[Waverley by Sir Walter Scott]@TWC D-Link bookWaverley CHAPTER XIII 5/10
To do the Baron justice, although sufficiently prone to dwell upon, and even to exaggerate, his family dignity and consequence, he was too much a man of real courage ever to allude to such personal acts of merit as he had himself manifested. Miss Rose now appeared from the interior room of her apartment, to welcome her father and his friends.
The little labours in which she had been employed obviously showed a natural taste, which required only cultivation.
Her father had taught her French and Italian, and a few of the ordinary authors in those languages ornamented her shelves.
He had endeavoured also to be her preceptor in music; but as he began with the more abstruse doctrines of the science, and was not perhaps master of them himself, she had made no proficiency further than to be able to accompany her voice with the harpsichord; but even this was not very common in Scotland at that period.
To make amends, she sang with great taste and feeling, and with a respect to the sense of what she uttered that might be proposed in example to ladies of much superior musical talent.
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