C
Courteousness
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Courteousness, they say, cometh easily to those who receive all men with open arms.
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Courteousness cometh of the combination of the two virtues of kindness and good-breeding.
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Men are likened to each other not by the cut of their personal appearance, but by the similarity of their manners.
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Behold the men who love justice and righteousness, and who are of a helpful disposition: the world setteth a high value on their manners.
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Disparaging words pain a man even when uttered only in jest: the well-bred therefore are never discourteous even to their foes.
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The world goeth on smoothly because of the men of good-breeding: verily, but for them all this harmony would be dead and buried in the dust.
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Though they are sharp as files, the men that are lacking in good manners are no better than mere wooden stocks.
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Discourtesy is unbecoming in a man, even were it only against men who are unfriendly and unjust.
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Behold the men who cannot smile: in all the wide, wide world they will see nothing but darkness even during the day.
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Behold the wealth in the hands of the churlish man: it is even as the milk that is spoiled for being kept in an unclean vessel.