Sir Thomas More

Sir Thomas More
or, Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects of Society

By

4
(1 Review)
Sir Thomas More by Robert Southey

Published:

1824

Pages:

103

Downloads:

520

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Sir Thomas More
or, Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects of Society

By

4
(1 Review)

Book Excerpt

e mere speculations which I advance for as little as they are worth. My serious belief amounts to this, that preternatural impressions are sometimes communicated to us for wise purposes: and that departed spirits are sometimes permitted to manifest themselves.

Stranger.--If a ghost, then, were disposed to pay you a visit, you would be in a proper state of mind for receiving such a visitor?

Montesinos.--I should not credit my senses lightly; neither should I obstinately distrust them, after I had put the reality of the appearance to the proof, as far as that were possible.

Stranger.--Should you like to have an opportunity afforded you?

Montesinos.--Heaven forbid! I have suffered so much in dreams from conversing with those whom even in sleep I knew to be departed, that an actual presence might perhaps be more than I could bear.

Stranger.--But if it were the spirit of one with whom you had no near ties of relationship or love, how t

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