[The Monk; a romance by M. G. Lewis]@TWC D-Link book
The Monk; a romance

CHAPTER III
32/61

To deserve admittance into the order of St.Francis was Ambrosio's highest ambition.

His Instructors carefully repressed those virtues whose grandeur and disinterestedness were ill-suited to the Cloister.

Instead of universal benevolence, He adopted a selfish partiality for his own particular establishment: He was taught to consider compassion for the errors of Others as a crime of the blackest dye: The noble frankness of his temper was exchanged for servile humility; and in order to break his natural spirit, the Monks terrified his young mind by placing before him all the horrors with which Superstition could furnish them: They painted to him the torments of the Damned in colours the most dark, terrible, and fantastic, and threatened him at the slightest fault with eternal perdition.

No wonder that his imagination constantly dwelling upon these fearful objects should have rendered his character timid and apprehensive.

Add to this, that his long absence from the great world, and total unacquaintance with the common dangers of life, made him form of them an idea far more dismal than the reality.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books