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'None Poetical days are getting past with e people of e of shaving for a beard, or thinking they are ill-used, or saying there's nothing in the world worth living for' 'Then the difference between a conized poet is, that one has been deluded, and cured of his delusion, and the other continues deluded all his days' 'Well, there's just enough truth in what you say, to make the remark unbearable However, it doesn't er, but' He paused, as if endeavouring to think what better thing he did

Cytherea'slines of the poeested the fancy that he was 'sporting' with her, and brought an aard contehts, and in answer to theain

'If I had known an Ae,' he resumed

Such levity, superimposed on the notion of 'sport', was intolerable to Cytherea; for a woman seems never to see any but the serious side of her attachue and di away his tiet on in your profession? Try once ain I have advertised for soesture and smile 'But we must remember that the fame of Christopher Wren hi Lane My successes seem to come very slowly I often think, that before I am ready to live, it will be ti--not for fame now, but for an easy life of reasonable comfort' It is a melancholy truth for the middle classes, that in proportion as they develop, by the study of poetry and art, their capacity for conjugal love of the highest and purest kind, they li able to exercise it--the very act putting out of their power the attaine

The ood income has had no time to learn love to its soleet rich