[Mathilda by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley]@TWC D-Link bookMathilda CHAPTER XII 28/53
what Mary says about places that are associated with former emotions in her _Rambles in Germany and Italy_ (2 vols., London: Moxon, 1844), II, 78-79.
She is writing of her approach to Venice, where, twenty-five years before, little Clara had died.
"It is a strange, but to any person who has suffered, a familiar circumstance, that those who are enduring mental or corporeal agony are strangely alive to immediate external objects, and their imagination even exercises its wild power over them....
Thus the banks of the Brenta presented to me a moving scene; not a palace, not a tree of which I did not recognize, as marked and recorded, at a moment when life and death hung upon our speedy arrival at Venice." [32] The remainder of this chapter, which describes the crucial scene between Mathilda and her father, is the result of much revision from _F of F--A_.
Some of the revisions are in _S-R fr_.
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