“The Simple Life is the last refuge of complicated and restless souls.”
Source: A Lodge in the Wilderness (1906), Ch. I, p. 22
“The Simple Life is the last refuge of complicated and restless souls.”
Source: A Lodge in the Wilderness (1906), Ch. I, p. 22
“The secret of life is to find out what one really wants.”
Source: A Lodge in the Wilderness (1906), Ch. II, p. 43
Prologue
The Path of the King (1921)
Context: Generations follow, oblivious of the high beginnings, but there is that in the stock which is fated to endure. The sons and daughters blunder and sin and perish, but the race goes on, for there is a fierce stuff of life in it. It sinks and rises again and blossoms at haphazard into virtue or vice, since the ordinary moral laws do not concern its mission. Some rags of greatness always cling to it, the dumb faith that sometime and somehow that blood drawn from kings it never knew will be royal again. Though nature is wasteful of material things, there is no waste of spirit. And then after long years there comes, unheralded and unlooked-for, the day of the Appointed Time...
Augustus (1937)
Context: If his "magna imago" could return to earth, he would be puzzled at some of our experiments in empire, and might well complain that the imperfections of his work were taken as its virtues, and that so many truths had gone silently out of mind. He had prided himself on having given the world peace, and he would be amazed by the loud praise of war as a natural and wholesome concomitant of a nation's life. Wars he had fought from an anxious desire to safeguard his people, as the shepherd builds the defences of his sheepfold; but he hated the thing, because he knew well the deadly "disordering," which the Greek historian noted as the consequence of the most triumphant campaign. He would marvel, too, at the current talk of racial purity, the exaltation of one breed of men as the chosen favourites of the gods. That would seem to him not only a defiance of the new Christian creed, but of the Stoicism which he had sincerely professed.
Source: Prester John (1910), Ch. X
Prologue
The House of the Four Winds (1935)
Source: Huntingtower (1922), Ch. 6
"A University's Bequest to Youth" (10 October 1936)
Canadian Occasions (1940)
Source: A Lodge in the Wilderness (1906), Ch. X, p. 272
Source: The Path of the King (1921), Ch. VIII "The Hidden City"
Pilgrim’s Way (1940)
Memory Hold-The-Door (1940)
Augustus (1937)
Source: Midwinter (1923), Ch. XVIII
Source: The Power-House (1916), Ch. 4 "I Follow The Trail Of The Super-Butler"
Source: The Power-House (1916), Ch. 3 "Tells of a Midsummer Night"
Source: The Path of the King (1921), Ch. XIII "The Last Stage"