[Zanoni by Edward Bulwer Lytton]@TWC D-Link book
Zanoni

CHAPTER 5
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She would not ask his confidence,--she sought to steal into it.

By little and little she felt that she was succeeding.

Too wrapped in his own strange existence to be acutely observant of the character of others, Glyndon mistook the self-content of a generous and humble affection for constitutional fortitude; and this quality pleased and soothed him.

It is fortitude that the diseased mind requires in the confidant whom it selects as its physician.

And how irresistible is that desire to communicate! How often the lonely man thought to himself, "My heart would be lightened of its misery, if once confessed!" He felt, too, that in the very youth, the inexperience, the poetical temperament of Adela, he could find one who would comprehend and bear with him better than any sterner and more practical nature.


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