< Page:Valperga (1823) Shelley Vol 2.djvu
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Ch. VIII.]

VALPERGA.

195

and hopes, that caused a wild transport, which, although it destroyed her, was still joy, still delight. But now there was no change; one steady hopeless blank was before her; the very energies of her mind were palsied; her imagination furled its wings, and the owlet, reason, was the only dweller that found sustenance and a being in her benighted soul.

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