The Mortal Immortal
July 16, 1833.--This is a memorable anniversary for me; on it I
complete my three hundred and twenty-third year!
The Wandering Jew?--certainly not. More than eighteen centuries
have passed over his head. In comparison with him, I am a very young
Immortal.
Am I, then, immortal? This is a question which I have asked
myself, by day and night, for now three hundred and three years, and
yet cannot answer it. I detected a grey hair amidst my brown locks
this very day--that surely signifies decay. Yet it may have remained
concealed there for three hundred years--for some persons have become
entirely white-headed before twenty years of age.
I will tell my story, and my reader shall judge for me. I will
tell my story, and so contrive to pass some few hours of a long
eternity, become so wearisome to me. For ever! Can it be? to live for
ever! I have heard of enchantments, in which the victims were plunged
into a deep sleep, to wake, after a hundred years, as fresh as ever:
I have heard of the Seven Sleepers--thus to be immortal would not be
so burthensome: but, oh! the weight of never-ending time--the tedious
passage of the still-succeeding hours! How happy was the fabled
Nourjahad!--But to my task.
All the world has heard of Cornelius Agrippa. His memory is as
immortal as his arts have made me. All the world has also heard of
his scholar, who, unawares, raised the foul fiend during his master's
absence, and was destroyed by him. The report, true or false, of this
accident, was attended with many inconveniences to the renowned
philosopher. All his scholars at once deserted him--his servants
disappeared. He had no one near him to put coals on his ever-burning
fires while he slept, or to attend to the changeful colours of his
medicines while he studied. Experiment after experiment failed,
because one pair of hands was insufficient to complete them: the dark
spirits laughed at him for not being able to retain a single mortal
in his service.
I was then very young--very poor--and very much in love. I had
been for about a year the pupil of Cornelius, though I was absent
when this accident took place. On my return, my friends implored me
not to return to the alchymist's abode. I trembled as I listened to
the dire tale they told; I required no second warning; and when
Cornelius came and offered me a purse of gold if I would remain under
his roof, I felt as if Satan himself tempted me. My teeth
chattered--my hair stood on end;--I ran off as fast as my trembling
knees would permit.
My failing steps were directed whither for two years they had
every evening been attracted,--a gently bubbling spring of pure
living water, beside which lingered a dark-haired girl, whose beaming
eyes were fixed on the path I was accustomed each night to tread. I
cannot remember the hour when I did not love Bertha; we had been
neighbours and playmates from infancy,--her parents, like mine were
of humble life, yet respectable,--our attachment had been a source of
pleasure to them. In an evil hour, a malignant fever carried off both
her father and mother, and Bertha became an orphan. She would have
found a home beneath my paternal roof, but, unfortunately, the old
lady of the near castle, rich, childless, and solitary, declared her
intention to adopt her. Henceforth Bertha was clad in silk--inhabited
a marble palace--and was looked on as being highly favoured by
fortune. But in her new situation among her new associates, Bertha
remained true to the friend of her humbler days; she often visited
the cottage of my father, and when forbidden to go thither, she would
stray towards the neighbouring wood, and meet me beside its shady
fountain.
She often declared that she owed no duty to her new protectress
equal in sanctity to that which bound us. Yet still I was too poor to
marry, and she grew weary of being tormented on my account. She had a
haughty but an impatient spirit, and grew angry at the obstacle that
prevented our union. We met now after an absence, and she had been
sorely beset while I was away; she complained bitterly, and almost
reproached me for being poor. I replied hastily,--
"I am honest, if I am poor!--were I not, I might soon become
rich!"
This exclamation produced a thousand questions. I feared to shock
her by owning the truth, but she drew it from me; and then, casting a
look of disdain on me, she said,--
"You pretend to love, and you fear to face the Devil for my
sake!"
I protested that I had only dreaded to offend her;--while she
dwelt on the magnitude of the reward that I should receive. Thus
encouraged--shamed by her--led on by love and hope, laughing at my
later fears, with quick steps and a light heart, I returned to accept
the offers of the alchymist, and was instantly installed in my
office.
