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Wilfrid Cumbermede
Chapter 20. A Dream
George MacDonald
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       _ CHAPTER XX. A DREAM
       The best immediate result of my illness was that I learned to love Charley Osborne dearly. We renewed an affection resembling from afar that of Shakspere for his nameless friend; we anticipated that informing _In Memoriam_. Lest I be accused of infinite arrogance, let me remind my reader that the sun is reflected in a dewdrop as in the ocean.
       One night I had a strange dream, which is perhaps worth telling for the involution of its consciousness.
       I thought I was awake in my bed, and Charley asleep in his. I lay looking into the room. It began to waver and change. The night-light enlarged and receded; and the walls trembled and waved. The light had got behind them, and shone through them.
       'Charley! Charley!' I cried; for I was frightened.
       'I heard him move: but before he reached me, I was lying on a lawn, surrounded by trees, with the moon shining through them from behind. The next moment Charley was by my side.
       'Isn't it prime?' he said. 'It's all over.'
       'What do you mean, Charley?' I asked.
       'I mean that we're both dead now. It's not so very bad--is it?'
       'Nonsense, Charley!' I returned; '_I_'m not dead. I'm as wide alive as ever I was. Look here.'
       So saying, I sprung to my feet, and drew myself up before him.
       'Where's your worst pain?' said Charley, with a curious expression in his tone.
       'Here,' I answered. 'No; it's not; it's in my back. No, it isn't. It's nowhere. I haven't got any pain.'
       Charley laughed a low laugh, which sounded as sweet as strange. It was to the laughter of the world 'as moonlight is to sunlight,' but not 'as water is to wine,' for what it had lost in sound it had gained in smile.
       'Tell me now you're not dead!' he exclaimed triumphantly.
       'But,' I insisted, 'don't you see I'm alive? _You_ may be dead for anything I know--but I _am not_--I know that.'
       'You're just as dead as I am,' he said. 'Look here.'
       A little way off, in an open plot by itself, stood a little white rose tree, half mingled with the moonlight. Charley went up to it, stepped on the topmost twig, and stood: the bush did not even bend under him.
       'Very well,' I answered. 'You are dead, I confess. But now, look you here.'
       I went to a red rose-bush which stood at some distance, blanched in the moon, set my foot on the top of it, and made as if I would ascend, expecting to crush it, roses and all, to the ground. But behold! I was standing on my red rose opposite Charley on his white.
       'I told you so,' he cried, across the moonlight, and his voice sounded as if it came from the moon far away.
       'Oh Charley!' I cried, 'I'm so frightened!'
       'What are you frightened at?'
       'At you. You're dead, you know.'
       'It is a good thing, Wilfrid,' he rejoined, in a tone of some reproach, 'that I am not frightened at you for the same reason; for what would happen then?'
       'I don't know. I suppose you would go away and leave me alone in this ghostly light.'
       'If I were frightened at you as you are at me, we should not be able to see each other at all. If you take courage the light will grow.'
       'Don't leave me, Charley,' I cried, and flung myself from my tree towards his. I found myself floating, half reclined on the air. We met midway each in the other's arms.
       'I don't know where I am, Charley.'
       'That is my father's rectory.'
       He pointed to the house, which I had not yet observed. It lay quite dark in the moonlight, for not a window shone from within.
       'Don't leave me, Charley.'
       'Leave you! I should think not, Wilfrid. I have been long enough without you already.'
       'Have you been long dead, then, Charley?'
       'Not very long. Yes, a long time. But, indeed, I don't know. We don't count time as we used to count it.--I want to go and see my father. It is long since I saw _him_, anyhow. Will you come?'
       'If you think I might--if you wish it,' I said, for I had no great desire to see Mr Osborne. 'Perhaps he won't care to see me.'
       'Perhaps not,' said Charley, with another low silvery laugh. 'Come along.'
       We glided over the grass. A window stood a little open on the second floor. We floated up, entered, and stood by the bedside of Charley's father. He lay in a sound sleep.
