[At Home And Abroad by Margaret Fuller Ossoli]@TWC D-Link book
At Home And Abroad

PART II
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He was the precursor of all we most prize.
True, his blood was mixed with madness, and the course of his actual life made some detours through villanous places, but his spirit was intimate with the fundamental truths of human nature, and fraught with prophecy.

There is none who has given birth to more life for this age; his gifts are yet untold; they are too present with us; but he who thinks really must often think with Rousseau, and learn of him even more and more: such is the method of genius, to ripen fruit for the crowd of those rays of whose heat they complain.
The second pleasure was in the speech of M.Berryer, when the Chamber was discussing the Address to the King.

Those of Thiers and Guizot had been, so far, more interesting, as they stood for more that was important; but M.Berryer is the most eloquent speaker of the House.
His oratory is, indeed, very good; not logical, but plausible, full and rapid, with occasional bursts of flame and showers of sparks, though indeed no stone of size and weight enough to crush any man was thrown out of the crater.

Although the oratory of our country is very inferior to what might be expected from the perfect freedom and powerful motive for development of genius in this province, it presents several examples of persons superior in both force and scope, and equal in polish, to M.Berryer.
Nothing can be more pitiful than the manner in which the infamous affair of Cracow is treated on all hands.

There is not even the affectation of noble feeling about it.


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