The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 14, No. 382, July 25, 1829 by Various
page 45 of 53 (84%)
page 45 of 53 (84%)
|
habits, which give stability, beauty, and happiness to society.
Descend from the clouds of political economy, and travel in safety on your mother earth; cast away the blinding spectacles of the philosophers, and use the eyes you have received from nature. Practise the vulgar principles, that it is erroneous to ruin immense good markets, to gain petty bad ones--that you cannot carry on losing trade--that you cannot live without profit--and that you cannot eat without income. And pule no more about individual economy, but eat, and drink, and enjoy yourselves, like your fathers. What! in these days of free trade, to tell the hypochondriacal Englishman that the foaming tankard, the honest bottle of port, and the savoury sirloin, must be prohibited articles! You surely wish us to hang and drown ourselves by wholesale.--Ibid. * * * * * THE FORGET-ME-NOT. The following account of the origin of the name "Forget-me-not," is extracted from Mill's _History of Chivalry_, and was communicated to that work by Dr. A.T. Thomson:--"Two lovers were loitering on the margin of a lake on a fine summer's evening, when the maiden espied some of the flowers of Myosòtis growing on the water, close to the bank of an island, at some distance from the shore. She expressed a desire to possess them, when the knight, in the true spirit of chivalry, plunged into the water, and swimming to the spot, cropped the wished for plant, but his strength was unable to fulfill the object of his achievement, |
|