Confession; Or, The Blind Heart. A Domestic Story - William Gilmore Simms - Book

Confession; Or, The Blind Heart. A Domestic Story

Wagner. But of the world--the heart, the mind of man, How happy could we know! Faust. What can we know? Who dares bestow the infant his true name? The few who felt and knew, but blindly gave Their knowledge to the multitude—they fell! Incapable to keep their full hearts in, They, from the first of immemorial time, Were crucified or burnt. Goethe's Faust, MS. Version.
CONTENTS

“Who dares bestow the infant his true name? The few who felt and knew, but blindly gave Their knowledge to the multitude—they fell Incapable to keep their full hearts in, They, from the first of immemorial time, Were crucified or burnt.”—Goethe's “Faust.”
The pains and penalties of folly are not necessarily death. They were in old times, perhaps, according to the text, and he who kept not to himself the secrets of his silly heart was surely crucified or burnt. Though lacking in penalties extreme like these, the present is not without its own. All times, indeed, have their penalties for folly, much more certainly than for crime; and this fact furnishes one of the most human arguments in favor of the doctrine of rewards and punishments in the future state. But these penalties are not always mortifications and trials of the flesh. There are punishments of the soul; the spirit; the sensibilities; the intellect—which are most usually the consequences of one's own folly. There is a perversity of mood which is the worst of all such penalties. There are tortures which the foolish heart equally inflicts and endures. The passions riot on their own nature; and, feeding as they do upon that bosom from which they spring, and in which they flourish, may, not inaptly, be likened to that unnatural brood which gnaws into the heart of the mother-bird, and sustains its existence at the expense of hers. Meetly governed from the beginning, they are dutiful agents that bless themselves in their own obedience; but, pampered to excess, they are tyrants that never do justice, until at last, when they fitly conclude the work of destruction by their own.

William Gilmore Simms
Содержание

CONFESSION


or,


THE BLIND HEART


A Domestic Story


CHAPTER I. — CONFESSION, OR THE BLIND HEART.


CHAPTER II. — BOY PASSIONS—A PROFESSION CHOSEN.


CHAPTER III. — ADMITTED AMONG THE LAWYERS


CHAPTER IV. — “SHE STILL SOOTHED THE MOCK OF OTHERS.”


CHAPTER V. — DEBUT.


CHAPTER VI. — DENIAL AND DEFEAT.


CHAPTER VII. — TEMPTATION.


CHAPTER VIII. — LOVE FINDS NO SMOOTH WATER IN THE SEA OF LAW


CHAPTER IX. — DUELLO.


CHAPTER X. — HEAD WINDS.


CHAPTER XI. — CRISIS.


CHAPTER XII. — “GONE TO BE MARRIED.”


CHAPTER XIII. — BAFFLED FURY.


CHAPTER XIV. — ONE DEBT PAID.


CHAPTER XV. — HONEYMOON PERIOD.


CHAPTER XVI. — THE HAPPY SEASON.


CHAPTER XVII. — THE EVIL PRINCIPLE.


CHAPTER XVIII. — PRESENTIMENTS.


CHAPTER XIX. — DISTRUST.


CHAPTER XX. — PROGRESS OF THE EVIL SPIRIT.


CHAPTER XXI. — CHANGES OF HOME.


CHAPTER XXII. — SELF-HUMILIATION.


CHAPTER XXIII. — PROGRESS OF PASSION.


CHAPTER XXIV. — A GROUP.


CHAPTER XXV. — THE OLD GOOSE FINDS A YOUNG GANDER.


CHAPTER XXVII. — KINGSLEY.


CHAPTER XXVIII. — MORALS OF ENTERPRISE.


CHAPTER XXIX. — THE HELL.


CHAPTER XXX. — FALSE LUCK.


CHAPTER XXXI. — HOW THE GAME WAS PLAYED


CHAPTER XXXII. — SUDDEN LESSON AND NEW SUSPICIONS.


CHAPTER XXXIII. — STILL THE CLOUD.


CHAPTER XXXIV. — A FATHER'S GRIEFS.


CHAPTER XXXV. — APPLICATION OF “THE QUESTION.”


CHAPTER XXXVI. — MEDITATED EXILE.


CHAPTER XXXVII. — “AND STILL THE BITTER IN THE CUP OF JOY.”


CHAPTER XXXVIII. — RENEWED AGONIES.


CHAPTER XXXIX. — THE NEW HOME.


CHAPTER XL. — THE BLACK DOG ONCE MORE UPON THE SCENE.


CHAPTER XLI. — TRIAL—THE WOMAN GROWS STRONG.


CHAPTER XLII. — CROSS PURPOSES.


CHAPTER XLIII. — ACCIDENT AND MORE AGONIES.


CHAPTER XLIV. — THE DAMNING LETTER.


CHAPTER XLV. — VERGE OF THE PRECIPICE.


CHAPTER XLVI. — THE UNBRIDLED MADNESS.


CHAPTER XLVII. — FATAL SILENCE.


CHAPTER XLVIII. — TOO LATE!


CHAPTER XLIX. — SUICIDE.


CHAPTER L. — CONFESSION OF EDGERTON.


CHAPTER LI. — DOUBTS—SUMMONS.


CHAPTER LII. — DEATH.


CHAPTER LIII. — REVELATION—THE LETTER OF JULIA.

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2004-07-01

Темы

Domestic fiction

Reload 🗙