<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
<p>Mr. Rochester did, on a future occasion, explain it. It
was one afternoon, when he chanced to meet me and Adèle in
the grounds: and while she played with Pilot and her shuttlecock,
he asked me to walk up and down a long beech avenue within sight
of her.</p>
<p>He then said that she was the daughter of a French
opera-dancer, Céline Varens, towards whom he had once
cherished what he called a “<i>grande
passion</i>.” This passion Céline had
professed to return with even superior ardour. He thought
himself her idol, ugly as he was: he believed, as he said, that
she preferred his “<i>taille
d’athlète</i>” to the elegance of the Apollo
Belvidere.</p>
<p>“And, Miss Eyre, so much was I flattered by this
preference of the Gallic sylph for her British gnome, that I
installed her in an hotel; gave her a complete establishment of
servants, a carriage, cashmeres, diamonds, dentelles,
&c. In short, I began the process of ruining myself in
the received style, like any other spoony. I had not, it
seems, the originality to chalk out a new road to shame and
destruction, but trode the old track with stupid exactness not to
deviate an inch from the beaten centre. I had—as I
deserved to have—the fate of all other spoonies.
Happening to call one evening when Céline did not expect
me, I found her out; but it was a warm night, and I was tired
with strolling through Paris, so I sat down in her boudoir; happy
to breathe the air consecrated so lately by her presence.
No,—I exaggerate; I never thought there was any
consecrating virtue about her: it was rather a sort of pastille
perfume she had left; a scent of musk and amber, than an odour of
sanctity. I was just beginning to stifle with the fumes of
conservatory flowers and sprinkled essences, when I bethought
myself to open the window and step out on to the balcony.
It was moonlight and gaslight besides, and very still and
serene. The balcony was furnished with a chair or two; I
sat down, and took out a cigar,—I will take one now, if you
will excuse me.”</p>
<p>Here ensued a pause, filled up by the producing and lighting
of a cigar; having placed it to his lips and breathed a trail of
Havannah incense on the freezing and sunless air, he went
on—</p>
<p>“I liked bonbons too in those days, Miss Eyre, and I was
<i>croquant</i>—(overlook the
barbarism)—<i>croquant</i> chocolate comfits, and smoking
alternately, watching meantime the equipages that rolled along
the fashionable streets towards the neighbouring opera-house,
when in an elegant close carriage drawn by a beautiful pair of
English horses, and distinctly seen in the brilliant city-night,
I recognised the ‘voiture’ I had given
Céline. She was returning: of course my heart
thumped with impatience against the iron rails I leant
upon. The carriage stopped, as I had expected, at the hotel
door; my flame (that is the very word for an opera inamorata)
alighted: though muffed in a cloak—an unnecessary
encumbrance, by-the-bye, on so warm a June evening—I knew
her instantly by her little foot, seen peeping from the skirt of
her dress, as she skipped from the carriage-step. Bending
over the balcony, I was about to murmur ‘Mon
ange’—in a tone, of course, which should be audible
to the ear of love alone—when a figure jumped from the
carriage after her; cloaked also; but that was a spurred heel
which had rung on the pavement, and that was a hatted head which
now passed under the arched <i>porte cochère</i> of the
hotel.</p>
<p>“You never felt jealousy, did you, Miss Eyre? Of
course not: I need not ask you; because you never felt
love. You have both sentiments yet to experience: your soul
sleeps; the shock is yet to be given which shall waken it.
You think all existence lapses in as quiet a flow as that in
which your youth has hitherto slid away. Floating on with
closed eyes and muffled ears, you neither see the rocks bristling
not far off in the bed of the flood, nor hear the breakers boil
at their base. But I tell you—and you may mark my
words—you will come some day to a craggy pass in the
channel, where the whole of life’s stream will be broken up
into whirl and tumult, foam and noise: either you will be dashed
to atoms on crag points, or lifted up and borne on by some
master-wave into a calmer current—as I am now.</p>
<p>“I like this day; I like that sky of steel; I like the
sternness and stillness of the world under this frost. I
like Thornfield, its antiquity, its retirement, its old
crow-trees and thorn-trees, its grey façade, and lines of
dark windows reflecting that metal welkin: and yet how long have
I abhorred the very thought of it, shunned it like a great
plague-house? How I do still abhor—”</p>
<p>He ground his teeth and was silent: he arrested his step and
struck his boot against the hard ground. Some hated thought
seemed to have him in its grip, and to hold him so tightly that
he could not advance.</p>
<p>We were ascending the avenue when he thus paused; the hall was
before us. Lifting his eye to its battlements, he cast over
them a glare such as I never saw before or since. Pain,
shame, ire, impatience, disgust, detestation, seemed momentarily
to hold a quivering conflict in the large pupil dilating under
his ebon eyebrow. Wild was the wrestle which should be
paramount; but another feeling rose and triumphed: something hard
and cynical: self-willed and resolute: it settled his passion and
petrified his countenance: he went on—</p>
<p>“During the moment I was silent, Miss Eyre, I was
arranging a point with my destiny. She stood there, by that
beech-trunk—a hag like one of those who appeared to Macbeth
on the heath of Forres. ‘You like Thornfield?’
