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I do not know how far this detestable custom of mourning is
carried in France; but judging from the appearance of the French people I should say that
a Frenchwoman goes into mourning for her cousins to the seventeenth degree. The result is
that when I cross the Channel I seem to have reached a country devastated by war or
pestilence. It is really suffering only from the family. Will anyone pretend that England
has not the best of this striking difference? Yet it is such senseless and unnatural
conventions as this that make us so impatient of what we call family feeling. Even apart
from its insufferable pretensions, the family needs hearty discrediting; for there is
hardly any vulnerable part of it that could not be amputated with advantage. |
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