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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11397 ***
+
+JOHNSON'S WORKS.
+
+
+THE RAMBLER.
+
+VOL. II.
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+WORKS
+
+OF
+
+SAMUEL JOHNSON, LL.D,
+
+IN NINE VOLUMES.
+
+
+
+VOLUME THE THIRD.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+MDCCCXXV.
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+OF
+
+THE SECOND VOLUME.
+
+
+NUMB.
+
+106. The vanity of an author's expectations.--Reasons why good authors
+ are sometimes neglected
+107. Properantia's hopes of a year of confusion. The misery of
+ prostitutes
+108. Life sufficient to all purposes if well employed
+109. The education of a fop
+110. Repentance stated and explained. Retirement and abstinence useful
+ to repentance
+111. Youth made unfortunate by its haste and eagerness
+112. Too much nicety not to be indulged. The character of Eriphile
+113. The history of Hymenæus's courtship
+114. The necessity of proportioning punishments to crimes
+115. The sequel of Hymenæus's courtship
+116. The young trader's attempt at politeness
+117. The advantages of living in a garret
+118. The narrowness of fame
+119. Tranquilla's account of her lovers, opposed to Hymenæus
+120. The history of Almamoulin the son of Nouradin
+121. The dangers of imitation. The impropriety of imitating Spenser
+122. A criticism on the English historians
+123. The young trader turned gentleman
+124. The lady's misery in a summer retirement
+125. The difficulty of defining comedy. Tragick and comick sentiments
+ confounded
+126. The universality of cowardice. The impropriety of extorting praise.
+ The impertinence of an astronomer
+127. Diligence too soon relaxed. Necessity of perseverance
+128. Anxiety universal. The unhappiness of a wit and a fine lady
+129. The folly of cowardice and inactivity
+130. The history of a beauty
+131. Desire of gain the general passion
+132. The difficulty of educating a young nobleman
+133. The miseries of a beauty defaced
+134. Idleness an anxious and miserable state
+135. The folly of annual retreats into the country
+136. The meanness and mischief of indiscriminate dedication
+137. The necessity of literary courage
+138. Original characters to be found in the country. The character of
+ Mrs. Busy
+139. A critical examination of Samson Agonistes
+140. The criticism continued
+141. The danger of attempting wit in conversation. The character of
+ Papilius
+142. An account of squire Bluster
+143. The criterions of plagiarism
+144. The difficulty of raising reputation. The various species of
+ detractors
+145. Petty writers not to be despised
+146. An account of an author travelling in quest of his own character.
+ The uncertainty of fame
+147. The courtier's esteem of assurance
+148. The cruelty of parental tyranny
+149. Benefits not always entitled to gratitude
+150. Adversity useful to the acquisition of knowledge
+151. The climactericks of the mind
+152. Criticism on epistolary writings
+153. The treatment incurred by loss of fortune
+154. The inefficacy of genius without learning
+155. The usefulness of advice. The danger of habits. The necessity of
+ reviewing life
+156. The laws of writing not always indisputable. Reflections on
+ tragi-comedy
+157. The scholar's complaint of his own bashfulness
+158. Rules of writing drawn from examples. Those examples often mistaken
+159. The nature and remedies of bashfulness
+160. Rules for the choice of associates
+161. The revolutions of a garret
+162. Old men in danger of falling into pupilage. The conduct of
+ Thrasybulus
+163. The mischiefs of following a patron
+164. Praise universally desired. The failings of eminent men often
+ imitated
+165. The impotence of wealth. The visit of Scrotinus to the place of his
+ nativity
+166. Favour not easily gained by the poor
+167. The marriage of Hymenæus and Tranquilla
+168. Poetry debased by mean expressions. An example from Shakespeare
+169. Labour necessary to excellence
+170. The history of Misella debauched by her relation
+171. Misella's description of the life of a prostitute
+172. The effect of sudden riches upon the manners
+173. Unreasonable fears of pedantry
+174. The mischiefs of unbounded raillery. History of Dicaculus
+175. The majority are wicked
+176. Directions to authors attacked by criticks. The various degrees of
+ critical perspicacity
+177. An account of a club of antiquaries
+178. Many advantages not to be enjoyed together
+179. The awkward merriment of a student
+180. The study of life not to be neglected for the sake of books
+181. The history of an adventurer in lotteries
+182. The history of Leviculus, the fortune-hunter
+183. The influence of envy and interest compared
+184. The subject of essays often suggested by chance. Chance equally
+ prevalent in other affairs
+185. The prohibition of revenge justifiable by reason. The meanness of
+ regulating our conduct by the opinions of men
+186. Anningait and Ajut; a Greenland history
+187. The history of Anningait and Ajut concluded
+188. Favour often gained with little assistance from understanding
+189. The mischiefs of falsehood. The character of Turpicula
+190. The history of Abouzaid, the son of Morad
+191. The busy life of a young lady
+192. Love unsuccessful without riches
+193. The author's art of praising himself
+194. A young nobleman's progress in politeness
+195. A young nobleman's introduction to the knowledge of the town
+196. Human opinions mutable. The hopes of youth fallacious
+197. The history of a legacy-hunter
+198. The legacy-hunter's history concluded
+199. The virtues of Rabbi Abraham's magnet
+200. Asper's complaint of the insolence of Prospero. Unpoliteness not
+ always the effect of pride
+201. The importance of punctuality
+202. The different acceptations of poverty. Cynicks and Monks not
+ poor
+203. The pleasures of life to be sought in prospects of futurity. Future
+ fame uncertain
+204. The history of ten days of Seged, emperour of Ethiopia
+205. The history of Seged concluded
+206. The art of living at the cost of others
+207. The folly of continuing too long upon the stage
+208. The Rambler's reception. His design
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+RAMBLER.
+
+
+
+No. 106. SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 1751.
+
+ _Opinionum commenta delet dies, naturæ judicia Confirmat_.
+ CICERO, vi. Att. 1.
+
+ Time obliterates the fictions of opinion, and confirms the decisions
+ of nature.
+
+It is necessary to the success of flattery, that it be accommodated to
+particular circumstances or characters, and enter the heart on that side
+where the passions stand ready to receive it. A lady seldom listens with
+attention to any praise but that of her beauty; a merchant always
+expects to hear of his influence at the bank, his importance on the
+exchange, the height of his credit, and the extent of his traffick: and
+the author will scarcely be pleased without lamentations of the neglect
+of learning, the conspiracies against genius, and the slow progress of
+merit, or some praises of the magnanimity of those who encounter poverty
+and contempt in the cause of knowledge, and trust for the reward of
+their labours to the judgment and gratitude of posterity.
+
+An assurance of unfading laurels, and immortal reputation, is the
+settled reciprocation of civility between amicable writers. To raise
+_monuments more durable than brass, and more conspicuous than
+pyramids_, has been long the common boast of literature; but, among
+the innumerable architects that erect columns to themselves, far the
+greater part, either for want of durable materials, or of art to dispose
+them, see their edifices perish as they are towering to completion, and
+those few that for a while attract the eye of mankind, are generally
+weak in the foundation, and soon sink by the saps of time.
+
+No place affords a more striking conviction of the vanity of human
+hopes, than a publick library; for who can see the wall crowded on every
+side by mighty volumes, the works of laborious meditation, and accurate
+inquiry, now scarcely known but by the catalogue, and preserved only to
+increase the pomp of learning, without considering how many hours have
+been wasted in vain endeavours, how often imagination has anticipated
+the praises of futurity, how many statues have risen to the eye of
+vanity, how many ideal converts have elevated zeal, how often wit has
+exulted in the eternal infamy of his antagonists, and dogmatism has
+delighted in the gradual advances of his authority, the immutability of
+his decrees, and the perpetuity of his power?
+
+ _--Non unquam dedit
+ Documenta fors majora, quam frugili loco
+ Starent superbi_.
+
+ Insulting chance ne'er call'd with louder voice,
+ On swelling mortals to be proud no more.
+
+Of the innumerable authors whose performances are thus treasured up in
+magnificent obscurity, most are forgotten, because they never deserved
+to be remembered, and owed the honours which they once obtained, not to
+judgment or to genius, to labour or to art, but to the prejudice of
+faction, the stratagem of intrigue, or the servility of adulation.
+
+Nothing is more common than to find men whose works are now totally
+neglected, mentioned with praises by their contemporaries, as the
+oracles of their age, and the legislators of science. Curiosity is
+naturally excited, their volumes after long inquiry are found, but
+seldom reward the labour of the search. Every period of time has
+produced these bubbles of artificial fame, which are kept up a while by
+the breath of fashion, and then break at once, and are annihilated. The
+learned often bewail the loss of ancient writers whose characters have
+survived their works; but, perhaps, if we could now retrieve them, we
+should find them only the Granvilles, Montagues, Stepneys, and
+Sheffields of their time, and wonder by what infatuation or caprice they
+could be raised to notice.
+
+It cannot, however, be denied, that many have sunk into oblivion, whom
+it were unjust to number with this despicable class. Various kinds of
+literary fame seem destined to various measures of duration. Some spread
+into exuberance with a very speedy growth, but soon wither and decay;
+some rise more slowly, but last long. Parnassus has its flowers of
+transient fragrance, as well as its oaks of towering height, and its
+laurels of eternal verdure.
+
+Among those whose reputation is exhausted in a short time by its own
+luxuriance, are the writers who take advantage of present incidents or
+characters which strongly interest the passions, and engage universal
+attention. It is not difficult to obtain readers, when we discuss a
+question which every one is desirous to understand, which is debated in
+every assembly, and has divided the nation into parties; or when we
+display the faults or virtues of him whose publick conduct has made
+almost every man his enemy or his friend. To the quick circulation of
+such productions all the motives of interest and vanity concur; the
+disputant enlarges his knowledge, the zealot animates his passion, and
+every man is desirous to inform himself concerning affairs so vehemently
+agitated and variously represented.
+
+It is scarcely to be imagined, through how many subordinations of
+interest the ardour of party is diffused; and what multitudes fancy
+themselves affected by every satire or panegyrick on a man of eminence.
+Whoever has, at any time, taken occasion to mention him with praise or
+blame, whoever happens to love or hate any of his adherents, as he
+wishes to confirm his opinion, and to strengthen his party, will
+diligently peruse every paper from which he can hope for sentiments like
+his own. An object, however small in itself, if placed near to the eye,
+will engross all the rays of light; and a transaction, however trivial,
+swells into importance when it presses immediately on our attention. He
+that shall peruse the political pamphlets of any past reign, will wonder
+why they were so eagerly read, or so loudly praised. Many of the
+performances which had power to inflame factions, and fill a kingdom
+with confusion, have now very little effect upon a frigid critick; and
+the time is coming, when the compositions of later hirelings shall lie
+equally despised. In proportion as those who write on temporary
+subjects, are exalted above their merit at first, they are afterwards
+depressed below it; nor can the brightest elegance of diction, or most
+artful subtilty of reasoning, hope for so much esteem from those whose
+regard is no longer quickened by curiosity or pride.
+
+It is, indeed, the fate of controvertists, even when they contend for
+philosophical or theological truth, to be soon laid aside and slighted.
+Either the question is decided, and there is no more place for doubt and
+opposition; or mankind despair of understanding it, and grow weary of
+disturbance, content themselves with quiet ignorance, and refuse to be
+harassed with labours which they have no hopes of recompensing with
+knowledge.
+
+The authors of new discoveries may surely expect to be reckoned among
+those whose writings are secure of veneration: yet it often happens that
+the general reception of a doctrine obscures the books in which it was
+delivered. When any tenet is generally received and adopted as an
+incontrovertible principle, we seldom look back to the arguments upon
+which it was first established, or can bear that tediousness of
+deduction, and multiplicity of evidence, by which its author was forced
+to reconcile it to prejudice, and fortify it in the weakness of novelty
+against obstinacy and envy.
+
+It is well known how much of our philosophy is derived from Boyle's
+discovery of the qualities of the air; yet of those who now adopt or
+enlarge his theory, very few have read the detail of his experiments.
+His name is, indeed, reverenced; but his works are neglected; we are
+contented to know, that he conquered his opponents, without inquiring
+what cavils were produced against him, or by what proofs they were
+confuted.
+
+Some writers apply themselves to studies boundless and inexhaustible, as
+experiments in natural philosophy. These are always lost in successive
+compilations, as new advances are made, and former observations become
+more familiar. Others spend their lives in remarks on language, or
+explanations of antiquities, and only afford materials for
+lexicographers and commentators, who are themselves overwhelmed by
+subsequent collectors, that equally destroy the memory of their
+predecessors by amplification, transposition, or contraction. Every new
+system of nature gives birth to a swarm of expositors, whose business is
+to explain and illustrate it, and who can hope to exist no longer than
+the founder of their sect preserves his reputation.
+
+There are, indeed, few kinds of composition from which an author,
+however learned or ingenious, can hope a long continuance of fame. He
+who has carefully studied human nature, and can well describe it, may
+with most reason flatter his ambition. Bacon, among all his pretensions
+to the regard of posterity, seems to have pleased himself chiefly with
+his Essays, _which come home to men's business and bosoms_, and of
+which, therefore, he declares his expectation, that they _will live as
+long as books last_. It may, however, satisfy an honest and benevolent
+mind to have been useful, though less conspicuous; nor will he that
+extends his hope to higher rewards, be so much anxious to obtain praise,
+as to discharge the duty which Providence assigns him.
+
+
+
+No. 107. TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1751.
+
+ _Alternis igitur contendere versibns ambo
+ Coepere: alternos Musoe meminisse volebant_. VIRG. Ec. vii. 18
+
+ On themes alternate now the swains recite;
+ The muses in alternate themes delight. ELPHINSTON.
+
+Among the various censures, which the unavoidable comparison of my
+performances with those of my predecessors has produced, there is none
+more general than that of uniformity. Many of my readers remark the want
+of those changes of colours, which formerly fed the attention with
+unexhausted novelty, and of that intermixture of subjects, or
+alternation of manner, by which other writers relieved weariness, and
+awakened expectation.
+
+I have, indeed, hitherto avoided the practice of uniting gay and solemn
+subjects in the same paper, because it seems absurd for an author to
+counteract himself, to press at once with equal force upon both parts of
+the intellectual balance, or give medicines, which, like the double
+poison of Dryden, destroy the force of one another. I have endeavoured
+sometimes to divert, and sometimes to elevate; but have imagined it an
+useless attempt to disturb merriment by solemnity, or interrupt
+seriousness by drollery. Yet I shall this day publish two letters of
+very different tendency, which I hope, like tragi-comedy, may chance to
+please even when they are not critically approved.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+DEAR SIR,
+
+Though, as my mamma tells me, I am too young to talk at the table, I
+have great pleasure in listening to the conversation of learned men,
+especially when they discourse of things which I do not understand; and
+have, therefore, been of late particularly delighted with many disputes
+about the _alteration of the stile_, which, they say, is to be made by
+act of parliament.
+
+One day when my mamma was gone out of the room, I asked a very great
+scholar what the style was. He told me he was afraid I should hardly
+understand him when he informed me, that it was the stated and
+established method of computing time. It was not, indeed, likely that I
+should understand him; for I never yet knew time computed in my life,
+nor can imagine why we should be at so much trouble to count what we
+cannot keep. He did not tell me whether we are to count the time past,
+or the time to come; but I have considered them both by myself, and
+think it as foolish to count time that is gone, as money that is spent;
+and as for the time which is to come, it only seems further off by
+counting; and therefore, when any pleasure is promised me, I always
+think of the time as little as I can.
+
+I have since listened very attentively to every one that talked upon
+this subject, of whom the greater part seem not to understand it better
+than myself; for though they often hint how much the nation has been
+mistaken, and rejoice that we are at last growing wiser than our
+ancestors, I have never been able to discover from them, that any body
+has died sooner, or been married later, for counting time wrong; and,
+therefore, I began to fancy that there was a great bustle with little
+consequence.
+
+At last, two friends of my papa, Mr. Cycle, and Mr. Starlight, being, it
+seems, both of high learning, and able to make an almanack, began to
+talk about the new style. Sweet Mr. Starlight--I am sure I shall love
+his name as long as I live; for he told Cycle roundly, with a fierce
+look, that we should never be right without a _year of confusion_. Dear
+Mr. Rambler, did you ever hear any thing so charming? a whole year of
+confusion! When there has been a rout at mamma's, I have thought one
+night of confusion worth a thousand nights of rest; and if I can but see
+a year of confusion, a whole year, of cards in one room, and dancings in
+another, here a feast, and there a masquerade, and plays, and coaches,
+and hurries, and messages, and milliners, and raps at the door, and
+visits, and frolicks, and new fashions, I shall not care what they do
+with the rest of the time, nor whether they count it by the old style or
+the new; for I am resolved to break loose from the nursery in the
+tumult, and play my part among the rest; and it will be strange if I
+cannot get a husband and a chariot in the year of confusion.
+
+Cycle, who is neither so young nor so handsome as Starlight, very
+gravely maintained, that all the perplexity may he avoided by leaping
+over eleven days in the reckoning; and, indeed, if it should come only
+to this, I think the new style is a delightful thing; for my mamma says
+I shall go to court when I am sixteen, and if they can but contrive
+often to leap over eleven days together, the months of restraint will
+soon be at an end. It is strange, that with all the plots that have been
+laid against time, they could never kill it by act of parliament before.
+Dear sir, if you have any vote or interest, get them but for once to
+destroy eleven months, and then I shall be as old as some married
+ladies. But this is desired only if you think they will not comply with
+Mr. Starlight's scheme; for nothing surely could please me like a year
+of confusion, when I shall no longer be fixed this hour to my pen, and
+the next to my needle, or wait at home for the dancing-master one day,
+and the next for the musick-master; but run from ball to ball, and from
+drum to drum; and spend all my time without tasks, and without account,
+and go out without telling whither, and come home without regard to
+prescribed hours, or family rules.
+
+I am, sir,
+
+Your humble servant,
+
+PROPERANTIA.
+
+MR. RAMBLER,
+
+I was seized this morning with an unusual pensiveness, and, finding that
+books only served to heighten it, took a ramble into the fields, in
+hopes of relief and invigoration from the keenness of the air and
+brightness of the sun.
+
+As I wandered wrapped up in thought, my eyes were struck with the
+hospital for the reception of deserted infants, which I surveyed with
+pleasure, till, by a natural train of sentiment, I began to reflect on
+the fate of the mothers. For to what shelter can they fly? Only to the
+arms of their betrayer, which, perhaps, are now no longer open to
+receive them; and then how quick must be the transition from deluded
+virtue to shameless guilt, and from shameless guilt to hopeless
+wretchedness?
+
+The anguish that I felt, left me no rest till I had, by your means,
+addressed myself to the publick on behalf of those forlorn creatures,
+the women of the town; whose misery here might satisfy the most rigorous
+censor, and whose participation of our common nature might surely induce
+us to endeavour, at least, their preservation from eternal punishment.
+
+These were all once, if not virtuous, at least innocent; and might still
+have continued blameless and easy, but for the arts and insinuations of
+those whose rank, fortune, or education, furnished them with means to
+corrupt or to delude them. Let the libertine reflect a moment on the
+situation of that woman, who, being forsaken by her betrayer, is reduced
+to the necessity of turning prostitute for bread, and judge of the
+enormity of his guilt by the evils which it produces.
+
+It cannot be doubted but that numbers follow this dreadful course of
+life, with shame, horrour, and regret; but where can they hope for
+refuge: "_The world is not their friend, nor the world's law_." Their
+sighs, and tears, and groans, are criminal in the eye of their tyrants,
+the bully and the bawd, who fatten on their misery, and threaten them
+with want or a gaol, if they show the least design of escaping from
+their bondage.
+
+"To wipe all tears from off all faces," is a task too hard for mortals;
+but to alleviate misfortunes is often within the most limited power: yet
+the opportunities which every day affords of relieving the most wretched
+of human beings are overlooked and neglected, with equal disregard of
+policy and goodness.
+
+There are places, indeed, set apart, to which these unhappy creatures
+may resort, when the diseases of incontinence seize upon them; but if
+they obtain a cure, to what are they reduced? Either to return with the
+small remains of beauty to their former guilt, or perish in the streets
+with nakedness and hunger.
+
+How frequently have the gay and thoughtless, in their evening frolicks,
+seen a band of those miserable females, covered with rags, shivering
+with cold, and pining with hunger; and, without either pitying their
+calamities, or reflecting upon the cruelty of those who, perhaps, first
+seduced them by caresses of fondness, or magnificence of promises, go on
+to reduce others to the same wretchedness by the same means!
+
+To stop the increase of this deplorable multitude, is undoubtedly the
+first and most pressing consideration. To prevent evil is the great end
+of government, the end for which vigilance and severity are properly
+employed. But surely those whom passion or interest has already
+depraved, have some claim to compassion, from beings equally frail and
+fallible with themselves. Nor will they long groan in their present
+afflictions, if none were to refuse them relief, but those that owe
+their exemption from the same distress only to their wisdom and their
+virtue.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+AMICUS[a].
+
+[Footnote a: The letter from Amicus was from an unknown correspondent.
+It breathes a tenderness of spirit worthy of Johnson himself. But he
+practised the lesson which it inculcates;--a harder task! Sterne could
+_write_ sentiment.]
+
+
+
+No. 108. SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 1751.
+
+ _--Sapere aude:
+ Incipe. Vivendi recte qui prorogat horam,
+ Rusticus expectat dum defluat amnis; at ille
+ Labitur et labetur in omne volubilis aevum_. HOR. Lib. i. Ep. ii. 39.
+
+ Begin, be bold, and venture to be wise;
+ He who defers this work from day to day,
+ Does on a river's bank expecting stay,
+ Till the whole stream, which stopp'd him, should be gone,
+ That runs, and as it runs, for ever will run on. COWLEY.
+
+An ancient poet, unreasonably discontented at the present state of
+things, which his system of opinions obliged him to represent in its
+worst form, has observed of the earth, "that its greater part is covered
+by the uninhabitable ocean; that of the rest some is encumbered with
+naked mountains, and some lost under barren sands; some scorched with
+unintermitted heat, and some petrified with perpetual frost; so that
+only a few regions remain for the production of fruits, the pasture of
+cattle, and the accommodation of man."
+
+The same observation may be transferred to the time allotted us in our
+present state. When we have deducted all that is absorbed in sleep, all
+that is inevitably appropriated to the demands of nature, or
+irresistibly engrossed by the tyranny of custom; all that passes in
+regulating the superficial decorations of life, or is given up in the
+reciprocations of civility to the disposal of others; all that is torn
+from us by the violence of disease, or stolen imperceptibly away by
+lassitude and languor; we shall find that part of our duration very
+small of which we can truly call ourselves masters, or which we can
+spend wholly at our own choice. Many of our hours are lost in a rotation
+of petty cares, in a constant recurrence of the same employments; many
+of our provisions for ease or happiness are always exhausted by the
+present day; and a great part of our existence serves no other purpose,
+than that of enabling us to enjoy the rest.
+
+Of the few moments which are left in our disposal, it may reasonably be
+expected, that we should be so frugal, as to let none of them slip from
+us without some equivalent; and perhaps it might be found, that as the
+earth, however straitened by rocks and waters, is capable of producing
+more than all its inhabitants are able to consume, our lives, though
+much contracted by incidental distraction, would yet afford us a large
+space vacant to the exercise of reason and virtue; that we want not
+time, but diligence, for great performances; and that we squander much
+of our allowance, even while we think it sparing and insufficient.
+
+This natural and necessary comminution of our lives, perhaps, often
+makes us insensible of the negligence with which we suffer them to slide
+away. We never consider ourselves as possessed at once of time
+sufficient for any great design, and therefore indulge ourselves, in
+fortuitous amusements. We think it unnecessary to take an account of a
+few supernumerary moments, which, however employed, could have produced
+little advantage, and which were exposed to a thousand chances of
+disturbance and interruption.
+
+It is observable, that, either by nature or by habit, our faculties are
+fitted to images of a certain extent, to which we adjust great things by
+division, and little things by accumulation. Of extensive surfaces we
+can only take a survey, as the parts succeed one another; and atoms we
+cannot perceive till they are united into masses. Thus we break the vast
+periods of time into centuries and years; and thus, if we would know the
+amount of moments, we must agglomerate them into days and weeks.
+
+The proverbial oracles of our parsimonious ancestors have informed us,
+that the fatal waste of fortune is by small expenses, by the profusion
+of sums too little singly to alarm our caution, and which we never
+suffer ourselves to consider together. Of the same kind is the
+prodigality of life; he that hopes to look back hereafter with
+satisfaction upon past years, must learn to know the present value of
+single minutes, and endeavour to let no particle of time fall useless to
+the ground.
+
+It is usual for those who are advised to the attainment of any new
+qualification, to look upon themselves as required to change the general
+course of their conduct, to dismiss business, and exclude pleasure, and
+to devote their days and nights to a particular attention. But all
+common degrees of excellence are attainable at a lower price; he that
+should steadily and resolutely assign to any science or language those
+interstitial vacancies which intervene in the most crowded variety of
+diversion or employment, would find every day new irradiations of
+knowledge, and discover how much more is to be hoped from frequency and
+perseverance, than from violent efforts and sudden desires; efforts
+which are soon remitted when they encounter difficulty, and desires,
+which, if they are indulged too often, will shake off the authority of
+reason, and range capriciously from one object to another.
+
+The disposition to defer every important design to a time of leisure,
+and a state of settled uniformity, proceeds generally from a false
+estimate of the human powers. If we except those gigantic and stupendous
+intelligences who are said to grasp a system by intuition, and bound
+forward from one series of conclusions to another, without regular steps
+through intermediate propositions, the most successful students make
+their advances in knowledge by short flights, between each of which the
+mind may lie at rest. For every single act of progression a short time
+is sufficient; and it is only necessary, that whenever that time is
+afforded, it be well employed.
+
+Few minds will be long confined to severe and laborious meditation; and
+when a successful attack on knowledge has been made, the student
+recreates himself with the contemplation of his conquest, and forbears
+another incursion, till the new-acquired truth has become familiar, and
+his curiosity calls upon him for fresh gratifications. Whether the time
+of intermission is spent in company, or in solitude, in necessary
+business, or in voluntary levities, the understanding is equally
+abstracted from the object of inquiry; but, perhaps, if it be detained
+by occupations less pleasing, it returns again to study with greater
+alacrity than when it is glutted with ideal pleasures, and surfeited
+with intemperance of application. He that will not suffer himself to be
+discouraged by fancied impossibilities, may sometimes find his abilities
+invigorated by the necessity of exerting them in short intervals, as the
+force of a current is increased by the contraction of its channel.
+
+From some cause like this, it has probably proceeded, that, among those
+who have contributed to the advancement of learning, many have risen to
+eminence in opposition to all the obstacles which external circumstances
+could place in their way, amidst the tumult of business, the distresses
+of poverty, or the dissipations of a wandering and unsettled state. A
+great part of the life of Erasmus was one continual peregrination; ill
+supplied with the gifts of fortune, and led from city to city, and from
+kingdom to kingdom, by the hopes of patrons and preferment, hopes which
+always flattered and always deceived him; he yet found means, by
+unshaken constancy, and a vigilant improvement of those hours, which, in
+the midst of the most restless activity, will remain unengaged, to write
+more than another in the same condition would have hoped to read.
+Compelled by want to attendance and solicitation, and so much versed in
+common life, that he has transmitted to us the most perfect delineation
+of the manners of his age, he joined to his knowledge of the world such
+application to books, that he will stand for ever in the first rank of
+literary heroes. How this proficiency was obtained he sufficiently
+discovers, by informing us, that the "Praise of Folly," one of his most
+celebrated performances, was composed by him on the road to Italy; _ne
+totum illud tempus quo equo fuit insidendum, illiteratis fabulis
+terreretur_: "lest the hours which he was obliged to spend on horseback
+should be tattled away without regard to literature."
+
+An Italian philosopher expressed in his motto, that _time was his
+estate_; an estate, indeed, which will produce nothing without
+cultivation, but will always abundantly repay the labours of industry,
+and satisfy the most extensive desires, if no part of it be suffered to
+lie waste by negligence, to be over-run with noxious plants, or laid out
+for shew, rather than for use.
+
+
+
+No. 109. TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1751.
+
+ _Gratum est, quod patriæ civem populoque dedisti,
+ Si facis, ut patriæ sit idoneus, utilis agris,
+ Utilis et bellorum et pacis rebus agendis.
+ Plurimum enim intererit, quibus artibus, et quibus hunc tu
+ Moribus instituas_ Juv. SAT, xiv. 70.
+
+ Grateful the gift! a member to the state,
+ If you that member useful shall create;
+ Train'd both to war, and, when the war shall cease,
+ As fond, as fit t'improve the arts of peace.
+ For much it boots which way you train your boy,
+ The hopeful object of your future joy. ELPHINSTON.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Though you seem to have taken a view sufficiently extensive of the
+miseries of life, and have employed much of your speculation on mournful
+subjects, you have not yet exhausted the whole stock of human
+infelicity. There is still a species of wretchedness which escapes your
+observation, though it might supply you with many sage remarks, and
+salutary cautions.
+
+I cannot but imagine the start of attention awakened by this welcome
+hint; and at this instant see the Rambler snuffing his candle, rubbing
+his spectacles, stirring his fire, locking out interruption, and
+settling himself in his easy chair, that he may enjoy a new calamity
+without disturbance. For, whether it be that continued sickness or
+misfortune has acquainted you only with the bitterness of being; or that
+you imagine none but yourself able to discover what I suppose has been
+seen and felt by all the inhabitants of the world; whether you intend
+your writings as antidotal to the levity and merriment with which your
+rivals endeavour to attract the favour of the publick; or fancy that you
+have some particular powers of dolorous declamation, and _warble out
+your groans_ with uncommon elegance or energy; it is certain, that
+whatever be your subject, melancholy for the most part bursts in upon
+your speculation, your gaiety is quickly overcast, and though your
+readers may be flattered with hopes of pleasantry, they are seldom
+dismissed but with heavy hearts.
+
+That I may therefore gratify you with an imitation of your own syllables
+of sadness, I will inform you that I was condemned by some disastrous
+influence to be an only son, born to the apparent prospect of a large
+fortune, and allotted to my parents at that time of life when satiety of
+common diversions allows the mind to indulge parental affection with
+greater intenseness. My birth was celebrated by the tenants with feasts,
+and dances, and bag-pipes: congratulations were sent from every family
+within ten miles round; and my parents discovered in my first cries such
+tokens of future virtue and understanding, that they declared themselves
+determined to devote the remaining part of life to my happiness and the
+increase of their estate.
+
+The abilities of my father and mother were not perceptibly unequal, and
+education had given neither much advantage over the other. They had both
+kept good company, rattled in chariots, glittered in playhouses, and
+danced at court, and were both expert in the games that were in their
+time called in as auxiliaries against the intrusion of thought.
+
+When there is such a parity between two persons associated for life, the
+dejection which the husband, if he be not completely stupid, must always
+suffer for want of superiority, sinks him to submissiveness. My mamma
+therefore governed the family without controul; and except that my
+father still retained some authority in the stables, and, now and then,
+after a supernumerary bottle, broke a looking-glass or china dish to
+prove his sovereignty, the whole course of the year was regulated by her
+direction, the servants received from her all their orders, and the
+tenants were continued or dismissed at her discretion.
+
+She, therefore, thought herself entitled to the superintendence of her
+son's education; and when my father, at the instigation of the parson,
+faintly proposed that I should be sent to school, very positively told
+him, that she should not suffer so fine a child to be ruined; that she
+never knew any boys at a grammar-school that could come into a room
+without blushing, or sit at table without some awkward uneasiness; that
+they were always putting themselves into danger by boisterous plays, or
+vitiating their behaviour with mean company, and that, for her part, she
+would rather follow me to the grave, than see me tear my clothes, and
+hang down my head, and sneak about with dirty shoes, and blotted
+fingers, my hair unpowdered, and my hat uncocked.
+
+My father, who had no other end in his proposal than to appear wise and
+manly, soon acquiesced, since I was not to live by my learning; for,
+indeed, he had known very few students that had not some stiffness in
+their manner. They, therefore, agreed, that a domestick tutor should be
+procured, and hired an honest gentleman of mean conversation and narrow
+sentiments, but whom, having passed the common forms of literary
+education, they implicitly concluded qualified to teach all that was to
+be learned from a scholar. He thought himself sufficiently exalted by
+being placed at the same table with his pupil, and had no other view
+than to perpetuate his felicity by the utmost flexibility of submission
+to all my mother's opinions and caprices. He frequently took away my
+book, lest I should mope with too much application, charged me never to
+write without turning up my ruffles, and generally brushed my coat
+before he dismissed me into the parlour. He had no occasion to complain
+of too burdensome an employment: for my mother very judiciously
+considered, that I was not likely to grow politer in his company, and
+suffered me not to pass any more time in his apartment than my lesson
+required. When I was summoned to my task, she enjoined me not to get any
+of my tutor's ways, who was seldom mentioned before me but for practices
+to be avoided. I was every moment admonished not to lean on my chair,
+cross my legs, or swing my hands like my tutor; and once my mother very
+seriously deliberated upon his total dismission, because I began, she
+said, to learn his manner of sticking on my hat, and had his bend in my
+shoulders, and his totter in my gait.
+
+Such, however, was her care, that I escaped all these depravities; and
+when I was only twelve years old, had rid myself of every appearance of
+childish diffidence. I was celebrated round the country for the
+petulance of my remarks, and the quickness of my replies; and many a
+scholar, five years older than myself, have I dashed into confusion by
+the steadiness of my countenance, silenced by my readiness of repartee,
+and tortured with envy by the address with which I picked up a fan,
+presented a snuff-box, or received an empty tea-cup.
+
+At fourteen I was completely skilled in all the niceties of dress, and I
+could not only enumerate all the variety of silks, and distinguish the
+product of a French loom, but dart my eye through a numerous company,
+and observe every deviation from the reigning mode. I was universally
+skilful in all the changes of expensive finery; but as every one, they
+say, has something to which he is particularly born, was eminently
+knowing in Brussels' lace.
+
+The next year saw me advanced to the trust and power of adjusting the
+ceremonial of an assembly. All received their partners from my hand, and
+to me every stranger applied for introduction. My heart now disdained
+the instructions of a tutor, who was rewarded with a small annuity for
+life, and left me qualified, in my own opinion, to govern myself.
+
+In a short time I came to London, and as my father was well known among
+the higher classes of life, soon obtained admission to the most splendid
+assemblies and most crowded card-tables. Here I found myself universally
+caressed and applauded; the ladies praised the fancy of my clothes, the
+beauty of my form, and the softness of my voice; endeavoured in every
+place to force themselves to my notice; and invited, by a thousand
+oblique solicitations, my attendance to the playhouse, and my
+salutations in the park. I was now happy to the utmost extent of my
+conception; I passed every morning in dress, every afternoon in visits,
+and every night in some select assemblies, where neither care nor
+knowledge were suffered to molest us.
+
+After a few years, however, these delights became familiar, and I had
+leisure to look round me with more attention. I then found that my
+flatterers had very little power to relieve the languor of satiety, or
+recreate weariness, by varied amusement; and therefore endeavoured to
+enlarge the sphere of my pleasures, and to try what satisfaction might
+be found in the society of men. I will not deny the mortification with
+which I perceived, that every man whose name I had heard mentioned with
+respect, received me with a kind of tenderness, nearly bordering on
+compassion; and that those whose reputation was not well established,
+thought it necessary to justify their understandings, by treating me
+with contempt. One of these witlings elevated his crest, by asking me in
+a full coffee-house the price of patches; and another whispered that he
+wondered why Miss Frisk did not keep me that afternoon to watch her
+squirrel.
+
+When I found myself thus hunted from all masculine conversation by those
+who were themselves barely admitted, I returned to the ladies, and
+resolved to dedicate my life to their service and their pleasure. But I
+find that I have now lost my charms. Of those with whom I entered the
+gay world, some are married, some have retired, and some have so much
+changed their opinion, that they scarcely pay any regard to my
+civilities, if there is any other man in the place. The new flight of
+beauties to whom I have made my addresses, suffer me to pay the treat,
+and then titter with boys. So that I now find myself welcome only to a
+few grave ladies, who, unacquainted with all that gives either use or
+dignity to life, are content to pass their hours between their bed and
+their cards, without esteem from the old, or reverence from the young.
+
+I cannot but think, Mr. Rambler, that I have reason to complain; for
+surely the females ought to pay some regard to the age of him whose
+youth was passed in endeavours to please them. They that encourage folly
+in the boy, have no right to punish it in the man. Yet I find that,
+though they lavish their first fondness upon pertness and gaiety, they
+soon transfer their regard to other qualities, and ungratefully abandon
+their adorers to dream out their last years in stupidity and contempt.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+FLORENTULUS.
+
+
+
+No. 110. SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 1751
+
+ At nobis vitæ dominum quærentibus unum
+ Lux iter est, et clara dies, et gratia simplex.
+ Spem sequimur, gradimurque fide, fruimurque futuris,
+ Ad quæ non veniunt præsentis gaudia vitæ,
+ Nec currunt pariter capta, et capienda voluptus.
+ PRUDENTIUS, Cont. Sym. ii. 904.
+
+ We through this maze of life one Lord obey;
+ Whose light and grace unerring lead the way.
+ By hope and faith secure of future bliss,
+ Gladly the joys of present life we miss:
+ For baffled mortals still attempt in vain,
+ Present and future bliss at once to gain. F. LEWIS.
+
+That to please the Lord and Father of the universe, is the supreme
+interest of created and dependent beings, as it is easily proved, has
+been universally confessed; and since all rational agents are conscious
+of having neglected or violated the duties prescribed to them, the fear
+of being rejected, or punished by God, has always burdened the human
+mind. The expiation of crimes, and renovation of the forfeited hopes of
+divine favour, therefore constitute a large part of every religion.
+
+The various methods of propitiation and atonement which fear and folly
+have dictated, or artifice and interest tolerated in the different parts
+of the world, however they may sometimes reproach or degrade humanity,
+at least shew the general consent of all ages and nations in their
+opinion of the placability of the divine nature. That God will forgive,
+may, indeed, be established as the first and fundamental truth of
+religion; for, though the knowledge of his existence is the origin of
+philosophy, yet, without the belief of his mercy, it would have little
+influence upon our moral conduct. There could be no prospect of enjoying
+the protection or regard of him, whom the least deviation from rectitude
+made inexorable for ever; and every man would naturally withdraw his
+thoughts from the contemplation of a Creator, whom he must consider as a
+governor too pure to be pleased, and too severe to be pacified; as an
+enemy infinitely wise, and infinitely powerful, whom he could neither
+deceive, escape, nor resist.
+
+Where there is no hope, there can be no endeavour. A constant and
+unfailing obedience is above the reach of terrestrial diligence; and
+therefore the progress of life could only have been the natural descent
+of negligent despair from crime to crime, had not the universal
+persuasion of forgiveness, to be obtained by proper means of
+reconciliation, recalled those to the paths of virtue, whom their
+passions had solicited aside; and animated to new attempts, and firmer
+perseverance, those whom difficulty had discouraged, or negligence
+surprised.
+
+In times and regions so disjoined from each other, that there can
+scarcely be imagined any communication of sentiments either by commerce
+or tradition, has prevailed a general and uniform expectation of
+propitiating God by corporal austerities, of anticipating his vengeance
+by voluntary inflictions, and appeasing his justice by a speedy and
+cheerful submission to a less penalty, when a greater is incurred.
+
+Incorporated minds will always feel some inclination towards exterior
+acts and ritual observances. Ideas not represented by sensible objects
+are fleeting, variable, and evanescent. We are not able to judge of the
+degree of conviction which operated at any particular time upon our own
+thoughts, but as it is recorded by some certain and definite effect. He
+that reviews his life in order to determine the probability of his
+acceptance with God, if he could once establish the necessary proportion
+between crimes and sufferings, might securely rest upon his performance
+of the expiation; but while safety remains the reward only of mental
+purity, he is always afraid lest he should decide too soon in his own
+favour; lest he should not have felt the pangs of true contrition; lest
+he should mistake satiety for detestation, or imagine that his passions
+are subdued when they are only sleeping.
+
+From this natural and reasonable diffidence arose, in humble and
+timorous piety, a disposition to confound penance with repentance, to
+repose on human determinations, and to receive from some judicial
+sentence the stated and regular assignment of reconciliatory pain. We
+are never willing to be without resource: we seek in the knowledge of
+others a succour for our own ignorance, and are ready to trust any that
+will undertake to direct us when we have no confidence in ourselves.
+
+This desire to ascertain by some outward marks the state of the soul,
+and this willingness to calm the conscience by some settled method, have
+produced, as they are diversified in their effects by various tempers
+and principles, most of the disquisitions and rules, the doubts and
+solutions, that have embarrassed the doctrine of repentance, and
+perplexed tender and flexible minds with innumerable scruples concerning
+the necessary measures of sorrow, and adequate degrees of
+self-abhorrence; and these rules, corrupted by fraud, or debased by
+credulity, have, by the common resiliency of the mind from one extreme
+to another, incited others to an open contempt of all subsidiary
+ordinances, all prudential caution, and the whole discipline of
+regulated piety.
+
+Repentance, however difficult to be practised, is, if it be explained
+without superstition, easily understood. _Repentance is the
+relinquishment of any practice, from the conviction that it has offended
+God_. Sorrow, and fear, and anxiety, are properly not parts, but
+adjuncts of repentance; yet they are too closely connected with it to be
+easily separated; for they not only mark its sincerity, but promote its
+efficacy.
+
+No man commits any act of negligence or obstinacy, by which his safety
+or happiness in this world is endangered, without feeling the pungency
+of remorse. He who is fully convinced, that he suffers by his own
+failure, can never forbear to trace back his miscarriage to its first
+cause, to image to himself a contrary behaviour, and to form involuntary
+resolutions against the like fault, even when he knows that he shall
+never again have the power of committing it. Danger, considered as
+imminent, naturally produces such trepidations of impatience as leave
+all human means of safety behind them; he that has once caught an alarm
+of terrour, is every moment seized with useless anxieties, adding one
+security to another, trembling with sudden doubts, and distracted by the
+perpetual occurrence of new expedients. If, therefore, he whose crimes
+have deprived him of the favour of God, can reflect upon his conduct
+without disturbance, or can at will banish the reflection; if he who
+considers himself as suspended over the abyss of eternal perdition only
+by the thread of life, which must soon part by its own weakness, and
+which the wing of every minute may divide, can cast his eyes round him
+without shuddering with horrour, or panting with security; what can he
+judge of himself, but that he is not yet awakened to sufficient
+conviction, since every loss is more lamented than the loss of the
+divine favour, and every danger more dreadful than the danger of final
+condemnation?
+
+Retirement from the cares and pleasures of the world has been often
+recommended as useful to repentance. This at least is evident, that
+every one retires, whenever ratiocination and recollection are required
+on other occasions; and surely the retrospect of life, the
+disentanglement of actions complicated with innumerable circumstances,
+and diffused in various relations, the discovery of the primary
+movements of the heart, and the extirpation of lusts and appetites
+deeply rooted and widely spread, may be allowed to demand some secession
+from sport and noise, business and folly. Some suspension of common
+affairs, some pause of temporal pain and pleasure, is doubtless
+necessary to him that deliberates for eternity, who is forming the only
+plan in which miscarriage cannot be repaired, and examining the only
+question in which mistake cannot be rectified.
+
+Austerities and mortifications are means by which the mind is
+invigorated and roused, by which the attractions of pleasure are
+interrupted, and the chains of sensuality are broken. It is observed by
+one of the fathers, that _he who restrains himself in the use of things
+lawful, will never encroach upon things forbidden_. Abstinence, if
+nothing more, is, at least, a cautious retreat from the utmost verge of
+permission, and confers that security which cannot be reasonably hoped
+by him that dares always to hover over the precipice of destruction, or
+delights to approach the pleasures which he knows it fatal to partake.
+Austerity is the proper antidote to indulgence; the diseases of mind as
+well as body are cured by contraries, and to contraries we should
+readily have recourse, if we dreaded guilt as we dread pain.
+
+The completion and sum of repentance is a change of life. That sorrow
+which dictates no caution, that fear which does not quicken our escape,
+that austerity which fails to rectify our affections, are vain and
+unavailing. But sorrow and terrour must naturally precede reformation;
+for what other cause can produce it? He, therefore, that feels himself
+alarmed by his conscience, anxious for the attainment of a better state,
+and afflicted by the memory of his past faults, may justly conclude,
+that the great work of repentance is begun, and hope by retirement and
+prayer, the natural and religious means of strengthening his conviction,
+to impress upon his mind such a sense of the divine presence, as may
+overpower the blandishments of secular delights, and enable him to
+advance from one degree of holiness to another, till death shall set him
+free from doubt and contest, misery and temptation[b].
+
+ What better can we do than prostrate fall
+ Before him reverent; and there confess
+ Humbly our faults, and pardon beg; with tears
+ Wat'ring the ground, and with our sighs the air
+ Frequenting, sent from hearts contrite, in sign
+ Of sorrow unfeign'd, and humiliation meek? Par. Lost. B. x. 1087.
+
+
+
+No. 111. TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: phronein gar hoi tacheis, ouk asphaleis.] SOPHOC.
+
+ Disaster always waits on early wit.
+
+It has been observed, by long experience, that late springs produce the
+greatest plenty. The delay of blooms and fragrance, of verdure and
+breezes, is for the most part liberally recompensed by the exuberance
+and fecundity of the ensuing seasons; the blossoms which lie concealed
+till the year is advanced, and the sun is high, escape those chilling
+blasts, and nocturnal frosts, which are often fatal to early luxuriance,
+prey upon the first smiles of vernal beauty, destroy the feeble
+principles of vegetable life, intercept the fruit in the gem, and beat
+down the flowers unopened to the ground.
+
+I am afraid there is little hope of persuading the young and sprightly
+part of my readers, upon whom the spring naturally forces my attention,
+to learn, from the great process of nature, the difference between
+diligence and hurry, between speed and precipitation; to prosecute their
+designs with calmness, to watch the concurrence of opportunity, and
+endeavour to find the lucky moment which they cannot make. Youth is the
+time of enterprize and hope: having yet no occasion of comparing our
+force with any opposing power, we naturally form presumptions in our own
+favour, and imagine that obstruction and impediment will give way before
+us. The first repulses rather inflame vehemence than teach prudence; a
+brave and generous mind is long before it suspects its own weakness, or
+submits to sap the difficulties which it expected to subdue by storm.
+Before disappointments have enforced the dictates of philosophy, we
+believe it in our power to shorten the interval between the first cause
+and the last effect; we laugh at the timorous delays of plodding
+industry, and fancy that, by increasing the fire, we can at pleasure
+accelerate the projection.
+
+At our entrance into the world, when health and vigour give us fair
+promises of time sufficient for the regular maturation of our schemes,
+and a long enjoyment of our acquisitions, we are eager to seize the
+present moment; we pluck every gratification within our reach, without
+suffering it to ripen into perfection, and crowd all the varieties of
+delight into a narrow compass; but age seldom fails to change our
+conduct; we grow negligent of time in proportion as we have less
+remaining, and suffer the last part of life to steal from us in languid
+preparations for future undertakings, or slow approaches to remote
+advantages, in weak hopes of some fortuitous occurrence, or drowsy
+equilibrations of undetermined counsel: whether it be that the aged,
+having tasted the pleasures of man's condition, and found them delusive,
+become less anxious for their attainment; or that frequent miscarriages
+have depressed them to despair, and frozen them to inactivity; or that
+death shocks them more as it advances upon them, and they are afraid to
+remind themselves of their decay, or to discover to their own hearts
+that the time of trifling is past. A perpetual conflict with natural
+desires seems to be the lot of our present state. In youth we require
+something of the tardiness and frigidity of age; and in age we must
+labour to recal the fire and impetuosity of youth; in youth we must
+learn to expect, and in age to enjoy.
+
+The torment of expectation is, indeed, not easily to be borne at a time
+when every idea of gratification fires the blood, and flashes on the
+fancy; when the heart is vacant to every fresh form of delight, and has
+no rival engagements to withdraw it from the importunities of a new
+desire. Yet, since the fear of missing what we seek must always be
+proportionable to the happiness expected from possessing it, the
+passions, even in this tempestuous state, might be somewhat moderated by
+frequent inculcation of the mischief of temerity, and the hazard of
+losing that which we endeavour to seize before our time.
+
+He that too early aspires to honours, must resolve to encounter not only
+the opposition of interest, but the malignity of envy. He that is too
+eager to be rich, generally endangers his fortune in wild adventures,
+and uncertain projects; and he that hastens too speedily to reputation,
+often raises his character by artifices and fallacies, decks himself in
+colours which quickly fade, or in plumes which accident may shake off,
+or competition pluck away.
+
+The danger of early eminence has been extended by some, even to the
+gifts of nature; and an opinion has been long conceived, that quickness
+of invention, accuracy of judgment, or extent of knowledge, appearing
+before the usual time, presage a short life. Even those who are less
+inclined to form general conclusions, from instances which by their own
+nature must be rare, have yet been inclined to prognosticate no suitable
+progress from the first sallies of rapid wits; but have observed, that
+after a short effort they either loiter or faint, and suffer themselves
+to be surpassed by the even and regular perseverance of slower
+understandings.
+
+It frequently happens, that applause abates diligence. Whoever finds
+himself to have performed more than was demanded, will be contented to
+spare the labour of unnecessary performances, and sit down to enjoy at
+ease his superfluities of honour. He whom success has made confident of
+his abilities, quickly claims the privilege of negligence, and looks
+contemptuously on the gradual advances of a rival, whom he imagines
+himself able to leave behind whenever he shall again summon his force to
+the contest. But long intervals of pleasure dissipate attention, and
+weaken constancy; nor is it easy for him that has sunk from diligence
+into sloth, to rouse out of his lethargy, to recollect his notions,
+rekindle his curiosity, and engage with his former ardour in the toils
+of study.
+
+Even that friendship which intends the reward of genius, too often tends
+to obstruct it. The pleasure of being caressed, distinguished, and
+admired, easily seduces the student from literary solitude. He is ready
+to follow the call which summons him to hear his own praise, and which,
+perhaps, at once flatters his appetite with certainty of pleasures, and
+his ambition with hopes of patronage; pleasures which he conceives
+inexhaustible, and hopes which he has not yet learned to distrust.
+
+These evils, indeed, are by no means to be imputed to nature, or
+considered as inseparable from an early display of uncommon abilities.
+They may be certainly escaped by prudence and resolution, and must
+therefore be recounted rather as consolations to those who are less
+liberally endowed, than as discouragements to such as are born with
+uncommon qualities. Beauty is well known to draw after it the
+persecutions of impertinence, to incite the artifices of envy, and to
+raise the flames of unlawful love; yet, among the ladies whom prudence
+or modesty have made most eminent, who has ever complained of the
+inconveniences of an amiable form? or would have purchased safety by the
+loss of charms?
+
+Neither grace of person, nor vigour of understanding, are to be regarded
+otherwise than as blessings, as means of happiness indulged by the
+Supreme Benefactor; but the advantages of either may be lost by too much
+eagerness to obtain them. A thousand beauties in their first blossom, by
+an imprudent exposure to the open world, have suddenly withered at the
+blast of infamy; and men who might have subjected new regions to the
+empire of learning, have been lured by the praise of their first
+productions from academical retirement, and wasted their days in vice
+and dependance. The virgin who too soon aspires to celebrity and
+conquest, perishes by childish vanity, ignorant credulity, or guiltless
+indiscretion. The genius who catches at laurels and preferment before
+his time, mocks the hopes that he had excited, and loses those years
+which might have been most usefully employed, the years of youth, of
+spirit, and vivacity.
+
+It is one of the innumerable absurdities of pride, that we are never
+more impatient of direction, than in that part of life when we need it
+most; we are in haste to meet enemies whom we have not strength to
+overcome, and to undertake tasks which we cannot perform: and as he that
+once miscarries does not easily persuade mankind to favour another
+attempt, an ineffectual struggle for fame is often followed by perpetual
+obscurity.
+
+[Footnote b: The perusal of these profound remarks on penance and
+repentance had so powerful an effect on one of the English Benedictine
+monks (The Rev. James Compton) at Paris, as to lead him from the errours
+of Popery! For an account of Dr. Johnson's true benevolence through the
+whole of this interesting occasion, see Malone's note to Boswell's Life
+of Johnson, vol. iv. p. 210--edit. 1822.]
+
+
+
+No. 112. SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 1751.
+
+ _In mea vesanas habui dispendia vires,
+ Et valui pænam fortis in ipse meain_. OVID, Am. Lib. i. vii. 25.
+
+ Of strength pernicious to myself I boast;
+ The pow'rs I have were given me to my cost. F. LEWIS.
+
+We are taught by Celsus, that health is best preserved by avoiding
+settled habits of life, and deviating sometimes into slight aberrations
+from the laws of medicine; by varying the proportions of food and
+exercise, interrupting the successions of rest and labour, and mingling
+hardships with indulgence. The body, long accustomed to stated
+quantities and uniform periods, is disordered by the smallest
+irregularity; and since we cannot adjust every day by the balance or
+barometer, it is fit sometimes to depart from rigid accuracy, that we
+may be able to comply with necessary affairs, or strong inclinations. He
+that too long observes nice punctualities, condemns himself to voluntary
+imbecility, and will not long escape the miseries of disease.
+
+The same laxity of regimen is equally necessary to intellectual health,
+and to a perpetual susceptibility of occasional pleasure. Long
+confinement to the same company which perhaps similitude of taste
+brought first together, quickly contracts the faculties, and makes a
+thousand things offensive that are in themselves indifferent; a man
+accustomed to hear only the echo of his own sentiments, soon bars all
+the common avenues of delight, and has no part in the general
+gratifications of mankind.
+
+In things which are not immediately subject to religious or moral
+consideration, it is dangerous to be too rigidly in the right.
+Sensibility may, by an incessant attention to elegance and propriety, be
+quickened to a tenderness inconsistent with the condition of humanity,
+irritable by the smallest asperity, and vulnerable by the gentlest
+touch. He that pleases himself too much with minute exactness, and
+submits to endure nothing in accommodations, attendance, or address,
+below the point of perfection, will, whenever he enters the crowd of
+life, be harassed with innumerable distresses, from which those who have
+not in the same manner increased their sensations find no disturbance.
+His exotick softness will shrink at the coarseness of vulgar felicity,
+like a plant transplanted to northern nurseries, from the dews and
+sunshine of the tropical regions.
+
+There will always be a wide interval between practical and ideal
+excellence; and, therefore, if we allow not ourselves to be satisfied
+while we can perceive any errour or defect, we must refer our hopes of
+ease to some other period of existence. It is well known, that, exposed
+to a microscope, the smoothest polish of the most solid bodies discovers
+cavities and prominences; and that the softest bloom of roseate
+virginity repels the eye with excrescences and discolorations. The
+perceptions as well as the senses may be improved to our own disquiet,
+and we may, by diligent cultivation of the powers of dislike, raise in
+time an artificial fastidiousness, which shall fill the imagination with
+phantoms of turpitude, shew us the naked skeleton of every delight, and
+present us only with the pains of pleasure, and the deformities of
+beauty.
+
+Peevishness, indeed, would perhaps very little disturb the peace of
+mankind, were it always the consequence of superfluous delicacy; for it
+is the privilege only of deep reflection, or lively fancy, to destroy
+happiness by art and refinement. But by continual indulgence of a
+particular humour, or by long enjoyment of undisputed superiority, the
+dull and thoughtless may likewise acquire the power of tormenting
+themselves and others, and become sufficiently ridiculous or hateful to
+those who are within sight of their conduct, or reach of their
+influence.
+
+They that have grown old in a single state are generally found to be
+morose, fretful, and captious; tenacious of their own practices and
+maxims; soon offended by contradiction or negligence; and impatient of
+any association, but with those that will watch their nod, and submit
+themselves to unlimited authority. Such is the effect of having lived
+without the necessity of consulting any inclination but their own.
+
+The irascibility of this class of tyrants is generally exerted upon
+petty provocations, such as are incident to understandings not far
+extended beyond the instincts of animal life; but, unhappily, he that
+fixes his attention on things always before him, will never have long
+cessations of anger. There are many veterans of luxury upon whom every
+noon brings a paroxysm of violence, fury, and execration; they never sit
+down to their dinner without finding the meat so injudiciously bought,
+or so unskilfully dressed, such blunders in the seasoning, or such
+improprieties in the sauce, as can scarcely be expiated without blood;
+and, in the transports of resentment, make very little distinction
+between guilt and innocence, but let fly their menaces, or growl out
+their discontent, upon all whom fortune exposes to the storm.
+
+It is not easy to imagine a more unhappy condition than that of
+dependance on a peevish man. In every other state of inferiority the
+certainty of pleasing is perpetually increased by a fuller knowledge of
+our duty; and kindness and confidence are strengthened by every new act
+of trust, and proof of fidelity. But peevishness sacrifices to a
+momentory offence the obsequiousness or usefulness of half a life, and,
+as more is performed, increases her exactions.
+
+Chrysalus gained a fortune by trade, and retired into the country; and,
+having a brother burthened by the number of his children, adopted one of
+his sons. The boy was dismissed with many prudent admonitions; informed
+of his father's inability to maintain him in his native rank; cautioned
+against all opposition to the opinions or precepts of his uncle; and
+animated to perseverance by the hopes of supporting the honour of the
+family, and overtopping his elder brother. He had a natural ductility of
+mind, without much warmth of affection, or elevation of sentiment; and
+therefore readily complied with every variety of caprice; patiently
+endured contradictory reproofs; heard false accusations without pain,
+and opprobrious reproaches without reply; laughed obstreperously at the
+ninetieth repetition of a joke; asked questions about the universal
+decay of trade; admired the strength of those heads by which the price
+of stocks is changed and adjusted; and behaved with such prudence and
+circumspection, that after six years the will was made, and Juvenculus
+was declared heir. But unhappily, a month afterwards, retiring at night
+from his uncle's chamber, he left the door open behind him: the old man
+tore his will, and being then perceptibly declining, for want of time to
+deliberate, left his money to a trading company.
+
+When female minds are embittered by age or solitude, their malignity is
+generally exerted in a rigorous and spiteful superintendance of domestic
+trifles. Eriphile has employed her eloquence for twenty years upon the
+degeneracy of servants, the nastiness of her house, the ruin of her
+furniture, the difficulty of preserving tapestry from the moths, and the
+carelessness of the sluts whom she employs in brushing it. It is her
+business every morning to visit all the rooms, in hopes of finding a
+chair without its cover, a window shut or open contrary to her orders, a
+spot on the hearth, or a feather on the floor, that the rest of the day
+may be justifiably spent in taunts of contempt, and vociferations of
+anger. She lives for no other purpose but to preserve the neatness of a
+house and gardens, and feels neither inclination to pleasure, nor
+aspiration after virtue, while she is engrossed by the great employment
+of keeping gravel from grass, and wainscot from dust. Of three amiable
+nieces she has declared herself an irreconcileable enemy; to one,
+because she broke off a tulip with her hoop; to another, because she
+spilt her coffee on a Turkey carpet; and to the third, because she let a
+wet dog run into the parlour. She has broken off her intercourse of
+visits, because company makes a house dirty; and resolves to confine
+herself more to her own affairs, and to live no longer in mire by
+foolish lenity.
+
+Peevishness is generally the vice of narrow minds, and, except when it
+is the effect of anguish and disease, by which the resolution is broken,
+and the mind made too feeble to bear the lightest addition to its
+miseries, proceeds from an unreasonable persuasion of the importance of
+trifles. The proper remedy against it is, to consider the dignity of
+human nature, and the folly of suffering perturbation and uneasiness
+from causes unworthy of our notice.
+
+He that resigns his peace to little casualties, and suffers the course
+of his life to be interrupted by fortuitous inadvertencies, or offences,
+delivers up himself to the direction of the wind, and loses all that
+constancy and equanimity which constitute the chief praise of a wise
+man.
+
+The province of prudence lies between the greatest things and the least;
+some surpass our power by their magnitude, and some escape our notice by
+their number and their frequency. But the indispensable business of life
+will afford sufficient exercise to every understanding; and such is the
+limitation of the human powers, that by attention to trifles we must let
+things of importance pass unobserved: when we examine a mite with a
+glass, we see nothing but a mite.
+
+That it is every man's interest to be pleased, will need little proof:
+that it is his interest to please others, experience will inform him. It
+is therefore not less necessary to happiness than to virtue, that he rid
+his mind of passions which make him uneasy to himself, and hateful to
+the world, which enchain his intellects, and obstruct his improvement.
+
+
+
+No. 113. TUESDAY, APRIL 16, 1751.
+
+ --_Uxorem, Postume, ducis?
+ Die, qua Tisiphone, quibus exagitere colubris?_ JUV. Sat. vi. 28.
+
+ A sober man like thee to change his life!
+ What fury would possess thee with a wife? DRYDEN.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I know not whether it is always a proof of innocence to treat censure
+with contempt. We owe so much reverence to the wisdom of mankind, as
+justly to wish, that our own opinion of our merit may be ratified by the
+concurrence of other suffrages; and since guilt and infamy must have the
+same effect upon intelligences unable to pierce beyond external
+appearance, and influenced often rather by example than precept, we are
+obliged to refute a false charge, lest we should countenance the crime
+which we have never committed. To turn away from an accusation with
+supercilious silence, is equally in the power of him that is hardened by
+villany, and inspirited by innocence. The wall of brass which Horace
+erects upon a clear conscience, may be sometimes raised by impudence or
+power; and we should always wish to preserve the dignity of virtue by
+adorning her with graces which wickedness cannot assume.
+
+For this reason I have determined no longer to endure, with either
+patient or sullen resignation, a reproach, which is, at least in my
+opinion, unjust; but will lay my case honestly before you, that you or
+your readers may at length decide it.
+
+Whether you will be able to preserve your boasted impartiality, when you
+hear that I am considered as an adversary by half the female world, you
+may surely pardon me for doubting, notwithstanding the veneration to
+which you may imagine yourself entitled by your age, your learning, your
+abstraction, or your virtue. Beauty, Mr. Rambler, has often overpowered
+the resolutions of the firm, and the reasonings of the wise, roused the
+old to sensibility, and subdued the rigorous to softness.
+
+I am one of those unhappy beings, who have been marked out as husbands
+for many different women, and deliberated a hundred times on the brink
+of matrimony. I have discussed all the nuptial preliminaries so often,
+that I can repeat the forms in which jointures are settled, pin-money
+secured, and provisions for younger children ascertained; but am at last
+doomed by general consent to everlasting solitude, and excluded by an
+irreversible decree from all hopes of connubial felicity. I am pointed
+out by every mother, as a man whose visits cannot be admitted without
+reproach; who raises hopes only to embitter disappointment, and makes
+offers only to seduce girls into a waste of that part of life, in which
+they might gain advantageous matches, and become mistresses and mothers.
+
+I hope you will think, that some part of this penal severity may justly
+be remitted, when I inform you, that I never yet professed love to a
+woman without sincere intentions of marriage; that I have never
+continued an appearance of intimacy from the hour that my inclination
+changed, but to preserve her whom I was leaving from the shock of
+abruptness, or the ignominy of contempt; that I always endeavoured to
+give the ladies an opportunity of seeming to discard me; and that I
+never forsook a mistress for larger fortune, or brighter beauty, but
+because I discovered some irregularity in her conduct, or some depravity
+in her mind; not because I was charmed by another, but because I was
+offended by herself.
+
+I was very early tired of that succession of amusements by which the
+thoughts of most young men are dissipated, and had not long glittered in
+the splendour of an ample patrimomy [Transcriber's note: sic] before I
+wished for the calm of domestick happiness. Youth is naturally delighted
+with sprightliness and ardour, and therefore I breathed out the sighs of
+my first affection at the feet of the gay, the sparkling, the vivacious
+Ferocula. I fancied to myself a perpetual source of happiness in wit
+never exhausted, and spirit never depressed; looked with veneration on
+her readiness of expedients, contempt of difficulty, assurance of
+address, and promptitude of reply; considered her as exempt by some
+prerogative of nature from the weakness and timidity of female minds;
+and congratulated myself upon a companion superior to all common
+troubles and embarrassments. I was, indeed, somewhat disturbed by the
+unshaken perseverance with which she enforced her demands of an
+unreasonable settlement; yet I should have consented to pass my life in
+union with her, had not my curiosity led me to a crowd gathered in the
+street, where I found Ferocula, in the presence of hundreds, disputing
+for six-pence with a chairman. I saw her in so little need of
+assistance, that it was no breach of the laws of chivalry to forbear
+interposition, and I spared myself the shame of owning her acquaintance.
+I forgot some point of ceremony at our next interview, and soon provoked
+her to forbid me her presence.
+
+My next attempt was upon a lady of great eminence for learning and
+philosophy. I had frequently observed the barrenness and uniformity of
+connubial conversation, and therefore thought highly of my own prudence
+and discernment, when I selected from a multitude of wealthy beauties,
+the deep-read Misothea, who declared herself the inexorable enemy of
+ignorant pertness, and puerile levity; and scarcely condescended to make
+tea, but for the linguist, the geometrician, the astronomer, or the
+poet. The queen of the Amazons was only to be gained by the hero who
+could conquer her in single combat; and Misothea's heart was only to
+bless the scholar who could overpower her by disputation. Amidst the
+fondest transports of courtship she could call for a definition of
+terms, and treated every argument with contempt that could not be
+reduced to regular syllogism. You may easily imagine, that I wished this
+courtship at an end; but when I desired her to shorten my torments, and
+fix the day of my felicity, we were led into a long conversation, in
+which Misothea endeavoured to demonstrate the folly of attributing
+choice and self-direction to any human being. It was not difficult to
+discover the danger of committing myself for ever to the arms of one who
+might at any time mistake the dictates of passion, or the calls of
+appetite, for the decree of fate; or consider cuckoldom as necessary to
+the general system, as a link in the everlasting chain of successive
+causes. I therefore told her, that destiny had ordained us to part, and
+that nothing should have torn me from her but the talons of necessity.
+
+I then solicited the regard of the calm, the prudent, the economical
+Sophronia, a lady who considered wit as dangerous, and learning as
+superfluous, and thought that the woman who kept her house clean, and
+her accounts exact, took receipts for every payment, and could find them
+at a sudden call, inquired nicely after the condition of the tenants,
+read the price of stocks once a-week, and purchased every thing at the
+best market, could want no accomplishments necessary to the happiness of
+a wise man. She discoursed with great solemnity on the care and
+vigilance which the superintendance of a family demands; observed how
+many were ruined by confidence in servants; and told me, that she never
+expected honesty but from a strong chest, and that the best storekeeper
+was the mistress's eye. Many such oracles of generosity she uttered, and
+made every day new improvements in her schemes for the regulations of
+her servants, and the distribution of her time. I was convinced that,
+whatever I might suffer from Sophronia, I should escape poverty; and we
+therefore proceeded to adjust the settlements according to her own rule,
+fair and softly. But one morning her maid came to me in tears to intreat
+my interest for a reconciliation with her mistress, who had turned her
+out at night for breaking six teeth in a tortoise-shell comb; she had
+attended her lady from a distant province, and having not lived long
+enough to save much money, was destitute among strangers, and, though of
+a good family, in danger of perishing in the streets, or of being
+compelled by hunger to prostitution. I made no scruple of promising to
+restore her; but upon my first application to Sophronia, was answered
+with an air which called for approbation, that if she neglected her own
+affairs, I might suspect her of neglecting mine; that the comb stood her
+in three half crowns; that no servant should wrong her twice; and that
+indeed she took the first opportunity of parting with Phillida, because,
+though she was honest, her constitution was bad, and she thought her
+very likely to fall sick. Of our conferrence I need not tell you the
+effect; it surely may be forgiven me, if on this occasion I forgot the
+decency of common forms.
+
+From two more ladies I was disengaged by finding, that they entertained
+my rivals at the same time, and determined their choice by the
+liberality of our settlements. Another, I thought myself justified in
+forsaking, because she gave my attorney a bribe to favour her in the
+bargain; another because I could never soften her to tenderness, till
+she heard that most of my family had died young; and another, because,
+to increase her fortune by expectations, she represented her sister as
+languishing and consumptive.
+
+I shall in another letter give the remaining part of my history of
+courtship. I presume that I should hitherto have injured the majesty of
+female virtue, had I not hoped to transfer my affection to higher merit.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+HYMENAEUS.
+
+
+
+No. 114. SATURDAY, APRIL 20, 1751.
+
+ --_Audi,
+ Nulla umquum de morte hominis cunctatio longa est._ JUV. Sat. vi. 220.
+
+ --When man's life is in debate,
+ The judge can ne'er too long deliberate. DRYDEN.
+
+Power and superiority are so flattering and delightful, that, fraught
+with temptation, and exposed to danger, as they are, scarcely any virtue
+is so cautious, or any prudence so timorous, as to decline them. Even
+those that have most reverence for the laws of right, are pleased with
+shewing that not fear, but choice, regulates their behaviour; and would
+be thought to comply, rather than obey. We love to overlook the
+boundaries which we do not wish to pass; and, as the Roman satirist
+remarks, he that has no design to take the life of another, is yet glad
+to have it in his hands.
+
+From the same principle, tending yet more to degeneracy and corruption,
+proceeds the desire of investing lawful authority with terrour, and
+governing by force rather than persuasion. Pride is unwilling to believe
+the necessity of assigning any other reason than her own will; and would
+rather maintain the most equitable claims by violence and penalties,
+than descend from the dignity of command to dispute and expostulation.
+
+It may, I think, be suspected, that this political arrogance has
+sometimes found its way into legislative assemblies, and mingled with
+deliberations upon property and life. A slight perusal of the laws by
+which the measures of vindictive and coercive justice are established,
+will discover so many disproportions between crimes and punishments,
+such capricious distinctions of guilt, and such confusion of remissness
+and severity, as can scarcely be believed to have been produced by
+publick wisdom, sincerely and calmly studious of publick happiness.
+
+The learned, the judicious, the pious Boerhaave relates, that he never
+saw a criminal dragged to execution without asking himself, "Who knows
+whether this man is not less culpable than me?" On the days when the
+prisons of this city are emptied into the grave, let every spectator of
+the dreadful procession put the same question to his own heart. Few
+among those that crowd in thousands to the legal massacre, and look with
+carelessness, perhaps with triumph, on the utmost exacerbations of human
+misery, would then be able to return without horrour and dejection. For,
+who can congratulate himself upon a life passed without some act more
+mischievous to the peace or prosperity of others, than the theft of a
+piece of money?
+
+It has been always the practice, when any particular species of robbery
+becomes prevalent and common, to endeavour its suppression by capital
+denunciations. Thus one generation of malefactors is commonly cut off,
+and their successors are frighted into new expedients; the art of
+thievery is augmented with greater variety of fraud, and subtilized to
+higher degrees of dexterity, and more occult methods of conveyance. The
+law then renews the pursuit in the heat of anger, and overtakes the
+offender again with death. By this practice capital inflictions are
+multiplied, and crimes, very different in their degrees of enormity, are
+equally subjected to the severest punishment that man has the power of
+exercising upon man.
+
+The lawgiver is undoubtedly allowed to estimate the malignity of an
+offence, not merely by the loss or pain which single acts may produce,
+but by the general alarm and anxiety arising from the fear of mischief,
+and insecurity of possession: he therefore exercises the right which
+societies are supposed to have over the lives of those that compose
+them, not simply to punish a transgression, but to maintain order, and
+preserve quiet; he enforces those laws with severity, that are most in
+danger of violation, as the commander of a garrison doubles the guard on
+that side which is threatened by the enemy.
+
+This method has been long tried, but tried with so little success, that
+rapine and violence are hourly increasing, yet few seem willing to
+despair of its efficacy; and of those who employ their speculations upon
+the present corruption of the people, some propose the introduction of
+more horrid, lingering, and terrifick punishments; some are inclined to
+accelerate the executions; some to discourage pardons; and all seem to
+think that lenity has given confidence to wickedness, and that we can
+only be rescued from the talons of robbery by inflexible rigour, and
+sanguinary justice.
+
+Yet, since the right of setting an uncertain and arbitrary value upon
+life has been disputed, and since experience of past times gives us
+little reason to hope that any reformation will be effected by a
+periodical havock of our fellow-beings, perhaps it will not be useless
+to consider what consequences might arise from relaxations of the law,
+and a more rational and equitable adaptation of penalties to offences.
+
+Death is, as one of the ancients observes, [Greek: to ton phoberon
+phoberotaton], _of dreadful things the most dreadful_: an evil, beyond
+which nothing can be threatened by sublunary power, or feared from human
+enmity or vengeance. This terrour should, therefore, be reserved as the
+last resort of authority, as the strongest and most operative of
+prohibitory sanctions, and placed before the treasure of life, to guard
+from invasion what cannot be restored. To equal robbery with murder is
+to reduce murder to robbery; to confound in common minds the gradations
+of iniquity, and incite the commission of a greater crime to prevent the
+detection of a less. If only murder were punished with death, very few
+robbers would stain their hands in blood; but when, by the last act of
+cruelty, no new danger is incurred, and greater security may be
+obtained, upon what principle shall we bid them forbear?
+
+It may be urged, that the sentence is often mitigated to simple robbery;
+but surely this is to confess that our laws are unreasonable in our own
+opinion; and, indeed, it may be observed, that all but murderers have,
+at their last hour, the common sensations of mankind pleading in their
+favour.
+
+From this conviction of the inequality of the punishment to the offence,
+proceeds the frequent solicitation of pardons. They who would rejoice at
+the correction of a thief, are yet shocked at the thought of destroying
+him. His crime shrinks to nothing, compared with his misery; and
+severity defeats itself by exciting pity.
+
+The gibbet, indeed, certainly disables those who die upon it from
+infesting the community; but their death seems not to contribute more to
+the reformation of their associates, than any other method of
+separation. A thief seldom passes much of his time in recollection or
+anticipation, but from robbery hastens to riot, and from riot to
+robbery; nor, when the grave closes on his companion, has any other care
+than to find another.
+
+The frequency of capital punishments, therefore, rarely hinders the
+commission of a crime, but naturally and commonly prevents its
+detection, and is, if we proceed only upon prudential principles,
+chiefly for that reason to be avoided. Whatever may be urged by casuists
+or politicians, the greater part of mankind, as they can never think
+that to pick the pocket and to pierce the heart is equally criminal,
+will scarcely believe that two malefactors so different in guilt can be
+justly doomed to the same punishment: nor is the necessity of submitting
+the conscience to human laws so plainly evinced, so clearly stated, or
+so generally allowed, but that the pious, the tender, and the just, will
+always scruple to concur with the community in an act which their
+private judgment cannot approve.
+
+He who knows not how often rigorous laws produce total impunity, and how
+many crimes are concealed and forgotten for fear of hurrying the
+offender to that state in which there is no repentance, has conversed
+very little with mankind. And whatever epithets of reproach or contempt
+this compassion may incur from those who confound cruelty with firmness,
+I know not whether any wise man would wish it less powerful, or less
+extensive.
+
+If those whom the wisdom of our laws has condemned to die, had been
+detected in their rudiments of robbery, they might, by proper discipline
+and useful labour, have been disentangled from their habits, they might
+have escaped all the temptation to subsequent crimes, and passed their
+days in reparation and penitence; and detected they might all have been,
+had the prosecutors been certain that their lives would have been
+spared. I believe, every thief will confess, that he has been more than
+once seized and dismissed; and that he has sometimes ventured upon
+capital crimes, because he knew, that those whom he injured would rather
+connive at his escape, than cloud their minds with the horrours of his
+death.
+
+All laws against wickedness are ineffectual, unless some will inform,
+and some will prosecute; but till we mitigate the penalties for mere
+violations of property, information will always be hated, and
+prosecution dreaded. The heart of a good man cannot but recoil at the
+thought of punishing a slight injury with death; especially when he
+remembers that the thief might have procured safety by another crime,
+from which he was restrained only by his remaining virtue.
+
+The obligations to assist the exercise of publick justice are indeed
+strong; but they will certainly be overpowered by tenderness for life.
+What is punished with severity contrary to our ideas of adequate
+retribution, will be seldom discovered; and multitudes will be suffered
+to advance from crime to crime, till they deserve death, because, if
+they had been sooner prosecuted, they would have suffered death before
+they deserved it.
+
+This scheme of invigorating the laws by relaxation, and extirpating
+wickedness by lenity, is so remote from common practice, that I might
+reasonably fear to expose it to the publick, could it be supported only
+by my own observations: I shall, therefore, by ascribing it to its
+author, Sir Thomas More, endeavour to procure it that attention, which I
+wish always paid to prudence, to justice, and to mercy.[c]
+
+
+
+No. 115. TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 1751.
+
+ _Quaedam parvu quidem; sed non toleranda maritis_. JUV. Sat vi. 184.
+
+ Some faults, though small, intolerable grow. DRYDEN.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I sit down, in pursuance of my late engagement, to recount the remaining
+part of the adventures that befel me in my long quest of conjugal
+felicity, which, though I have not yet been so happy as to obtain it, I
+have at least endeavoured to deserve by unwearied diligence, without
+suffering from repeated disappointments any abatement of my hope, or
+repression of my activity.
+
+You must have observed in the world a species of mortals who employ
+themselves in promoting matrimony, and without any visible motive of
+interest or vanity, without any discoverable impulse of malice or
+benevolence, without any reason, but that they want objects of attention
+and topicks of conversation, are incessantly busy in procuring wives and
+husbands. They fill the ears of every single man and woman with some
+convenient match; and when they are informed of your age and fortune,
+offer a partner for life with the same readiness, and the same
+indifference, as a salesman, when he has taken measure by his eye, fits
+his customer with a coat.
+
+It might be expected that they should soon be discouraged from this
+officious interposition by resentment or contempt; and that every man
+should determine the choice on which so much of his happiness must
+depend, by his own judgment and observation: yet it happens, that as
+these proposals are generally made with a shew of kindness, they seldom
+provoke anger, but are at worst heard with patience, and forgotten. They
+influence weak minds to approbation; for many are sure to find in a new
+acquaintance, whatever qualities report has taught them to expect; and
+in more powerful and active understandings they excite curiosity, and
+sometimes, by a lucky chance, bring persons of similar tempers within
+the attraction of each other.
+
+I was known to possess a fortune, and to want a wife; and therefore was
+frequently attended by these hymeneal solicitors, with whose importunity
+I was sometimes diverted, and sometimes perplexed; for they contended
+for me as vultures for a carcase; each employing all his eloquence, and
+all his artifices, to enforce and promote his own scheme, from the
+success of which he was to receive no other advantage than the pleasure
+of defeating others equally eager, and equally industrious.
+
+An invitation to sup with one of those busy friends, made me, by a
+concerted chance, acquainted with Camilla, by whom it was expected that
+I should be suddenly and irresistibly enslaved. The lady, whom the same
+kindness had brought without her own concurrence into the lists of love,
+seemed to think me at least worthy of the honour of captivity; and
+exerted the power, both of her eyes and wit, with so much art and
+spirit, that though I had been too often deceived by appearances to
+devote myself irrevocably at the first interview, yet I could not
+suppress some raptures of admiration, and flutters of desire. I was
+easily persuaded to make nearer approaches; but soon discovered, that an
+union with Camilla was not much to be wished. Camilla professed a
+boundless contempt for the folly, levity, ignorance, and impertinence of
+her own sex; and very frequently expressed her wonder that men of
+learning or experience could submit to trifle away life with beings
+incapable of solid thought. In mixed companies, she always associated
+with the men, and declared her satisfaction when the ladies retired. If
+any short excursion into the country was proposed, she commonly insisted
+upon the exclusion of women from the party; because, where they were
+admitted, the time was wasted in frothy compliments, weak indulgences,
+and idle ceremonies. To shew the greatness of her mind, she avoided all
+compliance with the fashion; and to boast the profundity of her
+knowledge, mistook the various textures of silk, confounded tabbies with
+damasks, and sent for ribands by wrong names. She despised the commerce
+of stated visits, a farce of empty form without instruction; and
+congratulated herself, that she never learned to write message cards.
+She often applauded the noble sentiment of Plato, who rejoiced that he
+was born a man rather than a woman; proclaimed her approbation of
+Swift's opinion, that women are only a higher species of monkeys; and
+confessed, that when she considered the behaviour, or heard the
+conversation, of her sex, she could not but forgive the Turks for
+suspecting them to want souls.
+
+It was the joy and pride of Camilla to have provoked, by this insolence,
+all the rage of hatred, and all the persecutions of calumny; nor was she
+ever more elevated with her own superiority, than when she talked of
+female anger, and female cunning. Well, says she, has nature provided
+that such virulence should be disabled by folly, and such cruelty be
+restrained by impotence.
+
+Camilla doubtless expected, that what she lost on one side, she should
+gain on the other; and imagined that every male heart would be open to a
+lady, who made such generous advances to the borders of virility. But
+man, ungrateful man, instead of springing forward to meet her, shrunk
+back at her approach. She was persecuted by the ladies as a deserter,
+and at best received by the men only as a fugitive. I, for my part,
+amused myself awhile with her fopperies, but novelty soon gave way to
+detestation, for nothing out of the common order of nature can be long
+borne. I had no inclination to a wife who had the ruggedness of a man
+without his force, and the ignorance of a woman without her softness;
+nor could I think my quiet and honour to be entrusted to such audacious
+virtue as was hourly courting danger, and soliciting assault.
+
+My next mistress was Nitella, a lady of gentle mien, and soft voice,
+always speaking to approve, and ready to receive direction from those
+with whom chance had brought her into company. In Nitella I promised
+myself an easy friend, with whom I might loiter away the day without
+disturbance or altercation. I therefore soon resolved to address her,
+but was discouraged from prosecuting my courtship, by observing, that
+her apartments were superstitiously regular; and that, unless she had
+notice of my visit, she was never to be seen. There is a kind of anxious
+cleanliness which I have always noted as the characteristick of a
+slattern; it is the superfluous scrupulosity of guilt, dreading
+discovery, and shunning suspicion: it is the violence of an effort
+against habit, which, being impelled by external motives, cannot stop at
+the middle point.
+
+Nitella was always tricked out rather with nicety than elegance; and
+seldom could forbear to discover, by her uneasiness and constraint, that
+her attention was burdened, and her imagination engrossed: I therefore
+concluded, that being only occasionally and ambitiously dressed, she was
+not familiarized to her own ornaments. There are so many competitors for
+the fame of cleanliness, that it is not hard to gain information of
+those that fail, from those that desire to excel: I quickly found that
+Nitella passed her time between finery and dirt; and was always in a
+wrapper, night-cap, and slippers, when she was not decorated for
+immediate show.
+
+I was then led by my evil destiny to Charybdis, who never neglected an
+opportunity of seizing a new prey when it came within her reach. I
+thought myself quickly made happy by permission to attend her to publick
+places; and pleased my own vanity with imagining the envy which I should
+raise in a thousand hearts, by appearing as the acknowledged favourite
+of Charybdis. She soon after hinted her intention to take a ramble for a
+fortnight, into a part of the kingdom which she had never seen. I
+solicited the happiness of accompanying her, which, after a short
+reluctance, was indulged me. She had no other curiosity on her journey,
+than after all possible means of expense; and was every moment taking
+occasion to mention some delicacy, which I knew it my duty upon such
+notices to procure.
+
+After our return, being now more familiar, she told me, whenever we met,
+of some new diversion; at night she had notice of a charming company
+that would breakfast in the gardens; and in the morning had been
+informed of some new song in the opera, some new dress at the playhouse,
+or some performer at a concert whom she longed to hear. Her intelligence
+was such, that there never was a show, to which she did not summon me on
+the second day; and as she hated a crowd, and could not go alone, I was
+obliged to attend at some intermediate hour, and pay the price of a
+whole company. When we passed the streets, she was often charmed with
+some trinket in the toy-shops; and from moderate desires of seals and
+snuff-boxes, rose, by degrees, to gold and diamonds. I now began to find
+the smile of Charybdis too costly for a private purse, and added one
+more to six and forty lovers, whose fortune and patience her rapacity
+had exhausted.
