for people have come to imagine me a very clever man, so easy is it to pass from one extreme to another.
 George Sand, Mauprat (1837). copy citation

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Author George Sand
Source Mauprat
Topic
Date 1837
Language English
Reference
Note Translated by John Oliver Hobbes
Weblink https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Mauprat_(Heinemann)

Context

“So, two or three families to whom I had done some service, tried all possible means to give me pleasure in return; and, as I refused everything, they thought they would give me a surprise. Once I had to pay a visit to Berthenoux for several days, on some confidential business which had been entrusted to me; for people have come to imagine me a very clever man, so easy is it to pass from one extreme to another. On my return I found this garden, marked out, planted, and inclosed as you see it. In vain did I get angry, and explain that I did not want to work, that I was too old, and that the pleasure of eating a little more fruit was not worth the trouble that this garden was going to cost me;” source