A year passed away. I became possessed of no insignificant sum of
money. Custom had banished my fears. In spite of the most painful
vigilance, I had never detected the trace of a cloven foot; nor was
the studious silence of our abode ever disturbed by demoniac howls. I
still continued my stolen interviews with Bertha, and Hope dawned on
me--Hope--but not perfect joy: for Bertha fancied that love and
security were enemies, and her pleasure was to divide them in my
bosom. Though true of heart, she was something of a coquette in
manner; I was jealous as a Turk. She slighted me in a thousand ways,
yet would never acknowledge herself to be in the wrong. She would
drive me mad with anger, and then force me to beg her pardon.
Sometimes she fancied that I was not sufficiently submissive, and
then she had some story of a rival, favoured by her protectress. She
was surrounded by silk-clad youths--the rich and gay. What chance had
the sad-robed scholar of Cornelius compared with these?
On one occasion, the philosopher made such large demands upon my
time, that I was unable to meet her as I was wont. He was engaged in
some mighty work, and I was forced to remain, day and night, feeding
his furnaces and watching his chemical preparations. Bertha waited
for me in vain at the fountain. Her haughty spirit fired at this
neglect; and when at last I stole out during a few short minutes
allotted to me for slumber, and hoped to be consoled by her, she
received me with disdain, dismissed me in scorn, and vowed that any
man should possess her hand rather than he who could not be in two
places at once for her sake. She would be revenged! And truly she
was. In my dingy retreat I heard that she had been hunting, attended
by Albert Hoffer. Albert Hoffer was favoured by her protectress, and
the three passed in cavalcade before my smoky window. Methought that
they mentioned my name; it was followed by a laugh of derision, as
her dark eyes glanced contemptuously towards my abode.
Jealousy, with all its venom and all its misery, entered my
breast. Now I shed a torrent of tears, to think that I should never
call her mine; and, anon, I imprecated a thousand curses on her
inconstancy. Yet, still I must stir the fires of the alchymist, still
attend on the changes of his unintelligible medicines.
Cornelius had watched for three days and nights, nor closed his
eyes. The progress of his alembics was slower than he expected: in
spite of his anxiety, sleep weighted upon his eyelids. Again and
again he threw off drowsiness with more than human energy; again and
again it stole away his senses. He eyed his crucibles wistfully. "Not
ready yet," he murmured; "will another night pass before
the work is accomplished? Winzy, you are vigilant--you are
faithful--you have slept, my boy--you slept last night. Look at that
glass vessel. The liquid it contains is of a soft rose-colour: the
moment it begins to change hue, awaken me--till then I may close my
eyes. First, it will turn white, and then emit golden flashes; but
wait not till then; when the rose-colour fades, rouse me." I
scarcely heard the last words, muttered, as they were, in sleep. Even
then he did not quite yield to nature. "Winzy, my boy," he
again said, "do not touch the vessel--do not put it to your
lips; it is a philtre--a philtre to cure love; you would not cease to
love your Bertha--beware to drink!"
And he slept. His venerable head sunk on his breast, and I scarce
heard his regular breathing. For a few minutes I watched the
vessel--the rosy hue of the liquid remained unchanged. Then my
thoughts wandered--they visited the fountain, and dwelt on a thousand
charming scenes never to be renewed--never! Serpents and adders were
in my heart as the word "Never!" half formed itself on my
lips. False girl!--false and cruel! Never more would she smile on me
as that evening she smiled on Albert. Worthless, detested woman! I
would not remain unrevenged--she should see Albert expire at her
feet--she should die beneath my vengeance. She had smiled in disdain
and triumph--she knew my wretchedness and her power. Yet what power
had she?--the power of exciting my hate--my utter scorn--my--oh, all
but indifference! Could I attain that--could I regard her with
careless eyes, transferring my rejected love to one fairer and more
true, that were indeed a victory!
A bright flash darted before my eyes. I had forgotten the medicine
of the adept; I gazed on it with wonder: flashes of admirable beauty,
more bright than those which the diamond emits when the sun's rays
are on it, glanced from the surface of the liquid; and odour the most
fragrant and grateful stole over my sense; the vessel seemed one
globe of living radiance, lovely to the eye, and most inviting to the
taste. The first thought, instinctively inspired by the grosser
sense, was, I will--I must drink. I raised the vessel to my lips. "It
will cure me of love--of torture!" Already I had quaffed half of
the most delicious liquor ever tasted by the palate of man, when the
philosopher stirred. I started--I dropped the glass--the fluid flamed
and glanced along the floor, while I felt Cornelius's gripe at my
throat, as he shrieked aloud, "Wretch! you have destroyed the
labour of my life!"
