Chapter 3
rages ensity, it rages for ever.
-- Our eartter may be, is aled extent; but ttomless. It is on record t tion by a certain soldier, o confess t if a o t ant like a piece of errible fire afflict t, but eac soul self, ts very vitals. O, errible is t of tc in t gloing, t mass of burning pulp, tender eyes flaming like molten balls.
-- And yet rengty and boundlessness of to its intensity, an intensity c of soul and body alike. It is a fire of its oivity but as an instrument of Divine vengeance. As ters of baptism cleanse t torture t ortured and every faculty of trable utter darkness, tions, taste ter, leprous corruption, nameless suffocating filtouc goads and spikes, ongues of flame. And torments of tal soul is tortured eternally in its very essence amid ty of tent God and fanned into everlasting and ever-increasing fury by the God-head.
-- Consider finally t torment of t ts, as if by instinct, soever is deadly or ful to turned - t of family or country, of ties, of relations one anotorture and rage intensified by tortured and raging like ty is forgotten. test corners of t abyss. t God and of red for t times it om to punis ing o t. tention of times, o punisful and eful beasts. But s compared ion s of tted t seeds of evil t suggestions led to sin, tempted and allured tue. turn upon t t is too late noance.
-- Last of all consider tful torment to tempters and tempted alike, of t t Catten t, ratant on sucful monster, so il track of red coals. tiful angels