she said, lifting her finger; and then she wrote in the air a
memento, which ran in lurid hieroglyphics all along the
house-front, between the upper and lower row of windows,
‘Like it if you can! Like it if you dare!’</p>
<p>“‘I will like it,’ said I; ‘I dare
like it;’ and” (he subjoined moodily) “I will
keep my word; I will break obstacles to happiness, to
goodness—yes, goodness. I wish to be a better man
than I have been, than I am; as Job’s leviathan broke the
spear, the dart, and the habergeon, hindrances which others count
as iron and brass, I will esteem but straw and rotten
wood.”</p>
<p>Adèle here ran before him with her shuttlecock.
“Away!” he cried harshly; “keep at a distance,
child; or go in to Sophie!” Continuing then to pursue
his walk in silence, I ventured to recall him to the point whence
he had abruptly diverged—</p>
<p>“Did you leave the balcony, sir,” I asked,
“when Mdlle. Varens entered?”</p>
<p>I almost expected a rebuff for this hardly well-timed
question, but, on the contrary, waking out of his scowling
abstraction, he turned his eyes towards me, and the shade seemed
to clear off his brow. “Oh, I had forgotten
Céline! Well, to resume. When I saw my charmer
thus come in accompanied by a cavalier, I seemed to hear a hiss,
and the green snake of jealousy, rising on undulating coils from
the moonlit balcony, glided within my waistcoat, and ate its way
in two minutes to my heart’s core. Strange!” he
exclaimed, suddenly starting again from the point.
“Strange that I should choose you for the confidant of all
this, young lady; passing strange that you should listen to me
quietly, as if it were the most usual thing in the world for a
man like me to tell stories of his opera-mistresses to a quaint,
inexperienced girl like you! But the last singularity
explains the first, as I intimated once before: you, with your
gravity, considerateness, and caution were made to be the
recipient of secrets. Besides, I know what sort of a mind I
have placed in communication with my own: I know it is one not
liable to take infection: it is a peculiar mind: it is a unique
one. Happily I do not mean to harm it: but, if I did, it
would not take harm from me. The more you and I converse,
the better; for while I cannot blight you, you may refresh
me.” After this digression he proceeded—</p>
<p>“I remained in the balcony. ‘They will come
to her boudoir, no doubt,’ thought I: ‘let me prepare
an ambush.’ So putting my hand in through the open
window, I drew the curtain over it, leaving only an opening
through which I could take observations; then I closed the
casement, all but a chink just wide enough to furnish an outlet
to lovers’ whispered vows: then I stole back to my chair;
and as I resumed it the pair came in. My eye was quickly at
the aperture. Céline’s chamber-maid entered,
lit a lamp, left it on the table, and withdrew. The couple
were thus revealed to me clearly: both removed their cloaks, and
there was ‘the Varens,’ shining in satin and
jewels,—my gifts of course,—and there was her
companion in an officer’s uniform; and I knew him for a
young roué of a vicomte—a brainless and vicious
youth whom I had sometimes met in society, and had never thought
of hating because I despised him so absolutely. On
recognising him, the fang of the snake Jealousy was instantly
broken; because at the same moment my love for Céline sank
under an extinguisher. A woman who could betray me for such
a rival was not worth contending for; she deserved only scorn;
less, however, than I, who had been her dupe.</p>
<p>“They began to talk; their conversation eased me
completely: frivolous, mercenary, heartless, and senseless, it
was rather calculated to weary than enrage a listener. A
card of mine lay on the table; this being perceived, brought my
name under discussion. Neither of them possessed energy or
wit to belabour me soundly, but they insulted me as coarsely as
they could in their little way: especially Céline, who
even waxed rather brilliant on my personal
defects—deformities she termed them. Now it had been
her custom to launch out into fervent admiration of what she
called my ‘<i>beauté mâle</i>:’ wherein
she differed diametrically from you, who told me point-blank, at
the second interview, that you did not think me handsome.
