[Pelham<br> Complete by Edward Bulwer-Lytton]@TWC D-Link book
Pelham
Complete

CHAPTER XIV
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CHAPTER XIV.
Erat homo ingeniosus, acutus, acer, et qui plurimum et salis haberet et fellis, nec candoris minus .-- Pliny.
I do not know a more difficult character to describe than Lord Vincent's.

Did I imitate certain writers, who think that the whole art of pourtraying individual character is to seize hold of some prominent peculiarity, and to introduce this distinguishing trait, in all times and in all scenes, the difficulty would be removed.

I should only have to present to the reader a man, whose conversation was nothing but alternate jest and quotation--a due union of Yorick and Partridge.

This would, however, be rendering great injustice to the character I wish to delineate.

There were times when Vincent was earnestly engrossed in discussion in which a jest rarely escaped him, and quotation was introduced only as a serious illustration, not as a humorous peculiarity.


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