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CHAPTER V.
EXAMPLES OF THRIFT.
"Examples demonstrate the possibility of success."--_Cotton._
_"The force of his own merit, makes his way."--_Shakespeare._
"Reader, attend, whether thy soul
Soars Fancy's flight beyond the Pole,
Or darkling grubs this earthly hole
In low pursuit--
Know, prudent, cautious self-control,
Is wisdom's root."--_Burns._
"In the family, as in the State, the best source of wealth is
Economy."--_Cicero._
"Right action is the result of right faith; but a true and right faith
cannot be sustained, deepened, extended, save in a course of right
action."--_M'Combie._
Thrift is the spirit of order applied to domestic management and
organization. Its object is to manage frugally the resources of the
family; to prevent waste; and avoid useless expenditure. Thrift is under
the influence of reason and forethought, and never works by chance or by
fits. It endeavours to make the most and the best of everything. It does
not save money for saving's sake. It makes cheerful sacrifices for the
present benefit of others; or it submits to voluntary privation for some
future good.
Mrs. Inchbald, author of the "Simple Story," was, by dint of thrift,
able to set apart the half of her small income for the benefit of her
infirm sister.
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