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    Chapter 31 - Page 2

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    from the turmoil
    of daily and contracted interests, to a wider view of the truths of
    existence. Pointing to the wild scene around them, he likened the confused
    masses of the mountains, their sterility, and their ruthless tempests, to
    the world with its want of happy fruits, its disorders, and its violence.
    Then directing the attention of his companion to the azure vault above
    them, which, seen at that elevation and in that pure atmosphere,
    resembled a benign canopy of the softest tints and colors, he made glowing
    appeals to the eternal and holy tranquillity of the state of being to
    which they were both fast hastening, and which had its type in the
    mysterious and imposing calm of that tranquil and inimitable void. He drew
    his moral in favor of a measured enjoyment of our advantages here, as well
    as of rendering love and justice to all who merited our esteem, and to the
    disadvantage of those iron prejudices which confine the best sentiments in
    the fetters of opinions founded in the ordinances and provisions of the
    violent and selfish.

    It was after one of these interesting dialogues that Melchior de
    Willading, his heart softened and his soul touched with the hopes of
    heaven, listened with a more indulgent ear to the firm declaration of
    Adelheid, that unless she became the wife of Sigismund, her self-respect,
    no less than her affections, must compel her to pass her life unmarried.
    We shall not say that the maiden herself philosophized on premises as
    sublime as those of the good monk, for with her the warm impulses of the
    heart lay at the bottom of her resolution; but even she had the
    respectable support of reason to sustain her cause. The baron had that
    innate desire to perpetuate his own existence in that of his descendants,
    which appears to be a property of nature. Alarmed at a declaration which
    threatened annihilation to his line, while at the same time he was more
    than usually under the influence of his better feelings, he promised that
    if the charge of murder could be removed from Balthazar, he would no
    longer oppose the union. We should be giving the reader an opinion a
    little too favorable of the Herr von Willading, were we, to say that he
    did not repent having made this promise soon after it was uttered. He was

    in a state of mind that resembled the vanes of his own towers, which
    changed their direction with every fresh current of air, but he was by
    far, too honorable to think seriously of violating a faith that he had
    once fairly plighted. He had moments of unpleasant misgivings as to the
    wisdom and propriety of his promise, but they were of that species of
    regret, which is known to attend an unavoidable evil. If he had any
    expectations of being released from his pledge, they were bottomed on
    certain
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