The contrast struck me at the time and—”</p>
<p>Adèle here came running up again.</p>
<p>“Monsieur, John has just been to say that your agent has
called and wishes to see you.”</p>
<p>“Ah! in that case I must abridge. Opening the
window, I walked in upon them; liberated Céline from my
protection; gave her notice to vacate her hotel; offered her a
purse for immediate exigencies; disregarded screams, hysterics,
prayers, protestations, convulsions; made an appointment with the
vicomte for a meeting at the Bois de Boulogne. Next morning
I had the pleasure of encountering him; left a bullet in one of
his poor etiolated arms, feeble as the wing of a chicken in the
pip, and then thought I had done with the whole crew. But
unluckily the Varens, six months before, had given me this
filette Adèle, who, she affirmed, was my daughter; and
perhaps she may be, though I see no proofs of such grim paternity
written in her countenance: Pilot is more like me than she.
Some years after I had broken with the mother, she abandoned her
child, and ran away to Italy with a musician or singer. I
acknowledged no natural claim on Adèle’s part to be
supported by me, nor do I now acknowledge any, for I am not her
father; but hearing that she was quite destitute, I e’en
took the poor thing out of the slime and mud of Paris, and
transplanted it here, to grow up clean in the wholesome soil of
an English country garden. Mrs. Fairfax found you to train
it; but now you know that it is the illegitimate offspring of a
French opera-girl, you will perhaps think differently of your
post and protégée: you will be coming to me some
day with notice that you have found another place—that you
beg me to look out for a new governess,
&c.—Eh?”</p>
<p>“No: Adèle is not answerable for either her
mother’s faults or yours: I have a regard for her; and now
that I know she is, in a sense, parentless—forsaken by her
mother and disowned by you, sir—I shall cling closer to her
than before. How could I possibly prefer the spoilt pet of
a wealthy family, who would hate her governess as a nuisance, to
a lonely little orphan, who leans towards her as a
friend?”</p>
<p>“Oh, that is the light in which you view it! Well,
I must go in now; and you too: it darkens.”</p>
<p>But I stayed out a few minutes longer with Adèle and
Pilot—ran a race with her, and played a game of battledore
and shuttlecock. When we went in, and I had removed her
bonnet and coat, I took her on my knee; kept her there an hour,
allowing her to prattle as she liked: not rebuking even some
little freedoms and trivialities into which she was apt to stray
when much noticed, and which betrayed in her a superficiality of
character, inherited probably from her mother, hardly congenial
to an English mind. Still she had her merits; and I was
disposed to appreciate all that was good in her to the
utmost. I sought in her countenance and features a likeness
to Mr. Rochester, but found none: no trait, no turn of expression
announced relationship. It was a pity: if she could but
have been proved to resemble him, he would have thought more of
her.</p>
<p>It was not till after I had withdrawn to my own chamber for
the night, that I steadily reviewed the tale Mr. Rochester had
told me. As he had said, there was probably nothing at all
extraordinary in the substance of the narrative itself: a wealthy
Englishman’s passion for a French dancer, and her treachery
to him, were every-day matters enough, no doubt, in society; but
there was something decidedly strange in the paroxysm of emotion
which had suddenly seized him when he was in the act of
expressing the present contentment of his mood, and his newly
revived pleasure in the old hall and its environs. I
meditated wonderingly on this incident; but gradually quitting
it, as I found it for the present inexplicable, I turned to the
consideration of my master’s manner to myself. The
confidence he had thought fit to repose in me seemed a tribute to
my discretion: I regarded and accepted it as such. His
deportment had now for some weeks been more uniform towards me
than at the first. I never seemed in his way; he did not
take fits of chilling hauteur: when he met me unexpectedly, the
encounter seemed welcome; he had always a word and sometimes a
smile for me: when summoned by formal invitation to his presence,
I was honoured by a cordiality of reception that made me feel I
really possessed the power to amuse him, and that these evening
conferences were sought as much for his pleasure as for my
benefit.</p>
<p>I, indeed, talked comparatively little, but I heard him talk
with relish. It was his nature to be communicative; he
