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org/access_use#pd-google
? 126 HUMANITY OR
royal parents; and many a person was relieved, with-
out knowing his benefactors.
THE DAUPHIN, SON OF LOUIS THE SIXTEENTH.
ARTE Antoinette, with the view of inculcating
sentiments of humanity in the Dauphin, took
him to see various hospitals and charitable in-
stitutions in Paris: he was particularly interested at the
Enfans Trouves, and on his return, repeatedly said
to his Mamma: "Mamma, when shall we go again? "
He immediately began to lay by part of his pocket-
money, in a little casket that Madame Elizabeth had
given him, and with some additions from her, his little
treasure soon amounted to a considerable sum. The
king, who was not in the secret, saw him one day,
very busily employed, in counting and piling up his
pieces of money. "Why, Charles, you are saving up
your money like a miser! " Colouring at the very word,
Miser, the young prince said: "Yes, papa, I am a
miser, but it is for those poor Foundling Children:
Ah, if you could see them, you would so pity them! "
Charmed at his sensibility, the king took him into his
arms, and ended by completely filling the casket.
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? BENEVOLENCE.
127
HE little Dauphin, having one day been rather
idle, and inattentive to his lessons, his Mamma,
thought proper, as a penance, to take from him
his favourite little dog, Moufflet, and shut him up in a
dark closet. This was a sad privation to poor Moufflet
also, who was extremely fond of his young master:
he began to whine, then to growl, then to scratch
against the door, and at length to bark most terribly.
The Dauphin could bear it no longer, and ran to the
Queen's apartment. "Mamma," said he, " Moufflet is
very unhappy, yet it is not he who has been naughty.
If you will let him out, I will go into his place, and
stay as long as you please. " His proposal was acceded
to, Moufflet was set at liberty, and the Prince remained
quietly in the dark closet, till his Mamma chose to
release him.
THE DUKE DE CHARTRES, EX-KING OF THE
FRENCH.
AD. de Genlis relates the following anecdote of
her eldest pupil, the Duke de Chartres, ex-
king of the French.
"During our stay at Spa, we were advised to make
an excursion to the old castle of Franchimont, situated
on the summit of a high mountain, from which there
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? 128
HUMANITY OR
is a most splendid view: we were told, at the same
time, that many prisoners for debt were confined within
the castle. M. de Chartres cried out, in the impulse
of the moment, that if there were prisoners in the
castle, the view would not be at all beautiful to him;
and he immediately proposed to make a subscription to
deliver them. I much approved the idea, and, thanks
to the ardent zeal of the prince, the necessary sum
was soon collected, and the prisoners liberated. We
then ascended the mountain, and were indeed en-
chanted with the prospect. "
A LETTER FROM THE DUKE DE CHARTRES TO
MAD. DE GENLIS, HIS GOVERNESS.
(f (? ||j[jE me priverai de mes menus plaisirs jusqu'a`
la fin de mon e? ducation, c'est a` dire jusqu' au
premier Avril, 1790, et j'en consacrerai l'ar-
gent a` la bienfaisance. Tous les premiers du mois
nous en de? ciderons l'emploi; je vous prie d'en recevoir
ma parole d'honneur la plus sacre? e. Je pre? fe? rerais que
ceci ne fu^t que de vous a` moi; mais vous savez bien
que tous mes secrets sont et seront toujours les vo^tres. "
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? BENEVOLENCE.
129
PULCHERIA, DAUGHTER OF MAD. DE GENLIS. AD. de Genlis gives us the following beautiful
anecdote of her younger daughter, Pulcheria,
whom she educated with the princes of Orleans.
"Pulcheria possessed, what is more valuable than
the most brilliant talents, a noble and disinterested
character, and a feeling heart. When she was about
fifteen, and we inhabited Belle Chasse, I was aware
that she assisted a poor old woman who lived near us,
and I imagined that her care was confined to giving
her the greater part of her pocket-money, and the
sums that she received on her own birthday, on that
of her father, and on New Year's day. It was the
winter season, and a particularly severe one. As I
regulated every expense at Belle Chasse, I had ordered
that but three logs of wood should be taken every
morning into my daughter's room. I perceived that
every morning when she came into my apartment, she
had a chilly appearance that I had never before per-
ceived in her; she shivered, and sat almost in the fire.
It was in vain I scolded her, she never answered, but
on the following day the same thing took place, and
this went on for six weeks. At length my faithful
Florian, who had always an eye to the interests of the
E
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? 130
HUMANITY OR
house, told me he had discovered that a little scullion,
named Albinori, carried away every morning very
early, a certain quantity of wood; and that, when
taken in the fact, he had insolently refused to enter
into any explanation. I sent for Albinori, and ques-
tioned him with great severity, which did not seem to
frighten him: he declared that he had acted by the
orders of Mad"! de Genlis, who went without fire in
order to give all her wood to her poor old woman, and
Albinori, in confiding this to me, with all the import-
ance of an ambassador, charged with an honourable
mission, begged me not to say a word to Mad"? de
Genlis, as she had made him promise to keep it a great
secret. Inexpressible indeed was my pleasure at this
discovery.
"I sent a load of wood to the poor woman, on con-
dition that Pulcheria should make use of her own three
logs. To endure bodily suffering for the sake of doing
good, is certainly the most rare and most affecting
kind of charity, and a few days afterwards, Pulcheria
made a charming observation to me, when I asked her
whether she was not pleased to have her fire again,
while she was dressing; 'Mamma,' said she, 'I have
lost the habit of enjoying a fire in my chamber. '"
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? BENEVOLENCE.
131
MARIA THERESA, EMPRESS OF AUSTRIA. ARIA Theresa was admitted by her father, the
Emperor Charles the Sixth, at the early age of
fourteen, to be present at the sittings of the
council. She always sat silent, but it was observed
that, however protracted the deliberations, she never
betrayed any signs of weariness, but listened with the
most eager attention to all she could, and all she could
not understand. The only use she made of her new
privilege was to be the bearer of petitions in behalf of
those who prevailed on her benevolence or her youthful
inexperience to intercede for them. The emperor, be-
coming at length impatient at the increasing number
of these petitions, said to her on one occasion, "You
seem to think a sovereign has nothing to do but to
grant favours! " "I see nothing else that can make a
crown supportable," replied his daughter: she was then
about fifteen.
THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY, GRANDSON OF
LOUIS THE FIFTEENTH.
ANY clever preceptors, many excellent fathers,
induce their young people to give money to the
poor; but these gifts, says King Stanislaus,
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? 132
HUMANITY OR
seldom have the effects that are expected from them,
because they are not always the fruit of personal sacri-
fice and privation. Louis, Duke of Burgundy, of whom
I have already spoken, was accustomed to perform
charitable and generous actions, but always at his own
expense.
He had long desired to have a little park of artil-
lery, and a very complete one was offered to him, at
the price of a hundred louis d'or. The money was
ready, and the prince was on the point of making the
purchase, when he heard a brave officer spoken of, who
was ruined by an unexpected change in some military
arrangements. Having asked the particulars, and
learned that this brave soldier, full of honour and pro-
bity, was reduced to sleep in a garret, and possessed
nothing but the clothes he wore, "Come," said he,
"no artillery and he sent the hundred louis d'or to
the poor and virtuous captain.
GETA, SON OF THE EMPEROR SEVERUS.
HE Roman Emperor Septimus Severus, after his
victories over the generals Niger and Albinus, returned in triumph to Rome, where he exer-
cised great severities, and condemned to death twenty-
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? BENEVOLENCE.
133
nine senators, whom he accused of having favoured his
enemies, but whose guilt was never proved.
His younger son, Geta, was only eight years old
when this occurred, but he appeared so deeply afflicted
when he heard Severus order so many executions, that
the emperor perceived it, and said to him, "My child,
it is so many enemies from whom I am delivering
you. "
The little prince then, in a low tone, asked his
attendants whether these unfortunate persons had not
children, relations, and friends, and as they were
obliged to tell him that they had many, " There will
be, then," said he, "more persons to weep at our vic-
tory, than to rejoice with us. "
Such a reflection, from a child of eight years old,
made a great impression upon the emperor, who would
perhaps have pardoned his victims, had he not been
incited to persevere in his cruel intentions, by Cara-
calla, his elder son.
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? FORGIVENESS OF INJURIES.
"To err is human, to forgive, divine. "--Pope.
HIS is the first and greatest of Christian virtues,
and this precept alone would set the Christian
Religion above all human Institutions: no an-
cient legislator, no mere moral philosopher, ever
imagined the putting of such a principle as this into
the human mind.
Our Saviour himself is our greatest and most touch-
ing example of the practice of it: "Lord, forgive them,
for they know not what they do I" In the martyrs of
old, and in other truly Christian persons, who have
suffered persecution to the death, we have proofs of the
softening and calming power of this principle upon the
mind. Charles the First of England, and Louis the
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? FORGIVENESS OF INJURIES. 135
Sixteenth of France, both very religious princes, de-
prived by popular fury of their crown, and of their
life, pardoned their enemies with their latest breath.
If we are wanting in instances of young princes, who
have acted upon this precept, it is not that we fail in
examples of illustrious children, who have been early
impressed with truly Christian principles, but that the
active exertion of this virtue can seldom be called forth
in them: who can offend, who can injure a little Prince,
protected and overshadowed by the Throne, near
which he stands! I have, however, one instance, and
one so beautiful, that it well deserves to stand alone.
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? 136 FORGIVENESS OF INJURIES.
LOUIS THE SEVENTEENTH.
"Since the birth of Cain, the first male child,
To him that did but yesterday suspire,
There was not such a gracious creature born. " Shakspeare.
FTER the execution of Louis the Sixteenth, the
unfortunate Dauphin, then become Louis the
Seventeenth, was torn from the arms of his
mother, and placed in the charge of the brutal Simon,
formerly a low shoemaker.
The tender age, the innocence, the angelic counte-
nance, the delicate health of the royal child, had no
effect in softening the manners of this ferocious guar-
dian. He made use of the most horrid language in
his presence, disturbed him from his sleep, often
threatened to knock him down, and once, as a last
refinement in cruelty, obliged the descendant of sixty
kings to wait upon him at table.
"Capet," said Simon one day to him, when the war
of La Vendee seemed for a time to turn in favour of
the Royalists, "If these Vendeans should deliver you,
what would you do? " "I would forgive you," replied
the young king.
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? FRIENDSHIP.
"Judge before Friendship, then confide till death. "--Young.
HE pleasures of equal and disinterested Friend-
ship are, as I formerly observed, but rarely to be
enjoyed by Princes. Still, instances are not
wanting, of illustrious persons who have had the happi-
ness to find the bosom friend, the more than brother,
where difference of rank has been lost sight of on both
sides, by a sympathy of sentiments and pursuits.
Holy Writ furnishes us with the example of David
and Jonathan: the ancient poets tell us of Theseus
and Pirithous, Orestes and Pylades, iEneas and Acha-
tes: in the Grecian history we have Pelopidas and
Epaminondas, Alexander and Hephsestion; and are
also told, that the tyrant Dionysius desired to be taken
into the tie that bound Damon and Pythias. The
Roman history presents us the example of Scipio and
Laelius; and in our own country we have the noble one
of Sir Philip Sydney, and Fulk Greville, Lord Brook.
Great indeed is the privilege that that man en-
joys, who is the bosom friend of a brave and great
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? 138
FRIENDSHIP.
man; and how highly Lord Brook appreciated this
distinction, may be judged by the Inscription, which
he himself ordered to be placed upon his monument:
FULK GREVILLE,
SERVANT TO QUEEN ELIZABETH,
COUNSELLOR TO KING JAMES,
AND FRIEND TO SIR PHILIP SYDNEY.
HENRY, PRINCE OF WALES, SON OF JAMES
THE FIRST.
