The Thorn Birds

by Colleen McCullough

Father Ralph de Bricassart Character Analysis

Father Ralph de Bricassart begins as a young, ambitious priest exiled to rural Australia after offending a bishop. He presents a polished, charming exterior and quickly wins influence through charm, intelligence, and social skill. But beneath his composure lies a lifelong conflict between worldly ambition and private longing. Ralph genuinely cares for the Cleary family—especially Meggie—but he constantly weighs his emotional attachments against his ecclesiastical goals. His connection with Meggie becomes the defining tension of his life. He desires her, yet he repeatedly chooses power over intimacy, rising through Church ranks while privately haunted by the love and intimacy he has sacrificed to do so. Even as he becomes a Cardinal, Ralph cannot fully sever his bond with Meggie or the land. He clings to memories of her and pours unspoken love into Dane, not realizing that Dane is his son until after Dane’s tragic death. Ralph wants both sanctity and possession, but in the end, he gains neither, and his death brings peace only when he accepts what he has lost.

Father Ralph de Bricassart Quotes in The Thorn Birds

The The Thorn Birds quotes below are all either spoken by Father Ralph de Bricassart or refer to Father Ralph de Bricassart . For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Forbidden Love and Desire Theme Icon
).

Chapter 3 Quotes

He kept his resentment from showing in his face; this parish had been excellent for his self-control. If once he was offered the chance to rise out of the obscurity his temper had landed him in, he would not again make the same mistake. And if he played his cards well, this old woman might be the answer to his prayers.

Related Characters: Father Ralph de Bricassart , Mary Carson
Page Number and Citation: 68
Explanation and Analysis:

Curious, how many priests were handsome as Adonis, had the sexual magnetism of Don Juan. Did they espouse celibacy as a refuge from the consequences?

Related Characters: Mary Carson (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number and Citation: 70
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 7 Quotes

“Why not? I’m tired of living, Ralph, and I’m going to stop.” Her hard eyes mocked. “Do you doubt me? For over seventy years I’ve done precisely what I wanted to do when I wanted to do it, so if Death thinks he’s the one to choose the time of my going, he’s very much mistaken. I’ll die when I choose the time, and no suicide, either. It’s our will to live keeps us kicking, Ralph; it isn’t hard to stop if we really want to. I’m tired, and I want to stop. Very simple.”

Related Characters: Mary Carson (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number and Citation: 180
Explanation and Analysis:

After you’ve read the will, you’ll understand what I mean. While I burn in Hell beyond the borders of this life I know now, you’ll still be in that life, but burning in a hell with fiercer flames than any God could possibly manufacture. Oh, my Ralph, I’ve gauged you to a nicety! If I never knew how to do anything else, I’ve always known how to make the ones I love suffer. And you’re far better game than my dear departed Michael ever was.

Related Characters: Mary Carson (speaker), Michael Carson , Father Ralph de Bricassart
Related Symbols: Mary’s Will
Page Number and Citation: 191
Explanation and Analysis:

Father Ralph moved restlessly. He had not stopped to shed his Requiem vestments, nor had he taken a chair; like a dark and beautiful sorcerer he stood half in the shadows at the back of the room, isolated, his hands hidden beneath the black chasuble, his face still, and at the back of the distant blue eyes a horrified, stunned resentment. There was not even going to be the longed-for chastisement of rage or contempt; Paddy was going to hand it all to him on a golden plate of goodwill, and thank him for relieving the Clearys of a burden.

Related Characters: Father Ralph de Bricassart , Mary Carson , Padraic Cleary
Related Symbols: Mary’s Will
Page Number and Citation: 211
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 9 Quotes

Pain was forgotten, Church was forgotten, God was forgotten. He found her mouth, forced it open hungrily, wanting more and more of her, not able to hold her close enough to assuage the ghastly drive growing in him. She gave him her neck, bared her shoulders where the skin was cool, smoother and glossier than satin; it was like drowning, sinking deeper and deeper, gasping and helpless. Mortality pressed down on him, a great weight crushing his soul, liberating the bitter dark wine of his senses in a sudden flood. He wanted to weep; the last of his desire trickled away under the burden of his mortality, and he wrenched her arms from about his wretched body, sat back on his heels with his head sunken forward, seeming to become utterly absorbed in watching his hands tremble on his knees. Meggie, what have you done to me, what might you do to me if I let you?

