[Dracula by Bram Stoker]@TWC D-Link bookDracula CHAPTER 12 34/54
And so, as you love me, and he loves me, and I love you with all the moods and tenses of the verb, I send you simply his 'love' instead. Goodbye, my dearest Lucy, and blessings on you. "Yours, "Mina Harker" REPORT FROM PATRICK HENNESSEY, MD, MRCSLK, QCPI, ETC, ETC, TO JOHN SEWARD, MD. 20 September. My dear Sir: "In accordance with your wishes, I enclose report of the conditions of everything left in my charge.
With regard to patient, Renfield, there is more to say.
He has had another outbreak, which might have had a dreadful ending, but which, as it fortunately happened, was unattended with any unhappy results. This afternoon a carrier's cart with two men made a call at the empty house whose grounds abut on ours, the house to which, you will remember, the patient twice ran away.
The men stopped at our gate to ask the porter their way, as they were strangers. "I was myself looking out of the study window, having a smoke after dinner, and saw one of them come up to the house.
As he passed the window of Renfield's room, the patient began to rate him from within, and called him all the foul names he could lay his tongue to.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|