The philosopher was totally unaware that I had drunk any portion
of his drug. His idea was, and I gave a tacit assent to it, that I
had raised the vessel from curiosity, and that, frightened at its
brightness, and the flashes of intense light it gave forth, I had let
it fall. I never undeceived him. The fire of the medicine was
quenched--the fragrance died away--he grew calm, as a philosopher
should under the heaviest trials, and dismissed me to rest.
I will not attempt to describe the sleep of glory and bliss which
bathed my soul in paradise during the remaining hours of that
memorable night. Words would be faint and shallow types of my
enjoyment, or of the gladness that possessed my bosom when I woke. I
trod air--my thoughts were in heaven. Earth appeared heaven, and my
inheritance upon it was to be one trance of delight. "This it is
to be cured of love," I thought; "I will see Bertha this
day, and she will find her lover cold and regardless; too happy to be
disdainful, yet how utterly indifferent to her!"
The hours danced away. The philosopher, secure that he had once
succeeded, and believing that he might again, began to concoct the
same medicine once more. He was shut up with his books and drugs, and
I had a holiday. I dressed myself with care; I looked in an old but
polished shield which served me for a mirror; methoughts my good
looks had wonderfully improved. I hurried beyond the precincts of the
town, joy in my soul, the beauty of heaven and earth around me. I
turned my steps toward the castle--I could look on its lofty turrets
with lightness of heart, for I was cured of love. My Bertha saw me
afar off, as I came up the avenue. I know not what sudden impulse
animated her bosom, but at the sight, she sprung with a light
fawn-like bound down the marble steps, and was hastening towards me.
But I had been perceived by another person. The old high-born hag,
who called herself her protectress, and was her tyrant, had seen me
also; she hobbled, panting, up the terrace; a page, as ugly as
herself, held up her train, and fanned her as she hurried along, and
stopped my fair girl with a "How, now, my bold mistress? whither
so fast? Back to your cage--hawks are abroad!"
Bertha clasped her hands--her eyes were still bent on my
approaching figure. I saw the contest. How I abhorred the old crone
who checked the kind impulses of my Bertha's softening heart.
Hitherto, respect for her rank had caused me to avoid the lady of the
castle; now I disdained such trivial considerations. I was cured of
love, and lifted above all human fears; I hastened forwards, and soon
reached the terrace. How lovely Bertha looked! her eyes flashing
fire, her cheeks glowing with impatience and anger, she was a
thousand times more graceful and charming than ever. I no longer
loved--oh no! I adored--worshipped--idolized her!
She had that morning been persecuted, with more than usual
vehemence, to consent to an immediate marriage with my rival. She was
reproached with the encouragement that she had shown him--she was
threatened with being turned out of doors with disgrace and shame.
Her proud spirit rose in arms at the threat; but when she remembered
the scorn that she had heaped upon me, and how, perhaps, she had thus
lost one whom she now regarded as her only friend, she wept with
remorse and rage. At that moment I appeared. "Oh, Winzy!"
she exclaimed, "take me to your mother's cot; swiftly let me
leave the detested luxuries and wretchedness of this noble
dwelling--take me to poverty and happiness."
I clasped her in my arms with transport. The old dame was
speechless with fury, and broke forth into invective only when we
were far on the road to my natal cottage. My mother received the fair
fugitive, escaped from a gilt cage to nature and liberty, with
tenderness and joy; my father, who loved her, welcomed her heartily;
it was a day of rejoicing, which did not need the addition of the
celestial potion of the alchymist to steep me in delight.
Soon after this eventful day, I became the husband of Bertha. I
ceased to be the scholar of Cornelius, but I continued his friend. I
always felt grateful to him for having, unaware, procured me that
delicious draught of a divine elixir, which, instead of curing me of
love (sad cure! solitary and joyless remedy for evils which seem
blessings to the memory), had inspired me with courage and
resolution, thus winning for me an inestimable treasure in my Bertha.
I often called to mind that period of trance-like inebriation with
wonder. The drink of Cornelius had not fulfilled the task for which
he affirmed that it had been prepared, but its effects were more
potent and blissful than words can express. They had faded by
degrees, yet they lingered long--and painted life in hues of
splendour. Bertha often wondered at my lightness of heart and
unaccustomed gaiety; for, before, I had been rather serious, or even
sad, in my disposition. She loved me the better for my cheerful
temper, and our days were winged by joy.
