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Godolphin
Chapter 57. Superstition...
Edward Bulwer-Lytton
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       _ CHAPTER LVII. SUPERSTITION.--ITS WONDERFUL EFFECTS
       It was perfectly true that there had appeared in London a person of the female sex who, during the last few years, had been much noted on the Continent for the singular boldness with which she had promulgated the wildest doctrines, and the supposed felicity which had attended her vaticinations. She professed belief in all the dogmas that preceded the dawn of modern philosophy; and a strange, vivid, yet gloomy eloquence that pervaded her language gave effect to theories which, while incomprehensible to the many, were alluring to the few. None knew her native country, although she was believed to come from the North of Europe. Her way of life was lonely, her habits eccentric; she sought no companionship; she was beautiful, but not of this earth's beauty; men admired, but courted not; she, at least, lived apart from the reach of human passions. In fact, the strange Liehbur, for such was the name the prophetness was known by (and she assumed before it the French title of Madame), was not an impostor, but a fanatic: the chords of the brain were touched, and the sound they gave back was erring and imperfect. She was mad, but with a certain method in her madness; a cold, and preternatural, and fearful spirit abode within her, and spoke from her lips--its voice froze herself, and she was more awed by her own oracles than her listeners themselves.
       In Vienna and in Paris her renown was great, and even terrible: the greatest men in those capitals had consulted her, and spoke of her decrees with a certain reverence; her insanity thrilled there, and they mistook the cause. Besides, in the main, she was right in the principle she addressed: she worked on the imagination, and the imagination afterwards fulfilled what she predicted. Every one knows what dark things may be done by our own fantastic persuasions; belief insures the miracles it credits. Men dream they shall die within a certain hour; the hour comes, and the dream is realised. The most potent wizardries are less potent than fancy itself. Macbeth was a murderer, not because the witches predicted, but because their prediction aroused the thoughts of murder. And this principle of action the prophetess knew well: she appealed to that attribute common to us all, the foolish and the wise, and on that fruitful ground she sowed her soothsayings.
       In London there are always persons to run after anything new, and Madame Liehbur became at once the rage.--I myself have seen a minister hurrying from her door with his cloak about his face; and one of the coldest of living sages confesses that she told him what he believes, by mere human means, she could not have discovered. Delusion all! But what age is free from it?
       The race of the nineteenth century boast their lights, but run as madly after any folly as their fathers in the eighth. What are the prophecies of St. Simon but a species of sorcery? Why believe the external more than the inner miracle?
       * * * * *
       There were but a few persons present at Lady Erpingham's, and when Radclyffe entered, Madame Liehbur was the theme of the general conversation. So many anecdotes were told, so much that was false was mingled with so much that seemed true, that Lady Erpingham's curiosity was excited, and she resolved to seek the modern Cassandra with the first opportunity. Godolphin sat apart from the talkers playing a quiet game at ecarte. Constance's eyes stole ever and anon to his countenance; and when she turned at length away with a sigh, she saw that Radclyffe's deep and inscrutable gaze was bent upon her, and the proud countess blushed, although she scarce knew why. _
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本书目录

Preface
Chapter 1. The Death-Bed Of John Vernon...
Chapter 2. Remark On The Tenure Of Life...
Chapter 3. The Hero Introduced To Our Reader's Notice...
Chapter 4. Percy's First Adventure As A Free Agent
Chapter 5. The Mummers.--Godolphin In Love...
Chapter 6. Percy Godolphin The Guest Of Saville...
Chapter 7. Saville Excused For Having Human Affections...
Chapter 8. Godolphin's Passion For The Stage...
Chapter 9. The Legacy.--A New Deformity In Saville...
Chapter 10. The Education Of Constance's Mind
Chapter 11. Conversation Between Lady Erpingham And Constance...
Chapter 12. Description Of Godolphin's House...
Chapter 13. A Ball Announced...
Chapter 14. Conversation Between Godolphin And Constance...
Chapter 15. The Feelings Of Constance And Godolphin Towards Each Other...
Chapter 16. Godolphin's Return Home...
Chapter 17. Constance At Her Toilet...
Chapter 18. The Interview.--The Crisis Of A Life
Chapter 19. A Rare And Exquisite Of The Best (worst) School...
Chapter 20. Fanny Millinger Once More...
Chapter 21. An Event Of Great Importance...
Chapter 22. The Bride Alone...
Chapter 23. An Insight Into The Real Grande Monde...
Chapter 24. The Married State Of Constance
Chapter 25. The Pleasure Of Retaliating Humiliation...
Chapter 26. The Visionary And His Daughter...
Chapter 27. A Conversation Little Appertaining To The Nineteenth Century...
Chapter 28. The Youth Of Lucilla Volktman.--A Mysterious Conversation...
Chapter 29. The Effect Of Years And Experience...
Chapter 30. Magnetism...
Chapter 31. A Scene.--Lucilla's Strange Conduct...
Chapter 32. The Weakness Of All Virtue Springing Only From The Feelings
Chapter 33. Return To Lady Erpingham...
Chapter 34. Ambition Vindicated...
Chapter 35. Godolphin At Rome...
Chapter 36. Dialogue Between Godolphin And Saville...
Chapter 37. An Evening With Constance
Chapter 38. Constance's Undiminished Love For Godolphin...
Chapter 39. Lucilla's Letter...
Chapter 40. Tivoli...
Chapter 41. Lucilla...
Chapter 42. Joy And Despair
Chapter 43. Love Strong As Death, And Not Less Bitter
Chapter 44. Godolphin
Chapter 45. The Declaration...
Chapter 46. The Bridals...
Chapter 47. News Of Lucilla
Chapter 48. In Which Two Persons, Permanently United..
Chapter 49. The Return To London...
Chapter 50. Godolphin's Soliloquy...
Chapter 51. Godolphin's Course Of Life...
Chapter 52. Radclyffe And Godolphin Converse...
Chapter 53. Fanny Behind The Scenes...
Chapter 54. The Career Of Constance...
Chapter 55. The Death Of George IV...
Chapter 56. The Roue Has Become A Valetudinarian...
Chapter 57. Superstition...
Chapter 58 The Empire Of Time And Of Love...
Chapter 59. Constance Makes A Discovery...
Chapter 60. The Reform Bill.--A Very Short
Chapter 61. The Soliloquy Of The Soothsayer...
Chapter 62. In Which The Common Life Glides Into The Strange...
Chapter 63. A Meeting Between Constance And The Prophetess
Chapter 64. Lucilla's Flight...
Chapter 65. New Views Of A Privileged Order...
Chapter 66. The Journey And The Surprise...
Chapter 67. The Full Renewal Of Love...
Chapter 68. The Last Conversation Between Godolphin And Constance...
Chapter The Last. A Dread Meeting...