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    A Too Deferential Man - Page 2

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    lightness, and not
    announce his adhesion to a commonplace with an emphatic insistance, as
    if it were a proof of singular insight. We mortals should chiefly like
    to talk to each other out of goodwill and fellowship, not for the sake
    of hearing revelations or being stimulated by witticisms; and I have
    usually found that it is the rather dull person who appears to be
    disgusted with his contemporaries because they are not always strikingly
    original, and to satisfy whom the party at a country house should have
    included the prophet Isaiah, Plato, Francis Bacon, and Voltaire. It is
    always your heaviest bore who is astonished at the tameness of modern
    celebrities: naturally; for a little of his company has reduced them to
    a state of flaccid fatigue. It is right and meet that there should be an
    abundant utterance of good sound commonplaces. Part of an agreeable
    talker's charm is that he lets them fall continually with no more than
    their due emphasis. Giving a pleasant voice to what we are all well
    assured of, makes a sort of wholesome air for more special and dubious
    remark to move in.

    Hence it seemed to me far from unbecoming in Felicia that in her first
    dialogue with Hinze, previously quite a stranger to her, her
    observations were those of an ordinarily refined and well-educated woman
    on standard subjects, and might have been printed in a manual of polite
    topics and creditable opinions. She had no desire to astonish a man of
    whom she had heard nothing particular. It was all the more exasperating
    to see and hear Hinze's reception of her well-bred conformities.
    Felicia's acquaintances know her as the suitable wife of a distinguished
    man, a sensible, vivacious, kindly-disposed woman, helping her husband
    with graceful apologies written and spoken, and making her receptions
    agreeable to all comers. But you would have imagined that Hinze had been
    prepared by general report to regard this introduction to her as an
    opportunity comparable to an audience of the Delphic Sibyl. When she had
    delivered herself on the changes in Italian travel, on the difficulty of
    reading Ariosto in these busy times, on the want of equilibrium in
    French political affairs, and on the pre-eminence of German music, he
    would know what to think. Felicia was evidently embarrassed by his
    reverent wonder, and, in dread lest she should seem to be playing the
    oracle, became somewhat confused, stumbling on her answers rather than

    choosing them. But this made no difference to Hinze's rapt attention and
    subdued eagerness of inquiry. He continued to put large questions,
    bending his head slightly that his eyes might be a little lifted in
    awaiting her reply.

    "What, may I ask, is your opinion as to the state of Art in England?"

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