The Last Man eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 624 pages of information about The Last Man.
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The Last Man eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 624 pages of information about The Last Man.

In solitude, and through many wanderings afar from the haunts of men, he matured his views for the reform of the English government, and the improvement of the people.  It would have been well if he had concealed his sentiments, until he had come into possession of the power which would secure their practical development.  But he was impatient of the years that must intervene, he was frank of heart and fearless.  He gave not only a brief denial to his mother’s schemes, but published his intention of using his influence to diminish the power of the aristocracy, to effect a greater equalization of wealth and privilege, and to introduce a perfect system of republican government into England.  At first his mother treated his theories as the wild ravings of inexperience.  But they were so systematically arranged, and his arguments so well supported, that though still in appearance incredulous, she began to fear him.  She tried to reason with him, and finding him inflexible, learned to hate him.

Strange to say, this feeling was infectious.  His enthusiasm for good which did not exist; his contempt for the sacredness of authority; his ardour and imprudence were all at the antipodes of the usual routine of life; the worldly feared him; the young and inexperienced did not understand the lofty severity of his moral views, and disliked him as a being different from themselves.  Evadne entered but coldly into his systems.  She thought he did well to assert his own will, but she wished that will to have been more intelligible to the multitude.  She had none of the spirit of a martyr, and did not incline to share the shame and defeat of a fallen patriot.  She was aware of the purity of his motives, the generosity of his disposition, his true and ardent attachment to her; and she entertained a great affection for him.  He repaid this spirit of kindness with the fondest gratitude, and made her the treasure-house of all his hopes.

At this time Lord Raymond returned from Greece.  No two persons could be more opposite than Adrian and he.  With all the incongruities of his character, Raymond was emphatically a man of the world.  His passions were violent; as these often obtained the mastery over him, he could not always square his conduct to the obvious line of self-interest, but self-gratification at least was the paramount object with him.  He looked on the structure of society as but a part of the machinery which supported the web on which his life was traced.  The earth was spread out as an highway for him; the heavens built up as a canopy for him.

Adrian felt that he made a part of a great whole.  He owned affinity not only with mankind, but all nature was akin to him; the mountains and sky were his friends; the winds of heaven and the offspring of earth his playmates; while he the focus only of this mighty mirror, felt his life mingle with the universe of existence.  His soul was sympathy, and dedicated to the worship of beauty and excellence.  Adrian and Raymond now came into contact, and a spirit of aversion rose between them.  Adrian despised the narrow views of the politician, and Raymond held in supreme contempt the benevolent visions of the philanthropist.

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The Last Man from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.