FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   610   611   612   613   614   615   616   617   618   619   620   621   622   623   624   625   626   627   628   629   630   631   632   633   634  
635   636   637   638   639   640   641   642   643   644   645   646   647   648   649   650   651   652   653   654   655   656   657   658   659   >>   >|  
ly in the World; without Modesty he would have pleaded the Cause he had taken upon him, tho it had appeared ever so Scandalous. From what has been said, it is plain, that Modesty and Assurance are both amiable, and may very well meet in the same Person. When they are thus mixed and blended together, they compose what we endeavour to express when we say a modest Assurance; by which we understand the just Mean between Bashfulness and Impudence. I shall conclude with observing, that as the same Man may be both Modest and Assured, so it is also possible for the same Person to be both Impudent and Bashful. We have frequent Instances of this odd kind of Mixture in People of depraved Minds and mean Education; who tho' they are not able to meet a Man's Eyes, or pronounce a Sentence without Confusion, can Voluntarily commit the greatest Villanies, or most indecent Actions. Such a Person seems to have made a Resolution to do Ill even in spite of himself, and in defiance of all those Checks and Restraints his Temper and Complection seem to have laid in his way. Upon the whole, I would endeavour to establish this Maxim, That the Practice of Virtue is the most proper Method to give a Man a becoming Assurance in his Words and Actions. Guilt always seeks to shelter it self in one of the Extreams, and is sometimes attended with both. X. [Footnote 1: [--Strabonem Appellat paetumm pater; et pullum, male parvus Si cui filius est; ut abortivus fuit olim Sisyphus: hunc varum, distortis cruribus; illum Balbutit scaurum, pravis fullum male talis. Hor.]] [Footnote 2: Book III., Chapters 10, 11. Words are the subject of this book; ch. 10 is on the Abuse of Words; ch. 11 of the Remedies of the foregoing imperfections and abuses.] * * * * * No. 374. Friday, May 9, 1712. Steele. 'Nil actum reputans si quid superesset agendum.' Luc. There is a Fault, which, tho' common, wants a Name. It is the very contrary to Procrastination: As we lose the present Hour by delaying from Day to Day to execute what we ought to do immediately; so most of us take Occasion to sit still and throw away the Time in our Possession, by Retrospect on what is past, imagining we have already acquitted our selves, and established our Characters in the sight of Mankind. But when we thus put a Value upon our selves for what we have alre
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   610   611   612   613   614   615   616   617   618   619   620   621   622   623   624   625   626   627   628   629   630   631   632   633   634  
635   636   637   638   639   640   641   642   643   644   645   646   647   648   649   650   651   652   653   654   655   656   657   658   659   >>   >|  



Top keywords:
Assurance
 

Person

 

endeavour

 

Modesty

 

Footnote

 

Actions

 
foregoing
 

imperfections

 

Remedies

 

abuses


subject
 

Chapters

 

parvus

 
filius
 
pullum
 
Strabonem
 

Appellat

 
paetumm
 

abortivus

 

cruribus


Balbutit

 

scaurum

 

pravis

 

distortis

 

Sisyphus

 
fullum
 

contrary

 
Possession
 

Occasion

 

execute


immediately

 

Retrospect

 

Mankind

 

Characters

 
imagining
 

acquitted

 
established
 

delaying

 

reputans

 

superesset


agendum

 

Steele

 

Procrastination

 
present
 

common

 
Friday
 
Complection
 

observing

 
Modest
 
Assured