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<h2> CHAPTER 1 </h2>
<p>ABODES OF HORROR have frequently been described, and castles, filled with
spectres and chimeras, conjured up by the magic spell of genius to harrow
the soul, and absorb the wondering mind. But, formed of such stuff as
dreams are made of, what were they to the mansion of despair, in one
corner of which Maria sat, endeavouring to recall her scattered thoughts!</p>
<p>Surprise, astonishment, that bordered on distraction, seemed to have
suspended her faculties, till, waking by degrees to a keen sense of
anguish, a whirlwind of rage and indignation roused her torpid pulse. One
recollection with frightful velocity following another, threatened to fire
her brain, and make her a fit companion for the terrific inhabitants,
whose groans and shrieks were no unsubstantial sounds of whistling winds,
or startled birds, modulated by a romantic fancy, which amuse while they
affright; but such tones of misery as carry a dreadful certainty directly
to the heart. What effect must they then have produced on one, true to the
touch of sympathy, and tortured by maternal apprehension!</p>
<p>Her infant's image was continually floating on Maria's sight, and the
first smile of intelligence remembered, as none but a mother, an unhappy
mother, can conceive. She heard her half speaking half cooing, and felt
the little twinkling fingers on her burning bosom—a bosom bursting
with the nutriment for which this cherished child might now be pining in
vain. From a stranger she could indeed receive the maternal aliment, Maria
was grieved at the thought—but who would watch her with a mother's
tenderness, a mother's self-denial?</p>
<p>The retreating shadows of former sorrows rushed back in a gloomy train,
and seemed to be pictured on the walls of her prison, magnified by the
state of mind in which they were viewed—Still she mourned for her
child, lamented she was a daughter, and anticipated the aggravated ills of
life that her sex rendered almost inevitable, even while dreading she was
no more. To think that she was blotted out of existence was agony, when
the imagination had been long employed to expand her faculties; yet to
suppose her turned adrift on an unknown sea, was scarcely less afflicting.</p>
<p>After being two days the prey of impetuous, varying emotions, Maria began
to reflect more calmly on her present situation, for she had actually been
rendered incapable of sober reflection, by the discovery of the act of
atrocity of which she was the victim. She could not have imagined, that,
in all the fermentation of civilized depravity, a similar plot could have
entered a human mind. She had been stunned by an unexpected blow; yet
life, however joyless, was not to be indolently resigned, or misery
endured without exertion, and proudly termed patience. She had hitherto
meditated only to point the dart of anguish, and suppressed the heart
heavings of indignant nature merely by the force of contempt. Now she
endeavoured to brace her mind to fortitude, and to ask herself what was to
be her employment in her dreary cell? Was it not to effect her escape, to
fly to the succour of her child, and to baffle the selfish schemes of her
tyrant—her husband?</p>
<p>These thoughts roused her sleeping spirit, and the self-possession
returned, that seemed to have abandoned her in the infernal solitude into
which she had been precipitated. The first emotions of overwhelming
impatience began to subside, and resentment gave place to tenderness, and
more tranquil meditation; though anger once more stopt the calm current of
reflection when she attempted to move her manacled arms. But this was an
outrage that could only excite momentary feelings of scorn, which
evaporated in a faint smile; for Maria was far from thinking a personal
insult the most difficult to endure with magnanimous indifference.</p>
<p>She approached the small grated window of her chamber, and for a
considerable time only regarded the blue expanse; though it commanded a
view of a desolate garden, and of part of a huge pile of buildings, that,
after having been suffered, for half a century, to fall to decay, had
undergone some clumsy repairs, merely to render it habitable. The ivy had
been torn off the turrets, and the stones not wanted to patch up the
breaches of time, and exclude the warring elements, left in heaps in the
disordered court. Maria contemplated this scene she knew not how long; or
rather gazed on the walls, and pondered on her situation. To the master of
this most horrid of prisons, she had, soon after her entrance, raved of
injustice, in accents that would have justified his treatment, had not a
malignant smile, when she appealed to his judgment, with a dreadful
conviction stifled her remonstrating complaints. By force, or openly, what
could be done? But surely some expedient might occur to an active mind,
without any other employment, and possessed of sufficient resolution to
put the risk of life into the balance with the chance of freedom.</p>
<p>A woman entered in the midst of these reflections, with a firm, deliberate
step, strongly marked features, and large black eyes, which she fixed
steadily on Maria's, as if she designed to intimidate her, saying at the
same time "You had better sit down and eat your dinner, than look at the
clouds."</p>
<p>"I have no appetite," replied Maria, who had previously determined to
speak mildly; "why then should I eat?"</p>
<p>"But, in spite of that, you must and shall eat something. I have had many
ladies under my care, who have resolved to starve themselves; but, soon or
late, they gave up their intent, as they recovered their senses."</p>
<p>"Do you really think me mad?" asked Maria, meeting the searching glance of
her eye.</p>
<p>"Not just now. But what does that prove?—Only that you must be the
more carefully watched, for appearing at times so reasonable. You have not
touched a morsel since you entered the house."—Maria sighed
intelligibly.—"Could any thing but madness produce such a disgust
for food?"</p>
<p>"Yes, grief; you would not ask the question if you knew what it was." The
attendant shook her head; and a ghastly smile of desperate fortitude
served as a forcible reply, and made Maria pause, before she added—"Yet
I will take some refreshment: I mean not to die.—No; I will preserve
my senses; and convince even you, sooner than you are aware of, that my
intellects have never been disturbed, though the exertion of them may have
been suspended by some infernal drug."</p>
<p>Doubt gathered still thicker on the brow of her guard, as she attempted to
