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Updated: June 16, 2025


In our time we have reason to be thankful for a criminal legislation tempered by mercy and philanthropy. We have attained, too, a standard of taste and of humanity which has banished the degrading exhibitions of public punishments, which has largely done away with coarseness and brutality, and has added much to the happiness of life.

Besides the natural and inevitable coarseness with which he repeats all that the press and public opinion of Spain has said of Weyler, it shows once more what McKinley is weak and catering to the rabble, and, besides, a low politician, who desires to leave a door open to me and to stand well with the jingoes of his party.

They ran parallel to my own course, but low down upon the beach instead of along the border of the turf; and, when I examined them, I saw at once, by the size and coarseness of the impression, that it was a stranger to me and to those in the pavilion who had recently passed that way.

Unfortunately such gems as these only make the coarseness of their setting the more conspicuous, and on the whole the sooner the world forgets about 'L'Amico Fritz' and 'I Rantzau' the better it will be for Mascagni's reputation. 'Guglielmo Ratcliff' and 'Silvano, both produced in 1895, have not been heard out of Italy, nor is there much probability that they will ever cross the Alps.

The coarseness and violence of those days seem incredible to us now; and, indeed, Paracelsus, as he confessed himself, was, though of gentle blood, rough and unpolished; and utterly, as one can see from his writings, unable to give and take, to conciliate perhaps to pardon. Soon they had their revenge. Ugly stories were whispered about.

There is nothing more cheerful than wisdom: I had like to have said more wanton." Was that why his conversation was sometimes coarse? "All the contraries are to be found in me, in one corner or another"; if delicacy, so also coarseness. Delicacy there was, certainly, a wonderful fineness of sensation.

You may have many acquaintances, but I should advise you to have but few near friends. If you have one, who is what he should be, you are comparatively happy. SECTION II. Rudeness of Manners. By rudeness I do not mean mere coarseness or rusticity, for that were more pardonable; but a want of civility.

And you do it! You who are so fine and so genteel!" Otto pressed together his eyelids; he heard her speak; an animal coarseness mingled itself with a sort of confidential manner which was annihilating to him. "She is my sister!" resounded in his soul. "Come now! come now!" and, descending the steps, she followed after him. "I know a better way!" said she, as they came to the lowest story.

And as the microscope which reveals the coarseness and blemishes of the works of man only shows more fully the perfectness of GOD'S works, and brings to light new and unimagined beauties, so it is with the Word of GOD when closely scanned. The science of yesterday is worthless to-day; but history and the discoveries of our own times only confirm the reliability of these ancient sacred records.

The capacity for perceiving and for reproducing what is nobly beautiful was lost. Vulgarity and coarseness stamped themselves upon the finest work of men like Giulio Romano. At this crisis it was proved how inferior was the neo-paganism of the sixteenth century to the paganism of antiquity it aped.

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