[Green Mansions by W. H. Hudson]@TWC D-Link book
Green Mansions

CHAPTER XVIII
5/15

Only to live I take it now--this hateful strength-giver that will enable me to reach Rima, and the purer, better life that is to be." During all that time, when we toiled onwards league after league in silence, or sat silent by the nightly fire, I thought of many things; but the past, with which I had definitely broken, was little in my mind.
Rima was still the source and centre of all my thoughts; from her they rose, and to her returned.

Thinking, hoping, dreaming, sustained me in those dark days and nights of pain and privation.

Imagination was the bread that gave me strength, the wine that exhilarated.

What sustained old Nuflo's mind I know not.

Probably it was like a chrysalis, dormant, independent of sustenance; the bright-winged image to be called at some future time to life by a great shouting of angelic hosts and noises of musical instruments slept secure, coffined in that dull, gross nature.
The old beloved wood once more! Never did his native village in some mountain valley seem more beautiful to the Switzer, returning, war-worn, from long voluntary exile, than did that blue cloud on the horizon--the forest where Rima dwelt, my bride, my beautiful--and towering over it the dark cone of Ytaioa, now seem to my hungry eyes! How near at last--how near! And yet the two or three intervening leagues to be traversed so slowly, step by step--how vast the distance seemed! Even at far Riolama, when I set out on my return, I scarcely seemed so far from my love.


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