{"id":"01KG8AN0ECXHY1FVT5M6ZHYDX2","cid":"bafkreifgzae6kwd5vgqcpcuqe62jngbdtktcknq4tmlk2kuvsgpjvjeada","type":"chunk","properties":{"end_line":13692,"extracted_at":"2026-01-30T20:48:52.924Z","extracted_by":"structure-extraction-lambda","label":"Chunk 1","source_file":"01KG89J1JSYKSGCE149MH9HF6A","start_line":13633,"text":"II.\r\n\r\n\"This morning I vowed it, my own dearest, dearest Pierre I feel stronger\r\nto-day; for to-day I have still more thought of thine own superhuman,\r\nangelical strength; which so, has a very little been transferred to me.\r\nOh, Pierre, Pierre, with what words shall I write thee now;--now, when\r\nstill knowing nothing, yet something of thy secret I, as a seer,\r\nsuspect. Grief,--deep, unspeakable grief, hath made me this seer. I\r\ncould murder myself, Pierre, when I think of my previous blindness; but\r\nthat only came from my swoon. It was horrible and most murdersome; but\r\nnow I see thou wert right in being so instantaneous with me, and in\r\nnever afterward writing to me, Pierre; yes, now I see it, and adore thee\r\nthe more.\r\n\r\n\"Ah! thou too noble and angelical Pierre, now I feel that a being like\r\nthee, can possibly have no love as other men love; but thou lovest as\r\nangels do; not for thyself, but wholly for others. But still are we one,\r\nPierre; thou art sacrificing thyself, and I hasten to re-tie myself to\r\nthee, that so I may catch thy fire, and all the ardent multitudinous\r\narms of our common flames may embrace. I will ask of thee nothing,\r\nPierre; thou shalt tell me no secret. Very right wert thou, Pierre,\r\nwhen, in that ride to the hills, thou wouldst not swear the fond,\r\nfoolish oath I demanded. Very right, very right; now I see it.\r\n\r\n\"If then I solemnly vow, never to seek from thee any slightest thing\r\nwhich thou wouldst not willingly have me know; if ever I, in all outward\r\nactions, shall recognize, just as thou dost, the peculiar position of\r\nthat mysterious, and ever-sacred being;--then, may I not come and live\r\nwith thee? I will be no encumbrance to thee. I know just where thou art,\r\nand how thou art living; and only just there, Pierre, and only just so,\r\nis any further life endurable, or possible for me. She will never\r\nknow--for thus far I am sure thou thyself hast never disclosed it to\r\nher what I once was to thee. Let it seem, as though I were some\r\nnun-like cousin immovably vowed to dwell with thee in thy strange exile.\r\nShow not to me,--never show more any visible conscious token of love. I\r\nwill never to thee. Our mortal lives, oh, my heavenly Pierre, shall\r\nhenceforth be one mute wooing of each other; with no declaration; no\r\nbridal; till we meet in the pure realms of God's final blessedness for\r\nus;--till we meet where the ever-interrupting and ever-marring world can\r\nnot and shall not come; where all thy hidden, glorious unselfishness\r\nshall be gloriously revealed in the full splendor of that heavenly\r\nlight; where, no more forced to these cruelest disguises, she, _she_ too\r\nshall assume her own glorious place, nor take it hard, but rather feel\r\nthe more blessed, when, there, thy sweet heart, shall be openly and\r\nunreservedly mine. Pierre, Pierre, my Pierre!--only this thought, this\r\nhope, this sublime faith now supports me. Well was it, that the swoon,\r\nin which thou didst leave me, that long eternity ago--well was it, dear\r\nPierre, that though I came out of it to stare and grope, yet it was only\r\nto stare and grope, and then I swooned again, and then groped again, and\r\nthen again swooned. But all this was vacancy; little I clutched; nothing\r\nI knew; 'twas less than a dream, my Pierre, I had no conscious thought\r\nof thee, love; but felt an utter blank, a vacancy;--for wert thou not\r\nthen utterly gone from me? and what could there then be left of poor\r\nLucy?--But now, this long, long swoon is past; I come out again into\r\nlife and light; but how could I come out, how could I any way _be_, my\r\nPierre, if not in thee? So the moment I came out of the long, long\r\nswoon, straightway came to me the immortal faith in thee, which though\r\nit could offer no one slightest possible argument of mere sense in thy\r\nbehalf, yet was it only the more mysteriously imperative for that, my\r\nPierre. Know then, dearest Pierre, that with every most glaring earthly\r","title":"Chunk 1"},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KG8AKWW7QVCVAK9TAN5XB61S","peer_type":"section","predicate":"in"},{"peer":"01KG89J1JSYKSGCE149MH9HF6A","peer_type":"file","predicate":"extractedFrom"},{"peer":"01KG89HMDZKNY753EZE1CJ8HZW","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"},{"peer":"01KG8AN0ECBP57XZAFH4ZVP4HQ","peer_type":"chunk","predicate":"next"}],"ver":2,"created_at":"2026-01-30T20:48:55.756Z","ts":"2026-01-30T20:49:32.811Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFF0H3YRP9ZSM033AM0QJ47H"}}