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-BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
S.A. Bent, comp. Familiar Short Sayings of Great Men. 1887.
Louis Philippe I.
[King of the French; son of Philip Égalité, Duc d’Orleans; born in Paris, Oct. 6, 1773; travelled in the United States, 1796; returned to France with the Bourbons; proclaimed king on the fall of that house, July, 1830; made conquests in Algeria; opposed electoral reform, which led to the revolution of 1848, when the king abdicated and retired to England, where he died, August, 1850.]Le juste milieu.
In an address to the deputies of Gaillac, after his accession to the throne, Louis Philippe said, “We shall endeavor to maintain the proper mean (le juste milieu), equally removed from the abuse of royal power, and the excesses of popular power.” This recalls the maxim of Cleobulus, one of the “Seven Wise Men,” king of Lindus, in Rhodes, in the sixth century B.C.; “Keep the golden mean” ([Greek]); the aurea mediocritas of Horace:—
“He that holds fast the golden mean,And lives contentedly betweenThe little and the great,Feels not the wants that pinch the poor,Nor plagues that haunt the rich man’s door.”Odes, II. 10, 5.