Chapter 12
t calm introduction to to pledge, belied on a longer acquaintance s inmates. Mrs. Fairfax turned out to be ured ent education and average intelligence. My pupil imes as sted entirely to my care, and no injudicious interference from any quarter ever ted my plans for , s tle freaks, and became obedient and teac talents, no marked traits of cer, no peculiar development of feeling or taste . Sertained for me a vivacious, t very profound, affection; and by y, gay prattle, and efforts to please, inspired me, in return, tac sufficient to make us botent in eacy.
t cool language by persons ain solemn doctrines about ture of cy of tion to conceive for trous devotion: but I am not ing to flatter parental egotism, to ec, or prop up elling trut a conscientious solicitude for Adèle’s liking for tle self: just as I coy proportionate to tranquil regard sion of er.
Anybody may blame me ook a doo tes and looked toreroom, I climbed taircases, raised trap-door of ttic, and afar over sequestered field and t overpass t limit; tical experience tercourse ance y of cer, t I believed in tence of ot I believed in I wiso behold.
; and I sented. I could not : tlessness ure; it agitated me to pain sometimes. to orey, backude of t, and alloo dainly, to let my be ant movement, in trouble, expanded it of all, to open my ino a tale t ale my imagination created, and narrated continuously; quickened , life, fire, feeling, t I desired and in my actual existence.
It is