1 The young man and his companion often went apart and appeared to weep.
2 Such were my thoughts when the door of my apartment was opened and Mr. Kirwin entered.
3 I alighted and was conducted to my solitary apartment to spend the evening as I pleased.
4 I stepped fearfully in: the apartment was empty, and my bedroom was also freed from its hideous guest.
5 He had also changed my apartment; for he perceived that I had acquired a dislike for the room which had previously been my laboratory.
6 I then reflected, and the thought made me shiver, that the creature whom I had left in my apartment might still be there, alive and walking about.
7 I left the room, and locking the door, made a solemn vow in my own heart never to resume my labours; and then, with trembling steps, I sought my own apartment.
8 I did not dare return to the apartment which I inhabited, but felt impelled to hurry on, although drenched by the rain which poured from a black and comfortless sky.
9 Before I had quitted your apartment, on a sensation of cold, I had covered myself with some clothes, but these were insufficient to secure me from the dews of night.
10 The girl met him at the door, helped to relieve him of his burden, and taking some of the fuel into the cottage, placed it on the fire; then she and the youth went apart into a nook of the cottage, and he showed her a large loaf and a piece of cheese.
11 In a solitary chamber, or rather cell, at the top of the house, and separated from all the other apartments by a gallery and staircase, I kept my workshop of filthy creation; my eyeballs were starting from their sockets in attending to the details of my employment.
12 A few days after, the Turk entered his daughter's apartment and told her hastily that he had reason to believe that his residence at Leghorn had been divulged and that he should speedily be delivered up to the French government; he had consequently hired a vessel to convey him to Constantinople, for which city he should sail in a few hours.