[Austin and His Friends by Frederic H. Balfour]@TWC D-Link book
Austin and His Friends

CHAPTER the Eighth
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Rather it was we who lived in a vain show, and would continue to do so until the spirit, the true substance of us, should be set free.

Well, whatever the truth of it might be, it was all a charming puzzle, and we should learn all about it some day, and meantime he had been furnished with an entirely new idea--the revealing power of darkness.

He loved the light because it was beautiful, and now he loved the darkness because it was mysterious, and held such wondrous secrets in its folds.

He had never been afraid of the dark even when a child.

It had always been associated in his mind with sleep and dreams, and he was very fond of both.
Of course it would have been no use attempting to instruct Lubin in the cryptic properties of the quincunx, or any other theories of garden arrangement propounded by Sir Thomas Browne.


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