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Simms, William Gilmore, 1806-1870

"Charlemont; Or, the Pride of the Village. a Tale of Kentucky"


Nay, it is somewhat doubtful, indeed, if he ever once alluded to the
state of his own scrip and the treasury of the church. His faith,
sincere, spontaneous, ardent, left him in very little doubt that
the Lord will provide, for is he not called "Jehovah-Jireh?"--and
his faith was strengthened and confirmed by the experience of his
whole life. But then John Cross had few wants--few, almost none!
In this respect he resembled the first apostles. The necessities
of life once cared for, never was mortal man more thoroughly
independent of the world. He was not one of those fine preachers
who, dealing out counsels of self-denial, in grave saws and solemn
maxims, with wondrous grim visage and a most slow, lugubrious
shaking of the head--are yet always religiously careful to secure
the warmest seat by the fireside, and the best buttered bun
on table. He taught no doctrine which he did not practise; and as
for consideration--that test at once of the religionist and the
gentleman--he was as humbly solicitous of the claims and feelings
of others, as the lovely and lowly child to whom reverence has
been well taught as the true beginning, equally of politeness and
religion.


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