+
+Imperia then took possession of my affections; but kept them only for a
+short time. She had newly inherited a large fortune, and having spent
+the early part of her life in the perusal of romances, brought with her
+into the gay world all the pride of Cleopatra; expected nothing less
+than vows, altars, and sacrifices; and thought her charms dishonoured,
+and her power infringed, by the softest opposition to her sentiments, or
+the smallest transgression of her commands. Time might indeed cure this
+species of pride in a mind not naturally undiscerning, and vitiated only
+by false representations; but the operations of time are slow; and I
+therefore left her to grow wise at leisure, or to continue in errour at
+her own expense.
+
+Thus I have hitherto, in spite of myself, passed my life in frozen
+celibacy. My friends, indeed, often tell me, that I flatter my
+imagination with higher hopes than human nature can gratify; that I
+dress up an ideal charmer in all the radiance of perfection, and then
+enter the world to look for the same excellence in corporeal beauty. But
+surely, Mr. Rambler, it is not madness to hope for some terrestrial lady
+unstained by the spots which I have been describing; at least I am
+resolved to pursue my search; for I am so far from thinking meanly of
+marriage, that I believe it able to afford the highest happiness decreed
+to our present state; and if, after all these miscarriages, I find a
+woman that fills up my expectation, you shall hear once more from,
+
+Yours, &c.
+
+HYMENAEUS.
+
+[Footnote c: The arguments of the revered Sir Samuel Romilly on Criminal
+Law, have almost been anticipated in this luminous paper, which would
+have gained praise even for a legislator. On the correction of our
+English Criminal Code, see Mr. Buxton's speech in the House of Commons,
+1820. It is a fund of practical information, and, apart from its own
+merits, will repay perusal by the valuable collection of opinions which
+it contains on this momentous and interesting subject. ED.]
+
+
+
+No. 116. SATURDAY, APRIL 27, 1751.
+
+ _Optat ephippia bos piger: optat arare caballus_.
+ HOR. Lib. i. Ep. xiv. 43.
+
+ Thus the slow ox would gaudy trappings claim;
+ The sprightly horse would plough.--FRANCIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I was the second son of a country gentleman by the daughter of a wealthy
+citizen of London. My father having by his marriage freed the estate
+from a heavy mortgage, and paid his sisters their portions, thought
+himself discharged from all obligation to further thought, and entitled
+to spend the rest of his life in rural pleasures. He therefore spared
+nothing that might contribute to the completion of his felicity; he
+procured the best guns and horses that the kingdom could supply, paid
+large salaries to his groom and huntsman, and became the envy of the
+country for the discipline of his hounds. But, above all his other
+attainments, he was eminent for a breed of pointers and setting-dogs,
+which by long and vigilant cultivation he had so much improved, that not
+a partridge or heathcock could rest in security, and game of whatever
+species that dared to light upon his manor, was beaten down by his shot,
+or covered with his nets.
+
+My elder brother was very early initiated in the chace, and, at an age
+when other boys are _creeping like snails unwillingly to school_, he
+could wind the horn, beat the bushes, bound over hedges, and swim
+rivers. When the huntsman one day broke his leg, he supplied his place
+with equal abilities, and came home with the scut in his hat, amidst the
+acclamations of the whole village. I being either delicate or timorous,
+less desirous of honour, or less capable of sylvan heroism, was always
+the favourite of my mother; because I kept my coat clean, and my
+complexion free from freckles, and did not come home, like my brother,
+mired and tanned, nor carry corn in my hat to the horse, nor bring dirty
+curs into the parlour.
+
+My mother had not been taught to amuse herself with books, and being
+much inclined to despise the ignorance and barbarity of the country
+ladies, disdained to learn their sentiments or conversation, and had
+made no addition to the notions which she had brought from the precincts
+of Cornhill. She was, therefore, always recounting the glories of the
+city; enumerating the succession of mayors; celebrating the magnificence
+of the banquets at Guildhall; and relating the civilities paid her at
+the companies' feasts by men of whom some are now made aldermen, some
+have fined for sheriffs, and none are worth less than forty thousand
+pounds. She frequently displayed her father's greatness; told of the
+large bills which he had paid at sight; of the sums for which his word
+would pass upon the Exchange; the heaps of gold which he used on
+Saturday night to toss about with a shovel; the extent of his warehouse,
+and the strength of his doors; and when she relaxed her imagination with
+lower subjects, described the furniture of their country-house, or
+repeated the wit of the clerks and porters.
+
+By these narratives I was fired with the splendour and dignity of
+London, and of trade. I therefore devoted myself to a shop, and warmed
+my imagination from year to year with inquiries about the privileges of
+a freeman, the power of the common council, the dignity of a wholesale
+dealer, and the grandeur of mayoralty, to which my mother assured me
+that many had arrived who began the world with less than myself.
+
+I was very impatient to enter into a path, which led to such honour and
+felicity; but was forced for a time to endure some repression of my
+eagerness, for it was my grandfather's maxim, that a _young man seldom
+makes much money, who is out of his time before two-and-twenty_. They
+thought it necessary, therefore, to keep me at home till the proper age,
+without any other employment than that of learning merchants' accounts,
+and the art of regulating books; but at length the tedious days elapsed,
+I was transplanted to town, and, with great satisfaction to myself,
+bound to a haberdasher.
+
+My master, who had no conception of any virtue, merit, or dignity, but
+that of being rich, had all the good qualities which naturally arise
+from a close and unwearied attention to the main chance; his desire to
+gain wealth was so well tempered by the vanity of shewing it, that
+without any other principle of action, he lived in the esteem of the
+whole commercial world; and was always treated with respect by the only
+men whose good opinion he valued or solicited, those who were
+universally allowed to be richer than himself.
+
+By his instructions I learned in a few weeks to handle a yard with great
+dexterity, to wind tape neatly upon the ends of my fingers, and to make
+up parcels with exact frugality of paper and packthread; and soon caught
+from my fellow-apprentices the true grace of a counter-bow, the careless
+air with which a small pair of scales is to be held between the fingers,
+and the vigour and sprightliness with which the box, after the riband
+has been cut, is returned into its place. Having no desire of any higher
+employment, and therefore applying all my powers to the knowledge of my
+trade, I was quickly master of all that could be known, became a critick
+in small wares, contrived new variations of figures, and new mixtures of
+colours, and was sometimes consulted by the weavers when they projected
+fashions for the ensuing spring.
+
+With all these accomplishments, in the fourth year of my apprenticeship,
+I paid a visit to my friends in the country, where I expected to be
+received as a new ornament of the family, and consulted by the
+neighbouring gentlemen as a master of pecuniary knowledge, and by the
+ladies as an oracle of the mode. But, unhappily, at the first publick
+table to which I was invited, appeared a student of the Temple, and an
+officer of the guards, who looked upon me with a smile of contempt,
+which destroyed at once all my hopes of distinction, so that I durst
+hardly raise my eyes for fear of encountering their superiority of mien.
+Nor was my courage revived by any opportunities of displaying my
+knowledge; for the templar entertained the company for part of the day
+with historical narratives and political observations; and the colonel
+afterwards detailed the adventures of a birth-night, told the claims and
+expectations of the courtiers, and gave an account of assemblies,
+gardens, and diversions. I, indeed, essayed to fill up a pause in a
+parliamentary debate with a faint mention of trade and Spaniards; and
+once attempted, with some warmth, to correct a gross mistake about a
+silver breast-knot; but neither of my antagonists seemed to think a
+reply necessary; they resumed their discourse without emotion, and again
+engrossed the attention of the company; nor did one of the ladies appear
+desirous to know my opinion of her dress, or to hear how long the
+carnation shot with white, that was then new amongst them, had been
+antiquated in town.
+
+As I knew that neither of these gentlemen had more money than myself, I
+could not discover what had depressed me in their presence; nor why they
+were considered by others as more worthy of attention and respect; and
+therefore resolved, when we met again, to rouse my spirit, and force
+myself into notice. I went very early to the next weekly meeting, and
+was entertaining a small circle very successfully with a minute
+representation of my lord mayor's show, when the colonel entered
+careless and gay, sat down with a kind of unceremonious civility, and
+without appearing to intend any interruption, drew my audience away to
+the other part of the room, to which I had not the courage to follow
+them. Soon after came in the lawyer, not indeed with the same attraction
+of mien, but with greater powers of language: and by one or other the
+company was so happily amused, that I was neither heard nor seen, nor
+was able to give any other proof of my existence than that I put round
+the glass, and was in my turn permitted to name the toast.
+
+My mother, indeed, endeavoured to comfort me in my vexation, by telling
+me, that perhaps these showy talkers were hardly able to pay every one
+his own; that he who has money in his pocket need not care what any man
+says of him; that, if I minded my trade, the time will come when lawyers
+and soldiers would be glad to borrow out of my purse; and that it is
+fine, when a man can set his hands to his sides, and say he is worth
+forty thousand pounds every day of the year. These and many more such
+consolations and encouragements, I received from my good mother, which,
+however, did not much allay my uneasiness; for having by some accident
+heard, that the country ladies despised her as a cit, I had therefore no
+longer much reverence for her opinions, but considered her as one whose
+ignorance and prejudice had hurried me, though without ill intentions,
+into a state of meanness and ignominy, from which I could not find any
+possibility of rising to the rank which my ancestors had always held.
+
+I returned, however, to my master, and busied myself among thread, and
+silks, and laces, but without my former cheerfulness and alacrity. I had
+now no longer any felicity in contemplating the exact disposition of my
+powdered curls, the equal plaits of my ruffles, or the glossy blackness
+of my shoes; nor heard with my former elevation those compliments which
+ladies sometimes condescended to pay me upon my readiness in twisting a
+paper, or counting out the change. The term of Young Man, with which I
+was sometimes honoured, as I carried a parcel to the door of a coach,
+tortured my imagination; I grew negligent of my person, and sullen in my
+temper; often mistook the demands of the customers, treated their
+caprices and objections with contempt, and received and dismissed them
+with surly silence.
+
+My master was afraid lest the shop should suffer by this change of my
+behaviour; and, therefore, after some expostulations, posted me in the
+warehouse, and preserved me from the danger and reproach of desertion,
+to which my discontent would certainly have urged me, had I continued
+any longer behind the counter.
+
+In the sixth year of my servitude my brother died of drunken joy, for
+having run down a fox that had baffled all the packs in the province. I
+was now heir, and with the hearty consent of my master commenced
+gentleman. The adventures in which my new character engaged me shall be
+communicated in another letter, by, Sir,
+
+Yours, &c.
+
+MISOCAPELUS.
+
+
+
+No. 117. TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Hossan ep Oulumpo memasan Themen autar ep Ossae
+ Paelion einosiphullon, in ouranos ambatos eiae.] HOMER, Od.
+ [Greek: L] 314.
+
+ The gods they challenge, and affect the skies:
+ Heav'd on Olympus tott'ring Ossa stood;
+ On Ossa, Pelion nods with all his wood. POPE.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Nothing has more retarded the advancement of learning than the
+disposition of vulgar minds to ridicule and vilify what they cannot
+comprehend. All industry must be excited by hope; and as the student
+often proposes no other reward to himself than praise, he is easily
+discouraged by contempt and insult. He who brings with him into a
+clamorous multitude the timidity of recluse speculation, and has never
+hardened his front in publick life, or accustomed his passions to the
+vicissitudes and accidents, the triumphs and defeats of mixed
+conversation, will blush at the stare of petulant incredulity, and
+suffer himself to be driven by a burst of laughter, from the fortresses
+of demonstration. The mechanist will be afraid to assert before hardy
+contradiction, the possibility of tearing down bulwarks with a
+silk-worm's thread; and the astronomer of relating the rapidity of
+light, the distance of the fixed stars, and the height of the lunar
+mountains.
+
+If I could by any efforts have shaken off this cowardice, I had not
+sheltered myself under a borrowed name, nor applied to you for the means
+of communicating to the publick the theory of a garret; a subject which,
+except some slight and transient strictures, has been hitherto neglected
+by those who were best qualified to adorn it, either for want of leisure
+to prosecute the various researches in which a nice discussion must
+engage them, or because it requires such diversity of knowledge, and
+such extent of curiosity, as is scarcely to be found in any single
+intellect: or perhaps others foresaw the tumults which would be raised
+against them, and confined their knowledge to their own breasts, and
+abandoned prejudice and folly to the direction of chance.
+
+That the professors of literature generally reside in the highest
+stories, has been immemorially observed. The wisdom of the ancients was
+well acquainted with the intellectual advantages of an elevated
+situation: why else were the Muses stationed on Olympus or Parnassus, by
+those who could with equal right have raised them bowers in the vale of
+Tempe, or erected their altars among the flexures of Meander? Why was
+Jove himself nursed upon a mountain? or why did the goddesses, when the
+prize of beauty was contested, try the cause upon the top of Ida? Such
+were the fictions by which the great masters of the earlier ages
+endeavoured to inculcate to posterity the importance of a garret, which,
+though they had been long obscured by the negligence and ignorance of
+succeeding times, were well enforced by the celebrated symbol of
+Pythagoras, [Greek: anemon pneonton taen aecho proskunei]; "when the
+wind blows, worship its echo." This could not but be understood by his
+disciples as an inviolable injunction to live in a garret, which I have
+found frequently visited by the echo and the wind. Nor was the tradition
+wholly obliterated in the age of Augustus, for Tibullus evidently
+congratulates himself upon his garret, not without some allusion to the
+Pythagorean precept:
+
+ _Quam juvat immites ventos audire cubantem--
+ Aut, gelidas hibernus aquas quum fuderit Auster,
+ Securum somnos imbre juvante sequi_! Lib. i. El. i. 45.
+
+ How sweet in sleep to pass the careless hours,
+ Lull'd by the beating winds and dashing show'rs!
+
+And it is impossible not to discover the fondness of Lucretius, an
+earlier writer, for a garret, in his description of the lofty towers of
+serene learning, and of the pleasure with which a wise man looks down
+upon the confused and erratick state of the world moving below him:
+
+ _Sed nil dulcius est, bene quam munita tenere
+ Edita doctrina Sapientum templa serena;
+ Despicere unde queas alios, passimque videre
+ Errare, atque viam palanteis quaerere vitae_. Lib. ii. 7.
+
+ --'Tis sweet thy lab'ring steps to guide
+ To virtue's heights, with wisdom well supplied,
+ And all the magazines of learning fortified:
+ From thence to look below on human kind,
+ Bewilder'd in the maze of life, and blind. DRYDEN.
+
+The institution has, indeed, continued to our own time; the garret is
+still the usual receptacle of the philosopher and poet; but this, like
+many ancient customs, is perpetuated only by an accidental imitation,
+without knowledge of the original reason for which it was established.
+
+ _Causa latet; res est notissima_.
+
+ The cause is secret, but th' effect is known. ADDISON.
+
+Conjectures have, indeed, been advanced concerning these habitations of
+literature, but without much satisfaction to the judicious inquirer.
+Some have imagined, that the garret is generally chosen by the wits as
+most easily rented; and concluded that no man rejoices in his aerial
+abode, but on the days of payment. Others suspect, that a garret is
+chiefly convenient, as it is remoter than any other part of the house
+from the outer door, which is often observed to be infested by
+visitants, who talk incessantly of beer, or linen, or a coat, and repeat
+the same sounds every morning, and sometimes again in the afternoon,
+without any variation, except that they grow daily more importunate and
+clamorous, and raise their voices in time from mournful murmurs to
+raging vociferations. This eternal monotony is always detestable to a
+man whose chief pleasure is to enlarge his knowledge, and vary his
+ideas. Others talk of freedom from noise, and abstraction from common
+business or amusements; and some, yet more visionary, tell us, that the
+faculties are enlarged by open prospects, and that the fancy is at more
+liberty, when the eye ranges without confinement.
+
+These conveniences may perhaps all be found in a well-chosen garret; but
+surely they cannot be supposed sufficiently important to have operated
+unvariably upon different climates, distant ages, and separate nations.
+Of an universal practice, there must still be presumed an universal
+cause, which, however recondite and abstruse, may be perhaps reserved to
+make me illustrious by its discovery, and you by its promulgation.
+
+It is universally known that the faculties of the mind are invigorated
+or weakened by the state of the body, and that the body is in a great
+measure regulated by the various compressions of the ambient element.
+The effects of the air in the production or cure of corporeal maladies
+have been acknowledged from the time of Hippocrates; but no man has yet
+sufficiently considered how far it may influence the operations of the
+genius, though every day affords instances of local understanding, of
+wits and reasoners, whose faculties are adapted to some single spot, and
+who, when they are removed to any other place, sink at once into silence
+and stupidity. I have discovered, by a long series of observations, that
+invention and elocution suffer great impediments from dense and impure
+vapours, and that the tenuity of a defecated air at a proper distance
+from the surface of the earth, accelerates the fancy, and sets at
+liberty those intellectual powers which were before shackled by too
+strong attraction, and unable to expand themselves under the pressure of
+a gross atmosphere. I have found dulness to quicken into sentiment in a
+thin ether, as water, though not very hot, boils in a receiver partly
+exhausted; and heads, in appearance empty, have teemed with notions upon
+rising ground, as the flaccid sides of a football would have swelled out
+into stiffness and extension.
+
+For this reason I never think myself qualified to judge decisively of
+any man's faculties, whom I have only known in one degree of elevation;
+but take some opportunity of attending him from the cellar to the
+garret, and try upon him all the various degrees of rarefaction and
+condensation, tension and laxity. If he is neither vivacious aloft, nor
+serious below, I then consider him as hopeless; but as it seldom
+happens, that I do not find the temper to which the texture of his brain
+is fitted, I accommodate him in time with a tube of mercury, first
+marking the points most favourable to his intellects, according to rules
+which I have long studied, and which I may, perhaps, reveal to mankind
+in a complete treatise of barometrical pneumatology.
+
+Another cause of the gaiety and sprightliness of the dwellers in garrets
+is probably the increase of that vertiginous motion, with which we are
+carried round by the diurnal revolution of the earth. The power of
+agitation upon the spirits is well known; every man has felt his heart
+lightened in a rapid vehicle, or on a galloping horse; and nothing is
+plainer, than that he who towers to the fifth story, is whirled through
+more space by every circumrotation, than another that grovels upon the
+ground-floor. The nations between the topicks are known to be fiery,
+inconstant, inventive, and fanciful; because, living at the utmost
+length of the earth's diameter, they are carried about with more
+swiftness than those whom nature has placed nearer to the poles; and
+therefore, as it becomes a wise man to struggle with the inconveniencies
+of his country, whenever celerity and acuteness are requisite, we must
+actuate our languor by taking a few turns round the centre in a garret.
+
+If you imagine that I ascribe to air and motion effects which they
+cannot produce, I desire you to consult your own memory, and consider
+whether you have never known a man acquire reputation in his garret,
+which, when fortune or a patron had placed him upon the first floor, he
+was unable to maintain; and who never recovered his former vigour of
+understanding, till he was restored to his original situation. That a
+garret will make every man a wit, I am very far from supposing; I know
+there are some who would continue blockheads even on the summit of the
+Andes, or on the peak of Teneriffe. But let not any man be considered as
+unimprovable till this potent remedy has been tried; for perhaps he was
+formed to be great only in a garret, as the joiner of Aretaeus was
+rational in no other place but his own shop.
+
+I think a frequent removal to various distances from the centre, so
+necessary to a just estimate of intellectual abilities, and consequently
+of so great use in education, that if I hoped that the publick could be
+persuaded to so expensive an experiment, I would propose, that there
+should be a cavern dug, and a tower erected, like those which Bacon
+describes in Solomon's house, for the expansion and concentration of
+understanding, according to the exigence of different employments, or
+constitutions. Perhaps some that fume away in meditations upon time and
+space in the tower, might compose tables of interest at a certain depth;
+and he that upon level ground stagnates in silence, or creeps in
+narrative, might at the height of half a mile, ferment into merriment,
+sparkle with repartee, and froth with declamation.
+
+Addison observes, that we may find the heat of Virgil's climate, in some
+lines of his Georgick: so, when I read a composition, I immediately
+determine the height of the author's habitation. As an elaborate
+performance is commonly said to smell of the lamp, my commendation of a
+noble thought, a sprightly sally, or a bold figure, is to pronounce it
+fresh from the garret; an expression which would break from me upon the
+perusal of most of your papers, did I not believe, that you sometimes
+quit the garret, and ascend into the cock-loft.
+
+HYPERTATUS.
+
+
+
+No. 118. SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1751.
+
+ --Omnes illacrymabiles
+ Urgentur, ignotique longâ
+ Nocte. Hon. Lib. iv. Ode ix. 26.
+
+ In endless night they sleep, unwept, unknown. FRANCIS.
+
+Cicero has, with his usual elegance and magnificence of language,
+attempted, in his relation of the dream of Scipio, to depreciate those
+honours for which he himself appears to have panted with restless
+solicitude, by shewing within what narrow limits all that fame and
+celebrity which man can hope for from men is circumscribed.
+
+"You see," says Africanus, pointing at the earth, from the celestial
+regions, "that the globe assigned to the residence and habitation of
+human beings is of small dimensions: how then can you obtain from the
+praise of men, any glory worthy of a wish? Of this little world the
+inhabited parts are neither numerous nor wide; even the spots where men
+are to be found are broken by intervening deserts, and the nations are
+so separated as that nothing can be transmitted from one to another.
+With the people of the south, by whom the opposite part of the earth is
+possessed, you have no intercourse; and by how small a tract do you
+communicate with the countries of the north? The territory which you
+inhabit is no more than a scanty island, inclosed by a small body of
+water, to which you give the name of the great sea and the Atlantick
+ocean. And even in this known and frequented continent, what hope can
+you entertain, that your renown will pass the stream of Ganges, or the
+cliffs of Caucasus? or by whom will your name be uttered in the
+extremities of the north or south, towards the rising or the setting
+sun? So narrow is the space to which your fame can be propagated; and
+even there how long will it remain?"
+
+He then proceeds to assign natural causes why fame is not only narrow in
+its extent, but short in its duration; he observes the difference
+between the computation of time in earth and heaven, and declares, that
+according to the celestial chronology, no human honours can last a
+single year.
+
+Such are the objections by which Tully has made a shew of discouraging
+the pursuit of fame; objections which sufficiently discover his
+tenderness and regard for his darling phantom. Homer, when the plan of
+his poem made the death of Patroclus necessary, resolved, at least, that
+he should die with honour; and therefore brought down against him the
+patron god of Troy, and left to Hector only the mean task of giving the
+last blow to an enemy whom a divine hand had disabled from resistance.
+Thus Tully ennobles fame, which he professes to degrade, by opposing it
+to celestial happiness; he confines not its extent but by the boundaries
+of nature, nor contracts its duration but by representing it small in
+the estimation of superior beings. He still admits it the highest and
+noblest of terrestrial objects, and alleges little more against it, than
+that it is neither without end, nor without limits.
+
+What might be the effect of these observations conveyed in Ciceronian
+eloquence to Roman understandings, cannot be determined; but few of
+those who shall in the present age read my humble version will find
+themselves much depressed in their hopes, or retarded in their designs;
+for I am not inclined to believe, that they who among us pass their
+lives in the cultivation of knowledge, or acquisition of power, have
+very anxiously inquired what opinions prevail on the further banks of
+the Ganges, or invigorated any effort by the desire of spreading their
+renown among the clans of Caucasus. The hopes and fears of modern minds
+are content to range in a narrower compass; a single nation, and a few
+years, have generally sufficient amplitude to fill our imaginations.
+
+A little consideration will indeed teach us, that fame has other limits
+than mountains and oceans; and that he who places happiness in the
+frequent repetition of his name, may spend his life in propagating it,
+without any danger of weeping for new worlds, or necessity of passing
+the Atlantick sea.
+
+The numbers to whom any real and perceptible good or evil can be derived
+by the greatest power, or most active diligence, are inconsiderable; and
+where neither benefit nor mischief operate, the only motive to the
+mention or remembrance of others is curiosity; a passion, which, though
+in some degree universally associated to reason, is easily confined,
+overborne, or diverted from any particular object.
+
+Among the lower classes of mankind, there will be found very little
+desire of any other knowledge, than what may contribute immediately to
+the relief of some pressing uneasiness, or the attainment of some near
+advantage. The Turks are said to hear with wonder a proposal to walk
+out, only that they may walk back; and inquire why any man should labour
+for nothing: so those whose condition has always restrained them to the
+contemplation of their own necessities, and who have been accustomed to
+look forward only to a small distance, will scarcely understand, why
+nights and days should be spent in studies, which end in new studies,
+and which, according to Malherbe's observation, do not tend to lessen
+the price of bread; nor will the trader or manufacturer easily be
+persuaded, that much pleasure can arise from the mere knowledge of
+actions, performed in remote regions, or in distant times; or that any
+thing can deserve their inquiry, of which, [Greek: kleos oion akouomen,
+oide ti idmen], we can only hear the report, but which cannot influence
+our lives by any consequences.
+
+The truth is, that very few have leisure from indispensable business, to
+employ their thoughts upon narrative or characters; and among those to
+whom fortune has given the liberty of living more by their own choice,
+many create to themselves engagements, by the indulgence of some petty
+ambition, the admission of some insatiable desire, or the toleration of
+some predominant passion. The man whose whole wish is to accumulate
+money, has no other care than to collect interest, to estimate
+securities, and to engage for mortgages: the lover disdains to turn his
+ear to any other name than that of Corinna; and the courtier thinks the
+hour lost which is not spent in promoting his interest, and facilitating
+his advancement. The adventures of valour, and the discoveries of
+science, will find a cold reception, when they are obtruded upon an
+attention thus busy with its favourite amusement, and impatient of
+interruption or disturbance.
+
+But not only such employments as seduce attention by appearances of
+dignity, or promises of happiness, may restrain the mind from excursion
+and inquiry; curiosity may be equally destroyed by less formidable
+enemies; it may be dissipated in trifles, or congealed by indolence. The
+sportsman and the man of dress have their heads filled with a fox or a
+horse-race, a feather or a ball; and live in ignorance of every thing
+beside, with as much content as he that heaps up gold, or solicits
+preferment, digs the field, or beats the anvil; and some yet lower in
+the ranks of intellect, dream out their days without pleasure or
+business, without joy or sorrow, nor ever rouse from their lethargy to
+hear or think.
+
+Even of those who have dedicated themselves to knowledge, the far
+greater part have confined their curiosity to a few objects, and have
+very little inclination to promote any fame, but that which their own
+studies entitle them to partake. The naturalist has no desire to know
+the opinions or conjectures of the philologer: the botanist looks upon
+the astronomer as a being unworthy of his regard: the lawyer scarcely
+hears the name of a physician without contempt; and he that is growing
+great and happy by electrifying a bottle, wonders how the world can be
+engaged by trifling prattle about war or peace.
+
+If, therefore, he that imagines the world filled with his actions and
+praises, shall subduct from the number of his encomiasts, all those who
+are placed below the flight of fame, and who hear in the valleys of life
+no voice but that of necessity; all those who imagine themselves too
+important to regard him, and consider the mention of his name as an
+usurpation of their time; all who are too much or too little pleased
+with themselves, to attend to any thing external; all who are attracted
+by pleasure, or chained down by pain, to unvaried ideas; all who are
+withheld from attending his triumph by different pursuits; and all who
+slumber in universal negligence; he will find his renown straitened by
+nearer bounds than the rocks of Caucasus, and perceive that no man can
+be venerable or formidable, but to a small part of his fellow-creatures.
+
+That we may not languish in our endeavours after excellence, it is
+necessary, that, as Africanus counsels his descendant, "we raise our
+eyes to higher prospects, and contemplate our future and eternal state,
+without giving up our hearts to the praise of crowds, or fixing our
+hopes on such rewards as human power can bestow."
+
+
+
+No. 119. TUESDAY, MAY 7, 1751.
+
+ _Iliacos intra muros peccatur, et extra_. HOR. Lib. i. Ep. ii, 16.
+
+ Faults lay on either side the Trojan tow'rs. ELPHINSTON.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+As, notwithstanding all that wit, or malice, or pride, or prudence will
+be able to suggest, men and women must at last pass their lives
+together, I have never therefore thought those writers friends to human
+happiness, who endeavour to excite in either sex a general contempt or
+suspicion of the other. To persuade them who are entering the world, and
+looking abroad for a suitable associate, that all are equally vicious,
+or equally ridiculous; that they who trust are certainly betrayed, and
+they who esteem are always disappointed; is not to awaken judgment, but
+to inflame temerity. Without hope there can be no caution. Those who are
+convinced, that no reason for preference can be found, will never harass
+their thoughts with doubt and deliberation; they will resolve, since
+they are doomed to misery, that no needless anxiety shall disturb their
+quiet; they will plunge at hazard into the crowd, and snatch the first
+hand that shall be held toward them.
+
+That the world is over-run with vice, cannot be denied; but vice,
+however predominant, has not yet gained an unlimited dominion. Simple
+and unmingled good is not in our power, but we may generally escape a
+greater evil by suffering a less; and therefore, those who undertake to
+initiate the young and ignorant in the knowledge of life, should be
+careful to inculcate the possibility of virtue and happiness, and to
+encourage endeavours by prospects of success.
+
+You, perhaps, do not suspect, that these are the sentiments of one who
+has been subject for many years to all the hardships of antiquated
+virginity; has been long accustomed to the coldness of neglect, and the
+petulance of insult; has been mortified in full assemblies by inquiries
+after forgotten fashions, games long disused, and wits and beauties of
+ancient renown; has been invited, with malicious importunity, to the
+second wedding of many acquaintances; has been ridiculed by two
+generations of coquets in whispers intended to be heard; and been long
+considered by the airy and gay, as too venerable for familiarity, and
+too wise for pleasure. It is indeed natural for injury to provoke anger,
+and by continual repetition to produce an habitual asperity; yet I have
+hitherto struggled with so much vigilance against my pride and my
+resentment, that I have preserved my temper uncorrupted. I have not yet
+made it any part of my employment to collect sentences against marriage;
+nor am inclined to lessen the number of the few friends whom time has
+left me, by obstructing that happiness which I cannot partake, and
+venting my vexation in censures of the forwardness and indiscretion of
+girls, or the inconstancy, tastelessness, and perfidy of men.
+
+It is, indeed, not very difficult to bear that condition to which we are
+not condemned by necessity, but induced by observation and choice; and
+therefore I, perhaps, have never yet felt all the malignity with which a
+reproach, edged with the appellation of old maid, swells some of those
+hearts in which it is infixed. I was not condemned in my youth to
+solitude, either by indigence or deformity, nor passed the earlier part
+of life without the flattery of courtship, and the joys of triumph. I
+have danced the round of gaiety amidst the murmurs of envy, and
+gratulations of applause; been attended from pleasure to pleasure by the
+great, the sprightly, and the vain; and seen my regard solicited by the
+obsequiousness of gallantry, the gaiety of wit, and the timidity of
+love. If, therefore, I am yet a stranger to nuptial happiness, I suffer
+only the consequences of my own resolves, and can look back upon the
+succession of lovers, whose addresses I have rejected, without grief,
+and without malice.
+
+When my name first began to be inscribed upon glasses, I was honoured
+with the amorous professions of the gay Venustulus, a gentleman, who,
+being the only son of a wealthy family, had been educated in all the
+wantonness of expense, and softness of effeminacy. He was beautiful in
+his person, and easy in his address, and, therefore, soon gained upon my
+eye at an age when the sight is very little over-ruled by the
+understanding. He had not any power in himself of gladdening or amusing;
+but supplied his want of conversation by treats and diversions; and his
+chief art of courtship was to fill the mind of his mistress with
+parties, rambles, musick, and shows. We were often engaged in short
+excursions to gardens and seats, and I was for a while pleased with the
+care which Venustulus discovered in securing me from any appearance of
+danger, or possibility of mischance. He never failed to recommend
+caution to his coachman, or to promise the waterman a reward if he
+landed us safe; and always contrived to return by daylight, for fear of
+robbers. This extraordinary solicitude was represented for a time as the
+effect of his tenderness for me; but fear is too strong for continued
+hypocrisy. I soon discovered that Venustulus had the cowardice as well
+as elegance of a female. His imagination was perpetually clouded with
+terrours, and he could scarcely refrain from screams and outcries at any
+accidental surprise. He durst not enter a room if a rat was heard behind
+the wainscot, nor cross a field where the cattle were frisking in the
+sunshine; the least breeze that waved upon the river was a storm, and
+every clamour in the street was a cry of fire. I have seen him lose his
+colour when my squirrel had broke his chain; and was forced to throw
+water in his face on the sudden entrance of a black cat. Compassion once
+obliged me to drive away with my fan, a beetle that kept him in
+distress, and chide off a dog that yelped at his heels, to which he
+would gladly have given up me to facilitate his own escape. Women
+naturally expect defence and protection from a lover or a husband, and,
+therefore, you will not think me culpable in refusing a wretch, who
+would have burdened life with unnecessary fears, and flown to me for
+that succour which it was his duty to have given.
+
+My next lover was Fungoso, the son of a stockjobber, whose visits my
+friends, by the importunity of persuasion, prevailed upon me to allow.
+Fungoso was no very suitable companion; for having been bred in a
+counting-house, he spoke a language unintelligible in any other place.
+He had no desire of any reputation but that of an acute prognosticator
+of the changes in the funds; nor had any means of raising merriment, but
+by telling how somebody was overreached in a bargain by his father. He
+was, however, a youth of great sobriety and prudence, and frequently
+informed us how carefully he would improve my fortune. I was not in
+haste to conclude the match, but was so much awed by my parents, that I
+durst not dismiss him, and might, perhaps, have been doomed for ever to
+the grossness of pedlary, and the jargon of usury, had not a fraud been
+discovered in the settlement, which set me free from the persecution of
+grovelling pride, and pecuniary impudence. I was afterwards six months
+without any particular notice but at last became the idol of the
+glittering Flosculus, who prescribed the mode of embroidery to all the
+fops of his time, and varied at pleasure the cock of every hat, and the
+sleeve of every coat that appeared in fashionable assemblies. Flosculus
+made some impression upon my heart by a compliment which few ladies can
+hear without emotion; he commended my skill in dress, my judgment in
+suiting colours, and my art in disposing ornaments. But Flosculus was
+too much engaged by his own elegance, to be sufficiently attentive to
+the duties of a lover, or to please with varied praise an ear made
+delicate by riot of adulation. He expected to be repaid part of his
+tribute, and staid away three days, because I neglected to take notice
+of a new coat. I quickly found, that Flosculus was rather a rival than
+an admirer; and that we should probably live in a perpetual struggle of
+emulous finery, and spend our lives in stratagems to be first in the
+fashion.
+
+I had soon after the honour at a feast of attracting the eyes of
+Dentatus, one of those human beings whose only happiness is to dine.
+Dentatus regaled me with foreign varieties, told me of measures that he
+had laid for procuring the best cook in France, and entertained me with
+bills of fare, prescribed the arrangement of dishes, and taught me two
+sauces invented by himself. At length, such is the uncertainty of human
+happiness, I declared my opinion too hastily upon a pie made under his
+own direction; after which he grew so cold and negligent, that he was
+easily dismissed.
+
+Many other lovers, or pretended lovers, I have had the honour to lead
+awhile in triumph. But two of them I drove from me, by discovering that
+they had no taste or knowledge in musick; three I dismissed, because
+they were drunkards; two, because they paid their addresses at the same
+time to other ladies; and six, because they attempted to influence my
+choice by bribing my maid. Two more I discarded at the second visit for
+obscene allusions; and five for drollery on religion. In the latter part
+of my reign, I sentenced two to perpetual exile, for offering me
+settlements, by which the children of a former marriage would have been
+injured; four, for representing falsely the value of their estates;
+three for concealing their debts; and one, for raising the rent of a
+decrepit tenant.
+
+I have now sent you a narrative, which the ladies may oppose, to the
+tale of Hymenaeus. I mean not to depreciate the sex which has produced
+poets and philosophers, heroes and martyrs; but will not suffer the
+rising generation of beauties to be dejected by partial satire; or to
+imagine that those who censured them have not likewise their follies,
+and their vices. I do not yet believe happiness unattainable in
+marriage, though I have never yet been able to find a man, with whom I
+could prudently venture an inseparable union. It is necessary to expose
+faults, that their deformity may be seen; but the reproach ought not to
+be extended beyond the crime, nor either sex to be contemned, because
+some women, or men, are indelicate or dishonest.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+TRANQUILLA.
+
+
+
+No. 120. SATURDAY, MAY 11, 1751.
+
+ Redditum Cyri solio Phraaten.
+ Dissidens plebi, numero beatorum
+ Eiimit virtus, populumque falsis
+ Dedocet uti
+ Vocibus.--HOR. Lib. ii. Od. ii. 17.
+
+ True virtue can the crowd unteach
+ Their false mistaken forms of speech;
+ Virtue, to crowds a foe profest,
+ Disdains to number with the blest
+ Phraates, by his slaves ador'd,
+ And to the Parthian crown restor'd. FRANCIS.
+
+In the reign of Jenghiz Can, conqueror of the east, in the city of
+Samarcand, lived Nouradin the merchant, renowned throughout all the
+regions of India, for the extent of his commerce, and the integrity of
+his dealings. His warehouses were filled with all the commodities of the
+remotest nations; every rarity of nature, every curiosity of art,
+whatever was valuable, whatever was useful, hasted to his hand. The
+streets were crowded with his carriages; the sea was covered with his
+ships; the streams of Oxus were wearied with conveyance, and every
+breeze of the sky wafted wealth to Nouradin.
+
+At length Nouradin felt himself seized with a slow malady, which he
+first endeavoured to divert by application, and afterwards to relieve by
+luxury and indulgence; but finding his strength every day less, he was
+at last terrified, and called for help upon the sages of physick; they
+filled his apartments with alexipharmicks, restoratives, and essential
+virtues; the pearls of the ocean were dissolved, the spices of Arabia
+were distilled, and all the powers of nature were employed to give new
+spirits to his nerves, and new balsam to his blood. Nouradin was for
+some time amused with promises, invigorated with cordials, or soothed
+with anodynes; but the disease preyed upon his vitals, and he soon
+discovered with indignation, that health was not to be bought. He was
+confined to his chamber, deserted by his physicians, and rarely visited
+by his friends; but his unwillingness to die flattered him long with
+hopes of life.
+
+At length, having passed the night in tedious languor, he called to him
+Almamoulin, his only son, and dismissing his attendants, "My son," says
+he, "behold here the weakness and fragility of man; look backward a few
+days, thy father was great and happy, fresh as the vernal rose, and
+strong as the cedar of the mountain; the nations of Asia drank his dews,
+and art and commerce delighted in his shade. Malevolence beheld me, and
+sighed: 'His root,' she cried, 'is fixed in the depths; it is watered by
+the fountains of Oxus; it sends out branches afar, and bids defiance to
+the blast; prudence reclines against his trunk, and prosperity dances on
+his top.' Now, Almamoulin, look upon me withering and prostrate; look
+upon me, and attend. I have trafficked, I have prospered, I have rioted
+in gain; my house is splendid, my servants are numerous; yet I displayed
+only a small part of my riches; the rest, which I was hindered from
+enjoying by the fear of raising envy, or tempting rapacity, I have piled
+in towers, I have buried in caverns, I have hidden in secret
+repositories, which this scroll will discover. My purpose was, after ten
+months more spent in commerce, to have withdrawn my wealth to a safer
+country; to have given seven years to delight and festivity, and the
+remaining part of my days to solitude and repentance; but the hand of
+death is upon me; a frigorifick torpor encroaches upon my veins; I am
+now leaving the produce of my toil, which it must be thy business to
+enjoy with wisdom." The thought of leaving his wealth filled Nouradin
+with such grief, that he fell into convulsions, became delirious, and
+expired.
+
+Almamoulin, who loved his father, was touched a while with honest
+sorrow, and sat two hours in profound meditation, without perusing the
+paper which he held in his hand. He then retired to his own chamber, as
+overborne with affliction, and there read the inventory of his new
+possessions, which swelled his heart with such transports, that he no
+longer lamented his father's death. He was now sufficiently composed to
+order a funeral of modest magnificence, suitable at once to the rank of
+Nouradin's profession, and the reputation of his wealth. The two next
+nights he spent in visiting the tower and the caverns, and found the
+treasures greater to his eye than to his imagination.
+
+Almamoulin had been bred to the practice of exact frugality, and had
+often looked with envy on the finery and expenses of other young men: he
+therefore believed, that happiness was now in his power, since he could
+obtain all of which he had hitherto been accustomed to regret the want.
+He resolved to give a loose to his desires, to revel in enjoyment, and
+feel pain or uneasiness no more.
+
+He immediately procured a splendid equipage, dressed his servants in
+rich embroidery, and covered his horses with golden caparisons. He
+showered down silver on the populace, and suffered their acclamations to
+swell him with insolence. The nobles saw him with anger, the wise men of
+the state combined against him, the leaders of armies threatened his
+destruction. Almamoulin was informed of his danger: he put on the robe
+of mourning in the presence of his enemies, and appeased them with gold,
+and gems, and supplication.
+
+He then sought to strengthen himself by an alliance with the princes of
+Tartary, and offered the price of kingdoms for a wife of noble birth.
+His suit was generally rejected, and his presents refused; but the
+princess of Astracan once condescended to admit him to her presence. She
+received him, sitting on a throne, attired in the robe of royalty, and
+shining with the jewels of Golconda; command sparkled in her eyes, and
+dignity towered on her forehead. Almamoulin approached and trembled. She
+saw his confusion and disdained him: "How," says she, "dares the wretch
+hope my obedience, who thus shrinks at my glance? Retire, and enjoy thy
+riches in sordid ostentation; thou wast born to be wealthy, but never
+canst be great."
+
+He then contracted his desires to more private and domestick pleasures.
+He built palaces, he laid out gardens[d], he changed the face of the
+land, he transplanted forests, he levelled mountains, opened prospects
+into distant regions, poured fountains from the tops of turrets, and
+rolled rivers through new channels.
+
+These amusements pleased him for a time; but languor and weariness soon
+invaded him. His bowers lost their fragrance, and the waters murmured
+without notice. He purchased large tracts of land in distant provinces,
+adorned them with houses of pleasure, and diversified them with
+accommodations for different seasons. Change of place at first relieved
+his satiety, but all the novelties of situation were soon exhausted; he
+found his heart vacant, and his desires, for want of external objects,
+ravaging himself.
+
+He therefore returned to Samarcand, and set open his doors to those whom
+idleness sends out in search of pleasure. His tables were always covered
+with delicacies; wines of every vintage sparkled in his bowls, and his
+lamps scattered perfumes. The sound of the lute, and the voice of the
+singer, chased away sadness; every hour was crowded with pleasure; and
+the day ended and began with feasts and dances, and revelry and
+merriment. Almamoulin cried out, "I have at last found the use of
+riches; I am surrounded by companions, who view my greatness without
+envy; and I enjoy at once the raptures of popularity, and the safety of
+an obscure station. What trouble can he feel, whom all are studious to
+please, that they may be repaid with pleasure? What danger can he dread,
+to whom every man is a friend?"
+
+Such were the thoughts of Almamoulin, as he looked down from a gallery
+upon the gay assembly regaling at his expense; but, in the midst of this
+soliloquy, an officer of justice entered the house, and in the form of
+legal citation, summoned Almamoulin to appear before the emperor. The
+guests stood awhile aghast, then stole imperceptibly away, and he was
+led off without a single voice to witness his integrity. He now found
+one of his most frequent visitants accusing him of treason, in hopes of
+sharing his confiscation; yet, unpatronized and unsupported, he cleared
+himself by the openness of innocence, and the consistence of truth; he
+was dismissed with honour, and his accuser perished in prison.
+
+Almamoulin now perceived with how little reason he had hoped for justice
+or fidelity from those who live only to gratify their senses; and, being
+now weary with vain experiments upon life and fruitless researches after
+felicity, he had recourse to a sage, who, after spending his youth in
+travel and observation, had retired from all human cares, to a small
+habitation on the banks of Oxus, where he conversed only with such as
+solicited his counsel. "Brother," said the philosopher, "thou hast
+suffered thy reason to be deluded by idle hopes, and fallacious
+appearances. Having long looked with desire upon riches, thou hadst
+taught thyself to think them more valuable than nature designed them,
+and to expect from them, what experience has now taught thee, that they
+cannot give. That they do not confer wisdom, thou mayest be convinced,
+by considering at how dear a price they tempted thee, upon thy first
+entrance into the world, to purchase the empty sound of vulgar
+acclamation. That they cannot bestow fortitude or magnanimity, that man
+may be certain, who stood trembling at Astracan, before a being not
+naturally superior to himself. That they will not supply unexhausted
+pleasure, the recollection of forsaken palaces, and neglected gardens,
+will easily inform thee. That they rarely purchase friends, thou didst
+soon discover, when thou wert left to stand thy trial uncountenanced and
+alone. Yet think not riches useless; there are purposes to which a wise
+man may be delighted to apply them; they may, by a rational distribution
+to those who want them, ease the pains of helpless disease, still the
+throbs of restless anxiety, relieve innocence from oppression, and raise
+imbecility to cheerfulness and vigour. This they will enable thee to
+perform, and this will afford the only happiness ordained for our
+present state, the confidence of Divine favour, and the hope of future
+rewards."
+
+[Footnote d: See Vathek.]
+
+
+
+No. 121. TUESDAY, MAY 14, 1751.
+
+ O imitatores, servum pecus! Hor. Lib. i. Ep. xix. 19.
+
+ Away, ye imitators, servile herd! ELPHINSTON.
+
+I have been informed by a letter from one of the universities, that
+among the youth from whom the next swarm of reasoners is to learn
+philosophy, and the next flight of beauties to hear elegies and sonnets,
+there are many, who, instead of endeavouring by books and meditation to
+form their own opinions, content themselves with the secondary
+knowledge, which a convenient bench in a coffee-house can supply; and
+without any examination or distinction, adopt the criticisms and
+remarks, which happen to drop from those who have risen, by merit or
+fortune, to reputation and authority.
+
+These humble retailers of knowledge my correspondent stigmatises with
+the name of Echoes; and seems desirous that they should be made ashamed
+of lazy submission, and animated to attempts after new discoveries and
+original sentiments.
+
+It is very natural for young men to be vehement, acrimonious, and
+severe. For, as they seldom comprehend at once all the consequences of a
+position, or perceive the difficulties by which cooler and more
+experienced reasoners are restrained from confidence, they form their
+conclusions with great precipitance. Seeing nothing that can darken or
+embarrass the question, they expect to find their own opinion
+universally prevalent, and are inclined to impute uncertainty and
+hesitation to want of honesty, rather than of knowledge. I may, perhaps,
+therefore, be reproached by my lively correspondent, when it shall be
+found, that I have no inclination to persecute these collectors of
+fortuitous knowledge with the severity required; yet, as I am now too
+old to be much pained by hasty censure, I shall not be afraid of taking
+into protection those whom I think condemned without a sufficient
+knowledge of their cause.
+
+He that adopts the sentiments of another, whom he has reason to believe
+wiser than himself, is only to be blamed when he claims the honours
+which are not due but to the author, and endeavours to deceive the world
+into praise and veneration; for, to learn, is the proper business of
+youth; and whether we increase our knowledge by books or by
+conversation, we are equally indebted to foreign assistance.
+
+The greater part of students are not born with abilities to construct
+systems, or advance knowledge; nor can have any hope beyond that of
+becoming intelligent hearers in the schools of art, of being able to
+comprehend what others discover, and to remember what others teach. Even
+those to whom Providence hath allotted greater strength of
+understanding, can expect only to improve a single science. In every
+other part of learning, they must be content to follow opinions, which
+they are not able to examine; and, even in that which they claim as
+peculiarly their own, can seldom add more than some small particle of
+knowledge, to the hereditary stock devolved to them from ancient times,
+the collective labour of a thousand intellects.
+
+In science, which, being fixed and limited, admits of no other variety
+than such as arises from new methods of distribution, or new arts of
+illustration, the necessity of following the traces of our predecessors
+is indisputably evident; but there appears no reason, why imagination
+should be subject to the same restraint. It might be conceived, that of
+those who profess to forsake the narrow paths of truth, every one may
+deviate towards a different point, since, though rectitude is uniform
+and fixed, obliquity may be infinitely diversified. The roads of science
+are narrow, so that they who travel them, must either follow or meet one
+another; but in the boundless regions of possibility, which fiction
+claims for her dominion, there are surely a thousand recesses
+unexplored, a thousand flowers unplucked, a thousand fountains
+unexhausted, combinations of imagery yet unobserved, and races of ideal
+inhabitants not hitherto described.
+
+Yet, whatever hope may persuade, or reason evince, experience can boast
+of very few additions to ancient fable. The wars of Troy, and the
+travels of Ulysses, have furnished almost all succeeding poets with
+incidents, characters, and sentiments. The Romans are confessed to have
+attempted little more than to display in their own tongue the inventions
+of the Greeks. There is, in all their writings, such a perpetual
+recurrence of allusions to the tales of the fabulous age, that they must
+be confessed often to want that power of giving pleasure which novelty
+supplies; nor can we wonder that they excelled so much in the graces of
+diction, when we consider how rarely they were employed in search of new
+thoughts.
+
+The warmest admirers of the great Mantuan poet can extol him for little
+more than the skill with which he has, by making his hero both a
+traveller and a warrior, united the beauties of the Iliad and the
+Odyssey in one composition: yet his judgment was perhaps sometimes
+overborne by his avarice of the Homeric treasures; and, for fear of
+suffering a sparkling ornament to be lost, he has inserted it where it
+cannot shine with its original splendour.
+
+When Ulysses visited the infernal regions, he found among the heroes
+that perished at Troy, his competitor, Ajax, who, when the arms of
+Achilles were adjudged to Ulysses, died by his own hand in the madness
+of disappointment. He still appeared to resent, as on earth, his loss
+and disgrace, Ulysses endeavoured to pacify him with praises and
+submission; but Ajax walked away without reply. This passage has always
+been considered as eminently beautiful; because Ajax, the haughty chief,
+the unlettered soldier, of unshaken courage, of immovable constancy, but
+without the power of recommending his own virtues by eloquence, or
+enforcing his assertions by any other argument than the sword, had no
+way of making his anger known, but by gloomy sullenness and dumb
+ferocity. His hatred of a man whom he conceived to have defeated him
+only by volubility of tongue, was therefore naturally shewn by silence
+more contemptuous and piercing than any words that so rude an orator
+could have found, and by which he gave his enemy no opportunity of
+exerting the only power in which he was superior.
+
+When Æneas is sent by Virgil to the shades, he meets Dido the queen of
+Carthage, whom his perfidy had hurried to the grave; he accosts her with
+tenderness and excuses; but the lady turns away like Ajax in mute
+disdain. She turns away like Ajax; but she resembles him in none of
+those qualities which give either dignity or propriety to silence. She
+might, without any departure from the tenour of her conduct, have burst
+out like other injured women into clamour, reproach, and denunciation;
+but Virgil had his imagination full of Ajax, and therefore could not
+prevail on himself to teach Dido any other mode of resentment.
+
+If Virgil could be thus seduced by imitation, there will be little hope,
+that common wits should escape; and accordingly we find, that besides
+the universal and acknowledged practice of copying the ancients, there
+has prevailed in every age a particular species of fiction. At one time
+all truth was conveyed in allegory; at another, nothing was seen but in
+a vision; at one period all the poets followed sheep, and every event
+produced a pastoral; at another they busied themselves wholly in giving
+directions to a painter.
+
+It is indeed easy to conceive why any fashion should become popular, by
+which idleness is favoured, and imbecility assisted; but surely no man
+of genius can much applaud himself for repeating a tale with which the
+audience is already tired, and which could bring no honour to any but
+its inventor.
+
+There are, I think, two schemes of writing, on which the laborious wits
+of the present time employ their faculties. One is the adaptation of
+sense to all the rhymes which our language can supply to some word, that
+makes the burden of the stanza; but this, as it has been only used in a
+kind of amorous burlesque, can scarcely be censured with much acrimony.
+The other is the imitation of Spenser, which, by the influence of some
+men of learning and genius, seems likely to gain upon the age, and
+therefore deserves to be more attentively considered.
+
+To imitate the fictions and sentiments of Spenser can incur no reproach,
+for allegory is perhaps one of the most pleasing vehicles of
+instruction. But I am very far from extending the same respect to his
+diction or his stanza. His style was in his own time allowed to be
+vicious, so darkened with old words and peculiarities of phrase, and so
+remote from common use, that Jonson boldly pronounces him _to have
+written no language_. His stanza is at once difficult and unpleasing;
+tiresome to the ear by its uniformity, and to the attention by its
+length. It was at first formed in imitation of the Italian poets,
+without due regard to the genius of our language. The Italians have
+little variety of termination, and were forced to contrive such a stanza
+as might admit the greatest number of similar rhymes; but our words end
+with so much diversity, that it is seldom convenient for us to bring
+more than two of the same sound together. If it be justly observed by
+Milton, that rhyme obliges poets to express their thoughts in improper
+terms, these improprieties must always be multiplied, as the difficulty
+of rhyme is increased by long concatenations.
+
+The imitators of Spenser are indeed not very rigid censors of
+themselves, for they seem to conclude, that when they have disfigured
+their lines with a few obsolete syllables, they have accomplished their
+design, without considering that they ought not only to admit old words,
+but to avoid new. The laws of imitation are broken by every word
+introduced since the time of Spenser, as the character of Hector is
+violated by quoting Aristotle in the play. It would, indeed, be
+difficult to exclude from a long poem all modern phrases, though it is
+easy to sprinkle it with gleanings of antiquity. Perhaps, however, the
+style of Spenser might by long labour be justly copied; but life is
+surely given us for higher purposes than to gather what our ancestors
+have wisely thrown away, and to learn what is of no value, but because
+it has been forgotten.
+
+
+
+No. 122. SATURDAY, MAY 18, 1751.
+
+ Nescio qua natale solum dulcedine captos
+ Ducit. OVID, Ex Pon. Lib. i. Ep. iii. 35.
+
+ By secret charms our native land attracts.
+
+Nothing is more subject to mistake and disappointment than anticipated
+judgment concerning the easiness or difficulty of any undertaking,
+whether we form our opinion from the performances of others, or from
+abstracted contemplation of the thing to be attempted.
+
+Whatever is done skilfully appears to be done with ease; and art, when
+it is once matured to habit, vanishes from observation. We are therefore
+more powerfully excited to emulation, by those who have attained the
+highest degree of excellence, and whom we can therefore with least
+reason hope to equal.
+
+In adjusting the probability of success by a previous consideration of
+the undertaking, we are equally in danger of deceiving ourselves. It is
+never easy, nor often possible, to comprise the series of any process
+with all its circumstances, incidents, and variations, in a speculative
+scheme. Experience soon shows us the tortuosities of imaginary
+rectitude, the complications of simplicity, and the asperities of
+smoothness. Sudden difficulties often start up from the ambushes of art,
+stop the career of activity, repress the gaiety of confidence, and when
+we imagine ourselves almost at the end of our labours, drive us back to
+new plans and different measures.
+
+There are many things which we every day see others unable to perform,
+and perhaps have even ourselves miscarried in attempting; and yet can
+hardly allow to be difficult; nor can we forbear to wonder afresh at
+every new failure, or to promise certainty of success to our next essay;
+but when we try, the same hindrances recur, the same inability is
+perceived, and the vexation of disappointment must again be suffered.
+
+Of the various kinds of speaking or writing, which serve necessity, or
+promote pleasure, none appears so artless or easy as simple narration;
+for what should make him that knows the whole order and progress of an
+affair unable to relate it? Yet we hourly find such as endeavour to
+entertain or instruct us by recitals, clouding the facts which they
+intend to illustrate, and losing themselves and their auditors in wilds
+and mazes, in digression and confusion. When we have congratulated
+ourselves upon a new opportunity of inquiry, and new means of
+information, it often happens, that without designing either deceit or
+concealment, without ignorance of the fact, or unwillingness to disclose
+it, the relator fills the ear with empty sounds, harasses the attention
+with fruitless impatience, and disturbs the imagination by a tumult of
+events, without order of time, or train of consequence.
+
+It is natural to believe, upon the same principle, that no writer has a
+more easy task than the historian. The philosopher has the works of
+omniscience to examine; and is therefore engaged in disquisitions, to
+which finite intellects are utterly unequal. The poet trusts to his
+invention, and is not only in danger of those inconsistencies, to which
+every one is exposed by departure from truth; but may be censured as
+well for deficiencies of matter, as for irregularity of disposition, or
+impropriety of ornament. But the happy historian has no other labour
+than of gathering what tradition pours down before him, or records
+treasure for his use. He has only the actions and designs of men like
+himself to conceive and to relate; he is not to form, but copy
+characters, and therefore is not blamed for the inconsistency of
+statesmen, the injustice of tyrants, or the cowardice of commanders. The
+difficulty of making variety consistent, or uniting probability with
+surprise, needs not to disturb him; the manners and actions of his
+personages are already fixed; his materials are provided and put into
+his hands, and he is at leisure to employ all his powers in arranging
+and displaying them.
+
+Yet, even with these advantages, very few in any age have been able to
+raise themselves to reputation by writing histories; and among the
+innumerable authors, who fill every nation with accounts of their
+ancestors, or undertake to transmit to futurity the events of their own
+time, the greater part, when fashion and novelty have ceased to
+recommend them, are of no other use than chronological memorials, which
+necessity may sometimes require to be consulted, but which fright away
+curiosity, and disgust delicacy.
+
+It is observed, that our nation, which has produced so many authors
+eminent for almost every other species of literary excellence, has been
+hitherto remarkably barren of historical genius; and so far has this
+defect raised prejudices against us, that some have doubted whether an
+Englishman can stop at that mediocrity of style, or confine his mind to
+that even tenour of imagination, which narrative requires.
+
+They who can believe that nature has so capriciously distributed
+understanding, have surely no claim to the honour of serious
+confutation. The inhabitants of the same country have opposite
+characters in different ages; the prevalence or neglect of any
+particular study can proceed only from the accidental influence of some
+temporary cause; and if we have failed in history, we can have failed
+only because history has not hitherto been diligently cultivated.
+
+But how is it evident, that we have not historians among us, whom we may
+venture to place in comparison with any that the neighbouring nations
+can produce? The attempt of Raleigh is deservedly celebrated for the
+labour of his researches, and the elegance of his style; but he has
+endeavoured to exert his judgment more than his genius, to select facts,
+rather than adorn them; and has produced an historical dissertation, but
+seldom risen to the majesty of history.
+
+The works of Clarendon deserve more regard. His diction is indeed
+neither exact in itself, nor suited to the purpose of history. It is the
+effusion of a mind crowded with ideas, and desirous of imparting them;
+and therefore always accumulating words, and involving one clause and
+sentence in another. But there is in his negligence a rude inartificial
+majesty, which, without the nicety of laboured elegance, swells the mind
+by its plenitude and diffusion. His narration is not perhaps
+sufficiently rapid, being stopped too frequently by particularities,
+which, though they might strike the author who was present at the
+transactions, will not equally detain the attention of posterity. But
+his ignorance or carelessness of the art of writing is amply compensated
+by his knowledge of nature and of policy; the wisdom of his maxims, the
+justness of his reasonings, and the variety, distinctness, and strength
+of his characters.
+
+But none of our writers can, in my opinion, justly contest the
+superiority of Knolles, who, in his history of the Turks, has displayed
+all the excellencies that narration can admit. His style, though
+somewhat obscured by time, and sometimes vitiated by false wit, is pure,
+nervous, elevated, and clear. A wonderful multiplicity of events is so
+artfully arranged, and so distinctly explained, that each facilitates
+the knowledge of the next. Whenever a new personage is introduced, the
+reader is prepared by his character for his actions; when a nation is
+first attacked, or city besieged, he is made acquainted with its
+history, or situation; so that a great part of the world is brought into
+view. The descriptions of this author are without minuteness, and the
+digressions without ostentation. Collateral events are so artfully woven
+into the contexture of his principal story, that they cannot be
+disjoined without leaving it lacerated and broken. There is nothing
+turgid in his dignity, nor superfluous in his copiousness. His orations
+only, which he feigns, like the ancient historians, to have been
+pronounced on remarkable occasions, are tedious and languid; and since
+they are merely the voluntary sports of imagination, prove how much the
+most judicious and skilful may be mistaken in the estimate of their own
+powers.
+
+Nothing could have sunk this author in obscurity, but the remoteness and
+barbarity of the people, whose story he relates. It seldom happens, that
+all circumstances concur to happiness or fame. The nation which produced
+this great historian, has the grief of seeing his genius employed upon a
+foreign and uninteresting subject; and that writer who might have
+secured perpetuity to his name, by a history of his own country, has
+exposed himself to the danger of oblivion, by recounting enterprises and
+revolutions, of which none desire to be informed.
+
+
+No. 123. TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1751.
+
+ _Quo semet est imbuta recens, servabit odorem
+ Testa din_.--HOR. Lib. i. Ep. ii. 69.
+
+ What season'd first the vessel, keeps the taste. CREECH.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Though I have so long found myself deluded by projects of honour and
+distinction, that I often resolve to admit them no more into my heart;
+yet how determinately soever excluded, they always recover their
+dominion by force or stratagem; and whenever, after the shortest
+relaxation of vigilance, reason and caution return to their charge, they
+find hope again in possession, with all her train of pleasures dancing
+about her.
+
+Even while I am preparing to write a history of disappointed
+expectations, I cannot forbear to flatter myself, that you and your
+readers are impatient for my performance; and that the sons of learning
+have laid down several of your late papers with discontent, when they
+found that Misocapelus had delayed to continue his narrative.
+
+But the desire of gratifying the expectations that I have raised, is not
+the only motive of this relation, which, having once promised it, I
+think myself no longer at liberty to forbear. For, however I may have
+wished to clear myself from every other adhesion of trade, I hope I
+shall be always wise enough to retain my punctuality, and amidst all my
+new arts of politeness, continue to despise negligence, and detest
+falsehood.
+
+When the death of my brother had dismissed me from the duties of a shop,
+I considered myself as restored to the rights of my birth, and entitled
+to the rank and reception which my ancestors obtained. I was, however,
+embarrassed with many difficulties at my first re-entrance into the
+world; for my haste to be a gentleman inclined me to precipitate
+measures; and every accident that forced me back towards my old station,
+was considered by me as an obstruction of my happiness.
+
+It was with no common grief and indignation, that I found my former
+companions still daring to claim my notice, and the journeymen and
+apprentices sometimes pulling me by the sleeve as I was walking in the
+street, and without any terrour of my new sword, which was,
+notwithstanding, of an uncommon size, inviting me to partake of a bottle
+at the old house, and entertaining me with histories of the girls in the
+neighbourhood. I had always, in my officinal state, been kept in awe by
+lace and embroidery; and imagined that, to fright away these unwelcome
+familiarities, nothing was necessary, but that I should, by splendour of
+dress, proclaim my re-union with a higher rank. I, therefore, sent for
+my tailor; ordered a suit with twice the usual quantity of lace; and
+that I might not let my persecutors increase their confidence, by the
+habit of accosting me, staid at home till it was made.
+
+This week of confinement I passed in practising a forbidding frown, a
+smile of condescension, a slight salutation, and an abrupt departure;
+and in four mornings was able to turn upon my heel, with so much levity
+and sprightliness, that I made no doubt of discouraging all publick
+attempts upon my dignity. I therefore issued forth in my new coat, with
+a resolution of dazzling intimacy to a fitter distance; and pleased
+myself with the timidity and reverence, which I should impress upon all
+who had hitherto presumed to harass me with their freedoms. But,
+whatever was the cause, I did not find myself received with any new
+degree of respect; those whom I intended to drive from me, ventured to
+advance with their usual phrases of benevolence; and those whose
+acquaintance I solicited, grew more supercilious and reserved. I began
+soon to repent the expense, by which I had procured no advantage, and to
+suspect that a shining dress, like a weighty weapon, has no force in
+itself, but owes all its efficacy to him that wears it.
+
+Many were the mortifications and calamities which I was condemned to
+suffer in my initiation to politeness. I was so much tortured by the
+incessant civilities of my companions, that I never passed through that
+region of the city but in a chair with the curtains drawn; and at last
+left my lodgings, and fixed myself in the verge of the court. Here I
+endeavoured to be thought a gentleman just returned from his travels,
+and was pleased to have my landlord believe that I was in some danger
+from importunate creditors; but this scheme was quickly defeated by a
+formal deputation sent to offer me, though I had now retired from
+business, the freedom of my company.
+
+I was now detected in trade, and therefore resolved to stay no longer. I
+hired another apartment, and changed my servants. Here I lived very
+happily for three months, and, with secret satisfaction, often overheard
+the family celebrating the greatness and felicity of the esquire; though
+the conversation seldom ended without some complaint of my covetousness,
+or some remark upon my language, or my gait. I now began to venture in
+the publick walks, and to know the faces of nobles and beauties; but
+could not observe, without wonder, as I passed by them, how frequently
+they were talking of a tailor. I longed, however, to be admitted to
+conversation, and was somewhat weary of walking in crowds without a
+companion, yet continued to come and go with the rest, till a lady whom
+I endeavoured to protect in a crowded passage, as she was about to step
+into her chariot, thanked me for my civility, and told me, that, as she
+had often distinguished me for my modest and respectful behaviour,
+whenever I set up for myself, I might expect to see her among my first
+customers.
+
+Here was an end of all my ambulatory projects. I indeed sometimes
+entered the walks again, but was always blasted by this destructive
+lady, whose mischievous generosity recommended me to her acquaintance.
+Being therefore forced to practise my adscititious character upon
+another stage, I betook myself to a coffee-house frequented by wits,
+among whom I learned in a short time the cant of criticism, and talked
+so loudly and volubly of nature, and manners, and sentiment, and
+diction, and similies, and contrasts, and action, and pronunciation,
+that I was often desired to lead the hiss and clap, and was feared and
+hated by the players and the poets. Many a sentence have I hissed, which
+I did not understand, and many a groan have I uttered, when the ladies
+were weeping in the boxes. At last a malignant author, whose performance
+I had persecuted through the nine nights, wrote an epigram upon Tape the
+critick, which drove me from the pit for ever.
+
+My desire to be a fine gentleman still continued: I therefore, after a
+short suspense, chose a new set of friends at the gaming-table, and was
+for some time pleased with the civility and openness with which I found
+myself treated. I was indeed obliged to play; but being naturally
+timorous and vigilant, was never surprised into large sums. What might
+have been the consequence of long familiarity with these plunderers, I
+had not an opportunity of knowing; for one night the constables entered
+and seized us, and I was once more compelled to sink into my former
+condition, by sending for my old master to attest my character.
+
+When I was deliberating to what new qualifications I should aspire, I
+was summoned into the country, by an account of my father's death. Here
+I had hopes of being able to distinguish myself, and to support the
+honour of my family. I therefore bought guns and horses, and, contrary
+to the expectation of the tenants, increased the salary of the huntsman.
+But when I entered the field, it was soon discovered, that I was not
+destined to the glories of the chase. I was afraid of thorns in the
+thicket, and of dirt in the marsh; I shivered on the brink of a river
+while the sportsmen crossed it, and trembled at the sight of a five-bar
+gate. When the sport and danger were over, I was still equally
+disconcerted; for I was effeminate, though not delicate, and could only
+join a feeble whispering voice in the clamours of their triumph.
+
+A fall, by which my ribs were broken, soon recalled me to domestick
+pleasures, and I exerted all my art to obtain the favour of the
+neighbouring ladies; but wherever I came, there was always some unlucky
+conversation upon ribands, fillets, pins, or thread, which drove all my
+stock of compliments out of my memory, and overwhelmed me with shame and
+dejection.
+
+Thus I passed the ten first years after the death of my brother, in
+which I have learned at last to repress that ambition, which I could
+never gratify; and, instead of wasting more of my life in vain
+endeavours after accomplishments, which, if not early acquired, no
+endeavours can obtain, I shall confine my care to those higher
+excellencies which are in every man's power, and though I cannot enchant
+affection by elegance and ease, hope to secure esteem by honesty and
+truth.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+MISOCAPELUS.
+
+
+
+No. 124. SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1751.
+
+ --Taciturn sylvas inter reptare salubres,
+ Curantem quicquid dignim sapiente bonoque est?
+ HOR. Lib. i. Ep. iv. 4.
+
+ To range in silence through each healthful wood,
+ And muse what's worthy of the wise and good. ELPHINSTON.
+
+The season of the year is now come, in which the theatres are shut, and
+the card-tables forsaken; the regions of luxury are for a while
+unpeopled, and pleasure leads out her votaries to groves and gardens, to
+still scenes and erratick gratifications. Those who have passed many
+months in a continual tumult of diversion; who have never opened their
+eyes in the morning, but upon some new appointment; nor slept at night
+without a dream of dances, musick, and good hands, or of soft sighs and
+humble supplications; must now retire to distant provinces, where the
+syrens of flattery are scarcely to be heard, where beauty sparkles
+without praise or envy, and wit is repeated only by the echo.
+
+As I think it one of the most important duties of social benevolence to
+give warning of the approach of calamity, when by timely prevention it
+may be turned aside, or by preparatory measures be more easily endured,
+I cannot feel the increasing warmth, or observe the lengthening days,
+without considering the condition of my fair readers, who are now
+preparing to leave all that has so long filled up their hours, all from
+which they have been accustomed to hope for delight; and who, till
+fashion proclaims the liberty of returning to the seats of mirth and
+elegance, must endure the rugged 'squire, the sober housewife, the loud
+huntsman, or the formal parson, the roar of obstreperous jollity, or the
+dulness of prudential instruction; without any retreat, but to the gloom
+of solitude, where they will yet find greater inconveniencies, and must
+learn, however unwillingly, to endure themselves.
+
+In winter, the life of the polite and gay may be said to roll on with a
+strong and rapid current; they float along from pleasure to pleasure,
+without the trouble of regulating their own motions, and pursue the
+course of the stream in all the felicity of inattention; content that
+they find themselves in progression, and careless whither they are
+going. But the months of summer are a kind of sleeping stagnation
+without wind or tide, where they are left to force themselves forward by
+their own labour, and to direct their passage by their own skill; and
+where, if they have not some internal principle of activity, they must
+be stranded upon shallows, or lie torpid in a perpetual calm.
+
+There are, indeed, some to whom this universal dissolution of gay
+societies affords a welcome opportunity of quitting, without disgrace,
+the post which they have found themselves unable to maintain; and of
+seeming to retreat only at the call of nature, from assemblies where,
+after a short triumph of uncontested superiority, they are overpowered
+by some new intruder of softer elegance or sprightlier vivacity. By
+these, hopeless of victory, and yet ashamed to confess a conquest, the
+summer is regarded as a release from the fatiguing service of celebrity,
+a dismission to more certain joys and a safer empire. They now solace
+themselves with the influence which they shall obtain, where they have
+no rival to fear; and with the lustre which they shall effuse, when
+nothing can be seen of brighter splendour. They imagine, while they are
+preparing for their journey, the admiration with which the rusticks will
+crowd about them; plan the laws of a new assembly; or contrive to delude
+provincial ignorance with a fictitious mode. A thousand pleasing
+expectations swarm in the fancy; and all the approaching weeks are
+filled with distinctions, honours, and authority.
+
+But others, who have lately entered the world, or have yet had no proofs
+of its inconstancy and desertion, are cut off, by this cruel
+interruption, from the enjoyment of their prerogatives, and doomed to
+lose four months in inactive obscurity. Many complaints do vexation and
+desire extort from those exiled tyrants of the town, against the
+inexorable sun, who pursues his course without any regard to love or
+beauty; and visits either tropick at the stated time, whether shunned or
+courted, deprecated or implored.
+
+To them who leave the places of publick resort in the full bloom of
+reputation, and withdraw from admiration, courtship, submission, and
+applause, a rural triumph can give nothing equivalent. The praise of
+ignorance, and the subjection of weakness, are little regarded by
+beauties who have been accustomed to more important conquests, and more
+valuable panegyricks. Nor indeed should the powers which have made
+havock in the theatres, or borne down rivalry in courts, be degraded to
+a mean attack upon the untravelled heir, or ignoble contest with the
+ruddy milkmaid.
+
+How then must four long months be worn away? Four months, in which there
+will be no routes, no shows, no ridottos; in which visits must be
+regulated by the weather, and assemblies will depend upon the moon! The
+Platonists imagine, that the future punishment of those who have in this
+life debased their reason by subjection to their senses, and have
+preferred the gross gratifications of lewdness and luxury, to the pure
+and sublime felicity of virtue and contemplation, will arise from the
+predominance and solicitations of the same appetites, in a state which
+can furnish no means of appeasing them. I cannot but suspect that this
+month, bright with sunshine, and fragrant with perfumes; this month,
+which covers the meadow with verdure, and decks the gardens with all the
+mixtures of colorifick radiance; this month, from which the man of fancy
+expects new infusions of imagery, and the naturalist new scenes of
+observation; this month will chain down multitudes to the Platonick
+penance of desire without enjoyment, and hurry them from the highest
+satisfactions, which they have yet learned to conceive, into a state of
+hopeless wishes and pining recollection, where the eye of vanity will
+look round for admiration to no purpose, and the hand of avarice shuffle
+cards in a bower with ineffectual dexterity.
+
+From the tediousness of this melancholy suspension of life, I would
+willingly preserve those who are exposed to it, only by inexperience;
+who want not inclination to wisdom or virtue, though they have been
+dissipated by negligence, or misled by example; and who would gladly
+find the way to rational happiness, though it should be necessary to
+struggle with habit, and abandon fashion. To these many arts of spending
+time might be recommended, which would neither sadden the present hour
+with weariness, nor the future with repentance.
+
+It would seem impossible to a solitary speculatist, that a human being
+can want employment. To be born in ignorance with a capacity of
+knowledge, and to be placed in the midst of a world filled with variety,
+perpetually pressing upon the senses and irritating curiosity, is surely
+a sufficient security against the languishment of inattention. Novelty
+is indeed necessary to preserve eagerness and alacrity; but art and
+nature have stores inexhaustible by human intellects; and every moment
+produces something new to him, who has quickened his faculties by
+diligent observation.
+
+Some studies, for which the country and the summer afford peculiar
+opportunities, I shall perhaps endeavour to recommend in a future essay;
+but if there be any apprehension not apt to admit unaccustomed ideas, or
+any attention so stubborn and inflexible, as not easily to comply with
+new directions, even these obstructions cannot exclude the pleasure of
+application; for there is a higher and nobler employment, to which all
+faculties are adapted by Him who gave them. The duties of religion,
+sincerely and regularly performed, will always be sufficient to exalt
+the meanest, and to exercise the highest understanding. That mind will
+never be vacant, which is frequently recalled by stated duties to
+meditations on eternal interests; nor can any hour be long, which is
+spent in obtaining some new qualification for celestial happiness.
+
+
+
+No. 125. TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1751.
+
+ _Descriptas servare vices, operumque colores,
+ Cur ego, si nequeo ignoroque, poëta salutor?_ HOR. De Ar. Poet. 86.
+
+ But if, through weakness, or my want of art,
+ I can't to every different style impart
+ The proper strokes and colours it may claim,
+ Why am I honour'd with a poet's name? FRANCIS.
+
+It is one of the maxims of the civil law, that _definitions are
+hazardous_. Things modified by human understandings, subject to
+varieties of complication, and changeable as experience advances
+knowledge, or accident influences caprice, are scarcely to be included
+in any standing form of expression, because they are always suffering
+some alteration of their state. Definition is, indeed, not the province
+of man; every thing is set above or below our faculties. The works and
+operations of nature are too great in their extent, or too much diffused
+in their relations, and the performances of art too inconstant and
+uncertain, to be reduced to any determinate idea. It is impossible to
+impress upon our minds an adequate and just representation of an object
+so great that we can never take it into our view, or so mutable that it
+is always changing under our eye, and has already lost its form while we
+are labouring to conceive it.
+
+Definitions have been no less difficult or uncertain in criticisms than
+in law. Imagination, a licentious and vagrant faculty, unsusceptible of
+limitations, and impatient of restraint, has always endeavoured to
+baffle the logician, to perplex the confines of distinction, and burst
+the inclosures of regularity. There is therefore scarcely any species of
+writing, of which we can tell what is its essence, and what are its
+constituents; every new genius produces some innovation, which, when
+invented and approved, subverts the rules which the practice of
+foregoing authors had established.
+
+Comedy has been particularly unpropitious to definers; for though
+perhaps they might properly have contented themselves, with declaring it
+to be _such a dramatick representation of human life, as may excite
+mirth_, they have embarrassed their definition with the means by which
+the comick writers attain their end, without considering that the
+various methods of exhilarating their audience, not being limited by
+nature, cannot be comprised in precept. Thus, some make comedy a
+representation of mean and others of bad men; some think that its
+essence consists in the unimportance, others in the fictitiousness of
+the transaction. But any man's reflections will inform him, that every
+dramatick composition which raises mirth, is comick; and that, to raise
+mirth, it is by no means universally necessary, that the personages
+should be either mean or corrupt, nor always requisite, that the action
+should be trivial, nor ever, that it should be fictitious.
+
+If the two kinds of dramatick poetry had been defined only by their
+effects upon the mind, some absurdities might have been prevented, with
+which the compositions of our greatest poets are disgraced, who, for
+want of some settled ideas and accurate distinctions, have unhappily
+confounded tragick with comick sentiments. They seem to have thought,
+that as the meanest of personages constituted comedy, their greatness
+was sufficient to form a tragedy; and that nothing was necessary but
+that they should crowd the scene with monarchs, and generals, and
+guards; and make them talk, at certain intervals, of the downfall of
+kingdoms, and the rout of armies. They have not considered, that
+thoughts or incidents, in themselves ridiculous, grow still more
+grotesque by the solemnity of such characters; that reason and nature
+are uniform and inflexible: and that what is despicable and absurd, will
+not, by any association with splendid titles, become rational or great;
+that the most important affairs, by an intermixture of an unseasonable
+levity, may be made contemptible; and that the robes of royalty can give
+no dignity to nonsense or to folly.
+
+"Comedy," says Horace, "sometimes raises her voice;" and Tragedy may
+likewise on proper occasions abate her dignity; but as the comick
+personages can only depart from their familiarity of style, when the
+more violent passions are put in motion, the heroes and queens of
+tragedy should never descend to trifle, but in the hours of ease, and
+intermissions of danger. Yet in the tragedy of Don Sebastian, when the
+king of Portugal is in the hands of his enemy, and having just drawn the
+lot, by which he is condemned to die, breaks out into a wild boast that
+his dust shall take possession of Africk, the dialogue proceeds thus
+between the captive and his conqueror:
+
+ _Muley Moluch_. What shall I do to conquer thee?
+
+ _Seb_. Impossible!
+ Souls know no conquerors.
+
+ _M. Mol_. I'll shew thee for a monster thro' my Afric.
+
+ _Seb_. No, thou canst only shew me for a man:
+ Afric is stored with monsters; man's a prodigy
+ Thy subjects have not seen.
+
+ _M. Mol_. Thou talk'st as if
+ Still at the head of battle.
+
+ _Seb_. Thou mistak'st,
+ For there I would not talk.
+
+ _Benducar, the Minister_. Sure he would sleep.
+ This conversation, with the sly remark of the minister, can only be
+found not to be comick, because it wants the probability necessary to
+representations of common life, and degenerates too much towards
+buffoonery and farce.
+
+The same play affords a smart return of the general to to the emperor,
+who, enforcing his orders for the death of Sebastian, vents his
+impatience in this abrupt threat:
+
+ --No more replies,
+ But see thou dost it: Or--
+
+To which Dorax answers,
+
+ Choak in that threat: I can say Or as loud.
+
+A thousand instances of such impropriety might be produced, were not one
+scene in Aureng-Zebe sufficient to exemplify it. Indamora, a captive
+queen, having Aureng-Zebe for her lover, employs Arimant, to whose
+charge she had been entrusted, and whom she had made sensible of her
+charms, to carry her message to his rival.
+
+ ARIMANT, _with a letter in his hand_: INDAMORA.
+
+ _Arim_. And I the messenger to him from you?
+ Your empire you to tyranny pursue:
+ You lay commands both cruel and unjust,
+ To serve my rival, and betray my trust.
+
+ _Ind_. You first betray'd your trust in loving me:
+ And should not I my own advantage see?
+ Serving my love, you may my friendship gain;
+ You know the rest of your pretences vain.
+ You must, my Arimant, you must be kind:
+ 'Tis in your nature, and your noble mind.
+
+ _Arim_. I'll to the king, and straight my trust resign.
+
+ _Ind_. His trust you may, but you shall never mine.
+ Heaven made you love me for no other end,
+ But to become my confidant and friend:
+ As such, I keep no secret from your sight,
+ And therefore make you judge how ill I write:
+ Read it, and tell me freely then your mind,
+ If 'tis indited, as I meant it, kind.
+
+ Arim. _I ask not heaven my freedom to restore_--[Reading.
+ _But only for your sake_--I'll read no more.
+ And yet I must--
+ _Less for my own, than for your sorrow sad_--[Reading.
+ Another line like this, would make me mad--
+ Heav'n! she goes on--yet more--and yet more kind!
+ [--_As reading_.
+ Each sentence is a dagger to my mind.
+ _See me this night_--[Reading.
+ _Thank fortune who did such a friend provide;
+ For faithful Arimant shall be your guide_.
+ Not only to be made an instrument,
+ But pre-engaged without my own consent!
+
+ _Ind_. Unknown to engage you still augments my score,
+ And gives you scope of meriting the more.
+
+ _Arim_. The best of men
+ Some int'rest in their actions must confess;
+ None merit, but in hope they may possess:
+ The fatal paper rather let me tear,
+ Than, like Bellerophon, my own sentence hear.
+
+ _Ind_. You may; but 'twill not be your best advice:
+ 'Twill only give me pains of writing twice.
+ You know you must obey me, soon or late:
+ Why should you vainly struggle with your fate?
+
+ _Arim_. I thank thee, heav'n! thou hast been wondrous kind!
+ Why am I thus to slavery design'd,
+ And yet am cheated with a free-born mind!
+ Or make thy orders with my reason suit,
+ Or let me live by sense, a glorious brute--[_She frowns_.
+ You frown, and I obey with speed, before
+ That dreadful sentence comes, _See me no more_.
+
+In this scene, every circumstance concurs to turn tragedy to farce. The
+wild absurdity of the expedient; the contemptible subjection of the
+lover; the folly of obliging him to read the letter, only because it
+ought to have been concealed from him; the frequent interruptions of
+amorous impatience; the faint expostulations of a voluntary slave; the
+imperious haughtiness of a tyrant without power; the deep reflection of
+the yielding rebel upon fate and free-will; and his wise wish to lose
+his reason as soon as he finds himself about to do what he cannot
+persuade his reason to approve, are sufficient to awaken the most torpid
+risibility.
+
+There is scarce a tragedy of the last century which has not debased its
+most important incidents, and polluted its most serious interlocutions,
+with buffoonery and meanness; but though, perhaps, it cannot be
+pretended that the present age has added much to the force and efficacy
+of the drama, it has at least been able to escape many faults, which
+either ignorance had overlooked, or indulgence had licensed. The later
+tragedies, indeed, have faults of another kind, perhaps more destructive
+to delight, though less open to censure. That perpetual tumour of phrase
+with which every thought is now expressed by every personage, the
+paucity of adventures which regularity admits, and the unvaried equality
+of flowing dialogue, has taken away from our present writers almost all
+that dominion over the passions which was the boast of their
+predecessors. Yet they may at least claim this commendation, that they
+avoid gross faults, and that if they cannot often move terrour or pity,
+they are always careful not to provoke laughter.
+
+
+
+No. 126. SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1751.
+
+ _--Nihil est aliud magnum quam multa minuta_. VET. AUCT.
+
+ Sands form the mountain, moments make the year. YOUNG.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Among other topicks of conversation which your papers supply, I was
+lately engaged in a discussion of the character given by Tranquilla of
+her lover Venustulus, whom, notwithstanding the severity of his
+mistress, the greater number seemed inclined to acquit of unmanly or
+culpable timidity.
