[Character by Samuel Smiles]@TWC D-Link bookCharacter CHAPTER XII--THE DISCIPLINE OF EXPERIENCE 96/112
At length the conversationalist descended to expostulation.
"I have talked to you, my friend," said he, "on all the ordinary subjects--literature, farming, merchandise, gaming, game-laws, horse-races, suits at law, politics, and swindling, and blasphemy, and philosophy: is there any one subject that you will favour me by opening upon ?" The wight writhed his countenance into a grin: "Sir," said he, "can you say anything clever about BEND-LEATHER ?" As might be expected, the conversationalist was completely nonplussed.] [Footnote 194: Coleridge, in his 'Lay Sermon,' points out, as a fact of history, how large a part of our present knowledge and civilization is owing, directly or indirectly, to the Bible; that the Bible has been the main lever by which the moral and intellectual character of Europe has been raised to its present comparative height; and he specifies the marked and prominent difference of this book from the works which it is the fashion to quote as guides and authorities in morals, politics, and history.
"In the Bible," he says, "every agent appears and acts as a self-substituting individual: each has a life of its own, and yet all are in life.
The elements of necessity and freewill are reconciled in the higher power of an omnipresent Providence, that predestinates the whole in the moral freedom of the integral parts.
Of this the Bible never suffers us to lose sight.
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