Light On The Path and Through the Gates of Gold
anner oblivion might be found. But he who hesitates before drinking the poison from the fear of only inviting change of mode of existence, and perhaps
ical life as the drunkard returns to the flagon of wine,-he knows not why, except that he desires the sensation produced by life as the drunkard desires the sensation produced by wine. The true w
or life; and yet he proves his words false by living. None can compel him to live; the galley-slave may be chained to his oar, but his life cannot be chained to his body. The superb mechanism of the human body is as useless as an engine whose fires are not lit, if the will to live ceases,-that will which we maintain resolutely
tant efforts, and without any idea towards what end those efforts are directed, then descends on him the misery of nineteenth-century thought. He is lost and bewildered, and without hope. He becomes sceptical, disillusioned, weary, and asks the apparently unanswe
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Werewolf
Short stories
Romance
Romance
Romance