Quote
"In Ireland, all is either brilliant sunshine or dark shadow, and its scenery, its skies, and the countenances of its genuine sons, are all either smiles or tears."
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Georgiana ChattertonGeorgiana Chatterton
Georgiana Chatterton
Georgiana, Lady Chatterton, later Mrs Dering was an English aristocrat, traveller, and author. Her first travelogue, Rambles in the South of Ireland, was published in 1839.
"In Ireland, all is either brilliant sunshine or dark shadow, and its scenery, its skies, and the countenances of its genuine sons, are all either smiles or tears."
"Now there are many pleasures in life, Long conversations, and leisure, that delightful evil."
"But in the good there is every kind of wisdom."
"The black-winged Erinnys Will never enter those homes where the hands are lifted up in prayer, And the gods have accepted their offerings."
"The English have not by nature sufficient sociability in their dispositions to do without a visible fire. A cheerful blaze is necessary to thaw their innate shyness and reserve, and to form a central point of union. ... They cannot converse comfortably with their hands unemployed. Some excuse must be found for idleness; some reason for being in one part of the room in preference to another. The slightest appearance of formality terrifies them beyond measure, because it reminds them of their own defects. The same principle which makes a burnt child dread the fire, causes them to cling to it as an antidote. All manner of contrivances are employed to break the bug-bear form. In summer, ottomans, albums, and windows, supply in some measure the loss of the darling fire, and enable English men and women to try and talk to each other."
"Moderation, the noblest gift of heaven."