The Forerunner, Volume 1 (1909-1910)
lt upon rock, rock-paved, rock-bo
f the crowded stony city; its steep and narrow confines no
to its elemental forms, with a vitality purchased
ep love of family and home. This home a room, a low and narrow room, u
d and interwound with the blood-tie, deepened by religion, intensified by centuries of relentless pressure, strengthened a thousandfold by the
to England, reared with love and care to strange exotic beauty, marrying a great landowner so l
y inherit the estate, an
, ill at ease. They mount the wide, white marble-terraced steps, the children crowding close, the mother fright
hambers, even the great kitchens and their clustering offices, ar
h and dark enough; they reach at last one friendly sheltering lit
where the