Complete by Edward Bulwer-Lytton]@TWC D-Link book Complete 5/9 His eyes, as I have before said, were round, large, and hazel; they were also unmeaning. His teeth were good; and his nose, neither aquiline nor Grecian, was yet a very showy nose upon the whole. All the maidservants admired him; and you felt, in looking at him, that it was a pity our army should lose so good a grenadier. He was generally considered a sensible man. He had read Blackstone, Montesquieu, Cowper's Poems, and _The Rambler_; and he was always heard with great attention in the House of Lords. |