[Zanoni by Edward Bulwer Lytton]@TWC D-Link bookZanoni CHAPTER 2 9/12
The very soul seemed to grow lighter and purer in that lucid air. "And these men, to commence their era of improvement and equality, are jealous even of the Creator.
They would deny an intelligence,--a God!" said Zanoni, as if involuntarily.
"Are you an artist, and, looking on the world, can you listen to such a dogma? Between God and genius there is a necessary link,--there is almost a correspondent language.
Well said the Pythagorean (Sextus, the Pythagorean.), 'A good intellect is the chorus of divinity.'" Struck and touched with these sentiments, which he little expected to fall from one to whom he ascribed those powers which the superstitions of childhood ascribe to the darker agencies, Glyndon said: "And yet you have confessed that your life, separated from that of others, is one that man should dread to share.
Is there, then, a connection between magic and religion ?" "Magic!" And what is magic! When the traveller beholds in Persia the ruins of palaces and temples, the ignorant inhabitants inform him they were the work of magicians.
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