Page:A note on Charlotte Brontë (IA note00swinoncharlottebrich).pdf/29

 Scott himself—to whose glorious memory I need offer no apology for the attribution of epithets which I cannot but regret to remember that even in their vulgar sense he would not have regarded as other than terms of honour—even in the best and greatest works of these our best and greatest we do not find this one great good quality so innate, so immanent as in hers. At most we find the combination of event with character, the coincidence of action with disposition, the coherence of consequences with emotions, to be rationally credible and acceptable to the natural sense of a reasonable faith, We rarely or never feel that, given the characters, the incidents become inevitable; that such passion must needs bring forth none other than such