+
+One of the company remarked that prudence ought to be distinguished from
+fear; and that if Venustulus was afraid of nocturnal adventures, no man
+who considered how much every avenue of the town was infested with
+robbers could think him blameable; for why should life be hazarded
+without prospect of honour or advantage? Another was of opinion, that a
+brave man might be afraid of crossing the river in the calmest weather,
+and declared, that, for his part, while there were coaches and a bridge,
+he would never be seen tottering in a wooden case, out of which he might
+be thrown by any irregular agitation, or which might be overset by
+accident, or negligence, or by the force of a sudden gust, or the rush
+of a larger vessel. It was his custom, he said, to keep the security of
+daylight, and dry ground; for it was a maxim with him, that no wise man
+ever perished by water, or was lost in the dark.
+
+The next was humbly of opinion, that if Tranquilla had seen, like him,
+the cattle run roaring about the meadows in the hot months, she would
+not have thought meanly of her lover for not venturing his safety among
+them. His neighbour then told us, that for his part he was not ashamed
+to confess, that he could not see a rat, though it was dead, without
+palpitation; that he had been driven six times out of his lodgings
+either by rats or mice; and that he always had a bed in the closet for
+his servant, whom he called up whenever the enemy was in motion. Another
+wondered that any man should think himself disgraced by a precipitate
+retreat from a dog; for there was always a possibility that a dog might
+be mad; and that surely, though there was no danger but of being bit by
+a fierce animal, there was more wisdom in flight than contest. By all
+these declarations another was encouraged to confess, that if he had
+been admitted to the honour of paying his addresses to Tranquilla, he
+should have been likely to incur the same censure; for, among all the
+animals upon which nature has impressed deformity and horrour, there is
+none whom he durst not encounter rather than a beetle.
+
+Thus, Sir, though cowardice is universally defined too close and anxious
+an attention to personal safety, there will be found scarcely any fear,
+however excessive in its degree, or unreasonable in its object, which
+will be allowed to characterise a coward. Fear is a passion which every
+man feels so frequently predominant in his own breast, that he is
+unwilling to hear it censured with great asperity; and, perhaps, if we
+confess the truth, the same restraint which would hinder a man from
+declaiming against the frauds of any employment among those who profess
+it, should withhold him from treating fear with contempt among human
+beings.
+
+Yet, since fortitude is one of those virtues which the condition of our
+nature makes hourly necessary, I think you cannot better direct your
+admonitions than against superfluous and panick terrours. Fear is
+implanted in us as a preservative from evil; but its duty, like that of
+other passions, is not to overbear reason, but to assist it; nor should
+it be suffered to tyrannize in the imagination, to raise phantoms of
+horrour, or beset life with supernumerary distresses.
+
+To be always afraid of losing life is, indeed, scarcely to enjoy a life
+that can deserve the care of preservation. He that once indulges idle
+fears will never be at rest. Our present state admits only of a kind of
+negative security; we must conclude ourselves safe when we see no
+danger, or none inadequate to our powers of opposition. Death, indeed,
+continually hovers about us, but hovers commonly unseen, unless we
+sharpen our sight by useless curiosity.
+
+There is always a point at which caution, however solicitous, must limit
+its preservatives, because one terrour often counteracts another. I once
+knew one of the speculatists of cowardice, whose reigning disturbance
+was the dread of housebreakers. His inquiries were for nine years
+employed upon the best method of barring a window, or a door; and many
+an hour has he spent in establishing the preference of a bolt to a lock.
+He had at last, by the daily superaddition of new expedients, contrived
+a door which could never be forced; for one bar was secured by another
+with such intricacy of subordination, that he was himself not always
+able to disengage them in the proper method. He was happy in this
+fortification, till being asked how he would escape if he was threatened
+by fire, he discovered, that with all his care and expense, he had only
+been assisting his own destruction. He then immediately tore off his
+bolts, and now leaves at night his outer door half-locked, that he may
+not by his own folly perish in the flames.
+
+There is one species of terrour which those who are unwilling to suffer
+the reproach of cowardice have wisely dignified with the name of
+_antipathy_. A man who talks with intrepidity of the monsters of the
+wilderness while they are out of sight, will readily confess his
+antipathy to a mole, a weasel, or a frog. He has indeed no dread of harm
+from an insect or a worm, but his antipathy turns him pale whenever they
+approach him. He believes that a boat will transport him with as much
+safety as his neighbours, but he cannot conquer his antipathy to the
+water. Thus he goes on without any reproach from his own reflections,
+and every day multiplies antipathies, till he becomes contemptible to
+others, and burdensome to himself. It is indeed certain, that
+impressions of dread may sometimes be unluckily made by objects not in
+themselves justly formidable; but when fear is discovered to be
+groundless, it is to be eradicated like other false opinions, and
+antipathies are generally superable by a single effort. He that has been
+taught to shudder at a mouse, if he can persuade himself to risk one
+encounter, will find his own superiority, and exchange his terrours for
+the pride of conquest.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+THRASO.
+
+SIR, As you profess to extend your regard to the minuteness of decency,
+as well as to the dignity of science, I cannot forbear to lay before you
+a mode of persecution by which I have been exiled to taverns and
+coffee-houses, and deterred from entering the doors of my friends. Among
+the ladies who please themselves with splendid furniture, or elegant
+entertainment, it is a practice very common, to ask every guest how he
+likes the carved work of the cornice, or the figures of the tapestry;
+the china at the table, or the plate on the side-board: and on all
+occasions to inquire his opinion of their judgment and their choice.
+Melania has laid her new watch in the window nineteen times, that she
+may desire me to look upon it. Calista has an art of dropping her
+snuff-box by drawing out her handkerchief, that when I pick it up I may
+admire it; and Fulgentia has conducted me, by mistake, into the wrong
+room, at every visit I have paid since her picture was put into a new
+frame.
+
+I hope, Mr. Rambler, you will inform them, that no man should be denied
+the privilege of silence, or tortured to false declarations; and that
+though ladies may justly claim to be exempt from rudeness, they have no
+right to force unwilling civilities. To please is a laudable and elegant
+ambition, and is properly rewarded with honest praise; but to seize
+applause by violence, and call out for commendation, without knowing, or
+caring to know, whether it be given from conviction, is a species of
+tyranny by which modesty is oppressed, and sincerity corrupted. The
+tribute of admiration, thus exacted by impudence and importunity,
+differs from the respect paid to silent merit, as the plunder of a
+pirate from the merchant's profit.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+MISOCOLAX
+
+
+
+SIR,
+
+Your great predecessor, the Spectator, endeavoured to diffuse among his
+female readers a desire of knowledge; nor can I charge you, though you
+do not seem equally attentive to the ladies, with endeavouring to
+discourage them from any laudable pursuit. But however either he or you
+may excite our curiosity, you have not yet informed us how it may be
+gratified. The world seems to have formed an universal conspiracy
+against our understandings; our questions are supposed not to expect
+answers, our arguments are confuted with a jest, and we are treated like
+beings who transgress the limits of our nature whenever we aspire to
+seriousness or improvement.
+
+I inquired yesterday of a gentleman eminent for astronomical skill, what
+made the day long in summer, and short in winter; and was told that
+nature protracted the days in summer, lest ladies should want time to
+walk in the park; and the nights in winter, lest they should not have
+hours sufficient to spend at the card-table.
+
+I hope you do not doubt but I heard such information with just contempt,
+and I desire you to discover to this great master of ridicule, that I
+was far from wanting any intelligence which he could have given me. I
+asked the question with no other intention than to set him free from the
+necessity of silence, and give him an opportunity of mingling on equal
+terms with a polite assembly, from which, however uneasy, he could not
+then escape, by a kind introduction of the only subject on which I
+believed him able to speak with propriety.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+GENEROSA.
+
+
+
+No. 127. TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 1751.
+
+ _Capisti meliust, quam desinis. Ultima primis
+ Cedunt: dissimiles hic vir et ille puer_. Ovid. Ep. ix. 24.
+
+ Succeeding years thy early fame destroy;
+ Thou, who began'st a man, wilt end a boy.
+
+Politian, a name eminent among the restorers of polite literature, when
+he published a collection of epigrams, prefixed to many of them the year
+of his age at which they were composed. He might design, by this
+information, either to boast the early maturity of his genius, or to
+conciliate indulgence to the puerility of his performances. But whatever
+was his intent, it is remarked by Scaliger, that he very little promoted
+his own reputation, because he fell below the promise which his first
+productions had given, and, in the latter part of his life, seldom
+equalled the sallies of his youth.
+
+It is not uncommon for those who, at their first entrance into the
+world, were distinguished for attainments or abilities, to disappoint
+the hopes which they had raised, and to end in neglect and obscurity
+that life which they began in celebrity and honour. To the long
+catalogue of the inconveniencies of old age, which moral and satirical
+writers have so copiously displayed, may be often added the loss of
+fame.
+
+The advance of the human mind towards any object of laudable pursuit,
+may be compared to the progress of a body driven by a blow. It moves,
+for a time, with great velocity and vigour, but the force of the first
+impulse is perpetually decreasing, and though it should encounter no
+obstacle capable of quelling it by a sudden stop, the resistance of the
+medium through which it passes, and the latent inequalities of the
+smoothest surface, will, in a short time, by continued retardation,
+wholly overpower it. Some hindrances will be found in every road of
+life, but he that fixes his eyes upon any thing at a distance,
+necessarily loses sight of all that fills up the intermediate space, and
+therefore sets forward with alacrity and confidence, nor suspects a
+thousand obstacles, by which he afterwards finds his passage embarrassed
+and obstructed. Some are indeed stopt at once in their career by a
+sudden shock of calamity, or diverted to a different direction by the
+cross impulse of some violent passion; but far the greater part languish
+by slow degrees, deviate at first into slight obliquities, and
+themselves scarcely perceive at what time their ardour forsook them, or
+when they lost sight of their original design.
+
+Weariness and negligence are perpetually prevailing by silent
+encroachments, assisted by different causes, and not observed till they
+cannot, without great difficulty, be opposed. Labour necessarily
+requires pauses of ease and relaxation, and the deliciousness of ease
+commonly makes us unwilling to return to labour. We, perhaps, prevail
+upon ourselves to renew our attempts, but eagerly listen to every
+argument for frequent interpositions of amusement; for, when indolence
+has once entered upon the mind, it can scarcely be dispossessed but by
+such efforts as very few are willing to exert.
+
+It is the fate of industry to be equally endangered by miscarriage and
+success, by confidence and despondency. He that engages in a great
+undertaking, with a false opinion of its facility, or too high
+conceptions of his own strength, is easily discouraged by the first
+hindrance of his advances, because he had promised himself an equal and
+perpetual progression without impediment or disturbance; when unexpected
+interruptions break in upon him, he is in the state of a man surprised
+by a tempest, where he purposed only to bask in the calm, or sport in
+the shallows.
+
+It is not only common to find the difficulty of an enterprize greater,
+but the profit less, than hope had pictured it. Youth enters the world
+with very happy prejudices in her own favour. She imagines herself not
+only certain of accomplishing every adventure, but of obtaining those
+rewards which the accomplishment may deserve. She is not easily
+persuaded to believe that the force of merit can be resisted by
+obstinacy and avarice, or its lustre darkened by envy and malignity. She
+has not yet learned that the most evident claims to praise or preferment
+may be rejected by malice against conviction, or by indolence without
+examination; that they may be sometimes defeated by artifices, and
+sometimes overborne by clamour; that, in the mingled numbers of mankind,
+many need no other provocation to enmity than that they find themselves
+excelled; that others have ceased their curiosity, and consider every
+man who fills the mouth of report with a new name, as an intruder upon
+their retreat, and disturber of their repose; that some are engaged in
+complications of interest which they imagine endangered by every
+innovation; that many yield themselves up implicitly to every report
+which hatred disseminates or folly scatters; and that whoever aspires to
+the notice of the publick, has in almost every man an enemy and a rival;
+and must struggle with the opposition of the daring, and elude the
+stratagems of the timorous, must quicken the frigid and soften the
+obdurate, must reclaim perverseness and inform stupidity.
+
+It is no wonder that when the prospect of reward has vanished, the zeal
+of enterprize should cease; for who would persevere to cultivate the
+soil which he has, after long labour, discovered to be barren? He who
+hath pleased himself with anticipated praises, and expected that he
+should meet in every place with patronage or friendship, will soon remit
+his vigour, when he finds that, from those who desire to be considered
+as his admirers, nothing can be hoped but cold civility, and that many
+refuse to own his excellence, lest they should be too justly expected to
+reward it.
+
+A man, thus cut off from the prospect of that port to which his address
+and fortitude had been employed to steer him, often abandons himself to
+chance and to the wind, and glides careless and idle down the current of
+life, without resolution to make another effort, till he is swallowed up
+by the gulph of mortality.
+
+Others are betrayed to the same desertion of themselves by a contrary
+fallacy. It was said of Hannibal, that he wanted nothing to the
+completion of his martial virtues, but that when he had gained a victory
+he should know how to use it. The folly of desisting too soon from
+successful labours, and the haste of enjoying advantages before they are
+secured, are often fatal to men of impetuous desire, to men whose
+consciousness of uncommon powers fills them with presumption, and who,
+having borne opposition down before them, and left emulation panting
+behind, are early persuaded to imagine that they have reached the
+heights of perfection, and that now, being no longer in danger from
+competitors, they may pass the rest of their days in the enjoyment of
+their acquisitions, in contemplation of their own superiority, and in
+attention to their own praises, and look unconcerned from their eminence
+upon the toils and contentions of meaner beings.
+
+It is not sufficiently considered in the hour of exultation, that all
+human excellence is comparative; that no man performs much but in
+proportion to what others accomplish, or to the time and opportunities
+which have been allowed him; and that he who stops at any point of
+excellence is every day sinking in estimation, because his improvement
+grows continually more incommensurate to his life. Yet, as no man
+willingly quits opinions favourable to himself, they who have once been
+justly celebrated, imagine that they still have the same pretensions to
+regard, and seldom perceive the diminution of their character while
+there is time to recover it. Nothing then remains but murmurs and
+remorse; for if the spendthrift's poverty be embittered by the
+reflection that he once was rich, how must the idler's obscurity be
+clouded by remembering that he once had lustre!
+
+These errours all arise from an original mistake of the true motives of
+action. He that never extends his view beyond the praises or rewards of
+men will be dejected by neglect and envy, or infatuated by honours and
+applause. But the consideration that life is only deposited in his hands
+to be employed in obedience to a Master who will regard his endeavours,
+not his success, would have preserved him from trivial elations and
+discouragements, and enabled him to proceed with constancy and
+cheerfulness, neither enervated by commendation, nor intimidated by
+censure.
+
+
+
+No. 128. SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1751.
+
+ [Greek:
+ Aion d asphalaes
+ Ouk egent, out Aiakida para Paelei,
+ Oute par antitheo
+ Kadmo legontai man broton
+ Olbon hupertaton hoi
+ Schein.] PIND. Py. iii. 153.
+
+ For not the brave, or wise, or great,
+ E'er yet had happiness complete:
+ Nor Peleus, grandson of the sky,
+ Nor Cadmus, scap'd the shafts of pain,
+ Though favour'd by the Pow'rs on high,
+ With every bliss that man can gain.
+
+The writers who have undertaken the task of reconciling mankind to their
+present state, and relieving the discontent produced by the various
+distribution of terrestrial advantages, frequently remind us that we
+judge too hastily of good and evil, that we view only the superfices of
+life, and determine of the whole by a very small part; and that in the
+condition of men it frequently happens, that grief and anxiety lie hid
+under the golden robes of prosperity, and the gloom of calamity is
+cheered by secret radiations of hope and comfort; as in the works of
+nature the bog is sometimes covered with flowers, and the mine concealed
+in the barren crags.
+
+None but those who have learned the art of subjecting their senses as
+well as reason to hypothetical systems, can be persuaded by the most
+specious rhetorician that the lots of life are equal; yet it cannot be
+denied that every one has his peculiar pleasures and vexations, that
+external accidents operate variously upon different minds, and that no
+man can exactly judge from his own sensations, what another would feel
+in the same circumstances.
+
+If the general disposition of things be estimated by the representation
+which every one makes of his own estate, the world must be considered as
+the abode of sorrow and misery; for how few can forbear to relate their
+troubles and distresses? If we judge by the account which may be
+obtained of every man's fortune from others, it may be concluded, that
+we all are placed in an elysian region, overspread with the luxuriance
+of plenty, and fanned by the breezes of felicity; since scarcely any
+complaint is uttered without censure from those that hear it, and almost
+all are allowed to have obtained a provision at least adequate to their
+virtue or their understanding, to possess either more than they deserve,
+or more than they enjoy.
+
+We are either born with such dissimilitude of temper and inclination, or
+receive so many of our ideas and opinions from the state of life in
+which we are engaged, that the griefs and cares of one part of mankind
+seem to the other hypocrisy, folly, and affectation. Every class of
+society has its cant of lamentation, which is understood or regarded by
+none but themselves; and every part of life has its uneasiness, which
+those who do not feel them will not commiserate. An event which spreads
+distraction over half the commercial world, assembles the trading
+companies in councils and committees, and shakes the nerves of a
+thousand stockjobbers, is read by the landlord and the farmer with
+frigid indifference. An affair of love, which fills the young breast
+with incessant alternations of hope and fear, and steals away the night
+and day from every other pleasure or employment, is regarded by them
+whose passions time has extinguished, as an amusement, which can
+properly raise neither joy nor sorrow, and, though it may be suffered to
+fill the vacuity of an idle moment, should always give way to prudence
+or interest.
+
+He that never had any other desire than to fill a chest with money, or
+to add another manor to his estate, who never grieved but at a bad
+mortgage, or entered a company but to make a bargain, would be
+astonished to hear of beings known among the polite and gay by the
+denomination of wits. How would he gape with curiosity, or grin with
+contempt, at the mention of beings who have no wish but to speak what
+was never spoken before; who, if they happen to inherit wealth, often
+exhaust their patrimonies in treating those who will hear them talk; and
+if they are poor, neglect opportunities of improving their fortunes, for
+the pleasure of making others laugh? How slowly would he believe that
+there are men who would rather lose a legacy than the reputation of a
+distich; who think it less disgrace to want money than repartee; whom
+the vexation of having been foiled in a contest of raillery is sometimes
+sufficient to deprive of sleep; and who would esteem it a lighter evil
+to miss a profitable bargain by some accidental delay, than not to have
+thought of a smart reply till the time of producing it was past? How
+little would he suspect that this child of idleness and frolick enters
+every assembly with a beating bosom, like a litigant on the day of
+decision, and revolves the probability of applause with the anxiety of a
+conspirator, whose fate depends upon the next night; that at the hour of
+retirement he carries home, under a show of airy negligence, a heart
+lacerated with envy, or depressed with disappointment; and immures
+himself in his closet, that he may disencumber his memory at leisure,
+review the progress of the day, state with accuracy his loss or gain of
+reputation, and examine the causes of his failure or success?
+
+Yet more remote from common conceptions are the numerous and restless
+anxieties, by which female happiness is particularly disturbed. A
+solitary philosopher would imagine ladies born with an exemption from
+care and sorrow, lulled in perpetual quiet, and feasted with unmingled
+pleasure; for what can interrupt the content of those, upon whom one age
+has laboured after another to confer honours, and accumulate immunities;
+those to whom rudeness is infamy, and insult is cowardice; whose eye
+commands the brave, and whose smiles soften the severe; whom the sailor
+travels to adorn, the soldier bleeds to defend, and the poet wears out
+life to celebrate; who claim tribute from every art and science, and for
+whom all who approach them endeavour to multiply delights, without
+requiring from them any returns but willingness to be pleased?
+
+Surely, among these favourites of nature, thus unacquainted with toil
+and danger, felicity must have fixed her residence; they must know only
+the changes of more vivid or more gentle joys: their life must always
+move either to the slow or sprightly melody of the lyre of gladness;
+they can never assemble but to pleasure, or retire but to peace.
+
+Such would be the thoughts of every man who should hover at a distance
+round the world, and know it only by conjecture and speculation. But
+experience will soon discover how easily those are disgusted who have
+been made nice by plenty and tender by indulgence. He will soon see to
+how many dangers power is exposed which has no other guard than youth
+and beauty, and how easily that tranquillity is molested which can only
+be soothed with the songs of flattery. It is impossible to supply wants
+as fast as an idle imagination may be able to form them, or to remove
+all inconveniencies by which elegance refined into impatience may be
+offended. None are so hard to please, as those whom satiety of pleasure
+makes weary of themselves; nor any so readily provoked as those who have
+been always courted with an emulation of civility.
+
+There are, indeed, some strokes which the envy of fate aims immediately
+at the fair. The mistress of Catullus wept for her sparrow many
+centuries ago, and lapdogs will be sometimes sick in the present age.
+The most fashionable brocade is subject to stains; a pinner, the pride
+of Brussels, may be torn by a careless washer; a picture may drop from a
+watch; or the triumph of a new suit may be interrupted on the first day
+of its enjoyment, and all distinctions of dress unexpectedly obliterated
+by a general mourning.
+
+Such is the state of every age, every sex, and every condition: all have
+their cares, either from nature or from folly: and whoever therefore
+finds himself inclined to envy another, should remember that he knows
+not the real condition which he desires to obtain, but is certain that
+by indulging a vicious passion, he must lessen that happiness which he
+thinks already too sparingly bestowed.
+
+
+
+No. 129. TUESDAY, JUNE 11. 1751.
+
+ _--Nunc, O nunc, Daedale, dixit,
+ Materiam, qua sis ingeniosus, habes.
+ Possidet en terras, et possidet aequara, Minos:
+ Nec tellus nostrae, nec patet undo fugae.
+ Restat iter coelo: tentabimus ire.
+ Da veniam caepto, Jupiter alte, meo. OVID. Ar. Am. Lib. ii. 33_.
+
+ Now, Daedalus, behold, by fate assign'd,
+ A task proportion'd to thy mighty mind!
+ Unconquer'd bars on earth and sea withstand;
+ Thine, Minos, is the main, and thine the land.
+ The skies are open--let us try the skies:
+ Forgive, great Jove, the daring enterprize.
+
+Moralists, like other writers, instead of casting their eyes abroad in
+the living world, and endeavouring to form maxims of practice and new
+hints of theory, content their curiosity with that secondary knowledge
+which books afford, and think themselves entitled to reverence by a new
+arrangement of an ancient system, or new illustration of established
+principles[e]. The sage precepts of the first instructors of the world
+are transmitted from age to age with little variation, and echoed from
+one author to another, not perhaps without some loss of their original
+force at every repercussion.
+
+I know not whether any other reason than this idleness of imitation can
+be assigned for that uniform and constant partiality, by which some
+vices have hitherto escaped censure, and some virtues wanted
+recommendation; nor can I discover why else we have been warned only
+against part of our enemies, while the rest have been suffered to steal
+upon us without notice; why the heart has on one side been doubly
+fortified, and laid open on the other to the incursions of errour, and
+the ravages of vice.
+
+Among the favourite topicks of moral declamation, may be numbered the
+miscarriages of imprudent boldness, and the folly of attempts beyond our
+power. Every page of every philosopher is crowded with examples of
+temerity that sunk under burdens which she laid upon herself, and called
+out enemies to battle by whom she was destroyed.
+
+Their remarks are too just to be disputed, and too salutary to be
+rejected; but there is likewise some danger lest timorous prudence
+should be inculcated, till courage and enterprise are wholly repressed,
+and the mind congealed in perpetual inactivity by the fatal influence of
+frigorifick wisdom.
+
+Every man should, indeed, carefully compare his force with his
+undertaking; for though we ought not to live only for our own sakes, and
+though therefore danger or difficulty should not be avoided merely
+because we may expose ourselves to misery or disgrace; yet it may be
+justly required of us, not to throw away our lives upon inadequate and
+hopeless designs, since we might, by a just estimate of our abilities,
+become more useful to mankind.
+
+There is an irrational contempt of danger, which approaches nearly to
+the folly, if not the guilt of suicide; there is a ridiculous
+perseverance in impracticable schemes, which is justly punished with
+ignominy and reproach. But in the wide regions of probability, which are
+the proper province of prudence and election, there is always room to
+deviate on either side of rectitude without rushing against apparent
+absurdity; and according to the inclinations of nature, or the
+impressions of precept, the daring and the cautious may move in
+different directions without touching upon rashness or cowardice.
+
+That there is a middle path which it is every man's duty to find, and to
+keep, is unanimously confessed: but it is likewise acknowledged that
+this middle path is so narrow, that it cannot easily be discovered, and
+so little beaten, that there are no certain marks by which it can be
+followed: the care, therefore, of all those who conduct others has been,
+that whenever they decline into obliquities, they should tend towards
+the side of safety.
+
+It can, indeed, raise no wonder that temerity has been generally
+censured; for it is one of the vices with which few can be charged, and
+which therefore, great numbers are ready to condemn. It is the vice of
+noble and generous minds, the exuberance of magnanimity, and the
+ebullition of genius; and is therefore not regarded with much
+tenderness, because it never flatters us by that appearance of softness
+and imbecility which is commonly necessary to conciliate compassion. But
+if the same attention had been applied to the search of arguments
+against the folly of pre-supposing impossibilities, and anticipating
+frustration, I know not whether many would not have been roused to
+usefulness, who, having been taught to confound prudence with timidity,
+never ventured to excel, lest they should unfortunately fail.
+
+It is necessary to distinguish our own interest from that of others, and
+that distinction will perhaps assist us in fixing the just limits of
+caution and adventurousness. In an undertaking that involves the
+happiness or the safety of many, we have certainly no right to hazard
+more than is allowed by those who partake the danger; but where only
+ourselves can suffer by miscarriage, we are not confined within such
+narrow limits; and still less is the reproach of temerity, when numbers
+will receive advantage by success, and only one be incommoded by
+failure.
+
+Men are generally willing to hear precepts by which ease is favoured;
+and as no resentment is raised by general representations of human
+folly, even in those who are most eminently jealous of comparative
+reputation, we confess, without reluctance, that vain man is ignorant of
+his own weakness, and therefore frequently presumes to attempt what he
+can never accomplish; but it ought likewise to be remembered, that man
+is no less ignorant of his own powers, and might perhaps have
+accomplished a thousand designs, which the prejudices of cowardice
+restrained him from attempting.
+
+It is observed in the golden verses of Pythagoras, that "Power is never
+far from necessity." The vigour of the human mind quickly appears, when
+there is no longer any place for doubt and hesitation, when diffidence
+is absorbed in the sense of danger, or overwhelmed by some resistless
+passion. We then soon discover, that difficulty is, for the most part,
+the daughter of idleness, that the obstacles with which our way seemed
+to be obstructed were only phantoms, which we believed real, because we
+durst not advance to a close examination; and we learn that it is
+impossible to determine without experience how much constancy may
+endure, or perseverance perform.
+
+But whatever pleasure may be found in the review of distresses when art
+or courage has surmounted them, few will be persuaded to wish that they
+may be awakened by want, or terrour, to the conviction of their own
+abilities. Every one should therefore endeavour to invigorate himself by
+reason and reflection, and determine to exert the latent force that
+nature may have reposed in him, before the hour of exigence comes upon
+him, and compulsion shall torture him to diligence. It is below the
+dignity of a reasonable being to owe that strength to necessity which
+ought always to act at the call of choice, or to need any other motive
+to industry than the desire of performing his duty.
+
+Reflections that may drive away despair, cannot be wanting to him who
+considers how much life is now advanced beyond the state of naked,
+undisciplined, uninstructed nature. Whatever has been effected for
+convenience or elegance, while it was yet unknown, was believed
+impossible; and therefore would never have been attempted, had not some,
+more daring than the rest, adventured to bid defiance to prejudice and
+censure. Nor is there yet any reason to doubt that the same labour would
+be rewarded with the same success. There are qualities in the products
+of nature yet undiscovered, and combinations in the powers of art yet
+untried. It is the duty of every man to endeavour that something may be
+added by his industry to the hereditary aggregate of knowledge and
+happiness. To add much can indeed be the lot of few, but to add
+something, however little, every one may hope; and of every honest
+endeavour, it is certain, that, however unsuccessful, it will be at last
+rewarded.
+
+[Footnote e: Johnson gained _his_ knowledge from actual experience. He
+told Boswell that before he wrote the Rambler he had been running about
+the world more than almost any body. Boswell's Life of Johnson, vol. i.
+p. 196.; and vol. iii. pp. 20, 21.]
+
+
+
+No. 130. SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1751.
+
+ Non sic prata novo vere decentia
+ Æstatis calidtæ dispoliat vapor:
+ Sævit solstitio cum medius dies;--
+ Ut fulgor teneris qui radiat genis
+ Momento rapitur! nullaque non dies
+ Formosi spolium corporis abstulit.
+ Res est forma fugax: quis sapiens bono
+ Confidat fragili? SENECA, Hippol. act. ii. 764.
+
+ Not faster in the summer's ray
+ The spring's frail beauty fades away,
+ Than anguish and decay consume
+ The smiling virgin's rosy bloom.
+ Some beauty's snatch'd each day, each hour;
+ For beauty is a fleeting flow'r:
+ Then how can wisdom e'er confide
+ In beauty's momentary pride? ELPHINSTON
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+You have very lately observed that in the numerous subdivisions of the
+world, every class and order of mankind have joys and sorrows of their
+own; we all feel hourly pain and pleasure from events which pass
+unheeded before other eyes, but can scarcely communicate our perceptions
+to minds pre-occupied by different objects, any more than the delight of
+well-disposed colours or harmonious sounds can be imparted to such as
+want the senses of hearing or of sight.
+
+I am so strongly convinced of the justness of this remark, and have on
+so many occasions discovered with how little attention pride looks upon
+calamity of which she thinks herself not in danger, and indolence
+listens to complaint when it is not echoed by her own remembrance, that
+though I am about to lay the occurrences of my life before you, I
+question whether you will condescend to peruse my narrative, or, without
+the help of some female speculatists, to be able to understand it.
+
+I was born a beauty. From the dawn of reason I had my regard turned
+wholly upon myself, nor can recollect any thing earlier than praise and
+admiration. My mother, whose face had luckily advanced her to a
+condition above her birth, thought no evil so great as deformity. She
+had not the power of imagining any other defect than a cloudy
+complexion, or disproportionate features; and therefore contemplated me
+as an assemblage of all that could raise envy or desire, and predicted
+with triumphant fondness the extent of my conquests, and the number of
+my slaves.
+
+She never mentioned any of my young acquaintance before me, but to
+remark how much they fell below my perfection; how one would have had a
+fine face, but that her eyes were without lustre; how another struck the
+sight at a distance, but wanted my hair and teeth at a nearer view;
+another disgraced an elegant shape with a brown skin; some had short
+fingers, and others dimples in a wrong place.
+
+As she expected no happiness nor advantage but from beauty, she thought
+nothing but beauty worthy of her care; and her maternal kindness was
+chiefly exercised in contrivances to protect me from any accident that
+might deface me with a scar, or stain me with a freckle: she never
+thought me sufficiently shaded from the sun, or screened from the fire.
+She was severe or indulgent with no other intention than the
+preservation of my form; she excused me from work, lest I should learn
+to hang down my head, or harden my finger with a needle; she snatched
+away my book, because a young lady in the neighbourhood had made her
+eyes red with reading by a candle; but she would scarcely suffer me to
+eat, lest I should spoil my shape, nor to walk lest I should swell my
+ancle with a sprain. At night I was accurately surveyed from head to
+foot, lest I should have suffered any diminution of my charms in the
+adventures of the day; and was never permitted to sleep, till I had
+passed through the cosmetick discipline, part of which was a regular
+lustration performed with bean-flower water and May-dews; my hair was
+perfumed with variety of unguents, by some of which it was to be
+thickened, and by others to be curled. The softness of my hands was
+secured by medicated gloves, and my bosom rubbed with a pomade prepared
+by my mother, of virtue to discuss pimples, and clear discolorations.
+
+I was always called up early, because the morning air gives a freshness
+to the cheeks; but I was placed behind a curtain in my mother's chamber,
+because the neck is easily tanned by the rising sun. I was then dressed
+with a thousand precautions, and again heard my own praises, and
+triumphed in the compliments and prognostications of all that approached
+me.
+
+My mother was not so much prepossessed with an opinion of my natural
+excellencies as not to think some cultivation necessary to their
+completion. She took care that I should want none of the accomplishments
+included in female education, or considered necessary in fashionable
+life. I was looked upon in my ninth year as the chief ornament of the
+dancing-master's ball; and Mr. Ariet used to reproach his other scholars
+with my performances on the harpsichord. At twelve I was remarkable for
+playing my cards with great elegance of manner, and accuracy of
+judgment.
+
+At last the time came when my mother thought me perfect in my exercises,
+and qualified to display in the open world those accomplishments which
+had yet only been discovered in select parties, or domestick assemblies.
+Preparations were therefore made for my appearance on a publick night,
+which she considered as the most important and critical moment of my
+life. She cannot be charged with neglecting any means of recommendation,
+or leaving any thing to chance which prudence could ascertain. Every
+ornament was tried in every position, every friend was consulted about
+the colour of my dress, and the mantua-makers were harassed with
+directions and alterations.
+
+At last the night arrived from which my future life was to be reckoned.
+I was dressed and sent out to conquer, with a heart beating like that of
+an old knight-errant at his first sally. Scholars have told me of a
+Spartan matron, who, when she armed her son for battle, bade him bring
+back his shield, or be brought upon it. My venerable parent dismissed me
+to a field, in her opinion of equal glory, with a command to shew that I
+was her daughter, and not to return without a lover.
+
+I went, and was received like other pleasing novelties with a tumult of
+applause. Every man who valued himself upon the graces of his person, or
+the elegance of his address, crowded about me, and wit and splendour
+contended for my notice. I was delightfully fatigued with incessant
+civilities, which were made more pleasing by the apparent envy of those
+whom my presence exposed to neglect, and returned with an attendant
+equal in rank and wealth to my utmost wishes, and from this time stood
+in the first rank of beauty, was followed by gazers in the Mall,
+celebrated in the papers of the day, imitated by all who endeavoured to
+rise into fashion, and censured by those whom age or disappointment
+forced to retire.
+
+My mother, who pleased herself with the hopes of seeing my exaltation,
+dressed me with all the exuberance of finery; and when I represented to
+her that a fortune might be expected proportionate to my appearance,
+told me that she should scorn the reptile who could inquire after the
+fortune of a girl like me. She advised me to prosecute my victories, and
+time would certainly bring me a captive who might deserve the honour of
+being enchained for ever.
+
+My lovers were indeed so numerous, that I had no other care than that of
+determining to whom I should seem to give the preference. But having
+been steadily and industriously instructed to preserve my heart from any
+impressions which might hinder me from consulting my interest, I acted
+with less embarrassment, because my choice was regulated by principles
+more clear and certain than the caprice of approbation. When I had
+singled out one from the rest as more worthy of encouragement, I
+proceeded in my measures by the rules of art; and yet when the ardour of
+the first visits was spent, generally found a sudden declension of my
+influence; I felt in myself the want of some power to diversify
+amusement, and enliven conversation, and could not but suspect that my
+mind failed in performing the promises of my face. This opinion was soon
+confirmed by one of my lovers, who married Lavinia with less beauty and
+fortune than mine, because he thought a wife ought to have qualities
+which might make her amiable when her bloom was past.
+
+The vanity of my mother would not suffer her to discover any defect in
+one that had been formed by her instructions, and had all the excellence
+which she herself could boast. She told me that nothing so much hindered
+the advancement of women as literature and wit, which generally
+frightened away those that could make the best settlements, and drew
+about them a needy tribe of poets and philosophers, that filled their
+heads with wild notions of content, and contemplation, and virtuous
+obscurity. She therefore enjoined me to improve my minuet-step with a
+new French dancing-master, and wait the event of the next birth-night.
+
+I had now almost completed my nineteenth year: if my charms had lost any
+of their softness, it was more than compensated by additional dignity;
+and if the attractions of innocence were impaired, their place was
+supplied by the arts of allurement. I was therefore preparing for a new
+attack, without any abatement of my confidence, when, in the midst of my
+hopes and schemes, I was seized by that dreadful malady which has so
+often put a sudden end to the tyranny of beauty. I recovered my health
+after a long confinement; but when I looked again on that face which had
+been often flushed with transport at its own reflection, and saw all
+that I had learned to value, all that I had endeavoured to improve, all
+that had procured me honours or praises, irrecoverably destroyed, I sunk
+at once into melancholy and despondence. My pain was not much consoled
+or alleviated by my mother, who grieved that I had not lost my life
+together with my beauty; and declared, that she thought a young woman
+divested of her charms had nothing for which those who loved her could
+desire to save her from the grave.
+
+Having thus continued my relation to the period from which my life took
+a new course, I shall conclude it in another letter, if, by publishing
+this, you shew any regard for the correspondence of,
+
+Sir, &c.
+
+VICTORIA.
+
+
+
+No. 131. TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 1751.
+
+ _--Fatis accede, Deisque,
+ Et cole felices, miseros fuge. sidera terrae
+ Ut distant, ut flamma mari, sic utile recto_. LUCAN. Lib. viii. 486.
+[Transcriber's note: punctuation in original.]
+
+ Still follow where auspicious fates invite;
+ Caress the happy, and the wretched slight.
+ Sooner shall jarring elements unite,
+ Than truth with gain, than interest with right. F. LEWIS.
+
+There is scarcely any sentiment in which, amidst the innumerable
+varieties of inclination that nature or accident have scattered in the
+world, we find greater numbers concurring, than in the wish for riches;
+a wish, indeed, so prevalent that it may be considered as universal and
+transcendental, as the desire in which all other desires are included,
+and of which the various purposes which actuate mankind are only
+subordinate species and different modifications.
+
+Wealth is the general centre of inclination, the point to which all
+minds preserve an invariable tendency, and from which they afterwards
+diverge in numberless directions. Whatever is the remote or ultimate
+design, the immediate care is to be rich; and in whatever enjoyment we
+intend finally to acquiesce, we seldom consider it as attainable but by
+the means of money. Of wealth therefore all unanimously confess the
+value, nor is there any disagreement but about the use.
+
+No desire can be formed which riches do not assist to gratify. He that
+places his happiness in splendid equipage or numerous dependants, in
+refined praise or popular acclamations, in the accumulation of
+curiosities or the revels of luxury, in splendid edifices or wide
+plantations, must still, either by birth or acquisition, possess riches.
+They may be considered as the elemental principles of pleasure, which
+may be combined with endless diversity; as the essential and necessary
+substance, of which only the form is left to be adjusted by choice.
+
+The necessity of riches being thus apparent, it is not wonderful that
+almost every mind has been employed in endeavours to acquire them; that
+multitudes have vied in arts by which life is furnished with
+accommodations, and which therefore mankind may reasonably be expected
+to reward.
+
+It had, indeed, been happy, if this predominant appetite had operated
+only in concurrence with virtue, by influencing none but those who were
+zealous to deserve what they were eager to possess, and had abilities to
+improve their own fortunes by contributing to the ease or happiness of
+others. To have riches and to have merit would then have been the same,
+and success might reasonably have been considered as a proof of
+excellence.
+
+But we do not find that any of the wishes of men keep a stated
+proportion to their powers of attainment. Many envy and desire wealth,
+who can never procure it by honest industry or useful knowledge. They
+therefore turn their eyes about to examine what other methods can be
+found of gaining that which none, however impotent or worthless, will be
+content to want.
+
+A little inquiry will discover that there are nearer ways to profit than
+through the intricacies of art, or up the steeps of labour; what wisdom
+and virtue scarcely receive at the close of life, as the recompense of
+long toil and repeated efforts, is brought within the reach of subtilty
+and dishonesty by more expeditious and compendious measures: the wealth
+of credulity is an open prey to falsehood; and the possessions of
+ignorance and imbecility are easily stolen away by the conveyances of
+secret artifice, or seized by the gripe of unresisted violence.
+
+It is likewise not hard to discover that riches always procure
+protection for themselves, that they dazzle the eyes of inquiry, divert
+the celerity of pursuit, or appease the ferocity of vengeance. When any
+man is incontestably known to have large possessions, very few think it
+requisite to inquire by what practices they were obtained; the
+resentment of mankind rages only against the struggles of feeble and
+timorous corruption, but when it has surmounted the first opposition, it
+is afterwards supported by favour, and animated by applause.
+
+The prospect of gaining speedily what is ardently desired, and the
+certainty of obtaining by every accession of advantage an addition of
+security, have so far prevailed upon the passions of mankind, that the
+peace of life is destroyed by a general and incessant struggle for
+riches. It is observed of gold, by an old epigrammatist, that "To have
+it is to be in fear, and to want it is to be in sorrow." There is no
+condition which is not disquieted either with the care of gaining or of
+keeping money; and the race of man may be divided in a political
+estimate between those who are practising fraud, and those who are
+repelling it.
+
+If we consider the present state of the world, it will be found, that
+all confidence is lost among mankind, that no man ventures to act, where
+money can be endangered upon the faith of another. It is impossible to
+see the long scrolls in which every contract is included, with all their
+appendages of seals and attestation, without wondering at the depravity
+of those beings, who must be restrained from violation of promise by
+such formal and publick evidences, and precluded from equivocation and
+subterfuge by such punctilious minuteness. Among all the satires to
+which folly and wickedness have given occasion, none is equally severe
+with a bond or a settlement.
+
+Of the various arts by which riches may be obtained, the greater part
+are at the first view irreconcileable with the laws of virtue; some are
+openly flagitious, and practised not only in neglect, but in defiance of
+faith and justice; and the rest are on every side so entangled with
+dubious tendencies, and so beset with perpetual temptations, that very
+few, even of those who are not yet abandoned, are able to preserve their
+innocence, or can produce any other claim to pardon than that they
+deviated from the right less than others, and have sooner and more
+diligently endeavoured to return.
+
+One of the chief characteristicks of the golden age, of the age in which
+neither care nor danger had intruded on mankind, is the community of
+possessions: strife and fraud were totally excluded, and every turbulent
+passion was stilled by plenty and equality. Such were indeed happy
+times, but such times can return no more. Community of possession must
+include spontaneity of production; for what is obtained by labour will
+be of right the property of him by whose labour it is gained. And while
+a rightful claim to pleasure or to affluence must be procured either by
+slow industry or uncertain hazard, there will always be multitudes whom
+cowardice or impatience incite to more safe and more speedy methods, who
+strive to pluck the fruit without cultivating the tree, and to share the
+advantages of victory without partaking the danger of the battle. In
+later ages, the conviction of the danger to which virtue is exposed
+while the mind continues open to the influence of riches, has determined
+many to vows of perpetual poverty; they have suppressed desire by
+cutting off the possibility of gratification, and secured their peace by
+destroying the enemy whom they had no hope of reducing to quiet
+subjection. But, by debarring themselves from evil, they have rescinded
+many opportunities of good; they have too often sunk into inactivity and
+uselessness; and, though they have forborne to injure society, have not
+fully paid their contributions to its happiness.
+
+While riches are so necessary to present convenience, and so much more
+easily obtained by crimes than virtues, the mind can only be secured
+from yielding to the continual impulse of covetousness by the
+preponderation of unchangeable and eternal motives. Gold will turn the
+intellectual balance, when weighed only against reputation; but will be
+light and ineffectual when the opposite scale is charged with justice,
+veracity, and piety[f].
+
+
+
+No. 132. SATURDAY, JUNE 22, 1751.
+
+ --_Dociles imitandis
+ Turpibus ac pravis omnes sumus_.--JUV. Sat. xiv. 40.
+
+ The mind of mortals, in perverseness strong,
+ Imbibes with dire docility the wrong.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+MR. RAMBLER,
+
+I was bred a scholar, and after the usual course of education, found it
+necessary to employ for the support of life that learning which I had
+almost exhausted my little fortune in acquiring. The lucrative
+professions drew my regard with equal attraction; each presented ideas
+which excited my curiosity, and each imposed duties which terrified my
+apprehension.
+
+There is no temper more unpropitious to interest than desultory
+application and unlimited inquiry, by which the desires are held in a
+perpetual equipoise, and the mind fluctuates between different purposes
+without determination. I had books of every kind round me, among which I
+divided my time as caprice or accident directed. I often spent the first
+hours of the day, in considering to what study I should devote the rest,
+and at last snatched up any author that lay upon the table, or perhaps
+fled to a coffee-house for deliverance from the anxiety of irresolution,
+and the gloominess of solitude.
+
+Thus my little patrimony grew imperceptibly less, till I was roused from
+my literary slumber by a creditor, whose importunity obliged me to
+pacify him with so large a sum, that what remained was not sufficient to
+support me more than eight months. I hope you will not reproach me with
+avarice or cowardice, if I acknowledge that I now thought myself in
+danger of distress, and obliged to endeavour after some certain
+competence.
+
+There have been heroes of negligence, who have laid the price of their
+last acre in a drawer, and, without the least interruption of their
+tranquillity, or abatement of their expenses, taken out one piece after
+another, till there was no more remaining. But I was not born to such
+dignity of imprudence, or such exaltation above the cares and
+necessities of life; I therefore immediately engaged my friends to
+procure me a little employment, which might set me free from the dread
+of poverty, and afford me time to plan out some final scheme of lasting
+advantage.
+
+My friends were struck with honest solicitude, and immediately promised
+their endeavours for my extrication. They did not suffer their kindness
+to languish by delay, but prosecuted their inquiries with such success,
+that in less than a month I was perplexed with variety of offers and
+contrariety of prospects.
+
+I had however no time for long pauses of consideration; and therefore
+soon resolved to accept the office of instructing a young nobleman in
+the house of his father: I went to the seat at which the family then
+happened to reside, was received with great politeness, and invited to
+enter immediately on my charge. The terms offered were such as I should
+willingly have accepted, though my fortune had allowed me greater
+liberty of choice: the respect with which I was treated, flattered my
+vanity; and perhaps the splendour of the apartments, and the luxury of
+the table, were not wholly without their influence. I immediately
+complied with the proposals, and received the young lord into my care.
+
+Having no desire to gain more than I should truly deserve, I very
+diligently prosecuted my undertaking, and had the satisfaction of
+discovering in my pupil a flexible temper, a quick apprehension, and a
+retentive memory. I did not much doubt that my care would, in time,
+produce a wise and useful counsellor to the state, though my labours
+were somewhat obstructed by want of authority, and the necessity of
+complying with the freaks of negligence, and of waiting patiently for
+the lucky moment of voluntary attention. To a man whose imagination was
+filled with the dignity of knowledge, and to whom a studious life had
+made all the common amusements insipid and contemptible, it was not very
+easy to suppress his indignation, when he saw himself forsaken in the
+midst of his lecture, for an opportunity to catch an insect, and found
+his instructions debarred from access to the intellectual faculties, by
+the memory of a childish frolick, or the desire of a new play-thing.
+
+Those vexations would have recurred less frequently, had not his mamma,
+by entreating at one time that he should be excused from a task as a
+reward for some petty compliance, and withholding him from his book at
+another, to gratify herself or her visitants with his vivacity, shewn
+him that every thing was more pleasing and more important than
+knowledge, and that study was to be endured rather than chosen, and was
+only the business of those hours which pleasure left vacant, or
+discipline usurped.
+
+I thought it my duty to complain, in tender terms, of these frequent
+avocations; but was answered, that rank and fortune might reasonably
+hope for some indulgence; that the retardation of my pupil's progress
+would not be imputed to any negligence or inability of mine; and that
+with the success which satisfied every body else, I might surely satisfy
+myself. I had now done my duty, and without more remonstrances continued
+to inculcate my precepts whenever they could be heard, gained every day
+new influence, and found that by degrees my scholar began to feel the
+quick impulses of curiosity, and the honest ardour of studious ambition.
+
+At length it was resolved to pass a winter in London. The lady had too
+much fondness for her son to live five months without him, and too high
+an opinion of his wit and learning to refuse her vanity the
+gratification of exhibiting him to the publick. I remonstrated against
+too early an acquaintance with cards and company; but, with a soft
+contempt of my ignorance and pedantry, she said, that he had been
+already confined too long to solitary study, and it was now time to shew
+him the world; nothing was more a brand of meanness than bashful
+timidity; gay freedom and elegant assurance were only to be gained by
+mixed conversation, a frequent intercourse with strangers, and a timely
+introduction to splendid assemblies; and she had more than once
+observed, that his forwardness and complaisance began to desert him,
+that he was silent when he had not something of consequence to say,
+blushed whenever he happened to find himself mistaken, and hung down his
+head in the presence of the ladies, without the readiness of reply, and
+activity of officiousness, remarkable in young gentlemen that are bred
+in London.
+
+Again I found resistance hopeless, and again thought it proper to
+comply. We entered the coach, and in four days were placed in the gayest
+and most magnificent region of the town. My pupil, who had for several
+years lived at a remote seat, was immediately dazzled with a thousand
+beams of novelty and shew. His imagination was filled with the perpetual
+tumult of pleasure that passed before him, and it was impossible to
+allure him from the window, or to overpower by any charm of eloquence
+the rattle of coaches, and the sounds which echoed from the doors in the
+neighbourhood. In three days his attention, which he began to regain,
+was disturbed by a rich suit, in which he was equipped for the reception
+of company, and which, having been long accustomed to a plain dress, he
+could not at first survey without ecstacy.
+
+The arrival of the family was now formally notified; every hour of every
+day brought more intimate or more distant acquaintances to the door; and
+my pupil was indiscriminately introduced to all, that he might accustom
+himself to change of faces, and be rid with speed of his rustick
+diffidence. He soon endeared himself to his mother by the speedy
+acquisition or recovery of her darling qualities; his eyes sparkle at a
+numerous assembly, and his heart dances at the mention of a ball. He has
+at once caught the infection of high life, and has no other test of
+principles or actions than the quality of those to whom they are
+ascribed. He begins already to look down on me with superiority, and
+submits to one short lesson in a week, as an act of condescension rather
+than obedience; for he is of opinion, that no tutor is properly
+qualified who cannot speak French; and having formerly learned a few
+familiar phrases from his sister's governess, he is every day soliciting
+his mamma to procure him a foreign footman, that he may grow polite by
+his conversation. I am not yet insulted, but find myself likely to
+become soon a superfluous incumbrance, for my scholar has now no time
+for science, or for virtue; and the lady yesterday declared him so much
+the favourite of every company, that she was afraid he would not have an
+hour in the day to dance and fence.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+EUMATHES.
+
+[Footnote f: Johnson often conversed, as well as wrote, on riches. In
+his conversations on the subject, amidst his often indulged laxity of
+talk, there was ever a deep insight into the human heart. "All the
+arguments," he once with keen satire remarked, "which are brought to
+represent poverty as no evil, shew it to be evidently a great evil. You
+never find people _labouring_ to convince you that you may live happily
+upon a plentiful fortune. So you hear people talking how miserable a
+king must be, and yet they all wish to be in his place." _Boswell_ vol.
+i. p. 422.
+
+When Simonides was asked whether it were better to be wise or rich, he
+gave an answer in favour of wealth. "For," said he, "I always behold the
+wise lingering at the gates of the wealthy." Aristot. Rhet. ii. 18.]
+
+
+
+No. 133. TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 1751.
+
+ _Magna quidem, sacris quæ dat præcepta libellis
+ Victrix fortune sapientia. Dicimus autem
+ Hos quoque felices, qui ferre incommoda vitæ,
+ Nec jactare jugum, vita didicere magistra._ Juv. Sat. xiii. 19.
+
+ Let Stoicks ethicks' haughty rules advance
+ To combat fortune, and to conquer chance:
+ Yet happy those, though not so learn'd are thought,
+ Whom life instructs, who by experience taught,
+ For new to come from past misfortunes look,
+ Nor shake the yoke, which galls the more 'tis shook. CREECH.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+You have shewn, by the publication of my letter, that you think the
+life of Victoria not wholly unworthy of the notice of a philosopher: I
+shall therefore continue my narrative, without any apology for
+unimportance which you have dignified, or for inaccuracies which you are
+to correct.
+
+When my life appeared to be no longer in danger, and as much of my
+strength was recovered as enabled me to bear the agitation of a coach, I
+was placed at a lodging in a neighbouring village, to which my mother
+dismissed me with a faint embrace, having repeated her command not to
+expose my face too soon to the sun or wind, and told me that with care I
+might perhaps become tolerable again. The prospect of being tolerable
+had very little power to elevate the imagination of one who had so long
+been accustomed to praise and ecstacy; but it was some satisfaction to
+be separated from my mother, who was incessantly ringing the knell of
+departed beauty, and never entered my room without the whine of
+condolence, or the growl of anger. She often wandered over my face, as
+travellers over the ruins of a celebrated city, to note every place
+which had once been remarkable for a happy feature. She condescended to
+visit my retirement, but always left me more melancholy; for after a
+thousand trifling inquiries about my diet, and a minute examination of
+my looks, she generally concluded with a sigh, that I should never more
+be fit to be seen.
+
+At last I was permitted to return home, but found no great improvement
+of my condition; for I was imprisoned in my chamber as a criminal, whose
+appearance would disgrace my friends, and condemn me to be tortured into
+new beauty. Every experiment which the officiousness of folly could
+communicate, or the credulity of ignorance admit, was tried upon me.
+Sometimes I was covered with emollients, by which it was expected that
+all the scars would be filled, and my cheeks plumped up to their former
+smoothness; and sometimes I was punished with artificial excoriations,
+in hopes of gaining new graces with a new skin. The cosmetick science
+was exhausted upon me; but who can repair the ruins of nature? My mother
+was forced to give me rest at last, and abandon me to the fate of a
+fallen toast, whose fortune she considered as a hopeless game, no longer
+worthy of solicitude or attention.
+
+The condition of a young woman who has never thought or heard of any
+other excellence than beauty, and whom the sudden blast of disease
+wrinkles in her bloom, is indeed sufficiently calamitous. She is at once
+deprived of all that gave her eminence or power; of all that elated her
+pride, or animated her activity; all that filled her days with pleasure,
+and her nights with hope; all that gave gladness to the present hour, or
+brightened her prospects of futurity. It is perhaps not in the power of
+a man whose attention has been divided by diversity of pursuits, and who
+has not been accustomed to derive from others much of his happiness, to
+image to himself such helpless destitution, such dismal inanity. Every
+object of pleasing contemplation is at once snatched away, and the soul
+finds every receptacle of ideas empty, or filled only with the memory of
+joys that can return no more. All is gloomy privation, or impotent
+desire; the faculties of anticipation slumber in despondency, or the
+powers of pleasure mutiny for employment.
+
+I was so little able to find entertainment for myself, that I was forced
+in a short time to venture abroad as the solitary savage is driven by
+hunger from his cavern. I entered with all the humility of disgrace into
+assemblies, where I had lately sparkled with gaiety, and towered with
+triumph. I was not wholly without hope, that dejection had
+misrepresented me to myself, and that the remains of my former face
+might yet have some attraction and influence; but the first circle of
+visits convinced me, that my reign was at an end; that life and death
+were no longer in my hands; that I was no more to practise the glance of
+command, or the frown of prohibition; to receive the tribute of sighs
+and praises, or be soothed with the gentle murmurs of amorous timidity.
+My opinion was now unheard, and my proposals were unregarded; the
+narrowness of my knowledge, and the meanness of my sentiments, were
+easily discovered, when the eyes were no longer engaged against the
+judgment; and it was observed, by those who had formerly been charmed
+with my vivacious loquacity, that my understanding was impaired as well
+as my face, and that I was no longer qualified to fill a place in any
+company but a party at cards.
+
+It is scarcely to be imagined how soon the mind sinks to a level with
+the condition. I, who had long considered all who approached me as
+vassals condemned to regulate their pleasures by my eyes, and harass
+their inventions for my entertainment, was in less than three weeks
+reduced to receive a ticket with professions of obligation; to catch
+with eagerness at a compliment; and to watch with all the anxiousness of
+dependance, lest any little civility that was paid me should pass
+unacknowledged.
+
+Though the negligence of the men was not very pleasing when compared
+with vows and adoration, yet it was far more supportable than the
+insolence of my own sex. For the first ten months after my return into
+the world, I never entered a single house in which the memory of my
+downfall was not revived. At one place I was congratulated on my escape
+with life; at another I heard of the benefits of early inoculation; by
+some I have been told in express terms, that I am not yet without my
+charms; others have whispered at my entrance, This is the celebrated
+beauty. One told me of a wash that would smooth the skin; and another
+offered me her chair that I might not front the light. Some soothed me
+with the observation that none can tell how soon my case may be her own;
+and some thought it proper to receive me with mournful tenderness,
+formal condolence, and consolatory blandishments.
+
+Thus was I every day harassed with all the stratagems of well-bred
+malignity; yet insolence was more tolerable than solitude, and I
+therefore persisted to keep my time at the doors of my acquaintance,
+without gratifying them with any appearance of resentment or depression.
+I expected that their exultation would in time vapour away; that the joy
+of their superiority would end with its novelty; and that I should be
+suffered to glide along in my present form among the nameless multitude,
+whom nature never intended to excite envy or admiration, nor enabled to
+delight the eye or inflame the heart.
+
+This was naturally to be expected, and this I began to experience. But
+when I was no longer agitated by the perpetual ardour of resistance, and
+effort of perseverance, I found more sensibly the want of those
+entertainments which had formerly delighted me; the day rose upon me
+without an engagement; and the evening closed in its natural gloom,
+without summoning me to a concert or a ball. None had any care to find
+amusements for me, and I had no power of amusing myself. Idleness
+exposed me to melancholy, and life began to languish in motionless
+indifference.
+
+Misery and shame are nearly allied. It was not without many struggles
+that I prevailed on myself to confess my uneasiness to Euphemia, the
+only friend who had never pained me with comfort or with pity. I at last
+laid my calamities before her, rather to ease my heart, than receive
+assistance. "We must distinguish," said she, "my Victoria, those evils
+which are imposed by Providence, from those to which we ourselves give
+the power of hurting us. Of your calamity, a small part is the
+infliction of Heaven, the rest is little more than the corrosion of idle
+discontent. You have lost that which may indeed sometimes contribute to
+happiness, but to which happiness is by no means inseparably annexed.
+You have lost what the greater number of the human race never have
+possessed; what those on whom it is bestowed for the most part possess
+in vain; and what you, while it was yours, knew not how to use: you have
+only lost early what the laws of nature forbid you to keep long, and
+have lost it while your mind is yet flexible, and while you have time to
+substitute more valuable and more durable excellencies. Consider
+yourself, my Victoria, as a being born to know, to reason, and to act;
+rise at once from your dream of melancholy to wisdom and to piety; you
+will find that there are other charms than those of beauty, and other
+joys than the praise of fools."
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+VICTORIA.
+
+
+
+No. 134. SATURDAY, JUNE 29, 1751.
+
+ _Quis scit an adjiciant hodiernae crastina summae
+ Tempora Dii superi?_ HOR. Lib. iv. Ode vii. 16.
+
+ Who knows if Heav'n, with ever-bounteous pow'r,
+ Shall add to-morrow to the present hour? FRANCIS.
+
+I sat yesterday morning employed in deliberating on which, among the
+various subjects that occurred to my imagination, I should bestow the
+paper of to-day. After a short effort of meditation by which nothing was
+determined, I grew every moment more irresolute, my ideas wandered from
+the first intention, and I rather wished to think, than thought upon any
+settled subject; till at last I was awakened from this dream of study by
+a summons from the press; the time was now come for which I had been
+thus negligently purposing to provide, and, however dubious or sluggish,
+I was now necessitated to write.
+
+Though to a writer whose design is so comprehensive and miscellaneous,
+that he may accommodate himself with a topick from every scene of life,
+or view of nature, it is no great aggravation of his task to be obliged
+to a sudden composition; yet I could not forbear to reproach myself for
+having so long neglected what was unavoidably to be done, and of which
+every moment's idleness increased the difficulty. There was however some
+pleasure in reflecting that I, who had only trifled till diligence was
+necessary, might still congratulate myself upon my superiority to
+multitudes, who have trifled till diligence is vain; who can by no
+degree of activity or resolution recover the opportunities which have
+slipped away; and who are condemned by their own carelessness to
+hopeless calamity and barren sorrow.
+
+The folly of allowing ourselves to delay what we know cannot be finally
+escaped, is one of the general weaknesses, which, in spite of the
+instruction of moralists, and the remonstrances of reason, prevail to a
+greater or less degree in every mind; even they who most steadily
+withstand it, find it, if not the most violent, the most pertinacious of
+their passions, always renewing its attacks, and though often
+vanquished, never destroyed.
+
+It is indeed natural to have particular regard to the time present, and
+to be most solicitous for that which is by its nearness enabled to make
+the strongest impressions. When therefore any sharp pain is to be
+suffered, or any formidable danger to be incurred, we can scarcely
+exempt ourselves wholly from the seducements of imagination; we readily
+believe that another day will bring some support or advantage which we
+now want; and are easily persuaded, that the moment of necessity which
+we desire never to arrive, is at a great distance from us.
+
+Thus life is languished away in the gloom of anxiety, and consumed in
+collecting resolutions which the next morning dissipates; in forming
+purposes which we scarcely hope to keep, and reconciling ourselves to
+our own cowardice by excuses, which, while we admit them, we know to be
+absurd. Our firmness is by the continual contemplation of misery, hourly
+impaired; every submission to our fear enlarges its dominion; we not
+only waste that time in which the evil we dread might have been suffered
+and surmounted, but even where procrastination produces no absolute
+increase of our difficulties, make them less superable to ourselves by
+habitual terrours. When evils cannot be avoided, it is wise to contract
+the interval of expectation; to meet the mischiefs which will overtake
+us if we fly; and suffer only their real malignity, without the
+conflicts of doubt, and anguish of anticipation.
+
+To act is far easier than to suffer; yet we every day see the progress
+of life retarded by the _vis inertiae_, the mere repugnance to motion,
+and find multitudes repining at the want of that which nothing but
+idleness hinders them from enjoying. The case of Tantalus, in the region
+of poetick punishment, was somewhat to be pitied, because the fruits
+that hung about him retired from his hand; but what tenderness can be
+claimed by those who, though perhaps they suffer the pains of Tantalus,
+will never lift their hands for their own relief?
+
+There is nothing more common among this torpid generation than murmurs
+and complaints; murmurs at uneasiness which only vacancy and suspicion
+expose them to feel, and complaints of distresses which it is in their
+own power to remove. Laziness is commonly associated with timidity.
+Either fear originally prohibits endeavours by infusing despair of
+success; or the frequent failure of irresolute struggles, and the
+constant desire of avoiding labour, impress by degrees false terrours on
+the mind. But fear, whether natural or acquired, when once it has full
+possession of the fancy, never fails to employ it upon visions of
+calamity, such as, if they are not dissipated by useful employment, will
+soon overcast it with horrours, and embitter life not only with those
+miseries by which all earthly beings are really more or less tormented,
+but with those which do not yet exist, and which can only be discerned
+by the perspicacity of cowardice.
+
+Among all who sacrifice future advantage to present inclination,
+scarcely any gain so little as those that suffer themselves to freeze in
+idleness. Others are corrupted by some enjoyment of more or less power
+to gratify the passions; but to neglect our duties, merely to avoid the
+labour of performing them, a labour which is always punctually rewarded,
+is surely to sink under weak temptations. Idleness never can secure
+tranquillity; the call of reason and of conscience will pierce the
+closest pavilion of the sluggard, and though it may not have force to
+drive him from his down, will be loud enough to hinder him from sleep.
+Those moments which he cannot resolve to make useful, by devoting them
+to the great business of his being, will still be usurped by powers that
+will not leave them to his disposal; remorse and vexation will seize
+upon them, and forbid him to enjoy what he is so desirous to
+appropriate.
+
+There are other causes of inactivity incident to more active faculties
+and more acute discernment. He to whom many objects of pursuit arise at
+the same time, will frequently hesitate between different desires, till
+a rival has precluded him, or change his course as new attractions
+prevail, and harass himself without advancing. He who sees different
+ways to the same end, will, unless he watches carefully over his own
+conduct, lay out too much of his attention upon the comparison of
+probabilities, and the adjustment of expedients, and pause in the choice
+of his road till some accident intercepts his journey. He whose
+penetration extends to remote consequences, and who, whenever he applies
+his attention to any design, discovers new prospects of advantage, and
+possibilities of improvement, will not easily be persuaded that his
+project is ripe for execution; but will superadd one contrivance to
+another, endeavour to unite various purposes in one operation, multiply
+complications, and refine niceties, till he is entangled in his own
+scheme, and bewildered in the perplexity of various intentions. He that
+resolves to unite all the beauties of situation in a new purchase, must
+waste his life in roving to no purpose from province to province. He
+that hopes in the same house to obtain every convenience, may draw plans
+and study Palladio, but will never lay a stone. He will attempt a
+treatise on some important subject, and amass materials, consult
+authors, and study all the dependant and collateral parts of learning,
+but never conclude himself qualified to write. He that has abilities to
+conceive perfection, will not easily be content without it; and since
+perfection cannot be reached, will lose the opportunity of doing well in
+the vain hope of unattainable excellence.
+
+The certainty that life cannot be long, and the probability that it will
+be much shorter than nature allows, ought to awaken every man to the
+active prosecution of whatever he is desirous to perform. It is true,
+that no diligence can ascertain success; death may intercept the
+swiftest career; but he who is cut off in the execution of an honest
+undertaking, has at least the honour of falling in his rank, and has
+fought the battle though he missed the victory.
+
+
+
+No. 135. TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1751.
+
+ Coelum, non animum, mutant. HOR. Lib. i. Ep. xi. 27.
+
+ Place may be chang'd; but who can change his mind?
+
+It is impossible to take a view on any side, or observe any of the
+various classes that form the great community of the world, without
+discovering the influence of example; and admitting with new conviction
+the observation of Aristotle, that _man is an imitative being_. The
+greater, far the greater number, follow the track which others have
+beaten, without any curiosity after new discoveries, or ambition of
+trusting themselves to their own conduct. And, of those who break the
+ranks and disorder the uniformity of the march, most return in a short
+time from their deviation, and prefer the equal and steady satisfaction
+of security before the frolicks of caprice and the honours of adventure.
+
+In questions difficult or dangerous it is indeed natural to repose upon
+authority, and, when fear happens to predominate, upon the authority of
+those whom we do not in general think wiser than ourselves. Very few
+have abilities requisite for the discovery of abstruse truth; and of
+those few some want leisure, and some resolution. But it is not so easy
+to find the reason of the universal submission to precedent where every
+man might safely judge for himself; where no irreparable loss can be
+hazarded, nor any mischief of long continuance incurred. Vanity might be
+expected to operate where the more powerful passions are not awakened;
+the mere pleasure of acknowledging no superior might produce slight
+singularities, or the hope of gaining some new degree of happiness
+awaken the mind to invention or experiment.
+
+If in any case the shackles of prescription could be wholly shaken off,
+and the imagination left to act without control, on what occasion should
+it be expected, but in the selection of lawful pleasure? Pleasure, of
+which the essence is choice; which compulsion dissociates from every
+thing to which nature has united it; and which owes not only its vigour
+but its being to the smiles of liberty. Yet we see that the senses, as
+well as the reason, are regulated by credulity; and that most will feel,
+or say that they feel, the gratifications which others have taught them
+to expect.
+
+At this time of universal migration, when almost every one, considerable
+enough to attract regard, has retired, or is preparing with all the
+earnestness of distress to retire, into the country; when nothing is to
+be heard but the hopes of speedy departure, or the complaints of
+involuntary delay; I have often been tempted to inquire what happiness
+is to be gained, or what inconvenience to be avoided, by this stated
+recession? Of the birds of passage, some follow the summer and some the
+winter, because they live upon sustenance which only summer or winter
+can supply; but of the annual flight of human rovers it is much harder
+to assign the reason, because they do not appear either to find or seek
+any thing which is not equally afforded by the town and country.
+
+I believe that many of these fugitives may have heard of men whose
+continual wish was for the quiet of retirement, who watched every
+opportunity to steal away from observation, to forsake the crowd, and
+delight themselves with _the society of solitude_. There is indeed
+scarcely any writer who has not celebrated the happiness of rural
+privacy, and delighted himself and his reader with the melody of birds,
+the whisper of groves, and the murmur of rivulets; nor any man eminent
+for extent of capacity, or greatness of exploits, that has not left
+behind him some memorials of lonely wisdom, and silent dignity.
+
+But almost all absurdity of conduct arises from the imitation of those
+whom we cannot resemble. Those who thus testified their weariness of
+tumult and hurry, and hasted with so much eagerness to the leisure of
+retreat, were either men overwhelmed with the pressure of difficult
+employments, harassed with importunities, and distracted with
+multiplicity; or men wholly engrossed by speculative sciences, who
+having no other end of life but to learn and teach, found their searches
+interrupted by the common commerce of civility, and their reasonings
+disjointed by frequent interruptions. Such men might reasonably fly to
+that ease and convenience which their condition allowed them to find
+only in the country. The statesman who devoted the greater part of his
+time to the publick, was desirous of keeping the remainder in his own
+power. The general, ruffled with dangers, wearied with labours, and
+stunned with acclamations, gladly snatched an interval of silence and
+relaxation. The naturalist was unhappy where the works of Providence
+were not always before him. The reasoner could adjust his systems only
+where his mind was free from the intrusion of outward objects.
+
+Such examples of solitude very few of those who are now hastening from
+the town, have any pretensions to plead in their own justification,
+since they cannot pretend either weariness of labour, or desire of
+knowledge. They purpose nothing more than to quit one scene of idleness
+for another, and after having trifled in publick, to sleep in secrecy.
+The utmost that they can hope to gain is the change of ridiculousness to
+obscurity, and the privilege of having fewer witnesses to a life of
+folly. He who is not sufficiently important to be disturbed in his
+pursuits, but spends all his hours according to his own inclination, and
+has more hours than his mental faculties enable him to fill either with
+enjoyment or desires, can have nothing to demand of shades and valleys.
+As bravery is said to be a panoply, insignificancy is always a shelter.
+
+There are, however, pleasures and advantages in a rural situation, which
+are not confined to philosophers and heroes. The freshness of the air,
+the verdure of the woods, the paint of the meadows, and the unexhausted
+variety which summer scatters upon the earth, may easily give delight to
+an unlearned spectator. It is not necessary that he who looks with
+pleasure on the colours of a flower should study the principles of
+vegetation, or that the Ptolemaick and Copernican system should be
+compared before the light of the sun can gladden, or its warmth
+invigorate. Novelty is itself a source of gratification; and Milton
+justly observes, that to him who has been long pent up in cities, no
+rural object can be presented, which will not delight or refresh some of
+his senses.
+
+Yet even these easy pleasures are missed by the greater part of those
+who waste their summer in the country. Should any man pursue his
+acquaintances to their retreats, he would find few of them listening to
+Philomel, loitering in woods, or plucking daisies, catching the healthy
+gale of the morning, or watching the gentle coruscations of declining
+day. Some will be discovered at a window by the road side, rejoicing
+when a new cloud of dust gathers towards them, as at the approach of a
+momentary supply of conversation, and a short relief from the
+tediousness of unideal vacancy. Others are placed in the adjacent
+villages, where they look only upon houses as in the rest of the year,
+with no change of objects but what a remove to any new street in London
+might have given them. The same set of acquaintances still settle
+together, and the form of life is not otherwise diversified than by
+doing the same things in a different place. They pay and receive visits
+in the usual form, they frequent the walks in the morning, they deal
+cards at night, they attend to the same tattle, and dance with the same
+partners; nor can they, at their return to their former habitation,
+congratulate themselves on any other advantage, than that they have
+passed their time like others of the same rank; and have the same right
+to talk of the happiness and beauty of the country, of happiness which
+they never felt, and beauty which they never regarded.
+
+To be able to procure its own entertainments, and to subsist upon its
+own stock, is not the prerogative of every mind. There are indeed
+understandings so fertile and comprehensive, that they can always feed
+reflection with new supplies, and suffer nothing from the preclusion of
+adventitious amusements; as some cities have within their own walls
+enclosed ground enough to feed their inhabitants in a siege. But others
+live only from day to day, and must be constantly enabled, by foreign
+supplies, to keep out the encroachments of languor and stupidity. Such
+could not indeed be blamed for hovering within reach of their usual
+pleasure, more than any other animal for not quitting its native
+element, were not their faculties contracted by their own fault. But let
+not those who go into the country, merely because they dare not be left
+alone at home, boast their love of nature, or their qualifications for
+solitude; nor pretend that they receive instantaneous infusions of
+wisdom from the Dryads, and are able, when they leave smoke and noise
+behind, to act, or think, or reason for themselves.
+
+
+
+No. 136. SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Echthrus gar moi keimos, omos aidao pulusin,
+ Os ch eteron men keuthei eni phresin, allo de bazei.]
+ HOMER, [Greek: I'.] 313.
+
+ Who dares think one thing, and another tell,
+ My heart detests him as the gates of Hell. POPE.
+
+The regard which they whose abilities are employed in the works of
+imagination claim from the rest of mankind, arises in a great measure
+from their influence on futurity. Rank may be conferred by princes, and
+wealth bequeathed by misers or by robbers; but the honours of a lasting
+name, and the veneration of distant ages, only the sons of learning have
+the power of bestowing. While therefore it continues one of the
+characteristicks of rational nature to decline oblivion, authors never
+can be wholly overlooked in the search after happiness, nor become
+contemptible but by their own fault.
+
+The man who considers himself as constituted the ultimate judge of
+disputable characters, and entrusted with the distribution of the last
+terrestrial rewards of merit, ought to summon all his fortitude to the
+support of his integrity, and resolve to discharge an office of such
+dignity with the most vigilant caution and scrupulous justice. To
+deliver examples to posterity, and to regulate the opinion of future
+times, is no slight or trivial undertaking; nor is it easy to commit
+more atrocious treason against the great republick of humanity, than by
+falsifying its records and misguiding its decrees.
+
+To scatter praise or blame without regard to justice, is to destroy the
+distinction of good and evil. Many have no other test of actions than
+general opinion; and all are so far influenced by a sense of reputation,
+that they are often restrained by fear of reproach, and excited by hope
+of honour, when other principles have lost their power; nor can any
+species of prostitution promote general depravity more than that which
+destroys the force of praise, by shewing that it may be acquired without
+deserving it, and which, by setting free the active and ambitious from
+the dread of infamy, lets loose the rapacity of power, and weakens the
+only authority by which greatness is controlled.
+
+Praise, like gold and diamonds, owes its value only to its scarcity. It
+becomes cheap as it becomes vulgar, and will no longer raise
+expectation, or animate enterprise. It is therefore not only necessary,
+that wickedness, even when it is not safe to censure it, be denied
+applause, but that goodness be commended only in proportion to its
+degree; and that the garlands, due to the great benefactors of mankind,
+be not suffered to fade upon the brow of him who can boast only petty
+services and easy virtues.
+
+Had these maxims been universally received, how much would have been
+added to the task of dedication, the work on which all the power of
+modern wit has been exhausted. How few of these initial panegyricks had
+appeared, if the author had been obliged first to find a man of virtue,
+then to distinguish the distinct species and degree of his desert, and
+at last to pay him only the honours which he might justly claim. It is
+much easier to learn the name of the last man whom chance has exalted to
+wealth and power, to obtain by the intervention of some of his
+domesticks the privilege of addressing him, or, in confidence of the
+general acceptance of flattery, to venture on an address without any
+previous solicitation; and after having heaped upon him all the virtues
+to which philosophy had assigned a name, inform him how much more might
+be truly said, did not the fear of giving pain to his modesty repress
+the raptures of wonder and the zeal of veneration.
+
+Nothing has so much degraded literature from its natural rank, as the
+practice of indecent and promiscuous dedication; for what credit can he
+expect who professes himself the hireling of vanity, however profligate,
+and without shame or scruple, celebrates the worthless, dignifies the
+mean, and gives to the corrupt, licentious, and oppressive, the
+ornaments which ought only to add grace to truth, and loveliness to
+innocence? Every other kind of adulation, however shameful, however
+mischievous, is less detestable than the crime of counterfeiting
+characters, and fixing the stamp of literary sanction upon the dross and
+refuse of the world.
+
+Yet I would not overwhelm the authors with the whole load of infamy, of
+which part, perhaps the greater part, ought to fall upon their patrons.
+If he that hires a bravo, partakes the guilt of murder, why should he
+who bribes a flatterer, hope to be exempted from the shame of falsehood?
+The unhappy dedicator is seldom without some motives which obstruct,
+though not destroy, the liberty of choice; he is oppressed by miseries
+which he hopes to relieve, or inflamed by ambition which he expects to
+gratify. But the patron has no incitements equally violent; he can
+receive only a short gratification, with which nothing but stupidity
+could dispose him to be pleased. The real satisfaction which praise can
+afford is by repeating aloud the whispers of conscience, and by shewing
+us that we have not endeavoured to deserve well in vain. Every other
+encomium is, to an intelligent mind, satire and reproach; the
+celebration of those virtues which we feel ourselves to want, can only
+impress a quicker sense of our own defects, and shew that we have not
+yet satisfied the expectations of the world, by forcing us to observe
+how much fiction must contribute to the completion of our character.
+
+Yet sometimes the patron may claim indulgence; for it does not always
+happen, that the encomiast has been much encouraged to his attempt. Many
+a hapless author, when his book, and perhaps his dedication, was ready
+for the press, has waited long before any one would pay the price of
+prostitution, or consent to hear the praises destined to insure his name
+against the casualties of time; and many a complaint has been vented
+against the decline of learning, and neglect of genius, when either
+parsimonious prudence has declined expense, or honest indignation
+rejected falsehood. But if at last, after long inquiry and innumerable
+disappointments, he find a lord willing to hear of his own eloquence and
+taste, a statesman desirous of knowing how a friendly historian will
+represent his conduct, or a lady delighted to leave to the world some
+memorial of her wit and beauty, such weakness cannot be censured as an
+instance of enormous depravity. The wisest man may, by a diligent
+solicitor, be surprised in the hour of weakness, and persuaded to solace
+vexation, or invigorate hope, with the musick of flattery.
+
+To censure all dedications as adulatory and servile, would discover
+rather envy than justice. Praise is the tribute of merit, and he that
+has incontestably distinguished himself by any publick performance, has
+a right to all the honours which the publick can bestow. To men thus
+raised above the rest of the community, there is no need that the book
+or its author should have any particular relation; that the patron is
+known to deserve respect, is sufficient to vindicate him that pays it.
+To the same regard from particular persons, private virtue and less
+conspicuous excellence may be sometimes entitled. An author may with
+great propriety inscribe his work to him by whose encouragement it was
+undertaken, or by whose liberality he has been enabled to prosecute it,
+and he may justly rejoice in his own fortitude that dares to rescue
+merit from obscurity.
+
+ _Acribus exemplis videor te claudere: misce
+ Ergo aliquid nostris de moribus.--_
+
+ Thus much I will indulge thee for thy ease,
+ And mingle something of our times to please. Dryden, jun.
+
+I know not whether greater relaxation may not he indulged, and whether
+hope as well as gratitude may not unblamably produce a dedication; but
+let the writer who pours out his praises only to propitiate power, or
+attract the attention of greatness, be cautious lest his desire betray
+him to exuberant eulogies. We are naturally more apt to please ourselves
+with the future than the past, and while we luxuriate in expectation,
+may be easily persuaded to purchase what we yet rate, only by
+imagination, at a higher price than experience will warrant.
+
+But no private views of personal regard can discharge any man from his
+general obligations to virtue and to truth. It may happen in the various
+combinations of life, that a good man may receive favours from one, who,
+notwithstanding his accidental beneficence, cannot be justly proposed to
+the imitation of others, and whom therefore he must find some other way
+of rewarding than by public celebrations. Self-love has indeed many
+powers of seducement; but it surely ought not to exalt any individual to
+equality with the collective body of mankind, or persuade him that a
+benefit conferred on him is equivalent to every other virtue. Yet many,
+upon false principles of gratitude, have ventured to extol wretches,
+whom all but their dependents numbered among the reproaches of the
+species, and whom they would likewise have beheld with the same scorn,
+had they not been hired to dishonest approbation.
+
+To encourage merit with praise is the great business of literature; but
+praise must lose its influence, by unjust or negligent distribution; and
+he that impairs its value may be charged with misapplication of the
+power that genius puts into his hands, and with squandering on guilt the
+recompense of virtue.
+
+
+
+No. 137. TUESDAY, JULY 9, 1751.
+
+ _Dum vitant stulti vitia, in contraria currunt_.
+ Hor. Lib. i. Sat. ii. 24.
+
+ --Whilst fools one vice condemn,
+ They run into the opposite extreme. CREECH.
+
+That wonder is the effect of ignorance, has been often observed. The
+awful stillness of attention, with which the mind is overspread at the
+first view of an unexpected effect, ceases when we have leisure to
+disentangle complications and investigate causes. Wonder is a pause of
+reason, a sudden cessation of the mental progress, which lasts only
+while the understanding is fixed upon some single idea, and is at an end
+when it recovers force enough to divide the object into its parts, or
+mark the intermediate gradations from the first agent to the last
+consequence.
+
+It may be remarked with equal truth, that ignorance is often the effect
+of wonder. It is common for those who have never accustomed themselves
+to the labour of inquiry, nor invigorated their confidence by conquests
+over difficulty, to sleep in the gloomy quiescence of astonishment,
+without any effort to animate inquiry, or dispel obscurity. What they
+cannot immediately conceive, they consider as too high to be reached, or
+too extensive to be comprehended; they therefore content themselves with
+the gaze of folly, forbear to attempt what they have no hopes of
+performing, and resign the pleasure of rational contemplation to more
+pertinacious study, or more active faculties.
+
+Among the productions of mechanick art, many are of a form so different
+from that of their first materials, and many consist of parts so
+numerous and so nicely adapted to each other, that it is not possible to
+view them without amazement. But when we enter the shops of artificers,
+observe the various tools by which every operation is facilitated, and
+trace the progress of a manufacture through the different hands, that,
+in succession to each other, contribute to its perfection, we soon
+discover that every single man has an easy task, and that the extremes,
+however remote, of natural rudeness and artificial elegance, are joined
+by a regular concatenation of effects, of which every one is introduced
+by that which precedes it, and equally introduces that which is to
+follow.
+
+The same is the state of intellectual and manual performances. Long
+calculations or complex diagrams affright the timorous and unexperienced
+from a second view; but if we have skill sufficient to analyze them into
+simple principles, it will be discovered that our fear was groundless.
+_Divide and conquer_, is a principle equally just in science as in
+policy. Complication is a species of confederacy, which, while it
+continues united, bids defiance to the most active and vigorous
+intellect; but of which every member is separately weak, and which may
+therefore be quickly subdued, if it can once be broken.
+
+The chief art of learning, as Locke has observed, is to attempt but
+little at a time. The widest excursions of the mind are made by short
+flights frequently repeated; the most lofty fabricks of science are
+formed by the continued accumulation of single propositions.
+
+It often happens, whatever be the cause, that impatience of labour, or
+dread of miscarriage, seizes those who are most distinguished for
+quickness of apprehension; and that they who might with greatest reason
+promise themselves victory, are least willing to hazard the encounter.
+This diffidence, where the attention is not laid asleep by laziness, or
+dissipated by pleasures, can arise only from confused and general views,
+such as negligence snatches in haste, or from the disappointment of the
+first hopes formed by arrogance without reflection. To expect that the
+intricacies of science will be pierced by a careless glance, or the
+eminences of fame ascended without labour, is to expect a particular
+privilege, a power denied to the rest of mankind; but to suppose that
+the maze is inscrutable to diligence, or the heights inaccessible to
+perseverance, is to submit tamely to the tyranny of fancy, and enchain
+the mind in voluntary shackles.
