The Brotherhood of Consolation by Honoré de Balzac
page 43 of 281 (15%)
page 43 of 281 (15%)
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"Dispose and order all things according to thy desires and thine
own judgment and still thou shalt find trials to suffer, whether thou wilt or no; and so the cross is there; be it pain of body or pain of mind. "Sometimes God will seem to leave thee, sometimes men will harass thee. But, far worse, thou wilt find thyself a burden to thyself, and no remedy will deliver thee, no consolation comfort thee: until it pleases God to end thy trouble thou must bear it; for it is God's will that we suffer without consolation, that we may go to him without one backward look, humble through tribulation." "What a strange book!" thought Godefroid, turning over the leaves. Then his eyes lighted on the following words:-- "When thou hast reached the height of finding all afflictions sweet, since they have made thee love the love of Jesus Christ, then know thyself happy; for thou hast found thy paradise in this world." Annoyed by this simplicity (the characteristic of strength), angry at being foiled by a book, he closed the volume; but even then he saw, in letters of gold on the green morocco cover, the words:-- SEEK THAT WHICH IS ETERNAL, AND THAT ONLY. "Have they found it here?" he asked himself. He went out to buy the handsomest copy he could find of the "Imitation of Jesus Christ" thinking that Madame de la Chanterie would wish to |
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