[Zicci Complete by Edward Bulwer-Lytton]@TWC D-Link bookZicci Complete CHAPTER XVIII 6/13
But the first lessons are stern and dread." "If thou hast mastered them, why not I ?" answered Glyndon, boldly.
"I have felt from my boyhood that strange mysteries were reserved for my career, and from the proudest ends of ordinary ambition I have carried my gaze into the cloud and darkness that stretch beyond.
The instant I beheld Zicci, I felt as if I had discovered the guide and the tutor for which my youth had idly languished and vainly burned." "And to me his duty can be transferred," replied the stranger.
"Yonder lies, anchored in the bay, the vessel in which Zicci seeks a fairer home; a little while and the breeze will rise, the sail will swell, and the stranger will have passed like a wind away.
Still, like the wind, he leaves in thy heart the seeds that may bear the blossom and the fruit. Zicci hath performed his task--he is wanted no more; the perfecter of his work is at thy side.
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