Five years afterwards I was suddenly summoned to the bedside of
the dying Cornelius. He had sent for me in haste, conjuring my
instant presence. I found him stretched on his pallet, enfeebled even
to death; all of life that yet remained animated his piercing eyes,
and they were fixed on a glass vessel, full of roseate liquid.
"Behold," he said, in a broken and inward voice, "the
vanity of human wishes! a second time my hopes are about to be
crowned, a second time they are destroyed. Look at that liquor--you
may remember five years ago I had prepared the same, with the same
success;-- then, as now, my thirsting lips expected to taste the
immortal elixir --you dashed it from me! and at present it is too
late."
He spoke with difficulty, and fell back on his pillow. I could not
help saying,--
"How, revered master, can a cure for love restore you to
life?"
A faint smile gleamed across his face as I listened earnestly to
his scarcely intelligible answer.
"A cure for love and for all things--the Elixir of
Immortality. Ah! if now I might drink, I should live for ever!"
As he spoke, a golden flash gleamed from the fluid; a
well-remembered fragrance stole over the air; he raised himself, all
weak as he was--strength seemed miraculously to re-enter his frame--
he stretched forth his hand--a loud explosion startled me--a ray of
fire shot up from the elixir, and the glass vessel which contained it
was shivered to atoms! I turned my eyes towards the philosopher; he
had fallen back--his eyes were glassy--his features rigid--he was
dead!
But I lived, and was to live for ever! So said the unfortunate
alchymist, and for a few days I believed his words. I remembered the
glorious intoxication that had followed my stolen draught. I
reflected on the change I had felt in my frame--in my soul. The
bounding elasticity of the one--the buoyant lightness of the other. I
surveyed myself in a mirror, and could perceive no change in my
features during the space of the five years which had elapsed. I
remembered the radiant hues and grateful scent of that delicious
beverage--worthy the gift it was capable of bestowing--I was,
then, IMMORTAL!
A few days after I laughed at my credulity. The old proverb, that
"a prophet is least regarded in his own country," was true
with respect to me and my defunct master. I loved him as a man--I
respected him as a sage--but I derided the notion that he could
command the powers of darkness, and laughed at the superstitious
fears with which he was regarded by the vulgar. He was a wise
philosopher, but had no acquaintance with any spirits but those clad
in flesh and blood. His science was simply human; and human science,
I soon persuaded myself, could never conquer nature's laws so far as
to imprison the soul for ever within its carnal habitation. Cornelius
had brewed a soul-refreshing drink--more inebriating than wine--
sweeter and more fragrant than any fruit: it possessed probably
strong medicinal powers, imparting gladness to the heart and vigour
to the limbs; but its effects would wear out; already they were
diminished in my frame. I was a lucky fellow to have quaffed health
and joyous spirits, and perhaps a long life, at my master's hands;
but my good fortune ended there: longevity was far different from
immortality.
I continued to entertain this belief for many years. Sometimes a
thought stole across me--Was the alchymist indeed deceived? But my
habitual credence was, that I should meet the fate of all the
children of Adam at my appointed time--a little late, but still at a
natural age. Yet it was certain that I retained a wonderfully
youthful look. I was laughed at for my vanity in consulting the
mirror so often, but I consulted it in vain--my brow was
untrenched--my cheeks--my eyes--my whole person continued as
untarnished as in my twentieth year.
I was troubled. I looked at the faded beauty of Bertha--I seemed
more like her son. By degrees our neighbors began to make similar
observations, and I found at last that I went by the name of the
Scholar bewitched. Bertha herself grew uneasy. She became jealous and
peevish, and at length she began to question me. We had no children;
we were all in all to each other; and though, as she grew older, her
vivacious spirit became a little allied to ill-temper, and her beauty
sadly diminished, I cherished her in my heart as the mistress I
idolized, the wife I had sought and won with such perfect love.
At last our situation became intolerable: Bertha was fifty--I
twenty years of age. I had, in very shame, in some measure adopted
the habits of advanced age; I no longer mingled in the dance among
the young and gay, but my heart bounded along with them while I
restrained my feet; and a sorry figure I cut among the Nestors of our
village. But before the time I mention, things were altered--we were
universally shunned; we were--at least, I was--reported to have kept
up an iniquitous acquaintance with some of my former master's
supposed friends. Poor Bertha was pitied, but deserted. I was
regarded with horror and detestation.
