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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Untitled Article
: > " 4 ^ ^ -J ^ V T ^^ ow * wWeb d on tjx ^ Hw | b in a large ^ rm ^ baixv . fjifr : * r Jg ^ JTa r «? ifyleAtly :. nx » r % ^ i ^ gF ill-lxealth > yetwitfi somethHig so g ^ tle atid mi ^ aftWy in Jier appearance as at once to attract and p ipage , Rising from h $ r chair , she embraced me , exclaiming , * I know you from yotir likeness to your mother—dear , dear Rupert . ' " That name of itself touched a chord which for many years had been mine . My mother had called me by that name ; so indeed had my father , when he gave me any other appellation except ' You sir V 'You dog you ! ' My uncle , after whom I was also called John , chose to drop what he called a silly romantic name . Rupert breathed of a dear htfrae , and my mother ' s kiss ; and I looked enquiringly on her who gave it me * when my attention was attracted by the vision of a lovely girl who stood . Bear us , radiant in youth and beauty . Who could she be ? And who was she who knew my name ? It was an enigma ; but one full of promise to me , who had so long been exiled from the charities of life ; and who , as the hart panteth after the water brooks / panted for love . " - ~? bl . ii . p . 174—8 .
The beautiful girl was Alithea Rivers , and the impression which that day made on the feelings and imagination of Fittkher was never obliterated . The cottage became the home % q which his heart turned throughout his boyhood and youth . T ? i }> & r § fining and softening influence of Mrs Rivers , and the affection apd companionship of Alithea , brought out all the better parts of his nature . The character of Alithea is more developed by her actions than by description , but all that is Said of her is in perfect accordance with the kind of nature which , doming in contact with one of deep passion , was lively tp Ittodjiee intensity of feeling , and , according to after-circumsj&tijfces , intensity either of joy or woe . The following passage is | lu illustration : —
^ She had two qualities which I have never seen equalled separately , but which , united in her , formed a spell no one could resist—the most acute sensitiveness to joy or grief in her own person , and the most lively sympathy with these feelings in others . I have seen her so enter heart and soul into the sentiments of one in whom she was interested , that her whole being took the colour of their mood ; and her very features and complexion appeared to alter in unison with theirs . Her tempter was never ruffled ; she could not be angry ; she grieved too AetiplffoT those who did wrong : but she could be glad ; and never have I wen Joy , the very sunshine of the soul , so cloudlessly expressed as in feer-counftenaBce . Her spirits were high even to wildness ; but at their bfeigk& » tempered by such thought for others , such inbred feminine softnf& 4 , athfltt her most exuberant gaiety resembled heart-cheering music , and made e&ph bosom respond /'—Vol , ii . p . 182 . natu re of
T % ^ Falkner , on whom she made so powerful an ij $ pressi < M ^ is , equally finely described , and may be partly eony& ; p d [ ¦ i ^ y .- » 4 extract , which will al&o show the kind of traiftiwg kl ^ U )^ t ^ n /^ T $ apt tQ receive : — v < v - « ? $ H £ | r * j !^ siibdue nay hatred ) to
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S opene ^ l Fqlkwr .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), April 1, 1837, page 232, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1830/page/42/
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