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mns the poor racked wretch who so much as remembers them! She is the enemy of Nature.--Tell us how? She is the slave of existing conventions.--And from what cause? She is the artificial production of a state that exalts her so long as she sacrifices daily and hourly to the artificial. Therefore she sides with Mrs. Burman--the foe of Nature: who, with her arts and gold lures, has now possession of the Law (the brass idol worshipped by the collective) to drive Nature into desolation. He placed himself to the right of Mrs. Burman, for the world to behold the couple: and he lent the world a sigh of disgust. What he could not do, as in other matters he did, was to rise above the situation, in a splendid survey and rapid view of the means of reversing it. He was too social to be a captain of the socially insurgent; imagination expired. But having a courageous Nataly to second him!--how then? It was the succour needed. Then he would have been ready to teach the world that Nature--honest Nature--is more to be prized than Convention: a new Era might begin. The thought was tonic for an instant and illuminated him springingly. It sank, excused for the flaccidity by Nataly's want of common adventurous daring. She had not taken to Lakelands; she was purchasing furniture from a flowing purse with a heavy heart--unfeminine, one might say; she preferred to live obscurely; she did not, one had to think--but it was unjust: and yet the accusation, that she did not cheerfully make a strain and spurt on behalf of her child, pressed to be repeated. These short glimpses at reflection in Victor were like the verberant twang of a musical instrument that has had a smart blow, and wails away independent of the player's cunning hand. He would have said, that he was more his natural self when the cunning hand played on him, to make him praise and uplift his beloved: mightily would it have astonished him to contemplate with assured perception in his own person the Nature he invoked. But men invoking Nature, do not find in her the Holy Mother she in such case becomes to her daughters, whom she so persecutes. Men call on her for their defence, as a favourable witness: she is a note of their rhetoric. They are not bettered by her sustainment; they have not, as women may have, her enaemic aid at a trying hour. It is not an effort at epigram to say, that whom she scourges most she most supports. An Opera-placard drew his next remark to Fene
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