Capitolo 86
I ever preach for; but I preach in vain!"
There is no philanthropy floury-spoken to emphatic way" here. Nobody can doubt the
the seriousness and the truth of the mixed anger of the poet and the pain. The uneasiness
of irregular unions "bitten had never been in" with more convincing
strength. The verse, besides in the passage it is usually freer from many
of the eccentricities of Crabbe. It is marked here and there from his/her tenderness
for oral antithesis, almost amounting to the pun that his/her parodists
you/he/she has not neglected. The second line is indeed as soon as more admissible in
toward serious that the mention of Dickens of the lady "in that it went home a
flood of torn wounds and a sedan-chair." But the indulgence of Crabbe in this habit
it is never a mere concession to the frivolous taste of the reader. His/her epigrams
often strikes deeply house, as in this example or in the line:--
"Too soon it did happy, and it made wise man too late."
The history that follows of Phoebe Dawson that it helped to calm Fox in
the last one covers of his/her long illness, it is anybody less powerful person. The gradual
footsteps from which the beauty of village is conducted to its downfall are said in a
one hundred lines with a non old fidelity in the case of the history of
Garden sorrel of Hetty. The verse, while alternatively calling Pope and Jeweler back, it is
still impelled by a moral intention that gives him/it absolute
individuality. The introduced portrait is acutely as pathetic as
The _Lost Path_ of Frederick Pedone or the "Child of Langhorne of uneasiness,
baptized in torn wounds." What you/he/she will ever be classified again with such you/he/she can be
doubtful, for _technique_ the first quality asked for an artist in is
our day, and the _technique_ of Crabbe is too often defective in the extreme.
These to that the most tragic accidents of the life of village, are assuaged however
intervals corrected by some of agile complexion. There is the gentleman
gardener that has his/her following children baptized by the Latin names