Related Characters: Father Ralph de Bricassart (speaker), Meggie Cleary
Page Number and Citation: 266
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 11 Quotes

“I don’t like Meggie. But if you really dislike Meghann so much, I’ll call you Meg.” […] “Come on, Meg, kiss me. It’s your turn to make love to me, and maybe you’ll like that better, eh?”

I never want to kiss you again as long as I live, she thought […] Meggie had grown up with men who never removed a layer of their clothes in the presence of women, but open-necked shirts showed hairy chests in hot weather. They were all fair men, and not offensive to her; this dark man was alien, repulsive. Ralph had a head of hair just as dark, but well she remembered that smooth, hairless brown chest.

“Do as you’re told, Meg! Kiss me.”

Related Characters: Luke O’Neill (speaker), Meggie Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number and Citation: 330
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 12 Quotes

“You will not leave, Ralph, and you know it well. You belong to the Church, you always have and you always will. The vocation for you is a true one. We shall pray now, and I shall add the Rose to my prayers for the rest of my life. Our Dear Lord sends us many griefs and much pain during our progress to eternal life. We must learn to bear it, I as much as you.”

Related Characters: Archbishop Vittorio di Contini-Verchese (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number and Citation: 359
Explanation and Analysis:

The grizzling scrap of humanity responsible for all this lay in a wicker bassinet by the far wall, not a bit appreciative of their attention as they stood around her and peered down. She yelled her resentment, and kept on yelling. In the end the nurse lifted her, bassinet and all, and put her in the room designated as her nursery.

“There’s certainly nothing wrong with her lungs.” Archbishop Ralph smiled, sitting on the edge of the bed and taking Meggie’s pale hand.

“I don’t think she likes life much,” Meggie said with an answering smile. How much older he looked! As fit and supple as ever, but immeasurably older. She turned her head to Anne and Luddie, and held out her other.

Related Characters: Father Ralph de Bricassart (speaker), Meggie Cleary (speaker), Justine Cleary , Anne Mueller , Ludwig (“Luddie”) Mueller , Dane Cleary
Page Number and Citation: 376
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 13 Quotes

Oh, dear God, dear God! No, not dear God! What’s God ever done for me, except deprive me of Ralph? We’re not too fond of each other, God and I. And do You know something, God? You don’t frighten me the way You used to. How much I feared You, Your punishment! All my life I’ve trodden the straight and narrow, from fear of You. And what’s it got me? Not one scrap more than if I’d broken every rule in Your book. You’re a fraud, God, a demon of fear. You treat us like children, dangling punishment. But You don’t frighten me anymore. Because it isn’t Ralph I ought to be hating, it’s You.

Related Characters: Meggie Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number and Citation: 394
Explanation and Analysis:

Because at last he understood that what he had aimed to be was not a man. Not a man, never a man; something far greater, something beyond the fate of a mere man. Yet after all his fate was here under his hands, struck quivering and alight with him, her man. A man, forever a man. Dear Lord, couldst Thou not have kept this from me? I am a man, I can never be God; it was a delusion, that life in search of godhead. Are we all the same, we priests, yearning to be God? We abjure the one act which irrefutably proves us men.

Related Characters: Father Ralph de Bricassart (speaker), Meggie Cleary
Page Number and Citation: 409-410
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 16 Quotes

Fee laughed. It came out as a snort, but it was a genuine laugh. Grown pallid with age and encroaching cataracts, her eyes rested on Meggie’s startled face, grim and ironic. “Do you take me for a fool, Meggie? I don’t mean Luke O’Neill. I mean Dane is the living image of Ralph de Bricassart.”

Related Characters: Fiona Cleary (speaker), Meggie Cleary , Dane Cleary , Father Ralph de Bricassart , Luke O’Neill , Frank Cleary
Page Number and Citation: 484
Explanation and Analysis:

“Each of us has something within us which won’t be denied, even if it makes us scream aloud to die. We are what we are, that’s all. Like the old Celtic legend of the bird with the thorn in its breast, singing its heart out and dying. Because it has to, it’s driven to. We can know what we do wrong even before we do it, but self-knowledge can’t affect or change the outcome, can it? Everyone singing his own little song, convinced it’s the most wonderful song the world has ever heard. Don’t you see? We create our own thorns, and never stop to count the cost. All we can do is suffer the pain, and tell ourselves it was well worth it.”

