Life of Lord Jeffrey: With a Selection from His Correspondence, 5 tomas

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A. and C. Black, 1852

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377 psl. - You should be happy yourself, for you may be sure you have done more good by this little publication, fostered more kindly feelings, and prompted more positive acts of beneficence, than can be traced to all the pulpits and confessionals in Christendom since Christmas 1842.
334 psl. - I often run over and sit an hour tete a tete, or take a long walk in the park with him — the only way really to know or be known by either man or woman. Taken in this way I think him very amiable and agreeable. In mixed company, where he is now much sought after as a lion, he is rather reserved, &c. He has dined here (for Charlotte has taken to giving quiet parties), and we with him, at rather too sumptuous a dinner for a man with a family, and only beginning to be rich, though selling 44,000 copies...
376 psl. - Dickens ! and may it always be as light and full as it is kind, and a fountain of kindness to all within reach of its beatings ! We are all charmed with your Carol, chiefly, I think, for the genuine goodness which breathes all through it, and is the true inspiring angel by which its genius has been awakened. The whole scene of the Cratchetts is like the dream of a beneficent angel in spite of its broad reality, and little Tiny Tim, in life and death almost as sweet and as touching as Nelly.
viii psl. - I felt no affection, nor regard, have become dear to me now that I can no longer enjoy their society. I do not like my tutor ; I cannot bring him to be on that footing of intimacy to which I have brought all his predecessors. I long for some object to fill up the void which the abrupt dissolution of so many affections has left in my heart. I feel I shall never be a great man, unless it be as a poet ; for, though I have a boundless ambition, I am too much the slave of my heart.
402 psl. - Oh, my dear, dear Dickens ! what a No. 5 you have now given us ! I have so cried and sobbed over it last night, and again this morning ; and felt my heart purified by those tears, and blessed and loved you for making me shed them ; and I never can bless and love you enough. Since the divine Nelly was found dead on her humble couch, beneath the snow and the ivy, there has been nothing like the actual dying of that sweet Paul, in the summer sunshine of that lofty room.
268 psl. - Memoirs. but read it ever since. The richness of his mind intoxicates me ; and yet, do not you think he would have been a happier man, and quite as useful and respectable, if he had not fancied it a duty to write a great book ? And is not this question an answer to your exhortation to me to write a little one ? Perpend.
67 psl. - ... whom they were committed. Do not imagine, however, that I was not very much moved with your contrition and conscientious qualms. I would grant you a fuller remission, if I were not afraid that the easiness of your penance might tempt you to a second transgression. To say the truth, I had not much expectation from the very eloquent and urgent expostulation I addressed to you, and had made up my mind to go on without you before it was sent away. This time, however, we really depend upon you ; and,...
461 psl. - ... that I may hear of the first honours attained by my nameboy. God bless him, and all of you ! We are all tolerably well here, I thank you; Mrs. Jeffrey, I am happy to say, has been really quite well for many months, and, in fact, by much the most robust of the two. My fairy grandchild, too, is bright and radiant through all the glooms of winter and age, and fills the house with sunshine and music. I am old and vulnerable, but still able for my work, and not a bit morose or querulous ; " and by...
201 psl. - I have seen and heard, amidst the flowers' freshness and nightingales of this beautiful country. I was a good deal among wits and politicians, of whom you would not care much to hear. But I also saw a good deal of Miss Edgeworth and Tommy Moore, and something of your countryman, Washington Irving', with whom I was very happy to renew my acquaintance. Moore is still more delightful in society than he is in his writings ; the sweetest-blooded, warmest-hearted, happiest, hopefulest, creature that ever...
69 psl. - In No. 3, I do Gentz, Hayley's Cowper, Sir J. Sinclair, and Thelwall. In No. 4, which is now printing, I have Miss Baillie's Plays, Comparative View of Geology, Lady Mary Wortley, and some little ones. I do not think you know any of my associates. There is the sage Horner however, whom you have seen, and who has gone to the English bar with the resolution of being Lord Chancellor; Brougham, a great mathematician, who has just published a book upon the ' Colonial Policy of Europe,' which all you Americans...

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