FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   >>  
w. [6] The dandelion. [7] The golden-crested wren. * * * * * RETROSPECTIVE GLEANINGS. * * * * * POVERTY. Owen Feltham says--"The poverty of a poor man is the least part of his misery. In all the storms of fortune, he is the first that must stand the shock of extremity. Poor men are perpetual sentinels, watching in the depth of night against the incessant assaults of want; while the rich lie strowd in secure reposes, and compassed with a large abundance. If the land be ruffetted with a bloodless famine, are not the poor the first that sacrifice their lives to hunger? If war thunders in the trembling country's lap, are not the poor those that are exposed to the enemy's sword and outrage? If the plague, like a loaded sponge, flies, sprinkling poison through a populous kingdom, the poor are the fruit that are shaken from the burdened tree; while the rich, furnished with the helps of fortune, have means to wind out themselves, and turn these sad indurances on the poor, that cannot avoid them. Like salt-marshes, that lie low, they are sure, whenever the sea of this world rages, to be first under, and embarrened with a fretting care. Who like the poor are harrowed with oppression, ever subject to the imperious taxes, and the gripes of mightiness? Continual care checks the spirit; continual labour checks the body; and continual insultation both. He is like one rolled in a vessel full of pikes--which way soever he turns, he something finds that pricks him. Yet, besides all these, there is another transcendent misery--and this is, that maketh men contemptible. As if the poor man were but fortune's dwarf, made lower than the rest of men, to be laughed at. The philosopher (though he were the same mind and the same man), in his squalid rags, could not find admission, when better robes procured both an open door and reverence. Though outward things can add nothing to our essential worth, yet, when we are judged on, by the help of others' outward senses, they much conduce to our value or disesteem. A diamond set in brass would be taken for a crystal, though it be not so; whereas a crystal set in gold will by many be thought a diamond. A poor man wise shall be thought a fool, though he have nothing to condemn him but his being poor. Poverty is a gulf, wherein all good parts are swallowed;--it is a reproach, which clouds the lustre of the pur
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   >>  



Top keywords:

fortune

 

outward

 

diamond

 

thought

 

crystal

 

continual

 
checks
 

misery

 
squalid
 
Feltham

philosopher

 
laughed
 
reverence
 

Though

 
POVERTY
 

procured

 
admission
 

pricks

 
soever
 

poverty


things

 
transcendent
 

maketh

 

contemptible

 

dandelion

 

condemn

 

reproach

 

clouds

 

lustre

 

swallowed


Poverty

 

judged

 

GLEANINGS

 
RETROSPECTIVE
 
essential
 

senses

 

golden

 

crested

 

disesteem

 

conduce


rolled

 

plague

 
outrage
 

sentinels

 
loaded
 
sponge
 

watching

 
exposed
 
sprinkling
 

burdened