[The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Bronte]@TWC D-Link bookThe Tenant of Wildfell Hall CHAPTER XLV 14/22
But, Gilbert, can you really derive no consolation from the thought that we may meet together where there is no more pain and sorrow, no more striving against sin, and struggling of the spirit against the flesh; where both will behold the same glorious truths, and drink exalted and supreme felicity from the same fountain of light and goodness--that Being whom both will worship with the same intensity of holy ardour--and where pure and happy creatures both will love with the same divine affection? If you cannot, never write to me!' 'Helen, I can! if faith would never fail.' 'Now, then,' exclaimed she, 'while this hope is strong within us--' 'We will part,' I cried.
'You shall not have the pain of another effort to dismiss me.
I will go at once; but--' I did not put my request in words: she understood it instinctively, and this time she yielded too--or rather, there was nothing so deliberate as requesting or yielding in the matter: there was a sudden impulse that neither could resist.
One moment I stood and looked into her face, the next I held her to my heart, and we seemed to grow together in a close embrace from which no physical or mental force could rend us.
A whispered 'God bless you!' and 'Go--go!' was all she said; but while she spoke she held me so fast that, without violence, I could not have obeyed her.
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