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    Fancy's Show-Box

    by Nathaniel Hawthorne
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    Page 1 of 5
    A Morality.
    From "Twice Told Tales"

    What is Guilt? A stain upon the soul. And it is a point of vast
    interest, whether the soul may contract such stains, in all their depth
    and flagrancy, from deeds which may have been plotted and resolved upon,
    but which, physically, have never had existence. Must the fleshly hand
    and visible frame of man set its seal to the evil designs of the soul, in
    order to give them their entire validity against the sinner? Or, while
    none but crimes perpetrated are cognizable before an earthly tribunal,
    will guilty thoughts,--of which guilty deeds are no more than shadows,--
    will these draw down the full weight of a condemning sentence, in the
    supreme court of eternity? In the solitude of a midnight chamber, or in
    a desert, afar from men, or in a church, while the body is kneeling, the
    soul may pollute itself even with those crimes, which we are accustomed
    to deem altogether carnal. If this be true, it is a fearful truth.

    Let us illustrate the subject by an imaginary example. A venerable
    gentleman, one Mr. Smith, who had long been regarded as a pattern of
    moral excellence, was warming his aged blood with a glass or two of
    generous wine. His children being gone forth about their worldly
    business, and his grandchildren at school, he sat alone, in a deep,

    luxurious arm-chair, with his feet beneath a richly carved mahogany
    table. Some old people have a dread of solitude, and when better company
    may not be had, rejoice even to hear the quiet breathing of a babe,
    asleep upon the carpet. But Mr. Smith, whose silver hair was the bright
    symbol of a life unstained, except by such spots as are inseparable from
    human nature, he had no need of a babe to protect him by its purity, nor
    of a grown person to stand between him and his own soul. Nevertheless,
    either Manhood must converse with Age, or Womanhood must soothe him with
    gentle cares, or Infancy must sport around his chair, or his thoughts
    will stray into the misty region of the past, and the old man be chill
    and sad. Wine will not always cheer him. Such might have been the case
    with Mr. Smith, when, through the brilliant medium of his glass of old
    Madeira, he beheld three figures entering the room. These were Fancy,
    who had assumed the garb and aspect of an itinerant showman, with a box
    of pictures on her back; and Memory, in the likeness of a clerk, with a
    pen behind her ear, an inkhorn at her buttonhole, and a huge manuscript
    volume beneath her arm; and lastly, behind the other two, a person
    shrouded in a dusky mantle, which concealed both face and form. But Mr.
    Smith had a shrewd idea that it was Conscience.

    How kind of Fancy, Memory, and Conscience to visit the old gentleman,
    just as he was beginning to imagine that
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