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قراءة كتاب Love Eternal

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Love Eternal

Love Eternal

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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LOVE ETERNAL


by

H. RIDER HAGGARD




TO
THE REV. PHILIP T. BAINBRIDGE
Vicar of St. Thomas' Regent Street, London


You, whose privilege it is by instruction and example to
strengthen the weak hands and confirm the feeble knees of many,
may perhaps care to read of one whose human love led her from
darkness into light and on to the gates of the Love Eternal.




CONTENTS

I   HONEST JOHN
II   ISOBEL KISSES GODFREY
III   THE PLANTAGENET LADY
IV   THE GARDEN IN THE SQUARE
V   MADAME RIENNES
VI   EXPERIENCES
VII   MR. KNIGHT AND DUTY
VIII   THE PASTEUR TAKES THE FIELD
IX   THE PASTEUR CONQUERS
X   GODFREY BECOMES A HERO
XI   JULIETTE'S FAREWELL
XII   HOME
XIII   THE INTERVENING YEARS
XIV   TOGETHER
XV   FOR EVER
XVI   LOVE AND LOSS
XVII   INDIA
XVIII   FRANCE—AND AFTER
XIX   MARRIAGE
XX   ORDERS
XXI   LOVE ETERNAL




LOVE ETERNAL


CHAPTER I

HONEST JOHN

More than thirty years ago two atoms of the eternal Energy sped forth from the heart of it which we call God, and incarnated themselves in the human shapes that were destined to hold them for a while, as vases hold perfumes, or goblets wine, or as sparks of everlasting radium inhabit the bowels of the rock. Perhaps these two atoms, or essences, or monads indestructible, did but repeat an adventure, or many, many adventures. Perhaps again and again they had proceeded from that Home august and imperishable on certain mornings of the days of Time, to return thither at noon or nightfall, laden with the fruits of gained experience. So at least one of them seemed to tell the other before all was done and that other came to believe. If so, over what fields did they roam throughout the æons, they who having no end, could have no beginning? Not those of this world only, we may be sure. It is so small and there are so many others, millions upon millions of them, and such an infinite variety of knowledge is needed to shape the soul of man, even though it remain as yet imperfect and but a shadow of what it shall be.

Godfrey Knight was born the first, six months later she followed (her name was Isobel Blake), as though to search for him, or because whither he went, thither she must come, that being her doom and his.

Their circumstances, or rather those of their parents, were very different but, as it chanced, the houses in which they dwelt stood scarcely three hundred yards apart.

Between the rivers Blackwater and Crouch in Essex, is a great stretch of land, flat for the most part and rather dreary, which, however, to judge from what they have left us, our ancestors thought of much importance because of its situation, its trade and the corn it grew. So it came about that they built great houses there and reared beautiful abbeys and churches for the welfare of their souls. Amongst these, not very far from the coast, is that of Monk's Acre, still

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