Modesty is not indeed the last word of love, but it is the necessary foundation for all love's most exquisite audacities, the foundation which alone gives worth and sweetness to what Sénancour calls its "delicious impudence.
Long before the days of the Romantic School, Sénancour touches the chords which are afterwards sounded by Sainte-Beuve.
It is remarkable that we should find already suggested in Sénancour even that conception of language as simply musical sound which was subsequently characteristic of the German Romantic School.
Sénancour declares elsewhere that he cares almost more for the songs whose words he does not understand than for those of which he can follow the words as well as the melody.
In these words Sénancour expressed his own literary faith and predicted his own destiny.
The human race would gain much," as Sénancour wrote early in the nineteenth century in his remarkable book on love, "if virtue were made less laborious.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "nancour" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.