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from which he only saves himself by strong efforts of will and by the recollection of the lost love of his youth. The awful calamity which overtook him at the very moment his betrothal to Susanna was sanctioned by her father proved, in fact, his salvation, and delivered him from madness, but its effects were never eradicated. Like Hamlet he found the times out of joint; but, instead of contending with them, he patiently submitted to Fate and won for himself, if not absolute peace, at least a certain amount of tranquillity. Throughout his life he was subject to visions. In his earliest days the appearance of a lady carrying a white rose marked the near approach of calamity. In later life a vision of his beloved Susanna was sometimes vouchsafed to him, and as he lay on his death-bed she came, after a long interval, as if beckoning him to join her. The other characters of the story are naturally drawn. David's stern, yet not unkind father; the minister and his wife; the old clerk, and Susanna herself, will soon make themselves known to the reader. The refusal of Susanna to give up David when she learns that his doctor fears he may become insane, and her victory over her father's objections to her engagement, are proofs of Lie's insight into the depth and steadfastness of the love of a good woman. The story of her death, of the bringing home her body in the boat, and of the scene in the death-chamber, are full of pathos, and are told with the simplicity of a great artist. "The Visionary" is written in the spirit of a true Nordlander, who is ever contrasting life and nature in the south of Norway with life "up there" at home, and with the more varied aspects of nature in Nordland. The vivid description of the great storm are evidently impressions and recollections of actual experience. Before he became an author Lie had often mused "On Man, on Nature, and on Human Life," and the first results of these musings were given to the world in "The Visionary." J.A.J.H. * * * * * CONTENTS PART I.--INTRODUCTION II. NORDLAND AND NORDLANDERS III. CHAP. I.--HOME II.--ON THE SHORE III.--THE SERVANTS' HALL IV.--AMONG THE VAETTE ROCKS V.--CONFIRMATION VI.--AT THE CLERK'S VII.--TRONDENAES VIII.--AT HOME IX.--THE CHRISTMAS VISIT X.--THE STORM XI.--CONCLUSION * * * * * PART I
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