Page 108 - Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Discovery
have never seen her when she was the least depressed,” she declared later. Mrs. Glover read a great deal, she added, and used to borrow books from the Clement library; she would stand talking with...
Page 258 - Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Discovery
but says I can have a room any time. . . . Yesterday morning Richard took a fit to go to Portland but he will go to a Hotel or perhaps to the Islands.”42The casualness of her mention...
Page 259 - Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Discovery
had made it a research for twenty five years, starting from the stand-point of magnetism thence going forward and leaving that behind. I discovered the art in a moment’s...
Page 113–115 - Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Discovery
These were the years of the great westward movement. Adventure, hope, need were driving increasing numbers into the wilderness to face the unknown, to subdue or be subdued by it. A new Children of...
Page 260 - Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Discovery
In her reply Mrs. Glover told him she wanted to hear no such gossip and refused his demand for money: The happiness of life is in doing right, and in holding the consciou...
Page 116 - Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Discovery
The most vivid glimpse we catch of her during her two years at Franklin is through the eyes of a twelve-year-old girl, Lucy Clark, who came to Patterson for some dental work. While he worked on her...
Page 261 - Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Discovery
but I do doubt its application in healing the sick.” You see that he is as full of conceit as ever. . . . Be with us, dear Mrs. Glover and help us; for I...
Page 117 - Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Discovery
Sarah C. Turner, who described George as having been placed in the care of her uncle and aunt by Mark Baker, went on to say, “In making the effort to be with her boy by coming to Groton, Mrs. Patte...
Page 265 - Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Discovery
Wright in a final letter published on February 24 announced that because of her silence in the face of his challenge “Mrs. Glover and her science are virtually dead and buried”—a judgment which, in...
Page 266 - Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Discovery
like the carnal mind of which Paul wrote, “enmity against God.” Its resistance to the demands of spiritual sense might seem innocent or trivial enough in the first place; but if yielded to, might i...