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Rh Edward Lorraine.—"Are you not now speaking rather after the fashion of common prejudice? I am young, it is true; but I have outlived the pleasures of youth. I" Mr. Morland.—"But not its feelings. You are still credulous of good—still enthusiastic of impossibilities; you believe that the world may be set right—nay, that you are one of those predestined to assist in so doing." Edward Lorraine.—"I will not deny that I do think there is great room for improvement, and that very likely I am deceived in my own self-estimate—a common mistake, even with the most experienced; still, I am not prepared to admit, that a cause can be injured by the devotion and industry given to it by even the humblest individual." Mr. Morland.—"I was thinking more of yourself. Have you not felt Mr. Delawarr's conduct very severely?" Edward Lorraine.—"I have: I put my own personal interests quite out of the question; but I cannot forgive a man that I so respected and admired, for being the one to show me that my respect and my admiration were given to an acted part—not the real character." Mr. Morland.—"Your own are my best