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Stella Fregelius: A Tale of Three Destinies

Chapter 6: AUTHOR’S NOTE
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About This Book

The narrative follows an imaginative inventor who creates an aerophone and enters emotional conflict when he falls for a woman characterized by spiritual intensity while also bound by promise and later marriage to his cousin. He pursues scientific experiments and encounters dreams, diaries, and supernatural experiences that probe bereavement, duty, and the possibility of posthumous contact. The plot alternates domestic scenes, introspection, and mystical episodes as the protagonist confronts longing, guilt, and the limits of material technology to bridge life and death, ending in an ambiguous, reflective resolution that privileges inward transformation over conventional climax.

AUTHOR’S NOTE

The author feels that he owes some apology to his readers for his boldness in offering to them a modest story which is in no sense a romance of the character that perhaps they expect from him; which has, moreover, few exciting incidents and no climax of the accustomed order, since the end of it only indicates its real beginning.

His excuse must be that, in the first instance, he wrote it purely to please himself and now publishes it in the hope that it may please some others. The problem of such a conflict, common enough mayhap did we but know it, between a departed and a present personality, of which the battle-ground is a bereaved human heart and the prize its complete possession; between earthly duty and spiritual desire also; was one that had long attracted him. Finding at length a few months of leisure, he treated the difficult theme, not indeed as he would have wished to do, but as best he could.

He may explain further that when he drafted this book, now some five years ago, instruments of the nature of the “aerophone” were not so much talked of as they are to-day. In fact this aerophone has little to do with his characters or their history, and the main motive of its introduction to his pages was to suggest how powerless are all such material means to bring within mortal reach the transcendental and unearthly ends which, with their aid, were attempted by Morris Monk.

These, as that dreamer learned, must be far otherwise obtained, whether in truth and spirit, or perchance, in visions only.

1903.