ENRY, Prince of Wales, son of James the First,
is one of the happy few, among persons of ex-
alted rank, who have possessed a disinterested
and affectionate friend.
Of the young noblemen, who frequented the Prince's
court, Sir John Harrington deservedly enjoyed the
principal share of his Highness's favour, and even
friendship, being indeed in all respects one of the
most virtuous and accomplished youths of his time,
and an example to those of his rank in all ages. He
was created Knight of the Bath, with the Duke of
York and others, in January, 1603, and was, as soon
as he came to years of discretion, remarkable for his
strict observance of the duties of piety both in public
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? FRIENDSHIP.
139
and private, and his application to the study of polite
learning. At the close of every week he examined
himself, what progress he had made in virtue and
goodness, and what fault he had committed during
the course of it; and kept an exact diary of his life.
His liberality to the distressed was no less remarkable
than his humanity and affability to all. The friend-
ship between the Prince and Sir John Harrington was
cultivated by a correspondence of letters during their
absence from each other, especially while the latter
was on his travels abroad: they are in Latin, and are
still extant.
Soon after Sir John left England, he wrote to the
Prince, regretting his absence from him in strong terms;
adding, that his grief was mitigated in some measure by
these considerations; first, that by his travels in other
countries, and the experience which he might gain by
it, he should some time or other be more qualified to
execute his Highness's commands, which were and
always should be sacred to him. Next that he had op-
portunities of doing justice to the virtues of his High-
ness at the courts of other Princes: he promised to be
careful to keep an exact journal of his travels for the
amusement of his Highness; concluding, that he car-
ried about him day and night in his bosom, and should
for ever do so, and often kissed, that ring, which the
Prince had presented to him, and which he esteemed
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? 140
FRIENDSHIP.
as a mark of his Highness's singular favour, in which
he placed the height of all his fortunes.
In another letter, he takes notice, that having now
in the space of seven weeks, travelled through great
part of the Low Countries, and seen three courts of
princes, and as many universities, together with seve-
ral large cities, fortified towns, and strong castles and
forts, he had set down in Latin, as well as he was
able, such observations as he could make, relating to
politics, men eminent for authority, prudence, or
learning, war, the present state of affairs, and the
manners of the people; in order at a proper time to
give an account how he had employed every day, to
his Highness, to whom he devoted both himself and
all his studies. For though he was thoroughly con-
scious of the slenderness of his own abilities, yet he
was unwilling to be one of those, who travel only to
indulge themselves in a shameful pursuit of pleasures,
or with a view of merely gratifying their eyes with
novelties. On the contrary, he assured the prince of
his own resolution to exert his utmost endeavours to
improve himself by experience, that he might be able
to serve his Highness with more dignity and ability.
This alone was the sum of his hopes, and a sufficient
incitement to him to go through all labours and fatigues.
This promising young nobleman survived the Prince,
his patron and friend, but by three months.
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? SECRECY.
"Dost thou so young
Know when to speak, and when to hold thy tongue? "
Dryden.
HE success of many undertakings depends upon
the Secrecy used in their commencement, and
therefore the faculty of retaining within the
mind, matters communicated in confidence, is very im-
portant in little Princes, and is by no means inconsist-
ent with that open frankness in the general conduct,
which is the great charm of youth.
Fenelon, a very wise and experienced man, who
wrote the poem of Telemaque, expressly for the
guidance of the prince his pupil, makes Telemachus
say: "The friends of my father took care to exercise
me early in keeping secrets: from my very childhood,
they confided to me all their anxieties, and conversed
with me upon the most important affairs. I was
enchanted that they should have this confidence in
me; it made me think myself already a man, and
never did I abuse it; never did the slightest word
escape me, that could betray a secret. " The bio-
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? 142
SECRECY.
graphers also, of two excellent young princes, Henry,
Prince of Wales, and Louis, Duke of Burgundy, of
both of whom I have related some anecdotes, mention
as a promising trait in their childhood, their power of
retaining the secrets confided to them.
PAPIRIUS PRiETEXTATUS.
APIRIUS Prsetextatus obtained that surname in
commemoration of an action of his, that gave
great satisfaction to the Roman Senate, during
the time that he still wore the Praetexta, a certain
gown appropriated to young men. His father carried
him to the senate-house, where affairs of the greatest
importance were then in debate. On his return, his
mother questioned him as to what had passed, when he
told her that it was a secret matter, which it was not
proper for him to disclose. This only excited the
lady's curiosity the more, and she pressed the lad so
hard, that in order to get rid of her importunities,
he invented a subject of discussion, and told her, that
the senate were debating, whether it would be more
advantageous to the republic to decree, that one
husband should have two wives, or that one wife
should have two husbands. The mother of Papirius
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? SECRECY. 143
was alarmed, and communicated the secret to many
other Roman matrons, who on the morrow went in
a body to the senate house, and presented a petition,
that rather than one man should have two wives, one
woman should marry two husbands. The senators
were in great astonishment at this strange petition,
when young Papirius stepped forth, and unravelled
the mystery: they were much amused at his explana-
tion, and praised his wit and secrecy, but from that
time it was made a law among the senators, that no
son of a senator should be admitted to their meetings,
Papirius excepted.
HEPHjESTION, FRIEND OF ALEXANDER
THE GREAT.
ALEXANDER the Great was not in the habit of
communicating the contents of the letters he
received from his mother Olympias, even to
his friend Hephaestion. But one day, Hephsestion
happened to cast his eye upon one of them, when he
went, according to custom, to read over the king's
shoulder: Alexander did not hinder him from reading
on; only, when he had done, he took his signet ring
from his finger, and pressed it upon the lips of He-
phsestion. He j,knew that the slightest hint would
secure his friend's silence.
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? TRUTH.
"O, Spirit, that dost prefer
Before all temples, the upright heart and pure. "
Milton.
iRUTH is the most beautiful of all things, and the
} love of it so characteristic of a noble mind, that
) in a Prince it is peculiarly becoming.
