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<h2> CHAPTER III </h2>
<p>Thus I lived sadly in my prison for five or six years.</p>
<p>The first redeeming ray flashed upon me when I least expected it.</p>
<p>Endowed with the gift of imagination, I made my former fiancee the object
of all my thoughts. She became my love and my dream.</p>
<p>Another circumstance which suddenly revealed to me the ground under my
feet was, strange as it may seem, the conviction that it was impossible to
make my escape from prison.</p>
<p>During the first period of my imprisonment, I, as a youthful and
enthusiastic dreamer, made all kinds of plans for escape, and some of them
seemed to me entirely possible of realisation. Cherishing deceptive hopes,
this thought naturally kept me in a state of tense alarm and hindered my
attention from concentrating itself on more important and substantial
matters. As soon as I despaired of one plan I created another, but of
course I did not make any progress—I merely moved within a closed
circle. It is hardly necessary to mention that each transition from one
plan to another was accompanied by cruel sufferings, which tormented my
soul, just as the eagle tortured the body of Prometheus.</p>
<p>One day, while staring with a weary look at the walls of my cell, I
suddenly began to feel how irresistibly thick the stone was, how strong
the cement which kept it together, how skilfully and mathematically this
severe fortress was constructed. It is true, my first sensation was
extremely painful; it was, perhaps, a horror of hopelessness.</p>
<p>I cannot recall what I did and how I felt during the two or three months
that followed. The first note in my diary after a long period of silence
does not explain very much. Briefly I state only that they made new
clothes for me and that I had grown stout.</p>
<p>The fact is that, after all my hopes had been abandoned, the consciousness
of the impossibility of my escape once for all extinguished also my
painful alarm and liberated my mind, which was then already inclined to
lofty contemplation and the joys of mathematics.</p>
<p>But the following is the day I consider as the first real day of my
liberation. It was a beautiful spring morning (May 6) and the balmy,
invigourating air was pouring into the open window; while walking back and
forth in my cell I unconsciously glanced, at each turn, with a vague
interest, at the high window, where the iron grate outlined its form
sharply and distinctly against the background of the azure, cloudless sky.</p>
<p>“Why is the sky so beautiful through these bars?” I reflected as I walked.
“Is not this the effect of the aesthetic law of contrasts, according to
which azure stands out prominently beside black? Or is it not, perhaps, a
manifestation of some other, higher law, according to which the infinite
may be conceived by the human mind only when it is brought within certain
boundaries, for instance, when it is enclosed within a square?”</p>
<p>When I recalled that at the sight of a wide open window, which was not
protected by bars, or of the sky, I had usually experienced a desire to
fly, which was painful because of its uselessness and absurdity—I
suddenly began to experience a feeling of tenderness for the bars; tender
gratitude, even love. Forged by hand, by the weak human hand of some
ignorant blacksmith, who did not even give himself an account of the
profound meaning of his creation; placed in the wall by an equally
ignorant mason, it suddenly represented in itself a model of beauty,
nobility and power. Having seized the infinite within its iron squares, it
became congealed in cold and proud peace, frightening the ignorant, giving
food for thought to the intelligent and delighting the sage!</p>
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