[The Witch of Prague by F. Marion Crawford]@TWC D-Link bookThe Witch of Prague CHAPTER XIII 27/31
"Enter into my soul and read what love is, in his own great writing.
Read how he steals suddenly into the sacred place, and makes it his, and tears down the old gods and sets up his dear image in their stead--read how he sighs, and speaks, and weeps, and loves--and forgives not, but will be revenged at the last.
Are you indeed of stone, and have you a stone for a heart? Love can melt even stones, being set in man as the great central fire in the earth to burn the hardest things to streams of liquid flame! And see, again, how very soft and gentle he can be! See how I love you--see how sweet it is--how very lovely a thing it is to love as woman can.
There--have you felt it now? Have you seen into the depths of my soul and into the hiding-places of my heart? Let it be so in your own, then, and let it be so for ever. You understand now.
You know what it all is--how wild, how passionate, how gentle and how great! Take to yourself this love of mine--is it not all yours? Take it, and plant it with strong roots and seeds of undying life in your own sleeping breast, and let it grow, and grow, till it is even greater than it was in me, till it takes us both into itself, together, fast bound in its immortal bonds, to be two in one, in life and beyond life, for ever and ever and ever to the end of ends!" She ceased and she saw that his face was no longer expressionless and cold.
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