Read this ebook for free! No credit card needed, absolutely nothing to pay.
Words: 462080 in 114 pages
This is an ebook sharing website. You can read the uploaded ebooks for free here. No credit cards needed, nothing to pay. If you want to own a digital copy of the ebook, or want to read offline with your favorite ebook-reader, then you can choose to buy and download the ebook.
Sayings Of The Fathers Of The Desert.
Abbot Alois said: "Unless a man say in his heart, 'Only God and I are in this world,' he will not find rest."
Abbot Hyperchius said: "He is really wise who teaches others by his deeds, and not by his words."
Abbot Moses said: "When the hand of the Lord slew the first-born of Egypt, there was no house in that land in which there lay not one dead."
A brother asked him: "What does this mean?"
The father answered: "If we look at our own sins, we will not see the sins of others. It is foolishness for a man having a corpse in his own house to leave it and go to weep over that of his neighbor."
Abbot Marcus said to Abbot Arsenius: "Why do you avoid us?"
He answered: "God knows I love you, but I cannot be with God and with men."
An Old Guide to Good Manners.
Wine, of course, ought to be taken in moderation, if it is taken at all; and it is well to mix it always with water, and not to drink it during the heat of the day, when the blood is already warm enough, but to wait until the cool of the evening. Even water, however, must be drunk sparingly, "so that the food may not be drowned, but ground down in order to digestion." What a disgusting picture the holy philosopher draws of those "miserable wretches whose life is nothing but revel, debauchery, bath, excess, idleness, drink!" "You may see some of them, half-drunk, staggering, with crowns round their necks like wine-jars, vomiting drink on one another in the name of good-fellowship; and others, full of the effects of their debauch, dirty, pale in the face, and still, above yesterday's bout, pouring another bout to last till next morning." Moreover, he entirely disapproves of importing wines. If one must drink, the product of one's native vines ought to suffice. "There are the fragrant Thasian wine, and the pleasant-breathing Lesbian, and a sweet Cretan wine, and sweet Syracusan wine, and Medusian and Egyptian wine, and the insular Naxian, the highly perfumed and flavored, another wine of the land of Italy. These are many names, but for the temperate drinker one wine suffices."
St. Clement concerns himself not only with what people ought to eat and drink, but with how they ought to eat and drink it. The chief thing necessary at table is temperance; the next is good manners. We remember to have had the pleasure and profit of reading once a modern hand-book of etiquette which abounded in the most amazing instructions for gentlemen and ladies at their meals. When you go to a dinner party, it said, do not pick your teeth much at table. Do not breathe hard over your beef. Don't snort while you are eating. Don't make a disgusting noise with your lips while taking in soup. And don't do twenty other horrible things which no gentleman or lady would any more have thought of doing than of standing up on their chairs or jumping upon the table. But St. Clement's directions for polite behavior show that worse things than these were in vogue in those beastly old days. He pours out words of indignation and contempt upon those 'gluttonous feasters who raise themselves from the couches on which the ancients used to recline at their banquets, stretch out their necks, and all but pitch their faces into the dishes "that they may catch the wandering steam by breathing in it." They grab every minute at the sauce; they besmear their hands with condiments; they cram themselves ravenously--in such a hurry that both jaws are stuffed out at once, the veins about the face are raised, and the perspiration runs all over as they pant and are tightened with their insatiable greed.
Suppose St. Clement had dined on board an American steamboat!
Free books android app tbrJar TBR JAR Read Free books online gutenberg
More posts by @FreeBooks

: Signers of the Declaration Historic Places Commemorating the Signing of the Declaration of Independence by Ferris Robert G Editor - Statesmen United States Biography; United States History Revolution 1775-1783 Biography; Historic buildings United States;

: The Rainbow Bridge by Fox Frances Margaret Merrill Frank T Illustrator - Girls Juvenile fiction; Adopted children Juvenile fiction

: The Pennsylvania Journal of Prison Discipline and Philanthropy (Vol. VIII No. II April 1853) by Pennsylvania Prison Society - Charities Periodicals; Prisons Periodicals