Wilfrid Cumbermede - George MacDonald

Wilfrid Cumbermede

{Illustration: One Day, As We Were Walking Over The Fields, I Told Him The Whole Story Of The Loss Of The Weapon At Moldwarp Hall.}
CONTENTS
I am—I will not say how old, but well past middle age. This much I feel compelled to mention, because it has long been my opinion that no man should attempt a history of himself until he has set foot upon the border land where the past and the future begin to blend in a consciousness somewhat independent of both, and hence interpreting both. Looking westward, from this vantage-ground, the setting sun is not the less lovely to him that he recalls a merrier time when the shadows fell the other way. Then they sped westward before him, as if to vanish, chased by his advancing footsteps, over the verge of the world. Now they come creeping towards him, lengthening as they come. And they are welcome. Can it be that he would ever have chosen a world without shadows? Was not the trouble of the shadowless noon the dreariest of all? Did he not then long for the curtained queen—the all-shadowy night? And shall he now regard with dismay the setting sun of his earthly life? When he looks back, he sees the farthest cloud of the sun-deserted east alive with a rosy hue. It is the prophecy of the sunset concerning the dawn. For the sun itself is ever a rising sun, and the morning will come though the night should be dark.
In this ‘season of calm weather,’ when the past has receded so far that he can behold it as in a picture, and his share in it as the history of a man who had lived and would soon die; when he can confess his faults without the bitterness of shame, both because he is humble, and because the faults themselves have dropped from him; when his good deeds look poverty-stricken in his eyes, and he would no more claim consideration for them than expect knighthood because he was no thief; when he cares little for his reputation, but much for his character—little for what has gone beyond his control, but endlessly much for what yet remains in his will to determine; then, I think, a man may do well to write his own life.

George MacDonald
Содержание

WILFRID CUMBERMEDE


WILFRID CUMBERMEDE.


INTRODUCTION.


CHAPTER I. WHERE I FIND MYSELF.


CHAPTER II. MY UNCLE AND AUNT.


CHAPTER III. AT THE TOP OF THE CHIMNEY-STAIR.


CHAPTER IV. THE PENDULUM.


CHAPTER V. I HAVE LESSONS.


CHAPTER VI. I COBBLE.


CHAPTER VII. THE SWORD ON THE WALL.


CHAPTER VIII. I GO TO SCHOOL, AND GRANNIE LEAVES IT.


CHAPTER IX. I SIN AND REPENT.


CHAPTER X. I BUILD CASTLES.


CHAPTER XI. A TALK WITH MY UNCLE.


CHAPTER XII. THE HOUSE-STEWARD.


CHAPTER XIII. THE LEADS.


CHAPTER XIV. THE GHOST.


CHAPTER XV. AWAY.


CHAPTER XVI. THE ICE-CAVE.


CHAPTER XVII. AMONG THE MOUNTAINS.


CHAPTER XVIII. AGAIN THE ICE-CAVE.


CHAPTER XIX. CHARLEY NURSES ME.


CHAPTER XX. A DREAM.


CHAPTER XXI. THE FROZEN STREAM.


CHAPTER XXII. AN EXPLOSION.


CHAPTER XXIII. ONLY A LINK.


CHAPTER XXIV. CHARLEY AT OXFORD.


CHAPTER XXV. MY WHITE MARE.


CHAPTER XXVI. A RIDING LESSON.


CHAPTER XXVII. A DISAPPOINTMENT.


CHAPTER XXVIII. IN LONDON.


CHAPTER XXIX. CHANGES.


CHAPTER XXX. PROPOSALS.


CHAPTER XXXI. ARRANGEMENTS.


CHAPTER XXXII. PREPARATIONS.


CHAPTER XXXIII. ASSISTANCE.


CHAPTER XXXIV. AN EXPOSTULATION.


CHAPTER XXXV. A TALK WITH CHARLEY.


CHAPTER XXXVI. TAPESTRY.


CHAPTER XXXVII. THE OLD CHEST.


CHAPTER XXXVIII. MARY OSBORNE.


CHAPTER XXXIX. A STORM.


CHAPTER XL. A DREAM.


CHAPTER XLI. A WAKING.


CHAPTER XLII. A TALK ABOUT SUICIDE.


CHAPTER XLIII. THE SWORD IN THE SCALE.


CHAPTER XLIV. I PART WITH MY SWORD


CHAPTER XLV. UMBERDEN CHURCH.


CHAPTER XLVI. MY FOLIO.


CHAPTER XLVII. THE LETTERS AND THEIR STORY.


CHAPTER XLVIII. ONLY A LINK.


CHAPTER XLIX. A DISCLOSURE.


CHAPTER L. THE DATES.


CHAPTER LI. CHARLEY AND CLARA.


CHAPTER LII. LILITH MEETS WITH A MISFORTUNE.


CHAPTER LIII. TOO LATE.


CHAPTER LIV. ISOLATION.


CHAPTER LV. ATTEMPTS AND COINCIDENCES.


CHAPTER LVI. THE LAST VISION.


CHAPTER LVII. ANOTHER DREAM.


CHAPTER LVIII. THE DARKEST HOUR.


CHAPTER LIX. THE DAWN.


CHAPTER LX. MY GREAT-GRANDMOTHER.


CHAPTER LXI. THE PARISH REGISTER.


CHAPTER LXII. A FOOLISH TRIUMPH.


CHAPTER LXIII. A COLLISION.


CHAPTER LXIV. YET ONCE.


CHAPTER LXV. CONCLUSION.

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2005-10-01

Темы

Christian fiction

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