The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 04, No. 25, November, 1859 by Various
page 65 of 293 (22%)
page 65 of 293 (22%)
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"My dear child, I am extremely grateful to you for your remark, and appreciate fully the purity of the source from which it springs. Unfortunately, our intellectual beliefs are not subject to the control of our will. I have examined, and the examination has, I regret to say, not had the effect you would desire." Mary looked at him wistfully; he smiled and bowed,--all himself again; and stopping at the door, he said, with a proud humility,-- "Do me the favor to present my devoted regard to your friend; believe me, that hereafter you shall have less reason to complain of me." He bowed, and was gone. An eye-witness of the scene has related, that, when Burr resigned his seat as President of his country's Senate, an object of peculiar political bitterness and obloquy, almost all who listened to him had made up their minds that he was an utterly faithless, unprincipled man; and yet, such was his singular and peculiar personal power, that his short farewell-address melted the whole assembly into tears, and his most embittered adversaries were charmed into a momentary enthusiasm of admiration. It must not be wondered at, therefore, if our simple-hearted, loving Mary strangely found all her indignation against him gone, and herself little disposed to criticize the impassioned tenderness with which Madame de Frontignac still regarded him. We have one thing more that we cannot avoid saying, of two men so |
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