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Mackenzie, Henry, 1745-1831

"The Man of Feeling"


A man of refined taste, who caught the tone of the French sentiment
of his time, has, of course, pleased French critics, and has been
translated into French. "The Man of Feeling" begins with imitation
of Sterne, and proceeds in due course through so many tears that it
is hardly to be called a dry book. As guide to persons of a
calculating disposition who may read these pages I append an index
to the Tears shed in "The Man of Feeling."

AUTHOR'S INTRODUCTION

My dog had made a point on a piece of fallow-ground, and led the
curate and me two or three hundred yards over that and some stubble
adjoining, in a breathless state of expectation, on a burning first
of September.
It was a false point, and our labour was vain: yet, to do Rover
justice (for he's an excellent dog, though I have lost his
pedigree), the fault was none of his, the birds were gone: the
curate showed me the spot where they had lain basking, at the root
of an old hedge.
I stopped and cried Hem! The curate is fatter than I; he wiped the
sweat from his brow.
There is no state where one is apter to pause and look round one,
than after such a disappointment. It is even so in life. When we
have been hurrying on, impelled by some warm wish or other, looking
neither to the right hand nor to the left--we find of a sudden that
all our gay hopes are flown; and the only slender consolation that
some friend can give us, is to point where they were once to be
found.


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