
PREFACE
THE DAWN OF ALL - PROLOGUE
PART I - CHAPTER I - (I)
CHAPTER III - (I)
CHAPTER IV - (I)
CHAPTER V - (I)
CHAPTER VI - (I)
CHAPTER VII - (I)
CHAPTER VIII - (I)
THE EMPEROR OF GERMANY WAS RECEIVED INTO THE CATHOLIC CHURCH ON THURSDAY EVENING.
The story opens with a disoriented scholar awakening in a hospital bed, his senses returning piece by piece like a puzzle. As the clamor of distant streets fades into a gentle murmur, he struggles to piece together his identity, his past, and the world that now surrounds him. The narrative follows his painstaking effort to re‑establish consciousness, each observation—of a red coverlet, a white ceiling, the watchful eyes of a doctor and nurse—serving as a foothold for deeper reflection.
Beyond the personal drama, the novel frames his experience as a broader meditation on the clash between ancient faith and modern thought. Through his inner questioning, the reader is invited to contemplate how societies might evolve when timeless spiritual truths are either suppressed or revived. The early chapters set a tone of quiet introspection, hinting at larger philosophical currents that will shape the characters’ futures.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (500K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-03-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1871–1914
An English priest and novelist who moved from the Church of England to Roman Catholicism, he brought spiritual urgency and a storyteller’s pace to his fiction. Best known today for Lord of the World, he wrote with a mix of conviction, imagination, and dramatic tension that still feels strikingly modern.
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by Robert Hugh Benson

by Robert Hugh Benson

by Robert Hugh Benson

by Robert Hugh Benson

by Robert Hugh Benson

by Robert Hugh Benson

by Robert Hugh Benson

by Robert Hugh Benson