TRUE COURTESY.
It does not make much difference whether we own our house, or have one little room in that house, we can make that little room a true home. We can people it with such moods, we can turn to it with such sweet fancies, that it will be fairly luminous with their presence, and will be the very perfection of a home. Against this home none of us should ever transgress. We should always treat each other with courtesy. It is often not so difficult to love a person as to be courteous to him. Courtesy is of greater value and a more royal grace than some people think. If w<j will but be courteous to each other, we will soon learn to love each other more wisely, profoundly, not, to say lastingly, than we ever did before.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19170106.2.76.55.7
Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume LIV, Issue 16431, 6 January 1917, Page 6 (Supplement)
Word Count
140TRUE COURTESY. New Zealand Herald, Volume LIV, Issue 16431, 6 January 1917, Page 6 (Supplement)
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