Related Characters: Meggie Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart
Related Symbols: The Thorn Bird
Page Number and Citation: 508
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 17 Quotes

“I’m going to be a priest,” said Dane. “I’m going to enter His service completely, offer everything I have and am to Him, as His priest. Poverty, chastity and obedience. He demands no less than all from His chosen servants. It won’t be easy, but I’m going to do it.”

The look in her eyes! As if he had killed her, ground her into the dust beneath his foot. That he should have to suffer this he hadn’t known, dreaming only of her pride in him, her pleasure at giving her son to God. They said she’d be thrilled, uplifted, completely in accord. Instead she was staring at him as if the prospect of his priesthood was her death sentence.

Related Characters: Dane Cleary (speaker), Meggie Cleary , Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number and Citation: 550-551
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 18 Quotes

Dane’s eyes, yet not Dane’s eyes. Looking at her; bewildered, full of pain, helpless.

“I have no son,” he said, “but among the many, many things I learned from yours was that no matter how hard it is, my first and only allegiance is to Almighty God.”

“Dane was your son too,” said Meggie.

He stared at her blankly. “What?”

“I said, Dane was your son too. When I left Matlock Island I was pregnant. Dane was yours, not Luke O’Neill’s.”

Related Characters: Meggie Cleary (speaker), Father Ralph de Bricassart (speaker), Dane Cleary , Luke O’Neill
Page Number and Citation: 646
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 19 Quotes

The tension began to leave her; the worst of it was over. “What I like—no, love—about you the most is that you give me such a good run for my money I never do quite catch up.”

His shoulders shook. “Then look at the future this way, Herzchen. Living in the same house with me might afford you the opportunity to see how it can be done.” He kissed her brows, her cheeks, her eyelids. “I would have you no other way than the way you are, Justine. Not a freckle of your face or a cell of your brain.”

Related Characters: Justine Cleary (speaker), Rainer Moerling Hartheim (speaker), Meggie Cleary , Father Ralph de Bricassart
Page Number and Citation: 691
Explanation and Analysis:
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Father Ralph de Bricassart Character Timeline in The Thorn Birds

