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Kenelm Chillingly, Book 3.

Chapter 7 No.7

Word Count: 1930    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

by side, in the still soft air of the Sabbath morn. Side by side they went on, crossing the pastoral glebe-lands, where the kine still drowsily reclined under the bowery sh

o muse on undisturbed, drinking quietly into his heart the subdued joy of the summer morn, with the freshness of its sparkling dews, the wayward carol of its earliest birds, the serene quietude of its limpid breezy air. Only when they came to fresh turnings in the road that led

ing from his revery, "wha

ly, "I am not hungr

re very strong, and there are two things which generally accompany great physical strength: the one is a keen

-a w

you have heard of Hercules: you kno

of c

. When I read that observation it set me thinking, being myself melancholic and having an exceedingly good appetite. Sure enough, when I began to collect evidence, I found that the strongest men with whom I made acquaintance, including prize-fighters and Irish draymen, were disposed to look upon life more on the shady than the sunny side of the way; in short, they were melancholic. But the kindness of

bs of beef, and shoulder of mutton, remains of a feast which the members of a monthly rustic club had held there the day before. Tom ate little at fi

nd would make you quarrel even with me. If you want a stimulus I allow you a pipe. I don't smoke myself, as a rule, but there have been times in my life w

minutes, during which Kenelm left him in silence, a l

beams at play amid the leaves of the arbour, of the frank perfume of the honeysuckle,

t sigh that he rose at

far to go: we

o be treated as an inferior; so each paid his due share, and the two men resumed their wandering. This time it was along a by-path amid fields, which was a shorter cut than the lane they had previously followed, to the main road to Luscombe. They walked slowly till they came to a rustic fo

the baluster of the bridge. "I see that you brought away your pipe from

smiled an

thought, "do you not feel what a blessed thing it is in this m

rew the pipe from hi

E

conti

ood, when we said our prayers at the knees of a mother, that we were lifted beyond this visible Nature, beyond these fields and woods and waters, in which, fair though they be, you and I miss something; in which neither you nor I are as happy as the kine in the fields, as the birds on the bough, as the fishes in the water: lifted to a c

hen replies, "I never thought of it be

capacities to conceive such a Being must be for our benefit and use: it would not be for our benefit and use if it were a lie. Again, if Nature has given to us a capacity to receive the notion that we live again, no matter whether some of us refuse so to believe, and argue against it,-why, the very capacity to receive the idea (for unless

ittle, for you see I am

under

oes that. You are a soul endowed with the capacity to receive the idea of a Creator so divinely wise and great and good that, though acting by the agency of general laws, He can accommodate them to all individual cases, so that-taking into account the life hereafter, which He grants to you the ca

't jeer m

beaten in your war, can so forgive your victor that you are walking in this solitude with him as a friend, knowing that you have but to drop a foot behind him in order to take his

ace with his hands, and

ose whom your life can colour for good or for bad. As you are strong, be gentle; as you can love one, be kind to all; as you have so much that is grand as Man,-that is, the highest of G

eeping li

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