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Rousseau, Jean-Jacques

"The Confessions Of Jean-Jacques Rousseau"

The country itself, losing those sweet and simple
charms which captivate the heart, appeared a gloomy desert, or covered
with a veil that concealed its beauties. We cultivated our little
gardens no more: our flowers were neglected. We no longer scratched
away the mold, and broke out into exclamations of delight, on
discovering that the grain we had sown began to shoot. We were
disgusted with our situation; our preceptors were weary of us. In a
word, my uncle wrote for our return, and we left Mr. and Miss
Lambercier without feeling any regret at the separation.
Near thirty years passed away from my leaving Bossey, without once
recalling the place to my mind with any degree of satisfaction; but
after having passed the prime of life, as I decline into old age
(while more recent occurrences are wearing out apace) I feel these
remembrances revive and imprint themselves on my heart, with a force
and charm that every day acquires fresh strength; as if, feeling
life flee from me, I endeavored to catch it again by its commencement.
The most trifling incidents of those happy days delight me, for no
other reason than being of those days, I recall every circumstance
of time, place, and persons; I see the maid or footman busy in the
chamber, a swallow entering the window, a fly settling on my hand
while repeating my lesson. I see the whole economy of the apartment;
on the right hand Mr. Lambercier's closet, with a print representing
all the popes, a barometer, a large almanac, the windows of the
house (which stood in a hollow at the bottom of the garden) shaded
by raspberry shrubs, whose shoots sometimes found entrance; I am
sensible the reader has no occasion to know all this, but I feel a
kind of necessity for relating it.


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