Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.

Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.

Swithin:  That resonant voice!

Lady Oldlace:  Swithin, his flow of eloquence!  He launched forth!

Swithin:  Like an eagle from a cliff.

Osier:  The measure of the words was like a beat of wings.

Swithin:  He makes poets of us.

Dame Dresden:  Spiral achieved his pinnacle to-day!

Virginia:  How treacherous is our memory when we have most the longing to recall great sayings!

Osier:  True, I conceive that my notes will be precious.

Winifred:  You could take notes!

Lady Oldlace:  It seems a device for missing the quintessential.

Swithin:  Scraps of the body to the loss of the soul of it.  We can allow that our friend performed good menial service.

Winifred:  I could not have done the thing.

Swithin:  In truth; it does remind one of the mess of pottage.

Lady Oldlace:  One hardly felt one breathed.

Virginia:  I confess it moved me to tears.

Swithin:  There is a pathos for us in the display of perfection.  Such subtle contrast with our individual poverty affects us.

Winifred:  Surely there were passages of a distinct and most exquisite pathos.

Lady Oldlace:  As in all great oratory!  The key of it is the pathos.

Virginia:  In great oratory, great poetry, great fiction; you try it by the pathos.  All our critics agree in stipulating for the pathos.  My tears were no feminine weakness, I could not be a discordant instrument.

Swithin:  I must make confession.  He played on me too.

Osier:  We shall be sensible for long of that vibration from the touch of a master hand.

Arden:  An accomplished player can make a toy-shop fiddle sound you a
Stradivarius.

Dame Dresden:  Have you a right to a remark, Mr. Arden?  What could have detained you?

Arden:  Ah, Dame.  It may have been a warning that I am a discordant instrument.  I do not readily vibrate.

Dame Dresden:  A discordant instrument is out of place in any civil society.  You have lost what cannot be recovered.

Arden:  There are the notes.

Osier:  Yes, the notes.

Swithin:  You can be satisfied with the dog’s feast at the table, Mr.
Arden!

Osier:  Ha!

Virginia:  Never have I seen Astraea look sublimer in her beauty than with her eyes uplifted to the impassioned speaker, reflecting every variation of his tones.

Arden:  Astraea!

Lady Oldlace:  She was entranced when he spoke of woman descending from her ideal to the gross reality of man.

Osier:  Yes, yes.  I have the words [reads]:  ’Woman is to the front of man, holding the vestal flower of a purer civilization.  I see,’ he says, ’the little taper in her hands transparent round the light, against rough winds.’

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Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.