convict her of mistake.</p>
<p>"Have patience!" exclaimed Maria, with a solemnity that inspired awe. "My
God! how have I been schooled into the practice!" A suffocation of voice
betrayed the agonizing emotions she was labouring to keep down; and
conquering a qualm of disgust, she calmly endeavoured to eat enough to
prove her docility, perpetually turning to the suspicious female, whose
observation she courted, while she was making the bed and adjusting the
room.</p>
<p>"Come to me often," said Maria, with a tone of persuasion, in consequence
of a vague plan that she had hastily adopted, when, after surveying this
woman's form and features, she felt convinced that she had an
understanding above the common standard, "and believe me mad, till you are
obliged to acknowledge the contrary." The woman was no fool, that is, she
was superior to her class; nor had misery quite petrified the life's-blood
of humanity, to which reflections on our own misfortunes only give a more
orderly course. The manner, rather than the expostulations, of Maria made
a slight suspicion dart into her mind with corresponding sympathy, which
various other avocations, and the habit of banishing compunction,
prevented her, for the present, from examining more minutely.</p>
<p>But when she was told that no person, excepting the physician appointed by
her family, was to be permitted to see the lady at the end of the gallery,
she opened her keen eyes still wider, and uttered a—"hem!" before
she enquired—"Why?" She was briefly told, in reply, that the malady
was hereditary, and the fits not occurring but at very long and irregular
intervals, she must be carefully watched; for the length of these lucid
periods only rendered her more mischievous, when any vexation or caprice
brought on the paroxysm of phrensy.</p>
<p>Had her master trusted her, it is probable that neither pity nor curiosity
would have made her swerve from the straight line of her interest; for she
had suffered too much in her intercourse with mankind, not to determine to
look for support, rather to humouring their passions, than courting their
approbation by the integrity of her conduct. A deadly blight had met her
at the very threshold of existence; and the wretchedness of her mother
seemed a heavy weight fastened on her innocent neck, to drag her down to
perdition. She could not heroically determine to succour an unfortunate;
but, offended at the bare supposition that she could be deceived with the
same ease as a common servant, she no longer curbed her curiosity; and,
though she never seriously fathomed her own intentions, she would sit,
every moment she could steal from observation, listening to the tale,
which Maria was eager to relate with all the persuasive eloquence of
grief.</p>
<p>It is so cheering to see a human face, even if little of the divinity of
virtue beam in it, that Maria anxiously expected the return of the
attendant, as of a gleam of light to break the gloom of idleness. Indulged
sorrow, she perceived, must blunt or sharpen the faculties to the two
opposite extremes; producing stupidity, the moping melancholy of
indolence; or the restless activity of a disturbed imagination. She sunk
into one state, after being fatigued by the other: till the want of
occupation became even more painful than the actual pressure or
apprehension of sorrow; and the confinement that froze her into a nook of
existence, with an unvaried prospect before her, the most insupportable of
evils. The lamp of life seemed to be spending itself to chase the vapours
of a dungeon which no art could dissipate.—And to what purpose did
she rally all her energy?—Was not the world a vast prison, and women
born slaves?</p>
<p>Though she failed immediately to rouse a lively sense of injustice in the
mind of her guard, because it had been sophisticated into misanthropy, she
touched her heart. Jemima (she had only a claim to a Christian name, which
had not procured her any Christian privileges) could patiently hear of
Maria's confinement on false pretences; she had felt the crushing hand of
power, hardened by the exercise of injustice, and ceased to wonder at the
perversions of the understanding, which systematize oppression; but, when
told that her child, only four months old, had been torn from her, even
while she was discharging the tenderest maternal office, the woman awoke
in a bosom long estranged from feminine emotions, and Jemima determined to
alleviate all in her power, without hazarding the loss of her place, the
sufferings of a wretched mother, apparently injured, and certainly
unhappy. A sense of right seems to result from the simplest act of reason,
and to preside over the faculties of the mind, like the master-sense of
feeling, to rectify the rest; but (for the comparison may be carried still
farther) how often is the exquisite sensibility of both weakened or
destroyed by the vulgar occupations, and ignoble pleasures of life?</p>
<p>The preserving her situation was, indeed, an important object to Jemima,
who had been hunted from hole to hole, as if she had been a beast of prey,
or infected with a moral plague. The wages she received, the greater part
of which she hoarded, as her only chance for independence, were much more
considerable than she could reckon on obtaining any where else, were it
possible that she, an outcast from society, could be permitted to earn a
subsistence in a reputable family. Hearing Maria perpetually complain of
listlessness, and the not being able to beguile grief by resuming her
customary pursuits, she was easily prevailed on, by compassion, and that
involuntary respect for abilities, which those who possess them can never
eradicate, to bring her some books and implements for writing. Maria's
conversation had amused and interested her, and the natural consequence
was a desire, scarcely observed by herself, of obtaining the esteem of a
person she admired. The remembrance of better days was rendered more
lively; and the sentiments then acquired appearing less romantic than they
had for a long period, a spark of hope roused her mind to new activity.</p>
<p>How grateful was her attention to Maria! Oppressed by a dead weight of
existence, or preyed on by the gnawing worm of discontent, with what
eagerness did she endeavour to shorten the long days, which left no traces
behind! She seemed to be sailing on the vast ocean of life, without seeing
any land-mark to indicate the progress of time; to find employment was
then to find variety, the animating principle of nature.</p>
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