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gin, nor cease to sympathize with all that emanates from the same pure home. Human ignorance and prejudice may for a time seem to have divorced what God has joined together; but human ignorance and prejudice shall at length pass away, and then science and religion shall be seen blending their parti-colored rays into one beautiful bow of light, linking heaven to earth and earth to heaven.--_Prof. Hitchcock._ Science is a first rate piece of furniture for a man's upper chamber, if he has common sense on the ground-floor. But if a man hasn't got plenty of good common sense, the more science he has the worse for his patient.--_Holmes._ ~Scriptures.~--The majesty of Scripture strikes me with admiration, as the purity of the Gospel has its influence on my heart. Peruse the works of our philosophers; with all their pomp of diction, how mean, how contemptible, are they, compared with the Scriptures! Is it possible that a book at once so simple and sublime should be merely the work of man? The Jewish authors were incapable of the diction, and strangers to the morality contained in the Gospel, the marks of whose truths are so striking and inimitable that the inventor would be a more astonishing character than the hero.--_Rousseau._ ~Secrecy.~--Thou hast betrayed thy secret as a bird betrays her nest, by striving to conceal it.--_Longfellow._ Never confide your secrets to paper: it is like throwing a stone in the air, and if you know who throws the stone, you do not know where it may fall.--_Calderon._ People addicted to secrecy are so without knowing why; they are not so for cause, but for secrecy's sake.--_Hazlitt._ ~Sect.~--The effective strength of sects is not to be ascertained merely by counting heads.--_Macaulay._ All sects are different, because they come from men; morality is everywhere the same, because it comes from God.--_Voltaire._ Fierce sectarianism breeds fierce latitudinarianism.--_De Quincey._ ~Self-Abnegation.~--'Tis much the doctrine of the times that men should not please themselves, but deny themselves everything they take delight in; not look upon beauty, wear no good clothes, eat no good meat, etc., which seems the greatest accusation that can be upon the Maker of all good things. If they are not to be used why did God make them?--_Selden._ Self-abnegation, that rare virtue that good men preach and good women practice.--_Holmes._ ~Self-Examination.~--We neither know nor judge oursel
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