+
+It is the proper ambition of the heroes in literature to enlarge the
+boundaries of knowledge by discovering and conquering new regions of the
+intellectual world. To the success of such undertakings perhaps some
+degree of fortuitous happiness is necessary, which no man can promise or
+procure to himself; and therefore doubt and irresolution may be forgiven
+in him that ventures into the unexplored abysses of truth, and attempts
+to find his way through the fluctuations of uncertainty, and the
+conflicts of contradiction. But when nothing more is required, than to
+pursue a path already beaten, and to trample obstacles which others have
+demolished, why should any man so much distrust his own intellect as to
+imagine himself unequal to the attempt?
+
+It were to be wished that they who devote their lives to study would at
+once believe nothing too great for their attainment, and consider
+nothing as too little for their regard; that they would extend their
+notice alike to science and to life, and unite some knowledge of the
+present world to their acquaintance with past ages and remote events.
+
+Nothing has so much exposed men of learning to contempt and ridicule, as
+their ignorance of things which are known to all but themselves. Those
+who have been taught to consider the institutions of the schools, as
+giving the last perfection to human abilities, are surprised to see men
+wrinkled with study, yet wanting to be instructed in the minute
+circumstances of propriety, or the necessary forms of daily transaction;
+and quickly shake off their reverence for modes of education, which they
+find to produce no ability above the rest of mankind.
+
+"Books," says Bacon, "can never teach the use of books." The student
+must learn by commerce with mankind to reduce his speculations to
+practice, and accommodate his knowledge to the purposes of life.
+
+It is too common for those who have been bred to scholastick
+professions, and passed much of their time in academies where nothing
+but learning confers honours, to disregard every other qualification,
+and to imagine that they shall find mankind ready to pay homage to their
+knowledge, and to crowd about them for instruction. They therefore step
+out from their cells into the open world with all the confidence of
+authority and dignity of importance; they look round about them at once
+with ignorance and scorn on a race of beings to whom they are equally
+unknown and equally contemptible, but whose manners they must imitate,
+and with whose opinions they must comply, if they desire to pass their
+time happily among them.
+
+To lessen that disdain with which scholars are inclined to look on the
+common business of the world, and the unwillingness with which they
+condescend to learn what is not to be found in any system of philosophy,
+it may be necessary to consider that though admiration is excited by
+abstruse researches and remote discoveries, yet pleasure is not given,
+nor affection conciliated, but by softer accomplishments, and qualities
+more easily communicable to those about us. He that can only converse
+upon questions, about which only a small part of mankind has knowledge
+sufficient to make them curious, must lose his days in unsocial silence,
+and live in the crowd of life without a companion. He that can only be
+useful on great occasions, may die without exerting his abilities, and
+stand a helpless spectator of a thousand vexations which fret away
+happiness, and which nothing is required to remove but a little
+dexterity of conduct and readiness of expedients.
+
+No degree of knowledge attainable by man is able to set him above the
+want of hourly assistance, or to extinguish the desire of fond
+endearments, and tender officiousness; and therefore, no one should
+think it unnecessary to learn those arts by which friendship may be
+gained. Kindness is preserved by a constant reciprocation of benefits or
+interchange of pleasures; but such benefits only can be bestowed, as
+others are capable to receive, and such pleasures only imparted, as
+others are qualified to enjoy.
+
+By this descent from the pinnacles of art no honour will be lost; for
+the condescensions of learning are always overpaid by gratitude. An
+elevated genius employed in little things, appears, to use the simile of
+Longinus, like the sun in his evening declination: he remits his
+splendour but retains his magnitude, and pleases more though he dazzles
+less.
+
+
+
+No. 138. SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1751.
+
+ _O tantum libeat mecum tibi sordida rura,
+ Atque humiles habitare casas, et figere cervos_. VIRG. EC. ii 28.
+
+ With me retire, and leave the pomp of courts
+ For humble cottages and rural sports.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Though the contempt with which you have treated the annual migrations of
+the gay and busy part of mankind is justified by daily observation;
+since most of those who leave the town, neither vary their
+entertainments nor enlarge their notions; yet I suppose you do not
+intend to represent the practice itself as ridiculous, or to declare
+that he whose condition puts the distribution of his time into his own
+power may not properly divide it between the town and country.
+
+That the country, and only the country, displays the inexhaustible
+varieties of nature, and supplies the philosophical mind with matter for
+admiration and inquiry, never was denied; but my curiosity is very
+little attracted by the colour of a flower, the anatomy of an insect, or
+the structure of a nest; I am generally employed upon human manners, and
+therefore fill up the months of rural leisure with remarks on those who
+live within the circle of my notice. If writers would more frequently
+visit those regions of negligence and liberty, they might diversify
+their representations, and multiply their images, for in the country are
+original characters chiefly to be found. In cities, and yet more in
+courts, the minute discriminations which distinguish one from another
+are for the most part effaced, the peculiarities of temper and opinion
+are gradually worn away by promiscuous converse, as angular bodies and
+uneven surfaces lose their points and asperities by frequent attrition
+against one another, and approach by degrees to uniform rotundity. The
+prevalence of fashion, the influence of example, the desire of applause,
+and the dread of censure, obstruct the natural tendencies of the mind,
+and check the fancy in its first efforts to break forth into experiments
+of caprice.
+
+Few inclinations are so strong as to grow up into habits, when they must
+struggle with the constant opposition of settled forms and established
+customs. But in the country every man is a separate and independent
+being: solitude flatters irregularity with hopes of secrecy; and wealth,
+removed from the mortification of comparison, and the awe of equality,
+swells into contemptuous confidence, and sets blame and laughter at
+defiance; the impulses of nature act unrestrained, and the disposition
+dares to shew itself in its true form, without any disguise of
+hypocrisy, or decorations of elegance. Every one indulges the full
+enjoyment of his own choice, and talks and lives with no other view than
+to please himself, without inquiring how far he deviates from the
+general practice, or considering others as entitled to any account of
+his sentiments or actions. If he builds or demolishes, opens or
+encloses, deluges or drains, it is not his care what may be the opinion
+of those who are skilled in perspective or architecture, it is
+sufficient that he has no landlord to controul him, and that none has
+any right to examine in what projects the lord of the manour spends his
+own money on his own grounds.
+
+For this reason it is not very common to want subjects for rural
+conversation. Almost every man is daily doing something which produces
+merriment, wonder, or resentment, among his neighbours. This utter
+exemption from restraint leaves every anomalous quality to operate in
+its full extent, and suffers the natural character to diffuse itself to
+every part of life. The pride which, under the check of publick
+observation, would have been only vented among servants and domesticks,
+becomes in a country baronet the torment of a province, and instead of
+terminating in the destruction of China-ware and glasses, ruins tenants,
+dispossesses cottagers, and harasses villages with actions of trespass
+and bills of indictment.
+
+It frequently happens that, even without violent passions, or enormous
+corruption, the freedom and laxity of a rustick life produces remarkable
+particularities of conduct or manner. In the province where I now
+reside, we have one lady eminent for wearing a gown always of the same
+cut and colour; another for shaking hands with those that visit her; and
+a third for unshaken resolution never to let tea or coffee enter her
+house.
+
+But of all the female characters which this place affords, I have found
+none so worthy of attention as that of Mrs. Busy, a widow, who lost her
+husband in her thirtieth year, and has since passed her time at the
+manour-house in the government of her children, and the management of
+the estate.
+
+Mrs. Busy was married at eighteen from a boarding-school, where she had
+passed her time like other young ladies, in needle-work, with a few
+intervals of dancing and reading. When she became a bride she spent one
+winter with her husband in town, where, having no idea of any
+conversation beyond the formalities of a visit, she found nothing to
+engage her passions: and when she had been one night at court, and two
+at an opera, and seen the Monument, the Tombs, and the Tower, she
+concluded that London had nothing more to shew, and wondered that when
+women had once seen the world, they could not be content to stay at
+home. She therefore went willingly to the ancient seat, and for some
+years studied housewifery under Mr. Busy's mother, with so much
+assiduity, that the old lady, when she died, bequeathed her a
+caudle-cup, a soup-dish, two beakers, and a chest of table-linen spun
+by herself.
+
+Mr. Busy, finding the economical qualities of his lady, resigned his
+affairs wholly into her hands, and devoted his life to his pointers and
+his hounds. He never visited his estates but to destroy the partridges
+or foxes; and often committed such devastations in the rage of pleasure,
+that some of his tenants refused to hold their lands at the usual rent.
+Their landlady persuaded them to be satisfied, and entreated her husband
+to dismiss his dogs, with many exact calculations of the ale drunk by
+his companions, and corn consumed by the horses, and remonstrances
+against the insolence of the huntsman, and the frauds of the groom. The
+huntsman was too necessary to his happiness to be discarded; and he had
+still continued to ravage his own estate, had he not caught a cold and a
+fever by shooting mallards in the fens. His fever was followed by a
+consumption, which in a few months brought him to the grave.
+
+Mrs. Busy was too much an economist to feel either joy or sorrow at his
+death. She received the compliments and consolations of her neighbours
+in a dark room, out of which she stole privately every night and morning
+to see the cows milked; and after a few days declared that she thought a
+widow might employ herself better than in nursing grief; and that, for
+her part, she was resolved that the fortunes of her children should not
+be impaired by her neglect.
+
+She therefore immediately applied herself to the reformation of abuses.
+She gave away the dogs, discharged the servants of the kennel and
+stable, and sent the horses to the next fair, but rated at so high a
+price that they returned unsold. She was resolved to have nothing idle
+about her, and ordered them to be employed in common drudgery. They lost
+their sleekness and grace, and were soon purchased at half the value.
+
+She soon disencumbered herself from her weeds, and put on a riding-hood,
+a coarse apron, and short petticoats, and has turned a large manour into
+a farm, of which she takes the management wholly upon herself. She rises
+before the sun to order the horses to their gears, and sees them well
+rubbed down at their return from work; she attends the dairy morning and
+evening, and watches when a calf falls that it may be carefully nursed;
+she walks out among the sheep at noon, counts the lambs, and observes
+the fences, and, where she finds a gap, stops it with a bush till it can
+be better mended. In harvest she rides a-field in the waggon, and is
+very liberal of her ale from a wooden bottle. At her leisure hours she
+looks goose eggs, airs the wool-room, and turns the cheese.
+
+When respect or curiosity brings visitants to her house, she entertains
+them with prognosticks of a scarcity of wheat, or a rot among the sheep,
+and always thinks herself privileged to dismiss them, when she is to see
+the hogs fed, or to count her poultry on the roost.
+
+The only things neglected about her are her children, whom she has
+taught nothing but the lowest household duties. In my last visit I met
+Miss Busy carrying grains to a sick cow, and was entertained with the
+accomplishments of her eldest son, a youth of such early maturity, that
+though he is only sixteen, she can trust him to sell corn in the market.
+Her younger daughter, who is eminent for her beauty, though somewhat
+tanned in making hay, was busy in pouring out ale to the ploughmen, that
+every one might have an equal share.
+
+I could not but look with pity on this young family, doomed by the
+absurd prudence of their mother to ignorance and meanness: but when I
+recommended a more elegant education, was answered, that she never saw
+bookish or finical people grow rich, and that she was good for nothing
+herself till she had forgotten the nicety of the boarding-school.
+
+I am, Yours, &c.
+
+BUCOLUS.
+
+
+
+No. 139. TUESDAY, JULY 16, 1751
+
+ --_Sit quod vis simplex duntanat et unum_. Hor. Art. Poet. 23.
+
+ Let ev'ry piece be simple and be one.
+
+It is required by Aristotle to the perfection of a tragedy, and is
+equally necessary to every other species of regular composition, that it
+should have a beginning, a middle, and an end. "The beginning," says he,
+"is that which hath nothing necessarily previous, but to which that
+which follows is naturally consequent; the end, on the contrary, is that
+which by necessity, or, at least, according to the common course of
+things, succeeds something else, but which implies nothing consequent to
+itself; the middle is connected on one side to something that naturally
+goes before, and on the other to something that naturally follows it."
+
+Such is the rule laid down by this great critick, for the disposition of
+the different parts of a well-constituted fable. It must begin where it
+may be made intelligible without introduction; and end where the mind is
+left in repose, without expectation of any further event. The
+intermediate passages must join the last effect to the first cause, by a
+regular and unbroken concatenation; nothing must be, therefore,
+inserted, which does not apparently arise from something foregoing, and
+properly make way for something that succeeds it.
+
+This precept is to be understood in its rigour only with respect to
+great and essential events, and cannot be extended in the same force to
+minuter circumstances and arbitrary decorations, which yet are more
+happy, as they contribute more to the main design; for it is always a
+proof of extensive thought and accurate circumspection, to promote
+various purposes by the same act; and the idea of an ornament admits
+use, though it seems to exclude necessity.
+
+Whoever purposes, as it is expressed by Milton, _to build the lofty
+rhyme_, must acquaint himself with this law of poetical architecture,
+and take care that his edifice be solid as well as beautiful; that
+nothing stand single or independent, so as that it may be taken away
+without injuring the rest; but that, from the foundation to the
+pinnacles, one part rest firm upon another.
+
+The regular and consequential distribution is among common authors
+frequently neglected; but the failures of those, whose example can have
+no influence, may be safely overlooked, nor is it of much use to recall
+obscure and unguarded names to memory for the sake of sporting with
+their infamy. But if there is any writer whose genius can embellish
+impropriety, and whose authority can make errour venerable, his works
+are the proper objects of critical inquisition. To expunge faults where
+there are no excellencies is a task equally useless with that of the
+chymist, who employs the arts of separation and refinement upon ore in
+which no precious metal is contained to reward his operations.
+
+The tragedy of Samson Agonistes has been celebrated as the second work
+of the great author of Paradise Lost, and opposed, with all the
+confidence of triumph, to the dramatick performances of other nations.
+It contains, indeed, just sentiments, maxims of wisdom, and oracles of
+piety, and many passages written with the ancient spirit of choral
+poetry, in which there is a just and pleasing mixture of Seneca's moral
+declamation, with the wild enthusiasm of the Greek writers. It is,
+therefore, worthy of examination, whether a performance thus illuminated
+with genius, and enriched with learning, is composed according to the
+indispensable laws of Aristotelian criticism: and, omitting, at present,
+all other considerations, whether it exhibits a beginning, a middle, and
+an end.
+
+The beginning is undoubtedly beautiful and proper, opening with a
+graceful abruptness, and proceeding naturally to a mournful recital of
+facts necessary to be known:
+
+ _Samson_. A little onward lend thy guiding hand
+ To these dark steps, a little further on;
+ For yonder bank hath choice of sun and shade:
+ There I am wont to sit, when any chance
+ Relieves me from my task of servile toil,
+ Daily in the common prison else enjoin'd me.--
+ O, wherefore was my birth from Heav'n foretold
+ Twice by an Angel?--
+ Why was my breeding order'd and prescrib'd,
+ As of a person separate to God,
+ Design'd for great exploits; if I must die
+ Betray'd, captiv'd, and both my eyes put out?--
+ Whom have I to complain of but myself?
+ Who this high gift of strength committed to me,
+ In what part lodg'd, how easily bereft me,
+ Under the seal of silence could not keep:
+ But weakly to a woman must reveal it.
+
+His soliloquy is interrupted by a chorus or company of men of his own
+tribe, who condole his miseries, extenuate his fault, and conclude with
+a solemn vindication of divine justice. So that at the conclusion of the
+first act there is no design laid, no discovery made, nor any
+disposition formed towards the consequent event.
+
+In the second act, Manoah, the father of Samson, comes to seek his son,
+and, being shewn him by the chorus, breaks out into lamentations of his
+misery, and comparisons of his present with his former state,
+representing to him the ignominy which his religion suffers, by the
+festival this day celebrated in honour of Dagon, to whom the idolaters
+ascribed his overthrow.
+
+ --Thou bear'st
+ Enough, and more, the burthen of that fault;
+ Bitterly hast thou paid, and still art paying
+ That rigid score. A worse thing yet remains,
+ This day the Philistines a popular feast
+ Here celebrate in Gaza; and proclaim
+ Great pomp, and sacrifice, and praises loud
+ To Dagon, as their God who hath deliver'd
+ Thee, Samson, bound and blind, into their hands,
+ Them out of thine, who slew'st them many a slain.
+
+Samson, touched with this reproach, makes a reply equally penitential
+and pious, which his father considers as the effusion of prophetick
+confidence:
+
+ _Samson_.--He, be sure,
+ Will not connive, or linger, thus provok'd,
+ But will arise and his great name assert:
+ Dagon must stoop, and shall ere long receive
+ Such a discomfit, as shall quite despoil him
+ Of all these boasted trophies won on me.
+
+ _Manoah_. With cause this hope relieves thee, and these words
+ I as a prophecy receive; for God,
+ Nothing more certain, will not long defer
+ To vindicate the glory of his name.
+
+This part of the dialogue, as it might tend to animate or exasperate
+Samson, cannot, I think, be censured as wholly superfluous; but the
+succeeding dispute, in which Samson contends to die, and which his
+father breaks off, that he may go to solicit his release, is only
+valuable for its own beauties, and has no tendency to introduce any
+thing that follows it.
+
+The next event of the drama is the arrival of Dalila, with all her
+graces, artifices, and allurements. This produces a dialogue, in a very
+high degree elegant and instructive, from which she retires, after she
+has exhausted her persuasions, and is no more seen nor heard of; nor has
+her visit any effect but that of raising the character of Samson.
+
+In the fourth act enters Harapha, the giant of Gath, whose name had
+never been mentioned before, and who has now no other motive of coming,
+than to see the man whose strength and actions are so loudly celebrated:
+
+ _Haraph_.--Much I have heard
+ Of thy prodigious might and feats perform'd,
+ Incredible to me, in this displeas'd,
+ That I was never present in the place
+ Of those encounters, where we might have tried
+ Each other's force in camp or listed fields;
+ And now am come to see of whom such noise
+ Hath walk'd about, and each limb to survey,
+ If thy appearance answer loud report.
+
+Samson challenges him to the combat; and, after an interchange of
+reproaches, elevated by repeated defiance on one side, and imbittered by
+contemptuous insults on the other, Harapha retires; we then hear it
+determined by Samson, and the chorus, that no consequence good or bad
+will proceed from their interview:
+
+ _Chorus_. He will directly to the lords, I fear,
+ And with malicious counsel stir them up
+ Some way or other yet farther to afflict thee.
+
+ _Sams_. He must allege some cause, and offer'd fight
+ Will not dare mention, lest a question rise
+ Whether he durst accept the offer or not;
+ And, that he durst not, plain enough appear'd.
+
+At last, in the fifth act, appears a messenger from the lords assembled
+at the festival of Dagon, with a summons by which Samson is required to
+come and entertain them with some proof of his strength. Samson, after a
+short expostulation, dismisses him with a firm and resolute refusal;
+but, during the absence of the messenger, having a while defended the
+propriety of his conduct, he at last declares himself moved by a secret
+impulse to comply, and utters some dark presages of a great event to be
+brought to pass by his agency, under the direction of Providence:
+
+ _Sams_. Be of good courage, I begin to feel
+ Some rousing motions in me, which dispose
+ To something extraordinary my thoughts.
+ I with this messenger will go along,
+ Nothing to do, be sure, that may dishonour
+ Our Law, or stain my vow of Nazarite.
+ If there be aught of presage in the mind,
+ This day will be remarkable in my life
+ By some great act, or of my days the last.
+
+While Samson is conducted off by the messenger, his father returns with
+hopes of success in his solicitation, upon which he confers with the
+chorus till their dialogue is interrupted, first by a shout of triumph,
+and afterwards by screams of horrour and agony. As they stand
+deliberating where they shall be secure, a man who had been present at
+the show enters, and relates how Samson, having prevailed on his guide
+to suffer him to lean against the main pillars of the theatrical
+edifice, tore down the roof upon the spectators and himself:
+
+ --Those two massy pillars,
+ With horrible convulsion, to and fro
+ He tugg'd, he shook, till down they came, and drew
+ The whole roof after them, with burst of thunder
+ Upon the heads of all who sat beneath--
+ Samson, with these immixt, inevitably
+ Pull'd down the same destruction on himself.
+
+This is undoubtedly a just and regular catastrophe, and the poem,
+therefore, has a beginning and an end which Aristotle himself could not
+have disapproved; but it must be allowed to want a middle, since nothing
+passes between the first act and the last, that either hastens or delays
+the death of Samson. The whole drama, if its superfluities were cut off,
+would scarcely fill a single act; yet this is the tragedy which
+ignorance has admired, and bigotry applauded.
+
+
+
+No. 140. SATURDAY, JULY 20, 1751.
+
+ --_Quis tam Lucili fautor inepte est,
+ Ut non hoc fateatur?_ HOR. Lib. i. Sat. x. 2.
+
+ What doating bigot, to his faults so blind,
+ As not to grant me this, can Milton find?
+
+It is common, says Bacon, to desire the end without enduring the means.
+Every member of society feels and acknowledges the necessity of
+detecting crimes, yet scarce any degree of virtue or reputation is able
+to secure an informer from publick hatred. The learned world has always
+admitted the usefulness of critical disquisitions, yet he that attempts
+to show, however modestly, the failures of a celebrated writer, shall
+surely irritate his admirers, and incur the imputation of envy,
+captiousness, and malignity.
+
+With this danger full in my view, I shall proceed to examine the
+sentiments of Milton's tragedy, which, though much less liable to
+censure than the disposition of his plan, are, like those of other
+writers, sometimes exposed to just exceptions for want of care, or want
+of discernment.
+
+Sentiments are proper and improper as they consist more or less with the
+character and circumstances of the person to whom they are attributed,
+with the rules of the composition in which they are found, or with the
+settled and unalterable nature of things.
+
+It is common among the tragick poets to introduce their persons alluding
+to events or opinions, of which they could not possibly have any
+knowledge. The barbarians of remote or newly discovered regions often
+display their skill in European learning. The god of love is mentioned
+in Tamerlane with all the familiarity of a Roman epigrammatist; and a
+late writer has put Harvey's doctrine of the circulation of the blood
+into the mouth of a Turkish statesman, who lived near two centuries
+before it was known even to philosophers or anatomists.
+
+Milton's learning, which acquainted him with the manners of the ancient
+eastern nations, and his invention, which required no assistance from
+the common cant of poetry, have preserved him from frequent outrages of
+local or chronological propriety. Yet he has mentioned Chalybean steel,
+of which it is not very likely that his chorus should have heard, and
+has made Alp the general name of a mountain, in a region where the Alps
+could scarcely be known:
+
+ No medicinal liquor can assuage,
+ Nor breath of cooling air from snowy Alp.
+
+He has taught Samson the tales of Circe, and the Syrens, at which he
+apparently hints in his colloquy with Dalila:
+
+ --I know thy trains,
+ Though dearly to my cost, thy gins, and toils;
+ Thy fair _enchanted cup_, and _warbling charms_
+ No more on me have pow'r.
+
+But the grossest errour of this kind is the solemn introduction of the
+Phoenix in the last scene; which is faulty, not only as it is
+incongruous to the personage to whom it is ascribed, but as it is so
+evidently contrary to reason and nature, that it ought never to be
+mentioned but as a fable in any serious poem:
+
+ --Virtue giv'n for lost,
+ Deprest, and overthrown, as seem'd,
+ Like that self-begotten bird
+ In the Arabian woods embost,
+ That no second knows nor third,
+ And lay ere while a holocaust,
+ From out her ashy womb now teem'd,
+ Revives, reflourishes, then vigorous most
+ When most unactive deem'd,
+ And though her body die, her fame survives
+ A secular bird, ages of lives.
+
+Another species of impropriety is the unsuitableness of thoughts to the
+general character of the poem. The seriousness and solemnity of tragedy
+necessarily reject all pointed or epigrammatical expressions, all remote
+conceits and opposition of ideas. Samson's complaint is therefore too
+elaborate to be natural:
+
+ As in the land of darkness, yet in light,
+ To live a life half dead, a living death,
+ And bury'd; but, O yet more miserable!
+ Myself, my sepulchre, a moving grave,
+ Buried, yet not exempt,
+ By privilege of death and burial,
+ From worst of other evils, pains and wrongs.
+
+All allusions to low and trivial objects, with which contempt is usually
+associated, are doubtless unsuitable to a species of composition which
+ought to be always awful, though not always magnificent. The remark
+therefore of the chorus on good or bad news seems to want elevation:
+
+ _Manoah_. A little stay will bring some notice hither.
+ _Chor_. Of good _or_ bad so great, of bad the sooner;
+ For evil news _rides post_, while good news _baits_.
+
+But of all meanness that has least to plead which is produced by mere
+verbal conceits, which, depending only upon sounds, lose their existence
+by the change of a syllable. Of this kind is the following dialogue:
+
+ _Chor_. But had we best retire? I see a _storm_.
+
+ _Sams_. Fair days have oft contracted wind and rain.
+
+ _Chor_. But this another kind of tempest brings.
+
+ _Sams_. Be less abstruse, my riddling days are past.
+
+ _Chor_. Look now for no enchanting voice, nor fear
+ The bait of honied words; a rougher tongue
+ Draws hitherward; I know him by his stride,
+ The giant _Harapha_.--
+
+And yet more despicable are the lines in which Manoah's paternal
+kindness is commended by the chorus:
+
+ Fathers are wont to _lay up_ for their sons,
+ Thou for thy son art bent to _lay out_ all.
+
+Samson's complaint of the inconveniencies of imprisonment is not wholly
+without verbal quaintness:
+
+ --I, a prisoner chain'd, scarce freely draw
+ The air, imprison'd also, close and damp.
+
+From the sentiments we may properly descend to the consideration of the
+language, which, in imitation of the ancients, is through the whole
+dialogue remarkably simple and unadorned, seldom heightened by epithets,
+or varied by figures; yet sometimes metaphors find admission, even where
+their consistency is not accurately preserved. Thus Samson confounds
+loquacity with a shipwreck:
+
+ How could I once look up, or heave the head,
+ Who, like a foolish _pilot_, have _shipwreck'd_
+ My _vessel_ trusted to me from above,
+ Gloriously _rigg'd_; and for a word, a tear,
+ Fool! have _divulg'd_ the _secret gift_ of God
+ To a deceitful woman?--
+
+And the chorus talks of adding fuel to flame in a report:
+
+ He's gone, and who knows how he may _report_
+ Thy _words_, by _adding fuel to the flame_?
+
+The versification is in the dialogue much more smooth and harmonious,
+than in the parts allotted to the chorus, which are often so harsh and
+dissonant, as scarce to preserve, whether the lines end with or without
+rhymes, any appearance of metrical regularity:
+
+ Or do my eyes misrepresent? Can this be he,
+ That heroic, that renown'd,
+ Irresistible Samson? whom unarm'd
+ No strength of man, or fiercest wild beast, could withstand;
+ Who tore the lion, as the lion tears the kid.
+
+Since I have thus pointed out the faults of Milton, critical integrity
+requires that I should endeavour to display his excellencies, though
+they will not easily be discovered in short quotations, because they
+consist in the justness of diffuse reasonings, or in the contexture and
+method of continued dialogues; this play having none of those
+descriptions, similies, or splendid sentences, with which other
+tragedies are so lavishly adorned. Yet some passages may be selected
+which seem to deserve particular notice, either as containing sentiments
+of passion, representations of life, precepts of conduct, or sallies of
+imagination. It is not easy to give a stronger representation of the
+weariness of despondency, than in the words of Samson to his father:
+
+ --I feel my genial spirits droop,
+ My hopes all flat, Nature within me seems
+ In all her functions weary of herself,
+ My race of glory run, and race of shame,
+ And I shall shortly be with them that rest.
+
+The reply of Samson to the flattering Dalila affords a just and striking
+description of the stratagems and allurements of feminine hypocrisy:
+
+ --These are thy wonted arts,
+ And arts of every woman false like thee,
+ To break all faith, all vows, deceive, betray,
+ Then as repentant to submit, beseech,
+ And reconcilement move with feign'd remorse,
+ Confess and promise wonders in her change;
+ Not truly penitent, but chief to try
+ Her husband, how far urg'd his patience bears,
+ His virtue or weakness which way to assail:
+ Then with more cautious and instructed skill
+ Again transgresses, and again submits.
+
+When Samson has refused to make himself a spectacle at the feast of
+Dagon, he first justifies his behaviour to the chorus, who charge him
+with having served the Philistines, by a very just distinction: and then
+destroys the common excuse of cowardice and servility, which always
+confound temptation with compulsion:
+
+ _Chor_. Yet with thy strength thou serv'st the Philistines.
+
+ _Sams_. Not in their idol worship, but by labour
+ Honest and lawful to deserve my food
+ Of those, who have me in their civil power.
+
+ _Chor_. Where the heart joins not, outward acts defile not.
+
+ _Sams_. Where outward force constrains, the sentence holds.
+ But who constrains me to the temple of Dagon,
+ Not dragging? The Philistine lords command.
+ Commands are no constraints. If I obey them,
+ I do it freely, venturing to displease
+ God for the fear of Man, and Man prefer,
+ Set God behind.
+
+The complaint of blindness which Samson pours out at the beginning of
+the tragedy is equally addressed to the passions and the fancy. The
+enumeration of his miseries is succeeded by a very pleasing train of
+poetical images, and concluded by such expostulation and wishes, as
+reason too often submits to learn from despair:
+
+ O first created Beam, and thou great Word
+ "Let there be light, and light was over all;"
+ Why am I thus bereav'd thy prime decree?
+ The sun to me is dark
+ And silent as the moon,
+ When she deserts the night
+ Hid in her vacant interlunar cave.
+ Since light so necessary is to life,
+ And almost life itself, if it be true
+ That light is in the soul,
+ She all in every part; why was the sight
+ To such a tender hall as the eye confin'd,
+ So obvious and so easy to be quench'd?
+ And not, as feeling, through all parts diffus'd,
+ That she may look at will through every pore?
+
+Such are the faults and such the beauties of Samson Agonistes, which I
+have shown with no other purpose than to promote the knowledge of true
+criticism. The everlasting verdure of Milton's laurels has nothing to
+fear from the blasts of malignity; nor can my attempt produce any other
+effect, than to strengthen their shoots by lopping their luxuriance[g].
+[Footnote g: This is not the language of an accomplice in Lauder's
+imposition.--ED.]
+
+
+
+No. 141. TUESDAY, JULY 23, 1751.
+
+ _Hilarisque, tamen cum pondere, virtus_. STAT.
+
+ Greatness with ease, and gay severity.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Politicians have long observed, that the greatest events may be
+often traced back to slender causes. Petty competition or casual
+friendship, the prudence of a slave, or the garrulity of a woman, have
+hindered or promoted the most important schemes, and hastened or
+retarded the revolutions of empire.
+
+Whoever shall review his life will generally find, that the whole tenour
+of his conduct has been determined by some accident of no apparent
+moment, or by a combination of inconsiderable circumstances, acting when
+his imagination was unoccupied, and his judgment unsettled; and that his
+principles and actions have taken their colour from some secret
+infusion, mingled without design in the current of his ideas. The
+desires that predominate in our hearts, are instilled by imperceptible
+communications at the time when we look upon the various scenes of the
+world, and the different employments of men, with the neutrality of
+inexperience; and we come forth from the nursery or the school,
+invariably destined to the pursuit of great acquisitions, or petty
+accomplishments.
+
+Such was the impulse by which I have been kept in motion from my
+earliest years. I was born to an inheritance which gave my childhood a
+claim to distinction and caresses, and was accustomed to hear applauses,
+before they had much influence on my thoughts. The first praise of which
+I remember myself sensible was that of good-humour, which, whether I
+deserved it or not when it was bestowed, I have since made it my whole
+business to propagate and maintain.
+
+When I was sent to school, the gaiety of my look, and the liveliness of
+my loquacity, soon gained me admission to hearts not yet fortified
+against affection by artifice or interest. I was entrusted with every
+stratagem, and associated in every sport; my company gave alacrity to a
+frolick, and gladness to a holiday. I was indeed so much employed in
+adjusting or executing schemes of diversion, that I had no leisure for
+my tasks, but was furnished with exercises, and instructed in my
+lessons, by some kind patron of the higher classes. My master, not
+suspecting my deficiency, or unwilling to detect what his kindness would
+not punish nor his impartiality excuse, allowed me to escape with a
+slight examination, laughed at the pertness of my ignorance, and the
+sprightliness of my absurdities, and could not forbear to show that he
+regarded me with such tenderness, as genius and learning can seldom
+excite.
+
+From school I was dismissed to the university, where I soon drew upon me
+the notice of the younger students, and was the constant partner of
+their morning walks, and evening compotations. I was not indeed much
+celebrated for literature, but was looked on with indulgence as a man of
+parts, who wanted nothing but the dulness of a scholar, and might become
+eminent whenever he should condescend to labour and attention. My tutor
+a while reproached me with negligence, and repressed my sallies with
+supercilious gravity; yet, having natural good-humour lurking in his
+heart, he could not long hold out against the power of hilarity, but
+after a few months began to relax the muscles of disciplinarian
+moroseness, received me with smiles after an elopement, and, that he
+might not betray his trust to his fondness, was content to spare my
+diligence by increasing his own.
+
+Thus I continued to dissipate the gloom of collegiate austerity, to
+waste my own life in idleness, and lure others from their studies, till
+the happy hour arrived, when I was sent to London. I soon discovered the
+town to be the proper element of youth and gaiety, and was quickly
+distinguished as a wit by the ladies, a species of beings only heard of
+at the university, whom I had no sooner the happiness of approaching
+than I devoted all my faculties to the ambition of pleasing them.
+
+A wit, Mr. Rambler, in the dialect of ladies, is not always a man who,
+by the action of a vigorous fancy upon comprehensive knowledge, brings
+distant ideas unexpectedly together, who, by some peculiar acuteness,
+discovers resemblance in objects dissimilar to common eyes, or, by
+mixing heterogeneous notions, dazzles the attention with sudden
+scintillations of conceit. A lady's wit is a man who can make ladies
+laugh, to which, however easy it may seem, many gifts of nature, and
+attainments of art, must commonly concur. He that hopes to be received
+as a wit in female assemblies, should have a form neither so amiable as
+to strike with admiration, nor so coarse as to raise disgust, with an
+understanding too feeble to be dreaded, and too forcible to be despised.
+The other parts of the character are more subject to variation; it was
+formerly essential to a wit, that half his back should be covered with a
+snowy fleece, and, at a time yet more remote, no man was a wit without
+his boots. In the days of the _Spectator_ a snuff-box seems to have been
+indispensable; but in my time an embroidered coat was sufficient,
+without any precise regulation of the rest of his dress.
+
+But wigs and boots and snuff-boxes are vain, without a perpetual
+resolution to be merry, and who can always find supplies of mirth?
+Juvenal indeed, in his comparison of the two opposite philosophers,
+wonders only whence an unexhausted fountain of tears could be
+discharged: but had Juvenal, with all his spirit, undertaken my
+province, he would have found constant gaiety equally difficult to be
+supported. Consider, Mr. Rambler, and compassionate the condition of a
+man, who has taught every company to expect from him a continual feast
+of laughter, an unintermitted stream of jocularity. The task of every
+other slave has an end. The rower in time reaches the port; the
+lexicographer at last finds the conclusion of his alphabet; only the
+hapless wit has his labour always to begin, the call for novelty is
+never satisfied, and one jest only raises expectation of another.
+
+I know that among men of learning and asperity the retainers to the
+female world are not much regarded: yet I cannot but hope that if you
+knew at how dear a rate our honours are purchased, you would look with
+some gratulation on our success, and with some pity on our miscarriages.
+Think on the misery of him who is condemned to cultivate barrenness and
+ransack vacuity; who is obliged to continue his talk when his meaning is
+spent, to raise merriment without images, to harass his imagination in
+quest of thoughts which he cannot start, and his memory in pursuit of
+narratives which he cannot overtake; observe the effort with which he
+strains to conceal despondency by a smile, and the distress in which he
+sits while the eyes of the company are fixed upon him as the last refuge
+from silence and dejection.
+
+It were endless to recount the shifts to which I have been reduced, or
+to enumerate the different species of artificial wit. I regularly
+frequented coffee-houses, and have often lived a week upon an
+expression, of which he who dropped it did not know the value. When
+fortune did not favour my erratick industry, I gleaned jests at home
+from obsolete farces. To collect wit was indeed safe, for I consorted
+with none that looked much into books, but to disperse it was the
+difficulty. A seeming negligence was often useful, and I have very
+successfully made a reply not to what the lady had said, but to what it
+was convenient for me to hear; for very few were so perverse as to
+rectify a mistake which had given occasion to a burst of merriment.
+Sometimes I drew the conversation up by degrees to a proper point, and
+produced a conceit which I had treasured up, like sportsmen who boast of
+killing the foxes which they lodge in the covert. Eminence is, however,
+in some happy moments, gained at less expense; I have delighted a whole
+circle at one time with a series of quibbles, and made myself good
+company at another, by scalding my fingers, or mistaking a lady's lap
+for my own chair.
+
+These are artful deceits and useful expedients; but expedients are at
+length exhausted, and deceits detected. Time itself, among other
+injuries, diminishes the power of pleasing, and I now find, in my
+forty-fifth year, many pranks and pleasantries very coldly received,
+which had formerly filled a whole room with jollity and acclamation.
+I am under the melancholy necessity of supporting that character by study,
+which I gained by levity, having learned too late that gaiety must be
+recommended by higher qualities, and that mirth can never please long
+but as the efflorescence of a mind loved for its luxuriance, but
+esteemed for its usefulness.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+PAPILIUS.
+
+
+
+No. 142. SATURDAY, JULY 27, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Entha d aner eniaue pelorios--
+ --oude, met allous
+ Poleit, all apaneuthen eon athemistia ede.
+ Kai gar Oaum etetukto pelorion oude epskei
+ Andri ge sitophagps.] HOMER. Od. [Greek: I'.] 187.
+
+ A giant shepherd here his flock maintains
+ Far from the rest, and solitary reigns,
+ In shelter thick of horrid shade reclin'd;
+ And gloomy mischiefs labour in the mind.
+ A form enormous! far unlike the race
+ Of human birth, in stature or in face. POPE.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Having been accustomed to retire annually from the town, I lately
+accepted the invitation of Eugenio, who has an estate and seat in a
+distant county. As we were unwilling to travel without improvement, we
+turned often from the direct road to please ourselves with the view of
+nature or of art; we examined every wild mountain and medicinal spring,
+criticised every edifice, contemplated every ruin, and compared every
+scene of action with the narratives of historians. By this succession of
+amusements we enjoyed the exercise of a journey without suffering the
+fatigue, and had nothing to regret but that, by a progress so leisurely
+and gentle, we missed the adventures of a post-chaise, and the pleasure
+of alarming villages with the tumult of our passage, and of disguising
+our insignificancy by the dignity of hurry.
+
+The first week after our arrival at Eugenio's house was passed in
+receiving visits from his neighbours, who crowded about him with all the
+eagerness of benevolence; some impatient to learn the news of the court
+and town, that they might be qualified by authentick information to
+dictate to the rural politicians on the next bowling day; others
+desirous of his interest to accommodate disputes, or his advice in the
+settlement of their fortunes and the marriage of their children.
+
+The civilities which he had received were soon to be returned; and I
+passed sometime with great satisfaction in roving through the country,
+and viewing the seats, gardens, and plantations, which are scattered
+over it. My pleasure would indeed have been greater had I been sometimes
+allowed to wander in a park or wilderness alone; but to appear as a
+friend of Eugenio was an honour not to be enjoyed without some
+inconveniencies: so much was every one solicitous for my regard, that I
+could seldom escape to solitude, or steal a moment from the emulation of
+complaisance, and the vigilance of officiousness.
+
+In these rambles of good neighbourhood, we frequently passed by a house
+of unusual magnificence. While I had my curiosity yet distracted among
+many novelties, it did not much attract my observation; but in a short
+time I could not forbear surveying it with particular notice; for the
+length of the wall which inclosed the gardens, the disposition of the
+shades that waved over it, and the canals of which I could obtain some
+glimpses through the trees from our own windows, gave me reason to
+expect more grandeur and beauty than I had yet seen in that province. I
+therefore inquired, as we rode by it, why we never, amongst our
+excursions, spent an hour where there was such an appearance of
+splendour and affluence? Eugenio told me that the seat which I so much
+admired, was commonly called in the country the _haunted house_, and
+that no visits were paid there by any of the gentlemen whom I had yet
+seen. As the haunts of incorporeal beings are generally ruinous,
+neglected, and desolate, I easily conceived that there was something to
+be explained, and told him that I supposed it only fairy ground, on
+which we might venture by day-light without danger. The danger, says he,
+is indeed only that of appearing to solicit the acquaintance of a man,
+with whom it is not possible to converse without infamy, and who has
+driven from him, by his insolence or malignity, every human being who
+can live without him.
+
+Our conversation was then accidentally interrupted; but my inquisitive
+humour being now in motion, could not rest without a full account of
+this newly discovered prodigy. I was soon informed that the fine house
+and spacious gardens were haunted by squire Bluster, of whom it was very
+easy to learn the character, since nobody had regard for him sufficient
+to hinder them from telling whatever they could discover.
+
+Squire Bluster is descended of an ancient family. The estate which his
+ancestors had immemorially possessed was much augmented by captain
+Bluster, who served under Drake in the reign of Elizabeth; and the
+Blusters, who were before only petty gentlemen, have from that time
+frequently represented the shire in parliament, been chosen to present
+addresses, and given laws at hunting-matches and races. They were
+eminently hospitable and popular, till the father of this gentleman died
+of an election. His lady went to the grave soon after him, and left the
+heir, then only ten years old, to the care of his grandmother, who would
+not suffer him to be controlled, because she could not bear to hear him
+cry; and never sent him to school, because she was not able to live
+without his company. She taught him however very early to inspect the
+steward's accounts, to dog the butler from the cellar, and to catch the
+servants at a junket; so that he was at the age of eighteen a complete
+master of all the lower arts of domestick policy, had often on the road
+detected combinations between the coachman and the ostler, and procured
+the discharge of nineteen maids for illicit correspondence with
+cottagers and charwomen.
+
+By the opportunities of parsimony which minority affords, and which the
+probity of his guardians had diligently improved, a very large sum of
+money was accumulated, and he found himself, when he took his affairs
+into his own hands, the richest man in the county. It has been long the
+custom of this family to celebrate the heir's completion of his
+twenty-first year, by an entertainment, at which the house is thrown
+open to all that are inclined to enter it, and the whole province flocks
+together as to a general festivity. On this occasion young Bluster
+exhibited the first tokens of his future eminence, by shaking his purse
+at an old gentleman who had been the intimate friend of his father, and
+offering to wager a greater sum than he could afford to venture; a
+practice with which he has, at one time or other, insulted every
+freeholder within ten miles round him.
+
+His next acts of offence were committed in a contentious and spiteful
+vindication of the privileges of his manours, and a rigorous and
+relentless prosecution of every man that presumed to violate his game.
+As he happens to have no estate adjoining equal to his own, his
+oppressions are often borne without resistance, for fear of a long suit,
+of which he delights to count the expenses without the least solicitude
+about the event; for he knows, that where nothing but an honorary right
+is contested, the poorer antagonist must always suffer, whatever shall
+be the last decision of the law.
+
+By the success of some of these disputes, he has so elated his
+insolence, and, by reflection upon the general hatred which they have
+brought upon him, so irritated his virulence, that his whole life is
+spent in meditating or executing mischief. It is his common practice to
+procure his hedges to be broken in the night, and then to demand
+satisfaction for damages which his grounds have suffered from his
+neighbour's cattle. An old widow was yesterday soliciting Eugenio to
+enable her to replevin her only cow, then in the pound by squire
+Bluster's order, who had sent one of his agents to take advantage of her
+calamity, and persuade her to sell the cow at an under rate. He has
+driven a day-labourer from his cottage, for gathering blackberries in a
+hedge for his children, and has now an old woman in the county-gaol for
+a trespass which she committed, by coming into his ground to pick up
+acorns for her hog.
+
+Money, in whatever hands, will confer power. Distress will fly to
+immediate refuge, without much consideration of remote consequences.
+Bluster has therefore a despotick authority in many families, whom he
+has assisted, on pressing occasions, with larger sums than they can
+easily repay. The only visits that he makes are to these houses of
+misfortune, where he enters with the insolence of absolute command,
+enjoys the terrours of the family, exacts their obedience, riots at
+their charge, and in the height of his joy insults the father with
+menaces, and the daughters with obscenity.
+
+He is of late somewhat less offensive; for one of his debtors, after
+gentle expostulations, by which he was only irritated to grosser
+outrage, seized him by the sleeve, led him trembling into the
+court-yard, and closed the door upon him in a stormy night. He took his
+usual revenge next morning by a writ; but the debt was discharged by the
+assistance of Eugenio.
+
+It is his rule to suffer his tenants to owe him rent, because by this
+indulgence he secures to himself the power of seizure whenever he has an
+inclination to amuse himself with calamity, and feast his ears with
+entreaties and lamentations. Yet as he is sometimes capriciously liberal
+to those whom he happens to adopt as favourites, and lets his lands at a
+cheap rate, his farms are never long unoccupied; and when one is ruined
+by oppression, the possibility of better fortune quickly lures another
+to supply his place.
+
+Such is the life of squire Bluster; a man in whose power fortune has
+liberally placed the means of happiness, but who has defeated all her
+gifts of their end by the depravity of his mind. He is wealthy without
+followers; he is magnificent without witnesses; he has birth without
+alliance, and influence without dignity. His neighbours scorn him as a
+brute; his dependants dread him as an oppressor; and he has only the
+gloomy comfort of reflecting, that if he is hated, he is likewise
+feared.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+VAGULUS.
+
+
+
+No. 143. TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1751.
+
+ _--Moveat cornicula risum
+ Furtivis nudata coloribus.--_ HOR. Lib. i. Ep. i. 19.
+
+ Lest when the birds their various colours claim,
+ Stripp'd of his stolen pride, the crow forlorn
+ Should stand the laughter of the publick scorn. FRANCIS.
+
+Among the innumerable practices by which interest or envy have taught
+those who live upon literary fame to disturb each other at their airy
+banquets, one of the most common is the charge of plagiarism. When the
+excellence of a new composition can no longer be contested, and malice
+is compelled to give way to the unanimity of applause, there is yet this
+one expedient to be tried, by which the author may be degraded, though
+his work be reverenced; and the excellence which we cannot obscure, may
+be set at such a distance as not to overpower our fainter lustre.
+
+This accusation is dangerous, because, even when it is false, it may be
+sometimes urged with probability. Bruyere declares, that we are come
+into the world too late to produce any thing new, that nature and life
+are preoccupied, and that description and sentiment have been long
+exhausted. It is indeed certain, that whoever attempts any common
+topick, will find unexpected coincidences of his thoughts with those of
+other writers; nor can the nicest judgment always distinguish accidental
+similitude from artful imitation. There is likewise a common stock of
+images, a settled mode of arrangement, and a beaten track of transition,
+which all authors suppose themselves at liberty to use, and which
+produce the resemblance generally observable among contemporaries. So
+that in books which best deserve the name of originals, there is little
+new beyond the disposition of materials already provided; the same ideas
+and combinations of ideas have been long in the possession of other
+hands; and, by restoring to every man his own, as the Romans must have
+returned to their cots from the possession of the world, so the most
+inventive and fertile genius would reduce his folios to a few pages. Yet
+the author who imitates his predecessors only by furnishing himself with
+thoughts and elegancies out of the same general magazine of literature,
+can with little more propriety be reproached as a plagiary, than the
+architect can be censured as a mean copier of Angelo or Wren, because he
+digs his marble from the same quarry, squares his stones by the same
+art, and unites them in the columns of the same orders.
+
+Many subjects fall under the consideration of an author, which, being
+limited by nature, can admit only of slight and accidental diversities.
+All definitions of the same thing must be nearly the same; and
+descriptions, which are definitions of a more lax and fanciful kind,
+must always have in some degree that resemblance to each other which
+they all have to their object. Different poets describing the spring or
+the sea would mention the zephyrs and the flowers, the billows and the
+rocks; reflecting on human life, they would, without any communication
+of opinions, lament the deceitfulness of hope, the fugacity of pleasure,
+the fragility of beauty, and the frequency of calamity; and for
+palliatives of these incurable miseries, they would concur in
+recommending kindness, temperance, caution, and fortitude.
+
+When therefore there are found in Virgil and Horace two similar
+passages--
+
+ _Hæ tibi erunt artes--
+ Parcere subjectis, et debellare superbos_. VIRG.
+
+ To tame the proud, the fetter'd slave to free:
+ These are imperial arts, and worthy thee. DRYDEN.
+
+ _Imperet bellante prior, jacentem
+ Lenis in hostem_. HOR.
+
+ Let Cæsar spread his conquests far,
+ Less pleas'd to triumph than to spare--
+
+it is surely not necessary to suppose with a late critick, that one is
+copied from the other, since neither Virgil nor Horace can be supposed
+ignorant of the common duties of humanity, and the virtue of moderation
+in success.
+
+Cicero and Ovid have on very different occasions remarked how little of
+the honour of a victory belongs to the general, when his soldiers and
+his fortune have made their deductions; yet why should Ovid be suspected
+to have owed to Tully an observation which perhaps occurs to every man
+that sees or hears of military glories?
+
+Tully observes of Achilles, that had not Homer written, his valour had
+been without praise:
+
+ _Nisi Ilias illa extitisset, idem tumulus qui corpus ejus contexerat,
+ nomen ejus obruisset_.
+
+ Unless the Iliad had been published, his name had been lost in the
+ tomb that covered his body.
+
+Horace tells us with more energy that there were brave men before the
+wars of Troy, but they were lost in oblivion for want of a poet:
+
+ _Vixere fortes ante Agamemnona
+ Multi; sed omnes illachrymabiles
+ Urgentur, ignotique longá
+ Nocte, carent quia vate sacro_.
+
+ Before great Agamemnon reign'd,
+ Reign'd kings as great as he, and brave,
+ Whose huge ambition's now contain'd
+ In the small compass of a grave:
+ In endless night they sleep, unwept, unknown:
+ No bard had they to make all time their own. FRANCIS.
+
+Tully inquires, in the same oration, why, but for fame, we disturb a
+short life with so many fatigues?
+
+ _Quid est quod in hoc tam exiguo vitae curriculo et tam brevi, tantis
+ nos in laboribus exerceamus?_
+
+ Why in so small a circuit of life should we employ ourselves in so
+ many fatigues?
+
+Horace inquires in the same manner,
+
+ _Quid brevi fortes jaculamur aevo
+ Multa?_
+
+ Why do we aim, with eager strife,
+ At things beyond the mark of life? FRANCIS.
+
+when our life is of so short duration, why we form such numerous
+designs? But Horace, as well as Tully, might discover that records are
+needful to preserve the memory of actions, and that no records were so
+durable as poems; either of them might find out that life is short, and
+that we consume it in unnecessary labour.
+
+There are other flowers of fiction so widely scattered and so easily
+cropped, that it is scarcely just to tax the use of them as an act by
+which any particular writer is despoiled of his garland; for they may be
+said to have been planted by the ancients in the open road of poetry for
+the accommodation of their successors, and to be the right of every one
+that has art to pluck them without injuring their colours or their
+fragrance. The passage of Orpheus to hell, with the recovery and second
+loss of Eurydice, have been described after Boetius by Pope, in such a
+manner as might justly leave him suspected of imitation, were not the
+images such as they might both have derived from more ancient writers.
+
+ _Quae sontes agitant metu,
+ Ultrices scelerum deæ
+ Jam masta: lacrymis madent,
+ Non Ixionium caput
+ Velox præcipitat rota_.
+
+ The pow'rs of vengeance, while they hear,
+ Touch'd with compassion, drop a tear:
+ Ixion's rapid wheel is bound,
+ Fix'd in attention to the sound. F. LEWIS.
+
+ Thy stone, O Sysiphus, stands still,
+ Ixion rests upon the wheel,
+ And the pale spectres dance!
+ The furies sink upon their iron beds. POPE
+
+ _Tandem, vincimur, arbiter
+ Umbrarum, miserans, ait--
+ Donemus, comitem viro,
+ Emtam carmine, conjugem_.
+
+ Subdu'd at length, Hell's pitying monarch cry'd,
+ The song rewarding, let us yield the bride. F. LEWIS.
+
+ He sung; and hell consented
+ To hear the poet's prayer;
+ Stern Proserpine relented,
+ And gave him back the fair. POPE
+
+ _Heu, noctis prope terminos
+ Orpheus Eurydicen suam
+ Vidit, perdidit, occidit_.
+
+ Nor yet the golden verge of day begun,
+ When Orpheus, her unhappy lord,
+ Eurydice to life restor'd,
+ At once beheld, and lost, and was undone. F. LEWIS.
+
+ But soon, too soon, the lover turns his eyes:
+ Again she falls, again she dies, she dies! POPE.
+
+No writer can be fully convicted of imitation, except there is a
+concurrence of more resemblance than can be imagined to have happened by
+chance; as where the same ideas are conjoined without any natural series
+or necessary coherence, or where not only the thought but the words are
+copied. Thus it can scarcely be doubted, that in the first of the
+following passages Pope remembered Ovid, and that in the second he
+copied Crashaw:
+
+ _Saepe pater dixit, studium quid inutile tentas?
+ Maeonides nullas ipse reliquit opes--
+ Sponte suâ carmen numeros veniebat ad aptos,
+ Et quod conabar scribere, versus erat_. OVID.
+
+ Quit, quit this barren trade, my father cry'd:
+ Ev'n Homer left no riches when he dy'd--
+ In verse spontaneous flow'd my native strain,
+ Forc'd by no sweat or labour of the brain. F. LEWIS.
+
+ I left no calling for this idle trade;
+ No duty broke, no father disobey'd;
+ While yet a child, ere yet a fool to fame,
+ I lisp'd in numbers, for the numbers came. POPE.
+
+ --This plain floor,
+ Believe me, reader, can say more
+ Than many a braver marble can,
+ Here lies a truly honest man. CRASHAW.
+
+ This modest stone, what few vain marbles can,
+ May truly say, Here lies an honest man. POPE.
+
+Conceits, or thoughts not immediately impressed by sensible objects, or
+necessarily arising from the coalition or comparison of common
+sentiments, may be with great justice suspected whenever they are found
+a second time. Thus Wallar probably owed to Grotius an elegant
+compliment:
+
+ Here lies the learned Savil's heir,
+ So early wise, and lasting fair,
+ That none, except her years they told,
+ Thought her a child, or thought her old. WALLER.
+
+[Transcriber's note: Inconsistency in spelling Waller/Wallar in
+original]
+
+ _Unica lux saecli, genitoris gloria, nemo
+ Quem puerum, nemo credidit esse senem_. GROT.
+
+ The age's miracle, his father's joy!
+ Nor old you would pronounce him, nor a boy. F. LEWIS.
+
+And Prior was indebted for a pretty illustration to Alleyne's poetical
+history of Henry the Seventh:
+
+ For nought but light itself, itself can shew,
+ And only kings can write, what kings can do. ALLEYNE.
+
+ Your musick's pow'r, your musick must disclose,
+ For what light is, 'tis only light that shews. PRIOR.
+
+And with yet more certainty may the same writer be censured, for
+endeavouring the clandestine appropriation of a thought which he
+borrowed, surely without thinking himself disgraced, from an epigram of
+Plato:
+
+ [Greek: Tae Paphiae to katoptron, epei toiae men orasthai
+ Ouk ethelo, oiae d' aen paros, ou dunamai.]
+
+ Venus, take my votive glass,
+ Since I am not what I was;
+ What from this day I shall be,
+ Venus, let me never see.
+
+As not every instance of similitude can be considered as a proof of
+imitation, so not every imitation ought to be stigmatized as plagiarism.
+The adoption of a noble sentiment, or the insertion of a borrowed
+ornament, may sometimes display so much judgment as will almost
+compensate for invention: and an inferior genius may, without any
+imputation of servility, pursue the path of the ancients, provided he
+declines to tread in their footsteps.
+
+
+
+No. 144. SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1751.
+
+ --_Daphnidis arcum
+ Fregisti et calamos: quae tu, perverse Menalea,
+ Et quum vidisti puero donata, dolebas;
+ Et si non aliqua nocuisses, mortuus esses._ VIRG. EC. iii. 12.
+
+ The bow of Daphnis and the shafts you broke;
+ When the fair boy receiv'd the gift of right;
+ And but for mischief, you had dy'd for spite. DRYDEN.
+
+It is impossible to mingle in conversation without observing the
+difficulty with which a new name makes its way into the world. The first
+appearance of excellence unites multitudes against it; unexpected
+opposition rises up on every side; the celebrated and the obscure join
+in the confederacy; subtlety furnishes arms to impudence, and invention
+leads on credulity.
+
+The strength and unanimity of this alliance is not easily conceived. It
+might be expected that no man should suffer his heart to be inflamed
+with malice, but by injuries; that none should busy himself in
+contesting the pretensions of another, but when some right of his own
+was involved in the question; that at least hostilities, commenced
+without cause, should quickly cease; that the armies of malignity should
+soon disperse, when no common interest could be found to hold them
+together; and that the attack upon a rising character should be left to
+those who had something to hope or fear from the event.
+
+The hazards of those that aspire to eminence, would be much diminished
+if they had none but acknowledged rivals to encounter. Their enemies
+would then be few, and, what is yet of greater importance, would be
+known. But what caution is sufficient to ward off the blows of invisible
+assailants, or what force can stand against uninterrupted attacks, and a
+continual succession of enemies? Yet such is the state of the world,
+that no sooner can any man emerge from the crowd, and fix the eyes of
+the publick upon him, than he stands as a mark to the arrows of lurking
+calumny, and receives in the tumult of hostility, from distant and from
+nameless hands, wounds not always easy to be cured.
+
+It is probable that the onset against the candidates for renown, is
+originally incited by those who imagine themselves in danger of
+suffering by their success; but, when war is once declared, volunteers
+flock to the standard, multitudes follow the camp only for want of
+employment, and flying squadrons are dispersed to every part, so pleased
+with an opportunity of mischief, that they toil without prospect of
+praise, and pillage without hope of profit.
+
+When any man has endeavoured to deserve distinction, he will be
+surprised to hear himself censured where he could not expect to have
+been named; he will find the utmost acrimony of malice among those whom
+he never could have offended.
+
+As there are to be found in the service of envy men of every diversity
+of temper and degree of understanding, calumny is diffused by all arts
+and methods of propagation. Nothing is too gross or too refined, too
+cruel or too trifling, to be practised; very little regard is had to the
+rules of honourable hostility, but every weapon is accounted lawful, and
+those that cannot make a thrust at life are content to keep themselves
+in play with petty malevolence, to tease with feeble blows and impotent
+disturbance.
+
+But as the industry of observation has divided the most miscellaneous
+and confused assemblages into proper classes, and ranged the insects of
+the summer, that torment us with their drones or stings, by their
+several tribes; the persecutors of merit, notwithstanding their numbers,
+may be likewise commodiously distinguished into Roarers, Whisperers, and
+Moderators.
+
+The Roarer is an enemy rather terrible than dangerous. He has no other
+qualification for a champion of controversy than a hardened front and
+strong voice. Having seldom so much desire to confute as to silence, he
+depends rather upon vociferation than argument, and has very little care
+to adjust one part of his accusation to another, to preserve decency in
+his language, or probability in his narratives.
+
+He has always a store of reproachful epithets and contemptuous
+appellations, ready to be produced as occasion may require, which by
+constant use he pours out with resistless volubility. If the wealth of a
+trader is mentioned, he without hesitation devotes him to bankruptcy; if
+the beauty and elegance of a lady be commended, he wonders how the town
+can fall in love with rustick deformity; if a new performance of genius
+happens to be celebrated, he pronounces the writer a hopeless idiot,
+without knowledge of books or life, and without the understanding by
+which it must be acquired. His exaggerations are generally without
+effect upon those whom he compels to hear them; and though it will
+sometimes happen that the timorous are awed by his violence, and the
+credulous mistake his confidence for knowledge, yet the opinions which
+he endeavours to suppress soon recover their former strength, as the
+trees that bend to the tempest erect themselves again when its force is
+past.
+
+The Whisperer is more dangerous. He easily gains attention by a soft
+address, and excites curiosity by an air of importance. As secrets are
+not to be made cheap by promiscuous publication, he calls a select
+audience about him, and gratifies their vanity with an appearance of
+trust by communicating his intelligence in a low voice. Of the trader he
+can tell that, though he seems to manage an extensive commerce, and
+talks in high terms of the funds, yet his wealth is not equal to his
+reputation; he has lately suffered much by an expensive project, and had
+a greater share than is acknowledged in the rich ship that perished by
+the storm. Of the beauty he has little to say, but that they who see her
+in a morning do not discover all those graces which are admired in the
+Park. Of the writer he affirms with great certainty, that though the
+excellence of the work be incontestible, he can claim but a small part
+of the reputation; that he owed most of the images and sentiments to a
+secret friend; and that the accuracy and equality of the style was
+produced by the successive correction of the chief criticks of the age.
+
+As every one is pleased with imagining that he knows something not yet
+commonly divulged, secret history easily gains credit; but it is for the
+most part believed only while it circulates in whispers; and when once
+it is openly told, is openly confuted.
+
+The most pernicious enemy is the man of Moderation. Without interest in
+the question, or any motive but honest curiosity, this impartial and
+zealous inquirer after truth is ready to hear either side, and always
+disposed to kind interpretations and favourable opinions. He hath heard
+the trader's affairs reported with great variation, and, after a
+diligent comparison of the evidence, concludes it probable that the
+splendid superstructure of business being originally built upon a narrow
+basis, has lately been found to totter; but between dilatory payment and
+bankruptcy there is a great distance; many merchants have supported
+themselves by expedients for a time, without any final injury to their
+creditors; and what is lost by one adventure may be recovered by
+another. He believes that a young lady pleased with admiration, and
+desirous to make perfect what is already excellent, may heighten her
+charms by artificial improvements, but surely most of her beauties must
+be genuine, and who can say that he is wholly what he endeavours to
+appear? The author he knows to be a man of diligence, who perhaps does
+not sparkle with the fire of Homer, but has the judgment to discover his
+own deficiencies, and to supply them by the help of others; and, in his
+opinion, modesty is a quality so amiable and rare, that it ought to find
+a patron wherever it appears, and may justly be preferred by the publick
+suffrage to petulant wit and ostentatious literature.
+
+He who thus discovers failings with unwillingness, and extenuates the
+faults which cannot be denied, puts an end at once to doubt or
+vindication; his hearers repose upon his candour and veracity, and admit
+the charge without allowing the excuse.
+
+Such are the arts by which the envious, the idle, the peevish, and the
+thoughtless, obstruct that worth which they cannot equal, and, by
+artifices thus easy, sordid, and detestable, is industry defeated,
+beauty blasted, and genius depressed.
+
+
+
+No. 145. TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1751.
+
+ _Non, si priores Maeonius tenet
+ Sedes Homerus, Pindaricae latent,
+ Ceaeque, et Alcaei minaces,
+ Stesichorique graves Camoenae_. HOR. Lib. iv. Od. ix. 5.
+
+ What though the muse her Homer thrones
+ High above all the immortal quire;
+ Nor Pindar's raptures she disowns,
+ Nor hides the plaintive Caean lyre;
+ Alcaeus strikes the tyrant soul with dread,
+ Nor yet is grave Stesichorus unread. FRANCIS.
+
+It is allowed that vocations and employments of least dignity are of the
+most apparent use; that the meanest artizan or manufacturer contributes
+more to the accommodation of life, than the profound scholar and
+argumentative theorist; and that the publick would suffer less present
+inconvenience from the banishment of philosophers than from the
+extinction of any common trade.
+
+Some have been so forcibly struck with this observation, that they have,
+in the first warmth of their discovery, thought it reasonable to alter
+the common distribution of dignity, and ventured to condemn mankind of
+universal ingratitude. For justice exacts, that those by whom we are
+most benefited should be most honoured. And what labour can be more
+useful than that which procures to families and communities those
+necessaries which supply the wants of nature, or those conveniencies by
+which ease, security, and elegance, are conferred?
+
+This is one of the innumerable theories which the first attempt to
+reduce them into practice certainly destroys. If we estimate dignity by
+immediate usefulness, agriculture is undoubtedly the first and noblest
+science; yet we see the plough driven, the clod broken, the manure
+spread, the seeds scattered, and the harvest reaped, by men whom those
+that feed upon their industry will never be persuaded to admit into the
+same rank with heroes, or with sages; and who, after all the confessions
+which truth may extort in favour of their occupation, must be content to
+fill up the lowest class of the commonwealth, to form the base of the
+pyramid of subordination, and lie buried in obscurity themselves, while
+they support all that is splendid, conspicuous, or exalted.
+
+It will be found upon a closer inspection, that this part of the conduct
+of mankind is by no means contrary to reason or equity. Remuneratory
+honours are proportioned at once to the usefulness and difficulty of
+performances, and are properly adjusted by comparison of the mental and
+corporeal abilities, which they appear to employ. That work, however
+necessary, which is carried on only by muscular strength and manual
+dexterity, is not of equal esteem, in the consideration of rational
+beings, with the tasks that exercise the intellectual powers, and
+require the active vigour of imagination or the gradual and laborious
+investigations of reason.
+
+The merit of all manual occupations seems to terminate in the inventor;
+and surely the first ages cannot be charged with ingratitude; since
+those who civilized barbarians, and taught them how to secure themselves
+from cold and hunger, were numbered amongst their deities. But these
+arts once discovered by philosophy, and facilitated by experience, are
+afterwards practised with very little assistance from the faculties of
+the soul; nor is any thing necessary to the regular discharge of these
+inferior duties, beyond that rude observation which the most sluggish
+intellect may practise, and that industry which the stimulations of
+necessity naturally enforce.
+
+Yet though the refusal of statues and panegyrick to those who employ
+only their hands and feet in the service of mankind may be easily
+justified, I am far from intending to incite the petulance of pride, to
+justify the superciliousness of grandeur, or to intercept any part of
+that tenderness and benevolence which, by the privilege of their common
+nature, one may claim from another.
+
+That it would be neither wise nor equitable to discourage the
+husbandman, the labourer, the miner, or the smith, is generally granted;
+but there is another race of beings equally obscure and equally
+indigent, who, because their usefulness is less obvious to vulgar
+apprehensions, live unrewarded and die unpitied, and who have been long
+exposed to insult without a defender, and to censure without an
+apologist.
+
+The authors of London were formerly computed by Swift at several
+thousands, and there is not any reason for suspecting that their number
+has decreased. Of these only a very few can be said to produce, or
+endeavour to produce, new ideas, to extend any principle of science, or
+gratify the imagination with any uncommon train of images or contexture
+of events; the rest, however laborious, however arrogant, can only be
+considered as the drudges of the pen, the manufacturers of literature,
+who have set up for authors, either with or without a regular
+initiation, and, like other artificers, have no other care than to
+deliver their tale of wares at the stated time.
+
+It has been formerly imagined, that he who intends the entertainment or
+instruction of others, must feel in himself some peculiar impulse of
+genius; that he must watch the happy minute in which his natural fire is
+excited, in which his mind is elevated with nobler sentiments,
+enlightened with clearer views, and invigorated with stronger
+comprehension; that he must carefully select his thoughts and polish his
+expressions; and animate his efforts with the hope of raising a monument
+of learning, which neither time nor envy shall be able to destroy.
+
+But the authors whom I am now endeavouring to recommend have been too
+long _hackneyed in the ways of men_ to indulge the chimerical ambition
+of immortality; they have seldom any claim to the trade of writing, but
+that they have tried some other without success; they perceive no
+particular summons to composition, except the sound of the clock; they
+have no other rule than the law or the fashion for admitting their
+thoughts or rejecting them; and about the opinion of posterity they have
+little solicitude, for their productions are seldom intended to remain
+in the world longer than a week.
+
+That such authors are not to be rewarded with praise is evident, since
+nothing can be admired when it ceases to exist; but surely, though they
+cannot aspire to honour, they may be exempted from ignominy, and adopted
+in that order of men which deserves our kindness, though not our
+reverence. These papers of the day, the _Ephemerae_ of learning, have
+uses more adequate to the purposes of common life than more pompous and
+durable volumes. If it is necessary for every man to be more acquainted
+with his contemporaries than with past generations, and to rather know
+the events which may immediately affect his fortune or quiet, than the
+revolutions of ancient kingdoms, in which he has neither possessions nor
+expectations; if it be pleasing to hear of the preferment and dismission
+of statesmen, the birth of heirs, and the marriage of beauties, the
+humble author of journals and gazettes must be considered as a liberal
+dispenser of beneficial knowledge.
+
+Even the abridger, compiler, and translator, though their labours cannot
+be ranked with those of the diurnal historiographer, yet must not be
+rashly doomed to annihilation. Every size of readers requires a genius
+of correspondent capacity; some delight in abstracts and epitomes,
+because they want room in their memory for long details, and content
+themselves with effects, without inquiry after causes; some minds are
+overpowered by splendour of sentiment, as some eyes are offended by a
+glaring light; such will gladly contemplate an author in an humble
+imitation, as we look without pain upon the sun in the water.
+
+As every writer has his use, every writer ought to have his patrons; and
+since no man, however high he may now stand, can be certain that he
+shall not be soon thrown down from his elevation by criticism or
+caprice, the common interest of learning requires that her sons should
+cease from intestine hostilities, and, instead of sacrificing each other
+to malice and contempt, endeavour to avert persecution from the meanest
+of their fraternity.
+
+
+
+No. 146. SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1751.
+
+ _Sunt illic duo, tresve, qui revolvant
+ Nostrarum tineas ineptiarum;
+ Sed cum sponsio, fabultaeque lassae
+ De scarpo fuerint incitato_. MART.
+
+ 'Tis possible that one or two
+ These fooleries of mine may view;
+ But then the bettings must be o'er,
+ Nor Crab or Childers talk'd of more. F. LEWIS.
+
+None of the projects or designs which exercise the mind of man are
+equally subject to obstructions and disappointments with the pursuit of
+fame. Riches cannot easily be denied to them who have something of
+greater value to offer in exchange; he whose fortune is endangered by
+litigation, will not refuse to augment the wealth of the lawyer; he
+whose days are darkened by langour, or whose nerves are excruciated by
+pain, is compelled to pay tribute to the science of healing. But praise
+may be always omitted without inconvenience. When once a man has made
+celebrity necessary to his happiness, he has put it in the power of the
+weakest and most timorous malignity, if not to take away his
+satisfaction, at least to withhold it. His enemies may indulge their
+pride by airy negligence, and gratify their malice by quiet neutrality.
+They that could never have injured a character by invectives, may
+combine to annihilate it by silence; as the women of Rome threatened to
+put an end to conquest and dominion, by supplying no children to the
+commonwealth.
+
+When a writer has with long toil produced a work intended to burst upon
+mankind with unexpected lustre, and withdraw the attention of the
+learned world from every other controversy or inquiry, he is seldom
+contented to wait long without the enjoyment of his new praises. With an
+imagination full of his own importance, he walks out like a monarch in
+disguise to learn the various opinions of his readers. Prepared to feast
+upon admiration; composed to encounter censures without emotion; and
+determined not to suffer his quiet to be injured by a sensibility too
+exquisite of praise or blame, but to laugh with equal contempt at vain
+objections and injudicious commendations, he enters the places of
+mingled conversation, sits down to his tea in an obscure corner, and,
+while he appears to examine a file of antiquated journals, catches the
+conversation of the whole room. He listens, but hears no mention of his
+book, and therefore supposes that he has disappointed his curiosity by
+delay; and that as men of learning would naturally begin their
+conversation with such a wonderful novelty, they had digressed to other
+subjects before his arrival. The company disperses, and their places are
+supplied by others equally ignorant, or equally careless. The same
+expectation hurries him to another place, from which the same
+disappointment drives him soon away. His impatience then grows violent
+and tumultuous; he ranges over the town with restless curiosity, and
+hears in one quarter of a cricket-match, in another of a pick-pocket; is
+told by some of an unexpected bankruptcy; by others of a turtle feast;
+is sometimes provoked by importunate inquiries after the white bear, and
+sometimes with praises of the dancing dog; he is afterwards entreated to
+give his judgment upon a wager about the height of the Monument; invited
+to see a foot-race in the adjacent villages; desired to read a ludicrous
+advertisement; or consulted about the most effectual method of making
+inquiry after a favourite cat. The whole world is busied in affairs
+which he thinks below the notice of reasonable creatures, and which are
+nevertheless sufficient to withdraw all regard from his labours and his
+merits.
+
+He resolves at last to violate his own modesty, and to recall the
+talkers from their folly by an inquiry after himself. He finds every one
+provided with an answer; one has seen the work advertised, but never met
+with any that had read it; another has been so often imposed upon by
+specious titles, that he never buys a book till its character is
+established; a third wonders what any man can hope to produce after so
+many writers of greater eminence; the next has inquired after the
+author, but can hear no account of him, and therefore suspects the name
+to be fictitious; and another knows him to be a man condemned by
+indigence to write too frequently what he does not understand.
+
+Many are the consolations with which the unhappy author endeavours to
+allay his vexation, and fortify his patience. He has written with too
+little indulgence to the understanding of common readers; he has fallen
+upon an age in which solid knowledge, and delicate refinement, have
+given way to a low merriment, and idle buffoonery, and therefore no
+writer can hope for distinction, who has any higher purpose than to
+raise laughter. He finds that his enemies, such as superiority will
+always raise, have been industrious, while his performance was in the
+press, to vilify and blast it; and that the bookseller, whom he had
+resolved to enrich, has rivals that obstruct the circulation of the
+copies. He at last reposes upon the consideration, that the noblest
+works of learning and genius have always made their way slowly against
+ignorance and prejudice; and that reputation, which is never to be lost,
+must be gradually obtained, as animals of longest life are observed not
+soon to attain their full stature and strength.
+
+By such arts of voluntary delusion does every man endeavour to conceal
+his own unimportance from himself. It is long before we are convinced of
+the small proportion which every individual bears to the collective body
+of mankind; or learn how few can be interested in the fortune of any
+single man; how little vacancy is left in the world for any new object
+of attention; to how small extent the brightest blaze of merit can be
+spread amidst the mists of business and of folly; and how soon it is
+clouded by the intervention of other novelties. Not only the writer of
+books, but the commander of armies, and the deliverer of nations, will
+easily outlive all noisy and popular reputation; he may be celebrated
+for a time by the publick voice, but his actions and his name will soon
+be considered as remote and unaffecting, and be rarely mentioned but by
+those whose alliance gives them some vanity to gratify by frequent
+commemoration.
+
+It seems not to be sufficiently considered how little renown can be
+admitted in the world. Mankind are kept perpetually busy by their fears
+or desires, and have not more leisure from their own affairs, than to
+acquaint themselves with the accidents of the current day. Engaged in
+contriving some refuge from calamity, or in shortening the way to some
+new possession, they seldom suffer their thoughts to wander to the past
+or future; none but a few solitary students have leisure to inquire into
+the claims of ancient heroes or sages; and names which hoped to range
+over kingdoms and continents, shrink at last into cloisters or colleges.
+
+Nor is it certain, that even of these dark and narrow habitations, these
+last retreats of fame, the possession will be long kept. Of men devoted
+to literature, very few extend their views beyond some particular
+science, and the greater part seldom inquire, even in their own
+profession, for any authors but those whom the present mode of study
+happens to force upon their notice; they desire not to fill their minds
+with unfashionable knowledge, but contentedly resign to oblivion those
+books which they now find censured or neglected.
+
+The hope of fame is necessarily connected with such considerations as
+must abate the ardour of confidence, and repress the vigour of pursuit.
+Whoever claims renown from any kind of excellence, expects to fill the
+place which is now possessed by another; for there are already names of
+every class sufficient to employ all that will desire to remember them;
+and surely he that is pushing his predecessors into the gulph of
+obscurity, cannot but sometimes suspect, that he must himself sink in
+like manner, and, as he stands upon the same precipice, be swept away
+with the same violence.
+
+It sometimes happens, that fame begins when life is at an end; but far
+the greater number of candidates for applause have owed their reception
+in the world to some favourable casualties, and have therefore
+immediately sunk into neglect, when death stripped them of their casual
+influence, and neither fortune nor patronage operated in their favour.
+Among those who have better claims to regard, the honour paid to their
+memory is commonly proportionate to the reputation which they enjoyed in
+their lives, though still growing fainter, as it is at a greater
+distance from the first emission; and since it is so difficult to obtain
+the notice of contemporaries, how little is to be hoped from future
+times? What can merit effect by its own force, when the help of art or
+friendship can scarcely support it?
+
+
+
+No. 147. TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1751.
+
+ Tu nihil invitâ dices faciesve Minervâ. Hon. Ar. Poet. 385.
+
+ --You are of too quick a sight,
+ Not to discern which way your talent lies. ROSCOMMON.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+As little things grow great by continual accumulation, I hope you will
+not think the dignity of your character impaired by an account of a
+ludicrous persecution, which, though it produced no scenes of horrour or
+of ruin, yet, by incessant importunity of vexation, wears away my
+happiness, and consumes those years which nature seems particularly to
+have assigned to cheerfulness, in silent anxiety and helpless
+resentment.
+
+I am the eldest son of a gentleman, who having inherited a large estate
+from his ancestors, and feeling no desire either to increase or lessen
+it, has from the time of his marriage generally resided at his own seat;
+where, by dividing his time among the duties of a father, a master, and
+a magistrate, the study of literature, and the offices of civility, he
+finds means to rid himself of the day, without any of those amusements,
+which all those with whom my residence in this place has made me
+acquainted, think necessary to lighten the burthen of existence.
+
+When my age made me capable of instruction, my father prevailed upon a
+gentleman, long known at Oxford for the extent of his learning and the
+purity of his manners, to undertake my education. The regard with which
+I saw him treated, disposed me to consider his instructions as
+important, and I therefore soon formed a habit of attention, by which I
+made very quick advances in different kinds of learning, and heard,
+perhaps too often, very flattering comparisons of my own proficiency
+with that of others, either less docile by nature, or less happily
+forwarded by instruction. I was caressed by all that exchanged visits
+with my father; and as young men are with little difficulty taught to
+judge favourably of themselves, began to think that close application
+was no longer necessary, and that the time was now come when I was at
+liberty to read only for amusement, and was to receive the reward of my
+fatigues in praise and admiration.
+
+While I was thus banqueting upon my own perfections, and longing in
+secret to escape from tutorage, my father's brother came from London to
+pass a summer at his native place. A lucrative employment which he
+possessed, and a fondness for the conversation and diversions of the gay
+part of mankind, had so long kept him from rural excursions, that I had
+never seen him since my infancy. My curiosity was therefore strongly
+excited by the hope of observing a character more nearly, which I had
+hitherto reverenced only at a distance.
+
+From all private and intimate conversation, I was long withheld by the
+perpetual confluence of visitants with whom the first news of my uncle's
+arrival crowded the house; but was amply recompensed by seeing an exact
+and punctilious practice of the arts of a courtier, in all the
+stratagems of endearment, the gradations of respect, and variations of
+courtesy. I remarked with what justice of distribution he divided his
+talk to a wide circle; with what address he offered to every man an
+occasion of indulging some favourite topick, or displaying some
+particular attainment; the judgment with which he regulated his
+inquiries after the absent; and the care with which he shewed all the
+companions of his early years how strongly they were infixed in his
+memory, by the mention of past incidents and the recital of puerile
+kindnesses, dangers, and frolicks. I soon discovered that he possessed
+some science of graciousness and attraction which books had not taught,
+and of which neither I nor my father had any knowledge; that he had the
+power of obliging those whom he did not benefit; that he diffused, upon
+his cursory behaviour and most trifling actions, a gloss of softness and
+delicacy by which every one was dazzled; and that, by some occult method
+of captivation, he animated the timorous, softened the supercilious, and
+opened the reserved. I could not but repine at the inelegance of my own
+manners, which left me no hopes but not to offend, and at the inefficacy
+of rustick benevolence, which gained no friends but by real service.
+
+My uncle saw the veneration with which I caught every accent of his
+voice, and watched every motion of his hand; and the awkward diligence
+with which I endeavoured to imitate his embrace of fondness, and his bow
+of respect. He was, like others, easily flattered by an imitator by whom
+he could not fear ever to be rivalled, and repaid my assiduities with
+compliments and professions. Our fondness was so increased by a mutual
+endeavour to please each other, that when he returned to London, he
+declared himself unable to leave a nephew so amiable and so accomplished
+behind him; and obtained my father's permission to enjoy my company for
+a few months, by a promise to initiate me in the arts of politeness, and
+introduce me into publick life.
+
+The courtier had little inclination to fatigue, and therefore, by
+travelling very slowly, afforded me time for more loose and familiar
+conversation; but I soon found, that by a few inquiries which he was not
+well prepared to satisfy, I had made him weary of his young companion.
+His element was a mixed assembly, where ceremony and healths,
+compliments and common topicks, kept the tongue employed with very
+little assistance from memory or reflection; but in the chariot, where
+he was necessitated to support a regular tenour of conversation, without
+any relief from a new comer, or any power of starting into gay
+digressions, or destroying argument by a jest, he soon discovered that
+poverty of ideas which had been hitherto concealed under the tinsel of
+politeness. The first day he entertained me with the novelties and
+wonders with which I should be astonished at my entrance into London,
+and cautioned me with apparent admiration of his own wisdom against the
+arts by which rusticity is frequently deluded. The same detail and the
+same advice he would have repeated on the second day; but as I every
+moment diverted the discourse to the history of the towns by which we
+passed, or some other subject of learning or of reason, he soon lost his
+vivacity, grew peevish and silent, wrapped his cloak about him, composed
+himself to slumber, and reserved his gaiety for fitter auditors.
+
+At length I entered London, and my uncle was reinstated in his
+superiority. He awaked at once to loquacity as soon as our wheels
+rattled on the pavement, and told me the name of every street as we
+crossed it, and owner of every house as we passed by. He presented me to
+my aunt, a lady of great eminence for the number of her acquaintances,
+and splendour of her assemblies, and either in kindness or revenge
+consulted with her, in my presence, how I might be most advantageously
+dressed for my first appearance, and most expeditiously disencumbered
+from my villatick bashfulness. My indignation at familiarity thus
+contemptuous flushed in my face; they mistook anger for shame, and
+alternately exerted their eloquence upon the benefits of publick
+education, and the happiness of an assurance early acquired.
+
+Assurance is, indeed, the only qualification to which they seem to have
+annexed merit, and assurance, therefore, is perpetually recommended to
+me as the supply of every defect, and the ornament of every excellence.
+I never sit silent in company when secret history is circulating, but I
+am reproached for want of assurance. If I fail to return the stated
+answer to a compliment; if I am disconcerted by unexpected raillery; if
+I blush when I am discovered gazing on a beauty, or hesitate when I find
+myself embarrassed in an argument; if I am unwilling to talk of what I
+do not understand, or timorous in undertaking offices which I cannot
+gracefully perform; if I suffer a more lively tatler to recount the
+casualties of a game, or a nimbler fop to pick up a fan, I am censured
+between pity and contempt, as a wretch doomed to grovel in obscurity for
+want of assurance.
+
+I have found many young persons harassed in the same manner, by those to
+whom age has given nothing but the assurance which they recommend; and
+therefore cannot but think it useful to inform them, that cowardice and
+delicacy are not to be confounded; and that he whose stupidity has armed
+him against the shafts of ridicule, will always act and speak with
+greater audacity, than they whose sensibility represses their ardour,
+and who dare never let their confidence outgrow their abilities.
+
+
+
+No. 148. SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1751.
+
+ _Me pater saevis oneret catenis,
+ Quod viro clemens misero peperci:
+ Me vel extremis Numidarum in agros
+ Classe releget._ HOR. Lib. iii. Od. xi. 45.
+
+ Me let my father load with chains,
+ Or banish to Numidia's farthest plains!
+ My crime, that I, a loyal wife,
+ In kind compassion sav'd my husband's life. FRANCIS.
+
+Politicians remark, that no oppression is so heavy or lasting as that
+which is inflicted by the perversion and exorbitance of legal authority.
+The robber may be seized, and the invader repelled, whenever they are
+found; they who pretend no right but that of force, may by force be
+punished or suppressed. But when plunder bears the name of impost, and
+murder is perpetrated by a judicial sentence, fortitude is intimidated,
+and wisdom confounded: resistance shrinks from an alliance with
+rebellion, and the villain remains secure in the robes of the
+magistrate.
