Page:The Mysterious Warning - Parsons (1796, volume 4).djvu/266

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mestic duties, which terminates in folly, vice, and the ruin of all social happiness.


In the conduct of Baron S———, may be traced the fatal effects of indulging that gloomy misanthropy, which feeds a proud spirit and a callosity of heart, insensible to every feeling but its own gratification, which, when opposed, may lead to the most determined cruelty and revenge.


Count M——— was greatly affected at the death of Eugenia; but by their separation he had been long weaned from that excess of passion he had felt in early life, and which had been productive of so much sorrow to both; his grief had less poignancy than he must otherwise have known, and the society of his friends contributed to restore his peace, though he ever preserved a tender remembrance of his first love.


In less than a twelvemonth after her decease, he offered himself to, and was ac-