- 01 - Chapter 1
- 02 - Chapter 2
- 03 - Chapter 3
- 04 - Chapter 4
- 05 - Chapter 5
- 06 - Chapter 6
- 07 - Chapter 7
- 08 - Chapter 8
- 09 - Chapter 9
- 10 - Chapter 10
- 11 - Chapter 11
- 12 - Chapter 12
- 13 - Chapter 13
- 14 - Chapter 14
- 15 - Chapter 15
- 16 - Chapter 16
- 17 - Chapter 17
- 18 - Chapter 18
- 19 - Chapter 19
- 20 - Chapter 20
- 21 - Chapter 21
- 22 - Chapter 22
- 23 - Chapter 23
- 24 - Chapter 24
- 25 - Chapter 25
- 26 - Chapter 26
- 27 - Chapter 27
- 28 - Chapter 28
- 29 - Chapter 29
- 30 - Chapter 30
- 31 - Chapter 31
- 32 - Chapter 32
The Damnation of Theron Ware (published in England as Illumination) is an 1896 novel by American author Harold Frederic. It is widely considered a classic of American realism. The novel reveals a great deal about turn-of-the-century provincial America, religious life, and the depressed state of intellectual and artistic culture in small towns.
The novel centers on the life of a Methodist pastor named Theron Ware who has recently moved to a fictional small town in the Adirondack Mountains of upstate New York, which Frederic modeled after Utica, New York. A promising young pastor recently married, Theron has a number of experiences that cause him to begin to question the Methodist religion, his role as a priest and even the very existence of God. His moral decline (or illumination) is heightened through his dealings with Father Forbes, the town's Catholic priest; Dr. Ledsmar, a local atheist, philosopher, and man of science; and Celia, a local Irish Catholic girl, a species of aesthete, with whom Theron becomes hopelessly infatuated. (Introduction by Wikipedia)
The novel centers on the life of a Methodist pastor named Theron Ware who has recently moved to a fictional small town in the Adirondack Mountains of upstate New York, which Frederic modeled after Utica, New York. A promising young pastor recently married, Theron has a number of experiences that cause him to begin to question the Methodist religion, his role as a priest and even the very existence of God. His moral decline (or illumination) is heightened through his dealings with Father Forbes, the town's Catholic priest; Dr. Ledsmar, a local atheist, philosopher, and man of science; and Celia, a local Irish Catholic girl, a species of aesthete, with whom Theron becomes hopelessly infatuated. (Introduction by Wikipedia)
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