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like one that has thirsted all his life long for the smile of youth

and beauty; and seen it fly his presence as the wave ebbed from the

parched lips of him whose fabled punishment is the perpetual type of

human longing and disappointment?  What would become of him; if this

fresh soul should stoop upon him in her first young passion; as the

flamingo drops out of the sky upon some lonely and dark lagoon in

the marshes of Cagliari; with a flutter of scarlet feathers and a

kindling of strange fires in the shadowy waters that hold her

burning image?



Marry her; of course?Why; no; not of course。  I should think the

chance less; on the whole; that he would be willing to marry her

than she to marry him。



There is one other thing that might happen。  If the interest he

awakes in her gets to be a deep one; and yet has nothing of love in

it; she will glance off from him into some great passion or other。

All excitements run to love in women of a certainlet us not say

age; but youth。  An electrical current passing through a coil of

wire makes a magnet of a bar of iron lying within it; but not

touching it。  So a woman is turned into a love…magnet by a tingling

current of life running round her。  I should like to see one of them

balanced on a pivot properly adjusted; and watch if she did not turn

so as to point north and south;as she would; if the love…currents

are like those of the earth our mother。



Pray; do you happen to remember Wordsworth's 〃Boy of Windermere〃?

This boy used to put his hands to his mouth; and shout aloud;

mimicking the hooting of the owls; who would answer him



               〃with quivering peals;

     And long halloos and screams; and echoes loud

     Redoubled and redoubled。〃



When they failed to answer him; and he hung listening intently for

their voices; he would sometimes catch the faint sound of far

distant waterfalls; or the whole scene around him would imprint

itself with new force upon his perceptions。 Read the sonnet; if

you please;it is Wordsworth all over;trivial in subject; solemn

in style; vivid in description; prolix in detail; true meta…

physically; but immensely suggestive of 〃imagination;〃 to use a mild

term; when related as an actual fact of a sprightly youngster。

All I want of it is to enforce the principle; that; when the door of

the soul is once opened to a guest; there is no knowing who will

come in next。



Our young girl keeps up her early habit of sketching heads and

characters。  Nobody is; I should think; more faithful and exact in

the drawing of the academical figures given her as lessons; but

there is a perpetual arabesque of fancies that runs round the margin

of her drawings; and there is one book which I know she keeps to run

riot in; where; if anywhere; a shrewd eye would be most likely to

read her thoughts。  This book of hers I mean to see; if I can get at

it honorably。



I have never yet crossed the threshold of the Little Gentleman's

chamber。  How he lives; when he once gets within it; I can only

guess。  His hours are late; as I have said; often; on waking late in

the night; I see the light through cracks in his window…shutters on

the wall of the house opposite。  If the times of witchcraft were not

over; I should be afraid to be so close a neighbor to a place from

which there come such strange noises。  Sometimes it is the dragging

of something heavy over the floor; that makes me shiver to hear it;…

…it sounds so like what people that kill other people have to do now

and then。  Occasionally I hear very sweet strains of music;whether

of a wind or stringed instrument; or a human voice; strange as it

may seem; I have often tried to find out; but through the partition

I could not be quite sure。  If I have not heard a woman cry and

moan; and then again laugh as though she would die laughing; I have

heard sounds so like them thatI am a fool to confess itI have

covered my head with the bedclothes; for I have had a fancy in my

dreams; that I could hardly shake off when I woke up; about that so…

called witch that was his great…grandmother; or whatever it was;a

sort of fancy that she visited the Little Gentleman;a young woman

in old…fashioned dress; with a red ring round her white neck;not a

neck…lace; but a dull…stain。



Of course you don't suppose that I have any foolish superstitions

about the matter;I; the Professor; who have seen enough to take

all that nonsense out of any man's head!  It is not our beliefs that

frighten us half so much as our fancies。  A man not only believes;

but knows he runs a risk; whenever he steps into a railroad car; but

it does n't worry him much。  On the other hand; carry that man

across a pasture a little way from some dreary country…village; and

show him an old house where there were strange deaths a good many

years ago; and there are rumors of ugly spots on the walls;the old

man hung himself in the garret; that is certain; and ever since the

country…people have called it 〃the haunted house;〃the owners

have n't been able to let it since the last tenants left on account

of the noises;so it has fallen into sad decay; and the moss grows

on the rotten shingles of the roof; and the clapboards have turned

black; and the windows rattle like teeth that chatter with fear; and

the walls of the house begin to lean as if its knees were shaking;

