London Daily Advertiser And Literary Gazette (Newspaper) - September 6, 1851, London, Middlesex LITERARY AND A Z E T T SEPTEMBER who to take in this are to order any of the Hawkers to them with THE animos truces an Honour to our wlen we Cruelty by the Term Inhumanity We declare it unnatural to while we call it by this Name and there is no Character fo amiable as tnat ofr him Heart is perfectly free from all There is a Pride that keeps this hateful alive in Tempers thoroughly to it 5 under the In fluence of naturally are barbarous The of an Injury excites in them a to inflict a greater on the from whom they have received it and they a Superiority in from whom they naffer the Severity they do not Pride thus becomes the Parent of and Cruelty of a itill lefs even in the Eye of than The Man who he appears great by return ing an and again ft his very at the Expence of Pain to revenges that he may appear would omit if he convinced it miffed the intended How then will he look upon him on a fair he finds all the eminent Men in the World agreed that true of Mind is in an Injury and that there is nx Man fo but can revenge one The one of the as well as People in the abjured all Barbarity of this kind They gave Cruelty its true when they declared it always proceeded from Fear Revenge from of Their Actions countenanced their Words Meriting at all the People who had rebelled or had offered them the they no fooner faw Conquer ihan every and they re as whom a Moment as They could not to a left it have been that they feared him and they were too proud to revenge an while that Act would convince the World they felt of the great Men of all Times has of truly noble The of theie truly noble declaring all Cruelty the genuine Effect of Cow all Revenge the legitimate Child of and have ever been the mo ft bloody in their they have feared every body who or who was but to have Power to hurt Civil Wars have always been more bloody than fought by Cowards by People had no Notions of and who were in continual Fear of one another And from the natural of their are induced to whenever they are concerned in It Was oi our Duke when he was warned that an he had broke for ill would take brne Opportunity to do him a I am in no on that I know him to be a Man of And I have been greatly truck with an of the Fa ther of when he was told that had laid a to murder I be lieve it I know him to be a and there is no Doubt but he can be and a which indeed b but Cruelty under a cer tain is as an Attendant on tne fame contemptible and abject as that in its more general Form We always fee the Minds the malicious and revengeful The who avoid a which who embrace it under the Name of a It is one of Crimes which Nature has made its own Avenger It never is in any but it gnaws the very Heart that it nor is it ever ex erted but it gives more Pain to thi who than to him who is the ObjecT of Many many watchful does the who meditates while he whom he ij it to dd to perhaps the his Enemy is involved and it tli When the is th Execution is attended wirh more Pain than the always with and ft en with immediate Danger the Blow place us though over charged with a fatal on the it and even if it the is than that of the No divine or human protects it the Eye ot Juf tice will view the Act without entering into the Con federation of its and all that is gained by hav at the immediate Hazard of obtained the End that was aimed that the who has finds by the from his Country and and doomed to wander among attended only by a wounded Con a written in his that whit he fuRers is not a but the of a When we are too violent in our we over run the Goal The Cruelty which urges us to kill the on we would revenge an the very of the End at which it which is the genuine Source of this dilutes to to make the Man who has wronged us loop to groan beneath the of our to give him Pain that he cannot and t the of by telling bm from time to This you for having in jured as all this it is the natural of and is the Point at which the Temper that employs it aims but this is not by The who given the original by this fet at is plunged into a State in which all Power or farther hurting him is over and he who before thought fo that the Fain of it was not to be now finds he has given his Enemy but has heaped on his own Head mote than all the and he could have inflict on As difficult and dangerous in the and as painful in the as Revenge in its Nature fo and fo peaceful and lecure is the op Quality of If we would true of this is the Path by which we ure to hope to it Nothing is fo as to but nothing is fo noble as to To be above the Reach of an more Great nefs than the effectual feel and afterwards to is Tle Man doos but intend in that that he feels hurt he gives a certain Triumph in this to the aimed the and tis fifty to one that never cart attain fa a a Man Who or who only renca enough to fay he is not hurt by on the who them nor can there be a fe verer on him who makes nefs to his Attempt of than the ing the fame World that he is too to eS fect The of Injuries are of this Kind call for o and there is more in baffling than there at tend the returning It muft be indeed there are fume of a higher Nature Son that it is im to nnd that the World could blame us tor relenting would we think iii regard even to Revenge is not the Conduct that would be dictated to us by Would we arms at true of Sou in this we j con that by how much the the Wrong by fo much the nobler it is to pardon it and by how much the more would bv fo much the more Honour there is in HOME PORT Wind at by Came down the for Port Lewis Three for Dublin and remain with the Ships as ky my Arrived the from Paft by from Got tenburg from Mary Ag from Thomas and Noble from Londonderry from Narva from Antigua from Dra from At Leith from At from Philadel phia from an arrived from Paris to the Marquis de from with an Account of the being brought to bed of a Title is Duke of The Right the Earl of Rothes is appointed Lieu on the and Governor of Duncannon Lieutenant Colonel Charles on is appointed to General Irvines ment in arrived in the River the from the Bay of we had an Account of the Arrival of in the Cargo follows Nankeen C Parcels of not yet Silk 2400 370 210700 Ware loth 1500 Tea China T ROY T LONDON Printed for at BROWNES near fold at the in Pauls