Flatland
Part 1, Section 12: Of the Doctrine of Our Priests
by Edwin A. Abbott
The author explains the basic doctrine of the priests.
The author explains the basic doctrine of the priests.
On this long storm the rainbow rose
Her final summer was it
Dorian wakes from peaceful sleep and is confronted by what actions to take after last night’s events. He contacts Alan Campbell to help him conceal what has happened.
Angels in the early morning
Death is a dialogue between
Jekyll seems to be improving, but then refuses visitors. Utterson goes to see Lanyon to find him sickly and unhappy.
I had no cause to be awake
A biography of Blaise Pascal.
So are you to my thoughts as food to life
The sun kept setting, setting still;
An awful tempest mashed the air,
A half-past three a single bird
Walter stays for the inquest. He considers what must have happened on that last night of Sir Percival's life. He returns to the inn to find a letter waiting.
Much madness is divinest sense
Their height in heaven comforts not
A biography of Thomas Penyngton Kirkman.
A younger Ethan Frome walks the streets of Starkfield stopping at a dance in the community church. Ethan quietly watches Mattie.
Who never lost, are unprepared
Why is my verse so barren of new pride?
O never say that I was false of heart
"The whole question of choosing one’s next working hypothesis has been fogged, owing to people’s neglect of a very simple principle..."
Our share of night to bear
The narrator describes “The Club.”
The preface is a disclaimer signed by the author. In the introduction/explanation, the stranger tells the narrator his story of being a yankee in Connecticut.