+
+Equally dangerous and equally detestable are the cruelties often
+exercised in private families, under the venerable sanction of parental
+authority; the power which we are taught to honour from the first
+moments of reason; which is guarded from insult and violation by all
+that can impress awe upon the mind of man; and which therefore may
+wanton in cruelty without control, and trample the bounds of right with
+innumerable transgressions, before duty and piety will dare to seek
+redress, or think themselves at liberty to recur to any other means of
+deliverance than supplications by which insolence is elated, and tears
+by which cruelty is gratified.
+
+It was for a long time imagined by the Romans, that no son could be the
+murderer of his father; and they had therefore no punishment
+appropriated to parricide. They seem likewise to have believed with
+equal confidence, that no father could be cruel to his child; and
+therefore they allowed every man the supreme judicature in his own
+house, and put the lives of his offspring into his hands. But experience
+informed them by degrees, that they determined too hastily in favour of
+human nature; they found that instinct and habit were not able to
+contend with avarice or malice; that the nearest relation might be
+violated; and that power, to whomsoever intrusted, might be ill
+employed. They were therefore obliged to supply and to change their
+institutions; to deter the parricide by a new law, and to transfer
+capital punishments from the parent to the magistrate.
+
+There are indeed many houses which it is impossible to enter familiarly,
+without discovering that parents are by no means exempt from the
+intoxications of dominion; and that he who is in no danger of hearing
+remonstrances but from his own conscience, will seldom be long without
+the art of controling his convictions, and modifying justice by his own
+will.
+
+If in any situation the heart were inaccessible to malignity, it might
+be supposed to be sufficiently secured by parental relation. To have
+voluntarily become to any being the occasion of its existence, produces
+an obligation to make that existence happy. To see helpless infancy
+stretching out her hands, and pouring out her cries in testimony of
+dependence, without any powers to alarm jealousy, or any guilt to
+alienate affection, must surely awaken tenderness in every human mind;
+and tenderness once excited will be hourly increased by the natural
+contagion of felicity, by the repercussion of communicated pleasure, by
+the consciousness of the dignity of benefaction. I believe no generous
+or benevolent man can see the vilest animal courting his regard, and
+shrinking at his anger, playing his gambols of delight before him,
+calling on him in distress, and flying to him in danger, without more
+kindness than he can persuade himself to feel for the wild and unsocial
+inhabitants of the air and water. We naturally endear to ourselves those
+to whom we impart any kind of pleasure, because we imagine their
+affection and esteem secured to us by the benefits which they receive.
+
+There is, indeed, another method by which the pride of superiority may
+be likewise gratified. He that has extinguished all the sensations of
+humanity, and has no longer any satisfaction in the reflection that he
+is loved as the distributor of happiness, may please himself with
+exciting terrour as the inflictor of pain: he may delight his solitude
+with contemplating the extent of his power and the force of his
+commands; in imagining the desires that flutter on the tongue which is
+forbidden to utter them, or the discontent which preys on the heart in
+which fear confines it: he may amuse himself with new contrivances of
+detection, multiplications of prohibition, and varieties of punishment;
+and swell with exultation when he considers how little of the homage
+that he receives he owes to choice.
+
+That princes of this character have been known, the history of all
+absolute kingdoms will inform us; and since, as Aristotle observes,
+_[Greek: hae oikonomikae monarchia], the government of a family is
+naturally monarchical_, it is, like other monarchies, too often
+arbitrarily administered. The regal and parental tyrant differ only in
+the extent of their dominions, and the number of their slaves. The same
+passions cause the same miseries; except that seldom any prince, however
+despotick, has so far shaken off all awe of the publick eye, as to
+venture upon those freaks of injustice, which are sometimes indulged
+under the secrecy of a private dwelling. Capricious injunctions, partial
+decisions, unequal allotments, distributions of reward, not by merit,
+but by fancy, and punishments, regulated not by the degree of the
+offence, but by the humour of the judge, are too frequent where no power
+is known but that of a father.
+
+That he delights in the misery of others, no man will confess, and yet
+what other motive can make a father cruel? The king may be instigated by
+one man to the destruction of another; he may sometimes think himself
+endangered by the virtues of a subject; he may dread the successful
+general or the popular orator; his avarice may point out golden
+confiscations; and his guilt may whisper that he can only be secure by
+cutting off all power of revenge.
+
+But what can a parent hope from the oppression of those who were born to
+his protection, of those who can disturb him with no competition, who
+can enrich him with no spoils? Why cowards are cruel may be easily
+discovered; but for what reason, not more infamous than cowardice, can
+that man delight in oppression who has nothing to fear?
+
+The unjustifiable severity of a parent is loaded with this aggravation,
+that those whom he injures are always in his sight. The injustice of a
+prince is often exercised upon those of whom he never had any personal
+or particular knowledge; and the sentence which he pronounces, whether
+of banishment, imprisonment, or death, removes from his view the man
+whom he condemns. But the domestick oppressor dooms himself to gaze upon
+those faces which he clouds with terrour and with sorrow; and beholds
+every moment the effects of his own barbarities. He that can bear to
+give continual pain to those who surround him, and can walk with
+satisfaction in the gloom of his own presence; he that can see
+submissive misery without relenting, and meet without emotion the eye
+that implores mercy, or demands justice, will scarcely be amended by
+remonstrance or admonition; he has found means of stopping the avenues
+of tenderness, and arming his heart against the force of reason.
+
+Even though no consideration should be paid to the great law of social
+beings, by which every individual is commanded to consult the happiness
+of others, yet the harsh parent is less to be vindicated than any other
+criminal, because he less provides for the happiness of himself. Every
+man, however little he loves others, would willingly be loved; every man
+hopes to live long, and therefore hopes for that time at which he shall
+sink back to imbecility, and must depend for ease and cheerfulness upon
+the officiousness of others. But how has he obviated the inconveniencies
+of old age, who alienates from him the assistance of his children, and
+whose bed must be surrounded in the last hours, in the hours of languor
+and dejection, of impatience and of pain, by strangers to whom his life
+is indifferent, or by enemies to whom his death is desirable?
+
+Piety will, indeed, in good minds overcome provocation, and those who
+have been harassed by brutality will forget the injuries which they have
+suffered, so far as to perform the last duties with alacrity and zeal.
+But surely no resentment can be equally painful with kindness thus
+undeserved, nor can severer punishment be imprecated upon a man not
+wholly lost in meanness and stupidity, than, through the tediousness of
+decrepitude, to be reproached by the kindness of his own children, to
+receive not the tribute but the alms of attendance, and to owe every
+relief of his miseries, not to gratitude but to mercy.
+
+
+
+No. 149. TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1751.
+
+ _Quod non sit Pylades hoc tempore, non sit Orestes,
+ Miraris? Pylades, Marce, bibebat idem.
+ Nec melior panis, turdusve dabatur Oresti:
+ Sed par, atque eadem coena duobus erat.--
+ Te Cadmea Tyrus, me pinguis Gallia vestit:
+ Vis te purpureum, Marce, sagatus amem?
+ Ut praestem Pyladen, aliquis mihi praestet Orestem.
+ Hoc non fit verbis, Marce: ut ameris, ama_. MART. Lib. vi. Ep. xi.
+
+ You wonder now that no man sees
+ Such friends as those of ancient Greece.
+ Here lay the point--Orestes' meat
+ Was just the same his friend did eat;
+ Nor can it yet be found, his wine
+ Was better, Pylades, than thine.
+ In home-spun russet, I am drest,
+ Your cloth is always of the best;
+ But, honest Marcus, if you please
+ To chuse me for your Pylades,
+ Remember, words alone are vain;
+ Love--if you would be lov'd again. F. LEWIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+No depravity of the mind has been more frequently or justly censured
+than ingratitude. There is indeed sufficient reason for looking on those
+that can return evil for good, and repay kindness and assistance with
+hatred or neglect, as corrupted beyond the common degrees of wickedness;
+nor will he, who has once been clearly detected in acts of injury to his
+benefactor, deserve to be numbered among social beings; he has
+endeavoured to destroy confidence, to intercept sympathy, and to turn
+every man's attention wholly on himself.
+
+There is always danger lest the honest abhorrence of a crime should
+raise the passions with too much violence against the man to whom it is
+imputed. In proportion as guilt is more enormous, it ought to be
+ascertained by stronger evidence. The charge against ingratitude is very
+general; almost every man can tell what favours he has conferred upon
+insensibility, and how much happiness he has bestowed without return;
+but perhaps, if these patrons and protectors were confronted with any
+whom they boast of having befriended, it would often appear that they
+consulted only their pleasure or vanity, and repaid themselves their
+petty donatives by gratifications of insolence and indulgence of
+contempt.
+
+It has happened that much of my time has been passed in a dependent
+state, and consequently I have received many favours in the opinion of
+those at whose expense I have been maintained; yet I do not feel in my
+heart any burning gratitude or tumultuous affection; and, as I would not
+willingly suppose myself less susceptible of virtuous passions than the
+rest of mankind, I shall lay the history of my life before you, that you
+may, by your judgment of my conduct, either reform, or confirm, my
+present sentiments. My father was the second son of a very ancient and
+wealthy family. He married a lady of equal birth, whose fortune, joined
+to his own, might have supported his posterity in honour; but being gay
+and ambitious, he prevailed on his friends to procure him a post, which
+gave him an opportunity of displaying his elegance and politeness. My
+mother was equally pleased with splendour, and equally careless of
+expense; they both justified their profusion to themselves, by
+endeavouring to believe it necessary to the extension of their
+acquaintance, and improvement of their interest; and whenever any place
+became vacant, they expected to be repaid. In the midst of these hopes
+my father was snatched away by an apoplexy; and my mother, who had no
+pleasure but in dress, equipage, assemblies, and compliments, finding
+that she could live no longer in her accustomed rank, sunk into
+dejection, and in two years wore out her life with envy and discontent.
+
+I was sent with a sister, one year younger than myself, to the elder
+brother of my father. We were not yet capable of observing how much
+fortune influences affection, but flattered ourselves on the road with
+the tenderness and regard with which we should be treated by our uncle.
+Our reception was rather frigid than malignant; we were introduced to
+our young cousins, and for the first month more frequently consoled than
+upbraided; but in a short time we found our prattle repressed, our dress
+neglected, our endearments unregarded, and our requests referred to the
+housekeeper.
+
+The forms of decency were now violated, and every day produced new
+insults. We were soon brought to the necessity of receding from our
+imagined equality with our cousins, to whom we sunk into humble
+companions without choice or influence, expected only to echo their
+opinions, facilitate their desires, and accompany their rambles. It was
+unfortunate that our early introduction into polite company, and
+habitual knowledge of the arts of civility, had given us such an
+appearance of superiority to the awkward bashfulness of our relations,
+as naturally drew respect and preference from every stranger; and my
+aunt was forced to assert the dignity of her own children, while they
+were sculking in corners for fear of notice, and hanging down their
+heads in silent confusion, by relating the indiscretion of our father,
+displaying her own kindness, lamenting the misery of birth without
+estate, and declaring her anxiety for our future provision, and the
+expedients which she had formed to secure us from those follies or
+crimes, to which the conjunction of pride and want often gives occasion.
+In a short time care was taken to prevent such vexatious mistakes; we
+were told, that fine clothes would only fill our heads with false
+expectations, and our dress was therefore accommodated to our fortune.
+
+Childhood is not easily dejected or mortified. We felt no lasting pain
+from insolence or neglect; but finding that we were favoured and
+commended by all whose interest did not prompt them to discountenance
+us, preserved our vivacity and spirit to years of greater sensibility.
+It then became irksome and disgusting to live without any principle of
+action but the will of another, and we often met privately in the garden
+to lament our condition, and to ease our hearts with mutual narratives
+of caprice, peevishness, and affront.
+
+There are innumerable modes of insult and tokens of contempt, for which
+it is not easy to find a name, which vanish to nothing in an attempt to
+describe them, and yet may, by continual repetition, make day pass after
+day in sorrow and in terrour. Phrases of cursory compliment and
+established salutation may, by a different modulation of the voice, or
+cast of the countenance, convey contrary meanings, and be changed from
+indications of respect to expressions of scorn. The dependant who
+cultivates delicacy in himself, very little consults his own
+tranquillity. My unhappy vigilance is every moment discovering some
+petulance of accent, or arrogance of mien, some vehemence of
+interrogation, or quickness of reply, that recals my poverty to my mind,
+and which I feel more acutely, as I know not how to resent it.
+
+You are not, however, to imagine, that I think myself discharged from
+the duties of gratitude, only because my relations do not adjust their
+looks, or tune their voices to my expectation. The insolence of
+benefaction terminates not in negative rudeness or obliquities of
+insult. I am often told in express terms of the miseries from which
+charity has snatched me, while multitudes are suffered by relations
+equally near to devolve upon the parish; and have more than once heard
+it numbered among other favours, that I am admitted to the same table
+with my cousins.
+
+That I sit at the first table I must acknowledge, but I sit there only
+that I may feel the stings of inferiority. My inquiries are neglected,
+my opinion is overborne, my assertions are controverted, and, as
+insolence always propagates itself, the servants overlook me, in
+imitation of their master; if I call modestly, I am not heard; if
+loudly, my usurpation of authority is checked by a general frown. I am
+often obliged to look uninvited upon delicacies, and sometimes desired
+to rise upon very slight pretences.
+
+The incivilities to which I am exposed would give me less pain, were
+they not aggravated by the tears of my sister, whom the young ladies are
+hourly tormenting with every art of feminine persecution. As it is said
+of the supreme magistrate of Venice, that he is a prince in one place
+and a slave in another, my sister is a servant to her cousins in their
+apartments, and a companion only at the table. Her wit and beauty drew
+so much regard away from them, that they never suffer her to appear with
+them in any place where they solicit notice, or expect admiration; and
+when they are visited by neighbouring ladies and pass their hours in
+domestick amusements, she is sometimes called to fill a vacancy,
+insulted with contemptuous freedoms, and dismissed to her needle, when
+her place is supplied. The heir has of late, by the instigation of his
+sisters, begun to harass her with clownish jocularity; he seems inclined
+to make his first rude essays of waggery upon her; and by the
+connivance, if not encouragement, of his father, treats her with such
+licentious brutality, as I cannot bear, though I cannot punish it.
+
+I beg to be informed, Mr. Rambler, how much we can be supposed to owe to
+beneficence, exerted on terms like these? to beneficence which pollutes
+its gifts with contumely, and may be truly said to pander to pride? I
+would willingly be told, whether insolence does not reward its own
+liberalities, and whether he that exacts servility can, with justice, at
+the same time, expect affection?
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+HYPERDULUS.
+
+
+
+No. 150. SATURDAY, AUGUST 24, 1751.
+
+ --_O munera nondum
+ Intellecta Deum!_ LUCAN.
+
+ --Thou chiefest good!
+ Bestow'd by Heav'n, but seldom understood. ROWE.
+
+As daily experience makes it evident that misfortunes are unavoidably
+incident to human life, that calamity will neither be repelled by
+fortitude, nor escaped by flight; neither awed by greatness, nor eluded
+by obscurity; philosophers have endeavoured to reconcile us to that
+condition which they cannot teach us to mend, by persuading us that most
+of our evils are made afflictive only by ignorance or perverseness, and
+that nature has annexed to every vicissitude of external circumstances
+some advantage sufficient to over-balance all its inconveniencies.
+
+This attempt may, perhaps, be justly suspected of resemblance to the
+practice of physicians, who, when they cannot mitigate pain, destroy
+sensibility, and endeavour to conceal, by opiates, the inefficacy of
+their other medicines. The panegyrists of calamity have more frequently
+gained applause to their wit, than acquiescence to their arguments; nor
+has it appeared that the most musical oratory, or subtle ratiocination,
+has been able long to overpower the anguish of oppression, the
+tediousness of languor, or the longings of want.
+
+Yet, it may be generally remarked, that, where much has been attempted,
+something has been performed; though the discoveries or acquisitions of
+man are not always adequate to the expectations of his pride, they are
+at least sufficient to animate his industry. The antidotes with which
+philosophy has medicated the cup of life, though they cannot give it
+salubrity and sweetness, have at least allayed its bitterness, and
+contempered its malignity; the balm which she drops upon the wounds of
+the mind abates their pain, though it cannot heal them.
+
+By suffering willingly what we cannot avoid, we secure ourselves from
+vain and immoderate disquiet; we preserve for better purposes that
+strength which would be unprofitably wasted in wild efforts of
+desperation, and maintain that circumspection which may enable us to
+seize every support, and improve every alleviation. This calmness will
+be more easily obtained, as the attention is more powerfully withdrawn
+from the contemplation of unmingled unabated evil, and diverted to those
+accidental benefits which prudence may confer on every state.
+
+Seneca has attempted, not only to pacify us in misfortune, but almost to
+allure us to it, by representing it as necessary to the pleasures of the
+mind. _He that never was acquainted with adversity_, says he, _has seen
+the world but on one side, and is ignorant of half the scenes of
+nature_. He invites his pupil to calamity, as the Syrens allured the
+passenger to their coasts, by promising that he shall return [Greek:
+pleiona eidos], with increase of knowledge, with enlarged views, and
+multiplied ideas.
+
+Curiosity is, in great and generous minds, the first passion and the
+last; and perhaps always predominates in proportion to the strength of
+the contemplative faculties. He who easily comprehends all that is
+before him, and soon exhausts any single subject, is always eager for
+new inquiries; and, in proportion as the intellectual eye takes in a
+wider prospect, it must be gratified with variety by more rapid flights,
+and bolder excursions; nor perhaps can there be proposed to those who
+have been accustomed to the pleasures of thought, a more powerful
+incitement to any undertaking, than the hope of filling their fancy with
+new images, of clearing their doubts, and enlightening their reason.
+
+When Jason, in Valerius Flaccus, would incline the young prince Acastus
+to accompany him in the first essay of navigation, he disperses his
+apprehensions of danger by representations of the new tracts of earth
+and heaven, which the expedition would spread before their eyes; and
+tells him with what grief he will hear, at their return, of the
+countries which they shall have seen, and the toils which they have
+surmounted:
+
+ _O quantum terrae, quantum cognoscere coeli
+ Permissum est! pelagus quantos aperimus in usus!
+ Nunc forsan grave reris opus: sed laeta recurret
+ Cum ratis, et caram cum jam mihi reddet Iolcon;
+ Quis pudor heu nostros tibi tunc audire labores!
+ Quam referam visas tua per suspiria gentes!_ ARG. Lib. i. 168.
+
+ Led by our stars, what tracts immense we trace!
+ From seas remote, what funds of science raise!
+ A pain to thought! but when the heroick band
+ Returns applauded to their native land,
+ A life domestick you will then deplore,
+ And sigh while I describe the various, shore. EDW. CAVE.
+
+Acastus was soon prevailed upon by his curiosity to set rocks and
+hardships at defiance, and commit his life to the winds; and the same
+motives have in all ages had the same effect upon those whom the desire
+of fame or wisdom has distinguished from the lower orders of mankind.
+
+If, therefore, it can be proved that distress is necessary to the
+attainment of knowledge, and that a happy situation hides from us so
+large a part of the field of meditation, the envy of many who repine at
+the sight of affluence and splendour will be much diminished; for such
+is the delight of mental superiority, that none on whom nature or study
+have conferred it, would purchase the gifts of fortune by its loss.
+
+It is certain, that however the rhetorick of Seneca may have dressed
+adversity with extrinsick ornaments, he has justly represented it as
+affording some opportunities of observation, which cannot be found in
+continual success; he has truly asserted, that to escape misfortune is
+to want instruction, and that to live at ease is to live in ignorance.
+
+As no man can enjoy happiness without thinking that he enjoys it, the
+experience of calamity is necessary to a just sense of better fortune:
+for the good of our present state is merely comparative, and the evil
+which every man feels will be sufficient to disturb and harass him, if
+he does not know how much he escapes. The lustre of diamonds is
+invigorated by the interposition of darker bodies; the lights of a
+picture are created by the shades. The highest pleasure which nature has
+indulged to sensitive perception, is that of rest after fatigue; yet,
+that state which labour heightens into delight, is of itself only ease,
+and is incapable of satisfying the mind without the superaddition of
+diversified amusements.
+
+Prosperity, as is truly asserted by Seneca, very much obstructs the
+knowledge of ourselves. No man can form a just estimate of his own
+powers by unactive speculation. That fortitude which has encountered no
+dangers, that prudence which has surmounted no difficulties, that
+integrity which has been attacked by no temptations, can at best be
+considered but as gold not yet brought to the test, of which therefore
+the true value cannot be assigned. _He that traverses the lists without
+an adversary, may receive_, says the philosopher, _the reward of
+victory, but he has no pretensions to the honour_. If it be the highest
+happiness of man to contemplate himself with satisfaction, and to
+receive the gratulations of his own conscience; he whose courage has
+made way amidst the turbulence of opposition, and whose vigour has
+broken through the snares of distress, has many advantages over those
+that have slept in the shades of indolence, and whose retrospect of time
+can entertain them with nothing but day rising upon day, and year
+gliding after year.
+
+Equally necessary is some variety of fortune to a nearer inspection of
+the manners, principles, and affections of mankind. Princes, when they
+would know the opinions or grievances of their subjects, find it
+necessary to steal away from guards and attendants, and mingle on equal
+terms among the people. To him who is known to have the power of doing
+good or harm, nothing is shewn in its natural form. The behaviour of all
+that approach him is regulated by his humour, their narratives are
+adapted to his inclination, and their reasonings determined by his
+opinions; whatever can alarm suspicion, or excite resentment, is
+carefully suppressed, and nothing appears but uniformity of sentiments,
+and ardour of affection. It may be observed, that the unvaried
+complaisance which ladies have the right of exacting, keeps them
+generally unskilled in human nature; prosperity will always enjoy the
+female prerogatives, and therefore must be always in danger of female
+ignorance. Truth is scarcely to be heard, but by those from whom it can
+serve no interest to conceal it.
+
+
+
+No. 151. TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1751.
+
+ [Greek:--Amphi d anthro-
+ pon phresin amplakiai
+ Anarithmatoi kremantai
+ Touto d amachanon eurein,
+ O ti nun, kai en teleu-
+ ta, phertaton andri tuchein.] PINDAR, Ol. vii. 43.
+[Transcriber's note: line breaks and hyphenation in original.]
+
+ But wrapt in error is the human mind,
+ And human bliss is ever insecure:
+ Know we what fortune yet remains behind?
+ Know we how long the present shall endure? WEST.
+
+The writers of medicine and physiology have traced, with great
+appearance of accuracy, the effects of time upon the human body, by
+marking the various periods of the constitution, and the several stages
+by which animal life makes its progress from infancy to decrepitude.
+Though their observations have not enabled them to discover how manhood
+may be accelerated, or old age retarded, yet surely, if they be
+considered only as the amusements of curiosity, they are of equal
+importance with conjectures on things more remote, with catalogues of
+the fixed stars, and calculations of the bulk of planets.
+
+It had been a task worthy of the moral philosophers to have considered
+with equal care the climactericks of the mind; to have pointed out the
+time at which every passion begins and ceases to predominate, and noted
+the regular variations of desire, and the succession of one appetite to
+another.
+
+The periods of mental change are not to be stated with equal certainty;
+our bodies grow up under the care of nature, and depend so little on our
+own management, that something more than negligence is necessary to
+discompose their structure, or impede their vigour. But our minds are
+committed in a great measure first to the direction of others, and
+afterwards of ourselves. It would be difficult to protract the weakness
+of infancy beyond the usual time, but the mind may be very easily
+hindered from its share of improvement, and the bulk and strength of
+manhood must, without the assistance of education and instruction, be
+informed only with the understanding of a child.
+
+Yet, amidst all the disorder and inequality which variety of discipline,
+example, conversation, and employment, produce in the intellectual
+advances of different men, there is still discovered, by a vigilant
+spectator, such a general and remote similitude, as may be expected in
+the same common nature affected by external circumstances indefinitely
+varied. We all enter the world in equal ignorance, gaze round about us
+on the same objects, and have our first pains and pleasures, our first
+hopes and fears, our first aversions and desires, from the same causes;
+and though, as we proceed farther, life opens wider prospects to our
+view, and accidental impulses determine us to different paths, yet as
+every mind, however vigorous or abstracted, is necessitated, in its
+present state of union, to receive its informations, and execute its
+purposes, by the intervention of the body, the uniformity of our
+corporeal nature communicates itself to our intellectual operations; and
+those whose abilities or knowledge incline them most to deviate from the
+general round of life, are recalled from eccentricity by the laws of
+their existence.
+
+If we consider the exercises of the mind, it will be found that in each
+part of life some particular faculty is more eminently employed. When
+the treasures of knowledge are first opened before us, while novelty
+blooms alike on either hand, and every thing equally unknown and
+unexamined seems of equal value, the power of the soul is principally
+exerted in a vivacious and desultory curiosity. She applies by turns to
+every object, enjoys it for a short time, and flies with equal ardour to
+another. She delights to catch up loose and unconnected ideas, but
+starts away from systems and complications, which would obstruct the
+rapidity of her transitions, and detain her long in the same pursuit.
+
+When a number of distinct images are collected by these erratick and
+hasty surveys, the fancy is busied in arranging them; and combines them
+into pleasing pictures with more resemblance to the realities of life as
+experience advances, and new observations rectify the former. While the
+judgment is yet uninformed, and unable to compare the draughts of
+fiction with their originals, we are delighted with improbable
+adventures, impracticable virtues, and inimitable characters: but, in
+proportion as we have more opportunities of acquainting ourselves with
+living nature, we are sooner disgusted with copies in which there
+appears no resemblance. We first discard absurdity and impossibility,
+then exact greater and greater degrees of probability, but at last
+become cold and insensible to the charms of falsehood, however specious,
+and, from the imitations of truth, which are never perfect, transfer our
+affection to truth itself.
+
+Now commences the reign of judgment or reason; we begin to find little
+pleasure but in comparing arguments, stating propositions, disentangling
+perplexities, clearing ambiguities, and deducing consequences. The
+painted vales of imagination are deserted, and our intellectual activity
+is exercised in winding through the labyrinths of fallacy, and toiling
+with firm and cautious steps up the narrow tracks of demonstration.
+Whatever may lull vigilance, or mislead attention, is contemptuously
+rejected, and every disguise in which errour may be concealed, is
+carefully observed, till, by degrees, a certain number of incontestable
+or unsuspected propositions are established, and at last concatenated
+into arguments, or compacted into systems.
+
+At length weariness succeeds to labour, and the mind lies at ease in the
+contemplation of her own attainments, without any desire of new
+conquests or excursions. This is the age of recollection and narrative;
+the opinions are settled, and the avenues of apprehension shut against
+any new intelligence; the days that are to follow must pass in the
+inculcation of precepts already collected, and assertion of tenets
+already received; nothing is henceforward so odious as opposition, so
+insolent as doubt, or so dangerous as novelty.
+
+In like manner the passions usurp the separate command of the successive
+periods of life. To the happiness of our first years nothing more seems
+necessary than freedom from restraint: every man may remember that if he
+was left to himself, and indulged in the disposal of his own time, he
+was once content without the superaddition of any actual pleasure. The
+new world is itself a banquet; and, till we have exhausted the freshness
+of life, we have always about us sufficient gratifications: the sunshine
+quickens us to play, and the shade invites us to sleep.
+
+But we soon become unsatisfied with negative felicity, and are solicited
+by our senses and appetites to more powerful delights, as the taste of
+him who has satisfied his hunger must be excited by artificial
+stimulations. The simplicity of natural amusement is now past, and art
+and contrivance must improve our pleasures; but, in time, art, like
+nature, is exhausted, and the senses can no longer supply the cravings
+of the intellect.
+
+The attention is then transferred from pleasure to interest, in which
+pleasure is perhaps included, though diffused to a wider extent, and
+protracted through new gradations. Nothing now dances before the eyes
+but wealth and power, nor rings in the ear, but the voice of fame;
+wealth, to which, however variously denominated, every man at some time
+or other aspires; power, which all wish to obtain within their circle of
+action; and fame, which no man, however high or mean, however wise or
+ignorant, was yet able to despise. Now prudence and foresight exert
+their influence: no hour is devoted wholly to any present enjoyment, no
+act or purpose terminates in itself, but every motion is referred to
+some distant end; the accomplishment of one design begins another, and
+the ultimate wish is always pushed off to its former distance.
+
+At length fame is observed to be uncertain, and power to be dangerous;
+the man whose vigour and alacrity begin to forsake him, by degrees
+contracts his designs, remits his former multiplicity of pursuits, and
+extends no longer his regard to any other honour than the reputation of
+wealth, or any other influence than his power. Avarice is generally the
+last passion of those lives of which the first part has been squandered
+in pleasure, and the second devoted to ambition. He that sinks under the
+fatigue of getting wealth, lulls his age with the milder business of
+saving it.
+
+I have in this view of life considered man as actuated only by natural
+desires, and yielding to their own inclinations, without regard to
+superior principles, by which the force of external agents may be
+counteracted, and the temporary prevalence of passions restrained.
+Nature will indeed always operate, human desires will be always ranging;
+but these motions, though very powerful, are not resistless; nature may
+be regulated, and desires governed; and, to contend with the
+predominance of successive passions, to be endangered first by one
+affection, and then by another, is the condition upon which we are to
+pass our time, the time of our preparation for that state which shall
+put an end to experiment, to disappointment, and to change.
+
+
+
+No. 152. SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1751.
+
+ --Tristia maestum
+ Vullum verba decent, iratum plena minarum. HOR. De Ar. Poet. 105.
+
+ Disastrous words can best disaster shew;
+ In angry phrase the angry passions glow. ELPHINSTON.
+
+"It was the wisdom," says Seneca, "of ancient times, to consider what is
+most useful as most illustrious." If this rule be applied to works of
+genius, scarcely any species of composition deserves more to be
+cultivated than the epistolary style, since none is of more various or
+frequent use through the whole subordination of human life.
+
+It has yet happened that, among the numerous writers which our nation
+has produced, equal, perhaps, always in force and genius, and of late in
+elegance and accuracy, to those of any other country, very few have
+endeavoured to distinguish themselves by the publication of letters,
+except such as were written in the discharge of publick trusts, and
+during the transaction of great affairs; which, though they afford
+precedents to the minister, and memorials to the historian, are of no
+use as examples of the familiar style, or models of private
+correspondence.
+
+If it be inquired by foreigners, how this deficiency has happened in the
+literature of a country, where all indulge themselves with so little
+danger in speaking and writing, may we not without either bigotry or
+arrogance inform them, that it must be imputed to our contempt of
+trifles, and our due sense of the dignity of the publick? We do not
+think it reasonable to fill the world with volumes from which nothing
+can be learned, nor expect that the employments of the busy, or the
+amusements of the gay, should give way to narratives of our private
+affairs, complaints of absence, expressions of fondness, or declarations
+of fidelity.
+
+A slight perusal of the innumerable letters by which the wits of France
+have signalized their names, will prove that other nations need not be
+discouraged from the like attempts by the consciousness of inability;
+for surely it is not very difficult to aggravate trifling misfortunes,
+to magnify familiar incidents, repeat adulatory professions, accumulate
+servile hyperboles, and produce all that can be found in the despicable
+remains of Voiture and Scarron.
+
+Yet, as much of life must be passed in affairs considerable only by
+their frequent occurrence, and much of the pleasure which our condition
+allows, must be produced by giving elegance to trifles, it is necessary
+to learn how to become little without becoming mean, to maintain the
+necessary intercourse of civility, and fill up the vacuities of actions
+by agreeable appearances. It had therefore been of advantage, if such of
+our writers as have excelled in the art of decorating insignificance,
+had supplied us with a few sallies of innocent gaiety, effusions of
+honest tenderness, or exclamations of unimportant hurry.
+
+Precept has generally been posterior to performance. The art of
+composing works of genius has never been taught but by the example of
+those who performed it by natural vigour of imagination, and rectitude
+of judgment. As we have few letters, we have likewise few criticisms
+upon the epistolary style. The observations with which Walsh has
+introduced his pages of inanity, are such as give him little claim to
+the rank assigned him by Dryden among the criticks. _Letters_, says he,
+_are intended as resemblances of conversation, and the chief
+excellencies of conversation are good humour and good breeding_. This
+remark, equally valuable for its novelty and propriety, he dilates and
+enforces with an appearance of complete acquiescence in his own
+discovery.
+
+No man was ever in doubt about the moral qualities of a letter. It has
+been always known that he who endeavours to please must appear pleased,
+and he who would not provoke rudeness must not practise it. But the
+question among those who establish rules for an epistolary performance
+is how gaiety or civility may be properly expressed; as among the
+criticks in history it is not contested whether truth ought to be
+preserved, but by what mode of diction it is best adorned.
+
+As letters are written on all subjects, in all states of mind, they
+cannot be properly reduced to settled rules, or described by any single
+characteristick; and we may safely disentangle our minds from critical
+embarrassments, by determining that a letter has no peculiarity but its
+form, and that nothing is to be refused admission, which would be proper
+in any other method of treating the same subject. The qualities of the
+epistolary style most frequently required, are ease and simplicity, an
+even flow of unlaboured diction, and an artless arrangement of obvious
+sentiments. But these directions are no sooner applied to use, than
+their scantiness and imperfection become evident. Letters are written to
+the great and to the mean, to the learned and the ignorant, at rest and
+in distress, in sport and in passion. Nothing can be more improper than
+ease and laxity of expression, when the importance of the subject
+impresses solicitude, or the dignity of the person exacts reverence.
+
+That letters should be written with strict conformity to nature is true,
+because nothing but conformity to nature can make any composition
+beautiful or just. But it is natural to depart from familiarity of
+language upon occasions not familiar. Whatever elevates the sentiments
+will consequently raise the expression; whatever fills us with hope or
+terrour, will produce some perturbation of images and some figurative
+distortions of phrase. Wherever we are studious to please, we are afraid
+of trusting our first thoughts, and endeavour to recommend our opinion
+by studied ornaments, accuracy of method, and elegance of style.
+
+If the personages of the comick scene be allowed by Horace to raise
+their language in the transports of anger to the turgid vehemence of
+tragedy, the epistolary writer may likewise without censure comply with
+the varieties of his matter. If great events are to be related, he may
+with all the solemnity of an historian deduce them from their causes,
+connect them with their concomitants, and trace them to their
+consequences. If a disputed position is to be established, or a remote
+principle to be investigated, he may detail his reasonings with all the
+nicety of syllogistick method. If a menace is to be averted, or a
+benefit implored, he may, without any violation of the edicts of
+criticism, call every power of rhetorick to his assistance, and try
+every inlet at which love or pity enters the heart.
+
+Letters that have no other end than the entertainment of the
+correspondents are more properly regulated by critical precepts, because
+the matter and style are equally arbitrary, and rules are more
+necessary, as there is a larger power of choice. In letters of this
+kind, some conceive art graceful, and others think negligence amiable;
+some model them by the sonnet, and will allow them no means of
+delighting but the soft lapse of calm mellifluence; others adjust them
+by the epigram, and expect pointed sentences and forcible periods. The
+one party considers exemption from faults as the height of excellence,
+the other looks upon neglect of excellence as the most disgusting fault;
+one avoids censure, the other aspires to praise; one is always in danger
+of insipidity, the other continually on the brink of affectation.
+
+When the subject has no intrinsick dignity, it must necessarily owe its
+attractions to artificial embellishments, and may catch at all
+advantages which the art of writing can supply. He that, like Pliny,
+sends his friend a portion for his daughter, will, without Pliny's
+eloquence or address, find means of exciting gratitude, and securing
+acceptance; but he that has no present to make but a garland, a riband,
+or some petty curiosity, must endeavour to recommend it by his manner of
+giving it.
+
+The purpose for which letters are written when no intelligence is
+communicated, or business transacted, is to preserve in the minds of the
+absent either love or esteem: to excite love we must impart pleasure,
+and to raise esteem we must discover abilities. Pleasure will generally
+be given, as abilities are displayed by scenes of imagery, points of
+conceit, unexpected sallies, and artful compliments. Trifles always
+require exuberance of ornament; the building which has no strength can
+be valued only for the grace of its decorations. The pebble must be
+polished with care, which hopes to be valued as a diamond; and words
+ought surely to be laboured, when they are intended to stand for things.
+
+
+
+No. 153. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1751
+
+ _Turba Remi? Sequitur Fortunam, ut semper, et odit
+ Damnatos_. JUV. Sat. x. 73.
+
+ The fickle crowd with fortune comes and goes;
+ Wealth still finds followers, and misfortune foes.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+There are occasions on which all apology is rudeness. He that has an
+unwelcome message to deliver, may give some proof of tenderness and
+delicacy, by a ceremonial introduction and gradual discovery, because
+the mind, upon which the weight of sorrow is to fall, gains time for the
+collection of its powers; but nothing is more absurd than to delay the
+communication of pleasure, to torment curiosity by impatience, and to
+delude hope by anticipation.
+
+I shall therefore forbear the arts by which correspondents generally
+secure admission, for I have too long remarked the power of vanity, to
+doubt that I shall be read by you with a disposition to approve, when I
+declare that my narrative has no other tendency than to illustrate and
+corroborate your own observations.
+
+I was the second son of a gentleman, whose patrimony had been wasted by
+a long succession of squanderers, till he was unable to support any of
+his children, except his heir, in the hereditary dignity of idleness.
+Being therefore obliged to employ that part of life in study which my
+progenitors had devoted to the hawk and hound, I was in my eighteenth
+year despatched to the university, without any rural honours. I had
+never killed a single woodcock, nor partaken one triumph over a
+conquered fox.
+
+At the university I continued to enlarge my acquisitions with little
+envy of the noisy happiness which my elder brother had the fortune to
+enjoy; and, having obtained my degree, retired to consider at leisure to
+what profession I should confine that application which had hitherto
+been dissipated in general knowledge. To deliberate upon a choice which
+custom and honour forbid to be retracted, is certainly reasonable; yet
+to let loose the attention equally to the advantages and inconveniencies
+of every employment is not without danger; new motives are every moment
+operating on every side; and mechanicks have long ago discovered, that
+contrariety of equal attractions is equivalent to rest.
+
+While I was thus trifling in uncertainty, an old adventurer, who had
+been once the intimate friend of my father, arrived from the Indies with
+a large fortune; which he had so much harassed himself in obtaining,
+that sickness and infirmity left him no other desire than to die in his
+native country. His wealth easily procured him an invitation to pass his
+life with us; and, being incapable of any amusement but conversation, he
+necessarily became familiarized to me, whom he found studious and
+domestick. Pleased with an opportunity of imparting my knowledge, and
+eager of any intelligence that might increase it, I delighted his
+curiosity with historical narratives and explications of nature, and
+gratified his vanity by inquiries after the products of distant
+countries, and the customs of their inhabitants.
+
+My brother saw how much I advanced in the favour of our guest, who,
+being without heirs, was naturally expected to enrich the family of his
+friend, but never attempted to alienate me, nor to ingratiate himself.
+He was, indeed, little qualified to solicit the affection of a
+traveller, for the remissness of his education had left him without any
+rule of action but his present humour. He often forsook the old
+gentleman in the midst of an adventure, because the horn sounded in the
+court-yard, and would have lost an opportunity, not only of knowing the
+history, but sharing the wealth of the mogul, for the trial of a new
+pointer, or the sight of a horse-race.
+
+It was therefore not long before our new friend declared his intention
+of bequeathing to me the profits of his commerce, as the only man in the
+family by whom he could expect them to be rationally enjoyed. This
+distinction drew upon me the envy not only of my brother but my father.
+
+As no man is willing to believe that he suffers by his own fault, they
+imputed the preference which I had obtained to adulatory compliances, or
+malignant calumnies. To no purpose did I call upon my patron to attest
+my innocence, for who will believe what he wishes to be false? In the
+heat of disappointment they forced their inmate by repeated insults to
+depart from the house, and I was soon, by the same treatment, obliged to
+follow him.
+
+He chose his residence in the confines of London, where rest,
+tranquillity, and medicine, restored him to part of the health which he
+had lost. I pleased myself with perceiving that I was not likely to
+obtain the immediate possession of wealth which no labour of mine had
+contributed to acquire; and that he, who had thus distinguished me,
+might hope to end his life without a total frustration of those
+blessings, which, whatever be their real value, he had sought with so
+much diligence, and purchased with so many vicissitudes of danger and
+fatigue.
+
+He, indeed, left me no reason to repine at his recovery, for he was
+willing to accustom me early to the use of money, and set apart for my
+expenses such a revenue as I had scarcely dared to image. I can yet
+congratulate myself that fortune has seen her golden cup once tasted
+without inebriation. Neither my modesty nor prudence was overwhelmed by
+affluence; my elevation was without insolence, and my expense without
+profusion. Employing the influence which money always confers, to the
+improvement of my understanding, I mingled in parties of gaiety, and in
+conferences of learning, appeared in every place where instruction was
+to be found, and imagined that, by ranging through all the diversities
+of life, I had acquainted myself fully with human nature, and learned
+all that was to be known of the ways of men.
+
+It happened, however, that I soon discovered how much was wanted to the
+completion of my knowledge, and found that, according to Seneca's
+remark, I had hitherto seen the world but on one side. My patron's
+confidence in his increase of strength tempted him to carelessness and
+irregularity; he caught a fever by riding in the rain, of which he died
+delirious on the third day. I buried him without any of the heir's
+affected grief or secret exultation; then preparing to take a legal
+possession of his fortune, I opened his closet, where I found a will,
+made at his first arrival, by which my father was appointed the chief
+inheritor, and nothing was left me but a legacy sufficient to support me
+in the prosecution of my studies.
+
+I had not yet found such charms in prosperity as to continue it by any
+acts of forgery or injustice, and made haste to inform my father of the
+riches which had been given him, not by the preference of kindness, but
+by the delays of indolence and cowardice of age. The hungry family flew
+like vultures on their prey, and soon made my disappointment publick, by
+the tumult of their claims, and the splendour of their sorrow.
+
+It was now my part to consider how I should repair the disappointment. I
+could not but triumph in my long list of friends, which comprised almost
+every name that power or knowledge entitled to eminence; and, in the
+prospect of the innumerable roads to honour and preferment, which I had
+laid open to myself by the wise use of temporary riches, I believed
+nothing necessary but that I should continue that acquaintance to which
+I had been so readily admitted, and which had hitherto been cultivated
+on both sides with equal ardour.
+
+Full of these expectations, I one morning ordered a chair, with an
+intention to make my usual circle of morning visits. Where I first
+stopped I saw two footmen lolling at the door, who told me without any
+change of posture, or collection of countenance, that their master was
+at home, and suffered me to open the inner door without assistance. I
+found my friend standing, and, as I was tattling with my former freedom,
+was formally entreated to sit down; but did not stay to be favoured with
+any further condescensions.
+
+My next experiment was made at the levee of a statesman, who received me
+with an embrace of tenderness, that he might with more decency publish
+my change of fortune to the sycophants about him. After he had enjoyed
+the triumph of condolence, he turned to a wealthy stockjobber, and left
+me exposed to the scorn of those who had lately courted my notice, and
+solicited my interest.
+
+I was then set down at the door of another, who, upon my entrance,
+advised me, with great solemnity, to think of some settled provision for
+life. I left him, and hurried away to an old friend, who professed
+himself unsusceptible of any impressions from prosperity or misfortune,
+and begged that he might see me when he was more at leisure.
+
+Of sixty-seven doors, at which I knocked in the first week after my
+appearance in a mourning dress, I was denied admission at forty-six; was
+suffered at fourteen to wait in the outer room till business was
+despatched; at four, was entertained with a few questions about the
+weather; at one, heard the footman rated for bringing my name; and at
+two was informed, in the flow of casual conversation, how much a man of
+rank degrades himself by mean company.
+
+My curiosity now led me to try what reception I should find among the
+ladies; but I found that my patron had carried all my powers of pleasing
+to the grave. I had formerly been celebrated as a wit, and not
+perceiving any languor in my imagination, I essayed to revive that
+gaiety which had hitherto broken out involuntarily before my sentences
+were finished. My remarks were now heard with a steady countenance, and
+if a girl happened to give way to habitual merriment, her forwardness
+was repressed with a frown by her mother or her aunt.
+
+Wherever I come I scatter infirmity and disease; every lady whom I meet
+in the Mall is too weary to walk; all whom I entreat to sing are
+troubled with colds: if I propose cards, they are afflicted with the
+head-ach; [Transcriber's note: sic] if I invite them to the gardens,
+they cannot bear a crowd.
+
+All this might be endured; but there is a class of mortals who think my
+understanding impaired with my fortune, exalt themselves to the dignity
+of advice, and, whenever we happen to meet, presume to prescribe my
+conduct, regulate my economy, and direct my pursuits. Another race,
+equally impertinent and equally despicable, are every moment
+recommending to me an attention to my interest, and think themselves
+entitled, by their superior prudence, to reproach me if I speak or move
+without regard to profit.
+
+Such, Mr. Rambler, is the power of wealth, that it commands the ear of
+greatness and the eye of beauty, gives spirit to the dull, and authority
+to the timorous, and leaves him from whom it departs, without virtue and
+without understanding, the sport of caprice, the scoff of insolence, the
+slave of meanness, and the pupil of ignorance.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+
+
+No. 154. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1751.
+
+ _--Tibi res antiquae laudis et artis
+ Ingredior, sanctos ausus recludere fontes_. VIR. Geo. ii. 174.
+
+ For thee my tuneful accents will I raise,
+ And treat of arts disclos'd in ancient days;
+ Once more unlock for thee the sacred spring. DRYDEN.
+
+The direction of Aristotle to those that study politicks, is first to
+examine and understand what has been written by the ancients upon
+government; then to cast their eyes round upon the world, and consider
+by what causes the prosperity of communities is visibly influenced, and
+why some are worse, and others better administered.
+
+The same method must be pursued by him who hopes to become eminent in
+any other part of knowledge. The first task is to search books, the next
+to contemplate nature. He must first possess himself of the intellectual
+treasures which the diligence of former ages has accumulated, and then
+endeavour to increase them by his own collections.
+
+The mental disease of the present generation, is impatience of study,
+contempt of the great masters of ancient wisdom, and a disposition to
+rely wholly upon unassisted genius and natural sagacity. The wits of
+these happy days have discovered a way to fame, which the dull caution
+of our laborious ancestors durst never attempt; they cut the knots of
+sophistry which it was formerly the business of years to untie, solve
+difficulties by sudden irradiations of intelligence, and comprehend long
+processes of argument by immediate intuition.
+
+Men who have flattered themselves into this opinion of their own
+abilities, look down on all who waste their lives over books, as a race
+of inferior beings, condemned by nature to perpetual pupilage, and
+fruitlessly endeavouring to remedy their barrenness by incessant
+cultivation, or succour their feebleness by subsidiary strength. They
+presume that none would be more industrious than they, if they were not
+more sensible of deficiencies; and readily conclude, that he who places
+no confidence in his own powers, owes his modesty only to his weakness.
+
+It is however certain, that no estimate is more in danger of erroneous
+calculations than those by which a man computes the force of his own
+genius. It generally happens at our entrance into the world, that, by
+the natural attraction of similitude, we associate with men like
+ourselves, young, sprightly, and ignorant, and rate our accomplishments
+by comparison with theirs; when we have once obtained an acknowledged
+superiority over our acquaintances, imagination and desire easily extend
+it over the rest of mankind, and if no accident forces us into new
+emulations, we grow old, and die in admiration of ourselves.
+
+Vanity, thus confirmed in her dominion, readily listens to the voice of
+idleness, and sooths the slumber of life with continual dreams of
+excellence and greatness. A man, elated by confidence in his natural
+vigour of fancy and sagacity of conjecture, soon concludes that he
+already possesses whatever toil and inquiry can confer. He then listens
+with eagerness to the wild objections which folly has raised against the
+common means of improvement; talks of the dark chaos of indigested
+knowledge; describes the mischievous effects of heterogeneous sciences
+fermenting in the mind; relates the blunders of lettered ignorance;
+expatiates on the heroick merit of those who deviate from prescription,
+or shake off authority; and gives vent to the inflations of his heart by
+declaring that he owes nothing to pedants and universities.
+
+All these pretensions, however confident, are very often vain. The
+laurels which superficial acuteness gains in triumphs over ignorance
+unsupported by vivacity, are observed by Locke to be lost, whenever real
+learning and rational diligence appear against her; the sallies of
+gaiety are soon repressed by calm confidence; and the artifices of
+subtilty are readily detected by those, who, having carefully studied
+the question, are not easily confounded or surprised.
+
+But, though the contemner of books had neither been deceived by others
+nor himself, and was really born with a genius surpassing the ordinary
+abilities of mankind; yet surely such gifts of Providence may be more
+properly urged as incitements to labour, than encouragements to
+negligence. He that neglects the culture of ground naturally fertile, is
+more shamefully culpable, than he whose field would scarcely recompense
+his husbandry.
+
+Cicero remarks, that not to know what has been transacted in former
+times, is to continue always a child. If no use is made of the labours
+of past ages, the world must remain always in the infancy of knowledge.
+The discoveries of every man must terminate in his own advantage, and
+the studies of every age be employed on questions which the past
+generation had discussed and determined. We may with as little reproach
+borrow science as manufactures from our ancestors; and it is as rational
+to live in caves till our own hands have erected a palace, as to reject
+all knowledge of architecture which our understandings will not supply.
+
+To the strongest and quickest mind it is far easier to learn than to
+invent. The principles of arithmetick and geometry may be comprehended
+by a close attention in a few days; yet who can flatter himself that the
+study of a long life would have enabled him to discover them, when he
+sees them yet unknown to so many nations, whom he cannot suppose less
+liberally endowed with natural reason, than the Grecians or Egyptians?
+
+Every science was thus far advanced towards perfection, by the emulous
+diligence of contemporary students, and the gradual discoveries of one
+age improving on another. Sometimes unexpected flashes of instruction
+were struck out by the fortuitous collision of happy incidents, or an
+involuntary concurrence of ideas, in which the philosopher to whom they
+happened had no other merit than that of knowing their value, and
+transmitting, unclouded, to posterity, that light which had been kindled
+by causes out of his power. The happiness of these casual illuminations
+no man can promise to himself, because no endeavours can procure them;
+and therefore whatever be our abilities or application, we must submit
+to learn from others what perhaps would have lain hid for ever from
+human penetration, had not some remote inquiry brought it to view; as
+treasures are thrown up by the ploughman and the digger in the rude
+exercise of their common occupations. The man whose genius qualifies him
+for great undertakings, must at least be content to learn from books the
+present state of human knowledge; that he may not ascribe to himself the
+invention of arts generally known; weary his attention with experiments
+of which the event has been long registered; and waste, in attempts
+which have already succeeded or miscarried, that time which might have
+been spent with usefulness and honour upon new undertakings.
+
+But, though the study of books is necessary, it is not sufficient to
+constitute literary eminence. He that wishes to be counted among the
+benefactors of posterity, must add by his own toil to the acquisitions
+of his ancestors, and secure his memory from neglect by some valuable
+improvement. This can only be effected by looking out upon the wastes of
+the intellectual world, and extending the power of learning over regions
+yet undisciplined and barbarous; or by surveying more exactly our
+ancient dominions, and driving ignorance from the fortresses and
+retreats where she skulks undetected and undisturbed. Every science has
+its difficulties, which yet call for solution before we attempt new
+systems of knowledge; as every country has its forests and marshes,
+which it would be wise to cultivate and drain, before distant colonies
+are projected as a necessary discharge of the exuberance of inhabitants.
+
+No man ever yet became great by imitation. Whatever hopes for the
+veneration of mankind must have invention in the design or the
+execution; either the effect must itself be new, or the means by which
+it is produced. Either truths hitherto unknown must be discovered, or
+those which are already known enforced by stronger evidence, facilitated
+by clearer method, or elucidated by brighter illustrations.
+
+Fame cannot spread wide or endure long that is not rooted in nature, and
+matured by art. That which hopes to resist the blast of malignity, and
+stand firm against the attacks of time, must contain in itself some
+original principle of growth. The reputation which arises from the
+detail or transposition of borrowed sentiments, may spread for awhile,
+like ivy on the rind of antiquity, but will be torn away by accident or
+contempt, and suffered to rot unheeded on the ground.
+
+
+
+No. 155. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1751.
+
+ _--Steriles transmisimus annos,
+ Haec aevi mihi prima dies, haec limina vitae_. STAT. i. 362.
+
+ --Our barren years are past;
+ Be this of life the first, of sloth the last. ELPHINSTON.
+
+No weakness of the human mind has more frequently incurred
+animadversion, than the negligence with which men overlook their own
+faults, however flagrant, and the easiness with which they pardon them,
+however frequently repeated.
+
+It seems generally believed, that as the eye cannot see itself, the mind
+has no faculties by which it can contemplate its own state, and that
+therefore we have not means of becoming acquainted with our real
+characters; an opinion which, like innumerable other postulates, an
+inquirer finds himself inclined to admit upon very little evidence,
+because it affords a ready solution of many difficulties. It will
+explain why the greatest abilities frequently fail to promote the
+happiness of those who possess them; why those who can distinguish with
+the utmost nicety the boundaries of vice and virtue, suffer them to be
+confounded in their own conduct; why the active and vigilant resign
+their affairs implicitly to the management of others; and why the
+cautious and fearful make hourly approaches towards ruin, without one
+sigh of solicitude or struggle for escape.
+
+When a position teems thus with commodious consequences, who can without
+regret confess it to be false? Yet it is certain that declaimers have
+indulged a disposition to describe the dominion of the passions as
+extended beyond the limits that nature assigned. Self-love is often
+rather arrogant than blind; it does not hide our faults from ourselves,
+but persuades us that they escape the notice of others, and disposes us
+to resent censures lest we should confess them to be just. We are
+secretly conscious of defects and vices, which we hope to conceal from
+the publick eye, and please ourselves with innumerable impostures, by
+which, in reality, nobody is deceived.
+
+In proof of the dimness of our internal sight, or the general inability
+of man to determine rightly concerning his own character, it is common
+to urge the success of the most absurd and incredible flattery, and the
+resentment always raised by advice, however soft, benevolent, and
+reasonable. But flattery, if its operation be nearly examined, will be
+found to owe its acceptance, not to our ignorance, but knowledge of our
+failures, and to delight us rather as it consoles our wants than
+displays our possessions. He that shall solicit the favour of his patron
+by praising him for qualities which he can find in himself, will be
+defeated by the more daring panegyrist who enriches him with
+adscititious excellence. Just praise is only a debt, but flattery is a
+present. The acknowledgment of those virtues on which conscience
+congratulates us, is a tribute that we can at any time exact with
+confidence; but the celebration of those which we only feign, or desire
+without any vigorous endeavours to attain them, is received as a
+confession of sovereignty over regions never conquered, as a favourable
+decision of disputable claims, and is more welcome as it is more
+gratuitous.
+
+Advice is offensive, not because it lays us open to unexpected regret,
+or convicts us of any fault which had escaped our notice, but because it
+shews us that we are known to others as well as to ourselves; and the
+officious monitor is persecuted with hatred, not because his accusation
+is false, but because he assumes that superiority which we are not
+willing to grant him, and has dared to detect what we desired to
+conceal.
+
+For this reason advice is commonly ineffectual. If those who follow the
+call of their desires, without inquiry whither they are going, had
+deviated ignorantly from the paths of wisdom, and were rushing upon
+dangers unforeseen, they would readily listen to information that recals
+them from their errours, and catch the first alarm by which destruction
+or infamy is denounced. Few that wander in the wrong way mistake it for
+the right, they only find it more smooth and flowery, and indulge their
+own choice rather than approve it: therefore few are persuaded to quit
+it by admonition or reproof, since it impresses no new conviction, nor
+confers any powers of action or resistance. He that is gravely informed
+how soon profusion will annihilate his fortune, hears with little
+advantage what he knew before, and catches at the next occasion of
+expense, because advice has no force to suppress his vanity. He that is
+told how certainly intemperance will hurry him to the grave, runs with
+his usual speed to a new course of luxury, because his reason is not
+invigorated, nor his appetite weakened.
+
+The mischief of flattery is, not that it persuades any man that he is
+what he is not, but that it suppresses the influence of honest ambition,
+by raising an opinion that honour may be gained without the toil of
+merit; and the benefit of advice arises commonly not from any new light
+imparted to the mind, but from the discovery which it affords of the
+publick suffrages. He that could withstand conscience is frighted at
+infamy, and shame prevails when reason is defeated.
+
+As we all know our own faults, and know them commonly with many
+aggravations which human perspicacity cannot discover, there is,
+perhaps, no man, however hardened by impudence or dissipated by levity,
+sheltered by hypocrisy or blasted by disgrace, who does not intend some
+time to review his conduct, and to regulate the remainder of his life by
+the laws of virtue. New temptations indeed attack him, new invitations
+are offered by pleasure and interest, and the hour of reformation is
+always delayed; every delay gives vice another opportunity of fortifying
+itself by habit; and the change of manners, though sincerely intended
+and rationally planned, is referred to the time when some craving
+passion shall be fully gratified, or some powerful allurement cease its
+importunity.
+
+Thus procrastination is accumulated on procrastination, and one
+impediment succeeds another, till age shatters our resolution, or death
+intercepts the project of amendment. Such is often the end of salutary
+purposes, after they have long delighted the imagination, and appeased
+that disquiet which every mind feels from known misconduct, when the
+attention is not diverted by business or by pleasure.
+
+Nothing surely can be more unworthy of a reasonable nature, than to
+continue in a state so opposite to real happiness, as that all the peace
+of solitude, and felicity of meditation, must arise from resolutions of
+forsaking it. Yet the world will often afford examples of men, who pass
+months and years in a continual war with their own convictions, and are
+daily dragged by habit, or betrayed by passion, into practices which
+they closed and opened their eyes with purposes to avoid; purposes
+which, though settled on conviction, the first impulse of momentary
+desire totally overthrows.
+
+The influence of custom is indeed such, that to conquer it will require
+the utmost efforts of fortitude and virtue; nor can I think any man more
+worthy of veneration and renown, than those who have burst the shackles
+of habitual vice. This victory, however, has different degrees of glory
+as of difficulty; it is more, heroick as the objects of guilty
+gratification are more familiar, and the recurrence of solicitation more
+frequent. He that, from experience of the folly of ambition, resigns his
+offices, may set himself free at once from temptation to squander his
+life in courts, because he cannot regain his former station. He who is
+enslaved by an amorous passion, may quit his tyrant in disgust, and
+absence will, without the help of reason, overcome by degrees the desire
+of returning. But those appetites to which every place affords their
+proper object, and which require no preparatory measures or gradual
+advances, are more tenaciously adhesive; the wish is so near the
+enjoyment, that compliance often precedes consideration, and, before the
+powers of reason can be summoned, the time for employing them is past.
+
+Indolence is therefore one of the vices from which those whom it once
+infects are seldom reformed. Every other species of luxury operates upon
+some appetite that is quickly satiated, and requires some concurrence of
+art or accident which every place will not supply; but the desire of
+ease acts equally at all hours, and the longer it is indulged is the
+more increased. To do nothing is in every man's power; we can never want
+an opportunity of omitting duties. The lapse to indolence is soft and
+imperceptible, because it is only a mere cessation of activity; but the
+return to diligence is difficult, because it implies a change from rest
+to motion, from privation to reality:
+
+ --_Facilis descensus Averni:
+ Noctes atque dies patet atri junua ditis;
+ Sed revocare gradum, saperasque evadere ad auras,
+ Hoc opus, hic labor est_.--VIR. Aen. Lib. vi. 126.
+
+ The gates of Hell are open night and day;
+ Smooth the descent, and easy is the way;
+ But to return, and view the cheerful skies,
+ In this the task and mighty labour lies. DRYDEN.
+
+Of this vice, as of all others, every man who indulges it is conscious:
+we all know our own state, if we could be induced to consider it, and it
+might perhaps be useful to the conquest of all these ensnarers of the
+mind, if, at certain stated days, life was reviewed. Many things
+necessary are omitted, because we vainly imagine that they may be always
+performed; and what cannot be done without pain will for ever be
+delayed, if the time of doing it be left unsettled. No corruption is
+great but by long negligence, which can scarcely prevail in a mind
+regularly and frequently awakened by periodical remorse. He that thus
+breaks his life into parts, will find in himself a desire to distinguish
+every stage of his existence by some improvement, and delight himself
+with the approach of the day of recollection, as of the time which is to
+begin a new series of virtue and felicity.
+
+
+
+No. 156. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1751.
+
+ _Nunquam aliud Natura, aliud Sapientia dicit_. Juv. Sat. xiv. 321.
+
+ For Wisdom ever echoes Nature's voice.
+
+Every government, say the politicians, is perpetually degenerating
+towards corruption, from which it must be rescued at certain periods by
+the resuscitation of its first principles, and the re-establishment of
+its original constitution. Every animal body, according to the methodick
+physicians, is, by the predominance of some exuberant quality,
+continually declining towards disease and death, which must be obviated
+by a seasonable reduction of the peccant humour to the just equipoise
+which health requires.
+
+In the same manner the studies of mankind, all at least which, not being
+subject to rigorous demonstration, admit the influence of fancy and
+caprice, are perpetually tending to errour and confusion. Of the great
+principles of truth which the first speculatists discovered, the
+simplicity is embarrassed by ambitious additions, or the evidence
+obscured by inaccurate argumentation; and as they descend from one
+succession of writers to another, like light transmitted from room to
+room, they lose their strength and splendour, and fade at last in total
+evanescence.
+
+The systems of learning therefore must be sometimes reviewed,
+complications analyzed into principles, and knowledge disentangled from
+opinion. It is not always possible, without a close inspection, to
+separate the genuine shoots of consequential reasoning, which grow out
+of some radical postulate, from the branches which art has ingrafted on
+it. The accidental prescriptions of authority, when time has procured
+them veneration, are often confounded with the laws of nature, and those
+rules are supposed coëval with reason, of which the first rise cannot be
+discovered.
+
+Criticism has sometimes permitted fancy to dictate the laws by which
+fancy ought to be restrained, and fallacy to perplex the principles by
+which fallacy is to be detected; her superintendence of others has
+betrayed her to negligence of herself; and, like the ancient Scythians,
+by extending her conquests over distant regions, she has left her throne
+vacant to her slaves.
+
+Among the laws of which the desire of extending authority, or ardour of
+promoting knowledge, has prompted the prescription, all which writers
+have received, had not the same original right to our regard. Some are
+to be considered as fundamental and indispensable, others only as useful
+and convenient; some as dictated by reason and necessity, others as
+enacted by despotick antiquity; some as invincibly supported by their
+conformity to the order of nature and operations of the intellect;
+others as formed by accident, or instituted by example, and therefore
+always liable to dispute and alteration.
+
+That many rules have been advanced without consulting nature or reason,
+we cannot but suspect, when we find it peremptorily decreed by the
+ancient masters, that only three speaking personages should appear at
+once upon the stage; a law, which, as the variety and intricacy of
+modern plays has made it impossible to be observed, we now violate
+without scruple, and, as experience proves, without inconvenience.
+
+The original of this precept was merely accidental. Tragedy was a
+monody, or solitary song in honour of Bacchus, improved afterwards into
+a dialogue by the addition of another speaker; but the ancients,
+remembering that the tragedy was at first pronounced only by one, durst
+not for some time venture beyond two; at last, when custom and impunity
+had made them daring, they extended their liberty to the admission of
+three, but restrained themselves by a critical edict from further
+exorbitance.
+
+By what accident the number of acts was limited to five, I know not that
+any author has informed us; but certainly it is not determined by any
+necessity arising either from the nature of action, or propriety of
+exhibition. An act is only the representation of such a part of the
+business of the play as proceeds in an unbroken tenour, or without any
+intermediate pause. Nothing is more evident than that of every real, and
+by consequence of every dramatick action, the intervals may be more or
+fewer than five; and indeed the rule is upon the English stage every day
+broken in effect, without any other mischief than that which arises from
+an absurd endeavour to observe it in appearance. Whenever the scene is
+shifted the act ceases, since some time is necessarily supposed to
+elapse while the personages of the drama change their place.
+
+With no greater right to our obedience have the criticks confined the
+dramatick action to a certain number of hours. Probability requires that
+the time of action should approach somewhat nearly to that of
+exhibition, and those plays will always be thought most happily
+conducted which crowd the greatest, variety into the least space. But
+since it will frequently happen that some delusion must be admitted, I
+know not where the limits of imagination can be fixed. It is rarely
+observed that minds, not prepossessed by mechanical criticism, feel any
+offence from the extension of the intervals between the acts; nor can I
+conceive it absurd or impossible, that he who can multiply three hours
+into twelve or twenty-four, might imagine with equal ease a greater
+number.
+
+I know not whether he that professes to regard no other laws than those
+of nature, will not be inclined to receive tragi-comedy to his
+protection, whom, however generally condemned, her own laurels have
+hitherto shaded from the fulminations of criticism. For what is there in
+the mingled drama which impartial reason can condemn? The connexion of
+important with trivial incidents, since it is not only common but
+perpetual in the world, may surely be allowed upon the stage, which
+pretends only to be the mirror of life. The impropriety of suppressing
+passions before we have raised them to the intended agitation, and of
+diverting the expectation from an event which we keep suspended only to
+raise it, may be speciously urged. But will not experience shew this
+objection to be rather subtle than just? Is it not certain that the
+tragick and comick affections have been moved alternately with equal
+force, and that no plays have oftener filled the eye with tears, and the
+breast with palpitation, than those which are variegated with interludes
+of mirth?
+
+I do not however think it safe to judge of works of genius merely by the
+event. The resistless vicissitudes of the heart, this alternate
+prevalence of merriment and solemnity, may sometimes be more properly
+ascribed to the vigour of the writer than the justness of the design:
+and, instead of vindicating tragi-comedy by the success of Shakspeare,
+we ought, perhaps, to pay new honours to that transcendent and unbounded
+genius that could preside over the passions in sport; who, to actuate
+the affections, needed not the slow gradation of common means, but could
+fill the heart with instantaneous jollity or sorrow, and vary our
+disposition as he changed his scenes. Perhaps the effects even of
+Shakspeare's poetry might have been yet greater, had he not counteracted
+himself; and we might have been more interested in the distresses of his
+heroes, had we not been so frequently diverted by the jokes of his
+buffoons.
+
+There are other rules more fixed and obligatory. It is necessary that of
+every play the chief action should be single; for since a play
+represents some transaction, through its regular maturation to its final
+event, two actions equally important must evidently constitute two
+plays.
+
+As the design of tragedy is to instruct by moving the passions, it must
+always have a hero, a personage apparently and incontestably superior to
+the rest, upon whom the attention may be fixed, and the anxiety
+suspended. For though, of two persons opposing each other with equal
+abilities and equal virtue, the auditor will inevitably, in time, choose
+his favourite, yet as that choice must be without any cogency of
+conviction, the hopes or fears which it raises will be faint and
+languid. Of two heroes acting in confederacy against a common enemy, the
+virtues or dangers will give little emotion, because each claims our
+concern with the same right, and the heart lies at rest between equal
+motives.
+
+It ought to be the first endeavour of a writer to distinguish nature
+from custom; or that which is established because it is right, from that
+which is right only because it is established; that he may neither
+violate essential principles by a desire of novelty, nor debar himself
+from the attainment of beauties within his view, by a needless fear of
+breaking rules which no literary dictator had authority to enact.
+
+
+
+No. 157. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1751.
+
+ [Greek:--Oi aidos
+ Ginetai ae t' andras mega sinetai aed' oninaesi.]
+ HOM. Il. [Greek: O.] 44.
+
+ Shame greatly hurts or greatly helps mankind. ELPHINSTON.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Though one of your correspondents has presumed to mention with some
+contempt that presence of attention and easiness of address, which the
+polite have long agreed to celebrate and esteem, yet I cannot be
+persuaded to think them unworthy of regard or cultivation; but am
+inclined to believe that, as we seldom value rightly what we have never
+known the misery of wanting, his judgment has been vitiated by his
+happiness; and that a natural exuberance of assurance has hindered him
+from discovering its excellence and use.
+
+This felicity, whether bestowed by constitution, or obtained by early
+habitudes, I can scarcely contemplate without envy. I was bred under a
+man of learning in the country, who inculcated nothing but the dignity
+of knowledge, and the happiness of virtue. By frequency of admonition,
+and confidence of assertion, he prevailed upon me to believe, that the
+splendour of literature would always attract reverence, if not darkened
+by corruption. I therefore pursued my studies with incessant industry,
+and avoided every thing which I had been taught to consider either as
+vicious or tending to vice, because I regarded guilt and reproach as
+inseparably united, and thought a tainted reputation the greatest
+calamity.
+
+At the university, I found no reason for changing my opinion; for though
+many among my fellow-students took the opportunity of a more remiss
+discipline to gratify their passions; yet virtue preserved her natural
+superiority, and those who ventured to neglect, were not suffered to
+insult her. The ambition of petty accomplishments found its way into the
+receptacles of learning, but was observed to seize commonly on those who
+either neglected the sciences or could not attain them; and I was
+therefore confirmed in the doctrines of my old master, and thought
+nothing worthy of my care but the means of gaining or imparting
+knowledge.
+
+This purity of manners, and intenseness of application, soon extended my
+renown, and I was applauded by those, whose opinion I then thought
+unlikely to deceive me, as a young man that gave uncommon hopes of
+future eminence. My performances in time reached my native province, and
+my relations congratulated themselves upon the new honours that were
+added to their family.
+
+I returned home covered with academical laurels, and fraught with
+criticism and philosophy. The wit and the scholar excited curiosity, and
+my acquaintance was solicited by innumerable invitations. To please will
+always be the wish of benevolence, to be admired must be the constant
+aim of ambition; and I therefore considered myself as about to receive
+the reward of my honest labours, and to find the efficacy of learning
+and of virtue.
+
+The third day after my arrival I dined at the house of a gentleman who
+had summoned a multitude of his friends to the annual celebration of his
+wedding-day. I set forward with great exultation, and thought myself
+happy that I had an opportunity of displaying my knowledge to so
+numerous an assembly. I felt no sense of my own insufficiency, till,
+going up stairs to the dining-room, I heard the mingled roar of
+obstreperous merriment. I was, however, disgusted rather than terrified,
+and went forward without dejection. The whole company rose at my
+entrance; but when I saw so many eyes fixed at once upon me, I was
+blasted with a sudden imbecility, I was quelled by some nameless power
+which I found impossible to be resisted. My sight was dazzled, my cheeks
+glowed, my perceptions were confounded; I was harassed by the multitude
+of eager salutations, and returned the common civilities with hesitation
+and impropriety; the sense of my own blunders increased my confusion,
+and, before the exchange of ceremonies allowed me to sit down, I was
+ready to sink under the oppression of surprise; my voice grew weak, and
+my knees trembled.
+
+The assembly then resumed their places, and I sat with my eyes fixed
+upon the ground. To the questions of curiosity, or the appeals of
+complaisance, I could seldom answer but with negative monosyllables, or
+professions of ignorance; for the subjects on which they conversed, were
+such as are seldom discussed in books, and were therefore out of my
+range of knowledge. At length an old clergyman, who rightly conjectured
+the reason of my conciseness, relieved me by some questions about the
+present state of natural knowledge, and engaged me, by an appearance of
+doubt and opposition, in the explication and defence of the Newtonian
+philosophy.
+
+The consciousness of my own abilities roused me from depression, and
+long familiarity with my subject enabled me to discourse with ease and
+volubility; but, however I might please myself, I found very little
+added by my demonstrations to the satisfaction of the company; and my
+antagonist, who knew the laws of conversation too well to detain their
+attention long upon an unpleasing topick, after he had commended my
+acuteness and comprehension, dismissed the controversy, and resigned me
+to my former insignificance and perplexity.
+
+After dinner, I received from the ladies, who had heard that I was a
+wit, an invitation to the tea-table. I congratulated myself upon an
+opportunity to escape from the company, whose gaiety began to be
+tumultuous, and among whom several hints had been dropped of the
+uselessness of universities, the folly of book-learning, and the
+awkwardness of scholars. To the ladies, therefore, I flew, as to a
+refuge from clamour, insult, and rusticity; but found my heart sink as I
+approached their apartment, and was again disconcerted by the ceremonies
+of entrance, and confounded by the necessity of encountering so many
+eyes at once.
+
+When I sat down I considered that, something pretty was always said to
+ladies, and resolved to recover my credit by some elegant observation or
+graceful compliment. I applied myself to the recollection of all that I
+had read or heard in praise of beauty, and endeavoured to accommodate
+some classical compliment to the present occasion. I sunk into profound
+meditation, revolved the characters of the heroines of old, considered
+whatever the poets have sung in their praise, and, after having borrowed
+and invented, chosen and rejected a thousand sentiments, which, if I had
+uttered them, would not have been understood, I was awakened from my
+dream of learned gallantry, by the servant who distributed the tea.
+
+There are not many situations more incessantly uneasy than that in which
+the man is placed who is watching an opportunity to speak, without
+courage to take it when it is offered, and who, though he resolves to
+give a specimen of his abilities, always finds some reason or other for
+delaying it to the next minute. I was ashamed of silence, yet could find
+nothing to say of elegance or importance equal to my wishes. The ladies,
+afraid of my learning, thought themselves not qualified to propose any
+subject of prattle to a man so famous for dispute, and there was nothing
+on either side but impatience and vexation.
+
+In this conflict of shame, as I was re-assembling my scattered
+sentiments, and, resolving to force my imagination to some sprightly
+sally, had just found a very happy compliment, by too much attention to
+my own meditations, I suffered the saucer to drop from my hand. The cup
+was broken, the lap-dog was scalded, a brocaded petticoat was stained,
+and the whole assembly was thrown into disorder. I now considered all
+hopes of reputation at an end, and while they were consoling and
+assisting one another, stole away in silence.
+
+The misadventures of this unhappy day are not yet at an end; I am afraid
+of meeting the meanest of them that triumphed over me in this state of
+stupidity and contempt, and feel the same terrours encroaching upon my
+heart at the sight of those who have once impressed them. Shame, above
+any other passion, propagates itself. Before those who have seen me
+confused, I can never appear without new confusion, and the remembrance
+of the weakness which I formerly discovered, hinders me from acting or
+speaking with my natural force.
+
+But is this misery, Mr. Rambler, never to cease; have I spent my life in
+study only to become the sport of the ignorant, and debarred myself from
+all the common enjoyments of youth to collect ideas which must sleep in
+silence, and form opinions which I must not divulge? Inform me, dear
+Sir, by what means I may rescue my faculties from these shackles of
+cowardice, how I may rise to a level with my fellow-beings, recall
+myself from this langour of involuntary subjection to the free exertion
+of my intellects, and add to the power of reasoning the liberty of
+speech.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+VERECUNDULUS.
+
+
+
+No. 158. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1751.
+
+ Grammatici certunt, et adhuc sub judice lis est. HOR. Ar. Poet. 78.
+
+ --Criticks yet contend,
+ And of their vain disputings find no end. FRANCIS.
+
+Criticism, though dignified from the earliest ages by the labours of men
+eminent for knowledge and sagacity, and, since the revival of polite
+literature, the favourite study of European scholars, has not yet
+attained the certainty and stability of science. The rules hitherto
+received are seldom drawn from any settled principle or self-evident
+postulate, or adapted to the natural and invariable constitution of
+things; but will be found, upon examination, the arbitrary edicts of
+legislators, authorised only by themselves, who, out of various means by
+which the same end may be attained, selected such as happened to occur
+to their own reflection, and then, by a law which idleness and timidity
+were too willing to obey, prohibited new experiments of wit, restrained
+fancy from the indulgence of her innate inclination to hazard and
+adventure, and condemned all future flights of genius to pursue the path
+of the Meonian eagle.
+
+This authority may be more justly opposed, as it is apparently derived
+from them whom they endeavour to control; for we owe few of the rules of
+writing to the acuteness of criticks, who have generally no other merit
+than that, having read the works of great authors with attention, they
+have observed the arrangement of their matter, or the graces of their
+expression, and then expected honour and reverence for precepts which
+they never could have invented; so that practice has introduced rules,
+rather than rules have directed practice.
+
+For this reason the laws of every species of writing have been settled
+by the ideas of him who first raised it to reputation, without inquiry
+whether his performances were not yet susceptible of improvement. The
+excellencies and faults of celebrated writers have been equally
+recommended to posterity; and, so far has blind reverence prevailed,
+that even the number of their books has been thought worthy of
+imitation.
+
+The imagination of the first authors of lyrick poetry was vehement and
+rapid, and their knowledge various and extensive. Living in an age when
+science had been little cultivated, and when the minds of their
+auditors, not being accustomed to accurate inspection, were easily
+dazzled by glaring ideas, they applied themselves to instruct, rather by
+short sentences and striking thoughts, than by regular argumentation;
+and, finding attention more successfully excited by sudden sallies and
+unexpected exclamations, than by the more artful and placid beauties of
+methodical deduction, they loosed their genius to its own course, passed
+from one sentiment to another without expressing the intermediate ideas,
+and roved at large over the ideal world with such lightness and agility,
+that their footsteps are scarcely to be traced.
+
+From this accidental peculiarity of the ancient writers the criticks
+deduce the rules of lyrick poetry, which they have set free from all the
+laws by which other compositions are confined, and allow to neglect the
+niceties of transition, to start into remote digressions, and to wander
+without restraint from one scene of imagery to another.
+
+A writer of later times has, by the vivacity of his essays, reconciled
+mankind to the same licentiousness in short dissertations; and he
+therefore who wants skill to form a plan, or diligence to pursue it,
+needs only entitle his performance an essay, to acquire the right of
+heaping together the collections of half his life without order,
+coherence, or propriety.
+
+In writing, as in life, faults are endured without disgust when they are
+associated with transcendent merit, and may be sometimes recommended to
+weak judgments by the lustre which they obtain from their union with
+excellence; but it is the business of those who presume to superintend
+the taste or morals of mankind, to separate delusive combinations and
+distinguish that which may be praised from that which can only be
+excused. As vices never promote happiness, though, when overpowered by
+more active and more numerous virtues, they cannot totally destroy it;
+so confusion and irregularity produce no beauty, though they cannot
+always obstruct the brightness of genius and learning. To proceed from
+one truth to another, and connect distant propositions by regular
+consequences, is the great prerogative of man. Independent and
+unconnected sentiments flashing upon the mind in quick succession, may,
+for a time, delight by their novelty, but they differ from systematical
+reasoning, as single notes from harmony, as glances of lightning from
+the radiance of the sun.
+
+When rules are thus drawn, rather from precedents than reason, there is
+danger not only from the faults of an author, but from the errours of
+those who criticise his works; since they may often mislead their pupils
+by false representations, as the Ciceronians of the sixteenth century
+were betrayed into barbarisms by corrupt copies of their darling writer.
+
+It is established at present, that the proemial lines of a poem, in
+which the general subject is proposed, must be void of glitter and
+embellishment. "The first lines of Paradise Lost," says Addison, "are
+perhaps as plain, simple, and unadorned, as any of the whole poem, in
+which particular the author has conformed himself to the example of
+Homer, and the precept of Horace."
+
+This observation seems to have been made by an implicit adoption of the
+common opinion, without consideration either of the precept or example.
+Had Horace been consulted, he would have been found to direct only what
+should be comprised in the proposition, not how it should be expressed;
+and to have commended Homer in opposition to a meaner poet, not for the
+gradual elevation of his diction, but the judicious expansion of his
+plan; for displaying unpromised events, not for producing unexpected
+elegancies.
+
+ --Specivsa dehinc miracula prouiat;
+ Antiphaten, Scyllamque, et cum Cyclope Charybdim. Hon. Ar. Poet. 146.
+
+ But from a cloud of smoke he breaks to light,
+ And pours his specious miracles to sight;
+ Antiphates his hideous feast devours,
+ Charybdis barks, and Polyphemus roars. FRANCIS.
+
+If the exordial verses of Homer be compared with the rest of the poem,
+they will not appear remarkable for plainness or simplicity, but rather
+eminently adorned and illuminated:
+
+ [Greek:
+ Andra moi ennepe, Mousa, polutropon, os mala polla
+ Plagchthae, epei Troiaes ieron ptoliethron eperse;
+ Pollon d anthropon iden astea, kai noon egno;
+ Polla d og en pontps pathen algea on kata thumon,
+ Arnumenos aen te psuchaen kai noston etairon;
+ All oud os etarous errusato, iemenos per;
+ Auton gar spheteraesin atasthaliaesin olonto.
+ Naepioi, oi kata bous uperionos Aeelioio
+ Aesthion; autar o toisin apheileto vostimon aemao;
+ Ton amothen ge, thea, thugater Dios, eipe kai eamin.]
+
+ The man, for wisdom's various arts renown'd,
+ Long exercised in woes, O muse! resound.
+ Who, when his arms had wrought the destin'd fall
+ Of sacred Troy, and raz'd her heav'n-built wall,
+ Wandering from clime to clime, observant stray'd,
+ The manners noted, and their states survey'd.
+ On stormy seas unnumber'd toils he bore,
+ Safe with his friends to gain his natal shore:
+ Vain toils! their impious folly dar'd to prey
+ On herds devoted to the god of day;
+ The god vindictive doom'd them never more
+ (Ah! men unbless'd) to touch that natal shore.
+ O snatch some portion of these acts from fate,
+ Celestial muse! and to our world relate. POPE.
+
+The first verses of the Iliad are in like manner particularly splendid,
+and the proposition of the Aeneid closes with dignity and magnificence
+not often to be found even in the poetry of Virgil.
+
+The intent of the introduction is to raise expectation, and suspend it;
+something therefore must be discovered, and something concealed; and the
+poet, while the fertility of his invention is yet unknown, may properly
+recommend himself by the grace of his language.
+
+He that reveals too much, or promises too little; he that never
+irritates the intellectual appetite, or that immediately satiates it,
+equally defeats his own purpose. It is necessary to the pleasure of the
+reader, that the events should not be anticipated, and how then can his
+attention be invited, but by grandeur of expression?
+
+
+
+No. 159. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1751.
+
+ _Sunt verba et voces, quibus hunc lenire dolorem
+ Possis, et magnuum morbi deponere partem_. HOR. Ep. Lib. i. 34.
+
+ The power of words, and soothing sounds, appease
+ The raging pain, and lessen the disease. FRANCIS.
+
+The imbecility with which Verecundulus complains that the presence of a
+numerous assembly freezes his faculties, is particularly incident to the
+studious part of mankind, whose education necessarily secludes them in
+their earlier years from mingled converse, till, at their dismission
+from schools and academies, they plunge at once into the tumult of the
+world, and, coming forth from the gloom of solitude, are overpowered by
+the blaze of publick life.
+
+It is, perhaps, kindly provided by nature, that as the feathers and
+strength of a bird grow together, and her wings are not completed till
+she is able to fly, so some proportion should be preserved in the human
+kind between judgment and courage; the precipitation of inexperience is
+therefore restrained by shame, and we remain shackled by timidity, till
+we have learned to speak and act with propriety. I believe few can
+review the days of their youth without recollecting temptations, which
+shame, rather than virtue, enabled them to resist; and opinions which,
+however erroneous in their principles, and dangerous in their
+consequences, they have panted to advance at the hazard of contempt and
+hatred, when they found themselves irresistibly depressed by a languid
+anxiety, which seized them at the moment of utterance, and still
+gathered strength from their endeavours to resist it.
+
+It generally happens that assurance keeps an even pace with ability, and
+the fear of miscarriage, which hinders Our first attempts, is gradually
+dissipated as our skill advances towards certainty of success. That
+bashfulness, therefore, which prevents disgrace, that short and
+temporary shame which secures us from the danger of lasting reproach,
+cannot be properly counted among our misfortunes.
+
+Bashfulness, however it may incommode for a moment, scarcely ever
+produces evils of long continuance; it may flush the cheek, flutter in
+the heart, deject the eyes, and enchain the tongue, but its mischiefs
+soon pass off without remembrance. It may sometimes exclude pleasure,
+but seldom opens any avenue to sorrow or remorse. It is observed
+somewhere that _few have repented of having forborne to speak_.
