Without Dogma by Henryk Sienkiewicz
page 66 of 496 (13%)
page 66 of 496 (13%)
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a link connecting us together, a little secret shared by both of us,
and also--" I pointed at the flowers the gardener had brought from the hot-house. "You know flowers want light to bring out all their beauty, and I wanted plenty of light for our atmosphere." "I cannot always follow you," she said, after a momentary silence, "but I trust you, yes, and believe in you." We remained once more silent; I pressed her hand again, saying good-night. We stopped near the door, and our eyes met. The waters begin to rise and to rise. They will overstep their boundary any moment. 23 February. The human being, like the sea, has his ebb and flood tides. To-day my will, my energy, the very action of life are at a very low tide. It came upon me without warning, a mere matter of nerves. But for that very reason my thoughts are full of bitterness. What right have I, a man physically worn out and mentally exhausted, to marry at all? Involuntarily the words of Hamlet come in my mind: "Get thee to a nunnery; why wouldst thou be a breeder of sinners?" I shall not bury myself within cloister walls. The future sinners will be like me, all nerves, oversensitive, not fit for any practical life,--in fact, artists without portfolios. But the deuce take it, it is not they, but Aniela I am thinking of. Have I a right to marry her,--to link that |
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