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    Chapter 3

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    Third Quarter.

    Black are the brooding clouds and troubled the deep waters, when
    the Sea of Thought, first heaving from a calm, gives up its Dead.
    Monsters uncouth and wild, arise in premature, imperfect
    resurrection; the several parts and shapes of different things are
    joined and mixed by chance; and when, and how, and by what
    wonderful degrees, each separates from each, and every sense and
    object of the mind resumes its usual form and lives again, no man--
    though every man is every day the casket of this type of the Great
    Mystery--can tell.

    So, when and how the darkness of the night-black steeple changed to
    shining light; when and how the solitary tower was peopled with a
    myriad figures; when and how the whispered 'Haunt and hunt him,'
    breathing monotonously through his sleep or swoon, became a voice
    exclaiming in the waking ears of Trotty, 'Break his slumbers;' when
    and how he ceased to have a sluggish and confused idea that such
    things were, companioning a host of others that were not; there are
    no dates or means to tell. But, awake and standing on his feet
    upon the boards where he had lately lain, he saw this Goblin Sight.

    He saw the tower, whither his charmed footsteps had brought him,
    swarming with dwarf phantoms, spirits, elfin creatures of the
    Bells. He saw them leaping, flying, dropping, pouring from the
    Bells without a pause. He saw them, round him on the ground; above
    him, in the air; clambering from him, by the ropes below; looking
    down upon him, from the massive iron-girded beams; peeping in upon
    him, through the chinks and loopholes in the walls; spreading away
    and away from him in enlarging circles, as the water ripples give
    way to a huge stone that suddenly comes plashing in among them. He
    saw them, of all aspects and all shapes. He saw them ugly,
    handsome, crippled, exquisitely formed. He saw them young, he saw
    them old, he saw them kind, he saw them cruel, he saw them merry,
    he saw them grim; he saw them dance, and heard them sing; he saw
    them tear their hair, and heard them howl. He saw the air thick
    with them. He saw them come and go, incessantly. He saw them
    riding downward, soaring upward, sailing off afar, perching near at

    hand, all restless and all violently active. Stone, and brick, and
    slate, and tile, became transparent to him as to them. He saw them
    IN the houses, busy at the sleepers' beds. He saw them soothing
    people in their dreams; he saw them beating them with knotted
    whips; he saw them yelling in their ears; he saw them playing
    softest music on their pillows; he saw them cheering some with the
    songs of birds and the perfume of flowers; he saw them flashing
    awful faces on the troubled rest of others, from enchanted mirrors
    which they carried in
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