FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2183   2184   2185   2186   2187   2188   2189   2190   2191   2192   2193   2194   2195   2196   2197   2198   2199   2200   2201   2202   2203   2204   2205   2206   2207  
2208   2209   2210   2211   2212   2213   2214   2215   2216   2217   2218   2219   2220   2221   2222   2223   2224   2225   2226   2227   2228   2229   2230   2231   2232   >>   >|  
the genealogical tree of the soul, and that we found that Julius was so closely related to Raphael. Not a spring, not a thicket, or a hill exists in this region where some memory of departed happiness does not come to destroy my repose. All things combine to prevent my recovery. Wherever I go, I repeat the painful scene of our separation. What have you done to me, Raphael? What am I become? Man of dangerous power! would that I had never known or never lost you! Hasten back; come on the wings of friendship, or the tender plant, your nursling, shall have perished. How could you, endowed with such tender feelings, venture to leave the work you had begun, but still so incomplete. The foundations that your proud wisdom tried to establish in my brain and heart are tottering; all the splendid palaces which you erected are crumbling, and the worm crushed to earth is writhing under the ruins. Happy, heavenly time, when I groped through life, with bandaged eyes, like a drunken man,--when all my knowledge and my wishes were confined to the narrow horizon of my childhood's teachings! Blessed time, when a cheerful sunset raised no higher aspiration in my soul than the wish of a fine day on the morrow; when nothing reminded me of the world save the newspaper; nothing spoke of eternity save the passing bell; only ghost-stories brought to mind the thought of death and judgment; when I trembled at the thought of the devil, and was proportionately drawn to the Godhead! I felt and was happy. Raphael has taught me to think I am on the way to regret that I was ever created. Creation? No, that is only a sound lacking all meaning, which my reason cannot receive. There was a time when I knew nothing, when no one knew me: accordingly, it is usual to say, I was not. That time is past: therefore it is usual to say that I was created. But also of the millions who existed centuries ago nothing more is now known, and yet men are wont to say, they are. On what do we found the right to grant the beginning and to deny the end? It is assumed that the cessation of thinking beings contradicts Infinite Goodness. Did, then, Infinite Goodness cone first into being at the creation of the world? If there was a period when there were no spirits, Infinite Goodness must have been imperative for a whole eternity. If the fabric of the universe is a perfection of the Creator, He, therefore, lacked a perfection before the creation of the world. But an assumption
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2183   2184   2185   2186   2187   2188   2189   2190   2191   2192   2193   2194   2195   2196   2197   2198   2199   2200   2201   2202   2203   2204   2205   2206   2207  
2208   2209   2210   2211   2212   2213   2214   2215   2216   2217   2218   2219   2220   2221   2222   2223   2224   2225   2226   2227   2228   2229   2230   2231   2232   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Raphael

 

Infinite

 

Goodness

 

created

 

thought

 
eternity
 

tender

 
perfection
 

creation

 

assumption


morrow

 

taught

 

reminded

 

universe

 

regret

 
lacking
 
Creation
 

Creator

 
fabric
 

Godhead


stories
 

brought

 

passing

 
lacked
 

proportionately

 

newspaper

 

meaning

 

judgment

 

trembled

 

beginning


contradicts

 

beings

 
thinking
 
assumed
 

spirits

 

period

 

reason

 

cessation

 

receive

 

centuries


existed

 

millions

 

imperative

 
dangerous
 

separation

 

repeat

 

painful

 
Hasten
 
perished
 
endowed