Page:Eugene Aram vol 3 - Lytton (1832).djvu/197



"Equal to either fortune." Speech of Eugene Aram.

comes over us, sometimes, in our career of pleasure, or the troublous exultation of our ambitious pursuits; a thought comes over us, like a cloud, that around us and about us Death—Shame—Crime—Despair, are busy at their work. I have read somewhere of an enchanted land, where the inmates walked along voluptuous gardens, and built palaces, and heard music, and made merry; while around, and within, the land, were deep caverns, where the gnomes and the fiends dwelt: and ever and anon their groans and laughter, and the sounds of their unutterable toils, or ghastly revels, travelled to the upper air, mixing