liked to open to a mind unacquainted with the world glimpses of
its scenes and ways (I do not mean its corrupt scenes and wicked
ways, but such as derived their interest from the great scale on
which they were acted, the strange novelty by which they were
characterised); and I had a keen delight in receiving the new
ideas he offered, in imagining the new pictures he portrayed, and
following him in thought through the new regions he disclosed,
never startled or troubled by one noxious allusion.</p>
<p>The ease of his manner freed me from painful restraint: the
friendly frankness, as correct as cordial, with which he treated
me, drew me to him. I felt at times as if he were my
relation rather than my master: yet he was imperious sometimes
still; but I did not mind that; I saw it was his way. So
happy, so gratified did I become with this new interest added to
life, that I ceased to pine after kindred: my thin
crescent-destiny seemed to enlarge; the blanks of existence were
filled up; my bodily health improved; I gathered flesh and
strength.</p>
<p>And was Mr. Rochester now ugly in my eyes? No, reader:
gratitude, and many associations, all pleasurable and genial,
made his face the object I best liked to see; his presence in a
room was more cheering than the brightest fire. Yet I had
not forgotten his faults; indeed, I could not, for he brought
them frequently before me. He was proud, sardonic, harsh to
inferiority of every description: in my secret soul I knew that
his great kindness to me was balanced by unjust severity to many
others. He was moody, too; unaccountably so; I more than
once, when sent for to read to him, found him sitting in his
library alone, with his head bent on his folded arms; and, when
he looked up, a morose, almost a malignant, scowl blackened his
features. But I believed that his moodiness, his harshness,
and his former faults of morality (I say <i>former</i>, for now
he seemed corrected of them) had their source in some cruel cross
of fate. I believed he was naturally a man of better
tendencies, higher principles, and purer tastes than such as
circumstances had developed, education instilled, or destiny
encouraged. I thought there were excellent materials in
him; though for the present they hung together somewhat spoiled
and tangled. I cannot deny that I grieved for his grief,
whatever that was, and would have given much to assuage it.</p>
<p>Though I had now extinguished my candle and was laid down in
bed, I could not sleep for thinking of his look when he paused in
the avenue, and told how his destiny had risen up before him, and
dared him to be happy at Thornfield.</p>
<p>“Why not?” I asked myself. “What
alienates him from the house? Will he leave it again
soon? Mrs. Fairfax said he seldom stayed here longer than a
fortnight at a time; and he has now been resident eight
weeks. If he does go, the change will be doleful.
Suppose he should be absent spring, summer, and autumn: how
joyless sunshine and fine days will seem!”</p>
<p>I hardly know whether I had slept or not after this musing; at
any rate, I started wide awake on hearing a vague murmur,
peculiar and lugubrious, which sounded, I thought, just above
me. I wished I had kept my candle burning: the night was
drearily dark; my spirits were depressed. I rose and sat up
in bed, listening. The sound was hushed.</p>
<p>I tried again to sleep; but my heart beat anxiously: my inward
tranquillity was broken. The clock, far down in the hall,
struck two. Just then it seemed my chamber-door was
touched; as if fingers had swept the panels in groping a way
along the dark gallery outside. I said, “Who is
there?” Nothing answered. I was chilled with
fear.</p>
<p>All at once I remembered that it might be Pilot, who, when the
kitchen-door chanced to be left open, not unfrequently found his
way up to the threshold of Mr. Rochester’s chamber: I had
seen him lying there myself in the mornings. The idea
calmed me somewhat: I lay down. Silence composes the
nerves; and as an unbroken hush now reigned again through the
whole house, I began to feel the return of slumber. But it
was not fated that I should sleep that night. A dream had
scarcely approached my ear, when it fled affrighted, scared by a
marrow-freezing incident enough.</p>
<p>This was a demoniac laugh—low, suppressed, and
deep—uttered, as it seemed, at the very keyhole of my
chamber door. The head of my bed was near the door, and I
thought at first the goblin-laugher stood at my bedside—or
rather, crouched by my pillow: but I rose, looked round, and
could see nothing; while, as I still gazed, the unnatural sound
was reiterated: and I knew it came from behind the panels.
