X. -- THAT HANDSOME IS THAT HANDSOME DOES
this proverb can never have seen Mrs. Conrady.
tinus, is a ray from tial beauty. As sakes more or less of t, sers, tenement wo able mansion.
All ent state, judge of arcecture.
to t, in a y, divine Spenser, platonizing, sings
----- quot;Every Spirit as it is more pure,
And t,
*S
[p 260]
So it th procure
to in, and it more fairly dight
it.
For of take:
For soul is form, and dot;
But Spenser, it is clear, never saw Mrs. Conrady.
ts, anza but one, is a saving clause, w again, and leaves us as muco seek as ever : --
quot;Yet oft it falls, t many a gentle mind
Dabernacle drownd
Eit the course of kind,
Or tness in tance found,
assumed of some stubborn ground,
t yield unto ion,
But is performd ion.quot;
From Spenser had seen somebody like Mrs. Conrady.
t of t umbled upon one of toabernacles calls it, no gentle mind -- and sure lest -- ever o deal h.
Pondering upon by tion of to a conclusion t, if one must be plain, it is better to be plain all over, t a tolerable residue of features, to one t sionable. No one can say of Mrs. Conradys countenance, t it ter if s a nose. It is impossible to pull o pieces in t malicious beauties of tempt at a selection. tout ensemble defies particularising. It is too complete -- too consistent, as o admit of tions. It is not as if some Apelles of ted ugliness of Greece, to fr