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whose mind had suddenly gone from him-I stared vacantly around me, like one alienated from common perceptions.

But I was young at that time, and the impression became gradually weakened, as I mingled in the business of life. It is now ten years since these events took place, and I sometimes think of them as unreal. Allan Clare was a dear friend to me-but there are times, when Allan and his sister, Margaret and her grandaughter, appear like personages of a dream— an idle dream.

CHAPTER XI.

STRANGE things have happened unto me-I seem scarce awake-but I will recollect my thoughts, and try to give an account of what has befallen me in the few last weeks.

Since my father's death our family have resided in London. I am in practice as a surgeon. there. My mother died two years after we left Widford.

A month or two ago I had been busying myself in drawing up the above narrative, intending to make it public. The employment had forced my mind to dwell upon facts, which had begun to fade from it-the memory of old times became vivid, and more vivid-I felt a strong desire to revisit the scenes of my native village -of the young loves of Rosamund and her Clare.

A kind of dread had hitherto kept me back; but I was restless now, till I had accomplished my wish. I set out one morning to walk-I reached Widford about eleven in the forenoon

-after a slight breakfast at my inn-where I was mortified to perceive, the old landlord did not know me again-(old Thomas Billet-he has often made angle rods for me when a child) -I rambled over all my accustomed haunts.

Our old house was vacant, and to be sold. I entered, unmolested, into the room that had been my bed-chamber. I kneeled down on the spot where my little bed had stood-I felt like a child-I prayed like one--it seemed as though old times were to return again—I looked round involuntarily, expecting to see some face I knew -but all was naked and mute. The bed was gone. My little pane of painted window, through which I loved to look at the sun, when I awoke in a fine summer's morning, was taken out, and had been replaced by one of common glass.

--

I visited, by turns, every chamber — they were all desolate and unfurnished, one excepted, in which the owner had left a harpsichord, probably to be sold-I touched the keys-I played some old Scottish tunes, which had delighted me when a child. Past associations revived with the music-blended with a sense of unreality, which at last became too powerful

I rushed out of the room to give vent to my feelings.

I wandered, scarce knowing where, into an old wood, that stands at the back of the house -we called it the Wilderness. A well-known form was missing, that used to meet me in this place it was thine, Ben Moxam the kindest, gentlest, politest, of human beings, yet was he nothing higher than a gardener in the family. Honest creature, thou didst never pass me in my childish rambles, without a soft speech, and a smile. I remember thy good-natured face. But there is one thing, for which I can never forgive thee, Ben Moxam-that thou didst join with an old maiden aunt of mine in a cruel plot, to lop away the hanging branches of the old fir trees.-I remember them sweeping to the ground.

I have often left my childish sports to ramble in this place-its glooms and its solitude had a mysterious charm for my young mind, nurturing within me that love of quietness and lonely thinking, which have accompanied me to maturer years.

In this Wilderness I found myself after a ten years' absence. Its stately fir trees were yet

standing, with all their luxuriant company of underwood - the squirrel was there, and the melancholy cooings of the wood-pigeon—all was as I had left it-my heart softened at the sight-it seemed, as though my character had been suffering a change, since I forsook these shades.

My parents were both dead-I had no counsellor left, no experience of age to direct me, no sweet voice of reproof. The LORD had taken away my friends, and I knew not where he had laid them. I paced round the wilderness, seeking a comforter. I prayed, that I might be restored to that state of innocence; in which I had wandered in those shades.

Methought, my request was heard for it seemed as though the stains of manhood were passing from me, and I were relapsing into the purity and simplicity of childhood. I was content to have been moulded into a perfect child. I stood still, as in a trance. I dreamed that I was enjoying a personal intercourse with my heavenly Father-and, extravagantly, put off the shoes from my feet-for the place where I stood, I thought, was holy ground.

This state of mind could not last long-and I

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