+
+To excite opposition, and inflame malevolence, is the unhappy privilege
+of courage made arrogant by consciousness of strength. No man finds in
+himself any inclination to attack or oppose him who confesses his
+superiority by blushing in his presence. Qualities exerted with apparent
+fearfulness, receive applause from every voice, and support from every
+hand. Diffidence may check resolution and obstruct performance, but
+compensates its embarrassments by more important advantages; it
+conciliates the proud, and softens the severe, averts envy from
+excellence, and censure from miscarriage.
+
+It may indeed happen that knowledge and virtue remain too long congealed
+by this frigorifick power, as the principles of vegetation are sometimes
+obstructed by lingering frosts. He that enters late into a public
+station, though with all the abilities requisite to the discharge of his
+duty, will find his powers at first impeded by a timidity which he
+himself knows to be vicious, and must struggle long against dejection
+and reluctance, before he obtains the full command of his own attention,
+and adds the gracefulness of ease to the dignity of merit.
+
+For this disease of the mind I know not whether any remedies of much
+efficacy can be found. To advise a man unaccustomed to the eyes of
+multitudes to mount a tribunal without perturbation, to tell him whose
+life was passed in the shades of contemplation, that he must not be
+disconcerted or perplexed in receiving and returning the compliments of
+a splendid assembly, is to advise an inhabitant of Brasil or Sumatra not
+to shiver at an English winter, or him who has always lived upon a plain
+to look from a precipice without emotion. It is to suppose custom
+instantaneously controllable by reason, and to endeavour to communicate,
+by precept, that which only time and habit can bestow.
+
+He that hopes by philosophy and contemplation alone to fortify himself
+against that awe which all, at their first appearance on the stage of
+life, must feel from the spectators, will, at the hour of need, be
+mocked by his resolution; and I doubt whether the preservatives which
+Plato relates Alcibiades to have received from Socrates, when he was
+about to speak in publick, proved sufficient to secure him from the
+powerful fascination.
+
+Yet, as the effects of time may by art and industry be accelerated or
+retarded, it cannot be improper to consider how this troublesome
+instinct may be opposed when it exceeds its just proportion, and instead
+of repressing petulance and temerity, silences eloquence, and
+debilitates force; since, though it cannot be hoped that anxiety should
+be immediately dissipated, it may be at least somewhat abated; and the
+passions will operate with less violence, when reason rises against
+them, than while she either slumbers in neutrality, or, mistaking her
+interest, lends them her assistance.
+
+No cause more frequently produces bashfulness than too high an opinion
+of our own importance. He that imagines an assembly filled with his
+merit, panting with expectation, and hushed with attention, easily
+terrifies himself with the dread of disappointing them, and strains his
+imagination in pursuit of something that may vindicate the veracity of
+fame, and shew that his reputation was not gained by chance. He
+considers that what he shall say or do will never be forgotten; that
+renown or infamy is suspended upon every syllable, and that nothing
+ought to fall from him which will not bear the test of time. Under such
+solicitude, who can wonder that the mind is overwhelmed, and, by
+struggling with attempts above her strength, quickly sinks into
+languishment and despondency?
+
+The most useful medicines are often unpleasing to the taste. Those who
+are oppressed by their own reputation, will, perhaps, not be comforted
+by hearing that their cares are unnecessary. But the truth is, that no
+man is much regarded by the rest of the world. He that considers how
+little he dwells upon the condition of others, will learn how little the
+attention of others is attracted by himself. While we see multitudes
+passing before us, of whom, perhaps, not one appears to deserve our
+notice, or excite our sympathy, we should remember, that we likewise are
+lost in the same throng; that the eye which happens to glance upon us is
+turned in a moment on him that follows us, and that the utmost which we
+can reasonably hope or fear is, to fill a vacant hour with prattle, and
+be forgotten.
+
+
+
+No. 160. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1751
+
+ --Inter se convenit ursis. JUV. Sat. xv. 164.
+
+ Beasts of each kind their fellows spare;
+ Bear lives in amity with bear.
+
+"The world," says Locke, "has people of all sorts." As in the general
+hurry produced by the superfluities of some, and necessities of others,
+no man needs to stand still for want of employment, so in the
+innumerable gradations of ability, and endless varieties of study and
+inclination, no employment can be vacant for want of a man qualified to
+discharge it.
+
+Such is probably the natural state of the universe; but it is so much
+deformed by interest and passion, that the benefit of this adaptation of
+men to things is not always perceived. The folly or indigence of those
+who set their services to sale, inclines them to boast of qualifications
+which they do not possess, and attempt business which they do not
+understand; and they who have the power of assigning to others the task
+of life, are seldom honest or seldom happy in their nomination. Patrons
+are corrupted by avarice, cheated by credulity, or overpowered by
+resistless solicitation. They are sometimes too strongly influenced by
+honest prejudices of friendship, or the prevalence of virtuous
+compassion. For, whatever cool reason may direct, it is not easy for a
+man of tender and scrupulous goodness to overlook the immediate effect
+of his own actions, by turning his eyes upon remoter consequences, and
+to do that which must give present pain, for the sake of obviating evil
+yet unfelt, or securing advantage in time to come. What is distant is in
+itself obscure, and, when we have no wish to see it, easily escapes our
+notice, or takes such a form as desire or imagination bestows upon it.
+
+Every man might, for the same reason, in the multitudes that swarm about
+him, find some kindred mind with which he could unite in confidence and
+friendship; yet we see many straggling single about the world, unhappy
+for want of an associate, and pining with the necessity of confining
+their sentiments to their own bosoms.
+
+This inconvenience arises, in like manner, from struggles of the will
+against the understanding. It is not often difficult to find a suitable
+companion, if every man would be content with such as he is qualified to
+please. But if vanity tempts him to forsake his rank, and post himself
+among those with whom no common interest or mutual pleasure can ever
+unite him, he must always live in a state of unsocial separation,
+without tenderness and without trust.
+
+There are many natures which can never approach within a certain
+distance, and which, when any irregular motive impels them towards
+contact, seem to start back from each other by some invincible
+repulsion. There are others which immediately cohere whenever they come
+into the reach of mutual attraction, and with very little formality of
+preparation mingle intimately as soon as they meet. Every man, whom
+either business or curiosity has thrown at large into the world, will
+recollect many instances of fondness and dislike, which have forced
+themselves upon him without the intervention of his judgment; of
+dispositions to court some and avoid others, when he could assign no
+reason for the preference, or none adequate to the violence of his
+passions; of influence that acted instantaneously upon his mind, and
+which no arguments or persuasions could ever overcome.
+
+Among those with whom time and intercourse have made us familiar, we
+feel our affections divided in different proportions without much regard
+to moral or intellectual merit. Every man knows some whom he cannot
+induce himself to trust, though he has no reason to suspect that they
+would betray him; those to whom he cannot complain, though he never
+observed them to want compassion; those in whose presence he never can
+be gay, though excited by invitations to mirth and freedom; and those
+from whom he cannot be content to receive instruction, though they never
+insulted his ignorance by contempt or ostentation.
+
+That much regard is to be had to those instincts of kindness and
+dislike, or that reason should blindly follow them, I am far from
+intending to inculcate: it is very certain, that by indulgence we may
+give them strength which they have not from nature, and almost every
+example of ingratitude and treachery proves, that by obeying them we may
+commit our happiness to those who are very unworthy of so great a trust.
+But it may deserve to be remarked, that since few contend much with
+their inclinations, it is generally vain to solicit the good-will of
+those whom we perceive thus involuntarily alienated from us; neither
+knowledge nor virtue will reconcile antipathy, and though officiousness
+may be for a time admitted, and diligence applauded, they will at last
+be dismissed with coldness, or discouraged by neglect.
+
+Some have indeed an occult power of stealing upon the affections, of
+exciting universal benevolence, and disposing every heart to fondness
+and friendship. But this is a felicity granted only to the favourites of
+nature. The greater part of mankind find a different reception from
+different dispositions; they sometimes obtain unexpected caresses from
+those whom they never flattered with uncommon regard, and sometimes
+exhaust all their arts of pleasing without effect. To these it is
+necessary to look round, and attempt every breast in which they find
+virtue sufficient for the foundation of friendship; to enter into the
+crowd, and try whom chance will offer to their notice, till they fix on
+some temper congenial to their own, as the magnet rolled in the dust
+collects the fragments of its kindred metal from a thousand particles of
+other substances.
+
+Every man must have remarked the facility with which the kindness of
+others is sometimes gained by those to whom he never could have imparted
+his own. We are by our occupations, education, and habits of life,
+divided almost into different species, which regard one another, for the
+most part, with scorn and malignity. Each of these classes of the human
+race has desires, fears, and conversation, vexations and merriment
+peculiar to itself; cares which another cannot feel; pleasures which he
+cannot partake; and modes of expressing every sensation which he cannot
+understand. That frolick which shakes one man with laughter, will
+convulse another with indignation; the strain of jocularity which in one
+place obtains treats and patronage, would in another be heard with
+indifference, and in a third with abhorrence.
+
+To raise esteem we must benefit others, to procure love we must please
+them. Aristotle observes, that old men do not readily form friendships,
+because they are not easily susceptible of pleasure. He that can
+contribute to the hilarity of the vacant hour, or partake with equal
+gust the favourite amusement; he whose mind is employed on the same
+objects, and who therefore never harasses the understanding with
+unaccustomed ideas, will be welcomed with ardour, and left with regret,
+unless he destroys those recommendations by faults with which peace and
+security cannot consist.
+
+It were happy, if, in forming friendships, virtue could concur with
+pleasure; but the greatest part of human gratifications approach so
+nearly to vice, that few who make the delight of others their rule of
+conduct, can avoid disingenuous compliances; yet certainly he that
+suffers himself to be driven or allured from virtue, mistakes his own
+interest, since he gains succour by means, for which his friend, if ever
+he becomes wise, must scorn him, and for which at last he must scorn
+himself.
+
+
+
+No. 161. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Oiae gar phullon geneae, toiaede kai Andron.]
+ HOM. Il. [Greek: T.]
+
+ Frail as the leaves that quiver on the sprays,
+ Like them man flourishes, like them decays.
+
+MR. RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+You have formerly observed that curiosity often terminates in barren
+knowledge, and that the mind is prompted to study and inquiry rather by
+the uneasiness of ignorance, than the hope of profit. Nothing can be of
+less importance to any present interest, than the fortune of those who
+have been long lost in the grave, and from whom nothing now can be hoped
+or feared. Yet, to rouse the zeal of a true antiquary, little more is
+necessary than to mention a name which mankind have conspired to forget;
+he will make his way to remote scenes of action through obscurity and
+contradiction, as Tully sought amidst bushes and brambles the tomb of
+Archimedes.
+
+It is not easy to discover how it concerns him that gathers the produce,
+or receives the rent of an estate, to know through what families the
+land has passed, who is registered in the Conqueror's survey as its
+possessor, how often it has been forfeited by treason, or how often sold
+by prodigality. The power or wealth of the present inhabitants of a
+country cannot be much increased by an inquiry after the names of those
+barbarians, who destroyed one another twenty centuries ago, in contests
+for the shelter of woods, or convenience of pasturage. Yet we see that
+no man can be at rest in the enjoyment of a new purchase till he has
+learned the history of his grounds from the ancient inhabitants of the
+parish, and that no nation omits to record the actions of their
+ancestors, however bloody, savage, and rapacious.
+
+The same disposition, as different opportunities call it forth,
+discovers itself in great or little things. I have always thought it
+unworthy of a wise man to slumber in total inactivity, only because he
+happens to have no employment equal to his ambition or genius; it is
+therefore my custom to apply my attention to the objects before me, and
+as I cannot think any place wholly unworthy of notice that affords a
+habitation to a man of letters, I have collected the history and
+antiquities of the several garrets in which I have resided.
+
+ Quantulacunque estis, vos ego magna voco.
+
+ How small to others, but how great to me!
+
+Many of these narratives my industry has been able to extend to a
+considerable length; but the woman with whom I now lodge has lived only
+eighteen months in the house, and can give no account of its ancient
+revolutions; the plaisterer having, at her entrance, obliterated, by his
+white-wash, all the smoky memorials which former tenants had left upon
+the ceiling, and perhaps drawn the veil of oblivion over politicians,
+philosophers, and poets.
+
+When I first, cheapened my lodgings, the landlady told me, that she
+hoped I was not an author, for the lodgers on the first floor had
+stipulated that the upper rooms should not be occupied by a noisy trade.
+I very readily promised to give no disturbance to her family, and soon
+despatched a bargain on the usual terms.
+
+I had not slept many nights in my new apartment before I began to
+inquire after my predecessors, and found my landlady, whose imagination
+is filled chiefly with her own affairs, very ready to give me
+information.
+
+Curiosity, like all other desires, produces pain as wel as pleasure.
+Before she began her narrative, I had heated my head with expectations
+of adventures and discoveries, of elegance in disguise, and learning in
+distress; and was somewhat mortified when I heard that the first tenant
+was a tailor, of whom nothing was remembered but that he complained of
+his room for want of light; and, after having lodged in it a month, and
+paid only a week's rent, pawned a piece of cloth which he was trusted,
+to cut out, and was forced to make a precipitate retreat from this
+quarter of the town.
+
+The next was a young woman newly arrived from the country, who lived for
+five weeks with great regularity, and became by frequent treats very
+much the favourite of the family, but at last received visits so
+frequently from a cousin in Cheapside, that she brought the reputation
+of the house into danger, and was therefore dismissed with good advice.
+
+The room then stood empty for a fortnight; my landlady began to think
+that she had judged hardly, and often wished for such another lodger. At
+last, an elderly man of a grave aspect read the bill, and bargained for
+the room at the very first price that was asked. He lived in close
+retirement, seldom went out till evening, and then returned early,
+sometimes cheerful, and at other times dejected. It was remarkable, that
+whatever he purchased, he never had small money in his pocket; and,
+though cool and temperate on other occasions, was always vehement and
+stormy, till he received his change. He paid his rent with great
+exactness, and seldom failed once a week to requite my landlady's
+civility with a supper. At last, such is the fate of human felicity, the
+house was alarmed at midnight by the constable, who demanded to search
+the garrets. My landlady assuring him that he had mistaken the door,
+conducted him up stairs, where he found the tools of a coiner; but the
+tenant had crawled along the roof to an empty house, and escaped; much
+to the joy of my landlady, who declares him a very honest man, and
+wonders why any body should be hanged for making money when such numbers
+are in want of it. She however confesses that she shall, for the future,
+always question the character of those who take her garret without
+beating down the price.
+
+The bill was then placed again in the window, and the poor woman was
+teased for seven weeks by innumerable passengers, who obliged her to
+climb with them every hour up five stories, and then disliked the
+prospect, hated the noise of a publick street, thought the stairs
+narrow, objected to a low ceiling, required the walls to be hung with
+fresher paper, asked questions about the neighbourhood, could not think
+of living so far from their acquaintance, wished the windows had looked
+to the south rather than the west, told how the door and chimney might
+have been better disposed, bid her half the price that she asked, or
+promised to give her earnest the next day, and came no more.
+
+At last, a short meagre man, in a tarnished waistcoat, desired to see
+the garret, and when he had stipulated for two long shelves, and a
+larger table, hired it at a low rate. When the affair was completed, he
+looked round him with great satisfaction, and repeated some words which
+the woman did not understand. In two days he brought a great box of
+books, took possession of his room, and lived very inoffensively, except
+that he frequently disturbed the inhabitants of the next floor by
+unseasonable noises. He was generally in bed at noon, but from evening
+to midnight he sometimes talked aloud with great vehemence, sometimes
+stamped as in rage, sometimes threw down his poker, then clattered his
+chairs, then sat down in deep thought, and again burst out into loud
+vociferations; sometimes he would sigh as oppressed with misery, and
+sometimes shaked with convulsive laughter. When he encountered any of
+the family, he gave way or bowed, but rarely spoke, except that as he
+went up stairs he often repeated,
+
+ [Greek:--Hos hupertata domata naiei].
+
+ This habitant th' aerial regions boast;
+
+hard words, to which his neighbours listened so often, that they learned
+them without understanding them. What was his employment she did not
+venture to ask him, but at last heard a printer's boy inquire for the
+author.
+
+My landlady was very often advised to beware of this strange man, who,
+though he was quiet for the present, might perhaps become outrageous in
+the hot months; but, as she was punctually paid, she could not find any
+sufficient reason for dismissing him, till one night he convinced her,
+by setting fire to his curtains, that it was not safe to have an author
+for her inmate.
+
+She had then for six weeks a succession of tenants, who left the house
+on Saturday, and, instead of paying their rent, stormed at their
+landlady. At last she took in two sisters, one of whom had spent her
+little fortune in procuring remedies for a lingering disease, and was
+now supported and attended by the other: she climbed with difficulty to
+the apartment, where she languished eight weeks without impatience, or
+lamentation, except for the expense and fatigue which her sister
+suffered, and then calmly and contentedly expired. The sister followed
+her to the grave, paid the few debts which they had contracted, wiped
+away the tears of useless sorrow, and, returning to the business of
+common life, resigned to me the vacant habitation.
+
+Such, Mr. Rambler, are the changes which have happened in the narrow
+space where my present fortune has fixed my residence. So true it is
+that amusement and instruction are always at hand for those who have
+skill and willingness to find them; and, so just is the observation of
+Juvenal, that a single house will shew whatever is done or suffered in
+the world.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+
+
+No. 162. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1751.
+
+ Orbus es, et locuples, et Bruto consule natus,
+ Esse tibi veras credis amicitias?
+ Sunt veræ: sed quas juvenis, quas pauper habebas:
+ Qui novus est, mortem diligit ille tuam. MART. Lib. xi. Ep. 44.
+
+ What! old, and rich, and childless too,
+ And yet believe your friends are true?
+ Truth might perhaps to those belong,
+ To those who lov'd you poor and young;
+ But, trust me, for the new you have,
+ They'll love you dearly--in your grave. F. LEWIS.
+
+One of the complaints uttered by Milton's Samson, in the anguish of
+blindness, is, that he shall pass his life under the direction of
+others; that he cannot regulate his conduct by his own knowledge, but
+must lie at the mercy of those who undertake to guide him.
+
+There is no state more contrary to the dignity of wisdom than perpetual
+and unlimited dependance, in which the understanding lies useless, and
+every motion is received from external impulse. Reason is the great
+distinction of human nature, the faculty by which we approach to some
+degree of association with celestial intelligences; but as the
+excellence of every power appears only in its operations, not to have
+reason, and to have it useless and unemployed, is nearly the same.
+
+Such is the weakness of man, that the essence of things is seldom so
+much regarded as external and accidental appendages. A small variation
+of trifling circumstances, a slight change of form by an artificial
+dress, or a casual difference of appearance, by a new light and
+situation, will conciliate affection or excite abhorrence, and determine
+us to pursue or to avoid. Every man considers a necessity of compliance
+with any will but his own, as the lowest state of ignominy and meanness;
+few are so far lost in cowardice or negligence, as not to rouse at the
+first insult of tyranny, and exert all their force against him who
+usurps their property, or invades any privilege of speech or action. Yet
+we see often those who never wanted spirit to repel encroachment or
+oppose violence, at last, by a gradual relaxation of vigilance,
+delivering up, without capitulation, the fortress which they defended
+against assault, and laying down unbidden the weapons which they grasp
+the harder for every attempt to wrest them from their hands. Men eminent
+for spirit and wisdom often resign themselves to voluntary pupilage, and
+suffer their lives to be modelled by officious ignorance, and their
+choice to be regulated by presumptuous stupidity.
+
+This unresisting acquiescence in the determination of others, may be the
+consequence of application to some study remote from the beaten track of
+life, some employment which does not allow leisure for sufficient
+inspection of those petty affairs, by which nature has decreed a great
+part of our duration to be filled. To a mind thus withdrawn from common
+objects, it is more eligible to repose on the prudence of another, than
+to be exposed every moment to slight interruptions. The submission which
+such confidence requires, is paid without pain, because it implies no
+confession of inferiority. The business from which we withdraw our
+cognizance, is not above our abilities, but below our notice. We please
+our pride with the effects of our influence thus weakly exerted, and
+fancy ourselves placed in a higher orb, for which we regulate
+subordinate agents by a slight and distant superintendance. But,
+whatever vanity or abstraction may suggest, no man can safely do that by
+others which might be done by himself; he that indulges negligence will
+quickly become ignorant of his own affairs; and he that trusts without
+reserve will at last be deceived.
+
+It is, however, impossible but that, as the attention tends strongly
+towards one thing, it must retire from another; and he that omits the
+care of domestick business, because he is engrossed by inquiries of more
+importance to mankind, has, at least, the merit of suffering in a good
+cause. But there are many who can plead no such extenuation of their
+folly; who shake off the burden of their situation, not that they may
+soar with less incumbrance to the heights of knowledge or virtue, but
+that they may loiter at ease and sleep in quiet; and who select for
+friendship and confidence not the faithful and the virtuous, but the
+soft, the civil, and compliant.
+
+This openness to flattery is the common disgrace of declining life. When
+men feel weakness increasing on them, they naturally desire to rest from
+the struggles of contradiction, the fatigue of reasoning, the anxiety of
+circumspection; when they are hourly tormented with pains and diseases,
+they are unable to bear any new disturbance, and consider all opposition
+as an addition to misery, of which they feel already more than they can
+patiently endure. Thus desirous of peace, and thus fearful of pain, the
+old man seldom inquires after any other qualities in those whom he
+caresses, than quickness in conjecturing his desires, activity in
+supplying his wants, dexterity in intercepting complaints before they
+approach near enough to disturb him, flexibility to his present humour,
+submission to hasty petulance, and attention to wearisome narrations. By
+these arts alone many have been able to defeat the claims of kindred and
+of merit, and to enrich themselves with presents and legacies.
+
+Thrasybulus inherited a large fortune, and augmented it by the revenues
+of several lucrative employments, which he discharged with honour and
+dexterity. He was at last wise enough to consider, that life should not
+be devoted wholly to accumulation, and therefore retiring to his estate,
+applied himself to the education of his children, and the cultivation of
+domestick happiness.
+
+He passed several years in this pleasing amusement, and saw his care
+amply recompensed; his daughters were celebrated for modesty and
+elegance, and his sons for learning, prudence, and spirit. In time the
+eagerness with which the neighbouring gentlemen courted his alliance,
+obliged him to resign his daughters to other families; the vivacity and
+curiosity of his sons hurried them out of rural privacy into the open
+world, from whence they had not soon an inclination to return. This,
+however, he had always hoped; he pleased himself with the success of his
+schemes, and felt no inconvenience from solitude till an apoplexy
+deprived him of his wife.
+
+Thrasybulus had now no companion; and the maladies of increasing years
+having taken from him much of the power of procuring amusement for
+himself, he thought it necessary to procure some inferior friend, who
+might ease him of his economical solicitudes, and divert him by cheerful
+conversation. All these qualities he soon recollected in Vafer, a clerk
+in one of the offices over which he had formerly presided. Vafer was
+invited to visit his old patron, and being by his station acquainted
+with the present modes of life, and by constant practice dexterous in
+business, entertained him with so many novelties, and so readily
+disentangled his affairs, that he was desired to resign his clerkship,
+and accept a liberal salary in the house of Thrasybulus.
+
+Vafer, having always lived in a state of dependance, was well versed in
+the arts by which favour is obtained, and could, without repugnance or
+hesitation, accommodate himself to every caprice, and echo every
+opinion. He never doubted but to be convinced, nor attempted opposition
+but to flatter Thrasybulus with the pleasure of a victory. By this
+practice he found his way into his patron's heart, and, having first
+made himself agreeable, soon became important. His insidious diligence,
+by which the laziness of age was gratified, engrossed the management of
+affairs; and his petty offices of civility, and occasional
+intercessions, persuaded the tenants to consider him as their friend and
+benefactor, and to entreat his enforcement of their representations of
+hard years, and his countenance to petitions for abatement of rent.
+
+Thrasybulus had now banqueted on flattery, till he could no longer bear
+the harshness of remonstrance or the insipidity of truth. All
+contrariety to his own opinion shocked him like a violation of some
+natural right, and all recommendation of his affairs to his own
+inspection was dreaded by him as a summons to torture. His children were
+alarmed by the sudden riches of Vafer, but their complaints were heard
+by their father with impatience, as the result of a conspiracy against
+his quiet, and a design to condemn him, for their own advantage, to
+groan out his last hours in perplexity and drudgery. The daughters
+retired with tears in their eyes, but the son continued his
+importunities till he found his inheritance hazarded by his obstinacy.
+
+Vafer triumphed over all their efforts, and, continuing to confirm
+himself in authority, at the death of his master, purchased an estate,
+and bade defiance to inquiry and justice.
+
+
+
+No. 163. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1751.
+
+ Mitte superba pati fastidia, spemque caducam
+ Despice; vive tibi, nam moriere tibi. SENECA.
+
+ Bow to no patron's insolence; rely
+ On no frail hopes, in freedom live and die. F. LEWIS.
+
+None of the cruelties exercised by wealth and power upon indigence and
+dependance is more mischievous in its consequences, or more frequently
+practised with wanton negligence, than the encouragement of expectations
+which are never to be gratified, and the elation and depression of the
+heart by needless vicissitudes of hope and disappointment.
+
+Every man is rich or poor, according to the proportion between his
+desires and enjoyments; any enlargement of wishes is therefore equally
+destructive to happiness with the diminution of possession; and he that
+teaches another to long for what he never shall obtain, is no less an
+enemy to his quiet, than if he had robbed him of part of his patrimony.
+
+But representations thus refined exhibit no adequate idea of the guilt
+of pretended friendship; of artifices by which followers are attracted
+only to decorate the retinue of pomp, and swell the shout of popularity,
+and to be dismissed with contempt and ignominy, when their leader has
+succeeded or miscarried, when he is sick of show, and weary of noise.
+While a man infatuated with the promises of greatness, wastes his hours
+and days in attendance and solicitation, the honest opportunities of
+improving his condition pass by without his notice; he neglects to
+cultivate his own barren soil, because he expects every moment to be
+placed in regions of spontaneous fertility, and is seldom roused from
+his delusion, but by the gripe of distress which he cannot resist, and
+the sense of evils which cannot be remedied.
+
+The punishment of Tantalus in the infernal regions affords a just image
+of hungry servility, flattered with the approach of advantage, doomed to
+lose it before it comes into his reach, always within a few days of
+felicity, and always sinking back to his former wants:
+
+ [Greek:
+ Kai maen Tantalon eiseidon, chalep alge echonta,
+ Estaot en limnae hae de proseplaze geneio.
+ Steuto de dipsaon, pieein d ouk eichen elesthai.
+ Ossaki gar kupsei ho geron pieein meneainon,
+ Tossach hudor apolesket anabrochen. amphi de possi
+ Gaia melaina phaneske katazaenaske de daimon,
+ Dendrea d hupsipeteala katakoeathen chee kaopon
+ Onchnai, kai roiai, kai maeleai aglaokarpoi,
+ Sukai te glukeoai, kai elaiai taelethoosai.
+ Ton opot ithusei o geoon epi cheosi masasthai,
+ Tasd anemos riptaske poti nephea skioenta.]
+ HOM. Od. [Greek: A'.] 581.
+
+"I saw," says Homer's Ulysses, "the severe punishment of Tantalus. In a
+lake, whose waters approached to his lips, he stood burning with thirst,
+without the power to drink. Whenever he inclined his head to the stream,
+some deity commanded it to be dry, and the dark earth appeared at his
+feet. Around him lofty trees spread their fruits to view; the pear, the
+pomegranate and the apple, the green olive and the luscious fig quivered
+before him, which, whenever he extended his hand to seize them, were
+snatched by the winds into clouds and obscurity."
+
+This image of misery was perhaps originally suggested to some poet by
+the conduct of his patron, by the daily contemplation of splendour which
+he never must partake, by fruitless attempts to catch at interdicted
+happiness, and by the sudden evanescence of his reward, when he thought
+his labours almost at an end. To groan with poverty, when all about him
+was opulence, riot, and superfluity, and to find the favours which he
+had long been encouraged to hope, and had long endeavoured to deserve,
+squandered at last on nameless ignorance, was to thirst with water
+flowing before him, and to see the fruits, to which his hunger was
+hastening, scattered by the wind. Nor can my correspondent, whatever he
+may have suffered, express with more justness or force the vexations of
+dependance.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I am one of those mortals who have been courted and envied as the
+favourites of the great. Having often gained the prize of composition at
+the university, I began to hope that I should obtain the same
+distinction in every other place, and determined to forsake the
+profession to which I was destined by my parents, and in which the
+interest of my family would have procured me a very advantageous
+settlement. The pride of wit fluttered in my heart, and when I prepared
+to leave the college, nothing entered my imagination but honours,
+caresses, and rewards, riches without labour, and luxury without
+expense.
+
+I however delayed my departure for a time, to finish the performance by
+which I was to draw the first notice of mankind upon me. When it was
+completed I hurried to London, and considered every moment that passed
+before its publication, as lost in a kind of neutral existence, and cut
+off from the golden hours of happiness and fame. The piece was at last
+printed and disseminated by a rapid sale; I wandered from one place of
+concourse to another, feasted from morning to night on the repetition of
+my own praises, and enjoyed the various conjectures of criticks, the
+mistaken candour of my friends, and the impotent malice of my enemies.
+Some had read the manuscript, and rectified its inaccuracies; others had
+seen it in a state so imperfect, that they could not forbear to wonder
+at its present excellence; some had conversed with the author at the
+coffeehouse; and others gave hints that they had lent him money.
+
+I knew that no performance is so favourably read as that of a writer who
+suppresses his name, and therefore resolved to remain concealed, till
+those by whom literary reputation is established had given their
+suffrages too publickly to retract them. At length my bookseller
+informed me that Aurantius, the standing patron of merit, had sent
+inquiries after me, and invited me to his acquaintance.
+
+The time which I had long expected was now arrived. I went to Aurantius
+with a beating heart, for I looked upon our interview as the critical
+moment of my destiny. I was received with civilities which my academick
+rudeness made me unable to repay; but when I had recovered from my
+confusion, I prosecuted the conversation with such liveliness and
+propriety, that I confirmed my new friend in his esteem of my abilities,
+and was dismissed with the utmost ardour of profession, and raptures of
+fondness.
+
+I was soon summoned to dine with Aurantius, who had assembled the most
+judicious of his friends to partake of the entertainment. Again I
+exerted my powers of sentiment and expression, and again found every eye
+sparkling with delight, and every tongue silent with attention. I now
+became familiar at the table of Aurantius, but could never, in his most
+private or jocund hours, obtain more from him than general declarations
+of esteem, or endearments of tenderness, which included no particular
+promise, and therefore conferred no claim. This frigid reserve somewhat
+disgusted me, and when he complained of three days absence, I took care
+to inform him with how much importunity of kindness I had been detained
+by his rival Pollio.
+
+Aurantius now considered his honour as endangered by the desertion of a
+wit, and, lest I should have an inclination to wander, told me that I
+could never find a friend more constant and zealous than himself; that
+indeed he had made no promises, because he hoped to surprise me with
+advancement, but had been silently promoting my interest, and should
+continue his good offices, unless he found the kindness of others more
+desired.
+
+If you, Mr. Rambler, have ever ventured your philosophy within the
+attraction of greatness, you know the force of such language introduced
+with a smile of gracious tenderness, and impressed at the conclusion
+with an air of solemn sincerity. From that instant I gave myself up
+wholly to Aurantius, and, as he immediately resumed his former gaiety,
+expected every morning a summons to some employment of dignity and
+profit. One month succeeded another, and, in defiance of appearances, I
+still fancied myself nearer to my wishes, and continued to dream of
+success, and wake to disappointment. At last the failure of my little
+fortune compelled me to abate the finery which I hitherto thought
+necessary to the company with whom I associated, and the rank to which I
+should be raised. Aurantius, from the moment in which he discovered my
+poverty, considered me as fully in his power, and afterwards rather
+permitted my attendance than invited it; thought himself at liberty to
+refuse my visits, whenever he had other amusements within reach, and
+often suffered me to wait, without pretending any necessary business.
+When I was admitted to his table, if any man of rank equal to his own
+was present, he took occasion to mention my writings, and commend my
+ingenuity, by which he intended to apologize for the confusion of
+distinctions, and the improper assortment of his company; and often
+called upon me to entertain his friends with my productions, as a
+sportsman delights the squires of his neighbourhood with the curvets of
+his horse, or the obedience of his spaniels.
+
+To complete my mortification, it was his practice to impose tasks upon
+me, by requiring me to write upon such subjects as he thought
+susceptible of ornament and illustration. With these extorted
+performances he was little satisfied, because he rarely found in them
+the ideas which his own imagination had suggested, and which he
+therefore thought more natural than mine.
+
+When the pale of ceremony is broken, rudeness and insult soon enter the
+breach. He now found that he might safely harass me with vexation, that
+he had fixed the shackles of patronage upon me, and that I could neither
+resist him nor escape. At last, in the eighth year of my servitude, when
+the clamour of creditors was vehement, and my necessity known to be
+extreme, he offered me a small office, but hinted his expectation, that
+I should marry a young woman with whom he had been acquainted.
+
+I was not so far depressed by my calamities as to comply with this
+proposal; but, knowing that complaints and expostulations would but
+gratify his insolence, I turned away with that contempt with which I
+shall never want spirit to treat the wretch who can outgo the guilt of a
+robber without the temptation of his profit, and who lures the credulous
+and thoughtless to maintain the show of his levee, and the mirth of his
+table, at the expense of honour, happiness, and life.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+LIBERALIS.
+
+
+
+No. 164. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1751.
+
+ _--Vitium, Gaure, Catonis habes_. MART. Lib. ii. Ep. lxxxix. 2.
+
+ Gaurus pretends to Cato's fame;
+ And proves--by Cato's vice, his claim.
+
+Distinction is so pleasing to the pride of man, that a great part of the
+pain and pleasure of life arises from the gratification or
+disappointment of an incessant wish for superiority, from the success or
+miscarriage of secret competitions, from victories and defeats, of
+which, though they appear to us of great importance, in reality none are
+conscious except ourselves.
+
+Proportionate to the prevalence of this love of praise is the variety of
+means by which its attainment is attempted. Every man however hopeless
+his pretensions may appear to all but himself, has some project by which
+he hopes to rise to reputation; some art by which he imagines that the
+notice of the world will be attracted; some quality, good or bad, which
+discriminates him from the common herd of mortals, and by which others
+maybe persuaded to love, or compelled to fear him. The ascents of
+honour, however steep, never appear inaccessible; he that despairs to
+scale the precipices by which learning and valour have conducted their
+favourites, discovers some by-bath, or easier acclivity, which, though
+it cannot bring him to the summit, will yet enable him to overlook those
+with whom he is now contending for eminence; and we seldom require more
+to the happiness of the present hour, than to surpass him that stands
+next before us.
+
+As the greater part of human kind speak and act wholly by imitation,
+most of those who aspire to honour and applause propose to themselves
+some example which serves as the model of their conduct, and the limit
+of their hopes. Almost every man, if closely examined, will be found to
+have enlisted himself under some leader whom he expects to conduct him
+to renown; to have some hero or other, living or dead, in his view,
+whose character he endeavours to assume, and whose performances he
+labours to equal.
+
+When the original is well chosen, and judiciously copied, the imitator
+often arrives at excellence, which he could never have attained without
+direction; for few are formed with abilities to discover new
+possibilities of excellence, and to distinguish themselves by means
+never tried before.
+
+But folly and idleness often contrive to gratify pride at a cheaper
+rate: not the qualities which are most illustrious, but those which are
+of easiest attainment, are selected for imitation; and the honours and
+rewards which publick gratitude has paid to the benefactors of mankind,
+are expected by wretches who can only imitate them in their vices and
+defects, or adopt some petty singularities of which those from whom they
+are borrowed were secretly ashamed.
+
+No man rises to such a height as to become conspicuous, but he is on one
+side censured by undiscerning malice, which reproaches him for his best
+actions, and slanders his apparent and incontestable excellencies; and
+idolized on the other by ignorant admiration, which exalts his faults
+and follies into virtues. It may be observed, that he by whose intimacy
+his acquaintances imagine themselves dignified, generally diffuses among
+them his mien and his habits; and indeed, without more vigilance than is
+generally applied to the regulation of the minuter parts of behaviour,
+it is not easy, when we converse much with one whose general character
+excites our veneration, to escape all contagion of his peculiarities,
+even when we do not deliberately think them worthy of our notice, and
+when they would have excited laughter or disgust, had they not been
+protected by their alliance to nobler qualities, and accidentally
+consorted with knowledge or with virtue.
+
+The faults of a man loved or honoured, sometimes steal secretly and
+imperceptibly upon the wise and virtuous, but, by injudicious fondness
+or thoughtless vanity, are adopted with design. There is scarce any
+failing of mind or body, any errour of opinion, or depravity of
+practice, which instead of producing shame and discontent, its natural
+effects, has not at one time or other gladdened vanity with the hopes of
+praise, and been displayed with ostentatious industry by those who
+sought kindred minds among the wits or heroes, and could prove their
+relation only by similitude of deformity.
+
+In consequence of this perverse ambition, every habit which reason
+condemns may be indulged and avowed. When a man is upbraided with his
+faults, he may indeed be pardoned if he endeavours to run for shelter to
+some celebrated name; but it is not to be suffered that, from the
+retreats to which he fled from infamy, he should issue again with the
+confidence of conquests, and call upon mankind for praise. Yet we see
+men that waste their patrimony in luxury, destroy their health with
+debauchery, and enervate their minds with idleness, because there have
+been some whom luxury never could sink into contempt, nor idleness
+hinder from the praise of genius.
+
+This general inclination of mankind to copy characters in the gross, and
+the force which the recommendation of illustrious examples adds to the
+allurements of vice, ought to be considered by all whose character
+excludes them from the shades of secrecy, as incitements to scrupulous
+caution and universal purity of manners. No man, however enslaved to his
+appetites, or hurried by his passions, can, while he preserves his
+intellects unimpaired, please himself with promoting the corruption of
+others. He whose merit has enlarged his influence, would surely wish to
+exert it for the benefit of mankind. Yet such will be the effect of his
+reputation, while he suffers himself to indulge in any favourite fault,
+that they who have no hope to reach his excellence will catch at his
+failings, and his virtues will be cited to justify the copiers of his
+vices.
+
+It is particularly the duty of those who consign illustrious names to
+posterity, to take care lest their readers be misled by ambiguous
+examples. That writer may be justly condemned as an enemy to goodness,
+who suffers fondness or interest to confound right with wrong, or to
+shelter the faults which even the wisest and the best have committed
+from that ignominy which guilt ought always to suffer, and with which it
+should be more deeply stigmatized when dignified by its neighbourhood to
+uncommon worth, since we shall be in danger of beholding it without
+abhorrence, unless its turpitude be laid open, and the eye secured from
+the deception of surrounding splendour.
+
+
+
+No. 165. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Aen neos, alla penaes nun gaeron, plousios eimi
+ O monos ek panton oiktros en amphoterois,
+ Os tote men chraesthai dunamaen, hopot oud' en eichon.
+ Nun d' opote chraesthai mae dunamai, tot echo.] ANTIPHILUS.
+
+ Young was I once and poor, now rich and old;
+ A harder case than mine was never told;
+ Blest with the power to use them--I had none;
+ Loaded with _riches_ now, the power is gone. F. LEWIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+The writers who have undertaken the unpromising task of moderating
+desire, exert all the power of their eloquence, to shew that happiness
+is not the lot of man, and have, by many arguments and examples, proved
+the instability of every condition by which envy or ambition are
+excited. They have set before our eyes all the calamities to which we
+are exposed from the frailty of nature, the influence of accident, or
+the stratagems of malice; they have terrified greatness with
+conspiracies, and riches with anxieties, wit with criticism, and beauty
+with disease.
+
+All the force of reason, and all the charms of language, are indeed
+necessary to support positions which every man hears with a wish to
+confute them. Truth finds an easy entrance into the mind when she is
+introduced by desire, and attended by pleasure; but when she intrudes
+uncalled, and brings only fear and sorrow in her train, the passes of
+the intellect are barred against her by prejudice and passion; if she
+sometimes forces her way by the batteries of argument, she seldom long
+keeps possession of her conquests, but is ejected by some favoured
+enemy, or at best obtains only a nominal sovereignty, without influence
+and without authority.
+
+That life is short we are all convinced, and yet suffer not that
+conviction to repress our projects or limit our expectations; that life
+is miserable we all feel, and yet we believe that the time is near when
+we shall feel it no longer. But to hope happiness and immortality is
+equally vain. Our state may indeed be more or less embittered as our
+duration may be more or less contracted; yet the utmost felicity which
+we can ever attain will be little better than alleviation of misery, and
+we shall always feel more pain from our wants than pleasure from our
+enjoyments. The incident which I am going to relate will shew, that to
+destroy the effect of all our success, it is not necessary that any
+signal calamity should fall upon us, that we should be harassed by
+implacable persecution, or excruciated by irremediable pains: the
+brightest hours of prosperity have their clouds, and the stream of life,
+if it is not ruffled by obstructions, will grow putrid by stagnation.
+
+My father, resolving not to imitate the folly of his ancestors, who had
+hitherto left the younger sons encumbrances on the eldest, destined me
+to a lucrative profession; and I, being careful to lose no opportunity
+of improvement, was, at the usual time in which young men enter the
+world, well qualified for the exercise of the business which I had
+chosen.
+
+My eagerness to distinguish myself in publick, and my impatience of the
+narrow scheme of life to which my indigence confined me, did not suffer
+me to continue long in the town where I was born. I went away as from a
+place of confinement, with a resolution to return no more, till I should
+be able to dazzle with my splendour those who now looked upon me with
+contempt, to reward those who had paid honours to my dawning merit, and
+to shew all who had suffered me to glide by them unknown and neglected,
+how much they mistook their interest in omitting to propitiate a genius
+like mine.
+
+Such were my intentions when I sallied forth into the unknown world, in
+quest of riches and honours, which I expected to procure in a very short
+time; for what could withhold them from industry and knowledge? He that
+indulges hope will always be disappointed. Reputation I very soon
+obtained; but as merit is much more cheaply acknowledged than rewarded,
+I did not find myself yet enriched in proportion to my celebrity.
+
+I had, however, in time, surmounted the obstacles by which envy and
+competition obstruct the first attempts of a new claimant, and saw my
+opponents and censurers tacitly confessing their despair of success, by
+courting my friendship and yielding to my influence. They who once
+pursued me, were now satisfied to escape from me; and they who had
+before thought me presumptuous in hoping to overtake them, had now their
+utmost wish, if they were permitted, at no great distance, quietly to
+follow me.
+
+My wants were not madly multiplied as my acquisitions increased, and the
+time came, at length, when I thought myself enabled to gratify all
+reasonable desires, and when, therefore, I resolved to enjoy that plenty
+and serenity which I had been hitherto labouring to procure, to enjoy
+them while I was yet neither crushed by age into infirmity, nor so
+habituated to a particular manner of life as to be unqualified for new
+studies or entertainments.
+
+I now quitted my profession, and, to set myself at once free from all
+importunities to resume it, changed my residence, and devoted the
+remaining part of my time to quiet and amusement. Amidst innumerable
+projects of pleasure, which restless idleness incited me to form, and of
+which most, when they came to the moment of execution, were rejected for
+others of no longer continuance, some accident revived in my imagination
+the pleasing ideas of my native place. It was now in my power to visit
+those from whom I had been so long absent, in such a manner as was
+consistent with my former resolution, and I wondered how it could happen
+that I had so long delayed my own happiness.
+
+Full of the admiration which I should excite, and the homage which I
+should receive, I dressed my servants in a more ostentatious livery,
+purchased a magnificent chariot, and resolved to dazzle the inhabitants
+of the little town with an unexpected blaze of greatness.
+
+While the preparations that vanity required were made for my departure,
+which, as workmen will not easily be hurried beyond their ordinary rate,
+I thought very tedious, I solaced my impatience with imaging the various
+censures that my appearance would produce; the hopes which some would
+feel from my bounty; the terrour which my power would strike on others;
+the awkward respect with which I should be accosted by timorous
+officiousness; and the distant reverence with which others, less
+familiar to splendour and dignity, would be contented to gaze upon me. I
+deliberated a long time, whether I should immediately descend to a level
+with my former acquaintances; or make my condescension more grateful by
+a gentle transition from haughtiness and reserve. At length I determined
+to forget some of my companions, till they discovered themselves by some
+indubitable token, and to receive the congratulations of others upon my
+good fortune with indifference, to shew that I always expected what I
+had now obtained. The acclamations of the populace I purposed to reward
+with six hogsheads of ale, and a roasted ox, and then recommend to them
+to return to their work.
+
+At last all the trappings of grandeur were fitted, and I began the
+journey of triumph, which I could have wished to have ended in the same
+moment; but my horses felt none of their master's ardour, and I was
+shaken four days upon rugged roads. I then entered the town, and, having
+graciously let fall the glasses, that my person might be seen, passed
+slowly through the street. The noise of the wheels brought the
+inhabitants to their doors, but I could not perceive that I was known by
+them. At last I alighted, and my name, I suppose, was told by my
+servants, for the barber stepped from the opposite house, and seized me
+by the hand with honest joy in his countenance, which, according to the
+rule that I had prescribed to myself, I repressed with a frigid
+graciousness. The fellow, instead of sinking into dejection, turned away
+with contempt, and left me to consider how the second salutation should
+be received. The next fellow was better treated, for I soon found that I
+must purchase by civility that regard which I had expected to enforce by
+insolence.
+
+There was yet no smoke of bonfires, no harmony of bells, no shout of
+crowds, nor riot of joy; the business of the day went forward as before;
+and, after having ordered a splendid supper, which no man came to
+partake, and which my chagrin hindered me from tasting, I went to bed,
+where the vexation of disappointment overpowered the fatigue of my
+journey, and kept me from sleep.
+
+I rose so much humbled by those mortifications, as to inquire after the
+present state of the town, and found that I had been absent too long to
+obtain the triumph which had flattered my expectation. Of the friends
+whose compliments I expected, some had long ago moved to distant
+provinces, some had lost in the maladies of age all sense of another's
+prosperity, and some had forgotten our former intimacy amidst care and
+distresses. Of three whom I had resolved to punish for their former
+offences by a longer continuance of neglect, one was, by his own
+industry, raised above my scorn, and two were sheltered from it in the
+grave. All those whom I loved, feared, or hated, all whose envy or whose
+kindness I had hopes of contemplating with pleasure, were swept away,
+and their place was filled by a new generation with other views and
+other competitions; and among many proofs of the impotence of wealth, I
+found that it conferred upon me very few distinctions in my native
+place.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+SEROTINUS.
+
+
+
+No. 166. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1751.
+
+ _Semper, eris pauper si pauper es, Aemiliane:
+ Dantur opes nullis nunc nisi divitibus_. MART. Lib. v. Ep. xxxi.
+
+ Once poor, my friend, still poor you must remain,
+ The rich alone have all the means of gain. EDW. CAVF.
+[Transcriber's note: Difficult to make out in original--possibly CAVE?]
+
+No complaint has been more frequently repeated in all ages than that of
+the neglect of merit associated with poverty, and the difficulty with
+which valuable or pleasing qualities force themselves into view, when
+they are obscured by indigence. It has been long observed, that native
+beauty has little power to charm without the ornaments which fortune
+bestows, and that to want the favour of others is often sufficient to
+hinder us from obtaining it.
+
+Every day discovers that mankind are not yet convinced of their errour,
+or that their conviction is without power to influence their conduct;
+for poverty still continues to produce contempt, and still obstructs the
+claims of kindred and of virtue. The eye of wealth is elevated towards
+higher stations, and seldom descends to examine the actions of those who
+are placed below the level of its notice, and who in distant regions and
+lower situations are struggling with distress, or toiling for bread.
+Among the multitudes overwhelmed with insuperable calamity, it is common
+to find those whom a very little assistance would enable to support
+themselves with decency, and who yet cannot obtain from near relations,
+what they see hourly lavished in ostentation, luxury, or frolick.
+
+There are natural reasons why poverty does not easily conciliate
+affection. He that has been confined from his infancy to the
+conversation of the lowest classes of mankind, must necessarily want
+those accomplishments which are the usual means of attracting favour;
+and though truth, fortitude, and probity, give an indisputable right to
+reverence and kindness, they will not be distinguished by common eyes,
+unless they are brightened by elegance of manners, but are cast aside
+like unpolished gems, of which none but the artist knows the intrinsick
+value, till their asperities are smoothed, and their incrustations
+rubbed away.
+
+The grossness of vulgar habits obstructs the efficacy of virtue, as
+impurity and harshness of style impair the force of reason, and rugged
+numbers turn off the mind from artifice of disposition, and fertility of
+invention. Few have strength of reason to over-rule the perceptions of
+sense; and yet fewer have curiosity or benevolence to struggle long
+against the first impression; he therefore who fails to please in his
+salutation and address, is at once rejected, and never obtains an
+opportunity of shewing his latent excellencies, or essential qualities.
+
+It is, indeed, not easy to prescribe a successful manner of approach to
+the distressed or necessitous, whose condition subjects every kind of
+behaviour equally to miscarriage. He whose confidence of merit incites
+him to meet, without any apparent sense of inferiority, the eyes of
+those who flattered themselves with their own dignity, is considered as
+an insolent leveller, impatient of the just prerogatives of rank and
+wealth, eager to usurp the station to which he has no right, and to
+confound the subordinations of society; and who would contribute to the
+exaltation of that spirit which even want and calamity are not able to
+restrain from rudeness and rebellion?
+
+But no better success will commonly be found to attend servility and
+dejection, which often give pride the confidence to treat them with
+contempt. A request made with diffidence and timidity is easily denied,
+because the petitioner himself seems to doubt its fitness.
+
+Kindness is generally reciprocal; we are desirous of pleasing others,
+because we receive pleasure from them; but by what means can the man
+please, whose attention is engrossed by his distresses, and who has no
+leisure to be officious; whose will is restrained by his necessities,
+and who has no power to confer benefits; whose temper is perhaps
+vitiated by misery, and whose understanding is impeded by ignorance?
+
+It is yet a more offensive discouragement, that the same actions
+performed by different hands produce different effects, and, instead of
+rating the man by his performances, we rate too frequently the
+performance by the man. It sometimes happens in the combinations of
+life, that important services are performed by inferiors; but though
+their zeal and activity may be paid by pecuniary rewards, they seldom
+excite that flow of gratitude, or obtain that accumulation of
+recompense, with which all think it their duty to acknowledge the favour
+of those who descend to their assistance from a higher elevation. To be
+obliged, is to be in some respect inferior to another[h]; and few
+willingly indulge the memory of an action which raises one whom they
+have always been accustomed to think below them, but satisfy themselves
+with faint praise and penurious payment, and then drive it from their
+own minds, and endeavour to conceal it from the knowledge of others.
+
+It may be always objected to the services of those who can be supposed
+to want a reward, that they were produced not by kindness but interest;
+they are, therefore, when they are no longer wanted, easily disregarded
+as arts of insinuation, or stratagems of selfishness. Benefits which are
+received as gifts from wealth, are exacted as debts from indigence; and
+he that in a high station is celebrated for superfluous goodness, would
+in a meaner condition have barely been confessed to have done his duty.
+
+It is scarcely possible for the utmost benevolence to oblige, when
+exerted under the disadvantages of great inferiority; for, by the
+habitual arrogance of wealth, such expectations are commonly formed as
+no zeal or industry can satisfy; and what regard can he hope, who has
+done less than was demanded from him?
+
+There are indeed kindnesses conferred which were never purchased by
+precedent favours, and there is an affection not arising from gratitude
+or gross interest, by which similar natures, are attracted to each
+other, without prospect of any other advantage than the pleasure of
+exchanging sentiments, and the hope of confirming their esteem of
+themselves by the approbation of each other. But this spontaneous
+fondness seldom rises at the sight of poverty, which every one regards
+with habitual contempt, and of which the applause is no more courted by
+vanity, than the countenance is solicited by ambition. The most generous
+and disinterested friendship must be resolved at last into the love of
+ourselves; he therefore whose reputation or dignity inclines us to
+consider his esteem as a testimonial of desert, will always find our
+hearts open to his endearments. We every day see men of eminence
+followed with all the obsequiousness of dependance, and courted with all
+the blandishments of flattery, by those who want nothing from them but
+professions of regard, and who think themselves liberally rewarded by a
+bow, a smile, or an embrace.
+
+But those prejudices which every mind feels more or less in favour of
+riches, ought, like other opinions, which only custom and example have
+impressed upon us, to be in time subjected to reason. We must learn how
+to separate the real character from extraneous adhesions and casual
+circumstances, to consider closely him whom we are about to adopt or to
+reject; to regard his inclinations as well as his actions; to trace out
+those virtues which lie torpid in the heart for want of opportunity, and
+those vices that lurk unseen by the absence of temptation; that when we
+find worth faintly shooting in the shades of obscurity, we may let in
+light and sunshine upon it, and ripen barren volition into efficacy and
+power.
+
+[Footnote h: Sir Joshua Reynolds evinced great reach of mind and
+intimate acquaintance with humanity, when he observed, on overhearing a
+person condoling with some ladies on the death of one who had conferred
+the greatest favours upon them, that at all events they were relieved
+from the burden of gratitude.]
+
+
+
+No. 167. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1751.
+
+ Candida perpetuo reside, Concordia, lecto,
+ Tamque pari semper sit Venus æqua jugo.
+ Diligat illa senem quondam: sed et ipsa marito,
+ Tum quoque cum fuerit, non videatur, anus. MART. Lib, w. xii. 7.
+
+ Their nuptial bed may smiling concord dress,
+ And Venus still the happy union bless!
+ Wrinkled with age, may mutual love and truth
+ To their dim eyes recal the bloom of youth. F. LEWIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+It is not common to envy those with whom we cannot easily be placed in
+comparison. Every man sees without malevolence the progress of another
+in the tracks of life, which he has himself no desire to tread, and
+hears, without inclination to cavils or contradiction, the renown of
+those whose distance will not suffer them to draw the attention of
+mankind from his own merit. The sailor never thinks it necessary to
+contest the lawyer's abilities; nor would the Rambler, however jealous
+of his reputation, be much disturbed by the success of rival wits at
+Agra or Ispahan.
+
+We do not therefore ascribe to you any superlative degree of virtue,
+when we believe that we may inform you of our change of condition
+without danger of malignant fascination; and that when you read of the
+marriage of your correspondents Hymenæus and Tranquilla, you will join
+your wishes to those of their other friends for the happy event of an
+union in which caprice and selfishness had so little part.
+
+There is at least this reason why we should be less deceived in our
+connubial hopes than many who enter into the same state, that we have
+allowed our minds to form no unreasonable expectations, nor vitiated our
+fancies in the soft hours of courtship, with visions of felicity which
+human power cannot bestow, or of perfection which human virtue cannot
+attain. That impartiality with which we endeavour to inspect the manners
+of all whom we have known was never so much overpowered by our passion,
+but that we discovered some faults and weaknesses in each other; and
+joined our hands in conviction, that as there are advantages to be
+enjoyed in marriage, there are inconveniencies likewise to be endured;
+and that, together with confederate intellects and auxiliar virtues, we
+must find different opinions and opposite inclinations.
+
+We however flatter ourselves, for who is not flattered by himself as
+well as by others on the day of marriage? that we are eminently
+qualified to give mutual pleasure. Our birth is without any such
+remarkable disparity as can give either an opportunity of insulting the
+other with pompous names and splendid alliances, or of calling in, upon
+any domestick controversy, the overbearing assistance of powerful
+relations. Our fortune was equally suitable, so that we meet without any
+of those obligations, which always produce reproach or suspicion of
+reproach, which, though they may be forgotten in the gaities of the
+first month, no delicacy will always suppress, or of which the
+suppression must be considered as a new favour, to be repaid by tameness
+and submission, till gratitude takes the place of love, and the desire
+of pleasing degenerates by degrees into the fear of offending.
+
+The settlements caused no delay; for we did not trust our affairs to the
+negociation of wretches, who would have paid their court by multiplying
+stipulations. Tranquilla scorned to detain any part of her fortune from
+him into whose hands she delivered up her person; and Hymenæus thought
+no act of baseness more criminal than his who enslaves his wife by her
+own generosity, who by marrying without a jointure, condemns her to all
+the dangers of accident and caprice, and at last boasts his liberality,
+by granting what only the indiscretion of her kindness enabled him to
+withhold. He therefore received on the common terms the portion which
+any other woman might have brought him, and reserved all the exuberance
+of acknowledgment for those excellencies which he has yet been able to
+discover only in Tranquilla.
+
+We did not pass the weeks of courtship like those who consider
+themselves as taking the last draught of pleasure, and resolve not to
+quit the bowl without a surfeit, or who know themselves about to set
+happiness to hazard, and endeavour to lose their sense of danger in the
+ebriety of perpetual amusement, and whirl round the gulph before they
+sink. Hymenæus often repeated a medical axiom, that _the succours of
+sickness ought not to be wasted in health_. We know that however our
+eyes may yet sparkle, and our hearts bound at the presence of each
+other, the time of listlessness and satiety, of peevishness and
+discontent, must come at last, in which we shall be driven for relief to
+shows and recreations; that the uniformity of life must be sometimes
+diversified, and the vacuities of conversation sometimes supplied. We
+rejoice in the reflection that we have stores of novelty yet
+unexhausted, which may be opened when repletion shall call for change,
+and gratifications yet untasted, by which life, when it shall become
+vapid or bitter, may be restored to its former sweetness and
+sprightliness, and again irritate the appetite, and again sparkle in the
+cup.
+
+Our time will probably be less tasteless than that of those whom the
+authority and avarice of parents unite almost without their consent in
+their early years, before they have accumulated any fund of reflection,
+or collected materials for mutual entertainment. Such we have often seen
+rising in the morning to cards, and retiring in the afternoon to doze,
+whose happiness was celebrated by their neighbours, because they
+happened to grow rich by parsimony, and to be kept quiet in
+insensibility, and agreed to eat and to sleep together.
+
+We have both mingled with the world, and are therefore no strangers to
+the faults and virtues, the designs and competitions, the hopes and
+fears of our contemporaries. We have both amused our leisure with books,
+and can therefore recount the events of former times, or cite the
+dictates of ancient wisdom. Every occurrence furnishes us with some hint
+which one or the other can improve, and if it should happen that memory
+or imagination fail us, we can retire to no idle or unimproving
+solitude.
+
+Though our characters, beheld at a distance, exhibit this general
+resemblance, yet a nearer inspection discovers such a dissimilitude of
+our habitudes and sentiments, as leaves each some peculiar advantages,
+and affords that _concordia discors_, that suitable disagreement which
+is always necessary to intellectual harmony. There may be a total
+diversity of ideas which admits no participation of the same delight,
+and there may likewise be such a conformity of notions as leaves neither
+any thing to add to the decisions of the other. With such contrariety
+there can be no peace, with such similarity there can be no pleasure.
+Our reasonings, though often formed upon different views, terminate
+generally in the same conclusion. Our thoughts, like rivulets issuing
+from distant springs, are each impregnated in its course with various
+mixtures, and tinged by infusions unknown to the other, yet, at last,
+easily unite into one stream, and purify themselves by the gentle
+effervescence of contrary qualities.
+
+These benefits we receive in a greater degree as we converse without
+reserve, because we have nothing to conceal. We have no debts to be paid
+by imperceptible deductions from avowed expenses, no habits to be
+indulged by the private subserviency of a favoured servant, no private
+interviews with needy relations, no intelligence with spies placed upon
+each other. We considered marriage as the most solemn league of
+perpetual friendship, a state from which artifice and concealment are to
+be banished for ever, and in which every act of dissimulation is a
+breach of faith.
+
+The impetuous vivacity of youth, and that ardour of desire, which the
+first sight of pleasure naturally produces, have long ceased to hurry us
+into irregularity and vehemence; and experience has shewn us that few
+gratifications are too valuable to be sacrificed to complaisance.
+
+We have thought it convenient to rest from the fatigue of pleasure, and
+now only continue that course of life into which we had before entered,
+confirmed in our choice by mutual approbation, supported in our
+resolution by mutual encouragement, and assisted in our efforts by
+mutual exhortation.
+
+Such, Mr. Rambler, is our prospect of life, a prospect which, as it is
+beheld with more attention, seems to open more extensive happiness, and
+spreads, by degrees, into the boundless regions of eternity. But if all
+our prudence has been vain, and we are doomed to give one instance more
+of the uncertainty of human discernment, we shall comfort ourselves
+amidst our disappointments, that we were not betrayed but by such
+delusions as caution could not escape, since we sought happiness only in
+the arms of virtue.
+
+We are, Sir,
+Your humble Servants,
+HYMENÆUS.
+TRANQUILLA.
+
+
+
+No. 168. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1751.
+
+ _--Decipit
+ Frons prima multos: rara mens intelligit,
+ Quod interiore condidit cura angulo_. PHÆDRUS, Lib. iv. Fab. i. 5.
+
+ The tinsel glitter, and the specious mien,
+ Delude the most; few pry behind the scene.
+
+It has been observed by Boileau, that "a mean or common thought
+expressed in pompous diction, generally pleases more than a new or noble
+sentiment delivered in low and vulgar language; because the number is
+greater of those whom custom has enabled to judge of words, than whom
+study has qualified to examine things." This solution might satisfy, if
+such only were offended with meanness of expression as are unable to
+distinguish propriety of thought, and to separate propositions or images
+from the vehicles by which they are conveyed to the understanding. But
+this kind of disgust is by no means confined to the ignorant or
+superficial; it operates uniformly and universally upon readers of all
+classes; every man, however profound or abstracted, perceives himself
+irresistibly alienated by low terms; they who profess the most zealous
+adherence to truth are forced to admit that she owes part of her charms
+to her ornaments; and loses much of her power over the soul, when she
+appears disgraced by a dress uncouth or ill-adjusted.
+
+We are all offended by low terms, but are not disgusted alike by the
+same compositions, because we do not all agree to censure the same terms
+as low. No word is naturally or intrinsically meaner than another; our
+opinion therefore of words, as of other things arbitrarily and
+capriciously established, depends wholly upon accident and custom. The
+cottager thinks those apartments splendid and spacious, which an
+inhabitant of palaces will despise for their inelegance; and to him who
+has passed most of his hours with the delicate and polite, many
+expressions will seem sordid, which another, equally acute, may hear
+without offence; but a mean term never fails to displease him to whom it
+appears mean, as poverty is certainly and invariably despised, though he
+who is poor in the eyes of some, may, by others, be envied for his
+wealth.
+
+Words become low by the occasions to which they are applied, or the
+general character of them who use them; and the disgust which they
+produce, arises from the revival of those images with which they are
+commonly united. Thus if, in the most solemn discourse, a phrase happens
+to occur which has been successfully employed in some ludicrous
+narrative, the gravest auditor finds it difficult to refrain from
+laughter, when they who are not prepossessed by the same accidental
+association, are utterly unable to guess the reason of his merriment.
+Words which convey ideas of dignity in one age, are banished from
+elegant writing or conversation in another, because they are in time
+debased by vulgar mouths, and can be no longer heard without the
+involuntary recollection of unpleasing images.
+
+When Macbeth is confirming himself in the horrid purpose of stabbing his
+king, he breaks out amidst his emotions into a wish natural to a
+murderer:
+
+ --Come, thick night!
+ And pall thee in the dunnest smoke of hell,
+ That my keen knife see not the wound it makes;
+ Nor heav'n peep through the blanket of the dark,
+ To cry, Hold! hold!--
+
+In this passage is exerted all the force of poetry; that force which
+calls new powers into being, which embodies sentiment, and animates
+matter: yet, perhaps, scarce any man now peruses it without some
+disturbance of his attention from the counteraction of the words to the
+ideas. What can be more dreadful than to implore the presence of night,
+invested, not in common obscurity, but in the smoke of hell? Yet the
+efficacy of this invocation is destroyed by the insertion of an epithet
+now seldom heard but in the stable, and _dun_ night may come or go
+without any other notice than contempt.
+
+If we start into raptures when some hero of the Iliad tells us that
+[Greek: doru mainetai], his lance rages with eagerness to destroy; if we
+are alarmed at the terrour of the soldiers commanded by Caesar to hew
+down the sacred grove, who dreaded, says Lucan, lest the axe aimed at
+the oak should fly back upon the striker:
+
+ --_Si robora sacra ferirent,
+ In sua credebaut redituras membra secures_;
+
+ None dares with impious steel the grove to rend,
+ Lest on himself the destin'd stroke descend;
+
+we cannot surely but sympathise with the horrours of a wretch about to
+murder his master, his friend, his benefactor, who suspects that the
+weapon will refuse its office, and start back from the breast which he
+is preparing to violate. Yet this sentiment is weakened by the name of
+an instrument used by butchers and cooks in the meanest employments: we
+do not immediately conceive that any crime of importance is to be
+committed with a _knife_; or who does not, at last, from the long habit
+of connecting a knife with sordid offices, feel aversion rather than
+terrour?
+
+Macbeth proceeds to wish, in the madness of guilt, that the inspection
+of heaven may be intercepted, and that he may, in the involutions of
+infernal darkness, escape the eye of Providence. This is the utmost
+extravagance of determined wickedness; yet this is so debased by two
+unfortunate words, that while I endeavour to impress on my reader the
+energy of the sentiment, I can scarce check my risibility, when the
+expression forces itself upon my mind; for who, without some relaxation
+of his gravity, can hear of the avengers of guilt _peeping through a
+blanket_?
+
+These imperfections of diction are less obvious to the reader, as he is
+less acquainted with common usages; they are therefore wholly
+imperceptible to a foreigner, who learns our language from books, and
+will strike a solitary academick less forcibly than a modish lady.
+
+Among the numerous requisites that must concur to complete an author,
+few are of more importance than an early entrance into the living world.
+The seeds of knowledge may be planted in solitude, but must be
+cultivated in publick. Argumentation may be taught in colleges, and
+theories formed in retirement; but the artifice of embellishment, and
+the powers of attraction, can be gained only by general converse.
+
+An acquaintance with prevailing customs and fashionable elegance is
+necessary likewise for other purposes. The injury that grand imagery
+suffers from unsuitable language, personal merit may fear from rudeness
+and indelicacy. When the success of Æneas depended on the favour of the
+queen upon whose coasts he was driven, his celestial protectress thought
+him not sufficiently secured against rejection by his piety or bravery,
+but decorated him for the interview with preternatural beauty. Whoever
+desires, for his writings or himself, what none can reasonably contemn,
+the favour of mankind, must add grace to strength, and make his thoughts
+agreeable as well as useful. Many complain of neglect who never tried to
+attract regard. It cannot be expected that the patrons of science or
+virtue should be solicitous to discover excellencies, which they who
+possess them shade and disguise. Few have abilities so much needed by
+the rest of the world as to be caressed on their own terms; and he that
+will not condescend to recommend himself by external embellishments,
+must submit to the fate of just sentiment meanly expressed, and be
+ridiculed and forgotten before he is understood.
+
+
+
+No. 169. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1751.
+
+ _Nec pluteum cædit, nec demorsos sapit ungues_. PER. Sat. i. 106.
+
+ No blood from bitten nails those poems drew;
+ But churn'd, like spittle, from the lips they flew. DRYDEN.
+
+Natural historians assert, that whatever is formed for long duration
+arrives slowly to its maturity. Thus the firmest timber is of tardy
+growth, and animals generally exceed each other in longevity, in
+proportion to the time between their conception and their birth.
+
+The same observation may be extended to the offspring of the mind. Hasty
+compositions, however they please at first by flowery luxuriance, and
+spread in the sunshine of temporary favour, can seldom endure the change
+of seasons, but perish at the first blast of criticism, or frost of
+neglect. When Apelles was reproached with the paucity of his
+productions, and the incessant attention with which he retouched his
+pieces, he condescended to make no other answer than that _he painted
+for perpetuity_.
+
+No vanity can more justly incur contempt and indignation than that which
+boasts of negligence and hurry. For who can bear with patience the
+writer who claims such superiority to the rest of his species, as to
+imagine mankind are at leisure for attention to his extemporary sallies,
+and that posterity will reposite his casual effusions among the
+treasures of ancient wisdom?
+
+Men have sometimes appeared of such transcendent abilities, that their
+slightest and most cursory performances excel all that labour and study
+can enable meaner intellects to compose; as there are regions of which
+the spontaneous products cannot be equalled in other soils by care and
+culture. But it is no less dangerous for any man to place himself in
+this rank of understanding, and fancy that he is born to be illustrious
+without labour, than to omit the cares of husbandry, and expect from his
+ground the blossoms of Arabia.
+
+The greatest part of those who congratulate themselves upon their
+intellectual dignity, and usurp the privileges of genius, are men whom
+only themselves would ever have marked out as enriched by uncommon
+liberalities of nature, or entitled to veneration and immortality on
+easy terms. This ardour of confidence is usually found among those who,
+having not enlarged their notions by books or conversation, are
+persuaded, by the partiality which we all feel in our own favour, that
+they have reached the summit of excellence, because they discover none
+higher than themselves; and who acquiesce in the first thoughts that
+occur, because their scantiness of knowledge allows them little choice;
+and the narrowness of their views affords them no glimpse of perfection,
+of that sublime idea which human industry has from the first ages been
+vainly toiling to approach. They see a little, and believe that there is
+nothing beyond their sphere of vision, as the Patuecos of Spain, who
+inhabited a small valley, conceived the surrounding mountains to be the
+boundaries of the world. In proportion as perfection is more distinctly
+conceived, the pleasure of contemplating our own performances will be
+lessened; it may therefore be observed, that they who most deserve
+praise are often afraid to decide in favour of their own performances;
+they know how much is still wanting to their completion, and wait with
+anxiety and terrour the determination of the publick. _I please every
+one else_, says Tully, _but never satisfy myself_.
+
+It has often been inquired, why, notwithstanding the advances of later
+ages in science, and the assistance which the infusion of so many new
+ideas has given us, we fall below the ancients in the art of
+composition. Some part of their superiority may be justly ascribed to
+the graces of their language, from which the most polished of the
+present European tongues are nothing more than barbarous degenerations.
+Some advantage they might gain merely by priority, which put them in
+possession of the most natural sentiments, and left us nothing but
+servile repetition or forced conceits. But the greater part of their
+praise seems to have been the just reward of modesty and labour. Their
+sense of human weakness confined them commonly to one study, which their
+knowledge of the extent of every science engaged them to prosecute with
+indefatigable diligence.
+
+Among the writers of antiquity I remember none except Statius who
+ventures to mention the speedy production of his writings, either as an
+extenuation of his faults, or a proof of his facility. Nor did Statius,
+when he considered himself as a candidate for lasting reputation, think
+a closer attention unnecessary, but amidst all his pride and indigence,
+the two great hasteners of modern poems, employed twelve years upon the
+Thebaid, and thinks his claim to renown proportionate to his labour.
+
+ _Thebais, multa cruciata lima,
+ Tentat, audaci fide, Mantuanæ
+ Gaudia famæ_.
+
+ Polish'd with endless toil, my lays
+ At length aspire to Mantuan praise.
+
+Ovid indeed apologizes in his banishment for the imperfection of his
+letters, but mentions his want of leisure to polish them as an addition
+to his calamities; and was so far from imagining revisals and
+corrections unnecessary, that at his departure from Rome, he threw his
+Metamorphoses into the fire, lest he should be disgraced by a book which
+he could not hope to finish.
+
+It seems not often to have happened that the same writer aspired to
+reputation in verse and prose; and of those few that attempted such
+diversity of excellence, I know not that even one succeeded. Contrary
+characters they never imagined a single mind able to support, and
+therefore no man is recorded to have undertaken more than one kind of
+dramatick poetry.
+
+What they had written, they did not venture in their first fondness to
+thrust into the world, but, considering the impropriety of sending forth
+inconsiderately that which cannot be recalled, deferred the publication,
+if not nine years, according to the direction of Horace, yet till their
+fancy was cooled after the raptures of invention, and the glare of
+novelty had ceased to dazzle the judgment.
+
+There were in those days no weekly or diurnal writers; _multa dies et
+multa litura_, much time, and many rasures, were considered as
+indispensable requisites; and that no other method of attaining lasting
+praise has been yet discovered, may be conjectured from the blotted
+manuscripts of Milton now remaining, and from the tardy emission of
+Pope's compositions, delayed more than once till the incidents to which
+they alluded were forgotten, till his enemies were secure from his
+satire, and, what to an honest mind must be more painful, his friends
+were deaf to his encomiums.
+
+To him, whose eagerness of praise hurries his productions soon into the
+light, many imperfections are unavoidable, even where the mind furnishes
+the materials, as well as regulates their disposition, and nothing
+depends upon search or information. Delay opens new veins of thought,
+the subject dismissed for a time appears with a new train of dependent
+images, the accidents of reading or conversation supply new ornaments
+or allusions, or mere intermission of the fatigue of thinking enables
+the mind to collect new force, and make new excursions. But all those
+benefits come too late for him, who, when he was weary with labour,
+snatched at the recompense, and gave his work to his friends and his
+enemies, as soon as impatience and pride persuaded him to conclude it.
+
+One of the most pernicious effects of haste, is obscurity. He that teems
+with a quick succession of ideas, and perceives how one sentiment
+produces another, easily believes that he can clearly express what he so
+strongly comprehends; he seldom suspects his thoughts of embarrassment,
+while he preserves in his own memory the series of connection, or his
+diction of ambiguity, while only one sense is present to his mind. Yet
+if he has been employed on an abstruse, or complicated argument, he will
+find, when he has awhile withdrawn his mind, and returns as a new reader
+to his work, that he has only a conjectural glimpse of his own meaning,
+and that to explain it to those whom he desires to instruct, he must
+open his sentiments, disentangle his method, and alter his arrangement.
+
+Authors and lovers always suffer some infatuation, from which only
+absence can set them free; and every man ought to restore himself to the
+full exercise of his judgment, before he does that which he cannot do
+improperly, without injuring his honour and his quiet.
+
+
+
+No. 170. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1751.
+
+ _Confiteor; si quid prodest delicta fateri_.
+ OVID. Am. Lib. i. El. iv. 3.
+
+ I grant the charge; forgive the fault confess'd.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I am one of those beings from whom many, that melt at the sight of all
+other misery, think it meritorious to withhold relief; one whom the
+rigour of virtuous indignation dooms to suffer without complaint, and
+perish without regard; and whom I myself have formerly insulted in the
+pride of reputation and security of innocence.
+
+I am of a good family, but my father was burthened with more children
+than he could decently support. A wealthy relation, as he travelled from
+London to his country-seat, condescending to make him a visit, was
+touched with compassion of his narrow fortune, and resolved to ease him
+of part of his charge, by taking the care of a child upon himself.
+Distress on one side, and ambition on the other, were too powerful for
+parental fondness, and the little family passed in review before him,
+that he might, make his choice. I was then ten years old, and, without
+knowing for what purpose, I was called to my great cousin, endeavoured
+to recommend myself by my best courtesy, sung him my prettiest song,
+told the last story that I had read, and so much endeared myself by my
+innocence, that he declared his resolution to adopt me, and to educate
+me with his own daughters.
+
+My parents felt the common struggles at the thought of parting, and
+_some natural tears they dropp'd, but wip'd them soon_. They considered,
+not without that false estimation of the value of wealth, which poverty
+long continued always produces, that I was raised to higher rank than
+they could give me, and to hopes of more ample fortune than they could
+bequeath. My mother sold some of her ornaments to dress me in such a
+manner as might secure me from contempt at my first arrival; and when
+she dismissed me, pressed me to her bosom with an embrace that I still
+feel, gave me some precepts of piety, which, however neglected, I have
+not forgotten, and uttered prayers for my final happiness, of which I
+have not yet ceased to hope that they will at last be granted.
+
+My sisters envied my new finery, and seemed not much to regret our
+separation; my father conducted me to the stage-coach with a kind of
+cheerful tenderness; and in a very short time I was transported to
+splendid apartments, and a luxurious table, and grew familiar to shew,
+noise, and gaiety.
+
+In three years my mother died, having implored a blessing on her family
+with her last breath. I had little opportunity to indulge a sorrow which
+there was none to partake with me, and therefore soon ceased to reflect
+much upon my loss. My father turned all his care upon his other
+children, whom some fortunate adventures and unexpected legacies enabled
+him, when he died, four years after my mother, to leave in a condition
+above their expectations.
+
+I should have shared the increase of his fortune, and had once a portion
+assigned me in his will; but my cousin assuring him that all care for me
+was needless, since he had resolved to place me happily in the world,
+directed him to divide my part amongst my sisters.
+
+Thus I was thrown upon dependance without resource. Being now at an age
+in which young women are initiated into company, I was no longer to be
+supported in my former character, but at a considerable expense; so that
+partly lest I should waste money, and partly lest my appearance might
+draw too many compliments and assiduities, I was insensibly degraded
+from my equality, and enjoyed few privileges above the head servant, but
+that of receiving no wages.
+
+I felt every indignity, but knew that resentment would precipitate my
+fall. I therefore endeavoured to continue my importance by little
+services and active officiousness, and, for a time, preserved myself
+from neglect, by withdrawing all pretences to competition, and studying
+to please rather than to shine. But my interest, notwithstanding this
+expedient, hourly declined, and my cousin's favourite maid began to
+exchange repartees with me, and consult me about the alterations of a
+cast gown.
+
+I was now completely depressed; and, though I had seen mankind enough to
+know the necessity of outward cheerfulness, I often withdrew to my
+chamber to vent my grief, or turn my condition in my mind, and examine
+by what means I might escape from perpetual mortification. At last my
+schemes and sorrows were interrupted by a sudden change of my relation's
+behaviour, who one day took an occasion when we were left together in a
+room, to bid me suffer myself no longer to be insulted, but assume the
+place which he always intended me to hold in the family. He assured me
+that his wife's preference of her own daughters should never hurt me;
+and, accompanying his professions with a purse of gold, ordered me to
+bespeak a rich suit at the mercer's, and to apply privately to him for
+money when I wanted it, and insinuate that my other friends supplied me,
+which he would take care to confirm.
+
+By this stratagem, which I did not then understand, he filled me with
+tenderness and gratitude, compelled me to repose on him as my only
+support, and produced a necessity of private conversation. He often
+appointed interviews at the house of an acquaintance, and sometimes
+called on me with a coach, and carried me abroad. My sense of his
+favour, and the desire of retaining it, disposed me to unlimited
+complaisance, and, though I saw his kindness grow every day more fond, I
+did not suffer any suspicion to enter my thoughts. At last the wretch
+took advantage of the familiarity which he enjoyed as my relation, and
+the submission which he exacted as my benefactor, to complete the ruin
+of an orphan, whom his own promises had made indigent, whom his
+indulgence had melted, and his authority subdued.
+
+I know not why it should afford subject of exultation to overpower on
+any terms the resolution, or surprise the caution of a girl; but of all
+the boasters that deck themselves in the spoils of innocence and beauty,
+they surely have the least pretensions to triumph, who submit to owe
+their success to some casual influence. They neither employ the graces
+of fancy, nor the force of understanding, in their attempts; they cannot
+please their vanity with the art of their approaches, the delicacy of
+their adulations, the elegance of their address, or the efficacy of
+their eloquence; nor applaud themselves as possessed of any qualities,
+by which affection is attracted. They surmount no obstacles, they defeat
+no rivals, but attack only those who cannot resist, and are often
+content to possess the body, without any solicitude to gain the heart.
+
+Many of those despicable wretches does my present acquaintance with
+infamy and wickedness enable me to number among the heroes of
+debauchery. Reptiles whom their own servants would have despised, had
+they not been their servants, and with whom beggary would have disdained
+intercourse, had she not been allured by hopes of relief. Many of the
+beings which are now rioting in taverns, or shivering in the streets,
+have been corrupted, not by arts of gallantry which stole gradually upon
+the affections and laid prudence asleep, but by the fear of losing
+benefits which were never intended, or of incurring resentment which
+they could not escape; some have been frighted by masters, and some awed
+by guardians into ruin.
+
+Our crime had its usual consequence, and he soon perceived that I could
+not long continue in his family. I was distracted at the thought of the
+reproach which I now believed inevitable. He comforted me with hopes of
+eluding all discovery, and often upbraided me with the anxiety, which
+perhaps none but himself saw in my countenance; but at last mingled his
+assurances of protection and maintenance with menaces of total
+desertion, if, in the moments of perturbation I should suffer his secret
+to escape, or endeavour to throw on him any part of my infamy.
+
+Thus passed the dismal hours, till my retreat could no longer be
+delayed. It was pretended that my relations had sent for me to a distant
+county, and I entered upon a state which shall be described in my next
+letter.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+MISELLA.
+
+
+
+No. 171. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1751.
+
+ _Tædet coeli convexa tueri_. VIRG. Æn. iv. 451.
+
+ Dark is the sun, and loathsome is the day.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Misella now sits down to continue her narrative. I am convinced that
+nothing would more powerfully preserve youth from irregularity, or guard
+inexperience from seduction, than a just description of the condition
+into which the wanton plunges herself; and therefore hope that my letter
+may be a sufficient antidote to my example.
+
+After the distraction, hesitation, and delays which the timidity of
+guilt naturally produces, I was removed to lodgings in a distant part of
+the town, under one of the characters commonly assumed upon such
+occasions. Here being by my circumstances condemned to solitude, I
+passed most of my hours in bitterness and anguish. The conversation of
+the people with whom I was placed was not at all capable of engaging my
+attention, or dispossessing the reigning ideas. The books which I
+carried to my retreat were such as heightened my abhorrence of myself;
+for I was not so far abandoned as to sink voluntarily into corruption,
+or endeavour to conceal from my own mind the enormity of my crime.
+
+My relation remitted none of his fondness, but visited me so often, that
+I was sometimes afraid lest his assiduity should expose him to
+suspicion. Whenever he came he found me weeping, and was therefore less
+delightfully entertained than he expected. After frequent expostulations
+upon the unreasonableness of my sorrow, and innumerable protestations of
+everlasting regard, he at last found that I was more affected with the
+loss of my innocence, than the danger of my fame, and that he might not
+be disturbed by my remorse, began to lull my conscience with the opiates
+of irreligion. His arguments were such as my course of life has since
+exposed me often to the necessity of hearing, vulgar, empty, and
+fallacious; yet they at first confounded me by their novelty, filled me
+with doubt and perplexity, and interrupted that peace which I began to
+feel from the sincerity of my repentance, without substituting any other
+support. I listened a while to his impious gabble, but its influence was
+soon overpowered by natural reason and early education, and the
+convictions which this new attempt gave me of his baseness completed my
+abhorrence. I have heard of barbarians, who, when tempests drive ships
+upon their coast, decoy them to the rocks that they may plunder their
+lading, and have always thought that wretches, thus merciless in their
+depredations, ought to be destroyed by a general insurrection of all
+social beings; yet how light is this guilt to the crime of him, who, in
+the agitations of remorse, cuts away the anchor of piety, and, when he
+has drawn aside credulity from the paths of virtue, hides the light of
+heaven which would direct her to return. I had hitherto considered him
+as a man equally betrayed with myself by the concurrence of appetite and
+opportunity; but I now saw with horrour that he was contriving to
+perpetuate his gratification, and was desirous to fit me to his purpose,
+by complete and radical corruption.
+
+To escape, however, was not yet in my power. I could support the
+expenses of my condition only by the continuance of his favour. He
+provided all that was necessary, and in a few weeks congratulated me
+upon my escape from the danger which we had both expected with so much
+anxiety. I then began to remind him of his promise to restore me with my
+fame uninjured to the world. He promised me in general terms, that
+nothing should be wanting which his power could add to my happiness, but
+forbore to release me from my confinement. I knew how much my reception
+in the world depended upon my speedy return, and was therefore
+outrageously impatient of his delays, which I now perceived to be only
+artifices of lewdness. He told me at last, with an appearance of sorrow,
+that all hopes of restoration to my former state were for ever
+precluded; that chance had discovered my secret, and malice divulged it;
+and that nothing now remained, but to seek a retreat more private, where
+curiosity or hatred could never find us.
