Victor Serenus: A Story of the Pauline Era

Books by Henry Wood

THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF HUMANISM
Large 12mo Paper 50 cents; English Cloth $1.25

VICTOR SERENUS A Story of the Pauline Era
12mo Cloth $1.25 Third Edition

STUDIES IN THE THOUGHT WORLD
$1.25 Seventh Edition

IDEAL SUGGESTION THROUGH MENTAL PHOTOGRAPHY
Paper 50 cents; Cloth $1.25
Eleventh Edition

GOD’S IMAGE IN MAN
Some Intuitive Perceptions of Truth
Cloth $1.00 Thirteenth Edition

EDWARD BURTON A Novel
Cloth $1.25; Paper 50 cents
Eighth Edition

THE SYMPHONY OF LIFE
Large 12mo Flat back Gilt top Cloth $1.25
Second Edition

THE NEW THOUGHT SIMPLIFIED
12mo Cloth 80 cents net Postpaid 88 cents
Second Edition


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LEE and SHEPARD Publishers
BOSTON


VICTOR SERENUS

A STORY OF THE PAULINE ERA






It is only the finite that has wrought and suffered; the infinite lies stretched in smiling repose.Emerson.








BOSTON U.S.A.
LEE AND SHEPARD PUBLISHERS
1904

Copyright, 1898, by Henry Wood


All Rights Reserved


Victor Serenus

TYPOGRAPHY BY C. J. PETERS & SON, BOSTON, U.S.A.


PRESSWORK BY BERWICK & SMITH.


To Margaret


[pg v]

PREFACE

It seems unnecessary to suggest that this book is entirely independent of the conventional lines of the modern realistic novel. To any who hold that idealism in fiction is not artistic, that a didactic element is inadmissible, and that philosophizing has no place, the work will hardly commend itself. To others, who believe that fiction may be a useful vehicle for the conveyance of helpful ideals, and even abstract truth, it is offered with the hope that it may furnish some measure both of entertainment and profit.

On many historical and chronological points that are involved, authorities differ; but so far as the author has been able to sift them, the prevailing and apparently most probable hypotheses have been followed. As may be inferred, it has been necessary to glean in many fields for the facts, opinions, and conclusions that make up the historic portion of the raw material from which this story has been fabricated.1

[pg vi]

A majority of the characters being creations, and a large part of the action also unhistoric, it must be left to the judgment of the reader how well they fit into their historic frame-work. So far as St. Paul is introduced in the narrative, nearly everything delineated belongs to those portions of his life which are but very briefly or incidentally touched upon, either in the Scriptural writings or other history. But utilizing many undoubted realities, the aim has been to fill in the wide blanks with that which is in accord and in the line of the possible or probable.

The author has intended to respect the hallowed associations which cluster about the name of the great Apostle. But Paul was a man with like passions as other men, and to be faithful, any outline of the forces that played through his great soul should be drawn naturally, and without that misleading glamor often imposed by far-away time and distance. Only by such a treatment can his life be brought near, and its practical lessons enforced. If to any the interpretation seem unduly broad, they may be assured that the author has no iconoclastic intent, but on the contrary, an aim which is wholly constructive, whereby everything wholesome and uplifting in human life may be encouraged and strengthened.



VICTOR SERENUS

A STORY OF THE PAULINE ERA


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