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The Absentee by Maria Edgeworth
Book, page 113 / 300


another occasion she was told that certain visitors had seen her
ladyship yawning. 'Yawn, did I?--glad of it--the yawn sent them
away, or I should have snored;--rude, was I? they won't
complain. To say I was rude to them would be to say, that I did
not think it worth my while to be otherwise. Barbarians! are
not we the civilised English, come to teach them manners and
fashions? Whoever does not conform, and swear allegiance too, we
shall keep out of the English pale.'

Lady Dashfort forced her way, and she set the fashion: fashion,
which converts the ugliest dress into what is beautiful and
charming, governs the public mode in morals and in manners; and
thus, when great talents and high rank combine, they can debase
or elevate the public taste.

With Lord Colambre she played more artfully; she drew him out in
defence of his beloved country, and gave him opportunities of
appearing to advantage; this he could not help feeling,
especially when the Lady Isabel was present. Lady Dashfort had
dealt long enough with human nature to know, that to make any man
pleased with her, she should begin by making him pleased with
himself.

Insensibly the antipathy that Lord Colambre had originally felt
to Lady Dashfort wore off; her faults, he began to think, were
assumed; he pardoned her defiance of good breeding, when he
observed that she could, when she chose it, be most engagingly
polite. It was not that she did not know what was right, but
that she did not think it always for her interest to practise it.

The party opposed to Lady Dashfort affirmed that her wit depended
merely on unexpectedness; a characteristic which may be applied
to any impropriety of speech, manner, or conduct. In some of her
ladyship's repartees, however, Lord Colambre now acknowledged
there was more than unexpectedness; there was real wit; but it
was of a sort utterly unfit for a woman, and he was sorry that
Lady Isabel should hear it. In short, exceptionable as it was
altogether, Lady Dashfort's conversation had become entertaining
to him; and though he could never esteem or feel in the least
interested about her, he began to allow that she could be

 
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