Mathilda eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 171 pages of information about Mathilda.
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Mathilda eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 171 pages of information about Mathilda.

When I was twelve years old it occurred to my aunt that I ought to learn music; she herself played upon the harp.  It was with great hesitation that she persuaded herself to undertake my instruction; yet believing this accomplishment a necessary part of my education, and balancing the evils of this measure or of having some one in the house to instruct me she submitted to the inconvenience.  A harp was sent for that my playing might not interfere with hers, and I began:  she found me a docile and when I had conquered the first rudiments a very apt scholar.  I had acquired in my harp a companion in rainy days; a sweet soother of my feelings when any untoward accident ruffled them:  I often addressed it as my only friend; I could pour forth to it my hopes and loves, and I fancied that its sweet accents answered me.  I have now mentioned all my studies.

I was a solitary being, and from my infant years, ever since my dear nurse left me, I had been a dreamer.  I brought Rosalind and Miranda and the lady of Comus to life to be my companions, or on my isle acted over their parts imagining myself to be in their situations.  Then I wandered from the fancies of others and formed affections and intimacies with the aerial creations of my own brain—­but still clinging to reality I gave a name to these conceptions and nursed them in the hope of realization.  I clung to the memory of my parents; my mother I should never see, she was dead:  but the idea of [my] unhappy, wandering father was the idol of my imagination.  I bestowed on him all my affections; there was a miniature of him that I gazed on continually; I copied his last letter and read it again and again.  Sometimes it made me weep; and at other [times] I repeated with transport those words,—­“One day I may claim her at your hands.”  I was to be his consoler, his companion in after years.  My favourite vision was that when I grew up I would leave my aunt, whose coldness lulled my conscience, and disguised like a boy I would seek my father through the world.  My imagination hung upon the scene of recognition; his miniature, which I should continually wear exposed on my breast, would be the means and I imaged the moment to my mind a thousand and a thousand times, perpetually varying the circumstances.  Sometimes it would be in a desart; in a populous city; at a ball; we should perhaps meet in a vessel; and his first words constantly were, “My daughter, I love thee”!  What extactic moments have I passed in these dreams!  How many tears I have shed; how often have I laughed aloud.[13]

This was my life for sixteen years.  At fourteen and fifteen I often thought that the time was come when I should commence my pilgrimage, which I had cheated my own mind into believing was my imperious duty:  but a reluctance to quit my Aunt; a remorse for the grief which, I could not conceal from myself, I should occasion her for ever withheld me.  Sometimes when I had planned the next morning for my escape a word of more than usual affection from her lips made me postpone my resolution.  I reproached myself bitterly for what I called a culpable weakness; but this weakness returned upon me whenever the critical moment approached, and I never found courage to depart.[14]

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Project Gutenberg
Mathilda from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.