[The Disowned<br> Complete by Edward Bulwer-Lytton]@TWC D-Link book
The Disowned
Complete

CHAPTER XX
26/26

His mind had not slept while the age advanced, and thus it had swelled as it were from the bondage of its earlier passions and prejudices.

But little did he think, in the blindness of self-delusion,--though it was so obvious to Clarence, that he could have smiled if he had not rather inclined to weep at the frailties of human nature,--little did he think that the vanity which had cost him so much remained "a monarch still," undeposed alike by his philosophy, his religion, or his remorse; and that, debarred by circumstances from all wider and more dangerous fields, it still lavished itself upon trifles unworthy of his powers and puerilities dishonouring his age.

Folly is a courtesan whom we ourselves seek, whose favours we solicit at an enormous price, and who, like Lais, finds philosophers at her door scarcely less frequently than the rest of mankind!.


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