Suddenly, and as if it were done in a dream, Hilda found herself

kneeling before the shrine, under the ever-burning lamp that throws

its rays upon the Archangel's face. She laid her forehead on the marble

steps before the altar, and sobbed out a prayer; she hardly knew to

whom, whether Michael, the Virgin, or the Father; she hardly knew for

what, save only a vague longing, that thus the burden of her spirit

might be lightened a little.

In an instant she snatched herself up, as it were, from her knees, all

a-throb with the emotions which were struggling to force their way out

of her heart by the avenue that had so nearly been opened for them. Yet

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there was a strange sense of relief won by that momentary, passionate

prayer; a strange joy, moreover, whether from what she had done, or for

what she had escaped doing, Hilda could not tell. But she felt as one

half stifled, who has stolen a breath of air.

Next to the shrine where she had knelt there is another, adorned with

a picture by Guercino, representing a maiden's body in the jaws of the

sepulchre, and her lover weeping over it; while her beatified spirit

looks down upon the scene, in the society of the Saviour and a throng

of saints. Hilda wondered if it were not possible, by some miracle of

faith, so to rise above her present despondency that she might look down

upon what she was, just as Petronilla in the picture looked at her own

corpse. A hope, born of hysteric trouble, fluttered in her heart. A

presentiment, or what she fancied such, whispered her, that, before she

had finished the circuit of the cathedral, relief would come.

The unhappy are continually tantalized by similar delusions of succor

near at hand; at least, the despair is very dark that has no such

will-o'-the-wisp to glimmer in it.




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