What do you think?
Rate this book


291 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 1946
I thus aspired to heavenly glory, and Harcamone had attained it before me, quietly, as the result of murdering a little girl and, fifteen years later, a Fontevrault guard. (p. 6)
To speak of saintliness again in connection with transportation [death] will set your teeth on edge, for they are not used to an acid diet. Yet the life I lead requires the giving up of earthly things that the Church, and all churches, require of their saints. Then saintliness opens, in fact, forces a door which looks out on the marvelous. And it is also recognized by the following: that it leads to Heaven by way of sin. (p. 42)
We walked up the road. The trees were getting denser, Nature was growing more mysterious, and I should like to speak of her the way islands occupied by pirates and savage tribes are sometimes spoken of in adventure stories. The traveller arrives in a land where the vegetation keeps watch over precious captives. There are cedars, catalpas, yews, wisteria, and all the trees common to the grounds of Renaissance castles, and that was the civilized setting required for Bulkaen's vigour.