The Works of Edgar Allan Poe - Volume 2


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speculation. I did not pretend to disguise from my perception the  
identity of the singular individual who thus perseveringly interfered  
with my affairs, and harassed me with his insinuated counsel. But  
who and what was this Wilson?--and whence came he?--and what were his  
purposes? Upon neither of these points could I be satisfied; merely  
ascertaining, in regard to him, that a sudden accident in his family had  
caused his removal from Dr. Bransby's academy on the afternoon of the  
day in which I myself had eloped. But in a brief period I ceased  
to think upon the subject; my attention being all absorbed in  
a contemplated departure for Oxford. Thither I soon went; the  
uncalculating vanity of my parents furnishing me with an outfit and  
annual establishment, which would enable me to indulge at will in  
the luxury already so dear to my heart,--to vie in profuseness of  
expenditure with the haughtiest heirs of the wealthiest earldoms in  
Great Britain.  
Excited by such appliances to vice, my constitutional temperament broke  
forth with redoubled ardor, and I spurned even the common restraints of  
decency in the mad infatuation of my revels. But it were absurd to  
pause in the detail of my extravagance. Let it suffice, that among  
spendthrifts I out-Heroded Herod, and that, giving name to a multitude  
of novel follies, I added no brief appendix to the long catalogue of  
vices then usual in the most dissolute university of Europe.  
348  


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