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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Untitled Article
agaiart &e Bnotarape * if &oh hakte & *»> * % *** « M& 4 * g ^* T AJHiy \ ainl fie maat submit ; and he finds too late his error ia riot heeding the advice of Christ , f If ai * y man will sue tbee at the law and take away thy coat , give him thy cloak also . ' He too is > turned out of the box at last , to be made sport of by those yfho have fleeced him , and who will never let him go , as long as they can keep the shackle on him and still retain him in t ^ eir power . 'the box of social law is far more mischievous and miserable iu
its consequences than any of the others ; because its infliction * are more generally diffused . There are so many classes of people who are subjected to its torture—a moral torture , worse to bear , and n ^ ore crippling to the energies of the mind and heart * than were the iniquitous inquisitorial torments that deformed and maimed the body . ' Society / c the world / s people / with the
mysterious ' on < lit as a witness , have established an inquisition after the most rigid and unsparing Spanish policy . It is a selfielected judgment ; it employs masked witnesses ; it endeavours , like its prototype , to torture into falsehood ; and would doom its victims to cells of perpetual moral darkness , away from the sun and air , and all the precious influences of social life . Thus it dot * E , or would try to do , with those who dare to question it *
established laws . Ai > d now how , and upon whom , does this last torture box act ? We will take , for instance , a girl brought up without any regard to the mere forms of society ; free to think , free to look , free to speak her thoughts , with this one object always before her—the desire after truth , to which she would look as the eagle looks upon the sun , whether soaring upward or taking a downward flight , always keeping that one light of life in view . The firet
(part of her life is easy ; the child may do what in the woman may be conspicuous ;* and conspicuous for why ? Because it is without that worldly varnish which ' society' wears as a livery , to the injury , and sometimes destruction , of originality of character ; just as painting over a beautiful delicately-chiselled statue would destroy its sharpness . Women become , like soldiers ,
so many slaves in uniform , to go through their various exercises ( though without ever * standing at ease' ) just as society naay bid . The single-hearted , the frank , the unsuspicious followers of their o > vn generous impulses , these are the selected victims * They are taught , that to exclaim wherever they find beauty , to yjfcld genuine admiration to whatever attracts their eye , to laap to ( do a service whenever they can , without respect to persons , i *
extraordinary , ' ' eccentric , ' ' wikl , ' ' incautious . ' As the g * ri gpowfi up she finds a thousand checks to the naturally open-hearted eo > pression of l > er pure unquestionable feelings . Even the 41104 rigid cau c ^ eteet no fault in the feeling itself , but they ahalte thek ta * ada and load her be careful bow &he feyoka , < ¦ for fofur af t ) tfft world '—what she ftfcys , * far fear pf the world / In time she
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1835, page 799, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2652/page/43/
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