 | Charles Brockden Brown - 1804
...refinements of artificial and systematic virtue, even their vices, if such we denominate them, arc loving and gentle, and undesigning and kind. All the...the same time of the greatest discrimination, could h¿ve attained. What infinite variety of character is presented to us in the Prologue to the Canterbury... | |
 | Caroline Frances Eleanor Spurgeon - 1925
...cannot be (p. 171] too much admired for the suavity and gentleness of nature which it displays. . . . All the milder and more delicate feelings of the soul are displayed . . . and displayed in a manner which none but a poet of the purest and sweetest dispositions, and... | |
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