My first impulse was to rise and fasten the bolt; my next, again
to cry out, “Who is there?”</p>
<p>Something gurgled and moaned. Ere long, steps retreated
up the gallery towards the third-storey staircase: a door had
lately been made to shut in that staircase; I heard it open and
close, and all was still.</p>
<p>“Was that Grace Poole? and is she possessed with a
devil?” thought I. Impossible now to remain longer by
myself: I must go to Mrs. Fairfax. I hurried on my frock
and a shawl; I withdrew the bolt and opened the door with a
trembling hand. There was a candle burning just outside,
and on the matting in the gallery. I was surprised at this
circumstance: but still more was I amazed to perceive the air
quite dim, as if filled with smoke; and, while looking to the
right hand and left, to find whence these blue wreaths issued, I
became further aware of a strong smell of burning.</p>
<p>Something creaked: it was a door ajar; and that door was Mr.
Rochester’s, and the smoke rushed in a cloud from
thence. I thought no more of Mrs. Fairfax; I thought no
more of Grace Poole, or the laugh: in an instant, I was within
the chamber. Tongues of flame darted round the bed: the
curtains were on fire. In the midst of blaze and vapour,
Mr. Rochester lay stretched motionless, in deep sleep.</p>
<p>“Wake! wake!” I cried. I shook him, but he
only murmured and turned: the smoke had stupefied him. Not
a moment could be lost: the very sheets were kindling, I rushed
to his basin and ewer; fortunately, one was wide and the other
deep, and both were filled with water. I heaved them up,
deluged the bed and its occupant, flew back to my own room,
brought my own water-jug, baptized the couch afresh, and, by
God’s aid, succeeded in extinguishing the flames which were
devouring it.</p>
<p>The hiss of the quenched element, the breakage of a pitcher
which I flung from my hand when I had emptied it, and, above all,
the splash of the shower-bath I had liberally bestowed, roused
Mr. Rochester at last. Though it was now dark, I knew he
was awake; because I heard him fulminating strange anathemas at
finding himself lying in a pool of water.</p>
<p>“Is there a flood?” he cried.</p>
<p>“No, sir,” I answered; “but there has been a
fire: get up, do; you are quenched now; I will fetch you a
candle.”</p>
<p>“In the name of all the elves in Christendom, is that
Jane Eyre?” he demanded. “What have you done
with me, witch, sorceress? Who is in the room besides
you? Have you plotted to drown me?”</p>
<p>“I will fetch you a candle, sir; and, in Heaven’s
name, get up. Somebody has plotted something: you cannot
too soon find out who and what it is.”</p>
<p>“There! I am up now; but at your peril you fetch a
candle yet: wait two minutes till I get into some dry garments,
if any dry there be—yes, here is my dressing-gown.
Now run!”</p>
<p>I did run; I brought the candle which still remained in the
gallery. He took it from my hand, held it up, and surveyed
the bed, all blackened and scorched, the sheets drenched, the
carpet round swimming in water.</p>
<p>“What is it? and who did it?” he asked. I
briefly related to him what had transpired: the strange laugh I
had heard in the gallery: the step ascending to the third storey;
the smoke,—the smell of fire which had conducted me to his
room; in what state I had found matters there, and how I had
deluged him with all the water I could lay hands on.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p140b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="“What is it and who did it?” he asked" src="images/p140s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>He listened very gravely; his face, as I went on, expressed
more concern than astonishment; he did not immediately speak when
I had concluded.</p>
<p>“Shall I call Mrs. Fairfax?” I asked.</p>
<p>“Mrs. Fairfax? No; what the deuce would you call
her for? What can she do? Let her sleep
unmolested.”</p>
<p>“Then I will fetch Leah, and wake John and his
wife.”</p>
<p>“Not at all: just be still. You have a shawl
on. If you are not warm enough, you may take my cloak
yonder; wrap it about you, and sit down in the arm-chair:
there,—I will put it on. Now place your feet on the
stool, to keep them out of the wet. I am going to leave you
a few minutes. I shall take the candle. Remain where
you are till I return; be as still as a mouse. I must pay a
visit to the second storey. Don’t move, remember, or
call any one.”</p>
<p>He went: I watched the light withdraw. He passed up the
gallery very softly, unclosed the staircase door with as little
noise as possible, shut it after him, and the last ray
vanished. I was left in total darkness. I listened
for some noise, but heard nothing. A very long time
elapsed. I grew weary: it was cold, in spite of the cloak;
and then I did not see the use of staying, as I was not to rouse
the house. I was on the point of risking Mr.
