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Sabatini, Rafael, 1875-1950

"The Strolling Saint; being the confessions of the high and mighty Agostino D'Anguissola, tyrant of Mondolfo and Lord of Carmina in the state of Piacenza"

How can you serve God here? Is not the world God's world
that you must shun it as if the Devil had fashioned it? Go, I say--and I
say it with the authority of the orders that I bear--go and serve man, and
thus shall you best serve God. All else are but snares to such a nature as
yours."
I looked at him helplessly, and from him to Galeotto who stood there, his
black brows knit; watching me with intentness as if great issues hung upon
my answer. And Gervasio's words touched in my mind some chord of memory.
They were words that I had heard before--or something very like them,
something whose import was the same.
Then I groaned miserably and took my head in my hands. "Whither am I to
go?" I cried. "What place is there in all the world for me? I am an
outcast. My very home is held against me. Whither, then, shall I go?"
"If that is all that troubles you," said Galeotto, his tone unctuously
humorous, "why we will ride to Pagliano."
I leapt at the word--literally leapt to my feet, and stared at him with
blazing eyes.
"Why, what ails him now?" quoth he.
Well might he ask. That name--Pagliano--had stirred my memory so
violently, that of a sudden as in a flash I had seen again the strange
vision that visited my delirium; I had seen again the inviting eyes, the
beckoning hands, and heard again the gentle voice saying, "Come to
Pagliano! Come soon!"
And now I knew, too, where I had heard words urging my return to the world
that were of the same import as those which Gervasio used.


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