Transcribed from the 1895 Jarrold and Sons edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org. Many thanks to Norfolk and Norwich Millennium Library, UK, for kindly allowing their copy to be used for this transcription.
“This is the condition of humanity; we are placed as it were in an intellectual twilight where we discover but few things clearly, and yet we see enough to tempt us with the hope of making better and more discoveries.”—Bolingbroke.
Crying for the Light
or Fifty Years Ago
J Ewing Ritchie
Author of ‘East Anglia’
Vol 2
London: Jarrold and Sons
Warwick Lane E.C.
1895
CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
| CHAPTER | PAGE | |
| XI. | THE STRUGGLES OF A SOUL | [1] |
| XII. | IN LOW COMPANY | [30] |
| XIII. | CONCERNING SAL | [54] |
| XIV. | AN ENCOUNTER | [73] |
| XV. | ELECTIONEERING | [94] |
| XVI. | ELECTIONEERING AGAIN | [114] |
| XVII. | QUIET TALKS | [138] |
| XVIII. | THE IRISH PRASTE | [176] |
| XIX. | WENTWORTH RETIRES | [195] |
| XX. | A STORM BREWING | [212] |
| XXI. | AN UNPLEASANT RENCONTRE | [232] |
CHAPTER XI.
THE STRUGGLES OF A SOUL.
There comes to us all a time when we seek something for the heart to rely on, to anchor to, when we see the hollowness of the world, the deceitfulness of riches; how fleeting is all earthly pleasure, how great is the need of spiritual strength, how, when the storm comes, we require a shelter that can defy its utmost force. Out of the depths the heart of man ever cries out for the living God. The actress Rose felt this as much amid the glare of life and the triumphs of the stage as the monk in his cloister or the hermit in his desert cell. Like all of us, in whom the brute has not quenched the Divine light which lighteth everyone who cometh into the world, she felt, as Wordsworth writes: