About This Book
The narrative opens at dawn in the fields around Nazareth, where light and weather unsettle animals and reveal a man lying beside a road. The chapter presents several passersby—a richly dressed elderly man, a somber young traveler on a lean donkey—and follows their inward reflections as each judges whether to aid or ignore the roadside figure. Through close attention to sensation, landscape, and interior monologue, the text contrasts social positions and private desires while exploring conscience, the weighing of duty against self-interest, and the quiet intimacies of departure and longing.
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