Piccadilly to Pall Mall, Manners, Morals, And Man

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Piccadilly to Pall Mall, Manners, Morals, And Man
Ralph Nevill
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Make up your mind, for I want to go and lunch." One of Sam's favourite maxims, which he was never tired of quoting, -[was, " Lend to the rich, and not to the poor," the policy inculcated by these words being one of the great causes of his success.
An advance made by a money-lender to a poor man often ruins the latter, without substantially benefiting the former, who, after resorting to legal proceedings, obtains but a small proportion of the money originally lent. On the other hand, rich men, w
...hen in want of ready cash, pay high interest to procure its immediate command, afterwards liquidating their debt without demur, being as a rule only too eager to conceal their folly from the public gaze.
Sam well appreciated this, and made some very large loans to wealthy men, who, for some reason or other, wanted them at a moment's notice.
173 Piccadilly to Pall Mall To younger sons of slender means and dubious expectations he was, however, generally obdurate.
" Better go to your people, my boy ; in any case, you would eventually have to go to them to pay me." When he did lend to such as these, it was generally as a friend rather than a money-lender, merely taking a cheque dated at some future period as an acknow- ledgment of the sum, for which he would accept no interest.


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