Page 114 (1/1)

"Oh, indeed! Do you call George Washington an unreasonable ineback to England without kissing his hand I should be laughed at--I should deserve to be laughed at"

"Yes, if the journey were an easier one"

"To be sure, the roads and the cold will be trials; but then ives trials to His Beloved He breaks theht's sleep between the portions Can you not also do this?"

"You little Methodist!" answered the Earl, with a tender gleaive you your oay Will you go with us, George?"

"It will be a relief New York is in the du beaten the Schuyler faction, thinks himself omnipotent; and this quarrel between Mr Jay and Governor Clinton keeps every one else on the edge of ill-huone to Philadelphia; I have scarcely a partner left; and there is no conversation now in New York that is not political Burr, Schuyler, Jay, Clinton! even the clergy have gone horse and foot into these disputes"

"Burr has a kind of cleverness; oneeverything"

"Nevertheless his opinions will not alter the axis of the earth It is however a dangerous thing to live in a co full armed from a word in such an atmosphere"

"I have accommodated my politics, sir, to my own satisfaction; and Ito their idols I vow, I am so weary of the words 'honour and honesty' that they beat a tattoo on e, you will understand that these words are the coin, hich eneral article of faith, but the i toHowever, let us go to Philadelphia and see the play That is what Annie desires"

"I desire to see Washington I wish to see the greatest of Americans"

"Let me tell you, Annie," said the Earl, "that there never was a man in Aton"

"For all that," interrupted George, "there will never coton of the first place in the hearts of the American nation"