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LETTER XXIII

Andrew Pringle, Esq, to the Reverend Charles Snodgrass MY DEAR FRIEND--London undoubtedly affords the best and the worst

specimens of the British character; but there is a certain townish

soeneral, of which I find it extrelish of the country,

there is apparently very little difference between them; but still there

is a difference, and of no small importance in a moral point of view

The country peculiarity is like the blooers of infancy cannot touch without injuring;

but this felt but not describable quality of the town character, is as

the varnish which brings out more vividly the colours of a picture, and

which may be freely and even rudely handled The woh as chaste in principle as those of any other community, possess

none of that innocent unterace of virtue;ones too, "in the first

freshness of their virgin beauty," speak of the conduct and vocation of

"the erring sisters of the sex," in a manner that often amazes me, and

has, in s towards the

fair satirists Thisless,

I have heard defended, but only by e experience of the world, and who, perhaps, on that account, are not

the best judges of female delicacy "Every woman," as Pope says, "may be

at heart a rake"; but it is for the interests of the domestic affections,

which are the very elements of virtue, to cherish the notion, that women,

as they are physically more delicate than men, are also so morally

But the absence of delicacy, the bloom of virtue, is not peculiar to the

females, it is characteristic of all the varieties of the metropolitan

s of universal

ridicule; but the sin, though in a less gross form, pervades the whole of

that sinister system by which much of the superiority of this vast

metropolis is supported The state of the periodical press, that great

organ of political instruction--the unruly tongue of liberty, strikingly

confirms the justice of this misanthropic remark

G--- had the kindness, by way of a treat to me, to collect, the other

day, at dinner, some of the most eminent editors of the London journals