The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 10, No. 270, August 25, 1827 by Various
page 34 of 51 (66%)
page 34 of 51 (66%)
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introduced into the court of chancery, for then let the decision fall out
as it might, the suitors would resign themselves to it as the decree of fate, as they must do even in the end after waiting half their lives. If the adage of _Bis dat qui cito dat_, be true, it is no less certain that he who denies at once, at length gives us something, for he gives us time. * * * * * RELIGIOUS BOOKS. There is an amusing anecdote related of a country curate, who having published a volume of sermons, in which he more particularly pointed out the dangers of a lax morality, and the want of strict religious principles among the higher classes of society, wrote a few weeks afterwards to a friend in town, inquiring in his extreme simplicity, "whether he did not observe any signs of reformation in the fashionable world?" the answer that he obtained may easily be divined. The good man had entirely forgotten that those who most needed his exhortations, were precisely those who would not read them; or who, if they read, would be the last to attend to them. If books could reform the world, it had been reformed long ago; but no disparagement either to good books--something else is necessary. * * * * * AN AMBIGUOUS COMPLIMENT. |
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