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    A Political Molecule - Page 2

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    Sometimes Spike's mind, emerging from its
    preoccupation, burst forth in a remark delivered with smiling zest; as,
    that he did like to see gravel walks well rolled, or that a lady should
    always wear the best jewellery, or that a bride was a most interesting
    object; but finding these ideas received rather coldly, he would relapse
    into abstraction, draw up his back, wrinkle his brows longitudinally,
    and seem to regard society, even including gravel walks, jewellery, and
    brides, as essentially a poor affair. Indeed his habit of mind was
    desponding, and he took melancholy views as to the possible extent of
    human pleasure and the value of existence. Especially after he had made
    his fortune in the cotton manufacture, and had thus attained the chief
    object of his ambition--the object which had engaged his talent for
    order and persevering application. For his easy leisure caused him much
    _ennui_. He was abstemious, and had none of those temptations to sensual
    excess which fill up a man's time first with indulgence and then with
    the process of getting well from its effects. He had not, indeed,
    exhausted the sources of knowledge, but here again his notions of human
    pleasure were narrowed by his want of appetite; for though he seemed
    rather surprised at the consideration that Alfred the Great was a
    Catholic, or that apart from the Ten Commandments any conception of
    moral conduct had occurred to mankind, he was not stimulated to further
    inquiries on these remote matters. Yet he aspired to what he regarded as
    intellectual society, willingly entertained beneficed clergymen, and
    bought the books he heard spoken of, arranging them carefully on the
    shelves of what he called his library, and occasionally sitting alone in
    the same room with them. But some minds seem well glazed by nature
    against the admission of knowledge, and Spike's was one of them. It was
    not, however, entirely so with regard to politics. He had had a strong
    opinion about the Reform Bill, and saw clearly that the large trading
    towns ought to send members. Portraits of the Reform heroes hung framed
    and glazed in his library: he prided himself on being a Liberal. In this
    last particular, as well as in not giving benefactions and not making
    loans without interest, he showed unquestionable firmness. On the Repeal

    of the Corn Laws, again, he was thoroughly convinced. His mind was
    expansive towards foreign markets, and his imagination could see that
    the people from whom we took corn might be able to take the cotton goods
    which they had hitherto dispensed with. On his conduct in these
    political concerns, his wife, otherwise influential as a woman who
    belonged to a family with a title in it, and who had condescended in
    marrying him, could gain no hold: she had to blush a little
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