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    discernment, is that it has a laming effect, enfeebling the
    energies of indignation and scorn, which are the proper scourges of
    wrong-doing and meanness, and which should continually feed the
    wholesome restraining power of public opinion. I respect the horsewhip
    when applied to the back of Cruelty, and think that he who applies it is
    a more perfect human being because his outleap of indignation is not
    checked by a too curious reflection on the nature of guilt--a more
    perfect human being because he more completely incorporates the best
    social life of the race, which can never be constituted by ideas that
    nullify action. This is the essence of Dante's sentiment (it is painful
    to think that he applies it very cruelly)--



    "E cortesia fu, lui esser villano"[1]--



    and it is undeniable that a too intense consciousness of one's kinship
    with all frailties and vices undermines the active heroism which battles
    against wrong.

    But certainly nature has taken care that this danger should not at
    present be very threatening. One could not fairly describe the
    generality of one's neighbours as too lucidly aware of manifesting in
    their own persons the weaknesses which they observe in the rest of her
    Majesty's subjects; on the contrary, a hasty conclusion as to schemes of
    Providence might lead to the supposition that one man was intended to
    correct another by being most intolerant of the ugly quality or trick
    which he himself possesses. Doubtless philosophers will be able to
    explain how it must necessarily be so, but pending the full extension of
    the _Ã priori_ method, which will show that only blockheads could expect
    anything to be otherwise, it does seem surprising that Heloisa should be
    disgusted at Laura's attempts to disguise her age, attempts which she
    recognises so thoroughly because they enter into her own practice; that
    Semper, who often responds at public dinners and proposes resolutions on
    platforms, though he has a trying gestation of every speech and a bad
    time for himself and others at every delivery, should yet remark
    pitilessly on the folly of precisely the same course of action in

    Ubique; that Aliquis, who lets no attack on himself pass unnoticed, and
    for every handful of gravel against his windows sends a stone in reply,
    should deplore the ill-advised retorts of Quispiam, who does not
    perceive that to show oneself angry with an adversary is to gratify him.
    To be unaware of our own little tricks of manner or our own mental
    blemishes and excesses is a comprehensible unconsciousness; the puzzling
    fact is that people should apparently take no account of their
    deliberate actions, and should expect them to be equally ignored by
    others. It is an inversion of the accepted order:
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