Capitolo 23
cultured gentleman in the politics, and to purify the public tone. Him
it unfortunately had principles of reform and a conceited maimer; him
it was rather rich, rather intelligent, rather well-cultured, rather
honest, and rather vulgar. Its fidelity was separated among Mrs.
Protection and his/her sister that he raged addressing as "Miss
Sybil" with familiarity of patronising. He was particularly strong in
thing him called "badinaige", and his/her happy but deprived attempts of grace
to the intelligence it drove Mrs.
Protection over the confinements of patience. When in a solemn humor, him
spoken as if he was practising for the ear of an university
society that debates, and with an anchor the worse effect on the patience; but
with all this he was useful, while always forming beads with the last one
political gossip, and deeply party in the fate of poles of party.
Entirely another kind of person was the Mr. Hartbeest Schneidekoupon, a
city of Philadelphia, although commonly resident in New York,
where he was fallen a victim to the charms of Sybil, and it made efforts to
wins his/her young affections instructing her/it in the mysteries of
currency and protection, to which subjects that he has been devoted.
To send these two affairs and to look on Miss Ross
welfare, he made periodic visits to Washington, where him
closeted him with committee-man and it gave expensive suppers
to members of Congress. The Mr. Schneidekoupon was rich, and around
thirty years old, tall and it becomes bald, with the bright eyes and does smooth,
elaborate manners and a lot of loquacity. He had the reputation of
rapid intellectual somersaults that turn, partly to have a good time him and
partly to frighten society. To a moment he was artistic, and
scientifically pronounced on his own paintings; to another him
it was literary, and he/she wrote a book on "to Live Noble", with a
I sweep humanitarian; to another he was devoted for having a good time him, a rode
raced horse-racing to obstacles, played pole and it prepared a four-in-hand; his last