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Untitled Article
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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
Th $ ttttmer in which , magistrates , treat application * -. fog DMwic Ucmces , or permission for setting in operation juiy scheme of popular amusement—the regulationsabaoxred M . tk& Bnttal } lloseutn respecting the print room , &c—the admowi
tory notices which it is thought necessary to affix to all . places o £ exhibition to which the large , and as it would appear unruly , family of John Bull is admitted , is a libel on the nation , pro-r claiming the people of England as prone to gross excesses , and wanting in that delicate principle which forbids an individual to
de&ce or appropriate a public property , or any part of it . The petpk best Know if this be true ; if true , how much longer do they mean to remain under the stigma ; if not true , will they not « eek some means to fehow the falseness of these accusations ? In some town of Germany , the name of which I cannot at this' tooiaent call to mind , there is , on a central spot , a , beanii-i ftil garden free to the people—it has no preservative of brick
waits fringed with broken glass , no grim porter looking poverty out of countenance , and petrifying infancy with fear- ^ -it baa na safeguard but a notice to the effect that' the garden was created for the advantage of the public , and to the protection of the ^ i bi wi it Is c&rfrfiitted . ' To this garden the people have free and indiscriminate access , yet never is even a flower plucked or any aeb&sh advantage taken * I can imagine few things more honourable
to fc community than such conduct , and certainly none more ptfWtic—the reverse behaviour is on a par with the wisdom wiltafckitted the goose for the sake of her golden eggs . The folltff to be admired in this instance of derinan good feeling , gf tod imtoe , and good taste , applies not less to its originators tiNtttt ^ fo its enjoyers . T 09 little pppeal is in general made to tfcfe Iw ^ her principles of human nature , too little confidence in their existence reposed or exhibited . We prefer locking our
doom to unlocking the feelings which would guard our peon prtity 80 mach more truly ; thus the purer motives , uncalled . trltettereised , lie cold and inert , like ore in an unopened tfftinfe , " and meaner motives , stimulated by the precautions aik > pt £ d , me more or less into activity . Fear often provoke * the ctairiger that it dreads , and the insults upon innocence
wfcicf * Suspicion inflicts , the natural impulse of retaliation will often TeVenge—revenge b y the fatal expedient of becoming gtriHt- A child ( of sufficient strength ) to whom we evince a c&Mkfonee that he can walk , will set off boldly for a march ds hmf £ Btsihe hearth-ni £ , whereas one who is continually wsurae 4 t ^ ftitl iB very tenacious of any attempt to put hi * "beat M # ' # oifeata * t . " Tell the human creature what are iU
capa-MM » l , eX > r ^ e those capabilities , trust to theiu , and show 1 tlky < M ? trmnt them , do this at the outset , and the wo * fc o £ wHmity i * ** 4 feeted at once and for crer . The bett locks way ; . t 1
Untitled Article
Xm Amu * mie * t .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1836, page 748, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2664/page/32/
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