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The White People | Frances Hodgson Burnett | |
Chapter III |
Page 2 of 4 |
It was Jean who told Angus that I was giving myself too entirely to the study of ancient books and the history of centuries gone by. "She is living to-day, and she must not pass through this life without gathering anything from it." "This life," she put it, as if I had passed through others before, and might pass through others again. That was always her way of speaking, and she seemed quite unconscious of any unusualness in it. "You are a wise woman, Jean," Angus said, looking long at her grave face. "A wise woman." He wrote to the London book-shops for the best modern books, and I began to read them. I felt at first as if they plunged me into a world I did not understand, and many of them I could not endure. But I persevered, and studied them as I had studied the old ones, and in time I began to feel as if perhaps they were true. My chief weariness with them came from the way they had of referring to the things I was so intimate with as though they were only the unauthenticated history of a life so long passed by that it could no longer matter to any one. So often the greatest hours of great lives were treated as possible legends. I knew why men had died or were killed or had borne black horror. I knew because I had read old books and manuscripts and had heard the stories which had come down through centuries by word of mouth, passed from father to son. |
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The White People Frances Hodgson Burnett |
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