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which not only pays for <gap/>, but pays<lb/> | which not only pays for <gap/>, but pays<lb/> | ||
without either risk or trouble. <del>It will be a new</del> <del><hi rend="superscript">new-discovered</hi></del><lb/> | without either risk or trouble. <del>It will be a new</del> <del><hi rend="superscript">new-discovered</hi></del><lb/> | ||
<del>treasure</del> To the aged and <del>the</del> parsimonious, it<lb/> | <del><hi rend="superscript"><unclear>and will</unclear></hi></del> <del>treasure</del> To the aged and <del>the</del> parsimonious, it<lb/> | ||
will be a new discovered treasure. — Timidity<lb/> | will be a new discovered treasure. — Timidity<lb/> | ||
Timidity and indolence are the natural accompaniments<lb/> | Timidity and indolence are the natural accompaniments<lb/> |
(a) This (should it ever come into existence)
will be the only species of property known,
which not only pays for , but pays
without either risk or trouble. It will be a new new-discovered
and will treasure To the aged and the parsimonious, it
will be a new discovered treasure. — Timidity
Timidity and indolence are the natural accompaniments
of that disposition to parsimony, which
is so natural an accompaniment of old age.
To plan money out at interest in any other way
is a wish not only of x but of hazard,
matters way a man x from both. — To
hoard money is to
suffer a continually increasing loss. Yet the
habit of sustaining this loss is found a concomitant,
and that nor that not an infrequent one,
of the habit of parsimony. At the house of death
large ready money in large masses has been found
in the hands of the parsimonious of all ranks,
from the Beggar to the Prince. But what
Prince, or what Beggar, is there, who will hoard
metallic money, when, by simply forbearing to
part with this, x paper money, he may, everyday
of his life, be not only preserving his property,
but adding to it?