Press enter after choosing selection

Anger

Anger image
Parent Issue
Day
19
Month
June
Year
1843
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

To indulge in nner is neither polite, brave or wise. TIn; inspired writer says. '%it resrs in the bosom offonls." Séneca calis it a short mndncss. and a dcfornicd vite. He was much in the nht;for tliey botli have ilie same symptoms:contortions of the face. n wild and glaring eye, the iii(lii;n;iiH sinilo, graiing of the teeth, violent spiiting, siidden rnotions, especi.illy of the hands. stamping wíiK the lert, trcinblmg íips, :a forced and squeaking voice." the speech lalse and broken, ''deep and frequent sighs. ghastly look," contmcied nerves,and a hundred other symptoms attend both disienipers. Tlic diííerenee is, the onc is voluniary. the otlier involuntary. and which is the most blameworthy. he who voluniririly indulges in anger, or the raving maniac, who is brouijlu to liis madness frorn circumstan ces entirely beyond hts control? To be somelimes affjcted by the mere passion itself, is involuntary and un'avóidnbie, hut to indulge the passion is dangerous, foolish nnd wicked. i:Anser is umvarrnnialilo ai'.d unjiist," fov it often fal! upori the wrong person: - it sccfTs at truth, baffles renson. deihrones judgement, and does every tliing in ngitaiion ind tumult; and he who overcomes this pnssion isa hero; and Fubius perfoimed a grcüler exploit when he overéame himself,

Article

Subjects
Signal of Liberty
Old News