[Therese Raquin by Emile Zola]@TWC D-Link bookTherese Raquin CHAPTER XVIII 1/10
CHAPTER XVIII. Therese also had been visited by the spectre of Camille, during this feverish night. After over a year of indifference, Laurent's sudden attentions had aroused her senses.
As she tossed herself about in insomnia, she had seen the drowned man rise up before her; like Laurent she had writhed in terror, and she had said as he had done, that she would no longer be afraid, that she would no more experience such sufferings, when she had her sweetheart in her arms. This man and woman had experienced at the same hour, a sort of nervous disorder which set them panting with terror.
A consanguinity had become established between them.
They shuddered with the same shudder; their hearts in a kind of poignant friendship, were wrung with the same anguish.
From that moment they had one body and one soul for enjoyment and suffering. This communion, this mutual penetration is a psychological and physiological phenomenon which is often found to exist in beings who have been brought into violent contact by great nervous shocks. For over a year, Therese and Laurent lightly bore the chain riveted to their limbs that united them.
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