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Simms, William Gilmore, 1806-1870

"Charlemont; Or, the Pride of the Village. a Tale of Kentucky"

A specious
outside, agreeable manners, cleverness and good humor, will soon
make their way into confidence, without requiring other guaranties
for the moral of the stranger. The people are naturally frank and
hospitable; for the simple reason that these qualities of character
are essential for procuring them that intercourse which they crave.
The habits are accessible, the restraints few, the sympathies are
genial, active, easily aroused, and very confiding. It follows,
naturally, that they are frequently wronged and outraged, and just
as naturally that their resentments are keen, eager, and vindictive.
The self-esteem, if not watchful, is revengeful; and society sanctions
promptly the fierce redress--that wild justice of revenge--which
punishes without appeal to law, with its own right hand, the
treacherous guest who has abused the unsuspecting confidence which
welcomed him to a seat upon the sacred hearth. In this brief portrait
of the morale of society, upon our frontiers, you will find the
materiel from which this story has been drawn, and its justification,
as a correct delineation of border life in one of its more settled
phases in the new states.


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