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    Matilda

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      Farewell, my only living friend; you are the sole tie that binds me to existence, and now I break it. It gives me no pain to leave you; nor can our separation give you much. You never regarded me as one of this world, but rather as a being, who for some penance was sent from the Kingdom of Shadows; and she passed a few days weeping on the earth and longing to return to her native soil. You will weep but they will be tears of gentleness. I would, if I thought that it would lessen your regret, tell you to smile and congratulate me on my departure from the misery you beheld me endure. I would say; Woodville, rejoice with your friend, I triumph now and am most happy. But I check these expressions; these may not be the consolations of the living; they weep for their own misery, and not for that of the being they have lost. No; shed a few natural tears due to my memory: and if you ever visit my grave, pluck from thence a flower, and lay it to your heart; for your heart is the only tomb in which my memory will be interred.

      My death is rapidly approaching and you are not near to watch the flitting and vanishing of my spirit. Do not regret this; for death is a too terrible object for the living. It is one of those adversities which hurt instead of purifying the heart; for it is so intense a misery that it hardens and dulls the feelings. Dreadful as the time was when I pursued my father towards the ocean, and found there only his lifeless corpse; yet for my own sake I should prefer that to the watching one by one his senses fade; his pulse weaken – and sleeplessly as it were devour his life in gazing. To see life in his limbs and to know that soon life would no longer be there; to see the warm breath issue from his lips and to know they would soon be chill – I will not continue to trace this frightful picture; you suffered this torture once; I never did. And the remembrance fills your heart sometimes with bitter despair when otherwise your feelings would have melted into soft sorrow.

      So day by day I become weaker, and life flickers in my wasting form, as a lamp about to lose its vivifying oil. I now behold the glad sun of May. It was May, four years ago, that I first saw my beloved father; it was in May, three years ago that my folly destroyed the only being I was doomed to love. May is returned, and I die. Three days ago, the anniversary of our meeting; and, alas! of our eternal separation, after a day of killing emotion, I caused myself to be led once more to behold the face of nature. I caused myself to be carried to some meadows some miles distant from my cottage; the grass was being mowed, and there was the scent of hay in the fields; all the earth looked fresh and its inhabitants happy. Evening approached and I beheld the sun set. Three years ago and on that day and hour it shone through the branches and leaves of the beech wood and its beams flickered upon the countenance of him whom I then beheld for the last time. I now saw that divine orb, gilding all the clouds with unwonted splendour, sink behind the horizon; it disappeared from a world where he whom I would seek exists not; it approached a world where he exists not. Why do I weep so bitterly? Why does my heart heave with vain endeavour to cast aside the bitter anguish that covers it ‘as the waters cover the sea’. I go from this world where he is no longer and soon I shall meet him in another.

      Farewell, Woodville, the turf will soon be green on my grave; and the violets will bloom on it. There is my hope and my expectation; yours are in this world; may they be fulfilled.

      BOCCACCIO · Mrs Rosie and the Priest

      GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS · As kingfishers catch fire

      The Saga of Gunnlaug Serpent-tongue

      THOMAS DE QUINCEY · On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts

      FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE · Aphorisms on Love and Hate

      JOHN RUSKIN · Traffic

      PU SONGLING · Wailing Ghosts

      JONATHAN SWIFT · A Modest Proposal

      Three Tang Dynasty Poets

      WALT WHITMAN · On the Beach at Night Alone

      KENKŌ · A Cup of Sake Beneath the Cherry Trees

      BALTASAR GRACIÁN · How to Use Your Enemies

      JOHN KEATS · The Eve of St Agnes

      THOMAS HARDY · Woman much missed

      GUY DE MAUPASSANT · Femme Fatale

      MARCO POLO · Travels in the Land of Serpents and Pearls

      SUETONIUS · Caligula

      APOLLONIUS OF RHODES · Jason and Medea

      ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON · Olalla

      KARL MARX AND FRIEDRICH ENGELS · The Communist Manifesto

      PETRONIUS · Trimalchio’s Feast

      JOHANN PETER HEBEL · How a Ghastly Story Was Brought to Light by a Common or Garden Butcher’s Dog

      HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN · The Tinder Box

      RUDYARD KIPLING · The Gate of the Hundred Sorrows

      DANTE · Circles of Hell

      HENRY MAYHEW · Of Street Piemen

      HAFEZ · The nightingales are drunk

      GEOFFREY CHAUCER · The Wife of Bath

      MICHEL DE MONTAIGNE · How We Weep and Laugh at the Same Thing

      THOMAS NASHE · The Terrors of the Night

      EDGAR ALLAN POE · The Tell-Tale Heart

      MARY KINGSLEY · A Hippo Banquet

      JANE AUSTEN · The Beautifull Cassandra

      ANTON CHEKHOV · Gooseberries

      SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE · Well, they are gone, and here must I remain

