| From these principles we may easily account for that merit, which is commonly ascribed to generosity, humanity, compassion, gratitude, friendship, fidelity, zeal, disinterestedness, liberality, and all those other qualities, which form the character of good and benevolent. |
| A propensity to the tender passions makes a man agreeable and useful in all the parts of life; and gives a just direction to all his other quailties, which otherwise may become prejudicial to society. |
| Courage and ambition, when not regulated by benevolence, are fit only to make a tyrant and public robber. |
| It is the same case with judgment and capacity, and all the qualities of that kind. |
| They are indifferent in themselves to the interests of society, and have a tendency to the good or ill of mankind, according as they are directed by these other passions. |
| As Love is immediately agreeable to the person, who is actuated by it, and hatred immediately disagreeable; this may also be a considerable reason, why we praise all the passions that partake of the former, and blame all those that have any considerable share of the latter. |
| It is certain we are infinitely touched with a tender sentiment, as well as with a great one. |
| The tears naturally start in our eyes at the conception of it; nor can we forbear giving a loose to the same tenderness towards the person who exerts it. |
| All this seems to me a proof, that our approbation has, in those cases, an origin different from the prospect of utility and advantage, either to ourselves or others. |
| To which we may add, that men naturally, without reflection, approve of that character, which is most like their own. |
| The man of a mild disposition and tender affections, in forming a notion of the most perfect virtue, mixes in it more of benevolence and humanity, than the man of courage and enterprize, who naturally looks upon a certain elevation of mind as the most accomplished character. |
| This must evidently proceed from an immediate sympathy, which men have with characters similar to their own. |
| They enter with more warmth into such sentiments, and feel more sensibly the pleasure, which arises from them. |
| It is remarkable, that nothing touches a man of humanity more than any instance of extraordinary delicacy in love or friendship, where a person is attentive to the smallest concerns of his friend, and is willing to sacrifice to them the most considerable interest of his own. |
| Such delicacies have little influence on society; because they make us regard the greatest trifles: But they are the more engaging, the more minute the concern is, and are a proof of the highest merit in any one, who is capable of them. |
| The passions are so contagious, that they pass with the greatest facility from one person to another, and produce correspondent movements in all human breasts. |
| Where friendship appears in very signal instances, my heart catches the same passion, and is warmed by those warm sentiments, that display themselves before me. |
| Such agreeable movements must give me an affection to every one that excites them. |
| This is the case with every thing that is agreeable in any person. |
| The transition from pleasure to love is easy: But the transition must here be still more easy; since the agreeable sentiment, which is excited by sympathy, is love itself; and there is nothing required but to change the object. |
| Hence the peculiar merit of benevolence in all its shapes and appearances. |