1 I half believed her; for I felt indeed only bad feelings surging in my breast.
2 The cut bled, the pain was sharp: my terror had passed its climax; other feelings succeeded.
3 But this time his feelings were all pent in his heart: I was not worthy to hear them uttered.
4 You are sick; because the best of feelings, the highest and the sweetest given to man, keeps far away from you.
5 For me, the watches of that long night passed in ghastly wakefulness; strained by dread: such dread as children only can feel.
6 You think I have no feelings, and that I can do without one bit of love or kindness; but I cannot live so: and you have no pity.
7 However, my tenderest feelings are about to receive a shock: such is my presentiment; stay now, to see whether it will be realised.
8 Ere long, I had reason to congratulate myself on the course of wholesome discipline to which I had thus forced my feelings to submit.
9 I should still have my unblighted self to turn to: my natural unenslaved feelings with which to communicate in moments of loneliness.
10 No severe or prolonged bodily illness followed this incident of the red-room; it only gave my nerves a shock of which I feel the reverberation to this day.
11 Had I attended to the suggestions of pride and ire, I should immediately have left him; but something worked within me more strongly than those feelings could.
12 I had imbibed from her something of her nature and much of her habits: more harmonious thoughts: what seemed better regulated feelings had become the inmates of my mind.
13 For when I say that I am of his kind, I do not mean that I have his force to influence, and his spell to attract; I mean only that I have certain tastes and feelings in common with him.
14 A child cannot quarrel with its elders, as I had done; cannot give its furious feelings uncontrolled play, as I had given mine, without experiencing afterwards the pang of remorse and the chill of reaction.
15 Had Grace been young and handsome, I should have been tempted to think that tenderer feelings than prudence or fear influenced Mr. Rochester in her behalf; but, hard-favoured and matronly as she was, the idea could not be admitted.
16 Teachers and pupils may look coldly on you for a day or two, but friendly feelings are concealed in their hearts; and if you persevere in doing well, these feelings will ere long appear so much the more evidently for their temporary suppression.
17 He put the question rather hurriedly; he seemed half to expect an indignant, or at least a disdainful rejection of the offer: not knowing all my thoughts and feelings, though guessing some, he could not tell in what light the lot would appear to me.
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