      JOHANN WOLFGANG VON GOETHE · Sketchy, Doubtful, Incomplete Jottings

      CHARLES DICKENS · The Great Winglebury Duel

      HERMAN MELVILLE · The Maldive Shark

      ELIZABETH GASKELL · The Old Nurse’s Story

      NIKOLAY LESKOV · The Steel Flea

      HONORÉ DE BALZAC · The Atheist’s Mass

      CHARLOTTE PERKINS GILMAN · The Yellow Wall-Paper

      C. P. CAVAFY · Remember, Body …

      FYODOR DOSTOEVSKY · The Meek One

      GUSTAVE FLAUBERT · A Simple Heart

      NIKOLAI GOGOL · The Nose

      SAMUEL PEPYS · The Great Fire of London

      EDITH WHARTON · The Reckoning

      HENRY JAMES · The Figure in the Carpet

      WILFRED OWEN · Anthem For Doomed Youth

      WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART · My Dearest Father

      PLATO · Socrates’ Defence

      CHRISTINA ROSSETTI · Goblin Market

      Sindbad the Sailor

      SOPHOCLES · Antigone

      RYŪNOSUKE AKUTAGAWA · The Life of a Stupid Man

      LEO TOLSTOY · How Much Land Does A Man Need?

      GIORGIO VASARI · Leonardo da Vinci

      OSCAR WILDE · Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime

      SHEN FU · The Old Man of the Moon

      AESOP · The Dolphins, the Whales and the Gudgeon

      MATSUO BASHŌ · Lips too Chilled

      EMILY BRONTË · The Night is Darkening Round Me

      JOSEPH CONRAD · To-morrow

      RICHARD HAKLUYT · The Voyage of Sir Francis Drake Around the Whole Globe

      KATE CHOPIN · A Pair of Silk Stockings

      CHARLES DARWIN · It was snowing butterflies

      BROTHERS GRIMM · The Robber Bridegroom

      CATULLUS · I Hate and I Love

      HOMER · Circe and the Cyclops

      D. H. LAWRENCE · Il Duro

      KATHERINE MANSFIELD · Miss Brill

      OVID · The Fall of Icarus

      SAPPHO · Come Close

      IVAN TURGENEV · Kasyan from the Beautiful Lands

      VIRGIL · O Cruel Alexis

      H. G. WELLS · A Slip under the Microscope

      HERODOTUS · The Madness of Cambyses

      Speaking of Siva

      The Dhammapada

      JANE AUSTEN · Lady Susan

      JEAN-JACQUES ROSSEAU · The Body Politic

      JEAN DE LA FONTAINE · The World is Full of Foolish Men

      H. G. WELLS · The Sea Raiders

      TITUS LIVY · Hannibal

      CHARLES DICKENS · To Be Read at Dusk

      LEO TOLSTOY · The Death of Ivan Ilyich

      MARK TWAIN · The Stolen White Elephant

      WILLIAM BLAKE · Tyger, Tyger

      SHERIDAN LE FANU · Green Tea

      The Yellow Book

      OLAUDAH EQUIANO · Kidnapped

     
    EDGAR ALLAN POE · A Modern Detective

      The Suffragettes

      MARGERY KEMPE · How to Be a Medieval Woman

      JOSEPH CONRAD · Typhoon

      GIACOMO CASANOVA · A Venetian Adventure

      W. B. YEATS · A Terrible Beauty is Born

      THOMAS HARDY · The Withered Arm

      EDWARD LEAR · Nonsense

      ARISTOPHANES · The Frogs

      FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE · Why I Am so Clever

      RAINER MARIA RILKE · Letters to a Young Poet

      LEONID ANDREYEV · Seven Hanged

      APHRA BEHN · Oroonoko

      LEWIS CARROLL · O Frabjous Day!

      JOHN GAY · Trivia: or, the Art of Walking the Streets of London

      E. T. A. HOFFMAN · The Sandman

      DANTE · Love that moves the sun and other stars

      ALEXANDER PUSHKIN · The Queen of Spades

      ANTON CHEKHOV · A Nervous Breakdown

      KAKUZO OKAKURA · The Book of Tea

      WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE · Is this a dagger which I see before me?

      EMILY DICKINSON · My life had stood a loaded gun

      LONGUS · Daphnis and Chloe

      MARY SHELLEY · Matilda

      GEORGE ELIOT · The Lifted Veil

      FYODOR DOSTOYEVSKY · White Nights

      OSCAR WILDE · Only Dull People Are Brilliant at Breakfast

      VIRGINIA WOOLF · Flush

      ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE · Lot No. 249

      The Rule of Benedict

      WASHINGTON IRVING · Rip Van Winkle

      Anecdotes of the Cynics

      VICTOR HUGO · Waterloo

      CHARLOTTE BRONTË · Stancliffe’s Hotel

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      This edition published in Penguin Classics 2016

      ISBN: 978-0-241-25188-1

     

     

     



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