The timeline below shows where the character Father Ralph de Bricassart appears in The Thorn Birds. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 3
Ambition and Personal Sacrifice Theme Icon
Father Ralph de Bricassart drives through the dry Australian plains toward Drogheda, a large sheep station in... (full context)
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When Ralph reaches Drogheda, he sees a grand house that stands out sharply against the rugged land... (full context)
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Ralph parks the Daimler and walks across the neatly trimmed lawn to the front veranda. Minnie,... (full context)
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Ralph greets her with formal courtesy and offers to say Mass, but Mary declines and asks... (full context)
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Mary presses Ralph further, saying that someone of his intelligence and presence belongs in a position of greater... (full context)
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...head stockman. She complains about frequent turnover and says it’s difficult to find reliable men. Ralph jokes that she has a reputation for being a demanding employer, but she brushes this... (full context)
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...She insists on keeping her privacy and views their arrival as practical rather than sentimental. Ralph raises a mild objection, suggesting that the arrangement might seem cold, but Mary dismisses the... (full context)
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...rail stretches across 600 miles, taking them deep into the Outback. When they finally arrive, Ralph meets them at the station. He charms each member of the family, especially Meggie, who... (full context)
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The next morning, Ralph drives the Clearys to Drogheda. Meggie, charmed by the Georgian homestead, asks if they will... (full context)
Chapter 4
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...homestead, the house is about the same size as the Clearys’ home in New Zealand. Ralph delivers them there and jokes about the water levels before warning them about the heat,... (full context)
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...monsoon is headed their way. They begin scrambling to move the herds to higher ground. Ralph arrives and joins Frank in mustering sheep along the Barwon River. They work through the... (full context)
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The rain begins just as Ralph and Frank return to the Cleary homestead after two exhausting days of mustering sheep through... (full context)
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...to manage lessons at home. Mary offers to pay for their tuition and board, and Ralph arranges for them to visit the presbytery often. He paints Meggie’s room apple green and... (full context)
Chapter 5
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...himself. Mary arranges for Paddy and Frank to stay at the presbytery, though she refuses Ralph’s offer to stay there herself. Once in town, Paddy finds Frank at a bar, offers... (full context)
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At the show, Ralph brings Meggie from the convent and meets Frank there. The three walk around together, and... (full context)
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...and holds his own against a champion, winning £20 and the respect of the crowd. Ralph tries to take Meggie away before the fighting starts, but she screams and refuses. Eventually... (full context)
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Back at the presbytery, Ralph, Meggie, and Frank rest by the fire. When Paddy arrives and sees Frank’s bruised face,... (full context)
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Ralph takes Meggie upstairs, helps her wash up and change, and then returns alone to speak... (full context)
Chapter 6
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Ralph visits Drogheda regularly, increasingly concerned about Fiona’s deepening detachment and Meggie’s heavy responsibilities. He watches... (full context)
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...to cope, spreading damp sawdust to trap dust and rationing precious rainwater strictly for drinking. Ralph continues his visits, observing Meggie’s quiet strength and resilience amid the oppressive conditions. (full context)
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...Meggie learns to hide her sorrow, determined never to share the burden of her pain. Ralph notices Meggie’s quiet withdrawal and worries she will become emotionally closed off, like Fiona. He... (full context)
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Ralph notices Meggie’s worsening distress and finally confronts her. At first, Meggie refuses to tell him... (full context)
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Although Ralph successfully comforts Meggie, their conversation leaves him unsettled. After reassuring her about menstruation, he recognizes... (full context)
Chapter 7
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...she finishes, she glances out the window and stiffens in anger at the sight of Ralph and Meggie walking together. Ralph has been teaching Meggie to ride, outfitting her with boots... (full context)
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Mary’s bitterness deepens when she watches Ralph and Meggie stroll easily across the lawns. Their casual intimacy enrages her, feeding the venom... (full context)
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...figure, Mary commands the evening with an iron will, pairing herself with Paddy while assigning Ralph to escort Fiona and the boys to attend Meggie. As the party fills with influential... (full context)
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Throughout the festivities, Ralph deliberately avoids Meggie, acutely aware of the attention their interaction would draw. Though it hurts... (full context)
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Around three in the morning, Mary pulls Ralph aside, asking him to help her upstairs. Instead of leading him toward the staircase, she... (full context)
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After Mary retires, Ralph leaves the house and walks across the lawn into the humid darkness. He stops to... (full context)
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In the late afternoon, Mrs. Smith wakes Ralph and tells him that Mary is dead. Still groggy from the day’s oppressive heat, Ralph... (full context)
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Sitting at his window as the sun sets over Drogheda, Ralph opens the envelope and reads Mary’s letter. She explains that the second document inside is... (full context)
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...she leaves all her money and properties to the Catholic Church, on the condition that Ralph personally administer the estate and name his own successor. She sets terms to protect Paddy... (full context)
