Seraphita eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 184 pages of information about Seraphita.

Seraphita eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 184 pages of information about Seraphita.

“How strange!” exclaimed Wilfrid.

“I hear delightful sounds,” said Minna.

“Well,” said the pastor, “it is all plain enough; she is going to bed.”

David had entered the house.  The others took their way back in silence; none of them interpreted the vision in the same manner, —­Monsieur Becker doubted, Minna adored, Wilfrid longed.

Wilfrid was a man about thirty-six years of age.  His figure, though broadly developed, was not wanting in symmetry.  Like most men who distinguish themselves above their fellows, he was of medium height; his chest and shoulders were broad, and his neck short,—­a characteristic of those whose hearts are near their heads; his hair was black, thick, and fine; his eyes, of a yellow brown, had, as it were, a solar brilliancy, which proclaimed with what avidity his nature aspired to Light.  Though these strong and virile features were defective through the absence of an inward peace,—­granted only to a life without storms or conflicts,—­they plainly showed the inexhaustible resources of impetuous senses and the appetites of instinct; just as every motion revealed the perfection of the man’s physical apparatus, the flexibility of his senses, and their fidelity when brought into play.  This man might contend with savages, and hear, as they do, the tread of enemies in distant forests; he could follow a scent in the air, a trail on the ground, or see on the horizon the signal of a friend.  His sleep was light, like that of all creatures who will not allow themselves to be surprised.  His body came quickly into harmony with the climate of any country where his tempestuous life conducted him.  Art and science would have admired his organization in the light of a human model.  Everything about him was symmetrical and well-balanced,—­action and heart, intelligence and will.  At first sight he might be classed among purely instinctive beings, who give themselves blindly up to the material wants of life; but in the very morning of his days he had flung himself into a higher social world, with which his feelings harmonized; study had widened his mind, reflection had sharpened his power of thought, and the sciences had enlarged his understanding.  He had studied human laws, —­the working of self-interests brought into conflict by the passions, and he seemed to have early familiarized himself with the abstractions on which societies rest.  He had pored over books,—­those deeds of dead humanity; he had spent whole nights of pleasure in every European capital; he had slept on fields of battle the night before the combat and the night that followed victory.  His stormy youth may have flung him on the deck of some corsair and sent him among the contrasting regions of the globe; thus it was that he knew the actions of a living humanity.  He knew the present and the past,—­a double history; that of to-day, that of other days.  Many men have been, like Wilfrid, equally powerful by the Hand, by the Heart, by the Head; like him, the

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Seraphita from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.