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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 i I had scarce thought of Job uotil I felt him trying to paw behind me : Hit hand w * i trembling as he laid it on my shoulder to steady his steps ; but there was something in hit ill-hewn features that * hor an indefinable ray of hope through my mind . His ntndv hair Wut plastered over his forehead , and his scant dress clung to him like a skin ; but though I recall his image now with a smile , I looked upon
him with a feeling far enough from amusement then . God bless thee my dear Job ! wherever in this unfit world thy fine spirit may be ful « filling its destiny ! ' He crept down carefully to the edge of the foaming abyss , till be stood with the breaking bubbles at his knees . I was at a log ? to know what he intended . She surely would not dare to ' attempt a jump to his arms from that slippery rock , and to reach her in any way seemed impossible .
Mr . Willis is a capital hand at " working up an interest . " He does this , at times , in a style that renders it difficult to keep one s seat . The following situation is of fearful and romantic excitement : —
" The next instant he threw himself forward , and while I covered my eye 3 in horror , with the flushing conviction that he had gone mad and flung himself into the hopeless whirlpool to reach her , she had crossed tne awful gulf , and lay trembling and exhausted at my feet ! He had thrown himself over the chasm , cnught the rock barely with the extremities of his tinkers , and with certain death if he missed his hold or slipped from his uncertain tenure , had sustained her with supernatural strength as she walked over his body .
" The guide providentially returned with a rope at the same instant and fastening it around one of his feet , we dragged him back through the whirlpool , and after a moment or two to recover from the suffocating immersion , he fell on his knees , and we joined him , I doubt not devoutly , in his inaudible thanks to God .
•• We had fairly * done ' Niagara . We had seen it by sunrise , sunder , moonlight ; from top and bottom , fasting and full , alone and together . We had learned by heart every green path on the inland of perpetual dew , which is set like an imperial emerald on its front , ( a poetical idea of my own much admired by Job , ) we had been grave , gay , tender , and sublime in its mighty neighbourhood , we bad become m > accustomed to the has * of its broad thunder , that it seemed to us like a natural property in the air , and we were unconscious of it for hours ; our voices haa become so tumd to its key , and our thoughts so tinged V > y its grand and perpetual anthem , that I almost doubted if the utr beyond the reach of its vibrations would not agonize us with its unnatural silence , and the common features of the world seem of an unutterable and frivolous littleness .
*« We were eating our lust breakfast there , in tender melaiu * holj ; mine far tije fulls , and Job's for the fulls , and Miss ¦ ¦ ¦ > to whotu I bad half u suspicion he bad mad * a declaration . " Job f f * id I . He looked up from his egg , My dew Job !'
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hitting * qf Advtnture . ** #
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1836, page 355, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2658/page/27/
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