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From: | Tybalt Coffey |
Subject: | backhanded |
Date: | Thu, 31 Aug 2006 07:22:36 +0100 |
If you attempt suicide you are a criminal: if you
succeed you are alunatic. In point of place, France was the centre of such
practices; in pointof time, the fifteenth century.
Wrights little volume was banned in advance by the
railwaybookstalls.
He clung to my knees and declared that hewould
follow me unhesitatingly wherever I might take him. And then, the muddlesomeness of
all those unnecessary localbodies. Of the two varieties I prefer the Indian one. I
recommend this maxim tothose who would like to be masters of their own
lives.
Marco Polo tells us that theBrahmins are the best
and most honourable merchants that can befound.
No; because there, once you subscribed to certain
opinions, you wereleft in peace. Diodorus Siculus gives us a hint how this selection
of the fittestcame about. This last is a contemptible little figure, not worth
talkingabout. Of these promptings of our past some are now discouraged by
society,others fostered.
Gregarious and homeless, fearingsolitude as never
before, our European is losing his idiosyncrasy.
Hehas no regard for the snobbery which underlies
it.
Hindus are not afflicted with the fidgets. It must
not be supposed that these affairs were a mockery.
When a duty ceases tobe a pleasure, then it ceases
to exist.
It is part of the ignoble tangle in which we have
thereby embroiledourselves.
Diodorus Siculus gives us a hint how this selection
of the fittestcame about.
Neurastheniaturns a man into the wrong kind of
woman. He hasleft no successor of sufficient authority, sufficient wit,
andsufficient courage. These thingsare not inventions; they are deductions. Our
whole legislation ispoisoned at the roots. Where a mans income is, there willhis
heart be also. Lighter punishmentswere inflicted for lighter offences. And what else
should anintelligent man seek? He hasleft no successor of sufficient authority,
sufficient wit, andsufficient courage. Man-hunting, another relic of past ages, is
encouraged by society andorganized into a trade.
It is part of the ignoble tangle in which we have
thereby embroiledourselves. If judges were lawgivers and not dispensers of law this
could be done.
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