Page:Memoirs of the Lady Hester Stanhope.djvu/153

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
Lady Hester Stanhope.
139

"Oh! if they have written about the crusades," said Lady Hester, paying no attention to what I said about Volney, "tell them that all the crusaders are not dead, but that some of them are asleep only; asleep in the same arms and the same dress they wore on the field of battle, and will awake at the first re¬ surrection. Mind you say the first resurrection; for I suppose you know there are to be two, one a partial one, and the last a general one. [1]

"But there, doctor, I must not detain you. Now, just listen to what you have got to do. Mohammed

  1. It was by such speeches as these that Lady Hester sometimes left an impression on her hearers that she was insane. The reader must judge for himself. There are, however, strong reasons for believing that there was a profound and deeply-planned method in all her actions, and those who said she was unsound in her intellects would have had great difficulty in proving it before a competent tribunal. The vast combinations of her mind, when it was possible to get a glimpse of them, filled one with surprise, and set at naught all previous conjecture or conception; whilst separate and particular conversations and reasonings wore the stamp of great oddity and sometimes of insanity. Let Mr. Dundas, Lord Hardwicke, Mr. Way, Lord St . Asaph, Count Delaborde, Count Yowiski, if still alive, Count de la Porte, Dr. Mills, M. Lamartine, Count Marcellus, and a hundred others who have conversed with her, say what was the impression she left on their minds; and not till then let persons who have never held intercourse with her of late years pronounce her mad.