[She and I, Volume 2 by John Conroy Hutcheson]@TWC D-Link book
She and I, Volume 2

CHAPTER ONE
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The task in either direction would be as hopeless as it is uninteresting; consequently, I will abandon it to the attention of more inquiring psychological minds than my own, hurrying on to tell what it was that I dreamt.
My vision was a threefold one--a series of dreams within dreams.
First, I thought that I was on a wide, whitened Alpine plain.

It was night.

In front of me, towered on high the rugged peaks of the Matterhorn, imposing in their grandeur; further on, in the illimitable distance, I could descry the rounded, snowcapp'd head of Mont Blanc, rearing itself heavenward, where the pale, treacherous moon kept her silent watch, and from whence the glistening stars twinkled down through an ocean of space, touching frosted particles of matter with scintillations of light, and making them glitter like diamonds--world- old, transparent jewels, set in the cold, ice-blue crown of the eternal glacier.
I could thus see myself, gazing through my dream eyes on my _eidolon_, as if it were only a reflection in a mirror.

_It_ was walking here on this wide Alpine plain, all alone; and I recognised also that I had the power to analyse and appreciate the motives by which it was led hither, the desires by which it was actuated--the strange thing, being, that I felt, within myself, all the thoughts and ideas that must have occurred to _my other self_.
At the same time, however, I seemed to be, as it were, but an inactive spectator of all that happened; looking on the visionary events of my dream as if I had no share or part in them.

I appeared to possess, while they occurred, a sort of dual existence, of which I was perfectly cognisant, then and afterwards.
I knew that I--my other self--wished to reach the heights of the Matterhorn before and above me: the region of perpetual snow.


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