The Description of Wales
by Geraldus Cambrensis
Book II
Chapter V
Their great exaction, and want of
moderation
Where they find plenty, and can exercise their power,
they levy the most unjust exactions. Immoderate in their
love of food and intoxicating drink, they say with the
Apostle, "We are instructed both to abound, and to suffer
need;" but do not add with him, "becoming all things to all
men, that I might by all means save some." As in times of
scarcity their abstinence and parsimony are too severe, so,
when seated at another man's table, after a long fasting,
(like wolves and eagles, who, like them, live by plunder,
and are rarely satisfied,) their appetite is immoderate.
They are therefore penurious in times of scarcity, and
extravagant in times of plenty; but no man, as in England,
mortgages his property for the gluttonous gratification of
his own appetite. They wish, however, that all people would
join with them in their bad habits and expenses; as the
commission of crimes reduces to a level all those who are
concerned in the perpetration of them.
The Description of Wales
Book II
by Geraldus Cambrensis
Chapter IV
<<< Book II
Contents >>> Chapter
VI
Main
Contents
|