FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   334   335   336   337   338   339   340   341   342   343   344   345   346   347   348   349   350   >>  
ention that can be thought of by those who even incumber their necessities with superfluous accommodation,--if they are as numerously attended,--if their equipages are as splendid,--if they regale at table with as much or more variety of plenty than ever,--if they are clad in as expensive and changeful a diversity, according to their tastes and modes,--if they are not deterred from the pleasures of the field by the charges which government has wisely turned from the culture to the sports of the field,--if the theatres are as rich and as well filled, and greater and at a higher price than ever,--and (what is more important than all) if it is plain, from the treasures which are spread over the soil or confided to the winds and the seas, that there are as many who are indulgent to their propensities of parsimony as others to their voluptuous desires, and that the pecuniary capital grows instead of diminishing,--on what ground are we authorized to say that a nation gambolling in an ocean of superfluity is undone by want? With what face can we pretend that they who have not denied any one gratification to any one appetite have a right to plead poverty in order to famish their virtues and to put their duties on short allowance? that they are to take the law from an imperious enemy, and can contribute no longer to the honor of their king, to the support of the independence of their country, to the salvation of that Europe which, if it falls, must crush them with its gigantic ruins? How can they affect to sweat and stagger and groan under their burdens, to whom the mines of Newfoundland, richer than those of Mexico and Peru, are now thrown in as a make-weight in the scale of their exorbitant opulence? What excuse can they have to faint, and creep, and cringe, and prostrate themselves at the footstool of ambition and crime, who, during a short, though violent struggle, which they have never supported with the energy of men, have amassed more to their annual accumulation than all the well-husbanded capital that enabled their ancestors, by long and doubtful and obstinate conflicts, to defend and liberate and vindicate the civilized world? But I do not accuse the people of England. As to the great majority of the nation, they have done whatever, in their several ranks and conditions and descriptions, was required of them by their relative situations in society: and from those the great mass of mankind cannot depart, without the subv
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   334   335   336   337   338   339   340   341   342   343   344   345   346   347   348   349   350   >>  



Top keywords:
capital
 

nation

 
opulence
 

excuse

 
exorbitant
 

weight

 

thrown

 
violent
 

ambition

 

footstool


Mexico
 

cringe

 

prostrate

 

Newfoundland

 

gigantic

 
independence
 

country

 
salvation
 
Europe
 

burdens


struggle

 

affect

 

stagger

 

richer

 

supported

 

conditions

 

descriptions

 

England

 

ention

 

majority


required
 

depart

 

mankind

 
relative
 

situations

 

society

 

people

 

accuse

 
husbanded
 
enabled

ancestors

 

accumulation

 
annual
 

support

 

energy

 

amassed

 

doubtful

 

obstinate

 

civilized

 

vindicate