What was to be done? we sat by our winter fire--poverty had made
itself felt, for none would buy the produce of my farm; and often I
had been forced to journey twenty miles to some place where I was not
known, to dispose of our property. It is true, we had saved something
for an evil day--that day was come.
We sat by our lone fireside--the old-hearted youth and his
antiquated wife. Again Bertha insisted on knowing the truth; she
recapitulated all she had ever heard said about me, and added her own
observations. She conjured me to cast off the spell; she described
how much more comely grey hairs were than my chestnut locks; she
descanted on the reverence and respect due to age--how preferable to
the slight regard paid to mere children: could I imagine that the
despicable gifts of youth and good looks outweighed disgrace, hatred
and scorn? Nay, in the end I should be burnt as a dealer in the black
art, while she, to whom I had not deigned to communicate any portion
of my good fortune, might be stoned as my accomplice. At length she
insinuated that I must share my secret with her, and bestow on her
like benefits to those I myself enjoyed, or she would denounce
me--and then she burst into tears.
Thus beset, methought it was the best way to tell the truth. I
reveled it as tenderly as I could, and spoke only of a very long
life, not of immortality--which representation, indeed, coincided
best with my own ideas. When I ended I rose and said,--
"And now, my Bertha, will you denounce the lover of your
youth?-- You will not, I know. But it is too hard, my poor wife, that
you should suffer for my ill-luck and the accursed arts of Cornelius.
I will leave you--you have wealth enough, and friends will return in
my absence. I will go; young as I seem and strong as I am, I can work
and gain my bread among strangers, unsuspected and unknown. I loved
you in youth; God is my witness that I would not desert you in age,
but that your safety and happiness require it."
I took my cap and moved toward the door; in a moment Bertha's arms
were round my neck, and her lips were pressed to mine. "No, my
husband, my Winzy," she said, "you shall not go alone--take
me with you; we will remove from this place, and, as you say, among
strangers we shall be unsuspected and safe. I am not so old as quite
to shame you, my Winzy; and I daresay the charm will soon wear off,
and, with the blessing of God, you will become more elderly-looking,
as is fitting; you shall not leave me."
I returned the good soul's embrace heartily. "I will not, my
Bertha; but for your sake I had not thought of such a thing. I will
be your true, faithful husband while you are spared to me, and do my
duty by you to the last."
The next day we prepared secretly for our emigration. We were
obliged to make great pecuniary sacrifices--it could not be helped.
We realized a sum sufficient, at least, to maintain us while Bertha
lived; and, without saying adieu to any one, quitted our native
country to take refuge in a remote part of western France.
It was a cruel thing to transport poor Bertha from her native
village, and the friends of her youth, to a new country, new
language, new customs. The strange secret of my destiny rendered this
removal immaterial to me; but I compassionated her deeply, and was
glad to perceive that she found compensation for her misfortunes in a
variety of little ridiculous circumstances. Away from all tell-tale
chroniclers, she sought to decrease the apparent disparity of our
ages by a thousand feminine arts--rouge, youthful dress, and assumed
juvenility of manner. I could not be angry. Did I not myself wear a
mask? Why quarrel with hers, because it was less successful? I
grieved deeply when I remembered that this was my Bertha, whom I had
loved so fondly and won with such transport--the dark-eyed,
dark-haired girl, with smiles of enchanting archness and a step like
a fawn--this mincing, simpering, jealous old woman. I should have
revered her grey locks and withered cheeks; but thus!--It was my
work, I knew; but I did not the less deplore this type of human
weakness.
Her jealously never slept. Her chief occupation was to discover
that, in spite of outward appearances, I was myself growing old. I
verily believe that the poor soul loved me truly in her heart, but
never had woman so tormenting a mode of displaying fondness. She
would discern wrinkles in my face and decrepitude in my walk, while I
bounded along in youthful vigour, the youngest looking of twenty
youths. I never dared address another woman. On one occasion,
fancying that the belle of the village regarded me with favouring
eyes, she brought me a grey wig. Her constant discourse among her
acquaintances was, that though I looked so young, there was ruin at
work within my frame; and she affirmed that the worst symptom about
me was my apparent health. My youth was a disease, she said, and I
ought at all times to prepare, if not for a sudden and awful death,
at least to awake some morning white-headed and bowed down with all
the marks of advanced years. I let her talk--I often joined in her
conjectures. Her warnings chimed in with my never-ceasing
speculations concerning my state, and I took an earnest, though
painful, interest in listening to all that her quick wit and excited
imagination could say on the subject.
