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judge. In looking round him he finds all equal in privileges, but none superior to Limself.

Their peculiar customs have the same tendency; for they teach them to value others who are not of the Society, by no other standard than that by which they estimate themselves. They neither pull off their hats, nor bow, nor scrape. In their speech they abstain from the use of flattering words and of titles. In their letters they never subscribe themselves the humble servants of any one. They never use, in short, any action or signature, which, serving as a mark of elevation to others, has any influence towards the degradation of themselves.

Their opinions also upon the supposed dignity of situations in life contribute towards the promotion of this independence of their minds.

They value no man, in the first place, on account of his earthly title. They pay respect to magistrates, and to all the nobility of the land, in their capacity of legislators, whom the chief magistrate has appointed; but they believe that the mere letters in a schedule of parchment can give no more intrinsic

trinsic worth to a person than they possess themselves; and they think with Juvenal, that "the only true nobility is virtue.” Hence titles, in the glare of which some people lose the dignity of their vision, have no magical effect upon Quakers.

They value no man, again, on account of the antiquity of his family-exploits. They believe that there are people now living in low and obscure situations, whose ancestors performed in the childhood of history, when it was ignorant and incapable of perpetuating traditions, as great feats as those which in its greater maturity it has recorded. And as far as these exploits of antiquity may be such as were performed in wars, they would not be valued by them as ornaments to men, of whose worth they can only judge by their virtuous or their Christian character.

They value no man, again, on account of the antiquity of his ancestors. Believing Revelation to contain the best account of the rise of man, they consider all families as equally old in their origin, because they believe them to have sprung from the same two parents, as their common source.

But this independence of mind, which is

VOL. III.

P

said

said to belong to the Quakers, may be fostered, again, by other circumstances, some of which are peculiar to themselves.

Many men allow the independence of their minds to be broken by an acceptance of the honours offered to them by the Governments under which they live; but no Quaker could accept of the honours of the world.

Others allow the independence of their minds to be invaded by the acceptance of places and pensions from the same quarter. But Quakers, generally speaking, are in a situation too independent, in consequence of their industry, to need any support of this kind; and no Quaker could accept it on the terms on which it is usually given.

Others, again, suffer their opinions to be fettered by the authority of Ecclesiastical dominion; but the Quakers have broken all such chains. They depend upon no minister of the Gospel for their religion, nor do they consider the priesthood, as others do, as a distinct order of men.

Others, again, come under the dominion of fashion and of popular opinion, so that they dare only do that which they see others

do,

do, or are hurried from one folly to another, without having the courage to try to resist the stream. But the life of a Quaker is a continual state of independence in this respect, being a continual protest against many of the customs and opinions of the world.

I shall now only observe upon this subject, that this trait of independence of mind, which is likely to be generated by some, and which is preserved by others of the causes which have been mentioned, is not confined to a few members, but runs through the Society. It belongs to the poor as well as to the rich, and to the servants of a family as well as to those who live in poverty by themselves. If a poor Quaker were to be introduced to a man of rank, he would neither degrade himself by flattery on the one hand, nor by any unbecoming submission on the other. He would neither be seduced into that which was wrong, nor intimidated from doing that which was right, by the splendour or authority of appearances about him. He would still preserve the independence of his mind, though he would behave with respect. You would never be able to convince him that he had

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been talking with a person who had been fashioned differently from himself. This trait of independence cannot but extend itself to the poor: for, having the same rights and privileges in the discipline, and the same peculiar customs, and the same views of men and manners as the rest of the Society, a similar disposition must be found in these, unless it be counteracted by other causes. But as Quaker-servants, who live in genuine Quaker-families, wear no liveries, nor any badges of poverty or servitude, there is nothing in the opposite scale to produce an opposite feature in their character.

CHAP.

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