[The Pilgrims Of The Rhine by Edward Bulwer-Lytton]@TWC D-Link book
The Pilgrims Of The Rhine

CHAPTER XVII
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But I am now in somewhat less dejected spirits.

Gertrude is better,--yes, really better; there is a physician here who gives me hope; my care is perpetually to amuse, and never to fatigue her,--never to permit her thoughts to rest upon herself.

For I have imagined that illness cannot, at least in the unexhausted vigour of our years, fasten upon us irremediably unless we feed it with our own belief in its existence.

You see men of the most delicate frames engaged in active and professional pursuits, who literally have no time for illness.

Let them become idle, let them take care of themselves, let them think of their health--and they die! The rust rots the steel which use preserves; and, thank Heaven, although Gertrude, once during our voyage, seemed roused, by an inexcusable imprudence of emotion on my part, into some suspicion of her state, yet it passed away; for she thinks rarely of herself,--I am ever in her thoughts and seldom from her side, and you know, too, the sanguine and credulous nature of her disease.


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