take the man who did n't mind the real risk of the cars to that old

house; on some dreary November evening; and ask him to sleep there

alone;how do you think he will like it?  He doesn't believe one

word of ghosts;but then he knows; that; whether waking or

sleeping; his imagination will people the haunted chambers with

ghostly images。  It is not what we believe; as I said before; that

frightens us commonly; but what we conceive。  A principle that

reaches a good way if I am not mistaken。  I say; then; that; if

these odd sounds coming from the Little Gentleman's chamber

sometimes make me nervous; so that I cannot get to sleep; it is not

because I suppose he is engaged in any unlawful or mysterious way。

The only wicked suggestion that ever came into my head was one that

was founded on the landlady's story of his having a pile of gold; it

was a ridiculous fancy; besides; I suspect the story of sweating

gold was only one of the many fables got up to make the Jews odious

and afford a pretext for plundering them。  As for the sound like a

woman laughing and crying; I never said it was a woman's voice; for;

in the first place; I could only hear indistinctly; and; secondly;

he may have an organ; or some queer instrument or other; with what

they call the vox humana stop。  If he moves his bed round to get

away from the window; or for any such reason; there is nothing very

frightful in that simple operation。  Most of our foolish conceits

explain themselves in some such simple way。  And; yet; for all that;

I confess; that; when I woke up the other evening; and heard; first

a sweet complaining cry; and then footsteps; and then the dragging

sound;nothing but his bed; I am quite sure;I felt a stirring in

the roots of my hair as the feasters did in Keats's terrible poem of

〃Lamia。〃



There is nothing very odd in my feeling nervous when I happen to lie

awake and get listening for sounds。  Just keep your ears open any

time after midnight; when you are lying in bed in a lone attic of a

dark night。  What horrid; strange; suggestive; unaccountable noises

you will hear!  The stillness of night is a vulgar error。  All the

dead things seem to be alive。  Crack!  That is the old chest of

drawers; you never hear it crack in the daytime。  Creak!  There's a

door ajar; you know you shut them all。



Where can that latch be that rattles so?  Is anybody trying it

softly?  or; worse than any body; is?  (Cold shiver。) Then a

sudden gust that jars all the windows;very strange!there does

not seem to be any wind about that it belongs to。  When it stops;

you hear the worms boring in the powdery beams overhead。  Then steps

outside;a stray animal; no doubt。  All right;but a gentle

moisture breaks out all over you; and then something like a whistle

or a cry;another gust of wind; perhaps; that accounts for the

rustling that just made your heart roll over and tumble about; so

that it felt more like a live rat under your ribs than a part of

your own body; then a crash of something that has fallen;blown

over; very likely Pater noster; qui es in coelis! for you are

damp and cold; and sitting bolt upright; and the bed trembling so

that the death…watch is frightened and has stopped ticking!



No;night is an awful time for strange noises and secret doings。

Who ever dreamed; till one of our sleepless neighbors told us of it;

of that Walpurgis gathering of birds and beasts of prey;foxes; and

owls; and crows; and eagles; that come from all the country round on

moonshiny nights to crunch the clams and muscles; and pick out the

eyes of dead fishes that the storm has thrown on Chelsea Beach?  Our

old mother Nature has pleasant and cheery tones enough for us when

she comes in her dress of blue and gold over the eastern hill…tops;

but when she follows us up…stairs to our beds in her suit of black

velvet and diamonds; every creak of her sandals and every whisper of

her lips is full of mystery and fear。



You understand; then; distinctly; that I do not believe there is

anything about this singular little neighbor of mine which is as it

should not be。  Probably a visit to his room would clear up all that

has puzzled me; and make me laugh at the notions which began; I

suppose; in nightmares; and ended by keeping my imagination at work

so as almost to make me uncomfortable at times。  But it is not so

easy to visit him as some of our other boarders; for various reasons

which I will not stop to mention。  I think some of them are rather

pleased to get 〃the Professor〃 under their ceilings。



The young man John; for instance; asked

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