Miss Temple, through all changes, had thus far continued

superintendent of the seminary: to her instruction I owed the best

part of my acquirements; her friendship and society had been my

continual solace; she had stood me in the stead of mother,

governess, and, latterly, companion. At this period she married,

removed with her husband (a clergyman, an excellent man, almost

worthy of such a wife) to a distant county, and consequently was

lost to me.

From the day she left I was no longer the same: with her was gone

every settled feeling, every association that had made Lowood in

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some degree a home to me. I had imbibed from her something of her

nature and much of her habits: more harmonious thoughts: what

seemed better regulated feelings had become the inmates of my mind.

I had given in allegiance to duty and order; I was quiet; I believed

I was content: to the eyes of others, usually even to my own, I

appeared a disciplined and subdued character.

But destiny, in the shape of the Rev. Mr. Nasmyth, came between me

and Miss Temple: I saw her in her travelling dress step into a

post-chaise, shortly after the marriage ceremony; I watched the

chaise mount the hill and disappear beyond its brow; and then

retired to my own room, and there spent in solitude the greatest

part of the half-holiday granted in honour of the occasion.

I walked about the chamber most of the time. I imagined myself only

to be regretting my loss, and thinking how to repair it; but when my

reflections were concluded, and I looked up and found that the

afternoon was gone, and evening far advanced, another discovery

dawned on me, namely, that in the interval I had undergone a

transforming process; that my mind had put off all it had borrowed

of Miss Temple--or rather that she had taken with her the serene

atmosphere I had been breathing in her vicinity--and that now I was

left in my natural element, and beginning to feel the stirring of

old emotions. It did not seem as if a prop were withdrawn, but

rather as if a motive were gone: it was not the power to be

tranquil which had failed me, but the reason for tranquillity was no

more. My world had for some years been in Lowood: my experience

had been of its rules and systems; now I remembered that the real

world was wide, and that a varied field of hopes and fears, of

sensations and excitements, awaited those who had courage to go

forth into its expanse, to seek real knowledge of life amidst its

perils.




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