Voyage to Locuta; a fragment; with etchings and notes of illustration . relation^ship existing between them : as, the servantto the master on whom he attends; the magis-*trate to the district in which he is placed ; thehouse to the family which inhabits it; thehorses to the carriage which they draw ; andthe lady who rides in it. Without the intersvention of this little active set of performers,she would never have arrived at her journeysend, descendedyVom her carriage, curtsied tothe company, and placed herself upon a sofa,where she talked of politics during half anhour, and concerning many kn
Voyage to Locuta; a fragment; with etchings and notes of illustration . relation^ship existing between them : as, the servantto the master on whom he attends; the magis-*trate to the district in which he is placed ; thehouse to the family which inhabits it; thehorses to the carriage which they draw ; andthe lady who rides in it. Without the intersvention of this little active set of performers,she would never have arrived at her journeysend, descendedyVom her carriage, curtsied tothe company, and placed herself upon a sofa,where she talked of politics during half anhour, and concerning many known charac-ters, was admired by the guests for her talents,and remained in their good graces, till shewas supplanted by a powerful rival. It is ne-cessary to add, that in this rank of citi-zens is included the very officer hinted atin the history of the three brothers, and thathe partakes of the peculiarity of the more ac-tive hero of that family, by obliging the de-pendent, who follows in his train, to be clothedjn the same uniform with that prescribed < X??. Little And &: For taking- a peaceable i <<, a disturbance in the back ground. A FRAGMENT. £5 by the latter, which in this instance provestheir authority to be equal. This is a princi-pal cause of the harmony and beauty of this sys-tem of government, and, therefore, one of itsmost important regulations, though one that isthe most frequently misunderstood and trans-gressed. For want of this attention to pro-priety, the character in question is frequentlyconfounded with other classes ; but when thisrule is strictly observed, it affords him a markof distinction from those in which he is some-times placed by mistake, and by which hispower and dignity are deplorably degraded. The office of the eighth order of inhabit-ants is very much like that of the seventh, ex-cept that, instead of its being directed to thatof linking together individuals only, it ex-tends also to the arrangement of whole d
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, booksubjectenglishlanguage, booksubjectutopias