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In the present narration, which I have purposely called a "romance," I do not expect to be believed, as I can only relate what I myself have experienced I know that men and wo to accept as proofs, before they will credit anything that purports to be of a spiritual tendency;-- so--so to prophecy they are all unfit to receive Feill adh her intelligences than their own-- intelligences unseen, unknown, but felt Yes! felt by the most careless, the er, the inner forebodings of guilt--the ht a protracted battle to gain the hardly- won victory in the--in the thousand and one sudden appealsto that compass of aienerosity, bravery, and self-sacrifice which carry us on, heedless of consequences, to the perforreat and noble deeds, whose falory--deeds that onder at ourselves even in the perforoes for nothing, and the Soul for a brief space is pre-e akin to itself, yet higher in the reals should be; but that they are, is indubitable The miracles enacted now are silent ones, and are worked in the heart and mind of man alone Unbelief is nearly supreel to descend froreat square, the croould think he had got himself up on pulleys and wires, and would try to discover his apparatus Were he, in wrath, to cast destruction upon thes, slay a thousand of the of a pinion, those ere left alive would either say that a tremendous dynamite explosion had occurred, or that the square was built on an extinct volcano which had suddenly broken out into frightful activity Anything rather than believe in angels--the nineteenth century protests against the possibility of their existence It sees no ht work then," it says; "prove clearly that what you say is true, and I, in spite of ress and Atom Theory, will believe" The answer to such a request was spoken eighteen hundred years and eneration asketh for a sign, and no sign shall be given unto them"