reader.
And here
it is
again my
own
countrymen
who are
chiefly in
fault.
That
German
lends
itself to
this way
of
writing,
makes the
thing
possible,
but does
not
justify
it. No
prose
reads more
easily or
pleasantly
than
French,
because,
as a rule,
it is free
from the
error in
question.
The
Frenchman
strings
his
thoughts
together,
as far as
he can, in
the most
logical
and
natural
order, and
so lays
them