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t seems absurd, but let him consecrate his energies to the creation of what is good. He must not demolish, but build. He must raise temples where mankind may come and partake of the purest pleasures.--_Goethe._ If I can put one touch of a rosy sunset into the life of any man or woman, I shall feel that I have worked with God.--_George MacDonald._ The city reveals the moral ends of being, and sets the awful problem of life. The country soothes us, refreshes us, lifts us up with religious suggestion.--_Chapin._ It is the age that forms the man, not the man that forms the age. Great minds do indeed react on the society which has made them what they are, but they only pay with interest what they have received.--_Macaulay._ In families well ordered there is always one firm, sweet temper, which controls without seeming to dictate. The Greeks represented Persuasion as crowned.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ ~Ingratitude.~--The great bulk of mankind resemble the swine, which in harvest gather and fatten upon the acorns beneath the oak, but show to the tree which bore them no other thanks than rubbing off its bark, and tearing up the sod around it.--_Scriver._ One great cause of our insensibility to the goodness of our Creator is the very extensiveness of his bounty.--_Paley._ ~Injustice.~--The injustice of men subserves the justice of God, and often his mercy.--_Madame Swetchine._ ~Ink.~--A drop of ink may make a million think.--_Byron._ Let there be gall enough in thy ink; though thou write with a goose-pen, no matter.--_Shakespeare._ The colored slave that waits upon thought.--_Mrs. Balfour._ Oh, she is fallen into a pit of ink, that the wide sea hath drops too few to wash her clean again!--_Shakespeare._ My ways are as broad as the king's high road, and my means lie in an inkstand.--_Southey._ ~Innocence.~--He's armed without that's innocent within.--_Pope._ There is no courage but in innocence.--_Southern._ There is no man so good who, were he to submit all his thoughts and actions to the law, would not deserve hanging ten times in his life.--_Montaigne._ ~Innovation.~--The ridiculous rage for innovation, which only increases the weight of the chains it cannot break, shall never fire my blood!--_Schiller._ Dislike of innovation proceeds sometimes from the disgust excited by false humanity, canting hypocrisy, and silly enthusiasm.--_Sydney Smith._ ~Insanity.~--Insanity is not a distinct and separa
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