Page:Iron shroud, or, Italian revenge (1).pdf/4

 folding doors them, which occupied the ccntrecentre [sic], no chink, or chasm, projection, broke the smooth black surfaccsurface [sic] of the walls. An iron bedstead, littered with straw, stood in one corner; and beside it, a vessel with water, and a coarse dish filled with coarser food.

Even the intrepid soul of Vivenzio shrunk with dismay as he entered this abodcabode [sic], and heard the ponderous doors triple-locked by the silent ruffians who conducted him to it. Their silence seemed prophetic of his fate, of the living grave that had been prepared for him. His menaces and his entreaties, his indignant appeals for justice, and his impatient questioning of their intentions, were alike vain. They listened, but spokcspoke [sic] not. Fit ministers of a crime that should have no tongue!

How dismal was the sound of their retiring steps! And, as their faint cchoesechoes [sic] died along the winding passagcspassages [sic], a fearful presage grew within him, that never more the face, or voice, or tread, of man, would greet his senses. He had seen human beings for the last time! And hche [sic] had looked his last upon the bright sky, and upon the smiling earth and upon a beautiful world he lovcdloved [sic] and whose minion he had been! HercHere [sic] he was to cndend [sic] his life—a life he had just begun to revel in! And by what means? By secret poison? or by murderous assault ? No—for then it had been needless to bring him thither. Famine perhaps—a thousand deaths in one ! It was terrible to think of it—but it was yet more terrible to picture long, long years of captivity in a solitude so appalling, a lonclinessloneliness [sic] so drcarydreary [sic], that thought, for want of fellowship, would lose itself in madness, or stagnatostagnate [sic] into idiocy.

He could not hope to escapcescape [sic], unlcssunless [sic] he had the