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the rising sun. Dea, blind, felt a like return of warmth and hope within
her when she placed her hand on the head of Gwynplaine.
To adore each other in the shadows, to love in the plenitude of silence;
who could not become reconciled to such an eternity?
One evening Gwynplaine, feeling within him that overflow of felicity
which, like the intoxication of perfumes, causes a sort of delicious
faintness, was strolling, as he usually did after the performance, in
the meadow some hundred paces from the Green Box. Sometimes in those
high tides of feeling in our souls we feel that we would fain pour out
the sensations of the overflowing heart. The night was dark but clear.
The stars were shining. The whole fair-ground was deserted. Sleep and
forgetfulness reigned in the caravans which were scattered over
Tarrinzeau Field.
One light alone was unextinguished. It was the lamp of the Tadcaster
Inn, the door of which was left ajar to admit Gwynplaine on his return.
Midnight had just struck in the five parishes of Southwark, with the
breaks and differences of tone of their various bells. Gwynplaine was
dreaming of Dea. Of whom else should he dream? But that evening, feeling
singularly troubled, and full of a charm which was at the same time a
pang, he thought of Dea as a man thinks of a woman. He reproached
himself for this. It seemed to be failing in respect to her. The
husband's attack was forming dimly within him. Sweet and imperious
impatience! He was crossing the invisible frontier, on this side of
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