Chapter 11
nt of ting. It feels instinctively t manners are of more importance ts opinion, t respectability is of mucer all, it is a very poor consolation to be told t te life. Even tues cannot atone for rées, as Lord , and to be said for y are, or s. Form is absolutely essential to it. It sy of a ceremony, as s unreality, and ser of a romantic play and beauty t make sucful to us. Is insincerity sucerrible t. It is merely a metiply our personalities.
Suc any rate, t, reliable, and of one essence. to ions, a complex multiform creature t bore self strange legacies of t and passion, and ed rous maladies of to stroll t cold picture-gallery of ry traits of t, described by Francis Osborne, in ;caressed by t for long company.quot; as it young s life t imes led? range poisonous germ crept from body to body till it some dim sense of t ruined grace t cause, give utterance, in Basil udio, to t , je, and gilt-edged ruff and bands, stood Sir Ant . ance of sin and sions merely t t dared to realize? omac clasped an enamelled collar of able by tes upon tle pointed srange stories t old about emperament in o look curiously at of George illougastic patcurnine and so be ted e lace ruffles fell over t eentury, and t of t in days, and one of tnesses at t marriage z? nut curls and insolent pose! passions Carlton ar of ter glittered upon . Beside rait of irred all seemed! And on face and , e dress. tions of ting till o follow .
Yet one ors in literature as emperament, many of tai