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liber amoris-第11章

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d shall I not follow its bidding?  No; I must wait till I am free; and then I will take my Freedom (a glad prize) and lay it at her feet and tell her my proud love of her that would not brook a rival in her dishonour; and that would have her all or none; and gain her or lose myself for ever!

You see by this letter the way I am in; and I hope you will excuse it as the picture of a half…disordered mind。  The least respite from my uneasiness (such as I had yesterday) only brings the contrary reflection back upon me; like a flood; and by letting me see the happiness I have lost; makes me feel; by contrast; more acutely what I am doomed to bear。



LETTER X





Dear Friend; Here I am at St。 Bees once more; amid the scenes which I greeted in their barrenness in winter; but which have now put on their full green attire that shews luxuriant to the eye; but speaks a tale of sadness to this heart widowed of its last; its dearest; its only hope!  Oh! lovely Bees…Inn! here I composed a volume of law…cases; here I wrote my enamoured follies to her; thinking her human; and that 〃all below was not the fiend's〃here I got two cold; sullen answers from the little witch; and here I was … and I was damned。  I thought the revisiting the old haunts would have soothed me for a time; but it only brings back the sense of what I have suffered for her and of her unkindness the more strongly; till I cannot endure the recollection。  I eye the Heavens in dumb despair; or vent my sorrows in the desart air。  〃To the winds; to the waves; to the rocks I complain〃you may suppose with what effect!  I fear I shall be obliged to return。  I am tossed about (backwards and forwards) by my passion; so as to become ridiculous。  I can now understand how it is that mad people never remain in the same placethey are moving on for ever; FROM THEMSELVES!

Do you know; you would have been delighted with the effect of the Northern twilight on this romantic country as I rode along last night?  The hills and groves and herds of cattle were seen reposing in the grey dawn of midnight; as in a moonlight without shadow。  The whole wide canopy of Heaven shed its reflex light upon them; like a pure crystal mirror。  No sharp points; no petty details; no hard contrastsevery object was seen softened yet distinct; in its simple outline and natural tones; transparent with an inward light; breathing its own mild lustre。  The landscape altogether was like an airy piece of mosaic…work; or like one of Poussin's broad massy landscapes or Titian's lovely pastoral scenes。  Is it not so; that poets see nature; veiled to the sight; but revealed to the soul in visionary grace and grandeur!  I confess the sight touched me; and might have removed all sadness except mine。  So (I thought) the light of her celestial face once shone into my soul; and wrapt me in a heavenly trance。  The sense I have of beauty raises me for a moment above myself; but depresses me the more afterwards; when I recollect how it is thrown away in vain admiration; and that it only makes me more susceptible of pain from the mortifications I meet with。  Would I had never seen her!  I might then not indeed have been happy; but at least I might have passed my life in peace; and have sunk into forgetfulness without a pang。The noble scenery in this country mixes with my passion; and refines; but does not relieve it。  I was at Stirling Castle not long ago。  It gave me no pleasure。  The declivity seemed to me abrupt; not sublime; for in truth I did not shrink back from it with terror。  The weather…beaten towers were stiff and formal: the air was damp and chill: the river winded its dull; slimy way like a snake along the marshy grounds: and the dim misty tops of Ben Leddi; and the lovely Highlands (woven fantastically of thin air) mocked my embraces and tempted my longing eyes like her; the sole queen and mistress of my thoughts!  I never found my contemplations on this subject so subtilised and at the same time so desponding as on that occasion。  I wept myself almost blind; and I gazed at the broad golden sunset through my tears that fell in showers。  As I trod the green mountain turf; oh! how I wished to be laid beneath itin one grave with herthat I might sleep with her in that cold bed; my hand in hers; and my heart for ever stillwhile worms should taste her sweet body; that I had never tasted!  There was a time when I could bear solitude; but it is too much for me at present。  Now I am no sooner left to myself than I am lost in infinite space; and look round me in vain for suppose or comfort。  She was my stay; my hope: without her hand to cling to; I stagger like an infant on the edge of a precipice。  The universe without her is one wide; hollow abyss; in which my harassed thoughts can find no resting…place。  I must break off here; for the hysterica passio comes upon me; and threatens to unhinge my reason。



LETTER XI





My dear and good Friend; I am afraid I trouble you with my querulous epistles; but this is probably the last。  To…morrow or the next day decides my fate with respect to the divorce; when I expect to be a free man。  In vain!  Was it not for her and to lay my freedom at her feet; that I consented to this step which has cost me infinite perplexity; and now to be discarded for the first pretender that came in her way!  If so; I hardly think I can survive it。  You who have been a favourite with women; do not know what it is to be deprived of one's only hope; and to have it turned to shame and disappointment。  There is nothing in the world left that can afford me one drop of comfortTHIS I feel more and more。  Everything is to me a mockery of pleasure; like her love。  The breeze does not cool me: the blue sky does not cheer me。  I gaze only on her face averted from mealas! the only face that ever was turned fondly to me!  And why am I thus treated?  Because I wanted her to be mine for ever in love or friendship; and did not push my gross familiarities as far as I might。  〃Why can you not go on as we have done; and say nothing about the word; FOREVER?〃  Was it not plain from this that she even then meditated an escape from me to some less sentimental lover?  〃Do you allow anyone else to do so?〃 I said to her once; as I was toying with her。  〃No; not now!〃 was her answer; that is; because there was nobody else in the house to take freedoms with her。  I was very well as a stopgap; but I was to be nothing more。  While the coast was clear; I had it all my own way: but the instant C came; she flung herself at his head in the most barefaced way; ran breathless up stairs before him; blushed when his foot was heard; watched for him in the passage; and was sure to be in close conference with him when he went down again。  It was then my mad proceedings commenced。  No wonder。  Had I not reason to be jealous of every appearance of familiarity with others; knowing how easy she had been with me at first; and that she only grew shy when I did not take farther liberties?  What has her character to rest upon but her attachment to me; which she now denies; not modestly; but impudently?  Will you yourself say that if she had all along no particular regard for me; she will not do as much or more with other more likely me
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