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The Diary of a Philadelphia Lawyer


No. IV.

The Unnatural Prosecution


Turning her mother’s pains and benefits

To laughter and contempt—that she may feel

How sharper than a serpent’s tooth it is

To have a thankless child!

                                                      Shakespeare.


Among the various occupations of man, there are none in which the practitioner is so much exposed to the extremes of human passion and human weakness, as in those which have been entitled consensus publici—the learned professions.

In periods of mental distress, when the anguished spirit wrestles with the demon of the world, and trembling under its load of conscious guilt—

That rings

In one dark, damning moment, crimes of years,

And screaming like a vulture in his ears,

Tells one by one, his thoughts and deeds of shame—

and the prospect of endless beatific existence in accepted and consecrated faith, sinks beneath the weight of its own immortal nature—when the soul shudders at its suspended condition, and even hope seems paralyzed, and fiercest terror strikes the alarum of everlasting death—when the proud spirit plumes its wing in anticipation of the flight that is to land it in its last, eternal home— ’tis then the timed and affrighted mortal calls to his side the minister of heaven’s pledges, and in the society of the clergyman, seeks a consolation and relief by exposing… Read More