We have several instances in history, of persons so
celebrated among their fellow-citizens for their strict
adherence to truth, that even in courts of justice their
evidence has been admitted, without the customary
form of administering the oath to them: this is told
of Xenocrates, the philosopher, in ancient, and of Pe-
trarch, the poet, in modern times. And it is said, that
the regard which Cato had to truth was so generally
acknowledged, that it was a common saying among
the Romans: I could not believe such a thing, though
Cato himself should affirm it.
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? TRUTH.
145
THE ABCHDUCHESS MARIE-ANTOINETTE.
|HE Archduchess Marie-Antoinette, was asked by
her mother, the Empress-queen, Maria Theresa,
whether the letters and copies which were shown
as proofs of her improvement were entirely her own
doing. She was very fearful of injuring her governess
by telling the truth, but, notwithstanding, acknow-
ledged, without attempting any evasion, that they had
all been previously traced with a pencil.
THE DAUPHIN, SON OF LOUIS THE SIXTEENTH.
URING the gloomy period of the imprisonment
of the Royal Family of France in the Temple,
the king endeavoured sometimes to exercise and
amuse his children by proposing to them enigmas, and
puzzling questions. "Charles," said he one day, " what
is it that is black and white, weighs scarcely an ounce,
flies day and night like the wind, and tells us many
things without speaking? " "Papa," said the prince,
"I think it is a horse. " "A horse, Charles! " "Well,
papa, a horse may be black and white. " "Yes. " "It
goes quickly, and does not talk. " "True, my little
friend; but a horse weighs a little more than an ounce,
L
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? 146
TRUTH.
and never tells us any thing. " "Ah, I have guessed
it! It is the newspaper. " "Right. I will give you
another. Who is the most interesting lady, the most
beautiful and noble"--" It is mamma," said the Dau-
phin, embracing the queen. --" But I have not finished--who is seldom followed, and often hated? " "Ah,
this is difficult," said the Prince, and he continued
musing. "I know it, papa," said he; "it is the god-
dess Truth; but to tell you the truth, my sister whis-
pered the answer to me. "
THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY, GRANDSON OF
LOUIS THE FIFTEENTH.
OUIS, Duke of Burgundy, was no less the enemy
of falsehood than of flattery. He owned his
faults candidly, and would not allow them to be
palliated through indulgence, or a weak desire to please
him. Once, when he had been inattentive at his les-
sons, and repeated badly the tasks that had been set
him, a lady happened to enter from the queen, to in-
quire whether the preceptor was satisfied with his
pupil. "Entirely so," was the complaisant reply. As
soon as the lady had left the room, "What, sir," said
the Prince, "do you exhort me never to tell a lie, and
do you lie for me, and in my presence! "
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? TRUTH.
147
JOHN, KING OF FRANCE.
jT was a beautiful saying of John, King of France, that if Justice and Good Faith were banished from
((JUJ the earth, they ought still to find a dwelling-place
in the hearts of kings. And he proved that this was
not merely a sentiment accidentally uttered, but a prin-
ciple of action with him; for Edward the Third, whose
prisoner he was, having allowed him to return to
France, to endeavour to raise the stipulated sum for
his ransom, John, finding this impossible, owing to the
impoverished state of his kingdom, returned to Eng-
land, and gave himself up to his former captivity.
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? FLATTERY.
"Oh, that men's ears should be
To counsel deaf, but not to flattery. "
Shakspeare.
HOWEVER careful the parents of young Princes
ft may be to surround them with persons of integ-
rity, the voice of flattery will notwithstanding
reach them, and no faculty is more important to them,
than the power of discriminating between praise duly
earned, and the adulation of selfish and interested
persons.
We have several examples of Princes, whose innate
singleness of heart, and love of what is exact and true,
have enabled them to detect and despise flattery.
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? FLATTERY.
149
THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY, GRANDSON OF LOUIS THE FIFTEENTH.
OUIS, Duke of Burgundy, grandson of Louis the
Fifteenth, was a prince of great promise, but died
at the age of nine years, from the effects of a fall.
He had a great aversion to all who flattered him, or
concealed the truth from him. He took a great affec-
tion for one of his valets de chambre, named Tourol.
"How happy is Tourol! " said some one to him, " you
always seem delighted to see him, and allow him to
be continually with you. " "It is true," replied the
Prince; "I love him, because he does not spare me,
but always reminds me when I am going to do any
thing wrong. "
CANUTE THE GREAT.
ANUTE, the greatest and most powerful monarch
of his time, King of Denmark and Norway, as
well as of England, could not fail of meeting
with adulation from his courtiers; and some of them,
breaking out one day in admiration of his grandeur,
exclaimed, that his power was more than human, and
that every thing was possible to him. Upon which
the monarch, it is said, ordered his chair to be set on
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? 150
FLATTERY.
the sea-shore, while the tide was coming in; and as
the waters approached, he commanded them to retire
and to obey the voice of him who was lord of all. He
feigned to sit some time in expectation of their sub-
mission, but the sea rolling on, not only wetted the
skirts of his robe, but likewise splashed his limbs; he
then turned to his courtiers, and remarked to them,
that he, like every creature in the universe, was feeble
and impotent, and that power resided with one Being
only, in whose hands were all the elements, and who
alone could say to the ocean, Thus far shalt thou go,
and no farther.
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? JUSTICE.
"Justice, like the liberal light of heaven,
Unpurchased, shines on all. " Thomson.
HE distribution of justice is the peculiar and most
important function of royalty, and as its first
principles are simple and immutable, they can-
not too early form the subject of contemplation to a
young Prince.
"The virtuous soul is a storehouse, in which are
treasured up the rules of action, and the seeds of mo-
rality. All the laws of nations and wise decrees of
state, the statutes of Solon, and the Twelve Tables,
are but a paraphrase upon this standing rectitude of
nature, this fruitful principle of justice, which is ready
to run out and enlarge itself into suitable determina-
tions, upon all emergent objects and occasions. "
Dr. South.
