Wesley Collected Works Vol 11
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-11-187 |
| Words | 398 |
There
are not only some Gentlemen, yea, and Noblemen, who are. of the ancient stamp, who are patterns of industry in their
calling to all that are round about them, but it is undeniable
that a vast majority of the middle and lower ranks of people
are diligently employed from morning to night, and from the
beginning to the end of the year. And indeed those who
are best acquainted with other nations, will not scruple to
testify, that the bulk of the English are at this day as diligent
as any people in the universe. 5. Neither is sloth the constant, any more than the
universal, character of the English nation. Upon many
occasions even those that are most infected with it arise and
shake themselves from the dust. Witness the behaviour of
those of the highest rank, when they were engaged in war. Did any one charge sloth on the late Duke of Marlborough,
or the Marquis of Granby ? Witness the behaviour of many
eminent men in the militia, setting an example to all their
troops ' Yea, some of them were neither afraid nor ashamed
to march on foot at the head of their men
6. Least of all is sloth peculiar to the English nation. Is
there no such thing even in Holland? Is there none in
Germany? Certainly there is enough of it, and to spare, in
every part of France; and yet there is a more abundant
harvest of it both in Italy, Spain, and Portugal: So utterly
void of truth is that assertion, that sloth is the present
characteristic of the English nation |
7. Neither is luxury. For it is not universal, no, nor
general. The food which is used by nine-tenths of our mation
is (as it ever was) plain and simple. A vast majority of the
nation, if we take in all the living souls, are not only strangers
to gluttony and drunkenness, but to delicacy either of meat
or drink. Neither do they err in quantity any more than in
quality, but take what nature requires, and no more. 8. And as luxury in food is not universal in England, so
neither is luxury in apparel. Thousands in every part of the
kingdom are utterly guiltless of it. Whether by choice or
necessity, their dress is as plain as their food; and so is
their furniture.