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39.

"W

HENCE springs the greatest degree of moral suffering?" was a question debated this evening, but not settled. It was argued that it would depend on the texture of character, its more or less conscientiousness, susceptibility, or strength. I thought from two sentiments-from jealousy, that is, the sense of a wrong endured, in one class of characters; from remorse, that is, from the sense of a wrong inflicted, in another.

THE

40.

HE bread of life is love; the salt of life is work; the sweetness of life, poesy; the water of life,

faith.

I

41.

HAVE seen triflers attempting to draw out a deep intellect; and they reminded me of children throwing pebbles down the well at Carisbrook, that they might hear them sound,

A

42.

BOND is necessary to complete our being, only we must be careful that the bond does not become bondage.

"THE secret of peace," said A. B., “is the resolution of the lesser into the greater;" meaning, perhaps, the due relative appreciation of our duties, and the proper placing of our affections: or, did she not rather mean, the resolving of the lesser duties and affections into the higher? But it is true in either sense.

THE love we have for Genius is to common love what the fire on the altar is to the fire on the hearth. We cherish it not for warmth or for service, but for an offering, as the expression of our worship.

ALL love not responded to and accepted is a species of idolatry. It is like the worship of a dumb beautiful image we have ourselves set up and deified,

but cannot inspire with life, nor warm with sympathy. No!-though we should consume our own hearts on the altar. Our love of God would be idolatry if we did not believe in his love for us his responsive love.

IN the same moment that we begin to speculate on the possibility of cessation or change in any strong affection that we feel, even from that moment we may date its death: it has become the fetch of the living love.

"MOTIVES," said Coleridge, "imply weakness, and the reasoning powers imply the existence of evil and temptation. The angelic nature would act from impulse alone." This is the sort of angel which Angelico da Fiesole conceived and represented, and he only.

Again: "If a man's conduct can neither be ascribed to the angelic or the bestial within him, it must be fiendish. Passion without appetite is fiendish."

And, he might have added, appetite without passion, bestial. Love in which is neither appetite nor passion is angelic. The union of all is human; and according as one or other predominates, does the

human being approximate to the fiend, the beast, or the angel.

I

43.

DON'T mean to say that principle is not a finer thing than passion; but passions existed before principles: they came into the world with us; principles are superinduced.

There are bad principles as well as bad passions; and more bad principles than bad passions. Good principles derive life, and strength, and warmth from high and good passions; but principles do not give life, they only bind up life into a consistent whole. One great fault in education is, the pains taken to inculcate principles rather than to train feelings. It is as if we took it for granted that passions could only be bad, and are to be ignored or repressed altogether, the old mischievous monkish doctrine.

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44.

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T is easy to be humble where humility is a condescension -easy to concede where we know ourselves wronged-easy to forgive where vengeance is in our power.

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"You and I," said H. G., yesterday, "are alike in this: both of us so abhor injustice, that we are ready to fight it with a broomstick if we can find nothing better!"

45.

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HE wise only possess ideas the greater part of mankind are possessed by them.

When once

the mind, in despite of the remonstrating conscience, has abandoned its free power to a haunting impulse or idea, then whatever tends to give depth and vividness to this idea or indefinite imagination, increases. its despotism, and in the same proportion renders the reason and free will ineffectual." This paragraph from Coleridge sounds like a truism until we have felt its truth.

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