{"id":"01KG8AMXWET0H0RSPRQ64QHSXQ","cid":"bafkreidujeocmqsyfifkbyjwt7nxawdf4tseamhckojnboq57c2gk7u2a4","type":"chunk","properties":{"end_line":5255,"extracted_at":"2026-01-30T20:48:52.921Z","extracted_by":"structure-extraction-lambda","label":"Chunk 3","source_file":"01KG89J1JSYKSGCE149MH9HF6A","start_line":5195,"text":"stung with the thought of having been driven away there, too. I now knew\r\nnot where to go to rid myself of my loneliness. At last I went outside\r\nof the house, and sat down on a stone, but its coldness went up to my\r\nheart, and I rose and stood on my feet. But my head was dizzy; I could\r\nnot stand; I fell, and knew no more. But next morning I found myself in\r\nbed in my uncheerable room, and some dark bread and a cup of water by\r\nme.\r\n\r\n\"It has only been by chance that I have told thee this one particular\r\nreminiscence of my early life in that house. I could tell many more like\r\nit, but this is enough to show what manner of life I led at that time.\r\nEvery day that I then lived, I felt all visible sights and all audible\r\nsounds growing stranger and stranger, and fearful and more fearful to\r\nme. To me the man and the woman were just like the cat; none of them\r\nwould speak to me; none of them were comprehensible to me. And the man,\r\nand the woman, and the cat, were just like the green foundation stones\r\nof the house to me; I knew not whence they came, or what cause they had\r\nfor being there. I say again, no living human soul came to the house but\r\nthe man and the woman; but sometimes the old man early trudged away to a\r\nroad that led through the woods, and would not come back till late in\r\nthe evening; he brought the dark bread, and the thin, reddish wine with\r\nhim. Though the entrance to the wood was not so very far from the door,\r\nyet he came so slowly and infirmly trudging with his little load, that\r\nit seemed weary hours on hours between my first descrying him among the\r\ntrees, and his crossing the splintered threshold.\r\n\r\n\"Now the wide and vacant blurrings of my early life thicken in my mind.\r\nAll goes wholly memoryless to me now. It may have been that about that\r\ntime I grew sick with some fever, in which for a long interval I lost\r\nmyself. Or it may be true, which I have heard, that after the period of\r\nour very earliest recollections, then a space intervenes of entire\r\nunknowingness, followed again by the first dim glimpses of the\r\nsucceeding memory, more or less distinctly embracing all our past up to\r\nthat one early gap in it.\r\n\r\n\"However this may be, nothing more can I recall of the house in the wide\r\nopen space; nothing of how at last I came to leave it; but I must have\r\nbeen still extremely young then. But some uncertain, tossing memory have\r\nI of being at last in another round, open space, but immensely larger\r\nthan the first one, and with no encircling belt of woods. Yet often it\r\nseems to me that there were three tall, straight things like pine-trees\r\nsomewhere there nigh to me at times; and that they fearfully shook and\r\nsnapt as the old trees used to in the mountain storms. And the floors\r\nseemed sometimes to droop at the corners still more steeply than the old\r\nfloors did; and changefully drooped too, so that I would even seem to\r\nfeel them drooping under me.\r\n\r\n\"Now, too, it was that, as it sometimes seems to me, I first and last\r\nchattered in the two childish languages I spoke of a little time ago.\r\nThere seemed people about me, some of whom talked one, and some the\r\nother; but I talked both; yet one not so readily as the other; and but\r\nbeginningly as it were; still this other was the one which was gradually\r\ndisplacing the former. The men who--as it sometimes dreamily seems to me\r\nat times--often climbed the three strange tree-like things, they\r\ntalked--I needs must think--if indeed I have any real thought about so\r\nbodiless a phantom as this is--they talked the language which I speak of\r\nas at this time gradually waning in me. It was a bonny tongue; oh, seems\r\nto me so sparkling-gay and lightsome; just the tongue for a child like\r\nme, if the child had not been so sad always. It was pure children's\r\nlanguage, Pierre; so twittering--such a chirp.\r\n\r","title":"Chunk 3"},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KG8AKSYXW4P2PJ2ZT3S17FHA","peer_type":"section","predicate":"in"},{"peer":"01KG89J1JSYKSGCE149MH9HF6A","peer_type":"file","predicate":"extractedFrom"},{"peer":"01KG89HMDZKNY753EZE1CJ8HZW","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"},{"peer":"01KG8AN3X4YH668X9F772HXECQ","peer_type":"chunk","predicate":"prev"},{"peer":"01KG8AMXWEDB4M30ZRCR0B8N7P","peer_type":"chunk","predicate":"next"}],"ver":2,"created_at":"2026-01-30T20:48:53.134Z","ts":"2026-01-30T20:49:16.798Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFF0H3YRP9ZSM033AM0QJ47H"}}