“There are some places which, seen for the first time, yet seem to strike a chord of recollection. "I have been here before," we think to ourselves, "and this is one of my true homes." It is no mystery for those philosophers who hold that all which we shall see, with all which we have seen and are seeing, exists already in an eternal now; that all those places are home to us which in the pattern of our life are twisting, in past, present and future, tendrils of remembrance round our heart-strings.”

Source: Trent's Own Case (1936), Chapter XV: "Eunice Makes a Clean Breast of It"

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Edmund Clerihew Bentley 27
British writer 1875–1956

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