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Ralph weeps for the first time since boyhood, feeling that Mary has crushed his bond with... (full context)
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Before departing Drogheda, Ralph encounters Paddy, who is distraught and working on funeral arrangements. Ralph orders him to hasten... (full context)
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...suspicious but polite, many already aware through gossip of the dramatic change in Mary’s bequest. Ralph conducts the Requiem Mass with cold dignity, referring to Mary as a pillar of the... (full context)
Chapter 8
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In December, Paddy receives a check from Ralph for £5,000. Stunned, he gives it to Fiona, who feels elated at the money, which... (full context)
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...destroy his pride to see her. Paddy, more for Fiona than Frank, suggests writing to Ralph, so he can look after Frank without revealing the family’s knowledge. Fiona agrees and the... (full context)
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...room, and most household duties fall to Mrs. Smith and the maids. A letter from Ralph explains that the income from Mary’s estate is enormous, and Paddy’s yearly wages, along with... (full context)
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Though happy working in the paddocks, Meggie still aches for Ralph. Hoping Ralph might someday visit Drogheda, she persuades Paddy to keep Ralph’s mare. She rides... (full context)
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Often alone in the paddocks, Meggie dreams about Ralph. However, her innocent longings, filled with images of marriage and companionship, offer her little comfort.... (full context)
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Meanwhile, in Sydney, Ralph oversees the discipline of a young priest caught in a scandal and reflects on his... (full context)
Chapter 9
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...vigil while Mrs. Smith and the women prepare food for the mourners. During this period, Ralph arrives at Drogheda, aware of the fires but unaware of Paddy and Stuart’s deaths. On... (full context)
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In the drawing room, Ralph finds Meggie alone, sitting by the fire in shock. He kneels beside her chair, takes... (full context)
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...for the funeral. Martin King, one of the neighboring landowners, delivers a brief speech, and Ralph conducts the Requiem Mass over the plain wooden coffins. The mourners carry the coffins through... (full context)
Chapter 10
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...the station, and Fiona continues handling the books. She also assumes responsibility for corresponding with Ralph. Meanwhile, suitors from nearby properties like Liam O’Rourke and Enoch Davies call on Meggie, but... (full context)
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...encounters Luke one evening at the creek ford, and she his uncanny physical resemblance to Ralph startles her. (full context)
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...work and lively personality. When Meggie asks, Fiona admits to noticing the slight resemblance to Ralph but dismisses any deeper comparison. Luke’s ambition and easy charm impress both the Cleary brothers... (full context)
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...close during a waltz, Meggie feels a physical excitement she had only ever associated with Ralph, but different in a way she does not yet understand. (full context)
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...begins to think of him with affection rather than unease. She stops comparing him to Ralph so directly, convincing herself that her feelings for Luke are different but enough. Meanwhile, Luke... (full context)
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...to approach her with more caution next time. After, Meggie tells herself she must forget Ralph and embrace the future Luke offers. She thinks that Luke represents the kind of love... (full context)
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...without hesitation; they like Luke’s work ethic and easy manner. Meggie adamantly refuses to inform Ralph or invite him to the wedding, insisting that he forfeited his place in her life... (full context)
Chapter 12
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...she is temporarily boarding. Pride keeps her silent about her troubles. Occasionally, she inquires about Ralph, but Bob’s letters offer little news—until one letter brings an unexpected account. Ralph had visited... (full context)
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In Athens, Ralph assists Archbishop di Contini-Verchese on a diplomatic mission aimed at improving relations with the Greek... (full context)
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Later, in the Archbishop’s hotel suite, Ralph receives astonishing news. Archbishop di Contini-Verchese informs him that he will be promoted to Archbishop... (full context)
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...returning to the cane fields. Meggie suggests he buy a station now with money from Ralph, but Luke refuses, valuing his independence above all. Back at Himmelhoch, Meggie waits anxiously and... (full context)
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...face it without Luke. She struggles for hours without progress. Delirious, she keeps calling for Ralph, confusing Doc Smith, who assumes it must be her husband’s name. Meanwhile, a taxi approaches... (full context)
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Anne Mueller is astonished to realize the visitor is Ralph and quickly escorts him to Meggie’s side. Ralph kneels beside her, overwhelmed with tenderness and... (full context)
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...Meggie names the child Justine. Although Meggie survives, she is physically broken and emotionally numb. Ralph visits her bedside, offering tender words, but Meggie unleashes her bitterness. She accuses him of... (full context)
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Eventually, Ralph leaves, unable to comfort Meggie further. Luke does not respond to news of the birth,... (full context)
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...Anne about her overwhelming loneliness, her disillusionment with Luke, and her enduring, futile love for Ralph. Accepting Anne’s plan, she agrees to go to Matlock Island in January, hoping to find... (full context)
Chapter 13
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While alone, Meggie reflects on her life. She acknowledges that she will never have Ralph and decides to dedicate herself to Luke and their future children. She tells herself she... (full context)
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Soon after, Ralph unexpectedly arrives at Himmelhoch. Anne, recognizing him, learns that he is leaving for Rome to... (full context)
