Into the Highways and Hedges
 Into the Highways & Hedges

Into the Highways & Hedges

BY F. F. Montrésor

F. F. Montrésor

SEVENTH EDITION

London 1896

HUTCHINSON & CO. 34 PATERNOSTER ROW

"Let a man contend to the uttermost for his life's set prize, be it what it will."

Dedicated TO MY MOTHER

PREFACE.

This is not meant to be a controversial novel. I by no means agree with all Barnabas Thorpe's opinions. Nevertheless I believe that the men who fight for their ideals have been, and always will be, the saving element in a world which happily has never yet been left without them.

Before and since the days when Socrates found that it was "impossible to live a quiet life, for that would be to disobey the deity," there have always been some souls who have counted it worth while to lose all else, if haply in the losing they might get nearer to the light from which they came. Their failures, their apparently hopeless mistakes, are often evident enough, yet the mistakes die, and the spirit which animates them lives. It would be dark, indeed, if the torches of those eager runners were to go out.

F. F. M.

INTO THE HIGHWAYS AND HEDGES.

FIRST PART.

CHAPTER I.


  P 1/315 next 
Back Top
Privacy Statement Terms of Service Contact