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_Isaac._ Egad, I wish she had answered her picture as well. After this interview, Don Jerome asks him what he thinks of his daughter. _Don Jerome._ Well, my good friend, have you softened her? _Isaac._ Oh, yes, I have softened her. _Don J._ Well, and you were astonished at her beauty, hey? _Isaac._ I was astonished, indeed. Pray how old is Miss? _Don J._ How old? let me see--twenty. _Isaac._ Then upon my soul she is the oldest looking girl of her age in Christendom. _Don J._ Do you think so? but I believe you will not see a prettier girl. _Isaac._ Here and there one. _Don J._ Louisa has the family face. _Isaac._ Yes, egad, I should have taken it for a family face, and one that has been in the family some time too. _Don J._ She has her father's eyes. _Isaac._ Truly I should have guessed them to be so. If she had her mother's spectacles I believe she would not see the worse. _Don J._ Her aunt Ursula's nose, and her grandmother's forehead to a hair. _Isaac._ Ay, faith, and her grandmother's chin to a hair. Sheridan, as we have observed, was not more remarkable as a dramatist than as a man of society, and passed for what was called a "wit." The name had been applied two centuries before to men of talent generally, especially to writers, but now it referred exclusively to such as were humorous in conversation. These men, though to a certain extent the successors of the parasites of Greece, and the fools of the middle ages, were men of education and independence, if not of good family, and rather sought popularity than any mercenary remuneration. The majority of them, however, were gainers by their pleasantry, they rose into a higher grade of society, were welcome at the tables of the great, and derived many advantages, not unacceptable to men generally poor and improvident. As Swift well observed, though not unequal to business, they were above it. Moreover, the age was one in which society was less varied than it is now in its elements and interests; when men of talent were more prominent, and it was easier to command an audience. It was known to all that Mr. ---- was coming, and guests repaired to the feast, not to talk, but to listen, as we should now to a public reading. The greatest joke and treat was to get two of such men, and set them against each other, when they had to bring out thei
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