[Pink and White Tyranny by Harriet Beecher Stowe]@TWC D-Link book
Pink and White Tyranny

CHAPTER XVII
15/17

Fenelon praises it as a Christian grace, under the name of simplicity; but we incline to consider it only as an advantage of natural organization.

There are many excellent Christians who are haunted by themselves, and in some form or other are always busy with themselves; either conscientiously pondering the right and wrong of their actions, or approbatively sensitive to the opinions of others, or aesthetically comparing their appearance and manners with an interior standard; while there are others who have received the gift, beyond the artist's eye or the musician's ear, of perfect self-forgetfulness.

Their religion lacks the element of conflict, and comes to them by simple impulse.
"Glad souls, without reproach or blot, Who do His will, and know it not." Rose had a frank, open joyousness of nature, that shed around her a healthy charm, like fine, breezy weather, or a bright morning; making every one feel as if to be good were the most natural thing in the world.

She seemed to be thinking always and directly of matters in hand, of things to be done, and subjects under discussion, as much as if she were an impersonal being.
She had been educated with every solid advantage which old Boston can give to her nicest girls; and that is saying a good deal.

Returning to a country home at an early age, she had been made the companion of her father; entering into all his literary tastes, and receiving constantly, from association with him, that manly influence which a woman's mind needs to develop its completeness.


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