h were my reflections when the last glimmer of the candle flashed up
like a meteor, and then as suddenly expired in night. I was glad that
the shadows were gone. Better, thought I, is utter darkness than that
poor flame which renders it visible. But I had suddenly grown rich in
thought. A clue had been furnished to the labyrinth in which I had
wandered from a child; a hint had been planted in the mind which it
would be impossible ever to circumscribe or extinguish. One letter had
been identified by which, like Champollion le Jeune, I could eventually
decipher the inscription on the pyramid. What are these spectral
apparitions which rear themselves in the human mind, and are called by
mortals _hints_? Whence do they come? Who lodges them in the chambers of
the mind, where they sprout and germinate, and bud and blossom, and
bear?
The Florentine caught one as it fell from the stars, and invented the
telescope to observe them. Columbus caught another, as it was whispered
by the winds, and they wafted him to the shores of a New World. Franklin
beheld one flash forth from the cloud, and he traced the lightnings to
their bourn. Another dropped from the skies into the brain of Leverrier,
and he scaled the very heavens, till he unburied a star.
Rapidly was my mind working out the solution of the problem which had so
long tortured it, based upon the intimation it had derived from St.
Paul's epistle, when most unexpectedly, and at the same time most
unwelcomely, I fell into one of those strange moods which can neither be
called sleep nor consciousness, but which leave their impress far more
powerfully than the visions of the night or the events of the day.
I beheld a small egg, most beautifully dotted over, and stained. Whilst
my eye rested on it, it cracked; an opening was made _from within_, and
almost immediately afterward a bird of glittering plumage and mocking
song flew out, and perched on the bough of a rose-tree, beneath whose
shadow I found myself reclining. Before my surprise had vanished, I
beheld a painted worm at my feet, crawling toward the root of the tree
which was blooming above me. It soon reached the trunk, climbed into the
branches, and commenced spinning its cocoon. Hardly had it finished its
silken home, ere it came forth in the form of a gorgeous butterfly, and,
spreading its wings, mounted toward the heavens. Quickly succeeding
this, the same pyramid of alabaster, which I had seen from the summit of
Te
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