Rochester’s displeasure by disobeying his orders, when the
light once more gleamed dimly on the gallery wall, and I heard
his unshod feet tread the matting. “I hope it is
he,” thought I, “and not something worse.”</p>
<p>He re-entered, pale and very gloomy. “I have found
it all out,” said he, setting his candle down on the
washstand; “it is as I thought.”</p>
<p>“How, sir?”</p>
<p>He made no reply, but stood with his arms folded, looking on
the ground. At the end of a few minutes he inquired in
rather a peculiar tone—</p>
<p>“I forget whether you said you saw anything when you
opened your chamber door.”</p>
<p>“No, sir, only the candlestick on the ground.”</p>
<p>“But you heard an odd laugh? You have heard that
laugh before, I should think, or something like it?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir: there is a woman who sews here, called Grace
Poole,—she laughs in that way. She is a singular
person.”</p>
<p>“Just so. Grace Poole—you have guessed
it. She is, as you say, singular—very. Well, I
shall reflect on the subject. Meantime, I am glad that you
are the only person, besides myself, acquainted with the precise
details of to-night’s incident. You are no talking
fool: say nothing about it. I will account for this state
of affairs” (pointing to the bed): “and now return to
your own room. I shall do very well on the sofa in the
library for the rest of the night. It is near
four:—in two hours the servants will be up.”</p>
<p>“Good-night, then, sir,” said I, departing.</p>
<p>He seemed surprised—very inconsistently so, as he had
just told me to go.</p>
<p>“What!” he exclaimed, “are you quitting me
already, and in that way?”</p>
<p>“You said I might go, sir.”</p>
<p>“But not without taking leave; not without a word or two
of acknowledgment and good-will: not, in short, in that brief,
dry fashion. Why, you have saved my life!—snatched me
from a horrible and excruciating death! and you walk past me as
if we were mutual strangers! At least shake
hands.”</p>
<p>He held out his hand; I gave him mine: he took it first in
one, them in both his own.</p>
<p>“You have saved my life: I have a pleasure in owing you
so immense a debt. I cannot say more. Nothing else
that has being would have been tolerable to me in the character
of creditor for such an obligation: but you: it is
different;—I feel your benefits no burden, Jane.”</p>
<p>He paused; gazed at me: words almost visible trembled on his
lips,—but his voice was checked.</p>
<p>“Good-night again, sir. There is no debt, benefit,
burden, obligation, in the case.”</p>
<p>“I knew,” he continued, “you would do me
good in some way, at some time;—I saw it in your eyes when
I first beheld you: their expression and smile did
not”—(again he stopped)—“did not”
(he proceeded hastily) “strike delight to my very inmost
heart so for nothing. People talk of natural sympathies; I
have heard of good genii: there are grains of truth in the
wildest fable. My cherished preserver,
goodnight!”</p>
<p>Strange energy was in his voice, strange fire in his look.</p>
<p>“I am glad I happened to be awake,” I said: and
then I was going.</p>
<p>“What! you <i>will</i> go?”</p>
<p>“I am cold, sir.”</p>
<p>“Cold? Yes,—and standing in a pool!
Go, then, Jane; go!” But he still retained my hand,
and I could not free it. I bethought myself of an
expedient.</p>
<p>“I think I hear Mrs. Fairfax move, sir,” said
I.</p>
<p>“Well, leave me:” he relaxed his fingers, and I
was gone.</p>
<p>I regained my couch, but never thought of sleep. Till
morning dawned I was tossed on a buoyant but unquiet sea, where
billows of trouble rolled under surges of joy. I thought
sometimes I saw beyond its wild waters a shore, sweet as the
hills of Beulah; and now and then a freshening gale, wakened by
hope, bore my spirit triumphantly towards the bourne: but I could
not reach it, even in fancy—a counteracting breeze blew off
land, and continually drove me back. Sense would resist
delirium: judgment would warn passion. Too feverish to
rest, I rose as soon as day dawned.</p>
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