Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- General Editor’s Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Chronology
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Nightmare Abbey
- Appendix A Peacock’s Preface of 1837
- Appendix B An Essay on Fashionable Literature (1818)
- Appendix C The Four Ages of Poetry (1820)
- Note on the Text
- Emendations and Variants
- Ambiguous Line-End Hyphenations
- Explanatory Notes
- Select Bibliography
Chapter X
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 June 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- General Editor’s Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Chronology
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Nightmare Abbey
- Appendix A Peacock’s Preface of 1837
- Appendix B An Essay on Fashionable Literature (1818)
- Appendix C The Four Ages of Poetry (1820)
- Note on the Text
- Emendations and Variants
- Ambiguous Line-End Hyphenations
- Explanatory Notes
- Select Bibliography
Summary
ON the evening on which Mr. Asterias had caught a glimpse of a female figure on the sea-shore, which he had translated into the visual sign of his interior cognition of a mermaid, Scythrop, retiring to his tower, found his study pre-occupied. Astranger, muffled in a cloak, was sitting at his table. Scythrop paused in surprise. The stranger rose at his entrance, and looked at him intently a few minutes, in silence. The eyes of the stranger alone were visible. All the rest of the figure was muffled and mantled in the folds of a black cloak, which was raised, by the right hand, to the level of the eyes. This scrutiny being completed, the stranger, dropping the cloak, said, “I see, by your physiognomy, that you may be trusted;” and revealed to the astonished Scythrop a female form and countenance of dazzling grace and beauty, with long flowing hair of raven blackness, and large black eyes of almost oppressive brilliancy: which strikingly contrasted with a complexion of snowy whiteness. Her dress was extremely elegant, but had an appearance of foreign fashion, as if both the lady and her mantua-maker were of “a far countree.”
“I guess ‘twas frightful there to see
A lady so richly clad as she,
Beautiful exceedingly.”
For, if it be terrible to one young lady to find another under a tree at midnight, it must, à fortiori, be much more terrible to a young gentleman to find a young lady in his study at that hour. If the logical consecutiveness of this conclusion be not manifest to my readers, I am sorry for their dullness, and must refer them, for more ample elucidation, to a treatise which Mr. Flosky intends to write, on the Categories of Relation, which comprehend Substance and Accident, Cause and Effect, Action and Re-action.
Scythrop, therefore, either was or ought to have been frightened: at all events, he was astonished; and astonishment, though not in itself fear, is nevertheless a good stage towards it, and is, indeed, as it were, the half-way house between respect and terror, according to Mr. Burke's graduated scale of the sublime.
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- Nightmare Abbey , pp. 63 - 69Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2016