Rensselaer Republican, Volume 12, Number 37, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 June 1880 — Words of Wisdom. [ARTICLE]

Words of Wisdom.

th* lotb to deflpiae the pemiae of fl foot A doctor to CTrebyvkUßy, twenty-fbor houn. obtafaw aboie applfluse than difleretion, the nuwßt of them. Let not one fidlnre diecoorage ypo, He that has had • Call nutjr stand m npright aa he ever v>i Lore can excuse anything hot meanneee; but meannees kills lore, aad enpplee even natural affection. There ia no one dee who haa the power to be ao much joar friend or ao much your enemy m yooreelf. That only can with propriety be styled refinement, which, by atrengthening the intellect, purifies the manners. To all men the bed friend is virtue; the beet companion* ate high endearotira »n<l honorable sentiments. Many people’s liven are not worth the market value of the iron in their blood and the phoephorua In their bonea. The majority of women are little touched by friendship, for it ia inaipid when they have once tasted of love. We are often er more croelly robbed by thoee who steal into onr hearts than by thoee who break into our houses. In some tranquil and apparently amiable natures, there are often unsuspected and unfathomable depths of resentment. The tear of a loving girl is Kke a dewdrop on the rose; but that on the cheek of a wife ia a drop of poison to her husband. Of all monarch*, nature is the moat just in the enactment of laws, and the most rigorous in punishing the violation' of them. Friends should be very delicate and careful in administering pity as medicine, when enemies use the same article as poison. Some of us fret inwardly, and some fret outwardly. The. latter is the better plan for our friends,' but the worse for ourselves. . ~ When a cunning man seems the most humble and submissive, he i* often the mo6tdangero®. Look out for the crouching tiger. Never rqtire iat, night without being wiser than when yt»d rose in the morning, by having leaimed .something useful during the dayi r iil * i He who thinks he can do without others is mistaken; lie who dunks others cannot do without him is still more mistaken. % • • ' •**?*»._. Love’s sweetest meanings are unspoken. The full heart knows no rhetoric of words; it resorts to the panto mime of sighs and glances.