? ?
? 126 HUMANITY OR
royal parents; and many a person was relieved, with-
out knowing his benefactors.
THE DAUPHIN, SON OF LOUIS THE SIXTEENTH.
ARTE Antoinette, with the view of inculcating
sentiments of humanity in the Dauphin, took
him to see various hospitals and charitable in-
stitutions in Paris: he was particularly interested at the
Enfans Trouves, and on his return, repeatedly said
to his Mamma: "Mamma, when shall we go again? "
He immediately began to lay by part of his pocket-
money, in a little casket that Madame Elizabeth had
given him, and with some additions from her, his little
treasure soon amounted to a considerable sum. The
king, who was not in the secret, saw him one day,
very busily employed, in counting and piling up his
pieces of money. "Why, Charles, you are saving up
your money like a miser! " Colouring at the very word,
Miser, the young prince said: "Yes, papa, I am a
miser, but it is for those poor Foundling Children:
Ah, if you could see them, you would so pity them! "
Charmed at his sensibility, the king took him into his
arms, and ended by completely filling the casket.
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? BENEVOLENCE.
127
HE little Dauphin, having one day been rather
idle, and inattentive to his lessons, his Mamma,
thought proper, as a penance, to take from him
his favourite little dog, Moufflet, and shut him up in a
dark closet. This was a sad privation to poor Moufflet
also, who was extremely fond of his young master:
he began to whine, then to growl, then to scratch
against the door, and at length to bark most terribly.
The Dauphin could bear it no longer, and ran to the
Queen's apartment. "Mamma," said he, " Moufflet is
very unhappy, yet it is not he who has been naughty.
If you will let him out, I will go into his place, and
stay as long as you please. " His proposal was acceded
to, Moufflet was set at liberty, and the Prince remained
quietly in the dark closet, till his Mamma chose to
release him.
THE DUKE DE CHARTRES, EX-KING OF THE
FRENCH.
AD. de Genlis relates the following anecdote of
her eldest pupil, the Duke de Chartres, ex-
king of the French.
"During our stay at Spa, we were advised to make
an excursion to the old castle of Franchimont, situated
on the summit of a high mountain, from which there
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? 128
HUMANITY OR
is a most splendid view: we were told, at the same
time, that many prisoners for debt were confined within
the castle. M. de Chartres cried out, in the impulse
of the moment, that if there were prisoners in the
castle, the view would not be at all beautiful to him;
and he immediately proposed to make a subscription to
deliver them. I much approved the idea, and, thanks
to the ardent zeal of the prince, the necessary sum
was soon collected, and the prisoners liberated. We
then ascended the mountain, and were indeed en-
chanted with the prospect. "
A LETTER FROM THE DUKE DE CHARTRES TO
MAD. DE GENLIS, HIS GOVERNESS.
(f (? ||j[jE me priverai de mes menus plaisirs jusqu'a`
la fin de mon e? ducation, c'est a` dire jusqu' au
premier Avril, 1790, et j'en consacrerai l'ar-
gent a` la bienfaisance. Tous les premiers du mois
nous en de? ciderons l'emploi; je vous prie d'en recevoir
ma parole d'honneur la plus sacre? e. Je pre? fe? rerais que
ceci ne fu^t que de vous a` moi; mais vous savez bien
que tous mes secrets sont et seront toujours les vo^tres. "
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? BENEVOLENCE.
129
PULCHERIA, DAUGHTER OF MAD. DE GENLIS. AD. de Genlis gives us the following beautiful
anecdote of her younger daughter, Pulcheria,
whom she educated with the princes of Orleans.
"Pulcheria possessed, what is more valuable than
the most brilliant talents, a noble and disinterested
character, and a feeling heart. When she was about
fifteen, and we inhabited Belle Chasse, I was aware
that she assisted a poor old woman who lived near us,
and I imagined that her care was confined to giving
her the greater part of her pocket-money, and the
sums that she received on her own birthday, on that
of her father, and on New Year's day. It was the
winter season, and a particularly severe one. As I
regulated every expense at Belle Chasse, I had ordered
that but three logs of wood should be taken every
morning into my daughter's room. I perceived that
every morning when she came into my apartment, she
had a chilly appearance that I had never before per-
ceived in her; she shivered, and sat almost in the fire.
It was in vain I scolded her, she never answered, but
on the following day the same thing took place, and
this went on for six weeks. At length my faithful
Florian, who had always an eye to the interests of the
E
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? 130
HUMANITY OR
house, told me he had discovered that a little scullion,
named Albinori, carried away every morning very
early, a certain quantity of wood; and that, when
taken in the fact, he had insolently refused to enter
into any explanation. I sent for Albinori, and ques-
tioned him with great severity, which did not seem to
frighten him: he declared that he had acted by the
orders of Mad"! de Genlis, who went without fire in
order to give all her wood to her poor old woman, and
Albinori, in confiding this to me, with all the import-
ance of an ambassador, charged with an honourable
mission, begged me not to say a word to Mad"? de
Genlis, as she had made him promise to keep it a great
secret. Inexpressible indeed was my pleasure at this
discovery.
"I sent a load of wood to the poor woman, on con-
dition that Pulcheria should make use of her own three
logs. To endure bodily suffering for the sake of doing
good, is certainly the most rare and most affecting
kind of charity, and a few days afterwards, Pulcheria
made a charming observation to me, when I asked her
whether she was not pleased to have her fire again,
while she was dressing; 'Mamma,' said she, 'I have
lost the habit of enjoying a fire in my chamber. '"
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? BENEVOLENCE.
131
MARIA THERESA, EMPRESS OF AUSTRIA. ARIA Theresa was admitted by her father, the
Emperor Charles the Sixth, at the early age of
fourteen, to be present at the sittings of the
council. She always sat silent, but it was observed
that, however protracted the deliberations, she never
betrayed any signs of weariness, but listened with the
most eager attention to all she could, and all she could
not understand. The only use she made of her new
privilege was to be the bearer of petitions in behalf of
those who prevailed on her benevolence or her youthful
inexperience to intercede for them. The emperor, be-
coming at length impatient at the increasing number
of these petitions, said to her on one occasion, "You
seem to think a sovereign has nothing to do but to
grant favours! " "I see nothing else that can make a
crown supportable," replied his daughter: she was then
about fifteen.
THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY, GRANDSON OF
LOUIS THE FIFTEENTH.
ANY clever preceptors, many excellent fathers,
induce their young people to give money to the
poor; but these gifts, says King Stanislaus,
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? 132
HUMANITY OR
seldom have the effects that are expected from them,
because they are not always the fruit of personal sacri-
fice and privation. Louis, Duke of Burgundy, of whom
I have already spoken, was accustomed to perform
charitable and generous actions, but always at his own
expense.
He had long desired to have a little park of artil-
lery, and a very complete one was offered to him, at
the price of a hundred louis d'or. The money was
ready, and the prince was on the point of making the
purchase, when he heard a brave officer spoken of, who
was ruined by an unexpected change in some military
arrangements. Having asked the particulars, and
learned that this brave soldier, full of honour and pro-
bity, was reduced to sleep in a garret, and possessed
nothing but the clothes he wore, "Come," said he,
"no artillery and he sent the hundred louis d'or to
the poor and virtuous captain.
GETA, SON OF THE EMPEROR SEVERUS.
HE Roman Emperor Septimus Severus, after his
victories over the generals Niger and Albinus, returned in triumph to Rome, where he exer-
cised great severities, and condemned to death twenty-
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? BENEVOLENCE.
133
nine senators, whom he accused of having favoured his
enemies, but whose guilt was never proved.
His younger son, Geta, was only eight years old
when this occurred, but he appeared so deeply afflicted
when he heard Severus order so many executions, that
the emperor perceived it, and said to him, "My child,
it is so many enemies from whom I am delivering
you. "
The little prince then, in a low tone, asked his
attendants whether these unfortunate persons had not
children, relations, and friends, and as they were
obliged to tell him that they had many, " There will
be, then," said he, "more persons to weep at our vic-
tory, than to rejoice with us. "
Such a reflection, from a child of eight years old,
made a great impression upon the emperor, who would
perhaps have pardoned his victims, had he not been
incited to persevere in his cruel intentions, by Cara-
calla, his elder son.
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? FORGIVENESS OF INJURIES.
"To err is human, to forgive, divine. "--Pope.
HIS is the first and greatest of Christian virtues,
and this precept alone would set the Christian
Religion above all human Institutions: no an-
cient legislator, no mere moral philosopher, ever
imagined the putting of such a principle as this into
the human mind.
Our Saviour himself is our greatest and most touch-
ing example of the practice of it: "Lord, forgive them,
for they know not what they do I" In the martyrs of
old, and in other truly Christian persons, who have
suffered persecution to the death, we have proofs of the
softening and calming power of this principle upon the
mind. Charles the First of England, and Louis the
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? FORGIVENESS OF INJURIES. 135
Sixteenth of France, both very religious princes, de-
prived by popular fury of their crown, and of their
life, pardoned their enemies with their latest breath.
If we are wanting in instances of young princes, who
have acted upon this precept, it is not that we fail in
examples of illustrious children, who have been early
impressed with truly Christian principles, but that the
active exertion of this virtue can seldom be called forth
in them: who can offend, who can injure a little Prince,
protected and overshadowed by the Throne, near
which he stands! I have, however, one instance, and
one so beautiful, that it well deserves to stand alone.
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? 136 FORGIVENESS OF INJURIES.
LOUIS THE SEVENTEENTH.
"Since the birth of Cain, the first male child,
To him that did but yesterday suspire,
There was not such a gracious creature born. " Shakspeare.
FTER the execution of Louis the Sixteenth, the
unfortunate Dauphin, then become Louis the
Seventeenth, was torn from the arms of his
mother, and placed in the charge of the brutal Simon,
formerly a low shoemaker.
The tender age, the innocence, the angelic counte-
nance, the delicate health of the royal child, had no
effect in softening the manners of this ferocious guar-
dian. He made use of the most horrid language in
his presence, disturbed him from his sleep, often
threatened to knock him down, and once, as a last
refinement in cruelty, obliged the descendant of sixty
kings to wait upon him at table.
"Capet," said Simon one day to him, when the war
of La Vendee seemed for a time to turn in favour of
the Royalists, "If these Vendeans should deliver you,
what would you do? " "I would forgive you," replied
the young king.
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? FRIENDSHIP.
"Judge before Friendship, then confide till death. "--Young.
HE pleasures of equal and disinterested Friend-
ship are, as I formerly observed, but rarely to be
enjoyed by Princes. Still, instances are not
wanting, of illustrious persons who have had the happi-
ness to find the bosom friend, the more than brother,
where difference of rank has been lost sight of on both
sides, by a sympathy of sentiments and pursuits.
Holy Writ furnishes us with the example of David
and Jonathan: the ancient poets tell us of Theseus
and Pirithous, Orestes and Pylades, iEneas and Acha-
tes: in the Grecian history we have Pelopidas and
Epaminondas, Alexander and Hephsestion; and are
also told, that the tyrant Dionysius desired to be taken
into the tie that bound Damon and Pythias. The
Roman history presents us the example of Scipio and
Laelius; and in our own country we have the noble one
of Sir Philip Sydney, and Fulk Greville, Lord Brook.
Great indeed is the privilege that that man en-
joys, who is the bosom friend of a brave and great
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? 138
FRIENDSHIP.
man; and how highly Lord Brook appreciated this
distinction, may be judged by the Inscription, which
he himself ordered to be placed upon his monument:
FULK GREVILLE,
SERVANT TO QUEEN ELIZABETH,
COUNSELLOR TO KING JAMES,
AND FRIEND TO SIR PHILIP SYDNEY.
HENRY, PRINCE OF WALES, SON OF JAMES
THE FIRST.