Why dwell on these minute circumstances? We lived on for many long
years. Bertha became bedrid and paralytic; I nursed her as a mother
might a child. She grew peevish, and still harped upon one string--of
how long I should survive her. It has ever been a source of
consolation to me, that I performed my duty scrupulously towards her.
She had been mine in youth, she was mine in age; and at last, when I
heaped the sod over her corpse, I wept to feel that I had lost all
that really bound me to humanity.
Since then how many have been my cares and woes, how few and empty
my enjoyments! I pause here in my history--I will pursue it no
further. A sailor without rudder or compass, tossed on a stormy sea
--a traveller lost on a widespread heath, without landmark or stone
to guide him--such I have been: more lost, more hopeless than either.
A nearing ship, a gleam from some far cot, may save them; but I have
no beacon except the hope of death.
Death! mysterious, ill-visaged friend of weak humanity! Why alone
of all mortals have you cast me from your sheltering fold? Oh, for
the peace of the grave! the deep silence of the iron-bound tomb! that
thought would cease to work in my brain, and my heart beat no more
with emotions varied only by new forms of sadness!
Am I immortal? I return to my first question. In the first place,
is it not more probably that the beverage of the alchymist was
fraught rather with longevity than eternal life? Such is my hope. And
then be it remembered, that I only drank half of the potion
prepared by him. Was not the whole necessary to complete the charm?
To have drained half the Elixir of Immortality is but to be
half-immortal--my For-ever is thus truncated and null.
But again, who shall number the years of the half of eternity? I
often try to imagine by what rule the infinite may be divided.
Sometimes I fancy age advancing upon me. One grey hair I have found.
Fool! do I lament? Yes, the fear of age and death often creeps coldly
into my heart; and the more I live, the more I dread death, even
while I abhor life. Such an enigma is man--born to perish--when he
wars, as I do, against the established laws of his nature.
But for this anomaly of feeling surely I might die: the medicine
of the alchymist would not be proof against fire--sword--and the
strangling waters. I have gazed upon the blue depths of many a placid
lake, and the tumultuous rushing of many a mighty river, and have
said, peace inhabits those waters; yet I have turned my steps away,
to live yet another day. I have asked myself, whether suicide would
be a crime in one to whom thus only the portals of the other world
could be opened. I have done all, except presenting myself as a
soldier or duelist, an objection of destruction to my--no, not my
fellow mortals, and therefore I have shrunk away. They are not my
fellows. The inextinguishable power of life in my frame, and their
ephemeral existence, places us wide as the poles asunder. I could not
raise a hand against the meanest or the most powerful among them.
Thus have I lived on for many a year--alone, and weary of
myself--desirous of death, yet never dying--a mortal immortal.
Neither ambition nor avarice can enter my mind, and the ardent love
that gnaws at my heart, never to be returned--never to find an equal
on which to expend itself--lives there only to torment me.
This very day I conceived a design by which I may end all--
without self-slaughter, without making another man a Cain--an
expedition, which mortal frame can never survive, even endued with
the youth and strength that inhabits mine. Thus I shall put my
immortality to the test, and rest for ever--or return, the wonder and
benefactor of the human species.
Before I go, a miserable vanity has caused me to pen these pages.
I would not die, and leave no name behind. Three centuries have
passed since I quaffed the fatal beverage; another year shall not
elapse before, encountering gigantic dangers--warring with the powers
of frost in their home--beset by famine, toil, and tempest--I yield
this body, too tenacious a cage for a soul which thirsts for freedom,
to the destructive elements of air and water; or, if I survive, my
name shall be recorded as one of the most famous among the sons of
men; and, my task achieved, I shall adopt more resolute means, and,
by scattering and annihilating the atoms that compose my frame, set
at liberty the life imprisoned within, and so cruelly prevented from
soaring from this dim earth to a sphere more congenial to its
immortal essence.