CXIX
DURING the following night there appeared to me in dreams a marvellous being in the form of a most lovely youth, who cried, as though he wanted to reprove me: “Knowest thou who lent thee that body, which thou wouldst have spoiled before its time?” I seemed to answer that I recognized all things pertaining to me as gifts fr the God of nature. “So, then,” he said, “thou hast contempt for His handiwork, through this thy will to spoil it? Cmit thyself unto His guidance, and lose not hope in His great goodness!” Much more he added, in words of marvellous efficacy, the thousandth part of which I cannot now remember.
I began to consider that the angel of my vision spoke the truth. So I cast my eyes around the prison, and saw se scraps of rotten brick, with the fragments of which, rubbing one against the other, I cposed a paste. Then, creeping on all fours, as I was cpelled to go, I crawled up to an angle of my dungeon door, and gnawed a splinter fr it with my teeth. Having achieved this feat, I waited till the light came on my prison; that was fr the hour of twenty and a half to twenty-one and a half. When it arrived, I began to write, the best I could, on se blank pages in my Bible, and rebuked the regents of my intellectual self for being too impatient to endure this life; they replied to my body with excuses drawn fr all that they had suffered; and the body gave them hope of better fortune. To this effect, then, by way of dialogue, I wrote as follows:-
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