The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 14, No. 383, August 1, 1829 by Various
page 25 of 47 (53%)
page 25 of 47 (53%)
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as the chance may be, suspended over it by an iron chain; so that sitting
on the aforesaid stone benches, you may inhale, like the gods, the savour of your dinner, while your frostbitten shins are soothed at the same time by the fire which dresses it.--_Monthly Magazine_. * * * * * THE TRUE GENTLEMAN. By a gentleman, we mean not to draw a line that would be invidious between high and low, rank and subordination, riches and poverty. The distinction is in the mind. Whoever is open, loyal, and true; whoever is of humane and affable demeanour; whoever is honourable in himself, and in his judgment of others, and requires no law but his word to make him fulfil an engagement--such a man is a gentleman: and such a man may be found among the tillers of the earth. But high birth and distinction, for the most part, insure the high sentiment which is denied to poverty and the lower professions. It is hence, and hence only, that the great claim their superiority; and hence, what has been so beautifully said of honour, the law of kings, is no more than true:-- It aids and strengthens virtue where it meets her, And imitates her actions where she is not. _De Vere_. * * * * * |
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