George A. Aitken
Capitolo 13
duelling;[21] players of hazard and sharpers;[22] "roarers" drunk and
"scowrers";[23] and brutal pastimes to the bear Garden and
elsewhere. [24] The country against cheats showed Steele to serious
threats above more than an occasion. [25]
Of that that Coleridge called her/it "pure humanity" of Steele is not in any place
best evidence that in the _Tatler_. It is enough from once more to quote the
notorious examples of the account of the death of his/her father and his
mother's grief;[26] the histories of Unnion and Valentine,[27] of the
Lovers,[28 of Cornish] of Clarinda and Chloe,[29] and of the Mr. Eustace,[30]
and the fascinating account of the happiness married of an old friend, with
the pathetic portrait of the death of his/her/their wife and the pain of husband
and children. [31] in the last number Steele said, "you/he/she has been more anymore a
delicious pleasure to me to frame characters of the national life"; and us
knows from his/her letters that when he wrote of children he was only
expressing the deep affection for which he felt his really. Equally in
advance of its time was its respect for women, one of whom--it Mrs.
Elizabeth Hastings--he has immortalized in the words, to love is her/it a
liberal education."[32] in the same number he wrote, "As it is the charity
esteemed a conjunction of the good necessary qualities to a virtuoso
crews, so love is the happy to composition all the completions that
makes an excellent gentleman." In a duration of a lot of laxity him continually the dwelt on
the happiness of marriage; "wife is the most agreeable term of human creature
life."[33] but the good nature is had to cultivate if conjugal life is
both happy,[34] and all the non necessary provocations avoided. "Dear Jenny,"
it tells Bickerstaff his/her sister, me "memoirs, and you avoid
Release-dragon."[35] women are had to exactly instruct before they can wait him
being treated from, and to influence men as them they owe. [36] the face of
the mind very it contributes to the ornament of the body; there is this way