       'Father! father!' said Charley, whispering in his ear as he lay--'it's all right. You need not be troubled about me any more.'
       Mr Osborne turned on his pillow.
       'He's dreaming about us now,' said Charley. 'He sees us both standing by his bed.'
       But the next moment Mr Osborne sat up, stretched out his arms towards us with the open palms outwards, as if pushing us away from him, and cried,
       'Depart from me, all evil-doers. O Lord! do I not hate them that hate thee?'
       He followed with other yet more awful words which I never could recall. I only remember the feeling of horror and amazement they left behind. I turned to Charley. He had disappeared, and I found myself lying in the bed beside Mr Osborne. I gave a great cry of dismay--when there was Charley again beside me, saying,
       'What's the matter, Wilfrid? Wake up. My father's not here.'
       I did wake, but until I had felt in the bed I could not satisfy myself that Mr Osborne was indeed not there.
       'You've been talking in your sleep. I could hardly get you waked,' said Charley, who stood there in his shirt.
       'Oh Charley!' I cried, 'I've had such a dream!'
       'What was it, Wilfrid?'
       'Oh! I can't talk about it yet,' I answered.
       I never did tell him that dream; for even then I was often uneasy about him--he was so sensitive. The affections of my friend were as hoops of steel; his feelings a breath would ripple. Oh, my Charley! if ever we meet in that land so vaguely shadowed in my dream, will you not know that I loved you heartily well? Shall I not hasten' to lay bare my heart before you--the priest of its confessional? Oh, Charley! when the truth is known, the false will fly asunder as the Autumn leaves in the wind; but the true, whatever their faults, will only draw together the more tenderly that they have sinned against each other. _
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本书目录

Introduction
Chapter 1. Where I Find Myself
Chapter 2. My Uncle And Aunt
Chapter 3. At The Top Of The Chimney-Stair
Chapter 4. The Pendulum
Chapter 5. I Have Lessons
Chapter 6. I Cobble
Chapter 7. The Sword On The Wall
Chapter 8. I Go To School, And Grannie Leaves It
Chapter 9. I Sin And Repent
Chapter 10. I Build Castles
Chapter 11. A Talk With My Uncle
Chapter 12. The House-Steward
Chapter 13. The Leads
Chapter 14. The Ghost
Chapter 15 Away
Chapter 16. The Ice-Cave
Chapter 17. Among The Mountains
Chapter 18. Again The Ice-Cave
Chapter 19. Charley Nurses Me
Chapter 20. A Dream
Chapter 21. The Frozen Stream
Chapter 22. An Explosion
Chapter 23. Only A Link
Chapter 24. Charley At Oxford
Chapter 25. My White Mare
Chapter 26. A Riding Lesson
Chapter 27. A Disappointment
Chapter 28. In London
Chapter 29. Changes
Chapter 30. Proposals
Chapter 31. Arrangements
Chapter 32. Preparations
Chapter 33. Assistance
Chapter 34. An Expostulation
Chapter 35. A Talk With Charley
Chapter 36. Tapestry
Chapter 37. The Old Chest
Chapter 38. Mary Osborne
Chapter 39. A Storm
Chapter 40. A Dream
Chapter 41. A Waking
Chapter 42. A Talk About Suicide
Chapter 43. The Sword In The Scale
Chapter 44. I Part With My Sword
Chapter 45. Umberden Church
Chapter 46. My Folio
Chapter 47. The Letters And Their Story
Chapter 48. Only A Link
Chapter 49. A Disclosure
Chapter 50. The Dates
Chapter 51. Charley And Clara
Chapter 52. Lilith Meets With A Misfortune
Chapter 53. Too Late
Chapter 54. Isolation
Chapter 55. Attempts And Coincidences
Chapter 56. The Last Vision
Chapter 57. Another Dream
Chapter 58. The Darkest Hour
Chapter 59. The Dawn
Chapter 60. My Great-Grandmother
Chapter 61. The Parish Register
Chapter 62. A Foolish Triumph
Chapter 63. A Collision
Chapter 64. Yet Once
Chapter 65. Conclusion