loudly upon the ear, then sinking gently away with the retiring breeze, and
then again returning with added sweetness. I listened with delight to their
melody, till their softness seemed to increase; the sounds became gradually
fainter and fainter; the landscape faded from my sight; a soft languor crept
over me: in short, I slept.
It would be of no use to go to sleep without dreaming; and, accordingly, I had
scarcely closed my eyes when, methought, a spirit stood before me. His head
was crowned with flowers; his azure wings fluttered in the breeze, and a light
drapery, like the fleecy vapour that hangs upon the summit of a mountain,
floated round him. In his hand he held a scroll, and his voice sounded soft and
sweet as the liquid melody of the nightingale.
"Take this," said he, smiling benignantly; "it is the Chronicle of a future age.
Weave it into a story. It will so far gratify your wishes, as to give you a hero
totally different from any hero that ever appeared before. You hesitate,"
continued he, again smiling, and regarding me earnestly: "I read your
thoughts, and see you fear to sketch the scenes of which you are to write,
because you imagine they must be different from those with which you are
acquainted. This is a natural distrust: the scenes will indeed be different from
those you now behold; the whole face of society will be changed: new
governments will have arisen; strange discoveries will be made, and stranger
modes of life adopted. The restless curiosity and research of man will then
have enabled him to lift the veil from much which is (to him at least) at
present a mystery; and his powers (both as regards mechanical agency and
intellectual knowledge) will be greatly enlarged. But even then, in his
plenitude of acquirement, he will be made conscious of the infirmity of his
nature, and will be guilty of many absurdities which, in his less enlightened
state, he would feel ashamed to commit.
"To no one but yourself has this vision been revealed: do not fear to behold it.
Though strange, it may be fully understood, for much will still remain to
connect that future age with the present. The impulses and feelings of human
creatures must, for the most part, be alike in all ages: habits vary, but nature
endures; and the same passions were delineated, the same weaknesses
ridiculed, by Aristophanes, Plautus, and Terence, as in after-times were
described by Shakspeare and Moliere; and as they will be in the times of
which you are to write,—by authors yet unknown.
"But you still hesitate; you object that the novelty of the allusions perplexes
you. This is quite a new kind of delicacy; as authors seldom trouble
themselves to become acquainted with a subject before they begin to write
upon it. However, since you are so very scrupulous, I will endeavour, if
possible, to assist you. Look around."