PART 2
34. CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR
 (continued)
Jo went prepared to bow down and adore the mighty ones
 whom she had worshiped with youthful enthusiasm afar off.  But
 her reverence for genius received a severe shock that night, 
 and it took her some time to recover from the discovery that
 the great creatures were only men and women after all.  Imagine
 her dismay, on stealing a glance of timid admiration at the
 poet whose lines suggested an ethereal being fed on `spirit, 
 fire, and dew', to behold him devouring his supper with an
 ardor which flushed his intellectual countenance.  Turning
 as from a fallen idol, she made other discoveries which
 rapidly dispelled her romantic illusions.  The great novelist
 vibrated between two decanters with the regularity of a pendulum;
 the famous divine flirted openly with one of the
 Madame de Staels of the age, who looked daggers at another
 Corinne, who was amiably satirizing her, after outmaneuvering
 her in efforts to absorb the profound philosopher, who imbibed
 tea Johnsonianly and appeared to slumber, the loquacity of the
 lady rendering speech impossible.  The scientific celebrities, 
 forgetting their mollusks and glacial periods, gossiped about
 art, while devoting themselves to oysters and ices with
 characteristic energy; the young musician, who was charming
 the city like a second Orpheus, talked horses; and the specimen
 of the British nobility present happened to be the most ordinary
 man of the party. 
Before the evening was half over, Jo felt so completely
 disillusioned, that she sat down in a corner to recover herself.
 Mr. Bhaer soon joined her, looking rather out of his element, 
 and presently several of the philosophers, each mounted on his
 hobby, came ambling up to hold an intellectual tournament in
 the recess.  The conversations were miles beyond Jo's comprehension,
 but she enjoyed it, though Kant and Hegel were unknown
 gods, the Subjective and Objective unintelligible terms, and
 the only thing `evolved from her inner consciousness' was a
 bad headache after it was all over.  It dawned upon her gradually
 that the world was being picked to pieces, and put together on
 new and, according to the talkers, on infinitely better principles
 than before, that religion was in a fair way to be
 reasoned into nothingness, and intellect was to be the only
 God.  Jo knew nothing about philosophy or metaphysics of any
 sort, but a curious excitement, half pleasurable, half painful,
 came over her as she listened with a sense of being turned
 adrift into time and space, like a young balloon out on a holiday. 
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