Varney the Vampire eBook

Thomas Peckett Prest
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,239 pages of information about Varney the Vampire.

Varney the Vampire eBook

Thomas Peckett Prest
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,239 pages of information about Varney the Vampire.

“And you will speak to me?”

“I will.”

“Having your promise, then, I am content, Varney.”

“But you must be secret; not even in the wildest waste of nature, where you can well presume that naught but Heaven can listen to your whisperings, must you utter one word of that which I shall tell to you.”

“Alas!” said Charles, “I dare not take such a confidence; I have said that it is not for myself; I seek such knowledge of what you are, and what you have been, but it is for another so dear to me, that all the charms of life that make up other men’s delights, equal not the witchery of one glance from her, speaking as it does of the glorious light from that Heaven which is eternal, from whence she sprung.”

“And you reject my communication,” said Varney, “because I will not give you leave to expose it to Flora Bannerworth?”

“It must be so.”

“And you are most anxious to hear that which I have to relate?”

“Most anxious, indeed—­indeed, most anxious.”

“Then have I found in that scruple which besets your mind, a better argument for trusting you, than had ye been loud in protestation.  Had your promises of secrecy been but those which come from the lip, and not from the heart, my confidence would not have been rejected on such grounds.  I think that I dare trust you.”

“With leave to tell to Flora that which you shall communicate.”

“You may whisper it to her, but to no one else, without my special leave and licence.”

“I agree to those terms, and will religiously preserve them.”

“I do not doubt you for one moment; and now I will tell to you what never yet has passed my lips to mortal man.  Now will I connect together some matters which you may have heard piecemeal from others.”

“What others are they?”

“Dr. Chillingworth, and he who once officiated as a London hangman.”

“I have heard something from those quarters.”

“Listen then to me, and you shall better understand that which you have heard.  Some years ago, it matters not the number, on a stormy night, towards the autumn of the year, two men sat alone in poverty, and that species of distress which beset the haughty, profligate, daring man, who has been accustomed all his life to its most enticing enjoyments, but never to that industry which alone ought to produce them, and render them great and magnificent.”

“Two men; and who were they?”

“I was one.  Look upon me!  I was of those men; and strong and evil passions were battling in my heart.”

“And the other!”

“Was Marmaduke Bannerworth.”

“Gracious Heaven! the father of her whom I adore; the suicide.”

“Yes, the same; that man stained with a thousand vices—­blasted by a thousand crimes—­the father of her who partakes nothing of his nature, who borrows nothing from his memory but his name—­was the man who there sat with me, plotting and contriving how, by fraud or violence, we were to lead our usual life of revelry and wild audacious debauch.”

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Project Gutenberg
Varney the Vampire from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.