ENRY, Prince of Wales, son of James the First,
is one of the happy few, among persons of ex-
alted rank, who have possessed a disinterested
and affectionate friend.
Of the young noblemen, who frequented the Prince's
court, Sir John Harrington deservedly enjoyed the
principal share of his Highness's favour, and even
friendship, being indeed in all respects one of the
most virtuous and accomplished youths of his time,
and an example to those of his rank in all ages. He
was created Knight of the Bath, with the Duke of
York and others, in January, 1603, and was, as soon
as he came to years of discretion, remarkable for his
strict observance of the duties of piety both in public
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? FRIENDSHIP.
139
and private, and his application to the study of polite
learning. At the close of every week he examined
himself, what progress he had made in virtue and
goodness, and what fault he had committed during
the course of it; and kept an exact diary of his life.
His liberality to the distressed was no less remarkable
than his humanity and affability to all. The friend-
ship between the Prince and Sir John Harrington was
cultivated by a correspondence of letters during their
absence from each other, especially while the latter
was on his travels abroad: they are in Latin, and are
still extant.
Soon after Sir John left England, he wrote to the
Prince, regretting his absence from him in strong terms;
adding, that his grief was mitigated in some measure by
these considerations; first, that by his travels in other
countries, and the experience which he might gain by
it, he should some time or other be more qualified to
execute his Highness's commands, which were and
always should be sacred to him. Next that he had op-
portunities of doing justice to the virtues of his High-
ness at the courts of other Princes: he promised to be
careful to keep an exact journal of his travels for the
amusement of his Highness; concluding, that he car-
ried about him day and night in his bosom, and should
for ever do so, and often kissed, that ring, which the
Prince had presented to him, and which he esteemed
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? 140
FRIENDSHIP.
as a mark of his Highness's singular favour, in which
he placed the height of all his fortunes.
In another letter, he takes notice, that having now
in the space of seven weeks, travelled through great
part of the Low Countries, and seen three courts of
princes, and as many universities, together with seve-
ral large cities, fortified towns, and strong castles and
forts, he had set down in Latin, as well as he was
able, such observations as he could make, relating to
politics, men eminent for authority, prudence, or
learning, war, the present state of affairs, and the
manners of the people; in order at a proper time to
give an account how he had employed every day, to
his Highness, to whom he devoted both himself and
all his studies. For though he was thoroughly con-
scious of the slenderness of his own abilities, yet he
was unwilling to be one of those, who travel only to
indulge themselves in a shameful pursuit of pleasures,
or with a view of merely gratifying their eyes with
novelties. On the contrary, he assured the prince of
his own resolution to exert his utmost endeavours to
improve himself by experience, that he might be able
to serve his Highness with more dignity and ability.
This alone was the sum of his hopes, and a sufficient
incitement to him to go through all labours and fatigues.
This promising young nobleman survived the Prince,
his patron and friend, but by three months.
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? SECRECY.
"Dost thou so young
Know when to speak, and when to hold thy tongue? "
Dryden.
HE success of many undertakings depends upon
the Secrecy used in their commencement, and
therefore the faculty of retaining within the
mind, matters communicated in confidence, is very im-
portant in little Princes, and is by no means inconsist-
ent with that open frankness in the general conduct,
which is the great charm of youth.
Fenelon, a very wise and experienced man, who
wrote the poem of Telemaque, expressly for the
guidance of the prince his pupil, makes Telemachus
say: "The friends of my father took care to exercise
me early in keeping secrets: from my very childhood,
they confided to me all their anxieties, and conversed
with me upon the most important affairs. I was
enchanted that they should have this confidence in
me; it made me think myself already a man, and
never did I abuse it; never did the slightest word
escape me, that could betray a secret. " The bio-
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? 142
SECRECY.
graphers also, of two excellent young princes, Henry,
Prince of Wales, and Louis, Duke of Burgundy, of
both of whom I have related some anecdotes, mention
as a promising trait in their childhood, their power of
retaining the secrets confided to them.
PAPIRIUS PRiETEXTATUS.
APIRIUS Prsetextatus obtained that surname in
commemoration of an action of his, that gave
great satisfaction to the Roman Senate, during
the time that he still wore the Praetexta, a certain
gown appropriated to young men. His father carried
him to the senate-house, where affairs of the greatest
importance were then in debate. On his return, his
mother questioned him as to what had passed, when he
told her that it was a secret matter, which it was not
proper for him to disclose. This only excited the
lady's curiosity the more, and she pressed the lad so
hard, that in order to get rid of her importunities,
he invented a subject of discussion, and told her, that
the senate were debating, whether it would be more
advantageous to the republic to decree, that one
husband should have two wives, or that one wife
should have two husbands. The mother of Papirius
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? SECRECY. 143
was alarmed, and communicated the secret to many
other Roman matrons, who on the morrow went in
a body to the senate house, and presented a petition,
that rather than one man should have two wives, one
woman should marry two husbands. The senators
were in great astonishment at this strange petition,
when young Papirius stepped forth, and unravelled
the mystery: they were much amused at his explana-
tion, and praised his wit and secrecy, but from that
time it was made a law among the senators, that no
son of a senator should be admitted to their meetings,
Papirius excepted.
HEPHjESTION, FRIEND OF ALEXANDER
THE GREAT.
ALEXANDER the Great was not in the habit of
communicating the contents of the letters he
received from his mother Olympias, even to
his friend Hephaestion. But one day, Hephsestion
happened to cast his eye upon one of them, when he
went, according to custom, to read over the king's
shoulder: Alexander did not hinder him from reading
on; only, when he had done, he took his signet ring
from his finger, and pressed it upon the lips of He-
phsestion. He j,knew that the slightest hint would
secure his friend's silence.
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? TRUTH.
"O, Spirit, that dost prefer
Before all temples, the upright heart and pure. "
Milton.
iRUTH is the most beautiful of all things, and the
} love of it so characteristic of a noble mind, that
) in a Prince it is peculiarly becoming.
