Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- “FORS CLAVIGERA”: VOLUME VII. (1877): LETTERS 73–84
- SYNOPSIS OF LETTERS 73–84
- LETTER 73 COMMISSARIAT
- LETTER 74 FATHER-LAW
- LETTER 75 STAR LAW
- LETTER 76 OUR BATTLE IS IMMORTAL
- LETTER 77 THE LORD THAT BOUGHT US
- LETTER 78 THE SWORD OF MICHAEL
- LETTER 79 LIFE GUARDS OF NEW LIFE
- LETTER 80 THE TWO CLAVIGERÆ
- LETTER 81 THE FIRST EPISTLE OF JOHN
- LETTER 82 HEAVENLY CHOIRS
- LETTER 83 HESIOD'S MEASURE
- LETTER 84 THE LAST WORDS OF THE VIRGIN
- “FORS CLAVIGERA”: VOLUME VIII. (1878–1884): LETTERS 85–96
- APPENDIX: ADDITIONAL PASSAGES FROM THE MANUSCRIPT OF, AND LETTERS RELATING TO, “FORS CLAVIGERA”
- INDEX
- Plate section
LETTER 75 - STAR LAW
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- “FORS CLAVIGERA”: VOLUME VII. (1877): LETTERS 73–84
- SYNOPSIS OF LETTERS 73–84
- LETTER 73 COMMISSARIAT
- LETTER 74 FATHER-LAW
- LETTER 75 STAR LAW
- LETTER 76 OUR BATTLE IS IMMORTAL
- LETTER 77 THE LORD THAT BOUGHT US
- LETTER 78 THE SWORD OF MICHAEL
- LETTER 79 LIFE GUARDS OF NEW LIFE
- LETTER 80 THE TWO CLAVIGERÆ
- LETTER 81 THE FIRST EPISTLE OF JOHN
- LETTER 82 HEAVENLY CHOIRS
- LETTER 83 HESIOD'S MEASURE
- LETTER 84 THE LAST WORDS OF THE VIRGIN
- “FORS CLAVIGERA”: VOLUME VIII. (1878–1884): LETTERS 85–96
- APPENDIX: ADDITIONAL PASSAGES FROM THE MANUSCRIPT OF, AND LETTERS RELATING TO, “FORS CLAVIGERA”
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
Venice, 1st February, 1877
1. I am told that some of my “most intelligent readers” can make nothing of what I related in last Fors, about St. Ursula's messages to me. What is their difficulty? Is it (1), that they do not believe in guardian angels,—or (2), that they do not think me good enough to have so great an angel to guard me,—or (3), that knowing the beginning of her myth, they do not believe in St. Ursula's personality?
If the first, I have nothing more to say;—if the second, I can assure them, they are not more surprised than I was myself;—if the third, they are to remember that all great myths are conditions of slow manifestation to human imperfect intelligence; and that whatever spiritual powers are in true personality appointed to go to and fro in the earth, to trouble the waters of healing, or bear the salutations of peace, can only be revealed, in their reality, by the gradual confirmation in the matured soul of what at first were only its instinctive desires, and figurative perceptions.
2. Oh me! I had so much to tell you in this Fors, if I could but get a minute's peace;—my stories of the Venetian doggie, and others of the greater dog and the lesser dog—in Heaven; and more stories of Little bear in Venice, and of the Greater bear and Lesser bear in Heaven; and more of the horses of St. Mark's, in Venice, and of Pegasus and the chivalry of Heaven;—ever so much more of the selling of melons in Venice, and of the twelve manner of fruits in Heaven for the healing of the nations.
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- The Works of John Ruskin , pp. 54 - 81Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1907