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When Ralph arrives on Matlock Island, Meggie recognizes him immediately and is stunned. Though she has spent... (full context)
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Meggie and Ralph spend the following days living freely, swimming and walking the island together. Ralph teaches Meggie... (full context)
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...is shocked but understands the necessity. Meggie sees the child as a lasting connection to Ralph, something that will carry his legacy forward. She feels triumphant and determined to protect her... (full context)
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...found new strength. Meggie confirms she is leaving for Drogheda and thanks Anne for sending Ralph to her. She explains that Ralph’s child gives her life a new purpose, and she... (full context)
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...not destructive. She believes that through the child she will always have a part of Ralph. Her resolution is firm, and she feels stronger than ever as she prepares for her... (full context)
Chapter 14
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...is able to nurse him. Dane is fair-haired and blue-eyed, bearing an unmistakable resemblance to Ralph rather than Luke, though Meggie takes comfort in the fact that Luke and Ralph look... (full context)
Chapter 15
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Meanwhile, far away in Rome, Ralph struggles with a different kind of war. He debates Cardinal Vittorio, arguing that the Pope... (full context)
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While Ralph is making quiet bargains in Rome, Jims and Patsy are shipped from the deserts of... (full context)
Chapter 16
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...another, rarely arguing. As they watch, Fiona remarks that Dane is the living image of Ralph. Meggie freezes, astonished that her mother has seen through the secret she has carried for... (full context)
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Meanwhile, Ralph’s career flourishes. After years of diplomatic work in Rome, he is elevated to Cardinal. His... (full context)
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In December, Ralph returns quietly to Drogheda for a holiday. He drives himself from Sydney without informing the... (full context)
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Ralph soon meets Justine, who is less welcoming. Justine, outspoken and scornful of religious authority, refuses... (full context)
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After their reunion, Ralph brings news about Frank. He explains that after Fiona first discovered Frank’s imprisonment, he had... (full context)
Chapter 17
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...Art in London. She adds that she has enough money to support herself because of Ralph’s financial support. (full context)
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...but a grown man, and this realization floods her with conflicting emotions. She thinks of Ralph and sees him in Dane’s beauty. Disturbed by the thought of her son’s maturity and... (full context)
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...recoils at the thought of losing him to the Church, just as she has lost Ralph. She recognizes that Dane, like Ralph, has been chosen by something beyond her. Her grief... (full context)
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...anguish and declares that she will not allow it. She sees how much Dane resembles Ralph, both in body and soul, and this intensifies her sense of despair. But Dane remains... (full context)
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...this as retribution—God reclaiming what she had stolen. She declares that Dane must go to Ralph in Rome for his training. Since Ralph helped create him, she believes he should take... (full context)
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Meggie resolves to send Dane to Ralph without ever revealing the truth. Anne and Fiona both ask whether Ralph knows Dane is... (full context)
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...tells her backstage at the theater that he is going to Rome to study under Ralph, she lashes out. But her fury quickly gives way to a practical decision: she will... (full context)
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...some close friends. Justine agrees, curious but wary of his connections. When she learns that Ralph and Cardinal di Contini-Verchese will be present, she promises to behave. She dresses casually and... (full context)
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...Their banter is playful but edged with mutual curiosity. When Cardinal Vittorio suggests they pretend Ralph is Dane’s uncle to make Vatican social appearances easier, Justine inadvertently reveals that Ralph is... (full context)
Chapter 18
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...tightly her knuckles whiten. Justine looks down the pew at her mother, then across to Ralph, who sits alone, motionless. For the first time, she cannot read his expression. She wonders... (full context)
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That night, they celebrate. The Clearys, Ralph, and some of Dane’s friends gather for dinner in a private room of a restaurant... (full context)
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Back in Sydney, the Clearys return to Drogheda, but Ralph stays behind for several more weeks. He visits his old seminary, speaks at a few... (full context)
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...an unknown location in Crete. Meggie decides to fly to Rome and seek help from Ralph, believing he is the only one with enough influence to find and bring Dane’s body... (full context)
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During their confrontation, Meggie finally tells Ralph the truth: Dane was his son. Ralph refuses to believe it at first, but Meggie... (full context)
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Ralph charters a private plane, and together with Meggie and Justine, he brings Dane’s body home... (full context)
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After the funeral, Ralph sits in the Drogheda drawing room with Meggie and Fiona, while the others retreat into... (full context)
Chapter 19
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...will come around eventually. But his mood changes instantly when he sees the news of Ralph’s and Dane’s deaths. Within minutes, he is driving toward the Vatican, thinking of the burden... (full context)
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Back in Bonn, Rainer receives two deliveries—one from Justine, the other from Ralph’s lawyers. The lawyers inform him that he has been named the new director of Michar... (full context)
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...strikes her as composed, powerful, and unfamiliar—nothing like anyone she has known, but reminiscent of Ralph. (full context)