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Rousseau, Jean-Jacques

"The Confessions Of Jean-Jacques Rousseau"

How pleasing would death have been at that
time, when, if I had not tasted many of the pleasures of life, I had
felt but few of its misfortunes. My tranquil soul would have taken her
flight, without having experienced those cruel ideas of the
injustice of mankind which embitters both life and death. I should
have enjoyed the sweet consolation that I still survived in the dearer
part of myself: in the situation I then was, it could hardly be called
death; and had I been divested of my uneasiness on her account, it
would have appeared but a gentle sleep; yet even these disquietudes
had such an affectionate and tender turn, that their bitterness was
tempered by a pleasing sensibility. I said to her, "You are the
depository of my whole being, act so that I may be happy." Two or
three times, when my disorder was most violent, I crept to her
apartment to give her my advice respecting her future conduct and I
dare affirm these admonitions were both wise and equitable, in which
the interest I took in her future concerns were strongly marked. As if
tears had been both nourishment and medicine, I found myself the
better for those I shed with her, while seated on her bed-side, and
holding her hands between mine. The hours crept insensibly away in
these nocturnal discourses; I returned to my chamber better than I had
quitted it, being content and calmed by the promises she made, and the
hopes with which she had inspired me: I slept on them with my heart at
peace, and fully resigned to the dispensations of Providence.


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