A Dove Of The East Quotes

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A Dove Of The East: Twenty Short Stories from The New Yorker – Exploring Love, Faith, and War A Dove Of The East: Twenty Short Stories from The New Yorker – Exploring Love, Faith, and War by Mark Helprin
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“Then in the darkness and purity of the meadows he began to feel that the world had many secrets, that they were shattering even to glimpse or sense, and that they were not necessarily unpleasant. In certain states of light he could see, he could begin to sense, things most miraculous indeed. Although it seemed self-serving, he concluded nonetheless, after a lifetime of adhering to the diffuse principles of a science he did not know, that there was life after death, that the dead rose into a mischievous world of pure light, that something most mysterious lay beyond the the enfolding darkness, something wonderful. ”
Mark Helprin, A Dove Of The East: Twenty Short Stories from The New Yorker – Exploring Love, Faith, and War