Here is the complete, unabridged text of George MacDonald’s final fantasy, Lilith (1895) — the dreamlike pilgrimage through death and waking that C.S. Lewis said “baptized” his imagination. The work is in the public domain; we offer it here, formatted for comfortable reading, as the companion text to our chapter-by-chapter discipleship study.
IThe LibraryRead →
IIThe MirrorRead →
IIIThe RavenRead →
IVSomewhere or Nowhere?Read →
VThe Old ChurchRead →
VIThe Sexton's CottageRead →
VIIThe CemeteryRead →
VIIIMy Father's ManuscriptRead →
IXI RepentRead →
XThe Bad BurrowRead →
XIThe Evil WoodRead →
XIIFriends and FoesRead →
XIIIThe Little OnesRead →
XIVA CrisisRead →
XVA Strange HostessRead →
XVIA Gruesome DanceRead →
XVIIA Grotesque TragedyRead →
XVIIIDead or Alive?Read →
XIXThe White LeechRead →
XXGone! -- But How?Read →
XXIThe Fugitive MotherRead →
XXIIBulikaRead →
XXIIIA Woman of BulikaRead →
XXIVThe White LeopardessRead →
XXVThe PrincessRead →
XXVIA Battle RoyalRead →
XXVIIThe Silent FountainRead →
XXVIIII Am SilencedRead →
XXIXThe Persian CatRead →
XXXAdam ExplainsRead →
XXXIThe Sexton's Old HorseRead →
XXXIIThe Lovers and the BagsRead →
XXXIIILona's NarrativeRead →
XXXIVPreparationRead →
XXXVThe Little Ones in BulikaRead →
XXXVIMother and DaughterRead →
XXXVIIThe ShadowRead →
XXXVIIITo the House of BitternessRead →
XXXIXThat NightRead →
XLThe House of DeathRead →
XLII Am SentRead →
XLIII Sleep the SleepRead →
XLIIIThe Dreams That CameRead →
XLIVThe WakingRead →
XLVThe Journey HomeRead →
XLVIThe CityRead →
XLVIIThe “Endless Ending”Read →
Begin reading
Open Chapter I →Text: George MacDonald, Lilith: A Romance (1895). Public domain — source text from Project Gutenberg (eBook #1640).