Selected English Letters (XV - XIX Centuries) by Various
page 95 of 450 (21%)
page 95 of 450 (21%)
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3 _Sept_. 1751. In another place, you are offended with the word gratitude; as if your idea of love excluded gratitude. And further on, you are offended that I call this same passion 'a little selfish passion'. And you say that you have known few girls, and still fewer men, whom you have thought 'capable of being in love'. 'By this', proceed you, 'you will see that my ideas of the word love are different from yours, when you call it a little selfish passion.' Now, madam, if that passion is not little and selfish that makes two vehement souls prefer the gratification of each other, often to a sense of duty, and always to the whole world without them, be pleased to tell me what is? And pray be so good as to define to me what the noble passion is, of which so few people of either sex are capable. Give me your ideas of it. I put not this question as a puzzler, a bamboozler, but purely for information; and that I may make my Sir Charles susceptible of the generous (may I say generous?) flame, and yet know what he is about, yet be a reasonable man. Harriet's passion is founded in gratitude for relief given her in a great exigence. But the man who rescued her is not, it seems, to have |
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