![]() ![]() He agreed, but once he was alone and climbing he started to feel beset by doubts. He met with Gil-Martin, who told him his brother was going up a mountain and he now had the opportunity to execute divine justice. He was not sure, though, how it was the case that, while he was confined for a month, there were still reports of his haunting his brother. He did not understand but felt this illness was a chastisement for his pride. He saw himself as two people, his companion one and his brother the other. Robert became afflicted by a strange malady, though, and was confined to his own room. He gloried in how George’s reputation suffered and how he had to withdraw to his private rooms. Gil-Martin encouraged him to plague his brother, so Robert continued to sow terror and frustration in him and his friends. ![]() The man laughed, but Robert felt a sense of triumph when religious notables secured his release. There he tried to save the soul of the prison guard and told him he had to slay him if he was an unregenerate. He kicked him and followed him to the bar, and was thrown in prison. Robert comes to the part in his narrative where he met his brother, and describes how he saw him wallowing in sin with his friends. Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Sinner Manuscript, Continued ![]()
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