We have several instances in history, of persons so
celebrated among their fellow-citizens for their strict
adherence to truth, that even in courts of justice their
evidence has been admitted, without the customary
form of administering the oath to them: this is told
of Xenocrates, the philosopher, in ancient, and of Pe-
trarch, the poet, in modern times. And it is said, that
the regard which Cato had to truth was so generally
acknowledged, that it was a common saying among
the Romans: I could not believe such a thing, though
Cato himself should affirm it.
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? TRUTH.
145
THE ABCHDUCHESS MARIE-ANTOINETTE.
|HE Archduchess Marie-Antoinette, was asked by
her mother, the Empress-queen, Maria Theresa,
whether the letters and copies which were shown
as proofs of her improvement were entirely her own
doing. She was very fearful of injuring her governess
by telling the truth, but, notwithstanding, acknow-
ledged, without attempting any evasion, that they had
all been previously traced with a pencil.
THE DAUPHIN, SON OF LOUIS THE SIXTEENTH.
URING the gloomy period of the imprisonment
of the Royal Family of France in the Temple,
the king endeavoured sometimes to exercise and
amuse his children by proposing to them enigmas, and
puzzling questions. "Charles," said he one day, " what
is it that is black and white, weighs scarcely an ounce,
flies day and night like the wind, and tells us many
things without speaking? " "Papa," said the prince,
"I think it is a horse. " "A horse, Charles! " "Well,
papa, a horse may be black and white. " "Yes. " "It
goes quickly, and does not talk. " "True, my little
friend; but a horse weighs a little more than an ounce,
L
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? 146
TRUTH.
and never tells us any thing. " "Ah, I have guessed
it! It is the newspaper. " "Right. I will give you
another. Who is the most interesting lady, the most
beautiful and noble"--" It is mamma," said the Dau-
phin, embracing the queen. --" But I have not finished--who is seldom followed, and often hated? " "Ah,
this is difficult," said the Prince, and he continued
musing. "I know it, papa," said he; "it is the god-
dess Truth; but to tell you the truth, my sister whis-
pered the answer to me. "
THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY, GRANDSON OF
LOUIS THE FIFTEENTH.
OUIS, Duke of Burgundy, was no less the enemy
of falsehood than of flattery. He owned his
faults candidly, and would not allow them to be
palliated through indulgence, or a weak desire to please
him. Once, when he had been inattentive at his les-
sons, and repeated badly the tasks that had been set
him, a lady happened to enter from the queen, to in-
quire whether the preceptor was satisfied with his
pupil. "Entirely so," was the complaisant reply. As
soon as the lady had left the room, "What, sir," said
the Prince, "do you exhort me never to tell a lie, and
do you lie for me, and in my presence! "
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? TRUTH.
147
JOHN, KING OF FRANCE.
jT was a beautiful saying of John, King of France, that if Justice and Good Faith were banished from
((JUJ the earth, they ought still to find a dwelling-place
in the hearts of kings. And he proved that this was
not merely a sentiment accidentally uttered, but a prin-
ciple of action with him; for Edward the Third, whose
prisoner he was, having allowed him to return to
France, to endeavour to raise the stipulated sum for
his ransom, John, finding this impossible, owing to the
impoverished state of his kingdom, returned to Eng-
land, and gave himself up to his former captivity.
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? FLATTERY.
"Oh, that men's ears should be
To counsel deaf, but not to flattery. "
Shakspeare.
HOWEVER careful the parents of young Princes
ft may be to surround them with persons of integ-
rity, the voice of flattery will notwithstanding
reach them, and no faculty is more important to them,
than the power of discriminating between praise duly
earned, and the adulation of selfish and interested
persons.
We have several examples of Princes, whose innate
singleness of heart, and love of what is exact and true,
have enabled them to detect and despise flattery.
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? FLATTERY.
149
THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY, GRANDSON OF LOUIS THE FIFTEENTH.
OUIS, Duke of Burgundy, grandson of Louis the
Fifteenth, was a prince of great promise, but died
at the age of nine years, from the effects of a fall.
He had a great aversion to all who flattered him, or
concealed the truth from him. He took a great affec-
tion for one of his valets de chambre, named Tourol.
"How happy is Tourol! " said some one to him, " you
always seem delighted to see him, and allow him to
be continually with you. " "It is true," replied the
Prince; "I love him, because he does not spare me,
but always reminds me when I am going to do any
thing wrong. "
CANUTE THE GREAT.
ANUTE, the greatest and most powerful monarch
of his time, King of Denmark and Norway, as
well as of England, could not fail of meeting
with adulation from his courtiers; and some of them,
breaking out one day in admiration of his grandeur,
exclaimed, that his power was more than human, and
that every thing was possible to him. Upon which
the monarch, it is said, ordered his chair to be set on
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FLATTERY.
the sea-shore, while the tide was coming in; and as
the waters approached, he commanded them to retire
and to obey the voice of him who was lord of all. He
feigned to sit some time in expectation of their sub-
mission, but the sea rolling on, not only wetted the
skirts of his robe, but likewise splashed his limbs; he
then turned to his courtiers, and remarked to them,
that he, like every creature in the universe, was feeble
and impotent, and that power resided with one Being
only, in whose hands were all the elements, and who
alone could say to the ocean, Thus far shalt thou go,
and no farther.
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? JUSTICE.
"Justice, like the liberal light of heaven,
Unpurchased, shines on all. " Thomson.
HE distribution of justice is the peculiar and most
important function of royalty, and as its first
principles are simple and immutable, they can-
not too early form the subject of contemplation to a
young Prince.
"The virtuous soul is a storehouse, in which are
treasured up the rules of action, and the seeds of mo-
rality. All the laws of nations and wise decrees of
state, the statutes of Solon, and the Twelve Tables,
are but a paraphrase upon this standing rectitude of
nature, this fruitful principle of justice, which is ready
to run out and enlarge itself into suitable determina-
tions, upon all emergent objects and occasions. "
Dr. South.
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