+
+The rage, anguish, and resentment, which I felt at this account are not
+to be expressed. I was in so much dread of reproach and infamy, which he
+represented as pursuing me with full cry, that I yielded myself
+implicitly to his disposal and was removed, with a thousand studied
+precautions, through by-ways and dark passages to another house, where I
+harassed him with perpetual solicitations for a small annuity that might
+enable me to live in the country in obscurity and innocence.
+
+This demand he at first evaded with ardent professions, but in time
+appeared offended at my importunity and distrust; and having one day
+endeavoured to sooth me with uncommon expressions of tenderness, when he
+found my discontent immoveable, left me with some inarticulate murmurs
+of anger. I was pleased that he was at last roused to sensibility, and
+expecting that at his next visit he would comply with my request, lived
+with great tranquillity upon the money in my hands, and was so much
+pleased with this pause of persecution, that I did not reflect how much
+his absence had exceeded the usual intervals, till I was alarmed with
+the danger of wanting subsistence. I then suddenly contracted my
+expenses, but was unwilling to supplicate for assistance. Necessity,
+however, soon overcame my modesty or my pride, and I applied to him by a
+letter, but had no answer. I writ in terms more pressing, but without
+effect. I then sent an agent to inquire after him, who informed me, that
+he had quitted his house, and was gone with his family to reside for
+some time on his estate in Ireland.
+
+However shocked at this abrupt departure, I was yet unwilling to believe
+that he could wholly abandon me, and therefore, by the sale of my
+clothes, I supported myself, expecting that every post would bring me
+relief. Thus I passed seven months between hope and dejection, in a
+gradual approach to poverty and distress, emaciated with discontent, and
+bewildered with uncertainty. At last my landlady, after many hints of
+the necessity of a new lover, took the opportunity of my absence to
+search my boxes, and missing some of my apparel, seized the remainder
+for rent, and led me to the door.
+
+To remonstrate against legal cruelty, was vain; to supplicate obdurate
+brutality, was hopeless. I went away I knew not whither, and wandered
+about without any settled purpose, unacquainted with the usual
+expedients of misery, unqualified for laborious offices, afraid to meet
+an eye that had seen me before, and hopeless of relief from those who
+were strangers to my former condition. Night came on in the midst of my
+distraction, and I still continued to wander till the menaces of the
+watch obliged me to shelter myself in a covered passage.
+
+Next day, I procured a lodging in the backward garret of a mean house,
+and employed my landlady to inquire for a service. My applications were
+generally rejected for want of a character. At length I was received at
+a draper's, but when it was known to my mistress that I had only one
+gown, and that of silk, she was of opinion that I looked like a thief,
+and without warning hurried me away. I then tried to support myself by
+my needle; and, by my landlady's recommendation obtained a little work
+from a shop, and for three weeks lived without repining; but when my
+punctuality had gained me so much reputation, that I was trusted to make
+up a head of some value, one of my fellow-lodgers stole the lace, and I
+was obliged to fly from a prosecution.
+
+Thus driven again into the streets, I lived upon the least that could
+support me, and at night accommodated myself under pent-houses as well
+as I could. At length I became absolutely pennyless, and having strolled
+all day without sustenance, was, at the close of evening, accosted by an
+elderly man, with an invitation to a tavern. I refused him with
+hesitation; he seized me by the hand, and drew me into a neighbouring
+house, where, when he saw my face pale with hunger, and my eyes swelling
+with tears, he spurned me from him, and bade me cant and whine in some
+other place; he for his part would take care of his pockets.
+
+I still continued to stand in the way, having scarcely strength to walk
+further, when another soon addressed me in the same manner. When he saw
+the same tokens of calamity, he considered that I might be obtained at a
+cheap rate, and therefore quickly made overtures, which I no longer had
+firmness to reject. By this man I was maintained four months in
+penurious wickedness, and then abandoned to my former condition, from
+which I was delivered by another keeper.
+
+In this abject state I have now passed four years, the drudge of
+extortion and the sport of drunkenness; sometimes the property of one
+man, and sometimes the common prey of accidental lewdness; at one time
+tricked up for sale by the mistress of a brothel, at another begging in
+the streets to be relieved from hunger by wickedness; without any hope
+in the day but of finding some whom folly or excess may expose to my
+allurements, and without any reflections at night, but such as guilt and
+terrour impress upon me.
+
+If those who pass their days in plenty and security, could visit for an
+hour the dismal receptacles to which the prostitute retires from her
+nocturnal excursions, and see the wretches that lie crowded together,
+mad with intemperance, ghastly with famine, nauseous with filth, and
+noisome with disease; it would not be easy for any degree of abhorrence
+to harden them against compassion, or to repress the desire which they
+must immediately feel to rescue such numbers of human beings from a
+state so dreadful.
+
+It is said, that in France they annually evacuate their streets, and
+ship their prostitutes and vagabonds to their colonies. If the women
+that infest this city had the same opportunity of escaping from their
+miseries, I believe very little force would be necessary; for who among
+them can dread any change? Many of us indeed are wholly unqualified for
+any but the most servile employments, and those perhaps would require
+the care of a magistrate to hinder them from following the same
+practices in another country; but others are only precluded by infamy
+from reformation, and would gladly be delivered on any terms from the
+necessity of guilt, and the tyranny of chance. No place but a populous
+city, can afford opportunities for open prostitution; and where the eye
+of justice can attend to individuals, those who cannot be made good may
+be restrained from mischief. For my part, I should exult at the
+privilege of banishment, and think myself happy in any region that
+should restore me once again to honesty and peace.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+MISELLA.
+
+
+
+No. 172. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1751.
+
+ _Sæpe rogare soles, qualis sim, Prisce, futurus,
+ Si fiam locuples, simque repente potens.
+ Quemquam posse putas mores narrare futuros?
+ Die mihi, si fias tu leo, qualis eris?_ MART. Lib. xii. Ep. 93.
+
+ Priscus, you've often ask'd me how I'd live,
+ Should fate at once both wealth and honour give.
+ What soul his future conduct can foresee?
+ Tell me what sort of lion you would be. F. LEWIS.
+
+Nothing has been longer observed, than that a change of fortune causes a
+change of manners; and that it is difficult to conjecture from the
+conduct of him whom we see in a low condition, how he would act, if
+wealth and power were put into his hands. But it is generally agreed,
+that few men are made better by affluence or exaltation; and that the
+powers of the mind, when they are unbound and expanded by the sunshine
+of felicity, more frequently luxuriate into follies, than blossom into
+goodness.
+
+Many observations have concurred to establish this opinion, and it is
+not likely soon to become obsolete, for want of new occasions to revive
+it. The greater part of mankind are corrupt in every condition, and
+differ in high and in low stations, only as they have more or fewer
+opportunities of gratifying their desires, or as they are more or less
+restrained by human censures. Many vitiate their principles in the
+acquisition of riches; and who can wonder that what is gained by fraud
+and extortion is enjoyed with tyranny and excess?
+
+Yet I am willing to believe that the depravation of the mind by external
+advantages, though certainly not uncommon, yet approaches not so nearly
+to universality, as some have asserted in the bitterness of resentment,
+or heat of declamation.
+
+Whoever rises above those who once pleased themselves with equality,
+will have many malevolent gazers at his eminence. To gain sooner than
+others that which all pursue with the same ardour, and to which all
+imagine themselves entitled, will for ever be a crime. When those who
+started with us in the race of life, leave us so far behind, that we
+have little hope to overtake them, we revenge our disappointment by
+remarks on the arts of supplantation by which they gained the advantage,
+or on the folly and arrogance with which they possess it. Of them, whose
+rise we could not hinder, we solace ourselves by prognosticating the
+fall.
+
+It is impossible for human purity not to betray to an eye, thus
+sharpened by malignity, some stains which lay concealed and unregarded,
+while none thought it their interest to discover them; nor can the most
+circumspect attention, or steady rectitude, escape blame from censors,
+who have no inclination to approve. Riches therefore, perhaps, do not so
+often produce crimes as incite accusers.
+
+The common charge against those who rise above their original condition,
+is that of pride. It is certain that success naturally confirms us in a
+favourable opinion of our own abilities. Scarce any man is willing to
+allot to accident, friendship, and a thousand causes, which concur in
+every event without human contrivance or interposition, the part which
+they may justly claim in his advancement. We rate ourselves by our
+fortune rather than our virtues, and exorbitant claims are quickly
+produced by imaginary merit. But captiousness and jealousy are likewise
+easily offended, and to him who studiously looks for an affront, every
+mode of behaviour will supply it; freedom will be rudeness, and reserve
+sullenness; mirth will be negligence, and seriousness formality; when he
+is received with ceremony, distance and respect are inculcated; if he is
+treated with familiarity, he concludes himself insulted by
+condescensions.
+
+It must however be confessed, that as all sudden changes are dangerous,
+a quick transition from poverty to abundance can seldom be made with
+safety. He that has long lived within sight of pleasures which he could
+not reach, will need more than common moderation, not to lose his reason
+in unbounded riot, when they are first put into his power.
+
+Every possession is endeared by novelty; every gratification is
+exaggerated by desire. It is difficult not to estimate what is lately
+gained above its real value; it is impossible not to annex greater
+happiness to that condition from which we are unwillingly excluded, than
+nature has qualified us to obtain. For this reason, the remote inheritor
+of an unexpected fortune, may be generally distinguished from those who
+are enriched in the common course of lineal descent, by his greater
+haste to enjoy his wealth, by the finery of his dress, the pomp of his
+equipage, the splendour of his furniture, and the luxury of his table.
+
+A thousand things which familiarity discovers to be of little value,
+have power for a time to seize the imagination. A Virginian king, when
+the Europeans had fixed a lock on his door, was so delighted to find his
+subjects admitted or excluded with such facility, that it was from
+morning to evening his whole employment to turn the key. We, among whom
+locks and keys have been longer in use, are inclined to laugh at this
+American amusement; yet I doubt whether this paper will have a single
+reader that may not apply the story to himself, and recollect some hours
+of his life in which he has been equally overpowered by the transitory
+charms of trifling novelty.
+
+Some indulgence is due to him whom a happy gale of fortune has suddenly
+transported into new regions, where unaccustomed lustre dazzles his
+eyes, and untasted delicacies solicit his appetite. Let him not be
+considered as lost in hopeless degeneracy, though he for a while forgets
+the regard due to others, to indulge the contemplation of himself, and
+in the extravagance of his first raptures expects that his eye should
+regulate the motions of all that approach him, and his opinion be
+received as decisive and oraculous. His intoxication will give way to
+time; the madness of joy will fume imperceptibly away; the sense of his
+insufficiency will soon return; he will remember that the co-operation
+of others is necessary to his happiness, and learn to conciliate their
+regard by reciprocal beneficence.
+
+There is, at least, one consideration which ought to alleviate our
+censures of the powerful and rich. To imagine them chargeable with all
+the guilt and folly of their own actions, is to be very little
+acquainted with the world.
+
+ _De l'absolu pouvoir vous ignorez l'yvresse,
+ Et du lache flateur la voix enchanteresse_.
+
+ Thou hast not known the giddy whirls of fate,
+ Nor servile flatteries which enchant the great. Miss A. W.
+
+He that can do much good or harm, will not find many whom ambition or
+cowardice will suffer to be sincere. While we live upon the level with
+the rest of mankind, we are reminded of our duty by the admonitions of
+friends and reproaches of enemies; but men who stand in the highest
+ranks of society, seldom hear of their faults; if by any accident an
+opprobrious clamour reaches their ears, flattery is always at hand to
+pour in her opiates, to quiet conviction, and obtund remorse.
+
+Favour is seldom gained but by conformity in vice. Virtue can stand
+without assistance, and considers herself as very little obliged by
+countenance and approbation: but vice, spiritless and timorous, seeks
+the shelter of crowds, and support of confederacy. The sycophant,
+therefore, neglects the good qualities of his patron, and employs all
+his art on his weaknesses and follies, regales his reigning vanity, or
+stimulates his prevalent desires.
+
+Virtue is sufficiently difficult with any circumstances, but the
+difficulty is increased when reproof and advice are frighted away. In
+common life, reason and conscience have only the appetites and passions
+to encounter; but in higher stations, they must oppose artifice and
+adulation. He, therefore, that yields to such temptations, cannot give
+those who look upon his miscarriage much reason for exultation, since
+few can justly presume that from the same snare they should have been
+able to escape.
+
+
+
+No. 173. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1751.
+
+ _Quo virtus, quo ferat error_. HOR. De Ar. Poet. 308.
+
+ Now say, where virtue stops, and vice begins?
+
+As any action or posture, long continued, will distort and disfigure the
+limbs; so the mind likewise is crippled and contracted by perpetual
+application to the same set of ideas. It is easy to guess the trade of
+an artizan by his knees, his fingers, or his shoulders: and there are
+few among men of the more liberal professions, whose minds do not carry
+the brand of their calling, or whose conversation does not quickly
+discover to what class of the community they belong.
+
+These peculiarities have been of great use, in the general hostility
+which every part of mankind exercises against the rest, to furnish
+insults and sarcasms. Every art has its dialect, uncouth and ungrateful
+to all whom custom has not reconciled to its sound, and which therefore
+becomes ridiculous by a slight misapplication, or unnecessary
+repetition.
+
+The general reproach with which ignorance revenges the superciliousness
+of learning, is that of pedantry; a censure which every man incurs, who
+has at any time the misfortune to talk to those who cannot understand
+him, and by which the modest and timorous are sometimes frighted from
+the display of their acquisitions, and the exertion of their powers.
+
+The name of a pedant is so formidable to young men when they first sally
+from their colleges, and is so liberally scattered by those who mean to
+boast their elegance of education, easiness of manners, and knowledge of
+the world, that it seems to require particular consideration; since,
+perhaps, if it were once understood, many a heart might be freed from
+painful apprehensions, and many a tongue, delivered from restraint.
+
+Pedantry is the unseasonable ostentation of learning. It may be
+discovered either in the choice of a subject, or in the manner of
+treating it. He is undoubtedly guilty of pedantry, who, when he has made
+himself master of some abstruse and uncultivated part of knowledge,
+obtrudes his remarks and discoveries upon those whom he believes unable
+to judge of his proficiency, and from whom, as he cannot fear
+contradiction, he cannot properly expect applause.
+
+To this errour the student is sometimes betrayed by the natural
+recurrence of the mind to its common employment, by the pleasure which
+every man receives from the recollection of pleasing images, and the
+desire of dwelling upon topicks, on which he knows himself able to speak
+with justness. But because we are seldom so far prejudiced in favour of
+each other, as to search out for palliations, this failure of politeness
+is imputed always to vanity; and the harmless collegiate, who, perhaps,
+intended entertainment and instruction, or at worst only spoke without
+sufficient reflection upon the character of his hearers, is censured as
+arrogant or overbearing, and eager to extend his renown, in contempt of
+the convenience of society and the laws of conversation.
+
+All discourse of which others cannot partake, is not only an irksome
+usurpation of the time devoted to pleasure and entertainment, but what
+never fails to excite very keen resentment, an insolent assertion of
+superiority, and a triumph over less enlightened understandings. The
+pedant is, therefore, not only heard with weariness, but malignity; and
+those who conceive themselves insulted by his knowledge, never fail to
+tell with acrimony how injudiciously it was exerted.
+
+To avoid this dangerous imputation, scholars sometimes divest themselves
+with too much haste of their academical formality, and in their
+endeavours to accommodate their notions and their style to common
+conceptions, talk rather of any thing than of that which they
+understand, and sink into insipidity of sentiment and meanness of
+expression.
+
+There prevails among men of letters an opinion, that all appearance of
+science is particularly hateful to women; and that therefore, whoever
+desires to be well received in female assemblies, must qualify himself
+by a total rejection of all that is serious, rational, or important;
+must consider argument or criticism, as perpetually interdicted; and
+devote all his attention to trifles, and all his eloquence to
+compliment.
+
+Students often form their notions of the present generation from the
+writings of the past, and are not very early informed of those changes
+which the gradual diffusion of knowledge, or the sudden caprice of
+fashion, produces in the world. Whatever might be the state of female
+literature in the last century, there is now no longer any danger lest
+the scholar should want an adequate audience at the tea-table; and
+whoever thinks it necessary to regulate his conversation by antiquated
+rules, will be rather despised for his futility than caressed for his
+politeness.
+
+To talk intentionally in a manner above the comprehension of those whom
+we address, is unquestionable pedantry; but surely complaisance
+requires, that no man should, without proof, conclude his company
+incapable of following him to the highest elevation of his fancy, or the
+utmost extent of his knowledge. It is always safer to err in favour of
+others than of ourselves, and therefore we seldom hazard much by
+endeavouring to excel.
+
+It ought at least to be the care of learning, when she quits her
+exaltation, to descend with dignity. Nothing is more despicable than the
+airiness and jocularity of a man bred to severe science, and solitary
+meditation. To trifle agreeably is a secret which schools cannot impart;
+that gay negligence and vivacious levity, which charm down resistance
+wherever they appear, are never attainable by him who, having spent his
+first years among the dust of libraries, enters late into the gay world
+with an unpliant attention and established habits.
+
+It is observed in the panegyrick on Fabricius the mechanist, that,
+though forced by publick employments into mingled conversation, he never
+lost the modesty and seriousness of the convent, nor drew ridicule upon
+himself by an affected imitation of fashionable life. To the same praise
+every man devoted to learning ought to aspire. If he attempts the softer
+arts of pleasing, and endeavours to learn the graceful bow and the
+familiar embrace, the insinuating accent and the general smile, he will
+lose the respect due to the character of learning, without arriving at
+the envied honour of doing any thing with elegance and facility.
+
+Theophrastus was discovered not to be a native of Athens, by so strict
+an adherence to the Attick dialect, as shewed that he had learned it not
+by custom, but by rule. A man not early formed to habitual elegance,
+betrays, in like manner, the effects of his education, by an unnecessary
+anxiety of behaviour. It is as possible to become pedantick, by fear of
+pedantry, as to be troublesome by ill-timed civility. There is no kind
+of impertinence more justly censurable than his who is always labouring
+to level thoughts to intellects higher than his own; who apologizes for
+every word which his own narrowness of converse inclines him to think
+unusual; keeps the exuberance of his faculties under visible restraint;
+is solicitous to anticipate inquiries by needless explanations; and
+endeavours to shade his own abilities, lest weak eyes should be dazzled
+with their lustre.
+
+
+
+No. 174. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1751.
+
+ _Faenum habet in cornu, longe fuge; dummodo risum
+ Excutiat sibi, non hic cuiquam parcet amico_.
+ HOR. Lib. i. Sat. iv. 34.
+
+ Yonder he drives--avoid that furious beast:
+ If he may have his jest, he never cares
+ At whose expense; nor friend nor patron spares. FRANCIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+MR. RAMBLER,
+
+The laws of social benevolence require, that every man should endeavour
+to assist others by his experience. He that has at last escaped into
+port from the fluctuations of chance, and the gusts of opposition, ought
+to make some improvements in the chart of life, by marking the rocks on
+which he has been dashed, and the shallows where he has been stranded.
+
+The errour into which I was betrayed, when custom first gave me up to my
+own direction, is very frequently incident to the quick, the sprightly,
+the fearless, and the gay; to all whose ardour hurries them into
+precipitate execution of their designs, and imprudent declaration of
+their opinions; who seldom count the cost of pleasure, or examine the
+distant consequences of any practice that flatters them with immediate
+gratification.
+
+I came forth into the crowded world with the usual juvenile ambition,
+and desired nothing beyond the title of a wit. Money I considered as
+below my care; for I saw such multitudes grow rich without
+understanding, that I could not forbear to look on wealth as an
+acquisition easy to industry directed by genius, and therefore threw it
+aside as a secondary convenience, to be procured when my principal wish
+should be satisfied, and the claim to intellectual excellence
+universally acknowledged.
+
+With this view I regulated my behaviour in publick, and exercised my
+meditations in solitude. My life was divided between the care of
+providing topicks for the entertainment of my company, and that of
+collecting company worthy to be entertained; for I soon found, that wit,
+like every other power, has its boundaries; that its success depends
+upon the aptitude of others to receive impressions; and that as some
+bodies, indissoluble by heat, can set the furnace and crucible at
+defiance, there are minds upon which the rays of fancy may be pointed
+without effect, and which no fire of sentiment can agitate or exalt.
+
+It was, however, not long before I fitted myself with a set of
+companions who knew how to laugh, and to whom no other recommendation
+was necessary than the power of striking out a jest. Among those I fixed
+my residence, and for a time enjoyed the felicity of disturbing the
+neighbours every night with the obstreperous applause which my sallies
+forced from the audience. The reputation of our club every day
+increased, and as my flights and remarks were circulated by my admirers,
+every day brought new solicitations for admission into our society.
+
+To support this perpetual fund of merriment, I frequented every place of
+concourse, cultivated the acquaintance of all the fashionable race, and
+passed the day in a continual succession of visits, in which I collected
+a treasure of pleasantry for the expenses of the evening. Whatever
+errour of conduct I could discover, whatever peculiarity of manner I
+could observe, whatever weakness was betrayed by confidence, whatever
+lapse was suffered by neglect, all was drawn together for the diversion
+of my wild companions, who when they had been taught the art of
+ridicule, never failed to signalize themselves by a zealous imitation,
+and filled the town on the ensuing day with scandal and vexation, with
+merriment and shame.
+
+I can scarcely believe, when I recollect my own practice, that I could
+have been so far deluded with petty praise, as to divulge the secrets of
+trust, and to expose the levities of frankness; to waylay the walks of
+the cautious, and surprise the security of the thoughtless. Yet it is
+certain, that for many years I heard nothing but with design to tell it,
+and saw nothing with any other curiosity than after some failure that
+might furnish out a jest.
+
+My heart, indeed, acquits me of deliberate malignity, or interested
+insidiousness. I had no other purpose than to heighten the pleasure of
+laughter by communication, nor ever raised any pecuniary advantage from
+the calamities of others. I led weakness and negligence into
+difficulties, only that I might divert myself with their perplexities
+and distresses; and violated every law of friendship, with no other hope
+than that of gaining the reputation of smartness and waggery.
+
+I would not be understood to charge myself with any crimes of the
+atrocious or destructive kind. I never betrayed an heir to gamesters, or
+a girl to bebauchees; [Transcriber's note: sic] never intercepted the
+kindness of a patron, or sported away the reputation of innocence. My
+delight was only in petty mischief, and momentary vexations, and my
+acuteness was employed not upon fraud and oppression, which it had been
+meritorious to detect, but upon harmless ignorance or absurdity,
+prejudice or mistake.
+
+This inquiry I pursued with so much diligence and sagacity, that I was
+able to relate, of every man whom I knew, some blunder or miscarriage;
+to betray the most circumspect of my friends into follies, by a
+judicious flattery of his predominant passion; or expose him to
+contempt, by placing him in circumstances which put his prejudices into
+action, brought to view his natural defects, or drew the attention of
+the company on his airs of affectation.
+
+The power had been possessed in vain if it had never been exerted; and
+it was not my custom to let any arts of jocularity remain unemployed. My
+impatience of applause brought me always early to the place of
+entertainment; and I seldom failed to lay a scheme with the small knot
+that first gathered round me, by which some of those whom we expected
+might be made subservient to our sport. Every man has some favourite
+topick of conversation, on which, by a feigned seriousness of attention,
+he may be drawn to expatiate without end. Every man has some habitual
+contortion of body, or established mode of expression, which never fails
+to raise mirth if it be pointed out to notice. By premonitions of these
+particularities I secured our pleasantry. Our companion entered with his
+usual gaiety, and began to partake of our noisy cheerfulness, when the
+conversation was imperceptibly diverted to a subject which pressed upon
+his tender part, and extorted the expected shrug, the customary
+exclamation, or the predicted remark. A general clamour of joy then
+burst from all that were admitted to the stratagem. Our mirth was often
+increased by the triumph of him that occasioned it; for as we do not
+hastily form conclusions against ourselves, seldom any one suspected,
+that he had exhilarated us otherwise than by wit.
+
+You will hear, I believe, with very little surprise, that by this
+conduct I had in a short time united mankind against me, and that every
+tongue was diligent in prevention or revenge. I soon perceived myself
+regarded with malevolence or distrust, but wondered what had been
+discovered in me either terrible or hateful. I had invaded no man's
+property; I had rivalled no man's claims: nor had ever engaged in any of
+those attempts which provoke the jealousy of ambition or the rage of
+faction. I had lived but to laugh, and make others laugh; and believed
+that I was loved by all who caressed, and favoured by all who applauded
+me. I never imagined, that he who, in the mirth of a nocturnal revel,
+concurred in ridiculing his friend, would consider, in a cooler hour,
+that the same trick might be played against himself; or that even where
+there is no sense of danger, the natural pride of human nature rises
+against him, who, by general censures, lays claim to general
+superiority.
+
+I was convinced, by a total desertion, of the impropriety of my conduct;
+every man avoided, and cautioned others to avoid me. Wherever I came, I
+found silence and dejection, coldness and terrour. No one would venture
+to speak, lest he should lay himself open to unfavourable
+representations; the company, however numerous, dropped off at my
+entrance upon various pretences; and, if I retired to avoid the shame of
+being left, I heard confidence and mirth revive at my departure.
+
+If those whom I had thus offended could have contented themselves with
+repaying one insult for another, and kept up the war only by a
+reciprocation of sarcasms, they might have perhaps vexed, but would
+never have much hurt me; for no man heartily hates him at whom he can
+laugh. But these wounds which they give me as they fly, are without
+cure; this alarm which they spread by their solicitude to escape me,
+excludes me from all friendship and from all pleasure. I am condemned to
+pass a long interval of my life in solitude, as a man suspected of
+infection is refused admission into cities; and must linger in
+obscurity, till my conduct shall convince the world, that I may be
+approached without hazard.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+DICACULUS.
+
+
+
+No. 175. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1751.
+
+ _Rari quippe boni: numerus vix est totidem quot
+ Thebarum portae, vel divitis ostia Nili_. Juv. Sat. xiii. 26.
+
+ Good men are scarce; the just are thinly sown:
+ They thrive but ill, nor can they last when grown;
+ And should we count them, and our store compile,
+ Yet Thebes more gates could show, more mouths the Nile. CREECH.
+
+None of the axioms of wisdom which recommend the ancient sages to
+veneration, seem to have required less extent of knowledge or
+perspicacity of penetration, than the remarks of Bias, that [Greek: oi
+pleones kakoi], "the majority are wicked."
+
+The depravity of mankind is so easily discoverable, that nothing but the
+desert or the cell can exclude it from notice. The knowledge of crimes
+intrudes uncalled and undesired. They whom their abstraction from common
+occurrences hinders from seeing iniquity, will quickly have their
+attention awakened by feeling it. Even he who ventures not into the
+world, may learn its corruption in his closet. For what are treatises of
+morality, but persuasives to the practice of duties, for which no
+arguments would be necessary, but that we are continually tempted to
+violate or neglect them? What are all the records of history, but
+narratives of successive villanies, of treasons and usurpations,
+massacres and wars?
+
+But, perhaps, the excellence of aphorisms consists not so much in the
+expression of some rare and abstruse sentiment, as in the comprehension
+of some obvious and useful truths in a few words. We frequently fall
+into errour and folly, not because the true principles of action are not
+known, but because, for a time, they are not remembered; and he may,
+therefore, be justly numbered among the benefactors of mankind, who
+contracts the great rules of life into short sentences, that may be
+easily impressed on the memory, and taught by frequent recollection to
+recur habitually to the mind.
+
+However those who have passed through half the life of man, may now
+wonder that any should require to be cautioned against corruption, they
+will find that they have themselves purchased their conviction by many
+disappointments and vexations which an earlier knowledge would have
+spared them; and may see, on every side, some entangling themselves in
+perplexities, and some sinking into ruin, by ignorance or neglect of the
+maxim of Bias.
+
+Every day sends out, in quest of pleasure and distinction, some heir
+fondled in ignorance, and flattered into pride. He comes forth with all
+the confidence of a spirit unacquainted with superiors, and all the
+benevolence of a mind not yet irritated by opposition, alarmed by fraud,
+or embittered by cruelty. He loves all, because he imagines himself the
+universal favourite. Every exchange of salutation produces new
+acquaintance, and every acquaintance kindles into friendship.
+
+Every season brings a new flight of beauties into the world, who have
+hitherto heard only of their own charms, and imagine that the heart
+feels no passion but that of love. They are soon surrounded by admirers
+whom they credit, because they tell them only what is heard with
+delight. Whoever gazes upon them is a lover; and whoever forces a sigh,
+is pining in despair.
+
+He surely is a useful monitor, who inculcates to these thoughtless
+strangers, that the _majority are wicked_; who informs them, that the
+train which wealth and beauty draw after them, is lured only by the
+scent of prey; and that, perhaps, among all those who crowd about them
+with professions and flatteries, there is not one who does not hope for
+some opportunity to devour or betray them, to glut himself by their
+destruction, or to share their spoils with a stronger savage.
+
+Virtue presented singly to the imagination or the reason, is so well
+recommended by its own graces, and so strongly supported by arguments,
+that a good man wonders how any can be bad; and they who are ignorant of
+the force of passion and interest, who never observed the arts of
+seduction, the contagion of example, the gradual descent from one crime
+to another, or the insensible depravation of the principles by loose
+conversation, naturally expect to find integrity in every bosom, and
+veracity on every tongue.
+
+It is, indeed, impossible not to hear from those who have lived longer,
+of wrongs and falsehoods, of violence and circumvention; but such
+narratives are commonly regarded by the young, the heady, and the
+confident, as nothing more than the murmurs of peevishness, or the
+dreams of dotage; and, notwithstanding all the documents of hoary
+wisdom, we commonly plunge into the world fearless and credulous,
+without any foresight of danger, or apprehension of deceit.
+
+I have remarked, in a former paper, that credulity is the common failing
+of unexperienced virtue; and that he who is spontaneously suspicious,
+may be justly charged with radical corruption; for, if he has not known
+the prevalence of dishonesty by information, nor had time to observe it
+with his own eyes, whence can he take his measures of judgment but from
+himself?
+
+They who best deserve to escape the snares of artifice, are most likely
+to be entangled. He that endeavours to live for the good of others, must
+always be exposed to the arts of them who live only for themselves,
+unless he is taught by timely precepts the caution required in common
+transactions, and shewn at a distance the pitfalls of treachery.
+
+To youth, therefore, it should be carefully inculcated, that, to enter
+the road of life without caution or reserve, in expectation of general
+fidelity and justice, is to launch on the wide ocean without the
+instruments of steerage, and to hope that every wind will be prosperous,
+and that every coast will afford a harbour.
+
+To enumerate the various motives to deceit and injury, would be to count
+all the desires that prevail among the sons of men; since there is no
+ambition however petty, no wish however absurd, that by indulgence will
+not be enabled to overpower the influence of virtue. Many there are, who
+openly and almost professedly regulate all their conduct by their love
+of money; who have no other reason for action or forbearance, for
+compliance or refusal, than that they hope to gain more by one than by
+the other. These are indeed the meanest and cruellest of human beings, a
+race with whom, as with some pestiferous animals, the whole creation
+seems to be at war; but who, however detested or scorned, long continue
+to add heap to heap, and when they have reduced one to beggary, are
+still permitted to fasten on another.
+
+Others, yet less rationally wicked, pass their lives in mischief,
+because they cannot bear the sight of success, and mark out every man
+for hatred, whose fame or fortune they believe increasing.
+
+Many who have not advanced to these degrees of guilt are yet wholly
+unqualified for friendship, and unable to maintain any constant or
+regular course of kindness. Happiness may be destroyed not only by union
+with the man who is apparently the slave of interest, but with him whom
+a wild opinion of the dignity of perseverance, in whatever cause,
+disposes to pursue every injury with unwearied and perpetual resentment;
+with him whose vanity inclines him to consider every man as a rival in
+every pretension; with him whose airy negligence puts his friend's
+affairs or secrets in continual hazard, and who thinks his forgetfulness
+of others excused by his inattention to himself; and with him whose
+inconstancy ranges without any settled rule of choice through varieties
+of friendship, and who adopts and dismisses favourites by the sudden
+impulse of caprice.
+
+Thus numerous are the dangers to which the converse of mankind exposes
+us, and which can be avoided only by prudent distrust. He therefore
+that, remembering this salutary maxim, learns early to withhold his
+fondness from fair appearances, will have reason to pay some honours to
+Bias of Priene, who enabled him to become wise without the cost of
+experience.
+
+
+
+No. 176. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1751
+
+ --_Naso suspendis adunco_. HOR. Lib. i. Sat. vi. 5.
+
+ On me you turn the nose.--
+
+There are many vexatious accidents and uneasy situations which raise
+little compassion for the sufferer, and which no man but those whom they
+immediately distress can regard with seriousness. Petty mischiefs, that
+have no influence on futurity, nor extend their effects to the rest of
+life, are always seen with a kind of malicious pleasure. A mistake or
+embarrassment, which for the present moment fills the face with blushes,
+and the mind with confusion, will have no other effect upon those who
+observe it, than that of convulsing them with irresistible laughter.
+Some circumstances of misery are so powerfully ridiculous, that neither
+kindness nor duty can withstand them; they bear down love, interest, and
+reverence, and force the friend, the dependent, or the child, to give
+way to, instantaneous motions of merriment.
+
+Among the principal of comick calamities, may be reckoned the pain which
+an author, not yet hardened into insensibility, feels at the onset of a
+furious critick, whose age, rank, or fortune, gives him confidence to
+speak without reserve; who heaps one objection upon another, and
+obtrudes his remarks, and enforces his corrections, without tenderness
+or awe.
+
+The author, full of the importance of his work, and anxious for the
+justification of every syllable, starts and kindles at the slightest
+attack; the critick, eager to establish his superiority, triumphing in
+every discovery of failure, and zealous to impress the cogency of his
+arguments, pursues him from line to line without cessation or remorse.
+The critick, who hazards little, proceeds with vehemence, impetuosity,
+and fearlessness; the author, whose quiet and fame, and life and
+immortality, are involved in the controversy, tries every art of
+subterfuge and defence; maintains modestly what he resolves never to
+yield, and yields unwillingly what cannot be maintained. The critick's
+purpose is to conquer, the author only hopes to escape; the critick
+therefore knits his brow, and raises his voice, and rejoices whenever he
+perceives any tokens of pain excited by the pressure of his assertions,
+or the point of his sarcasms. The author, whose endeavour is at once to
+mollify and elude his persecutor, composes his features and softens his
+accent, breaks the force of assault by retreat, and rather steps aside
+than flies or advances.
+
+As it very seldom happens that the rage of extemporary criticism
+inflicts fatal or lasting wounds, I know not that the laws of
+benevolence entitle this distress to much sympathy. The diversion of
+baiting an author has the sanction of all ages and nations, and is more
+lawful than the sport of teasing other animals, because, for the most
+part, he comes voluntarily to the stake, furnished, as he imagines, by
+the patron powers of literature, with resistless weapons, and
+impenetrable armour, with the mail of the boar of Erymanth, and the paws
+of the lion of Nemea.
+
+But the works of genius are sometimes produced by other motives than
+vanity; and he whom necessity or duty enforces to write, is not always
+so well satisfied with himself, as not to be discouraged by censorious
+impudence. It may therefore be necessary to consider, how they whom
+publication lays open to the insults of such as their obscurity secures
+against reprisals, may extricate themselves from unexpected encounters.
+
+Vida, a man of considerable skill in the politicks of literature,
+directs his pupil wholly to abandon his defence, and even when he can
+irrefragably refute all objections, to suffer tamely the exultations of
+his antagonist.
+
+This rule may perhaps be just, when advice is asked, and severity
+solicited, because no man tells his opinion so freely as when he
+imagines it received with implicit veneration; and criticks ought never
+to be consulted, but while errours may yet be rectified or insipidity
+suppressed. But when the book has once been dismissed into the world,
+and can be no more retouched, I know not whether a very different
+conduct should not be prescribed, and whether firmness and spirit may
+not sometimes be of use to overpower arrogance and repel brutality.
+Softness, diffidence, and moderation, will often be mistaken for
+imbecility and dejection; they hire cowardice to the attack by the hopes
+of easy victory, and it will soon be found that he whom every man thinks
+he can conquer, shall never be at peace.
+
+The animadversions of criticks are commonly such as may easily provoke
+the sedatest writer to some quickness of resentment and asperity of
+reply. A man, who by long consideration has familiarized a subject to
+his own mind, carefully surveyed the series of his thoughts, and planned
+all the parts of his composition into a regular dependance on each
+other, will often start at the sinistrous interpretations or absurd
+remarks of haste and ignorance, and wonder by what infatuation they have
+been led away from the obvious sense, and upon what peculiar principles
+of judgment they decide against him.
+
+The eye of the intellect, like that of the body, is not equally perfect
+in all, nor equally adapted in any to all objects; the end of criticism
+is to supply its defects; rules are the instruments of mental vision,
+which may indeed assist our faculties when properly used, but produce
+confusion and obscurity by unskilful application.
+
+Some seem always to read with the microscope of criticism, and employ
+their whole attention upon minute elegance, or faults scarcely visible
+to common observation. The dissonance of a syllable, the recurrence of
+the same sound, the repetition of a particle, the smallest deviation
+from propriety, the slightest defect in construction or arrangement,
+swell before their eyes into enormities. As they discern with great
+exactness, they comprehend but a narrow compass, and know nothing of the
+justness of the design, the general spirit of the performance, the
+artifice of connection, or the harmony of the parts; they never,
+conceive how small a proportion that which they are busy in
+contemplating bears to the whole, or how the petty inaccuracies, with
+which they are offended, are absorbed and lost in general excellence.
+
+Others are furnished by criticism with a telescope. They see with great
+clearness whatever is too remote to be discovered by the rest of
+mankind, but are totally blind to all that lies immediately before them.
+They discover in every passage some secret meaning, some remote
+allusion, some artful allegory, or some occult imitation, which no other
+reader ever suspected; but they have no perception of the cogency of
+arguments, the force of pathetick sentiments, the various colours of
+diction, or the flowery embellishments of fancy; of all that engages the
+attention of others they are totally insensible, while they pry into
+worlds of conjecture, and amuse themselves with phantoms in the clouds.
+
+In criticism, as in every other art, we fail sometimes by our weakness,
+but more frequently by our fault. We are sometimes bewildered by
+ignorance, and sometimes by prejudice, but we seldom deviate far from
+the right, but when we deliver ourselves up to the direction of vanity.
+
+
+
+No. 177. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1751.
+
+ _Turpe est difficiles habere nugas_. MART. Lib. ii. Ep. lxxxvi. 9.
+
+ Those things which now seem frivolous and slight,
+ Will be of serious consequence to you,
+ When they have made you once ridiculous. ROSCOMMON.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+When I was, at the usual time, about to enter upon the profession to
+which my friends had destined me, being summoned, by the death of my
+father, into the country, I found myself master of an unexpected sum of
+money, and of an estate, which, though not large, was, in my opinion,
+sufficient to support me in a condition far preferable to the fatigue,
+dependance, and uncertainty of any gainful occupation. I therefore
+resolved to devote the rest of my life wholly to curiosity, and without
+any confinement of my excursions, or termination of my views, to wander
+over the boundless regions of general knowledge.
+
+This scheme of life seemed pregnant with inexhaustible variety, and
+therefore I could not forbear to congratulate myself upon the wisdom of
+my choice. I furnished a large room with all conveniences for study;
+collected books of every kind; quitted every science at the first
+perception of disgust; returned to it again as soon as my former ardour
+happened to revive; and having no rival to depress me by comparison, nor
+any critick to alarm me with objections, I spent day after day in
+profound tranquillity, with only so much complaisance in my own
+improvements, as served to excite and animate my application.
+
+Thus I lived for some years with complete acquiescence in my own plan of
+conduct, rising early to read, and dividing the latter part of the day
+between economy, exercise, and reflection. But, in time, I began to find
+my mind contracted and stiffened by solitude. My ease and elegance were
+sensibly impaired; I was no longer able to accommodate myself with
+readiness to the accidental current of conversation; my notions grew
+particular and paradoxical, and my phraseology formal and unfashionable;
+I spoke, on common occasions, the language of books. My quickness of
+apprehension, and celerity of reply, had entirely deserted me; when I
+delivered my opinion, or detailed my knowledge, I was bewildered by an
+unseasonable interrogatory, disconcerted by any slight opposition, and
+overwhelmed and lost in dejection, when the smallest advantage was
+gained against me in dispute. I became decisive and dogmatical,
+impatient of contradiction, perpetually jealous of my character,
+insolent to such as acknowledged my superiority, and sullen and
+malignant to all who refused to receive my dictates.
+
+This I soon discovered to be one of those intellectual diseases which a
+wise man should make haste to cure. I therefore resolved for a time to
+shut my books, and learn again the art of conversation; to defecate and
+clear my mind by brisker motions, and stronger impulses; and to unite
+myself once more to the living generation.
+
+For this purpose I hasted to London, and entreated one of my academical
+acquaintances to introduce me into some of the little societies of
+literature which are formed in taverns and coffee-houses. He was pleased
+with an opportunity of shewing me to his friends, and soon obtained me
+admission among a select company of curious men, who met once a week to
+exhilarate their studies, and compare their acquisitions.
+
+The eldest and most venerable of this society was Hirsutus, who, after
+the first civilities of my reception, found means to introduce the
+mention of his favourite studies, by a severe censure of those who want
+the due regard for their native country. He informed me, that he had
+early withdrawn his attention from foreign trifles, and that since he
+began to addict his mind to serious and manly studies, he had very
+carefully amassed all the English books that were printed in the black
+character. This search he had pursued so diligently, that he was able to
+shew the deficiencies of the best catalogues. He had long since
+completed his Caxton, had three sheets of Treveris unknown to the
+antiquaries, and wanted to a perfect Pynson but two volumes, of which
+one was promised him as a legacy by its present possessor, and the other
+he was resolved to buy, at whatever price, when Quisquilius's library
+should be sold. Hirsutus had no other reason for the valuing or
+slighting a book, than that it was printed in the Roman or the Gothic
+letter, nor any ideas but such as his favourite volumes had supplied;
+when he was serious he expatiated on the narratives "of Johan de
+Trevisa," and when he was merry, regaled us with a quotation from the
+"Shippe of Foles."
+
+While I was listening to this hoary student, Ferratus entered in a
+hurry, and informed us with the abruptness of ecstacy, that his set of
+halfpence was now complete; he had just received in a handful of change,
+the piece that he had so long been seeking, and could now defy mankind
+to outgo his collection of English copper.
+
+Chartophylax then observed how fatally human sagacity was sometimes
+baffled, and how often the most valuable discoveries are made by chance.
+He had employed himself and his emissaries seven years at great expense
+to perfect his series of Gazettes, but had long wanted a single paper,
+which, when he despaired of obtaining it, was sent him wrapped round a
+parcel of tobacco.
+
+Cantilenus turned all his thoughts upon old ballads, for he considered
+them as the genuine records of the national taste. He offered to shew me
+a copy of "The Children in the Wood," which he firmly believed to be of
+the first edition, and, by the help of which, the text might be freed
+from several corruptions, if this age of barbarity had any claim to such
+favours from him.
+
+Many were admitted into this society as inferior members, because they
+had collected old prints and neglected pamphlets, or possessed some
+fragment of antiquity, as the seal of an ancient corporation, the
+charter of a religious house, the genealogy of a family extinct, or a
+letter written in the reign of Elizabeth.
+
+Every one of these virtuosos looked on all his associates as wretches of
+depraved taste and narrow notions. Their conversation was, therefore,
+fretful and waspish, their behaviour brutal, their merriment bluntly
+sarcastick, and their seriousness gloomy and suspicious. They were
+totally ignorant of all that passes, or has lately passed, in the world;
+unable to discuss any question of religious, political, or military
+knowledge; equally strangers to science and politer learning, and
+without any wish to improve their minds, or any other pleasure than that
+of displaying rarities, of which they would not suffer others to make
+the proper use.
+
+Hirsutus graciously informed me, that the number of their society was
+limited, but that I might sometimes attend as an auditor. I was pleased
+to find myself in no danger of an honour, which I could not have
+willingly accepted, nor gracefully refused, and left them without any
+intention of returning; for I soon found that the suppression of those
+habits with which I was vitiated, required association with men very
+different from this solemn race.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+VIVACULUS.
+
+It is natural to feel grief or indignation when any thing necessary or
+useful is wantonly wasted, or negligently destroyed; and therefore my
+correspondent cannot be blamed for looking with uneasiness on the waste
+of life. Leisure and curiosity might soon make great advances in useful
+knowledge, were they not diverted by minute emulation and laborious
+trifles. It may, however, somewhat mollify his anger to reflect, that
+perhaps none of the assembly which he describes, was capable of any
+nobler employment, and that he who does his best, however little, is
+always to be distinguished from him who does nothing. Whatever busies
+the mind without corrupting it, has at least this use, that it rescues
+the day from idleness, and he that is never idle will not often be
+vicious.
+
+
+
+No. 178. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1751.
+
+ _Purs sanitatis velle sanuria fuit_. SENECA.
+
+ To yield to remedies is half the cure.
+
+Pythagoras is reported to have required from those whom he instructed in
+philosophy a probationary silence of five years. Whether this
+prohibition of speech extended to all the parts of this time, as seems
+generally to be supposed, or was to be observed only in the school or in
+the presence of their master, as is more probable, it was sufficient to
+discover the pupil's disposition; to try whether he was willing to pay
+the price of learning, or whether he was one of those whose ardour was
+rather violent than lasting, and who expected to grow wise on other
+terms than those of patience and obedience.
+
+Many of the blessings universally desired, are very frequently wanted,
+because most men, when they should labour, content themselves to
+complain, and rather linger in a state in which they cannot be at rest,
+than improve their condition by vigour and resolution.
+
+Providence has fixed the limits of human enjoyment by immoveable
+boundaries, and has set different gratifications at such a distance from
+each other, that no art or power can bring them together. This great law
+it is the business of every rational being to understand, that life may
+not pass away in an attempt to make contradictions consistent, to
+combine opposite qualities, and to unite things which the nature of
+their being must always keep asunder.
+
+Of two objects tempting at a distance on contrary sides, it is
+impossible to approach one but by receding from the other; by long
+deliberation and dilatory projects, they may be both lost, but can never
+be both gained. It is, therefore, necessary to compare them, and, when
+we have determined the preference, to withdraw our eyes and our thoughts
+at once from that which reason directs us to reject. This is more
+necessary, if that which we are forsaking has the power of delighting
+the senses, or firing the fancy. He that once turns aside to the
+allurements of unlawful pleasure, can have no security that he shall
+ever regain the paths of virtue.
+
+The philosophick goddess of Boethius, having related the story of
+Orpheus, who, when he had recovered his wife from the dominions of
+death, lost her again by looking back upon her in the confines of light,
+concludes with a very elegant and forcible application. "Whoever you are
+that endeavour to elevate your minds to the illuminations of Heaven,
+consider yourselves as represented in this fable; for he that is once so
+far overcome as to turn back his eyes towards the infernal caverns,
+loses at the first sight all that influence which attracted him on
+high:"
+
+ Vos haec fabula respicit,
+ Quicunque in superum diem
+ Mentem ducere quaeritis.
+ Nam qui Tartareum in specus
+ Victus lumina flexerit,
+ Quidquid praecipuum trahit,
+ Perdit, dum videt inferos.
+
+It may be observed, in general, that the future is purchased by the
+present. It is not possible to secure instant or permanent happiness but
+by the forbearance of some immediate gratification. This is so evidently
+true with regard to the whole of our existence, that all the precepts of
+theology have no other tendency than to enforce a life of faith; a life
+regulated not by our senses but our belief; a life in which pleasures
+are to be refused for fear of invisible punishments, and calamities
+sometimes to be sought, and always endured, in hope of rewards that
+shall be obtained in another state.
+
+Even if we take into our view only that particle of our duration which
+is terminated by the grave, it will be found that we cannot enjoy one
+part of life beyond the common limitations of pleasure, but by
+anticipating some of the satisfaction which should exhilarate the
+following years. The heat of youth may spread happiness into wild
+luxuriance, but the radical vigour requisite to make it perennial is
+exhausted, and all that can be hoped afterwards is languor and
+sterility.
+
+The reigning errour of mankind is, that we are not content with the
+conditions on which the goods of life are granted. No man is insensible
+of the value of knowledge, the advantages of health, or the convenience
+of plenty, but every day shews us those on whom the conviction is
+without effect.
+
+Knowledge is praised and desired by multitudes whom her charms could
+never rouse from the couch of sloth; whom the faintest invitation of
+pleasure draws away from their studies; to whom any other method of
+wearing out the day is more eligible than the use of books, and who are
+more easily engaged by any conversation, than such as may rectify their
+notions or enlarge their comprehension.
+
+Every man that has felt pain, knows how little all other comforts can
+gladden him to whom health is denied. Yet who is there does not
+sometimes hazard it for the enjoyment of an hour? All assemblies of
+jollity, all places of public entertainment, exhibit examples of
+strength wasting in riot, and beauty withering in irregularity; nor is
+it easy to enter a house in which part of the family is not groaning in
+repentance of past intemperance, and part admitting disease by
+negligence, or soliciting it by luxury.
+
+There is no pleasure which men of every age and sect have more generally
+agreed to mention with contempt, than the gratifications of the palate;
+an entertainment so far removed from intellectual happiness, that
+scarcely the most shameless of the sensual herd have dared to defend it:
+yet even to this, the lowest of our delights, to this, though neither
+quick nor lasting, is health with all its activity and sprightliness
+daily sacrificed; and for this are half the miseries endured which urge
+impatience to call on death.
+
+The whole world is put in motion by the wish for riches and the dread of
+poverty. Who, then, would not imagine that such conduct as will
+inevitably destroy what all are thus labouring to acquire, must
+generally be avoided? That he who spends more than he receives, must in
+time become indigent, cannot be doubted; but, how evident soever this
+consequence may appear, the spendthrift moves in the whirl of pleasure
+with too much rapidity to keep it before his eyes, and, in the
+intoxication of gaiety, grows every day poorer without any such sense of
+approaching ruin as is sufficient to wake him into caution.
+
+Many complaints are made of the misery of life; and indeed it must be
+confessed that we are subject to calamities by which the good and bad,
+the diligent and slothful, the vigilant and heedless, are equally
+afflicted. But surely, though some indulgence may be allowed to groans
+extorted by inevitable misery, no man has a right to repine at evils
+which, against warning, against experience, he deliberately and
+leisurely brings upon his own head; or to consider himself as debarred
+from happiness by such obstacles as resolution may break or dexterity
+may put aside.
+
+Great numbers who quarrel with their condition, have wanted not the
+power but the will to obtain a better state. They have never
+contemplated the difference between good and evil sufficiently to
+quicken aversion, or invigorate desire; they have indulged a drowsy
+thoughtlessness or giddy levity; have committed the balance of choice to
+the management of caprice; and when they have long accustomed themselves
+to receive all that chance offered them, without examination, lament at
+last that they find themselves deceived.
+
+
+
+No. 179. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1751.
+
+ _Perpetuo risu pulmonem agitare solebat_. JUV. Sat. x. 33.
+
+ Democritus would feed his spleen, and shake
+ His sides and shoulders till he felt them ake. DRYDEN
+
+Every man, says Tully, has two characters; one which he partakes with
+all mankind, and by which he is distinguished from brute animals;
+another which discriminates him from the rest of his own species, and
+impresses on him a manner and temper peculiar to himself; this
+particular character, if it be not repugnant to the laws of general
+humanity, it is always his business to cultivate and preserve.
+
+Every hour furnishes some confirmation of Tully's precept. It seldom
+happens, that an assembly of pleasure is so happily selected, but that
+some one finds admission, with whom the rest are deservedly offended;
+and it will appear, on a close inspection, that scarce any man becomes
+eminently disagreeable, but by a departure from his real character, and
+an attempt at something for which nature or education have left him
+unqualified.
+
+Ignorance or dulness have indeed no power of affording delight, but they
+never give disgust except when they assume the dignity of knowledge, or
+ape the sprightliness of wit. Awkwardness and inelegance have none of
+those attractions by which ease and politeness take possession of the
+heart; but ridicule and censure seldom rise against them, unless they
+appear associated with that confidence which belongs only to long
+acquaintance with the modes of life, and to consciousness of unfailing
+propriety of behaviour. Deformity itself is regarded with tenderness
+rather than aversion, when it does not attempt to deceive the sight by
+dress and decoration, and to seize upon fictitious claims the
+prerogatives of beauty.
+
+He that stands to contemplate the crowds that fill the streets of a
+populous city, will see many passengers whose air and motion it will be
+difficult to behold without contempt and laughter; but if he examines
+what are the appearances that thus powerfully excite his risibility, he
+will find among them neither poverty nor disease, nor any involuntary or
+painful defect. The disposition to derision and insult is awakened by
+the softness of foppery, the swell of insolence, the liveliness of
+levity, or the solemnity of grandeur; by the sprightly trip, the stately
+stalk, the formal strut, the lofty mien; by gestures intended to catch
+the eye, and by looks elaborately formed as evidences of importance.
+
+It, has, I think, been sometimes urged in favour of affectation, that it
+is only a mistake of the means to a good end, and that the intention
+with which it is practised is always to please. If all attempts to
+innovate the constitutional or habitual character have really proceeded
+from publick spirit and love of others, the world has hitherto been
+sufficiently ungrateful, since no return but scorn has yet been made to
+the most difficult of all enterprises, a contest with nature; nor has
+any pity been shown to the fatigues of labour which never succeeded, and
+the uneasiness of disguise by which nothing was concealed.
+
+It seems therefore to be determined by the general suffrage of mankind,
+that he who decks himself in adscititious qualities rather purposes to
+command applause than impart pleasure: and he is therefore treated as a
+man who, by an unreasonable ambition, usurps the place in society to
+which he has no right. Praise is seldom paid with willingness even to
+incontestable merit, and it can be no wonder that he who calls for it
+without desert is repulsed with universal indignation.
+
+Affectation naturally counterfeits those excellencies which are placed
+at the greatest distance from possibility of attainment. We are
+conscious of our own defects, and eagerly endeavour to supply them by
+artificial excellence; nor would such efforts be wholly without excuse,
+were they not often excited by ornamental trifles, which he, that thus
+anxiously struggles for the reputation of possessing them, would not
+have been known to want, had not his industry quickened observation.
+
+Gelasimus passed the first part of his life in academical privacy and
+rural retirement, without any other conversation than that of scholars,
+grave, studious, and abstracted as himself. He cultivated the
+mathematical sciences with indefatigable diligence, discovered many
+useful theorems, discussed with great accuracy the resistance of fluids,
+and, though his priority was not generally acknowledged, was the first
+who fully explained all the properties of the catenarian curve.
+
+Learning, when if rises to eminence, will be observed in time, whatever
+mists may happen to surround it. Gelasimus, in his forty-ninth year, was
+distinguished by those who have the rewards of knowledge in their hands,
+and called out to display his acquisitions for the honour of his
+country, and add dignity by his presence to philosophical assemblies. As
+he did not suspect his unfitness for common affairs, he fell no
+reluctance to obey the invitation, and what he did not feel he had yet
+too much honesty to feign. He entered into the world as a larger and
+more populous college, where his performances would be more publick, and
+his renown farther extended; and imagined that he should find his
+reputation universally prevalent, and the influence of learning every
+where the same.
+
+His merit introduced him to splendid tables and elegant acquaintance;
+but he did not find himself always qualified to join in the
+conversation. He was distressed by civilities, which he knew not how to
+repay, and entangled in many ceremonial perplexities, from which his
+books and diagrams could not extricate him. He was sometimes unluckily
+engaged in disputes with ladies, with whom algebraick axioms had no
+great weight, and saw many whose favour and esteem he could not but
+desire, to whom he was very little recommended by his theories of the
+tides, or his approximations to the quadrature of the circle.
+
+Gelasimus did not want penetration to discover, that no charm was more
+generally irresistible than that of easy facetiousness and flowing
+hilarity. He saw that diversion was more frequently welcome than
+improvement; that authority and seriousness were rather feared than
+loved; and that the grave scholar was a kind of imperious ally, hastily
+dismissed when his assistance was no longer necessary. He came to a
+sudden resolution of throwing off those cumbrous ornaments of learning
+which hindered his reception, and commenced a man of wit and jocularity.
+Utterly unacquainted with every topick of merriment, ignorant of the
+modes and follies, the vices and virtues of mankind, and unfurnished
+with any ideas but such as Pappas and Archimedes had given him, he began
+to silence all inquiries with a jest instead of a solution, extended his
+face with a grin, which he mistook for a smile, and in the place of
+scientifick discourse, retailed in a new language, formed between the
+college and the tavern, the intelligence of the newspaper.
+
+Laughter, he knew, was a token of alacrity; and, therefore, whatever he
+said or heard, he was careful not to fail in that great duty of a wit.
+If he asked or told the hour of the day, if he complained of heat or
+cold, stirred the fire, or filled a glass, removed his chair, or snuffed
+a candle, he always found some occasion to laugh. The jest was indeed a
+secret to all but himself; but habitual confidence in his own
+discernment hindered him from suspecting any weakness or mistake. He
+wondered that his wit was so little understood, but expected that his
+audience would comprehend it by degrees, and persisted all his life to
+shew by gross buffoonery, how little the strongest faculties can perform
+beyond the limits of their own province.
+
+
+
+No. 180. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Taut eidos sophos isthi, mataen d' Epikouron eason
+ Poy to kenon zaetein, kai tines ai monades.] AUTOMEDON.
+
+ On life, on morals, be thy thoughts employ'd;
+ Leave to the schools their atoms and their void.
+
+It is somewhere related by Le Clerc, that a wealthy trader of good
+understanding, having the common ambition to breed his son a scholar,
+carried him to an university, resolving to use his own judgment in the
+choice of a tutor. He had been taught, by whatever intelligence, the
+nearest way to the heart of an academick, and at his arrival entertained
+all who came about him with such profusion, that the professors were
+lured by the smell of his table from their books, and flocked round him
+with all the cringes of awkward complaisance. This eagerness answered
+the merchant's purpose: he glutted them with delicacies, and softened
+them with caresses, till he prevailed upon one after another to open his
+bosom, and make a discovery of his competitions, jealousies, and
+resentments. Having thus learned each man's character, partly from
+himself, and partly from his acquaintances, he resolved to find some
+other education for his son, and went away convinced, that a scholastick
+life has no other tendency than to vitiate the morals and contract the
+understanding: nor would he afterwards hear with patience the praises of
+the ancient authors, being persuaded that scholars of all ages must have
+been the same, and that Xenophon and Cicero were professors of some
+former university, and therefore mean and selfish, ignorant and servile,
+like those whom he had lately visited and forsaken.
+
+Envy, curiosity, and a sense of the imperfection of our present state,
+incline us to estimate the advantages which are in the possession of
+others above their real value. Every one must have remarked, what powers
+and prerogatives the vulgar imagine to be conferred by learning. A man
+of science is expected to excel the unlettered and unenlightened even on
+occasions where literature is of no use, and among weak minds, loses
+part of his reverence, by discovering no superiority in those parts of
+life, in which all are unavoidably equal; as when a monarch makes a
+progress to the remoter provinces, the rustics are said sometimes to
+wonder that they find him of the same size with themselves.
+
+These demands of prejudice and folly can never be satisfied; and
+therefore many of the imputations which learning suffers from
+disappointed ignorance, are without reproach. But there are some
+failures, to which men of study are peculiarly exposed. Every condition
+has its disadvantages. The circle of knowledge is too wide for the most
+active and diligent intellect, and while science is pursued, other
+accomplishments are neglected; as a small garrison must leave one part
+of an extensive fortress naked, when an alarm calls them to another.
+
+The learned, however, might generally support their dignity with more
+success, if they suffered not themselves to be misled by the desire of
+superfluous attainments. Raphael, in return to Adam's inquiries into the
+courses of the stars, and the revolutions of heaven, counsels him to
+withdraw his mind from idle speculations, and employ his faculties upon
+nearer and more interesting objects, the survey of his own life, the
+subjection of his passions, the knowledge of duties which must daily be
+performed, and the detection of dangers which must daily be incurred.
+
+This angelick counsel every man of letters should always have before
+him. He that devotes himself to retired study naturally sinks from
+omission to forgetfulness of social duties; he must be therefore
+sometimes awakened and recalled to the general condition of mankind.
+
+I am far from any intention to limit curiosity, or confine the labours
+of learning to arts of immediate and necessary use. It is only from the
+various essays of experimental industry, and the vague excursions of
+minds sent out upon discovery, that any advancement of knowledge can be
+expected; and, though many must be disappointed in their labours, yet
+they are not to be charged with having spent their time in vain; their
+example contributed to inspire emulation, and their miscarriages taught
+others the way to success.
+
+But the distant hope of being one day useful or eminent, ought not to
+mislead us too far from that study which is equally requisite to the
+great and mean, to the celebrated and obscure; the art of moderating the
+desires, of repressing the appetites, and of conciliating or retaining
+the favour of mankind.
+
+No man can imagine the course of his own life, or the conduct of the
+world around him, unworthy his attention; yet, among the sons of
+learning, many seem to have thought of every thing rather than of
+themselves, and to have observed every thing but what passes before
+their eyes: many who toil through the intricacy of complicated systems,
+are insuperably embarrassed with the least perplexity in common affairs;
+many who compare the actions, and ascertain the characters of ancient
+heroes, let their own days glide away without examination, and suffer
+vicious habits to encroach upon their minds without resistance or
+detection.
+
+The most frequent reproach of the scholastick race is the want of
+fortitude, not martial but philosophick. Men bred in shades and silence,
+taught to immure themselves at sunset, and accustomed to no other weapon
+than syllogism, may be allowed to feel terrour at personal danger, and
+to be disconcerted by tumult and alarm. But why should he whose life is
+spent in contemplation, and whose business is only to discover truth, be
+unable to rectify the fallacies of imagination, or contend successfully
+against prejudice and passion? To what end has he read and meditated, if
+he gives up his understanding to false appearances, and suffers himself
+to be enslaved by fear of evils to which only folly or vanity can expose
+him, or elated by advantages to which, as they are equally conferred
+upon the good and bad, no real dignity is annexed.
+
+Such, however, is the state of the world, that the most obsequious of
+the slaves of pride, the most rapturous of the gazers upon wealth, the
+most officious of the whisperers of greatness, are collected from
+seminaries appropriated to the study of wisdom and of virtue, where it
+was intended that appetite should learn to be content with little, and
+that hope should aspire only to honours which no human power can give or
+take away[j].
+
+The student, when he comes forth into the world, instead of
+congratulating himself upon his exemption from the errours of those
+whose opinions have been formed by accident or custom, and who live
+without any certain principles of conduct, is commonly in haste to
+mingle with the multitude, and shew his sprightliness and ductility by
+an expeditious compliance with fashions or vices. The first smile of a
+man, whose fortune gives him power to reward his dependants, commonly
+enchants him beyond resistance; the glare of equipage, the sweets of
+luxury, the liberality of general promises, the softness of habitual
+affability, fill his imagination; and he soon ceases to have any other
+wish than to be well received, or any measure of right and wrong but the
+opinion of his patron.
+
+A man flattered and obeyed, learns to exact grosser adulation, and
+enjoin lower submission. Neither our virtues nor vices are all our own.
+If there were no cowardice, there would be little insolence; pride
+cannot rise to any great degree, but by the concurrence of blandishment
+or the sufferance of tameness. The wretch who would shrink and crouch
+before one that should dart his eyes upon him with the spirit of natural
+equality, becomes capricious and tyrannical when he sees himself
+approached with a downcast look, and hears the soft address of awe and
+servility. To those who are willing to purchase favour by cringes and
+compliance, is to be imputed the haughtiness that leaves nothing to be
+hoped by firmness and integrity.
+
+If, instead of wandering after the meteors of philosophy, which fill the
+world with splendour for a while, and then sink and are forgotten, the
+candidates of learning fixed their eyes upon the permanent lustre of
+moral and religious truth, they would find a more certain direction to
+happiness. A little plausibility of discourse, and acquaintance with
+unnecessary speculations, is dearly purchased, when it excludes those
+instructions which fortify the heart with resolution, and exalt the
+spirit to independence.
+
+[Footnote j: "Such are a sort of sacrilegious ministers in the temple of
+intellect. They profane its shew-bread to pamper the palate, its
+everlasting lamp they use to light unholy fires within their breast, and
+show them the way to the sensual chambers of sense and worldliness."
+IRVING.]
+
+
+
+No. 181. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1751.
+
+ _--Neu fluitem dubue spe pendulus horae_. HOR. Lib. i. Ep. xviii. 110.
+
+ Nor let me float in fortune's pow'r,
+ Dependent on the future hour. FRANCIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+As I have passed much of my life in disquiet and suspense, and lost many
+opportunities of advantage by a passion which I have reason to believe
+prevalent in different degrees over a great part of mankind, I cannot
+but think myself well qualified to warn those who are yet uncaptivated,
+of the danger which they incur by placing themselves within its
+influence.
+
+I served an apprenticeship to a linen-draper, with uncommon reputation
+for diligence and fidelity; and at the age of three-and-twenty opened a
+shop for myself with a large stock, and such credit among all the
+merchants, who were acquainted with my master, that I could command
+whatever was imported curious or valuable. For five years I proceeded
+with success proportionate to close application and untainted integrity;
+was a daring bidder at every sale; always paid my notes before they were
+due; and advanced so fast in commercial reputation, that I was
+proverbially marked out as the model of young traders, and every one
+expected that a few years would make me an alderman.
+
+In this course of even prosperity, I was one day persuaded to buy a
+ticket in the lottery. The sum was inconsiderable, part was to be repaid
+though fortune might fail to favour me, and therefore my established
+maxims of frugality did not restrain me from so trifling an experiment.
+The ticket lay almost forgotten till the time at which every man's fate
+was to be determined; nor did the affair even then seem of any
+importance, till I discovered by the publick papers that the number next
+to mine had conferred the great prize.
+
+My heart leaped at the thought of such an approach to sudden riches,
+which I considered myself, however contrarily to the laws of
+computation, as having missed by a single chance; and I could not
+forbear to revolve the consequences which such a bounteous allotment
+would have produced, if it had happened to me. This dream of felicity,
+by degrees, took possession of my imagination. The great delight of my
+solitary hours was to purchase an estate, and form plantations with
+money which once might have been mine, and I never met my friends but I
+spoiled all their merriment by perpetual complaints of my ill luck.
+
+At length another lottery was opened, and I had now so heated my
+imagination with the prospect of a prize, that I should have pressed
+among the first purchasers, had not my ardour been withheld by
+deliberation upon the probability of success from one ticket rather than
+another. I hesitated long between even and odd; considered the square
+and cubick numbers through the lottery; examined all those to which good
+luck had been hitherto annexed; and at last fixed upon one, which, by
+some secret relation to the events of my life, I thought predestined to
+make me happy. Delay in great affairs is often mischievous; the ticket
+was sold, and its possessor could not be found.
+
+I returned to my conjectures, and after many arts of prognostication,
+fixed upon another chance, but with less confidence. Never did captive,
+heir, or lover, feel so much vexation from the slow pace of time, as I
+suffered between the purchase of my ticket and the distribution of the
+prizes. I solaced my uneasiness as well as I could, by frequent
+contemplation of approaching happiness; when the sun rose I knew it
+would set, and congratulated myself at night that I was so much nearer
+to my wishes. At last the day came, my ticket appeared, and rewarded all
+my care and sagacity with a despicable prize of fifty pounds.
+
+My friends, who honestly rejoiced upon my success, were very coldly
+received; I hid myself a fortnight in the country, that my chagrin might
+fume away without observation, and then returning to my shop, began to
+listen after another lottery.
+
+With the news of a lottery I was soon gratified, and having now found
+the vanity of conjecture, and inefficacy of computation, I resolved to
+take the prize by violence, and therefore bought forty tickets, not
+omitting, however, to divide them between the even and odd numbers, that
+I might not miss the lucky class. Many conclusions did I form, and many
+experiments did I try, to determine from which of those tickets I might
+most reasonably expect riches. At last, being unable to satisfy myself
+by any modes of reasoning, I wrote the numbers upon dice, and allotted
+five hours every day to the amusement of throwing them in a garret; and,
+examining the event by an exact register, found, on the evening before
+the lottery was drawn, that one of my numbers had been turned up five
+times more than any of the rest in three hundred and thirty thousand
+throws.
+
+This experiment was fallacious; the first day presented the hopeful
+ticket, a detestable blank. The rest came out with different fortune,
+and in conclusion I lost thirty pounds by this great adventure.
+
+I had now wholly changed the cast of my behaviour and the conduct of my
+life. The shop was for the most part abandoned to my servants, and if I
+entered it, my thoughts were so engrossed by my tickets, that I scarcely
+heard or answered a question, but considered every customer as an
+intruder upon my meditations, whom I was in haste to despatch. I mistook
+the price of my goods, committed blunders in my bills, forgot to file my
+receipts, and neglected to regulate my books. My acquaintances by
+degrees began to fall away; but I perceived the decline of my business
+with little emotion, because whatever deficience there might be in my
+gains, I expected the next lottery to supply.
+
+Miscarriage naturally produces diffidence; I began now to seek
+assistance against ill luck, by an alliance with those that had been
+more successful. I inquired diligently at what office any prize had been
+sold, that I might purchase of a propitious vender; solicited those who
+had been fortunate in former lotteries, to partake with me in my new
+tickets; and whenever I met with one that had in any event of his life
+been eminently prosperous, I invited him to take a larger share. I had,
+by this rule of conduct, so diffused my interest, that I had a fourth
+part of fifteen tickets, an eighth of forty, and a sixteenth of ninety.
+
+I waited for the decision of my fate with my former palpitations, and
+looked upon the business of my trade with the usual neglect. The wheel
+at last was turned, and its revolutions brought me a long succession of
+sorrows and disappointments. I indeed often partook of a small prize,
+and the loss of one day was generally balanced by the gain of the next;
+but my desires yet remained unsatisfied, and when one of my chances had
+failed, all my expectation was suspended on those which remained yet
+undetermined. At last a prize of five thousand pounds was proclaimed; I
+caught fire at the cry, and inquiring the number, found it to be one of
+my own tickets, which I had divided among those on whose luck I
+depended, and of which I had retained only a sixteenth part.
+
+You will easily judge with what detestation of himself, a man thus
+intent upon gain reflected that he had sold a prize which was once in
+his possession. It was to no purpose, that I represented to my mind the
+impossibility of recalling the past, or the folly of condemning an act,
+which only its event, an event which no human intelligence could
+foresee, proved to be wrong. The prize which, though put in my hands,
+had been suffered to slip from me, filled me with anguish, and knowing
+that complaint would only expose me to ridicule, I gave myself up
+silently to grief, and lost by degrees my appetite and my rest.
+
+My indisposition soon became visible; I was visited by my friends, and
+among them by Eumathes, a clergyman, whose piety and learning gave him
+such an ascendant over me, that I could not refuse to open my heart.
+There are, said he, few minds sufficiently firm to be trusted in the
+hands of chance. Whoever finds himself inclined to anticipate futurity,
+and exalt possibility to certainty, should avoid every kind of casual
+adventure, since his grief must be always proportionate to his hope. You
+have long wasted that time, which, by a proper application, would have
+certainly, though moderately, increased your fortune, in a laborious and
+anxious pursuit of a species of gain, which no labour or anxiety, no art
+or expedient, can secure or promote. You are now fretting away your life
+in repentance of an act, against which repentance can give no caution,
+but to avoid the occasion of committing it. Rouse from this lazy dream
+of fortuitous riches, which, if obtained, you could scarcely have
+enjoyed, because they could confer no consciousness of desert; return to
+rational and manly industry, and consider the mere gift of luck as below
+the care of a wise man.
+
+
+
+No. 182. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1751.
+
+ _--Dives qui fieri vult,
+ Et cilo vult fieri.--_ JUV. Sat. xiv. 176
+
+ The lust of wealth can never bear delay.
+
+It has been observed in a late paper, that we are unreasonably desirous
+to separate the goods of life from those evils which Providence has
+connected with them, and to catch advantages without paying the price at
+which they are offered us. Every man wishes to be rich, but very few
+have the powers necessary to raise a sudden fortune, either by new
+discoveries, or by superiority of skill, in any necessary employment;
+and among lower understandings, many want the firmness and industry
+requisite to regular gain and gradual acquisitions.
+
+From the hope of enjoying affluence by methods more compendious than
+those of labour, and more generally practicable than those of genius,
+proceeds the common inclination to experiment and hazard, and that
+willingness to snatch all opportunities of growing rich by chance,
+which, when it has once taken possession of the mind, is seldom driven
+out either by time or argument, but continues to waste life in perpetual
+delusion, and generally ends in wretchedness and want.
+
+The folly of untimely exultation and visionary prosperity, is by no
+means peculiar to the purchasers of tickets; there are multitudes whose
+life is nothing but a continual lottery; who are always within a few
+months of plenty and happiness, and how often soever they are mocked
+with blanks, expect a prize from the next adventure.
+
+Among the most resolute and ardent of the votaries of chance, may be
+numbered the mortals whose hope is to raise themselves by a wealthy
+match; who lay out all their industry on the assiduities of courtship,
+and sleep and wake with no other ideas than of treats, compliments,
+guardians and rivals.
+
+One of the most indefatigable of this class, is my old friend Leviculus,
+whom I have never known for thirty years without some matrimonial
+project of advantage. Leviculus was bred under a merchant, and by the
+graces of his person, the sprightliness of his prattle, and the neatness
+of his dress, so much enamoured his master's second daughter, a girl of
+sixteen, that she declared her resolution to have no other husband. Her
+father, after having chidden her for undutifulness, consented to the
+match, not much to the satisfaction of Leviculus, who was sufficiently
+elated with his conquest to think himself entitled to a larger fortune.
+He was, however, soon rid of his perplexity, for his mistress died
+before their marriage.
+
+He was now so well satisfied with his own accomplishments, that he
+determined to commence fortune-hunter; and when his apprenticeship
+expired, instead of beginning, as was expected, to walk the Exchange
+with a face of importance, or associating himself with those who were
+most eminent for their knowledge of the stocks, he at once threw off the
+solemnity of the counting-house, equipped himself with a modish wig,
+listened to wits in coffee-houses, passed his evenings behind the scenes
+in the theatres, learned the names of beauties of quality, hummed the
+last stanzas of fashionable songs, talked with familiarity of high play,
+boasted of his achievements upon drawers and coachmen, was often brought
+to his lodgings at midnight in a chair, told with negligence and
+jocularity of bilking a tailor, and now and then let fly a shrewd jest
+at a sober citizen.
+
+Thus furnished with irresistible artillery, he turned his batteries upon
+the female world, and, in the first warmth of self-approbation, proposed
+no less than the possession of riches and beauty united. He therefore
+paid his civilities to Flavilla, the only daughter of a wealthy
+shop-keeper, who not being accustomed to amorous blandishments, or
+respectful addresses, was delighted with the novelty of love, and easily
+suffered him to conduct her to the play, and to meet her where she
+visited. Leviculus did not doubt but her father, however offended by a
+clandestine marriage, would soon be reconciled by the tears of his
+daughter, and the merit of his son-in-law, and was in haste to conclude
+the affair. But the lady liked better to be courted than married, and
+kept him three years in uncertainty and attendance. At last she fell in
+love with a young ensign at a ball, and having danced with him all
+night, married him in the morning.
+
+Leviculus, to avoid the ridicule of his companions, took a journey to a
+small estate in the country, where, after his usual inquiries concerning
+the nymphs in the neighbourhood, he found it proper to fall in love with
+Altilia, a maiden lady, twenty years older than himself, for whose
+favour fifteen nephews and nieces were in perpetual contention. They
+hovered round her with such jealous officiousness, as scarcely left a
+moment vacant for a lover. Leviculus, nevertheless, discovered his
+passion in a letter, and Altilia could not withstand the pleasure of
+hearing vows and sighs, and flatteries and protestations. She admitted
+his visits, enjoyed for five years the happiness of keeping all her
+expectants in perpetual alarms, and amused herself with the various
+stratagems which were practised to disengage her affections. Sometimes
+she was advised with great earnestness to travel for her health, and
+sometimes entreated to keep her brother's house. Many stories were
+spread to the disadvantage of Leviculus, by which she commonly seemed
+affected for a time, but took care soon afterwards to express her
+conviction of their falsehood. But being at last satiated with this
+ludicrous tyranny, she told her lover, when he pressed for the reward of
+his services, that she was very sensible of his merit, but was resolved
+not to impoverish an ancient family.
+
+He then returned to the town, and soon after his arrival, became
+acquainted with Latronia, a lady distinguished by the elegance of her
+equipage, and the regularity of her conduct. Her wealth was evident in
+her magnificence, and her prudence in her economy, and therefore
+Leviculus, who had scarcely confidence to solicit her favour, readily
+acquitted fortune of her former debts, when he found himself
+distinguished by her with such marks of preference as a woman of modesty
+is allowed to give. He now grew bolder, and ventured to breathe out his
+impatience before her. She heard him without resentment, in time
+permitted him to hope for happiness, and at last fixed the nuptial day,
+without any distrustful reserve of pin-money, or sordid stipulations for
+jointure, and settlements.
+
+Leviculus was triumphing on the eve of marriage, when he heard on the
+stairs the voice of Latronia's maid, whom frequent bribes had secured in
+his service. She soon burst into his room, and told him that she could
+not suffer him to be longer deceived; that her mistress was now spending
+the last payment of her fortune, and was only supported in her expense
+by the credit of his estate. Leviculus shuddered to see himself so near
+a precipice, and found that he was indebted for his escape to the
+resentment of the maid, who having assisted Latronia to gain the
+conquest, quarrelled with her at last about the plunder.
+
+Leviculus was now hopeless and disconsolate, till one Sunday he saw a
+lady in the Mall, whom her dress declared a widow, and whom, by the
+jolting prance of her gait, and the broad resplendence of her
+countenance, he guessed to have lately buried some prosperous citizen.
+He followed her home, and found her to be no less than the relict of
+Prune the grocer, who, having no children, had bequeathed to her all his
+debts and dues, and his estates real and personal. No formality was
+necessary in addressing madam Prune, and therefore Leviculus went next
+morning without an introductor. His declaration was received with a loud
+laugh; she then collected her countenance, wondered at his impudence,
+asked if he knew to whom he was talking, then shewed him the door, and
+again laughed to find him confused. Leviculus discovered that this
+coarseness was nothing more than the coquetry of Cornhill, and next day
+returned to the attack. He soon grew familiar to her dialect, and in a
+few weeks heard, without any emotion, hints of gay clothes with empty
+pockets; concurred in many sage remarks on the regard due to people of
+property; and agreed with her in detestation of the ladies at the other
+end of the town, who pinched their bellies to buy fine laces, and then
+pretended to laugh at the city.
+
+He sometimes presumed to mention marriage; but was always answered with
+a slap, a hoot, and a flounce. At last he began to press her closer, and
+thought himself more favourably received; but going one morning, with a
+resolution to trifle no longer, he found her gone to church with a young
+journeyman from the neighbouring shop, of whom she had become enamoured
+at her window.
+
+In these, and a thousand intermediate adventures, has Leviculus spent
+his time, till he is now grown grey with age, fatigue, and
+disappointment. He begins at last to find that success is not to be
+expected, and being unfit for any employment that might improve his
+fortune, and unfurnished with any arts that might amuse his leisure, is
+condemned to wear out a tasteless life in narratives which few will
+hear, and complaints which none will pity.
+
+
+
+No. 183. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1751.
+
+ _Nidla fides regni sociis, omnisque potestas
+ Impatiens consortis erit_. LUCAN. Lib. i. 92.
+
+ No faith of partnership dominion owns;
+ Still discord hovers o'er divided thrones.
+
+The hostility perpetually exercised between one man and another, is
+caused by the desire of many for that which only few can possess. Every
+man would be rich, powerful, and famous; yet fame, power, and riches are
+only the names of relative conditions, which imply the obscurity,
+dependance, and poverty of greater numbers. This universal and incessant
+competition produces injury and malice by two motives, interest and
+envy; the prospect of adding to our possessions what we can take from
+others, and the hope of alleviating the sense of our disparity by
+lessening others, though we gain nothing to ourselves.
+
+Of these two malignant and destructive powers, it seems probable at the
+first view, that interest has the strongest and most extensive
+influence. It is easy to conceive that opportunities to seize what has
+been long wanted, may excite desires almost irresistible; but surely the
+same eagerness cannot be kindled by an accidental power of destroying
+that which gives happiness to another. It must be more natural to rob
+for gain, than to ravage only for mischief.
+
+Yet I am inclined to believe, that the great law of mutual benevolence
+is oftener violated by envy than by interest, and that most of the
+misery which the defamation of blameless actions, or the obstruction of
+honest endeavours, brings upon the world, is inflicted by men that
+propose no advantage to themselves but the satisfaction of poisoning the
+banquet which they cannot taste, and blasting the harvest which they
+have no right to reap.
+
+Interest can diffuse itself but to a narrow compass. The number is never
+large of those who can hope to fill the posts of degraded power, catch
+the fragments of shattered fortune, or succeed to the honours of
+depreciated beauty. But the empire of envy has no limits, as it requires
+to its influence very little help from external circumstances. Envy may
+always be produced by idleness and pride, and in what place will they
+not be found?
+
+Interest requires some qualities not universally bestowed. The ruin of
+another will produce no profit to him who has not discernment to mark
+his advantage, courage to seize, and activity to pursue it; but the cold
+malignity of envy may be exerted in a torpid and quiescent state, amidst
+the gloom of stupidity, in the coverts of cowardice. He that falls by
+the attacks of interest, is torn by hungry tigers; he may discover and
+resist his enemies. He that perishes in the ambushes of envy, is
+destroyed by unknown and invisible assailants, and dies like a man
+suffocated by a poisonous vapour, without knowledge of his danger, or
+possibility of contest.
+
+Interest is seldom pursued but at some hazard. He that hopes to gain
+much, has commonly something to lose, and when he ventures to attack
+superiority, if he fails to conquer, is irrecoverably crushed. But envy
+may act without expense or danger. To spread suspicion, to invent
+calumnies, to propagate scandal, requires neither labour nor courage. It
+is easy for the author of a lie, however malignant, to escape detection,
+and infamy needs very little industry to assist its circulation.
+
+Envy is almost the only vice which is practicable at all times, and in
+every place; the only passion which can never lie quiet for want of
+irritation: its effects therefore are every where discoverable, and its
+attempts always to be dreaded.
+
+It is impossible to mention a name which any advantageous distinction
+has made eminent, but some latent animosity will burst out. The wealthy
+trader, however he may abstract himself from publick affairs, will never
+want those who hint, with Shylock, that ships are but boards. The
+beauty, adorned only with the unambitious graces of innocence and
+modesty, provokes, whenever she appears, a thousand murmurs of
+detraction. The genius, even when he endeavours only to entertain or
+instruct, yet suffers persecution from innumerable criticks, whose
+acrimony is excited merely by the pain of seeing others pleased, and of
+hearing applauses which another enjoys.
+
+The frequency of envy makes it so familiar, that it escapes our notice;
+nor do we often reflect upon its turpitude or malignity, till we happen
+to feel its influence. When he that has given no provocation to malice,
+but by attempting to excel, finds himself pursued by multitudes whom he
+never saw, with all the implacability of personal resentment; when he
+perceives clamour and malice let loose upon him as a publick enemy, and
+incited by every stratagem of defamation; when he hears the misfortunes
+of his family, or the follies of his youth, exposed to the world; and
+every failure of conduct, or defect of nature, aggravated and ridiculed;
+he then learns to abhor those artifices at which he only laughed before,
+and discovers how much the happiness of life would be advanced by the
+eradication of envy from the human heart.
