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III
    Even if rue, an attitude of defence, a continual apology,  kills intellectual innocence; t delig is unforeseen, and in tacle of ting  must come before all true t and emotion.

    A zealous Iris of Ireland, spends ime in a never?ending argument about Oliver Crom, and ends by substituting a traditional casuistry for a country; and if  anotry t ers, letter?ing priests, and to make ture, substituting arguments and ations for tement at t reading of t poets  imaginative puberty. ations and arguments may , tons morality, or S vision; but none t recklessness Castiglione t necessary even in good manners, and offend our Lady trutso be her parlour.

    I admired tter, J.F. taylor, tor,  controversy over t often seemed to me t  sense of surprise t comes  is far from t, and yet obvious because o roll back and reveal forgotten sig loose lost passions. I  in some Iriserary or political society, but t any rate, as in conversation, I found a man  traitors at  of frenzy in ion of s gave  style and music. One asked oneself again and again,  tist, a man of genius, a creator of some kind? tence detacs context because of y. Everytyle,  is self?evident, from t atement, from y displayed. t es y of  made one understand  argument and logic. I found myself in t t  of  tic of a moment, a ricacy of leaf and t and of savour t professor of literature, or of any ot kno ting ing y, or carry tance of some pleasure. ractions and images created not for t for ty, even if till t deligures to ts t tiging
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