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_ speak of sacred things familiarly? that Biblical allusions (allusions, that is, to the single book with whose language, from his church-going habits, he is intimate) are _not_ frequent on his lips? If so, he cannot have pursued his studies of the character on so many long-ago muster-fields and at so many cattle-shows as I. But I scorn any such line of defence, and will confess at once that one of the things I am proud of in my countrymen is (I am not speaking now of such persons as I have assumed Mr. Sawin to be) that they do not put their Maker away far from them, or interpret the fear of God into being afraid of Him. The Talmudists had conceived a deep truth when they said, that 'all things were in the power of God, save the fear of God;' and when people stand in great dread of an invisible power, I suspect they mistake quite another personage for the Deity. I might justify myself for the passages criticised by many parallel ones from Scripture, but I need not. The Reverend Homer Wilbur's note-books supply me with three apposite quotations. The first is from a Father of the Roman Church, the second from a Father of the Anglican, and the third from a Father of Modern English poetry. The Puritan divines would furnish me with many more such. St. Bernard says, _Sapiens nummularius est Deus: nummum fictum non recipiet_; 'A cunning money-changer is God: he will take in no base coin.' Latimer says, 'You shall perceive that God, by this example, shaketh us by the noses and taketh us by the ears.' Familiar enough, both of them, one would say! But I should think Mr. Biglow had verily stolen the last of the two maligned passages from Dryden's 'Don Sebastian,' where I find 'And beg of Heaven to charge the bill on me!' And there I leave the matter, being willing to believe that the Saint, the Martyr, and even the Poet, were as careful of God's honor as my critics are ever likely to be. II. GLOSSARY TO THE BIGLOW PAPERS Act'lly, _actually_. Air, _are_. Airth, _earth_. Airy, _area_. Aree, _area_. Arter, _after_. Ax, _ask_. Beller, _bellow_. Bellowses, _lungs_. Ben, _been_. Bile, _boil_. Bimeby, _by and by_. Blurt out, _to speak bluntly_. Bust, _burst_. Buster, _a roistering blade_; used also as a general superlative. Caird, _carried_. Cairn, _carrying_. Caleb, _a turncoat_. Cal'late, _calculate_. Cass, _a person with two lives_. Close, _clothes_. Cockerel, _a young cock_. Cocktail, _a kind of d
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