[Yeast: A Problem by Charles Kingsley]@TWC D-Link book
Yeast: A Problem

CHAPTER II: SPRING YEARNINGS
18/22

The cleverest and noblest fellows are sure to be the best riders in the long run.

And as for bad company and "the world," when you take to going in the first-class carriages for fear of meeting a swearing sailor in the second-class--when those who have "renounced the world" give up buying and selling in the funds--when my uncle, the pious banker, who will only "associate" with the truly religious, gives up dealing with any scoundrel or heathen who can "do business" with him--then you may quote pious people's opinions to me.

In God's name, if the Stock Exchange, and railway stagging, and the advertisements in the Protestant Hue-and-Cry, and the frantic Mammon-hunting which has been for the last fifty years the peculiar pursuit of the majority of Quakers, Dissenters, and Religious Churchmen, are not The World, what is?
I don't complain of them, though; Puritanism has interdicted to them all art, all excitement, all amusement--except money-making.

It is their dernier ressort, poor souls! 'But you must explain to us naughty fox-hunters how all this agrees with the good book.

We see plainly enough, in the meantime, how it agrees with "poor human nature." We see that the "religious world," like the "great world," and the "sporting world," and the "literary world," "Compounds for sins she is inclined to, By damning those she has no mind to;" and that because England is a money-making country, and money-making is an effeminate pursuit, therefore all sedentary and spoony sins, like covetousness, slander, bigotry, and self-conceit, are to be cockered and plastered over, while the more masculine vices, and no- vices also, are mercilessly hunted down by your cold-blooded, soft- handed religionists.
'This is a more quiet letter than usual from me, my dear coz, for many of your reproofs cut me home: they angered me at the time; but I deserve them.


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