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looked into a garden; whence a wicket gate opened into a small
paddock; all beyond; was fine meadowland and wood。 There was
no other dwelling near; in that direction; and the prospect it
commanded was very extensive。 One beautiful evening; when the
first shades of twilight were beginning to settle upon the earth;
Oliver sat at this window; intent upon his books。 He had been
poring over them for some time; and; as the day had been
uncommonly sultry; and he had exerted himself a great deal; it is
no disparagement to the authors; whoever they may have been; to
say that gradually and by slow degrees; he fell asleep。
There is a kind of sleep that steals upon us sometimes; which;
while it holds the body prisoner; does not free the mind from a
sense of things about it; and enable it to ramble at its pleasure。 So
far as an overpowering heaviness; a prostration of strength; and an
utter inability to control our thoughts of power of motion; can be
called sleep; this is it; and yet; we have a consciousness of all that
is going on about us; and; if we dream at such a time; words which
are really spoken; or sounds which really exist at the moment;
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accommodate themselves with surprising readiness to our visions;
until reality and imagination become so strangely blended that it
is afterwards almost a matter of impossibility to separate the two。
Nor is this; the most striking phenomenon; incidental to such a
state。 It is an undoubted fact; that although our senses of touch
and sight be for the time dead; yet our sleeping thoughts; and the
visionary scenes that pass before us; will be influenced and
materially influenced; by the mere silent presence of some external
object; which may not have been near us when we closed our eyes;
and of whose vicinity we have had no waking consciousness。
Oliver knew; perfectly well; that he was in his own little room;
that his books were lying on the table before him; that the sweet
air was stirring among the creeping plants outside。 And yet he was
asleep。 Suddenly; the scene changed; the air became close and
confined; and he thought; with a glow of terror; that he was in the
Jew’s house again。 There sat the hideous old man; in his
accustomed corner; pointing at him; and whispering to another
man; with his face averted; who sat beside him。
“Hush; my dear!” he thought he heard the Jew say; “it is he;
sure enough。 Come away。”
“He!” the other man seemed to answer; “could I mistake him;
think you? If a crowd of ghosts were to put themselves into his
exact shape; and he stood amongst them; there is something that
would tell me how to point him out。 If you buried him fifty feet
deep; and took me across his grave; I fancy I should know; if there
wasn’t a mark above it; that he lay buried there!”
The man seemed to say this; with such dreadful hatred; that
Oliver awoke with the fear; and started up。
“Good Heaven! what was that; which sent the blood tingling to
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his heart; and deprived him of his choice; and of power to move?
There—there—at the window—close before him—so close; that he
could have almost touched him before he started back; with his
eyes peering into the room; and meeting his; there stood the Jew!
And beside him; white with rage or fear; or both; were the
scowling features of the very man who had accosted him in the
inn…yard。
It was but an instant; a glance; a flash; before his eyes; and they
were gone。 But they had recognised him; and he them; and their
look was as firmly impressed upon his memory; as if it had been
deeply carved in stone; and set before him from his birth。 He stood
transfixed for a moment; then; leaping from the window into the
garden; called loudly for help。
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Chapter 35
Containing The Unsatisfactory Result Of Oliver’s
Adventure; And A Conversation Of Some
Importance Between Harry Maylie And Rose。
When the inmates of the house; attracted by Oliver’s
cries; hurried to the spot from which they proceeded;
they found him; pale and agitated; pointing in the
direction of the meadows behind the house; and scarcely able to
articulate the words; “The Jew! the Jew!”
Mr。 Giles was at a loss to comprehend what this outcry meant;
but Harry Maylie; whose perceptions were something quicker; and
who had heard Oliver’s history from his mother; understood it at
once。
“What direction did he take?” he asked; catching up a heavy
stick which was standing in a corner。
“That;” replied Oliver; pointing out the course the man had
taken; “I missed them in an instant。”
“Then; they are in the ditch!” said Harry。 “Follow! And keep as
near me as you can。” So saying; he sprang over the hedge; and
darted off with a speed which rendered it matter of exceeding
difficulty for the others to keep near him。
Giles followed as well as he could; and Oliver followed too; and
in the course of a minute or two; Mr。 Losberne; who had been out
walking; and just then returned; tumbled over the hedge after
them; and picking himself up with more agility than he could have
been supposed to possess; struck into the same course at no
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contemptible speed; shouting all the while; most prodigiously; to
know what was the matter。
On they all went; nor stopped they once to breathe; until the
leader; striking off into an angle of the field indicated by Oliver;
began to search; narrowly; the ditch and hedge adjoining; which
afforded time for the remainder of the party to come up; and for
Oliver to communicate to Mr。 Losberne the circumstances that
had led to so vigorous a pursuit。
The search was all in vain。 There were not even the traces of
recent footsteps to be seen。 They stood now on the summit of a
little hill; commanding the open fields in every direction for three
or four miles。 There was the village in the hollow on the left; but;
in order to gain that; after pursuing the track Oliver had pointed
out; the men must have made a circuit of open ground; which it
was impossible they could have accomplished in so short a time。 A
thick wood skirted the meadowland in another direction; but they
could not have gained that covert for the same reason。
“It must have been a dream; Oliver;” said Harry Maylie。
“Oh; no; indeed; sir;” replied Oliver; shuddering at the very
recollection of the old wretch’s countenance; “I saw him too
plainly for that。 I saw them both; as plainly as I see you now。”
“Who was the other?” inquired Harry and Mr。 Losberne;
together。
“The very same man I told you of; who came so suddenly upon
me at the inn;” said Oliver。 “We had our eyes fixed full upon each
other; and I could swear to him。”
“They took this way?” demanded Harry; “are you sure?”
“As I am that the men were at the window;” replied Oliver;
pointing down; as he spoke; to the hedge which divided the
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cottage garden from the meadow。 “The tall man leaped over; just
there; and the Jew; running a few paces to the right; crept through
that gap。”
The two gentlemen watched Oliver’s earnest face; as he spoke;
and looking from him to each other; seemed to feel satisfied of the
accuracy of what he said。 Still; in no direction were there any
appearances of the trampling of men in hurried flight。 The grass
was long; but it was trodden down nowhere; save where their own
feet had crushed it。 The sides and brinks of the dishes were of
damp clay; but in no one place could they discern the print of
men’s shoes; or the slightest mark which would indicate that any
feet had pressed the ground for hours before。
“This is strange!” said Harry。
“Strange?” echoed the doctor。 “Blathers and Duff; themselves;
could make nothing of it。”
Notwithstanding the evidently useless nature of their search;
they did not desist until the coming on of night rendered its
further prosecution hopeless; and even then; they gave it up with
reluctance。 Giles was despatched to the different ale…houses in the
village; furnished with the best description Oliver could give of the
appearance and dress of the strangers。 Of these; the Jew was; at all
events; sufficiently remarkable to be remembered; supposing he
had been seen drinking; or loitering about; but Giles returned
without any intelligence; calculated to dispel or lessen the
mystery。
On the next day; fresh search was made; and the inquiries
renewed; but with no better success。 On the day following; Oliver
and Mr。 Maylie repaired to the market…town; in the hope of seeing
or hearing something of the men there; but this effort was equally
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fruitless。 After a few days; the affair began to be forgotten; as most
affairs are; when wonder; having no fresh food to support it; dies
away of itself。
Meanwhile; Rose