Tales of the Manor 1

Cover Tales of the Manor 1
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my children ; let it ad- here to .us as $n imperishable clothing, always visible, never obtrusive, like the down upon the swan, always pure, though never gaudy." When Mr. Selwyn ceased speaking, he met cordial greetings from every eye around him. There were no despondent sighs, no shakings of the head, or im- portant affectations of humility, nor was there any exhibition of yawning weari- ness, to tell him that his exordium might have been spared : every one felt (though not in an equal degree)... that religion was not only the consolation of the sor- rows of life, but the heightener of all its pleasures, and they saw no reason for abandoning all allusion to it, in describ- ing that intermixture of both which every story of life exhibits.
THE MANOR. 149 u To-morrow evening we shall expect your tale; will you compose it in the mean time?" said Charles to Letitia.
" No ! I have not knowledge enough ; I can only tell you a true story, in my own way." " Then pray make it as little romantic as possible : remember, we know very little about knights and distressed dam- sels, and still less about Arcadian shep- herds." " Never mind them, Letitia," said her father, encouragingly ; " I can remem- ber the time when I was romantic myself^ and I think a little of the temper is no bad thing in any young person, for it is ever allied to generous enthusiasm and disinterested kindness - 9 and I have fre- quently remarked, that people so desig- nated, after a few years' taming, subside into more estimable people than those ever become, who are wholly free from this propensity in youth.


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