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tics of the law of kindness is its universality. It is not circumscribed in its application, it is not confined to a few people, nor is its exercise favourable to a part, and injurious to the rest. Like the dews of heaven, the roaming atmosphere, or the glowing light of the sun, it is fitted for all people, and will as readily warm the frozen heart of the Laplander, in his eternal ice, with love divine, as it will cool the raging passions of the fevered son of the tropics. Parents amid their children, schoolmasters surrounded by their scholars, the governor, ruler, king, and emperor, with their subjects, the overseer with his slaves, the head workman with his labourers, all will find it a power which will procure them more obedience than any force they can use, obedience more lasting and sincere, from the fact, that it springs from affection instead of fear. I know that passion may intervene, and render it difficult to practise the law of kindness; that temper flies, and the impulse of revenge says, "destroy;" but over these we must throw a bridle, and learn to overcome evil with good." There is not a nobler sight in the moral world than that of an individual subduing his passions, repressing the desire to revenge, and acting on the principle, "Love your enemies." The case of Stephen, though surrounded by his enraged murderers, who hurled the stones of death at him, yet, in his magnanimity of purpose, praying that the sin of murder might not be laid to their charge, is infinitely more ennobling than Alexander amid his wealth, or Napoleon in all the pride of military conquest.

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CHAPTER IX.

NATIONAL KINDNESS.

-True Religion

Is always mild, propitious, and humble;
Plays not the tyrant, plants no faith in blood;
Nor bears destruction on her chariot wheels:
But stoops to polish, succour, and redress,
And builds her grandeur on the public good."

It is not often remembered that society, as composed of individuals, is frequently actuated by revenge, and that much of the evil which exists in it may be clearly traced to its neglect of the law of kindness. A community, or a nation, becomes unkind when it gives no heed to the education of the poor; when it raises such walls of distinction as to discourage and shut out the humble in life from notice, however worthy and virtuous; when it makes a god of riches and fashion, to frown upon even the industrious, and to set them aside like worthless weeds, because they cannot shine in silks and revel in luxury; when it

crushes the feeble person for the least deviation from the path of rectitude, chasing him or her to desperation with unrelenting severity, while, at the same time, it will receive with open arms the rich villain into its highest circles; when its laws are oppressive, cruel, and without a tendency to reform the criminal; when its legislation becomes encumbered with volumes of useless laws, so enveloping justice with technicalities, and forms, and multiplied modes of procedure, that, if justice is obtained, in many cases the costs eat up the proceeds; when the rich and influential practise such conduct as seduces the poor and lowly into vice; and when established custom sanctions sin in a variety of its forms, thus leading multitudes on to ruin. In all these, and in many other things, a nation or a community may be unkind, and walk contrary to the Christian law, "Overcome evil with good." What is it but the unkindness of community, which suffers an unnatural speculation to raise provisions above the price of labour, grinding the working classes in poverty and sorrow, and, through absolute want, driving many of them to beggary and theft? What is it but the unkindness of community that takes from multitudes of the poorer people all hope of rising in prosperity, and, by condemning them to perpetual drudgery, causes many of them, through mere despair, to become thieves and prostitutes? What is it but the unkindness of community that, because an individual female has made one mis-step, she is driven deeper and deeper into the foulest dens of vice, even when exhibiting an earnest repentance, and a strong desire to return to virtue? What is it but the unkindness of community

that winks and smiles at the wickedness, vice, and dissipation of the rich knave, a known gambler, seducer, and oppressor of the weak; yet on whose arm females will lean in confidence at their parties, and whose money gets him notice, even when an individual in humble life, though rich in virtue and knowledge, will be unnoticed by what are called the great? Oh, there is so much misery to be traced directly to the customs and fashions of life, that many a poor man may date his ruin from the door of society, by being pressed into vice by the follies and oppression of those who always owe to the poor a good example.

I was much impressed with the following extract from Mr. Ainsworth's work, entitled, "Jack Sheppard'." A benevolent individual urged upon a woman, living in the lowest dregs of life, and whose husband had been hung for house-breaking, to give him her infant. She refused; and, when she saw that he was angry at her refusal, "Don't be angry with me, sir," cried the widow, sobbing bitterly, "pray don't. I know I am undeserving of your bounty; but if I were to tell you what hardships I have undergone, to what frightful extremities I have been reduced, and to what infamy I have submitted, to earn a scanty subsistence for this child's sake; if you could feel what it is to stand alone in the world as I do, bereft of all who ever loved me, and shunned by all who have ever known me, except the worthless and the wretched; if you knew (and heaven grant that you may be spared

1 A work, by the way, whose general tendency is unquestionably evil, especially upon the minds of youth. Even the good passages in it will not divest it of this tendency.

the knowledge!) how much affliction sharpens love, and how much more dear to me my child has become for every sacrifice I have made for him; if you were told all this, you would, I am sure, pity rather than reproach me, because I cannot at once consent to a separation which I feel would break my heart." Many a female, like the one here represented, has been plunged deeper and deeper in infamy, because society has had no smile to win the wanderer from sin, but rather has frowned her away from repent

ance.

How vividly the following passage pourtrays some of the ruin caused by the modern arrangements of society! It is in the same conversation, between the same individuals, from which the foregoing extract was taken:- "Let me advise you on no account (said Wood,) to fly to strong waters for consolation, Joan. One nail drives out another, it's true; but the worst nail you can employ is a coffin nail. Gin Lane's the nearest road to the churchyard."

"It may be; but if it shortens the distance, and lightens the journey, I care not,' retorted the widow, who seemed by this reproach to be roused into sudden eloquence. To those who, like me, have never been able to get out of the dark and dreary paths of life, the grave is indeed a refuge, and the sooner they reach it the better. The spirit I drink perhaps it is killing

may be poison; it may kill me; me: but so would hunger, cold, misery; so would my own thoughts. I should have gone mad without it. Gin is the poor man's friend; his whole set-off against the rich man's luxury. It comforts him

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