+
+Envy is, indeed, a stubborn weed of the mind, and seldom yields to the
+culture of philosophy. There are, however, considerations, which, if
+carefully implanted and diligently propagated, might in time overpower
+and repress it, since no one can nurse it for the sake of pleasure, as
+its effects are only shame, anguish, and perturbation. It is above all
+other vices inconsistent with the character of a social being, because
+it sacrifices truth and kindness to very weak temptations. He that
+plunders a wealthy neighbour gains as much as he takes away, and may
+improve his own condition in the same proportion as he impairs
+another's; but he that blasts a flourishing reputation, must be content
+with a small dividend of additional fame, so small as can afford very
+little consolation to balance the guilt by which it is obtained.
+
+I have hitherto avoided that dangerous and empirical morality, which
+cures one vice by means of another. But envy is so base and detestable,
+so vile in its original, and so pernicious in its effects, that the
+predominance of almost any other quality is to be preferred. It is one
+of those lawless enemies of society, against which poisoned arrows may
+honestly be used. Let it therefore be constantly remembered, that
+whoever envies another, confesses his superiority, and let those be
+reformed by their pride who have lost their virtue.
+
+It is no slight aggravation of the injuries which envy incites, that
+they are committed against those who have given no intentional
+provocation; and that the sufferer is often marked out for ruin, not
+because he has failed in any duty, but because he has dared to do more
+than was required.
+
+Almost every other crime is practised by the help of some quality which
+might have produced esteem or love, if it had been well employed; but
+envy is mere unmixed and genuine evil; it pursues a hateful end by
+despicable means, and desires not so much its own happiness as another's
+misery. To avoid depravity like this, it is not necessary that any one
+should aspire to heroism or sanctity, but only that he should resolve
+not to quit the rank which nature assigns him, and wish to maintain the
+dignity of a human being.
+
+
+
+No. 184. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1751.
+
+ _Permittes ipsis expendere numinibus, quid
+ Conveniat nobis, rebusque sit utile nostris_. JUV. Sat. x. 347.
+
+ Intrust thy fortune to the pow'rs above;
+ Leave them to manage for thee, and to grant
+ What their unerring wisdom sees thee want. DRYDEN.
+
+As every scheme of life, so every form of writing, has its advantages
+and inconveniencies, though not mingled in the same proportions. The
+writer of essays escapes many embarrassments to which a large work would
+have exposed him; he seldom harasses his reason with long trains of
+consequences, dims his eyes with the perusal of antiquated volumes, or
+burthens his memory with great accumulations of preparatory knowledge. A
+careless glance upon a favourite author, or transient survey of the
+varieties of life, is sufficient to supply the first hint or seminal
+idea, which, enlarged by the gradual accretion of matter stored in the
+mind, is by the warmth of fancy easily expanded into flowers, and
+sometimes ripened into fruit.
+
+The most frequent difficulty by which the authors of these petty
+compositions are distressed, arises from the perpetual demand of novelty
+and change. The compiler of a system of science lays his invention at
+rest, and employs only his judgment, the faculty exerted with least
+fatigue. Even the relator of feigned adventures, when once the principal
+characters are established, and the great events regularly connected,
+finds incidents and episodes crowding upon his mind; every change opens
+new views, and the latter part of the story grows without labour out of
+the former. But he that attempts to entertain his reader with
+unconnected pieces, finds the irksomeness of his task rather increased
+than lessened by every production. The day calls afresh upon him for a
+new topick, and he is again obliged to choose, without any principle to
+regulate his choice.
+
+It is indeed true, that there is seldom any necessity of looking far, or
+inquiring long for a proper subject. Every diversity of art or nature,
+every publick blessing or calamity, every domestick pain or
+gratification, every sally of caprice, blunder of absurdity, or
+stratagem of affectation, may supply matter to him whose only rule is to
+avoid uniformity. But it often happens, that the judgment is distracted
+with boundless multiplicity, the imagination ranges from one design to
+another, and the hours pass imperceptibly away, till the composition can
+be no longer delayed, and necessity enforces the use of those thoughts
+which then happen to be at hand. The mind, rejoicing at deliverance on
+any terms from perplexity and suspense, applies herself vigorously to
+the work before her, collects embellishments and illustrations, and
+sometimes finishes, with great elegance and happiness, what in a state
+of ease and leisure she never had begun.
+
+It is not commonly observed, how much, even of actions, considered as
+particularly subject to choice, is to be attributed to accident, or some
+cause out of our own power, by whatever name it be distinguished. To
+close tedious deliberations with hasty resolves, and after long
+consultations with reason to refer the question to caprice, is by no
+means peculiar to the essayist. Let him that peruses this paper review
+the series of his life, and inquire how he was placed in his present
+condition. He will find, that of the good or ill which he has
+experienced, a great part came unexpected, without any visible
+gradations of approach; that every event has been influenced by causes
+acting without his intervention; and that whenever he pretended to the
+prerogative of foresight, he was mortified with new conviction of the
+shortness of his views.
+
+The busy, the ambitious, the inconstant, and the adventurous, may be
+said to throw themselves by design into the arms of fortune, and
+voluntarily to quit the power of governing themselves; they engage in a
+course of life in which little can be ascertained by previous measures;
+nor is it any wonder that their time is passed between elation and
+despondency, hope and disappointment.
+
+Some there are who appear to walk the road of life with more
+circumspection, and make no step till they think themselves secure from
+the hazard of a precipice, when neither pleasure nor profit can tempt
+them from the beaten path; who refuse to climb lest they should fall, or
+to run lest they should stumble, and move slowly forward without any
+compliance with those passions by which the heady and vehement are
+seduced and betrayed.
+
+Yet even the timorous prudence of this judicious class is far from
+exempting them from the dominion of chance, a subtle and insidious
+power, who will intrude upon privacy and embarrass caution. No course of
+life is so prescribed and limited, but that many actions must result
+from arbitrary election. Every one must form the general plan of his
+conduct by his own reflections; he must resolve whether he will
+endeavour at riches or at content; whether he will exercise private or
+publick virtues; whether he will labour for the general benefit of
+mankind, or contract his beneficence to his family and dependants.
+
+This question has long exercised the schools of philosophy, but remains
+yet undecided; and what hope is there that a young man, unacquainted
+with the arguments on either side, should determine his own destiny
+otherwise than by chance?
+
+When chance has given him a partner of his bed, whom he prefers to all
+other women, without any proof of superior desert, chance must again
+direct him in the education of his children; for, who was ever able to
+convince himself by arguments, that he had chosen for his son that mode
+of instruction to which his understanding was best adapted, or by which
+he would most easily be made wise or virtuous?
+
+Whoever shall inquire by what motives he was determined on these
+important occasions, will find them such as his pride will scarcely
+suffer him to confess; some sudden ardour of desire, some uncertain
+glimpse of advantage, some petty competition, some inaccurate
+conclusion, or some example implicitly reverenced. Such are often the
+first causes of our resolves; for it is necessary to act, but impossible
+to know the consequences of action, or to discuss all the reasons which
+offer themselves on every part to inquisitiveness and solicitude.
+
+Since life itself is uncertain, nothing which has life for its basis can
+boast much stability. Yet this is but a small part of our perplexity. We
+set out on a tempestuous sea in quest of some port, where we expect to
+find rest, but where we are not sure of admission, we are not only in
+danger of sinking in the way, but of being misled by meteors mistaken
+for stars, of being driven from our course by the changes of the wind,
+and of losing it by unskilful steerage; yet it sometimes happens, that
+cross winds blow us to a safer coast, that meteors draw us aside from
+whirlpools, and that negligence or errour contributes to our escape from
+mischiefs to which a direct course would have exposed us. Of those that,
+by precipitate conclusions, involve themselves in calamities without
+guilt, very few, however they may reproach themselves, can be certain
+that other measures would have been more successful.
+
+In this state of universal uncertainty, where a thousand dangers hover
+about us, and none can tell whether the good that he pursues is not evil
+in disguise, or whether the next step will lead him to safety or
+destruction, nothing can afford any rational tranquillity, but the
+conviction that, however we amuse ourselves with unideal sounds, nothing
+in reality is governed by chance, but that the universe is under the
+perpetual superintendance of Him who created it; that our being is in
+the hands of omnipotent Goodness, by whom what appears casual to us, is
+directed for ends ultimately kind and merciful; and that nothing can
+finally hurt him who debars not himself from the Divine favour.
+
+
+
+No. 185. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1751.
+
+ _At vindicta bonum vita jucundius ipsa,
+ Nempe hoc indocti.--
+ Chrysippus non dicet idem, nec mite Thaletis
+ Ingenium, dulcique senex vicinus Hymetto,
+ Qui partem adceptæ sæva inter vincla Cicutæ
+ Adcusatori nollet dare.--
+ --Quippe minuti
+ Semper et infirmi est animi exiguique voluptas
+ Ultio_. JUV. Sat. xiii. 180.
+
+ _But O! revenge is sweet_.
+ Thus think the crowd; who, eager to engage,
+ Take quickly fire, and kindle into rage.
+ Not so mild Thales nor Chrysippus thought,
+ Nor that good man, who drank the poisonous draught.
+ With mind serene; and could not wish to see
+ His vile accuser drink as deep as he:
+ Exalted Socrates! divinely brave!
+ Injur'd he fell, and dying he forgave!
+ Too noble for revenge; which still we find
+ The weakest frailty of a feeble mind. DRYDEN.
+
+No vicious dispositions of the mind more obstinately resist both the
+counsels of philosophy and the injunctions of religion, than those which
+are complicated with an opinion of dignity; and which we cannot dismiss
+without leaving in the hands of opposition some advantage iniquitously
+obtained, or suffering from our own prejudices some imputation of
+pusillanimity.
+
+For this reason scarcely any law of our Redeemer is more openly
+transgressed, or more industriously evaded, than that by which he
+commands his followers to forgive injuries, and prohibits, under the
+sanction of eternal misery, the gratification of the desire which every
+man feels to return pain upon him that inflicts it. Many who could have
+conquered their anger, are unable to combat pride, and pursue offences
+to extremity of vengeance, lest they should be insulted by the triumph
+of an enemy.
+
+But certainly no precept could better become him, at whose birth _peace_
+was proclaimed _to the earth_. For, what would so soon destroy all the
+order of society, and deform life with violence and ravage, as a
+permission to every one to judge his own cause, and to apportion his own
+recompense for imagined injuries?
+
+It is difficult for a man of the strictest justice not to favour himself
+too much, in the calmest moments of solitary meditation. Every one
+wishes for the distinctions for which thousands are wishing at the same
+time, in their own opinion, with better claims. He that, when his reason
+operates in its full force, can thus, by the mere prevalence of
+self-love, prefer himself to his fellow-beings, is very unlikely to
+judge equitably when his passions are agitated by a sense of wrong, and
+his attention wholly engrossed by pain, interest, or danger. Whoever
+arrogates, to himself the right of vengeance, shews how little he is
+qualified to decide his own claims, since he certainly demands what he
+would think unfit to be granted to another.
+
+Nothing is more apparent than that, however injured, or however
+provoked, some must at last be contented to forgive. For it can never be
+hoped, that he who first commits an injury, will contentedly acquiesce
+in the penalty required: the same haughtiness of contempt, or vehemence
+of desire, that prompt the act of injustice, will more strongly incite
+its justification; and resentment can never so exactly balance the
+punishment with the fault, but there will remain an overplus of
+vengeance which even he who condemns his first action will think himself
+entitled to retaliate. What then can ensue but a continual exacerbation
+of hatred, an unextinguishable feud, an incessant reciprocation of
+mischief, a mutual vigilance to entrap, and eagerness to destroy.
+
+Since then the imaginary right of vengeance must be at last remitted,
+because it is impossible to live in perpetual hostility, and equally
+impossible that of two enemies, either should first think himself
+obliged by justice to submission, it is surely eligible to forgive
+early. Every passion is more easily subdued before it has been long
+accustomed to possession of the heart; every idea is obliterated with
+less difficulty, as it has been more slightly impressed, and less
+frequently renewed. He who has often brooded over his wrongs, pleased
+himself with schemes of malignity, and glutted his pride with the
+fancied supplications of humbled enmity, will not easily open his bosom
+to amity and reconciliation, or indulge the gentle sentiments of
+benevolence and peace.
+
+It is easiest to forgive, while there is yet little to be forgiven. A
+single injury may be soon dismissed from the memory; but a long
+succession of ill offices by degrees associates itself with every idea;
+a long contest involves so many circumstances, that every place and
+action will recall it to the mind, and fresh remembrance of vexation
+must still enkindle rage, and irritate revenge.
+
+A wise man will make haste to forgive, because he knows the true value
+of time, and will not suffer it to pass away in unnecessary pain. He
+that willingly suffers the corrosions of inveterate hatred, and gives up
+his days and nights to the gloom of malice, and perturbations of
+stratagem, cannot surely be said to consult his ease. Resentment is an
+union of sorrow with malignity, a combination of a passion which all
+endeavour to avoid, with a passion which all concur to detest. The man
+who retires to meditate mischief, and to exasperate his own rage; whose
+thoughts are employed only on means of distress and contrivances of
+ruin; whose mind never pauses from the remembrance of his own
+sufferings, but to indulge some hope of enjoying the calamities of
+another, may justly be numbered among the most miserable of human
+beings, among those who are guilty without reward, who have neither the
+gladness of prosperity, nor the calm of innocence.
+
+Whoever considers the weakness both of himself and others, will not long
+want persuasives to forgiveness. We know not to what degree of malignity
+any injury is to be imputed; or how much its guilt, if we were to
+inspect the mind of him that committed it, would be extenuated by
+mistake, precipitance, or negligence; we cannot be certain how much more
+we feel than was intended to be inflicted, or how much we increase the
+mischief to ourselves by voluntary aggravations. We may charge to design
+the effects of accident; we may think the blow violent only because we
+have made ourselves delicate and tender; we are on every side in danger
+of errour and of guilt; which we are certain to avoid only by speedy
+forgiveness.
+
+From this pacifick and harmless temper, thus propitious to others and
+ourselves, to domestick tranquillity and to social happiness, no man is
+withheld but by pride, by the fear of being insulted by his adversary,
+or despised by the world.
+
+It may be laid down as an unfailing and universal axiom, that "all pride
+is abject and mean." It is always an ignorant, lazy, or cowardly
+acquiescence in a false appearance of excellence, and proceeds not from
+consciousness of our attainments, but insensibility of our wants.
+
+Nothing can be great which is not right. Nothing which reason condemns
+can be suitable to the dignity of the human mind. To be driven by
+external motives from the path which our own heart approves, to give way
+to any thing but conviction, to suffer the opinion of others to rule our
+choice, or overpower our resolves, is to submit tamely to the lowest and
+most ignominious slavery, and to resign the right of directing our own
+lives.
+
+The utmost excellence at which humanity can arrive, is a constant and
+determinate pursuit of virtue, without regard to present dangers or
+advantage; a continual reference of every action to the divine will; an
+habitual appeal to everlasting justice; and an unvaried elevation of the
+intellectual eye to the reward which perseverance only can obtain. But
+that pride which many, who presume to boast of generous sentiments,
+allow to regulate their measures, has nothing nobler in view than the
+approbation of men, of beings whose superiority we are under no
+obligation to acknowledge, and who, when we have courted them with the
+utmost assiduity, can confer no valuable or permanent reward; of beings
+who ignorantly judge of what they do not understand, or partially
+determine what they never have examined; and whose sentence is therefore
+of no weight till it has received the ratification of our own
+conscience.
+
+He that can descend to bribe suffrages like these, at the price of his
+innocence; he that can suffer the delight of such acclamations to
+withhold his attention from the commands of the universal Sovereign, has
+little reason to congratulate himself upon the greatness of his mind;
+whenever he awakes to seriousness and reflection, he must become
+despicable in his own eyes, and shrink with shame from the remembrance
+of his cowardice and folly.
+
+Of him that hopes to be forgiven, it is indispensably required that he
+forgive. It is therefore superfluous to urge any other motive. On this
+great duty eternity is suspended, and to him that refuses to practise
+it, the Throne of mercy is inaccessible, and the Saviour of the world
+has been born in vain.
+
+
+
+No. 186. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1751.
+
+ _Pone me, pigris ubi nulla campis
+ Arbor æstica recreatur aurâ--
+ Dulce ridentem Lalagen amabo,
+ Dulce loquentem_. HOR. Lib. i. Ode xxii. 17.
+
+ Place me where never summer breeze
+ Unbinds the glebe, or warms the trees;
+ Where ever lowering clouds appear,
+ And angry Jove deforms th' inclement year:
+ Love and the nymph shall charm my toils,
+ The nymph, who sweetly speaks and sweetly smiles. FRANCIS.
+
+Of the happiness and misery of our present state, part arises from our
+sensations, and part from our opinions; part is distributed by nature,
+and part is in a great measure apportioned by ourselves. Positive
+pleasure we cannot always obtain, and positive pain we often cannot
+remove. No man can give to his own plantations the fragrance of the
+Indian groves; nor will any precepts of philosophy enable him to
+withdraw his attention from wounds or diseases. But the negative
+infelicity which proceeds, not from the pressure of sufferings, but the
+absence of enjoyments, will always yield to the remedies of reason.
+
+One of the great arts of escaping superfluous uneasiness, is to free our
+minds from the habit of comparing our condition with that of others on
+whom the blessings of life are more bountifully bestowed, or with
+imaginary states of delight and security, perhaps unattainable by
+mortals. Few are placed in a situation so gloomy and distressful, as not
+to see every day beings yet more forlorn and miserable, from whom they
+may learn to rejoice in their own lot.
+
+No inconvenience is less superable by art or diligence than the
+inclemency of climates, and therefore none affords more proper exercise
+for this philosophical abstraction. A native of England, pinched with
+the frosts of December, may lessen his affection for his own country by
+suffering his imagination to wander in the vales of Asia, and sport
+among the woods that are always green, and streams that always murmur;
+but if he turns his thought towards the polar regions, and considers the
+nations to whom a great portion of the year is darkness, and who are
+condemned to pass weeks and months amidst mountains of snow, he will
+soon recover his tranquillity, and, while he stirs his fire, or throws
+his cloak about him, reflect how much he owes to Providence, that he is
+not placed in Greenland or Siberia.
+
+The barrenness of the earth and the severity of the skies in these
+dreary countries, are such as might be expected to confine the mind
+wholly to the contemplation of necessity and distress, so that the care
+of escaping death from cold and hunger, should leave no room for those
+passions which, in lands of plenty, influence conduct, or diversify
+characters; the summer should be spent only in providing for the winter,
+and the winter in longing for the summer.
+
+Yet learned curiosity is known to have found its way into these abodes
+of poverty and gloom: Lapland and Iceland have their historians, their
+criticks, and their poets; and love, that extends his dominion wherever
+humanity can be found, perhaps exerts the same power in the
+Greenlander's hut as in the palaces of eastern monarchs.
+
+In one of the large caves to which the families of Greenland retire
+together, to pass the cold months, and which may be termed their
+villages or cities, a youth and maid, who came from different parts of
+the country, were so much distinguished for their beauty, that they were
+called by the rest of the inhabitants Anningait and Ajut, from a
+supposed resemblance to their ancestors of the same names, who had been
+transformed of old into the sun and moon.
+
+Anningait for some time heard the praises of Ajut with little emotion,
+but at last, by frequent interviews, became sensible of her charms, and
+first made a discovery of his affection, by inviting her with her
+parents to a feast, where he placed before Ajut the tail of a whale.
+Ajut seemed not much delighted by this gallantry; yet, however, from
+that time was observed rarely to appear, but in a vest made of the skin
+of a white deer; she used frequently to renew the black dye upon her
+hands and forehead, to adorn her sleeves with coral and shells, and to
+braid her hair with great exactness.
+
+The elegance of her dress, and the judicious disposition of her
+ornaments, had such an effect upon Anningait, that he could no longer be
+restrained from a declaration of his love. He therefore composed a poem
+in her praise, in which, among other heroick and tender sentiments, he
+protested, that "she was beautiful as the vernal willow, and fragrant as
+the thyme upon the mountains; that her fingers were white as the teeth
+of the morse, and her smile grateful as the dissolution of the ice; that
+he would pursue her, though she should pass the snows of the midland
+cliffs, or seek shelter in the caves of the eastern cannibals: that he
+would tear her from the embraces of the genius of the rocks, snatch her
+from the paws of Amarock, and rescue her from the ravine of Hafgufa." He
+concluded with a wish, that "whoever shall attempt to hinder his union
+with Ajut, might be buried without his bow, and that, in the land of
+souls, his skull might serve for no other use than to catch the
+droppings of the starry lamps."
+
+This ode being universally applauded, it was expected that Ajut would
+soon yield to such fervour and accomplishments; but Ajut, with the
+natural haughtiness of beauty, expected all the forms of courtship; and
+before she would confess herself conquered, the sun returned, the ice
+broke, and the season of labour called all to their employments.
+
+Anningait and Ajut for a time always went out in the same boat, and
+divided whatever was caught. Anningait, in the sight of his mistress,
+lost no opportunity of signalizing his courage: he attacked the
+sea-horses on the ice; pursued the seals into the water, and leaped upon
+the back of the whale, while he was yet struggling with the remains of
+life. Nor was his diligence less to accumulate all that could be
+necessary to make winter comfortable: he dried the roe of fishes and the
+flesh of seals; he entrapped deer and foxes, and dressed their skins to
+adorn his bride; he feasted her with eggs from the rocks, and strewed her
+tent with flowers.
+
+It happened that a tempest drove the fish to a distant part of the
+coast, before Anningait had completed his store; he therefore entreated
+Ajut, that she would at last grant him her hand, and accompany him to
+that part of the country whither he was now summoned by necessity. Ajut
+thought him not yet entitled to such condescension, but proposed, as a
+trial of his constancy, that he should return at the end of summer to
+the cavern where their acquaintance commenced, and there expect the
+reward of his assiduities. "O virgin, beautiful as the sun shining on
+the water, consider," said Anningait, "what thou hast required. How
+easily may my return be precluded by a sudden frost or unexpected fogs!
+then must the night be passed without my Ajut. We live not, my fair, in
+those fabled countries, which lying strangers so wantonly describe;
+where the whole year is divided into short days and nights; where the
+same habitation serves for summer and winter; where they raise houses in
+rows above the ground, dwell together from year to year, with flocks of
+tame animals grazing in the fields about them; can travel at any time
+from one place to another, through ways inclosed with trees, or over
+walls raised upon the inland waters; and direct their course through
+wide countries by the sight of green hills or scattered buildings. Even
+in summer we have no means of crossing the mountains, whose snows are
+never dissolved; nor can remove to any distant residence, but in our
+boats coasting the bays. Consider, Ajut, a few summer-days, and a few
+winter-nights, and the life of man is at an end. Night is the time of
+ease and festivity, of revels and gaiety; but what will be the flaming
+lamp, the delicious seal, or the soft oil, without the smile of Ajut?"
+
+The eloquence of Anningait was vain; the maid continued inexorable, and
+they parted with ardent promises to meet again before the night of
+winter.
+
+
+
+No. 187. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1751.
+
+ _Non illum nostri possunt mutare labores;
+ Non si frigoribus mediis Hebrunique bibamus,
+ Sithoniasque nives hyemis subeamus aquosae:--
+ Ominia vincit amor. Vinc. Ec. x. 64_.
+
+ Love alters not for us his hard decrees,
+ Not though beneath the Thracian clime we freeze,
+ Or the mild bliss of temperate skies forego,
+ And in raid winter tread Sithonian snow:--
+ Love conquers all.--DRYDEN.
+
+Anningait, however discomposed by the dilatory coyness of Ajut, was yet
+resolved to omit no tokens of amorous respect; and therefore presented
+her at his departure with the skins of seven white fawns, of five swans
+and eleven seals, with three marble lamps, ten vessels of seal oil, and
+a large kettle of brass, which he had purchased from a ship, at the
+price of half a whale, and two horns of sea-unicorns.
+
+Ajut was so much affected by the fondness of her lover, or so much
+overpowered by his magnificence, that she followed him to the sea-side;
+and, when she saw him enter the boat, wished aloud, that he might return
+with plenty of skins and oil; that neither the mermaids might snatch him
+into the deeps, nor the spirits of the rocks confine him in their
+caverns.
+
+She stood a while to gaze upon the departing vessel, and then returning
+to her hut, silent and dejected, laid aside, from that hour, her white
+deer skin, suffered her hair to spread unbraided on her shoulders, and
+forbore to mix in the dances of the maidens. She endeavoured to divert
+her thoughts, by continual application to feminine employments, gathered
+moss for the winter lamps, and dried grass to line the boots of
+Anningait. Of the skins which he had bestowed upon her, she made a
+fishing-coat, a small boat, and tent, all of exquisite manufacture; and
+while she was thus busied, solaced her labours with a song, in which she
+prayed, "that her lover might have hands stronger than the paws of the
+bear, and feet swifter than the feet of the reindeer; that his dart
+might never err, and that his boat might never leak; that he might never
+stumble on the ice, nor faint in the water; that the seal might rush on
+his harpoon, and the wounded whale might dash the waves in vain."
+
+The large boats in which the Greenlanders transport their families, are
+always rowed by women; for a man will not debase himself by work, which
+requires neither skill nor courage. Anningait was therefore exposed by
+idleness to the ravages of passion. He went thrice to the stern of the
+boat, with an intent to leap into the water, and swim back to his
+mistress; but, recollecting the misery which they must endure in the
+winter, without oil for the lamp, or skins for the bed, he resolved to
+employ the weeks of absence in provision for a night of plenty and
+felicity. He then composed his emotions as he could, and expressed, in
+wild numbers and uncouth images, his hopes, his sorrows, and his fears.
+"O life!" says he, "frail and uncertain! where shall wretched man find
+thy resemblance, but in ice floating on the ocean? It towers on high, it
+sparkles from afar, while the storms drive and the waters beat it, the
+sun melts it above, and the rocks shatter it below. What art thou,
+deceitful pleasure! but a sudden blaze streaming from the north, which
+plays a moment on the eye, mocks the traveller with the hopes of light,
+and then vanishes for ever? What, love, art thou but a whirlpool, which
+we approach without knowledge of our danger, drawn on by imperceptible
+degrees, till we have lost all power of resistance and escape? Till I
+fixed my eyes on the graces of Ajut, while I had not yet called her to
+the banquet, I was careless as the sleeping morse, was merry as the
+singers in the stars. Why, Ajut, did I gaze upon thy graces? why, my
+fair, did I call thee to the banquet? Yet, be faithful, my love,
+remember Anningait, and meet my return with the smile of virginity. I
+will chase the deer, I will subdue the whale, resistless as the frost of
+darkness, and unwearied as the summer sun. In a few weeks I shall return
+prosperous and wealthy; then shall the roe-fish and the porpoise feast
+thy kindred; the fox and hare shall cover thy couch; the tough hide of
+the seal shall shelter thee from cold; and the fat of the whale
+illuminate thy dwelling."
+
+Anningait having with these sentiments consoled his grief, and animated
+his industry, found that they had now coasted the headland, and saw the
+whales spouting at a distance. He therefore placed himself in his
+fishing-boat, called his associates to their several employments, plied
+his oar and harpoon with incredible courage and dexterity; and, by
+dividing his time between the chace and fishery, suspended the miseries
+of absence and suspicion.
+
+Ajut, in the mean time, notwithstanding her neglected dress, happened,
+as she was drying some skins in the sun, to catch the eye of Norngsuk,
+on his return from hunting. Norngsuk was of birth truly illustrious. His
+mother had died in child-birth, and his father, the most expert fisher
+of Greenland, had perished by too close pursuit of the whale. His
+dignity was equalled by his riches; he was master of four men's and two
+women's boats, had ninety tubs of oil in his winter habitation, and
+five-and-twenty seals buried in the snow against the season of darkness.
+When he saw the beauty of Ajut, he immediately threw over her the skin
+of a deer that he had taken, and soon after presented her with a branch
+of coral. Ajut refused his gifts, and determined to admit no lover in
+the place of Anningait.
+
+Norngsuk, thus rejected, had recourse to stratagem. He knew that Ajut
+would consult an Angekkok, or diviner, concerning the fate of her lover,
+and the felicity of her future life. He therefore applied himself to the
+most celebrated Angekkok of that part of the country, and, by a present
+of two seals and a marble kettle, obtained a promise, that when Ajut
+should consult him, he would declare that her lover was in the land of
+souls. Ajut, in a short time, brought him a coat made by herself, and
+inquired what events were to befall her, with assurances of a much
+larger reward at the return of Anningait, if the prediction should
+flatter her desires. The Angekkok knew the way to riches, and foretold
+that Anningait, having already caught two whales, would soon return home
+with a large boat laden with provisions.
+
+This prognostication she was ordered to keep secret; and Norngsuk
+depending upon his artifice, renewed his addresses with greater
+confidence; but finding his suit still unsuccessful, applied himself to
+her parents with gifts and promises. The wealth of Greenland is too
+powerful for the virtue of a Greenlander; they forgot the merit and the
+presents of Anningait, and decreed Ajut to the embraces of Norngsuk. She
+entreated; she remonstrated; she wept, and raved; but finding riches
+irresistible, fled away into the uplands, and lived in a cave upon such
+berries as she could gather, and the birds or hares which she had the
+fortune to ensnare, taking care, at an hour when she was not likely to
+be found, to view the sea every day, that her lover might not miss her
+at his return.
+
+At last she saw the great boat in which Anningait had departed, stealing
+slow and heavy laden along the coast. She ran with all the impatience of
+affection to catch her lover in her arms, and relate her constancy and
+sufferings. When the company reached the land, they informed her that
+Anningait, after the fishery was ended, being unable to support the slow
+passage of the vessel of carriage, had set out before them in his
+fishing-boat, and they expected at their arrival to have found him on
+shore.
+
+Ajut, distracted at this intelligence, was about to fly into the hills,
+without knowing why, though she was now in the hands of her parents, who
+forced her back to their own hut, and endeavoured to comfort her; but
+when at last they retired to rest, Ajut went down to the beach; where,
+finding a fishing-boat, she entered it without hesitation, and telling
+those who wondered at her rashness, that she was going in search of
+Anningait, rowed away with great swiftness, and was seen no more.
+
+The fate of these lovers gave occasion to various fictions and
+conjectures. Some are of opinion, that they were changed into stars;
+others imagine, that Anningait was seized in his passage by the genius
+of the rocks, and that Ajut was transformed into a mermaid, and still
+continues to seek her lover in the deserts of the sea. But the general
+persuasion is, that they are both in that part of the land of souls
+where the sun never sets, where oil is always fresh, and provisions
+always warm. The virgins sometimes throw a thimble and a needle into the
+bay, from which the hapless maid departed; and when a Greenlander would
+praise any couple for virtuous affection, he declares that they love
+like Anningait and Ajut.
+
+
+
+No. 188. SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 1751.
+
+ --_Si te colo, Sexte, non amabo_. MART. Lib. ii. Ep. lv. 33.
+
+ The more I honour thee, the less I love.
+
+None of the desires dictated by vanity is more general, or less
+blamable, than that of being distinguished for the arts of conversation.
+Other accomplishments may be possessed without opportunity of exerting
+them, or wanted without danger that the defect can often be remarked;
+but as no man can live, otherwise than in an hermitage, without hourly
+pleasure or vexation, from the fondness or neglect of those about him,
+the faculty of giving pleasure is of continual use. Few are more
+frequently envied than those who have the power of forcing attention
+wherever they come, whose entrance is considered as a promise of
+felicity, and whose departure is lamented, like the recess of the sun
+from northern climates, as a privation of all that enlivens fancy, or
+inspirits gaiety.
+
+It is apparent, that to excellence in this valuable art, some peculiar
+qualifications are necessary; for every one's experience will inform
+him, that the pleasure which men are able to give in conversation, holds
+no stated proportion to their knowledge or their virtue. Many find their
+way to the tables and the parties of those who never consider them as of
+the least importance in any other place; we have all, at one time or
+other, been content to love those whom we could not esteem, and been
+persuaded to try the dangerous experiment of admitting him for a
+companion, whom we knew to be too ignorant for a counsellor, and too
+treacherous for a friend.
+
+I question whether some abatement of character is not necessary to
+general acceptance. Few spend their time with much satisfaction under
+the eye of uncontestable superiority; and therefore, among those whose
+presence is courted at assemblies of jollity, there are seldom found men
+eminently distinguished for powers or acquisitions. The wit whose
+vivacity condemns slower tongues to silence, the scholar whose knowledge
+allows no man to fancy that he instructs him, the critick who suffers no
+fallacy to pass undetected, and the reasoner who condemns the idle to
+thought, and the negligent to attention, are generally praised and
+feared, reverenced and avoided.
+
+He that would please must rarely aim at such excellence as depresses his
+hearers in their own opinion, or debars them from the hope of
+contributing reciprocally to the entertainment of the company.
+Merriment, extorted by sallies of imagination, sprightliness of remark,
+or quickness of reply, is too often what the Latins call, the Sardinian
+laughter, a distortion of the face without gladness of heart.
+
+For this reason, no style of conversation is more extensively acceptable
+than the narrative. He who has stored his memory with slight anecdotes,
+private incidents, and personal peculiarities, seldom fails to find his
+audience favourable. Almost every man listens with eagerness to
+contemporary history; for almost every man has some real or imaginary
+connexion with a celebrated character, some desire to advance or oppose
+a rising name. Vanity often co-operates with curiosity. He that is a
+hearer in one place, qualifies himself to become a speaker in another;
+for though he cannot comprehend a series of argument, or transport the
+volatile spirit of wit without evaporation, he yet thinks himself able
+to treasure up the various incidents of a story, and please his hopes
+with the information which he shall give to some inferior society.
+
+Narratives are for the most part heard without envy, because they are
+not supposed to imply any intellectual qualities above the common rate.
+To be acquainted with facts not yet echoed by plebeian mouths, may
+happen to one man as well as to another; and to relate them when they
+are known, has in appearance so little difficulty, that every one
+concludes himself equal to the task.
+
+But it is not easy, and in some situations of life not possible, to
+accumulate such a stock of materials as may support the expense of
+continual narration; and it frequently happens, that they who attempt
+this method of ingratiating themselves, please only at the first
+interview; and, for want of new supplies of intelligence, wear out their
+stories by continual repetition.
+
+There would be, therefore, little hope of obtaining the praise of a good
+companion, were it not to be gained by more compendious methods; but
+such is the kindness of mankind to all, except those who aspire to real
+merit and rational dignity, that every understanding may find some way
+to excite benevolence; and whoever is not envied may learn the art of
+procuring love. We are willing to be pleased, but are not willing to
+admire: we favour the mirth or officiousness that solicits our regard,
+but oppose the worth or spirit that enforces it.
+
+The first place among those that please, because they desire only to
+please, is due to the _merry fellow_, whose laugh is loud, and whose
+voice is strong; who is ready to echo every jest with obstreperous
+approbation, and countenance every frolick with vociferations of
+applause. It is not necessary to a merry fellow to have in himself any
+fund of jocularity, or force of conception; it is sufficient that he
+always appears in the highest exaltation of gladness, for the greater
+part of mankind are gay or serious by infection, and follow without
+resistance the attraction of example.
+
+Next to the merry fellow is the _good-natured man_, a being generally
+without benevolence, or any other virtue, than such as indolence and
+insensibility confer. The characteristick of a good-natured man is to
+bear a joke; to sit unmoved and unaffected amidst noise and turbulence,
+profaneness and obscenity; to hear every tale without contradiction; to
+endure insult without reply; and to follow the stream of folly, whatever
+course it shall happen to take. The good-natured man is commonly the
+darling of the petty wits, with whom they exercise themselves in the
+rudiments of raillery; for he never takes advantage of failings, nor
+disconcerts a puny satirist with unexpected sarcasms; but while the
+glass continues to circulate, contentedly bears the expense of an
+uninterrupted laughter, and retires rejoicing at his own importance.
+
+The _modest man_ is a companion of a yet lower rank, whose only power of
+giving pleasure is not to interrupt it. The modest man satisfies himself
+with peaceful silence, which all his companions are candid enough to
+consider as proceeding not from inability to speak, but willingness to
+hear.
+
+Many, without being able to attain any general character of excellence,
+have some single art of entertainment which serves them as a passport
+through the world. One I have known for fifteen years the darling of a
+weekly club, because every night, precisely at eleven, he begins his
+favourite song, and during the vocal performance, by corresponding
+motions of his hand, chalks out a giant upon the wall. Another has
+endeared himself to a long succession of acquaintances by sitting among
+them with his wig reversed; another by contriving to smut the nose of
+any stranger who was to be initiated in the club; another by purring
+like a cat, and then pretending to be frighted; and another by yelping
+like a hound, and calling to the drawers to drive out the dog[k].
+
+Such are the arts by which cheerfulness is promoted, and sometimes
+friendship established; arts, which those who despise them should not
+rigorously blame, except when they are practised at the expense of
+innocence; for it is always necessary to be loved, but not always
+necessary to be reverenced.
+
+
+
+No. 189. TUESDAY, JANUARY 7, 1752.
+
+ _Quod tam grande Sophos clamat tibi turba togata;
+ Non tu, Pomponi; caena diserta tua est_. MART. Lib. vi. Ep. xlviii.
+
+ Resounding plaudits though the crowd have rung;
+ Thy treat is eloquent, and not thy tongue. F. LEWIS.
+
+The world scarcely affords opportunities of making any
+observation more frequently, than on false claims to commendation.
+Almost every man wastes part of his life in attempts to display
+qualities which he does not possess, and to gain applause which he
+cannot keep; so that scarcely can two persons casually meet, but one is
+offended or diverted by the ostentation of the other.
+
+Of these pretenders it is fit to distinguish those who endeavour to
+deceive from them who are deceived; those who by designed impostures
+promote their interest, or gratify their pride, from them who mean only
+to force into regard their latent excellencies and neglected virtues;
+who believe themselves qualified to instruct or please, and therefore
+invite the notice of mankind.
+
+The artful and fraudulent usurpers of distinction deserve greater
+severities than ridicule and contempt, since they are seldom content
+with empty praise, but are instigated by passions more pernicious than
+vanity. They consider the reputation which they endeavour to establish
+as necessary to the accomplishment of some subsequent design, and value
+praise only as it may conduce to the success of avarice or ambition.
+
+The commercial world is very frequently put into confusion by the
+bankruptcy of merchants, that assumed the splendour of wealth only to
+obtain the privilege of trading with the stock of other men, and of
+contracting debts which nothing but lucky casualties could enable them
+to pay; till after having supported their appearance a while by
+tumultuous magnificence of boundless traffick, they sink at once, and
+drag down into poverty those whom their equipages had induced to trust
+them.
+
+Among wretches that place their happiness in the favour of the great, of
+beings whom only high titles or large estates set above themselves,
+nothing is more common than to boast of confidence which they do not
+enjoy; to sell promises which they know their interest unable to
+perform; and to reimburse the tribute which they pay to an imperious
+master, from the contributions of meaner dependants, whom they can amuse
+with tales of their influence, and hopes of their solicitation.
+
+Even among some, too thoughtless and volatile for avarice or ambition,
+may be found a species of falsehood more detestable than the levee or
+exchange can shew. There are men that boast of debaucheries, of which
+they never had address to be guilty; ruin, by lewd tales, the characters
+of women to whom they are scarcely known, or by whom they have been
+rejected; destroy in a drunken frolick the happiness of families; blast
+the bloom of beauty, and intercept the reward of virtue.
+
+Other artifices of falsehood, though utterly unworthy of an ingenuous
+mind, are not yet to be ranked with flagitious enormities, nor is it
+necessary to incite sanguinary justice against them, since they may be
+adequately punished by detection and laughter. The traveller who
+describes cities which he has never seen; the squire, who, at his return
+from London, tells of his intimacy with nobles to whom he has only bowed
+in the park or coffee-house; the author who entertains his admirers with
+stories of the assistance which he gives to wits of a higher rank; the
+city dame who talks of her visits at great houses, where she happens to
+know the cook-maid, are surely such harmless animals as truth herself
+may be content to despise without desiring to hurt them.
+
+But of the multitudes who struggle in vain for distinction, and display
+their own merits only to feel more acutely the sting of neglect, a great
+part are wholly innocent of deceit, and are betrayed, by infatuation and
+credulity, to that scorn with which the universal love of praise incites
+us all to drive feeble competitors out of our way.
+
+Few men survey themselves with so much severity, as not to admit
+prejudices in their own favour, which an artful flatterer may gradually
+strengthen, till wishes for a particular qualification are improved to
+hopes of attainment, and hopes of attainment to belief of possession.
+Such flatterers every one will find, who has power to reward their
+assiduities. Wherever there is wealth there will be dependance and
+expectation, and wherever there is dependance, there will be an
+emulation of servility.
+
+Many of the follies which provoke general censure, are the effects of
+such vanity as, however it might have wantoned in the imagination, would
+scarcely have dared the publick eye, had it not been animated and
+emboldened by flattery. Whatever difficulty there may be in the
+knowledge of ourselves, scarcely any one fails to suspect his own
+imperfections, till he is elevated by others to confidence. We are
+almost all naturally modest and timorous; but fear and shame are uneasy
+sensations, and whosoever helps to remove them is received with
+kindness.
+
+Turpicula was the heiress of a large estate, and having lost her mother
+in her infancy, was committed to a governess, whom misfortunes had
+reduced to suppleness and humility. The fondness of Turpicula's father
+would not suffer him to trust her at a publick school, but he hired
+domestick teachers, and bestowed on her all the accomplishments that
+wealth could purchase. But how many things are necessary to happiness
+which money cannot obtain! Thus secluded from all with whom she might
+converse on terms of equality, she heard none of those intimations of
+her defects, which envy, petulance, or anger, produce among children,
+where they are not afraid of telling what they think.
+
+Turpicula saw nothing but obsequiousness, and heard nothing but
+commendations. None are so little acquainted with the heart, as not to
+know that woman's first wish is to be handsome, and that consequently
+the readiest method of obtaining her kindness is to praise her beauty.
+Turpicula had a distorted shape and a dark complexion; yet, when the
+impudence of adulation had ventured to tell her of the commanding
+dignity of her motion, and the soft enchantment of her smile, she was
+easily convinced, that she was the delight or torment of every eye, and
+that all who gazed upon her felt the fire of envy or love. She therefore
+neglected the culture of an understanding which might have supplied the
+defects of her form, and applied all her care to the decoration of her
+person; for she considered that more could judge of beauty than of wit,
+and was, like the rest of human beings, in haste to be admired. The
+desire of conquest naturally led her to the lists in which beauty
+signalizes her power. She glittered at court, fluttered in the park, and
+talked aloud in the front box; but after a thousand experiments of her
+charms, was at last convinced that she had been flattered, and that her
+glass was honester than her maid.
+
+[Footnote k: Mrs. Piozzi, in her Anecdotes, informs us, that the man who
+sung, and, by corresponding motions of his arm, chalked out a giant on
+the wall, was one Richardson, an attorney: the ingenious imitator of a
+cat, was one Busby, a proctor in the Commons: and the father of Dr.
+Salter, of the Charter-House, a friend of Johnson's, and a member of the
+Ivy-Lane Club, was the person who yelped like a hound, and perplexed the
+distracted waiters.--Mr. Chalmers, in his preface to the Rambler,
+observes, that the above-quoted lively writer was the only authority for
+these assignments. She is certainly far too hasty and negligent to be
+relied on, when unsupported by other testimony.--See Preface.]
+
+
+
+No. 190. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1752.
+
+ _Ploravere suis non respondere favorem
+ Speratum meritis_.--HOR. Lib. ii. Ep. i. 9.
+
+ Henry and Alfred--
+ Clos'd their long glories with a sigh, to find
+ Th' unwilling gratitude of base mankind. POPE.
+
+Among the emirs and visiers, the sons of valour and of wisdom, that
+stand at the corners of the Indian throne, to assist the counsels or
+conduct the wars of the posterity of Timur, the first place was long
+held by Morad the son of Hanuth. Morad, having signalized himself in
+many battles and sieges, was rewarded with the government of a province,
+from which the fame of his wisdom and moderation was wafted to the
+pinnacles of Agra, by the prayers of those whom his administration made
+happy. The emperour called him into his presence, and gave into his hand
+the keys of riches, and the sabre of command. The voice of Morad was
+heard from the cliffs of Taurus to the Indian ocean, every tongue
+faultered in his presence, and every eye was cast down before him.
+
+Morad lived many years in prosperity; every day increased his wealth,
+and extended his influence. The sages repeated his maxims, the captains
+of thousands waited his commands. Competition withdrew into the cavern
+of envy, and discontent trembled at his own murmurs. But human greatness
+is short and transitory, as the odour of incense in the fire. The sun
+grew weary of gilding the palaces of Morad, the clouds of sorrow
+gathered round his head, and the tempest of hatred roared about his
+dwelling.
+
+Morad saw ruin hastily approaching. The first that forsook him were his
+poets; their example was followed by all those whom he had rewarded for
+contributing to his pleasures, and only a few, whose virtue had entitled
+them to favour, were now to be seen in his hall or chambers. He felt his
+danger, and prostrated himself at the foot of the throne. His accusers
+were confident and loud, his friends stood contented with frigid
+neutrality, and the voice of truth was overborne by clamour. He was
+divested of his power, deprived of his acquisitions, and condemned to
+pass the rest of his life on his hereditary estate.
+
+Morad had been so long-accustomed to crowds and business, supplicants
+and flattery, that he knew not how to fill up his hours in solitude; he
+saw with regret the sun rise to force on his eye a new day for which he
+had no use; and envied the savage that wanders in the desert, because he
+has no time vacant from the calls of nature, but is always chasing his
+prey, or sleeping in his den.
+
+His discontent in time vitiated his constitution, and a slow disease
+seized upon him. He refused physick, neglected exercise, and lay down on
+his couch peevish and restless, rather afraid to die than desirous to
+live. His domesticks, for a time, redoubled their assiduities; but
+finding that no officiousness could soothe, nor exactness satisfy, they
+soon gave way to negligence and sloth; and he that once commanded
+nations, often languished in his chamber without an attendant.
+
+In this melancholy state, he commanded messengers to recall his eldest
+son Abouzaid from the army. Abouzaid was alarmed at the account of his
+father's sickness, and hasted by long journeys to his place of
+residence. Morad was yet living, and felt his strength return at the
+embraces of his son; then commanding him to sit down at his bedside,
+"Abouzaid," says he, "thy father has no more to hope or fear from the
+inhabitants of the earth; the cold hand of the angel of death is now
+upon him, and the voracious grave is howling for his prey. Hear,
+therefore, the precepts of ancient experience, let not my last
+instructions issue forth in vain. Thou hast seen me happy and
+calamitous, thou hast beheld my exaltation and my fall. My power is in
+the hands of my enemies, my treasures have rewarded my accusers; but my
+inheritance, the clemency of the emperour has spared, and my wisdom his
+anger could not take away. Cast thine eyes around thee; whatever thou
+beholdest will, in a few hours, be thine: apply thine ear to my
+dictates, and these possessions will promote thy happiness. Aspire not
+to public honours, enter not the palaces of kings; thy wealth will set
+thee above insult, let thy moderation keep thee below envy. Content
+thyself with private dignity, diffuse thy riches among thy friends, let
+every day extend thy beneficence, and suffer not thy heart to be at rest
+till thou art loved by all to whom thou art known. In the height of my
+power, I said to defamation, Who will hear thee? and to artifice, What
+canst thou perform? But, my son, despise not thou the malice of the
+weakest, remember that venom supplies the want of strength, and that the
+lion may perish by the puncture of an asp."
+
+Morad expired in a few hours. Abouzaid, after the months of mourning,
+determined to regulate his conduct by his father's precepts, and
+cultivate the love of mankind by every art of kindness and endearment.
+He wisely considered, that domestick happiness was first to be secured,
+and that none have so much power of doing good or hurt, as those who are
+present in the hour of negligence, hear the bursts of thoughtless
+merriment, and observe the starts of unguarded passion. He therefore
+augmented the pay of all his attendants, and requited every exertion of
+uncommon diligence by supernumerary gratuities. While he congratulated
+himself upon the fidelity and affection of his family, he was in the
+night alarmed with robbers, who, being pursued and taken, declared that
+they had been admitted by one of his servants; the servant immediately
+confessed, that he unbarred the door, because another not more worthy of
+confidence was entrusted with the keys.
+
+Abouzaid was thus convinced that a dependant could not easily be made a
+friend; and that while many were soliciting for the first rank of
+favour, all those would be alienated whom he disappointed. He therefore
+resolved to associate with a few equal companions selected from among
+the chief men of the province. With these he lived happily for a time,
+till familiarity set them free from restraint, and every man thought
+himself at liberty to indulge his own caprice, and advance his own
+opinions. They then disturbed each other with contrariety of
+inclinations, and difference of sentiments, and Abouzaid was
+necessitated to offend one party by concurrence, or both by
+indifference.
+
+He afterwards determined to avoid a close union with beings so
+discordant in their nature, and to diffuse himself in a larger circle.
+He practised the smile of universal courtesy, and invited all to his
+table, but admitted none to his retirements. Many who had been rejected
+in his choice of friendship, now refused to accept his acquaintance; and
+of those whom plenty and magnificence drew to his table, every one
+pressed forward toward intimacy, thought himself overlooked in the
+crowd, and murmured because he was not distinguished above the rest. By
+degrees all made advances, and all resented repulse. The table was then
+covered with delicacies in vain; the musick sounded in empty rooms; and
+Abouzaid was left to form in solitude some new scheme of pleasure or
+security.
+
+Resolving now to try the force of gratitude, he inquired for men of
+science, whose merit was obscured by poverty. His house was soon crowded
+with poets, sculptors, painters, and designers, who wantoned in
+unexperienced plenty, and employed their powers in celebration of their
+patron. But in a short time they forgot the distress from which they had
+been rescued, and began to consider their deliverer as a wretch of
+narrow capacity, who was growing great by works which he could not
+perform, and whom they overpaid by condescending to accept his bounties.
+Abouzaid heard their murmurs and dismissed them, and from that hour
+continued blind to colours, and deaf to panegyrick.
+
+As the sons of art departed, muttering threats of perpetual infamy,
+Abouzaid, who stood at the gate, called to him Hamet the poet. "Hamet,"
+said he, "thy ingratitude has put an end to my hopes and experiments: I
+have now learned the vanity of those labours that wish to be rewarded by
+human benevolence; I shall henceforth do good, and avoid evil, without
+respect to the opinion of men; and resolve to solicit only the
+approbation of that Being whom alone we are sure to please by
+endeavouring to please him."
+
+
+
+No. 191. TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1752.
+
+ _Cereus in vitium flecli, monitoribus asper_. HOR. Art. Poet. 163.
+
+ The youth--
+ Yielding like wax, th' impressive folly bears;
+ Rough to reproof, and slow to future cares. FRANCIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+DEAR MR. RAMBLER,
+
+I have been four days confined to my chamber by a cold, which has
+already kept me from three plays, nine sales, five shows, and six
+card-tables, and put me seventeen visits behind-hand; and the doctor
+tells my mamma, that, if I fret and cry, it will settle in my head,
+and I shall not be fit to be seen these six weeks. But, dear Mr. Rambler,
+how can I help it? At this very time Melissa is dancing with the
+prettiest gentleman;--she will breakfast with him to-morrow, and then run
+to two auctions, and hear compliments, and have presents; then she will
+be drest, and visit, and get a ticket to the play; then go to cards and
+win, and come home with two flambeaux before her chair. Dear Mr.
+Rambler, who can bear it?
+
+My aunt has just brought me a bundle of your papers for my amusement.
+She says you are a philosopher, and will teach me to moderate my
+desires, and look upon the world with indifference. But, dear sir, I do
+not wish nor intend to moderate my desires, nor can I think it proper to
+look upon the world with indifference, till the world looks with
+indifference on me. I have been forced, however, to sit this morning a
+whole quarter of an hour with your paper before my face; but just as my
+aunt came in, Phyllida had brought me a letter from Mr. Trip, which I
+put within the leaves; and read about _absence_ and _inconsolableness_,
+and _ardour_, and _irresistible passion_, and _eternal constancy_, while
+my aunt imagined that I was puzzling myself with your philosophy, and
+often cried out when she saw me look confused, "If there is any word
+that you do not understand, child, I will explain it."
+
+Dear soul! how old people that think themselves wise may be imposed
+upon! But it is fit that they should take their turn, for I am sure,
+while they can keep poor girls close in the nursery, they tyrannize over
+us in a very shameful manner, and fill our imaginations with tales of
+terrour, only to make us live in quiet subjection, and fancy that we can
+never be safe but by their protection.
+
+I have a mamma and two aunts, who have all been formerly celebrated for
+wit and beauty, and are still generally admired by those that value
+themselves upon their understanding, and love to talk of vice and
+virtue, nature and simplicity, and beauty and propriety; but if there
+was not some hope of meeting me, scarcely a creature would come near
+them that wears a fashionable coat. These ladies, Mr. Rambler, have had
+me under their government fifteen years and a half, and have all that
+time been endeavouring to deceive me by such representations of life as
+I now find not to be true; but I know not whether I ought to impute them
+to ignorance or malice, as it is possible the world may be much changed
+since they mingled in general conversation.
+
+Being desirous that I should love books, they told me, that nothing but
+knowledge could make me an agreeable companion to men of sense, or
+qualify me to distinguish the superficial glitter of vanity from the
+solid merit of understanding; and that a habit of reading would enable
+me to fill up the vacuities of life without the help of silly or
+dangerous amusements, and preserve me from the snares of idleness and
+the inroads of temptation.
+
+But their principal intention was to make me afraid of men; in which
+they succeeded so well for a time, that I durst not look in their faces,
+or be left alone with them in a parlour; for they made me fancy, that no
+man ever spoke but to deceive, or looked but to allure; that the girl
+who suffered him that had once squeezed her hand, to approach her a
+second time, was on the brink of ruin; and that she who answered a
+billet, without consulting her relations, gave love such power over her,
+that she would certainly become either poor or infamous.
+
+From the time that my leading-strings were taken off, I scarce heard any
+mention of my beauty but from the milliner, the mantua-maker, and my own
+maid; for my mamma never said more, when she heard me commended, but
+"the girl is very well," and then endeavoured to divert my attention by
+some inquiry after my needle, or my book.
+
+It is now three months since I have been suffered to pay and receive
+visits, to dance at publick assemblies, to have a place kept for me in
+the boxes, and to play at lady Racket's rout; and you may easily imagine
+what I think of those who have so long cheated me with false
+expectations, disturbed me with fictitious terrours, and concealed from
+me all that I have found to make the happiness of woman.
+
+I am so far from perceiving the usefulness or necessity of books, that
+if I had not dropped all pretensions to learning, I should have lost Mr.
+Trip, whom I once frighted into another box, by retailing some of
+Dryden's remarks upon a tragedy; for Mr. Trip declares, that he hates
+nothing like hard words, and I am sure, there is not a better partner to
+be found; his very walk is a dance. I have talked once or twice among
+ladies about principles and ideas, but they put their fans before their
+faces, and told me I was too wise for them, who for their part never
+pretended to read any thing but the play-bill, and then asked me the
+price of my best head.
+
+Those vacancies of time which are to be filled up with books I have
+never vet obtained; for, consider, Mr. Rambler, I go to bed late, and
+therefore cannot rise early; as soon as I am up, I dress for the
+gardens; then walk in the park; then always go to some sale or show, or
+entertainment at the little theatre; then must be dressed for dinner;
+then must pay my visits; then walk in the park; then hurry to the play;
+and from thence to the card-table. This is the general course of the
+day, when there happens nothing extraordinary; but sometimes I ramble
+into the country, and come back again to a ball; sometimes I am engaged
+for a whole day and part of the night. If, at any time, I can gain an
+hour by not being at home, I have so many things to do, so many orders
+to give to the milliner, so many alterations to make in my clothes, so
+many visitants' names to read over, so many invitations to accept or
+refuse, so many cards to write, and so many fashions to consider, that I
+am lost in confusion, forced at last to let in company or step into my
+chair, and leave half my affairs to the direction of my maid.
+
+This is the round of my day; and when shall I either stop my course, or
+so change it as to want a book? I suppose it cannot be imagined, that
+any of these diversions will soon be at an end. There will always be
+gardens, and a park, and auctions, and shows, and playhouses, and cards;
+visits will always be paid, and clothes always be worn; and how can I
+have time unemployed upon my hands?
+
+But I am most at a loss to guess for what purpose they related such
+tragick stories of the cruelty, perfidy, and artifices of men, who, if
+they ever were so malicious and destructive, have certainly now reformed
+their manners. I have not, since my entrance into the world, found one
+who does not profess himself devoted to my service, and ready to live or
+die as I shall command him. They are so far from intending to hurt me,
+that their only contention is, who shall be allowed most closely to
+attend, and most frequently to treat me; when different places of
+entertainment, or schemes of pleasure are mentioned, I can see the eye
+sparkle and the cheeks glow of him whose proposals obtain my
+approbation; he then leads me off in triumph, adores my condescension,
+and congratulates himself that he has lived to the hour of felicity. Are
+these, Mr. Rambler, creatures to be feared? Is it likely that an injury
+will be done me by those who can enjoy life only while I favour them
+with my presence?
+
+As little reason can I yet find to suspect them of stratagems and fraud.
+When I play at cards, they never take advantage of my mistakes, nor
+exact from me a rigorous observation of the game. Even Mr. Shuffle, a
+grave gentleman, who has daughters older than myself, plays with me so
+negligently, that I am sometimes inclined to believe he loses his money
+by design, and yet he is so fond of play, that he says, he will one day
+take me to his house in the country, that we may try by ourselves who
+can conquer. I have not yet promised him; but when the town grows a
+little empty, I shall think upon it, for I want some trinkets, like
+Letitia's, to my watch. I do not doubt my luck, but must study some
+means of amusing my relations.
+
+For all these distinctions I find myself indebted to that beauty which I
+was never suffered to hear praised, and of which, therefore, I did not
+before know the full value. The concealment was certainly an intentional
+fraud, for my aunts have eyes like other people, and I am every day
+told, that nothing but blindness can escape the influence of my charms.
+Their whole account of that world which they pretend to know so well,
+has been only one fiction entangled with another; and though the modes
+of life oblige me to continue some appearances of respect, I cannot
+think that they, who have been so clearly detected in ignorance or
+imposture, have any right to the esteem, veneration, or obedience of,
+
+Sir, Yours,
+BELLARIA.
+
+
+
+No. 192. SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1752.
+
+ [Greek:
+ Genos ouden eis Erota;
+ Sophiae, tropos pateitai;
+ Monon arguron blepousin.
+ Apoloito protos autos
+ Ho ton arguron philaesas.
+ Dia touton ou tokaees,
+ Dai touton ou tokaees;
+ Polemoi, phonoi di auton.
+ To de cheiron, ollymestha
+ Dia touton oi philountes.] ANACREON. [Greek: ODLI Ms.] 5.
+
+ Vain the noblest birth would prove,
+ Nor worth or wit avail in love;
+ 'Tis gold alone succeeds--by gold
+ The venal sex is bought and sold.
+ Accurs'd be he who first of yore
+ Discover'd the pernicious ore!
+ This sets a brother's heart on fire,
+ And arms the son against the sire;
+ And what, alas! is worse than all,
+ To this the lover owes his fall. F. LEWIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I am the son of a gentleman, whose ancestors, for many ages, held the
+first rank in the country; till at last one of them, too desirous of
+popularity, set his house open, kept a table covered with continual
+profusion, and distributed his beef and ale to such as chose rather to
+live upon the folly of others, than their own labour, with such
+thoughtless liberality, that he left a third part of his estate
+mortgaged. His successor, a man of spirit, scorned to impair his dignity
+by parsimonious retrenchments, or to admit, by a sale of his lands, any
+participation of the rights of his manour; he therefore made another
+mortgage to pay the interest of the former, and pleased himself with the
+reflection, that his son would have the hereditary estate without the
+diminution of an acre.
+
+Nearly resembling this was the practice of my wise progenitors for many
+ages. Every man boasted the antiquity of her family, resolved to support
+the dignity of his birth, and lived in splendour and plenty at the
+expense of his heir, who, sometimes by a wealthy marriage, and sometimes
+by lucky legacies, discharged part of the incumbrances, and thought
+himself entitled to contract new debts, and to leave to his children the
+same inheritance of embarrassment and distress.
+
+Thus the estate perpetually decayed; the woods were felled by one, the
+park ploughed by another, the fishery let to farmers by a third; at last
+the old hall was pulled down to spare the cost of reparation, and part
+of the materials sold to build a small house with the rest. We were now
+openly degraded from our original rank, and my father's brother was
+allowed with less reluctance to serve an apprenticeship, though we never
+reconciled ourselves heartily to the sound of haberdasher, but always
+talked of warehouses and a merchant, and when the wind happened to blow
+loud, affected to pity the hazards of commerce, and to sympathize with
+the solicitude of my poor uncle, who had the true retailer's terrour of
+adventure, and never exposed himself or his property to any wider water
+than the Thames.
+
+In time, however, by continual profit and small expenses, he grew rich,
+and began to turn his thoughts towards rank. He hung the arms of the
+family over his parlour-chimney; pointed at a chariot decorated only
+with a cypher; became of opinion that money could not make a gentleman;
+resented the petulance of upstarts; told stories of alderman Puff's
+grandfather the porter; wondered that there was no better method for
+regulating precedence; wished for some dress peculiar to men of fashion;
+and when his servant presented a letter, always inquired whether it came
+from his brother the esquire.
+
+My father was careful to send him game by every carrier, which, though
+the conveyance often cost more than the value, was well received,
+because it gave him an opportunity of calling his friends together,
+describing the beauty of his brother's seat, and lamenting his own
+folly, whom no remonstrances could withhold from polluting his fingers
+with a shop-book.
+
+The little presents which we sent were always returned with great
+munificence. He was desirous of being the second founder of his family,
+and could not bear that we should be any longer outshone by those whom
+we considered as climbers upon our ruins, and usurpers of our fortune.
+He furnished our house with all the elegance of fashionable expense, and
+was careful to conceal his bounties, lest the poverty of his family
+should be suspected.
+
+At length it happened that, by misconduct like our own, a large estate,
+which had been purchased from us, was again exposed to the best bidder.
+My uncle, delighted with an opportunity of reinstating the family in
+their possessions, came down with treasures scarcely to be imagined in a
+place where commerce has not made large sums familiar, and at once drove
+all the competitors away, expedited the writings, and took possession.
+He now considered himself as superior to trade, disposed of his stock,
+and as soon as he had settled his economy, began to shew his rural
+sovereignty, by breaking the hedges of his tenants in hunting, and
+seizing the guns or nets of those whose fortunes did not qualify them
+for sportsmen. He soon afterwards solicited the office of sheriff, from
+which all his neighbours were glad to be reprieved, but which he
+regarded as a resumption of ancestral claims, and a kind of restoration
+to blood after the attainder of a trade.
+
+My uncle, whose mind was so filled with this change of his condition,
+that he found no want of domestick entertainment, declared himself too
+old to marry, and resolved to let the newly-purchased estate fall into
+the regular channel of inheritance. I was therefore considered as heir
+apparent, and courted with officiousness and caresses, by the gentlemen
+who had hitherto coldly allowed me that rank which they could not
+refuse, depressed me with studied neglect, and irritated me with
+ambiguous insults.
+
+I felt not much pleasure from the civilities for which I knew myself
+indebted to my uncle's industry, till, by one of the invitations which
+every day now brought me, I was induced to spend a week with Lucius,
+whose daughter Flavilla I had often seen and admired like others,
+without any thought of nearer approaches. The inequality which had
+hitherto kept me at a distance being now levelled, I was received with
+every evidence of respect: Lucius told me the fortune which he intended
+for his favourite daughter; many odd accidents obliged us to be often
+together without company, and I soon began to find that they were
+spreading for me the nets of matrimony.
+
+Flavilla was all softness and complaisance. I, who had been excluded by
+a narrow fortune from much acquaintance with the world, and never been
+honoured before with the notice of so fine a lady, was easily enamoured.
+Lucius either perceived my passion, or Flavilla betrayed it; care was
+taken, that our private meetings should be less frequent, and my charmer
+confessed by her eyes how much pain she suffered from our restraint. I
+renewed my visit upon every pretence, but was not allowed one interview
+without witness; at last I declared my passion to Lucius, who received
+me as a lover worthy of his daughter, and told me that nothing was
+wanting to his consent, but that my uncle should settle his estate upon
+me. I objected the indecency of encroaching on his life, and the danger
+of provoking him by such an unseasonable demand. Lucius seemed not to
+think decency of much importance, but admitted the danger of
+displeasing, and concluded that as he was now old and sickly, we might,
+without any inconvenience, wait for his death.
+
+With this resolution I was better contented, as it procured me the
+company of Flavilla, in which the days passed away amidst continual
+rapture; but in time I began to be ashamed of sitting idle, in
+expectation of growing rich by the death of my benefactor, and proposed
+to Lucius many schemes of raising my own fortune by such assistance as I
+knew my uncle willing to give me. Lucius, afraid lest I should change my
+affection in absence, diverted me from my design by dissuasives to which
+my passion easily listened. At last my uncle died, and considering
+himself as neglected by me, from the time that Flavilla took possession
+of my heart, left his estate to my younger brother, who was always
+hovering about his bed, and relating stories of my pranks and
+extravagance, my contempt of the commercial dialect, and my impatience
+to be selling stock.
+
+My condition was soon known, and I was no longer admitted by the father
+of Flavilla. I repeated the protestations of regard, which had been
+formerly returned with so much ardour, in a letter which she received
+privately, but returned by her father's footman. Contempt has driven out
+my love, and I am content to have purchased, by the loss of fortune, an
+escape from a harpy, who has joined the artifices of age to the
+allurements of youth. I am now going to pursue my former projects with a
+legacy which my uncle bequeathed me, and if I succeed, shall expect to
+hear of the repentance of Flavilla.
+
+I am, Sir, Yours, &c.
+
+CONSTANTIUS.
+
+
+
+No. 193. TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1752.
+
+ _Laudis amore tumes? sunt certa piacula, quoe te
+ Ter pure lecto poterunt recreare libello_. HOR. Lib. i. Ep. i. 36.
+
+ Or art thou vain? books yield a certain spell
+ To stop thy tumour; you shall cease to swell
+ When you have read them thrice, and studied well. CREECH.
+
+Whatever is universally desired, will be sought by industry and
+artifice, by merit and crimes, by means good and bad, rational and
+absurd, according to the prevalence of virtue or vice, of wisdom or
+folly. Some will always mistake the degree of their own desert, and some
+will desire that others may mistake it. The cunning will have recourse
+to stratagem, and the powerful to violence, for the attainment of their
+wishes; some will stoop to theft, and others venture upon plunder.
+
+Praise is so pleasing to the mind of man, that it is the original motive
+of almost all our actions. The desire of commendation, as of every thing
+else, is varied indeed by innumerable differences of temper, capacity,
+and knowledge; some have no higher wish than for the applause of a club;
+some expect the acclamations of a county; and some have hoped to fill
+the mouths of all ages and nations with their names. Every man pants for
+the highest eminence within his view; none, however mean, ever sinks
+below the hope of being distinguished by his fellow-beings, and very few
+have by magnanimity or piety been so raised above it, as to act wholly
+without regard to censure or opinion.
+
+To be praised, therefore, every man resolves; but resolutions will not
+execute themselves. That which all think too parsimoniously distributed
+to their own claims, they will not gratuitously squander upon others,
+and some expedient must be tried, by which praise may be gained before
+it can be enjoyed.
+
+Among the innumerable bidders for praise, some are willing to purchase
+at the highest rate, and offer ease and health, fortune and life. Yet
+even of these only a small part have gained what they so earnestly
+desired; the student wastes away in meditation, and the soldier perishes
+on the ramparts, but unless some accidental advantage cooperates with
+merit, neither perseverance nor adventure attracts attention, and
+learning and bravery sink into the grave, without honour or remembrance.
+
+But ambition and vanity generally expect to be gratified on easier
+terms. It has been long observed, that what is procured by skill or
+labour to the first possessor, may be afterwards transferred for money;
+and that the man of wealth may partake all the acquisitions of courage
+without hazard, and all the products of industry without fatigue. It was
+easily discovered, that riches would obtain praise among other
+conveniencies, and that he whose pride was unluckily associated with
+laziness, ignorance, or cowardice, needed only to pay the hire of a
+panegyrist, and he might be regaled with periodical eulogies; might
+determine, at leisure, what virtue or science he would be pleased to
+appropriate, and be lulled in the evening with soothing serenades, or
+waked in the morning by sprightly gratulations.
+
+The happiness which mortals receive from the celebration of beneficence
+which never relieved, eloquence which never persuaded, or elegance which
+never pleased, ought not to be envied or disturbed, when they are known
+honestly to pay for their entertainment. But there are unmerciful
+exactors of adulation, who withhold the wages of venality; retain their
+encomiast from year to year by general promises and ambiguous
+blandishments; and when he has run through the whole compass of
+flattery, dismiss him with contempt, because his vein of fiction is
+exhausted.
+
+A continual feast of commendation is only to be obtained by merit or by
+wealth; many are therefore obliged to content themselves with single
+morsels, and recompense the infrequency of their enjoyment by excess and
+riot, whenever fortune sets the banquet before them. Hunger is never
+delicate; they who are seldom gorged to the full with praise, may be
+safely fed with gross compliments; for the appetite must be satisfied
+before it is disgusted.
+
+It is easy to find the moment at which vanity is eager for sustenance,
+and all that impudence or servility can offer will be well received.
+When any one complains of the want of what he is known to possess in an
+uncommon degree, he certainly waits with impatience to be contradicted.
+When the trader pretends anxiety about the payment of his bills, or the
+beauty remarks how frightfully she looks, then is the lucky moment to
+talk of riches or of charms, of the death of lovers, or the honour of a
+merchant.
+
+Others there are yet more open and artless, who, instead of suborning a
+flatterer, are content to supply his place, and, as some animals
+impregnate themselves, swell with the praises which they hear from their
+own tongues. _Recte is dicitur laudare sese, cui nemo alius contigit
+laudator_. "It is right," says Erasmus, "that he, whom no one else will
+commend, should bestow commendations on himself." Of all the sons of
+vanity, these are surely the happiest and greatest; for what is
+greatness or happiness but independence on external influences,
+exemption from hope or fear, and the power of supplying every want from
+the common stores of nature, which can neither be exhausted nor
+prohibited? Such is the wise man of the stoicks; such is the divinity of
+the epicureans; and such is the flatterer of himself. Every other
+enjoyment malice may destroy; every other panegyrick envy may withhold;
+but no human power can deprive the boaster of his own encomiums. Infamy
+may hiss, or contempt may growl, the hirelings of the great may follow
+fortune, and the votaries of truth may attend on virtue; but his
+pleasures still remain the same; he can always listen with rapture to
+himself, and leave those who dare not repose upon their own attestation,
+to be elated or depressed by chance, and toil on in the hopeless task of
+fixing caprice, and propitiating malice.
+
+This art of happiness has been long practised by periodical writers,
+with little apparent violation of decency. When we think our
+excellencies overlooked by the world, or desire to recall the attention
+of the publick to some particular performance, we sit down with great
+composure and write a letter to ourselves. The correspondent, whose
+character we assume, always addresses us with the deference due to a
+superior intelligence; proposes his doubts with a proper sense of his
+own inability; offers an objection with trembling diffidence; and at
+last has no other pretensions to our notice than his profundity of
+respect, and sincerity of admiration, his submission to our dictates,
+and zeal for our success. To such a reader, it is impossible to refuse
+regard, nor can it easily be imagined with how much alacrity we snatch
+up the pen which indignation or despair had condemned to inactivity,
+when we find such candour and judgment yet remaining in the world.
+
+A letter of this kind I had lately the honour of perusing, in which,
+though some of the periods were negligently closed, and some expressions
+of familiarity were used, which I thought might teach others to address
+me with too little reverence, I was so much delighted with the passages
+in which mention was made of universal learning--unbounded genius--soul
+of Homer, Pythagoras, and Plato--solidity of thought--accuracy of
+distinction--elegance of combination--vigour of fancy--strength of
+reason--and regularity of composition--that I had once determined to lay
+it before the publick. Three times I sent it to the printer, and three
+times I fetched it back. My modesty was on the point of yielding, when
+reflecting that I was about to waste panegyricks on myself, which might
+be more profitably reserved for my patron, I locked it up for a better
+hour, in compliance with the farmer's principle, who never eats at home
+what he can carry to the market.
+
+
+
+No. 194. SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1752.
+
+ _Si damnosa senem juvat alea, ludit et heres
+ Bullatus, parvoque eadem movet arma fritillo_. JUV. Sat. xiv. 4.
+
+ If gaming does an aged sire entice,
+ Then my young master swiftly learns the vice,
+ And shakes in hanging sleeves the little box and dice. J. DRYDEN, jun.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+That vanity which keeps every man important in his own eyes, inclines me
+to believe that neither you nor your readers have yet forgotten the name
+of Eumathes, who sent you a few months ago an account of his arrival at
+London, with a young nobleman his pupil. I shall therefore continue my
+narrative without preface or recapitulation.
+
+My pupil, in a very short time, by his mother's countenance and
+direction, accomplished himself with all those qualifications which
+constitute puerile politeness. He became in a few days a perfect master
+of his hat, which with a careless nicety he could put off or on, without
+any need to adjust it by a second motion. This was not attained but by
+frequent consultations with his dancing-master, and constant practice
+before the glass, for he had some rustick habits to overcome; but, what
+will not time and industry perform? A fortnight more furnished him with
+all the airs and forms of familiar and respectful salutation, from the
+clap on the shoulder to the humble bow; he practises the stare of
+strangeness, and the smile of condescension, the solemnity of promise,
+and the graciousness of encouragement, as if he had been nursed at a
+levee; and pronounces, with no less propriety than his father, the
+monosyllables of coldness, and sonorous periods of respectful
+profession.
+
+He immediately lost the reserve and timidity which solitude and study
+are apt to impress upon the most courtly genius; was able to enter a
+crowded room with airy civility; to meet the glances of a hundred eyes
+without perturbation; and address those whom he never saw before with
+ease and confidence. In less than a month his mother declared her
+satisfaction at his proficiency by a triumphant observation, that she
+believed _nothing would make him blush_.
+
+The silence with which I was contented to hear my pupil's praises, gave
+the lady reason to suspect me not much delighted with his acquisitions;
+but she attributed my discontent to the diminution of my influence, and
+my fears of losing the patronage of the family; and though she thinks
+favourably of my learning and morals, she considers me as wholly
+unacquainted with the customs of the polite part of mankind; and
+therefore not qualified to form the manners of a young nobleman, or
+communicate the knowledge of the world. This knowledge she comprises in
+the rules of visiting, the history of the present hour, an early
+intelligence of the change of fashions, an extensive acquaintance with
+the names and faces of persons of rank, and a frequent appearance in
+places of resort.
+
+All this my pupil pursues with great application. He is twice a day in
+the Mall, where he studies the dress of every man splendid enough to
+attract his notice, and never comes home without some observation upon
+sleeves, button-holes, and embroidery. At his return from the theatre,
+he can give an account of the gallantries, glances, whispers, smiles,
+sighs, flirts, and blushes of every box, so much to his mother's
+satisfaction, that when I attempted to resume my character, by inquiring
+his opinion of the sentiments and diction of the tragedy, she at once
+repressed my criticism, by telling me, "that she hoped he did not go to
+lose his time in attending to the creatures on the stage."
+
+But his acuteness was most eminently signalized at the masquerade, where
+he discovered his acquaintance through their disguises, with such
+wonderful facility, as has afforded the family an inexhaustible topick
+of conversation. Every new visitor is informed how one was detected by
+his gait, and another by the swinging of his arms, a third by the toss
+of his head, and another by his favourite phrase; nor can you doubt but
+these performances receive their just applause, and a genius thus
+hastening to maturity is promoted by every art of cultivation.
+
+Such have been his endeavours, and such his assistances, that every
+trace of literature was soon obliterated. He has changed his language
+with his dress, and instead of endeavouring at purity or propriety, has
+no other care than to catch the reigning phrase and current exclamation,
+till, by copying whatever is peculiar in the talk of all those whose
+birth or fortune entitles them to imitation, he has collected every
+fashionable barbarism of the present winter, and speaks a dialect not to
+be understood among those who form their style by poring upon authors.
+
+To this copiousness of ideas, and felicity of language, he has joined
+such eagerness to lead the conversation, that he is celebrated among the
+ladies as the prettiest gentleman that the age can boast of, except that
+some who love to talk themselves, think him too forward, and others
+lament that, with so much wit and knowledge, he is not taller.
+
+His mother listens to his observations with her eyes sparkling and her
+heart beating, and can scarcely contain, in the most numerous
+assemblies, the expectations which she has formed for his future
+eminence. Women, by whatever fate, always judge absurdly of the
+intellects of boys. The vivacity and confidence which attract female
+admiration, are seldom produced in the early part of life, but by
+ignorance at least, if not by stupidity; for they proceed not from
+confidence of right, but fearlessness of wrong. Whoever has a clear
+apprehension, must have quick sensibility, and where he has no
+sufficient reason to trust his own judgment, will proceed with doubt and
+caution, because he perpetually dreads the disgrace of errour. The pain
+of miscarriage is naturally proportionate to the desire of excellence;
+and, therefore, till men are hardened by long familiarity with reproach,
+or have attained, by frequent struggles, the art of suppressing their
+emotions, diffidence is found the inseparable associate of
+understanding.
+
+But so little distrust has my pupil of his own abilities, that he has
+for some time professed himself a wit, and tortures his imagination on
+all occasions for burlesque and jocularity. How he supports a character
+which, perhaps, no man ever assumed without repentance, may be easily
+conjectured. Wit, you know, is the unexpected copulation of ideas, the
+discovery of some occult relation between images in appearance remote
+from each other; an effusion of wit, therefore, presupposes an
+accumulation of knowledge; a memory stored with notions, which the
+imagination may cull out to compose, new assemblages. Whatever may be
+the native vigour of the mind, she can never form many combinations from
+few ideas, as many changes can never be rung upon a few bells. Accident
+may indeed sometimes produce a lucky parallel or a striking contrast;
+but these gifts of chance are not frequent, and he that has nothing of
+his own, and yet condemns himself to needless expenses, must live upon
+loans or theft.
+
+The indulgence which his youth has hitherto obtained, and the respect
+which his rank secures, have hitherto supplied the want of intellectual
+qualifications; and he imagines that all admire who applaud, and that
+all who laugh are pleased. He therefore returns every day to the charge
+with increase of courage, though not of strength, and practises all the
+tricks by which wit is counterfeited. He lays trains for a quibble; he
+contrives blunders for his footman; he adapts old stories to present
+characters; he mistakes the question, that he may return a smart answer;
+he anticipates the argument, that he may plausibly object; when he has
+nothing to reply, he repeats the last words of his antagonist, then
+says, "your humble servant," and concludes with a laugh of triumph.
+
+These mistakes I have honestly attempted to correct; but what can be
+expected from reason unsupported by fashion, splendour, or authority? He
+hears me, indeed, or appears to hear me, but is soon rescued from the
+lecture by more pleasing avocations; and shows, diversions, and
+caresses, drive my precepts from his remembrance.
+
+He at last imagines himself qualified to enter the world, and has met
+with adventures in his first sally, which I shall, by your paper,
+communicate to the publick.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+EUMATHES.
+
+
+
+No. 195. TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1752.
+
+ --_Nescit equo rudis
+ Haerere ingenuus puer,
+ Venarique timet; ludere doctior,
+ Seu Graeco jubeas trocho,
+ Seu malis vetitâ legibus aleâ_. HOR. Lib. iii. Ode xxiv. 54.
+
+ Nor knows our youth, of noblest race,
+ To mount the manag'd steed, or urge the chace;
+ More skill'd in the mean arts of vice,
+ The whirling troque, or law-forbidden dice. FRANCIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Favours of every kind are doubled when they are speedily conferred. This
+is particularly true of the gratification of curiosity. He that long
+delays a story, and suffers his auditor to torment himself with
+expectation, will seldom be able to recompense the uneasiness, or equal
+the hope which he suffers to be raised.
+
+For this reason, I have already sent you the continuation of my pupil's
+history, which, though it contains no events very uncommon, may be of
+use to young men who are in too much haste to trust their own prudence,
+and quit the wing of protection before they are able to shift for
+themselves.
+
+When he first settled in London, he was so much bewildered in the
+enormous extent of the town, so confounded by incessant noise, and
+crowds, and hurry, and so terrified by rural narratives of the arts of
+sharpers, the rudeness of the populace, malignity of porters, and
+treachery of coachmen, that he was afraid to go beyond the door without
+an attendant, and imagined his life in danger if he was obliged to pass
+the streets at night in any vehicle but his mother's chair.
+
+He was therefore contented, for a time, that I should accompany him in
+all his excursions. But his fear abated as he grew more familiar with
+its objects; and the contempt to which his rusticity exposed him from
+such of his companions as had accidentally known the town longer,
+obliged him to dissemble his remaining terrours.
+
+His desire of liberty made him now willing to spare me the trouble of
+observing his motions; but knowing how much his ignorance exposed him to
+mischief, I thought it cruel to abandon him to the fortune of the town.
+We went together every day to a coffee-house, where he met wits, heirs,
+and fops, airy, ignorant, and thoughtless as himself, with whom he had
+become acquainted at card-tables, and whom he considered as the only
+beings to be envied or admired. What were their topicks of conversation,
+I could never discover; for, so much was their vivacity repressed by my
+intrusive seriousness, that they seldom proceeded beyond the exchange of
+nods and shrugs, an arch grin, or a broken hint, except when they could
+retire, while I was looking on the papers, to a corner of the room,
+where they seemed to disburden their imaginations, and commonly vented
+the superfluity of their sprightliness in a peal of laughter. When they
+had tittered themselves into negligence, I could sometimes overhear a
+few syllables, such as--solemn rascal--academical airs--smoke the tutor--
+company for gentlemen!--and other broken phrases, by which I did not
+suffer my quiet to be disturbed, for they never proceeded to avowed
+indignities, but contented themselves to murmur in secret, and, whenever
+I turned my eye upon them, shrunk into stillness.
+
+He was, however, desirous of withdrawing from the subjection which he
+could not venture to break, and made a secret appointment to assist his
+companions in the persecution of a play. His footman privately procured
+him a catcall, on which he practised in a back-garret for two hours in
+the afternoon. At the proper time a chair was called; he pretended an
+engagement at lady Flutter's, and hastened to the place where his
+critical associates had assembled. They hurried away to the theatre,
+full of malignity and denunciations against a man whose name they had
+never heard, and a performance which they could not understand; for they
+were resolved to judge for themselves, and would not suffer the town to
+be imposed upon by scribblers. In the pit, they exerted themselves with
+great spirit and vivacity; called out for the tunes of obscene songs,
+talked loudly at intervals of Shakespeare and Jonson, played on their
+catcalls a short prelude of terrour, clamoured vehemently for a
+prologue, and clapped with great dexterity at the first entrance of the
+players.
+
+Two scenes they heard without attempting interruption; but, being no
+longer able to restrain their impatience, they then began to exert
+themselves in groans and hisses, and plied their catcalls with incessant
+diligence; so that they were soon considered by the audience as
+disturbers of the house; and some who sat near them, either provoked at
+the obstruction of their entertainment, or desirous to preserve the
+author from the mortification of seeing his hopes destroyed by children,
+snatched away their instruments of criticism, and, by the seasonable
+vibration of a stick, subdued them instantaneously to decency and
+silence.
+
+To exhilarate themselves after this vexatious defeat, they posted to a
+tavern, where they recovered their alacrity, and, after two hours of
+obstreperous jollity, burst out big with enterprize, and panting for
+some occasion to signalize their prowess. They proceeded vigorously
+through two streets, and with very little opposition dispersed a rabble
+of drunkards less daring than themselves, then rolled two watchmen in
+the kennel, and broke the windows of a tavern in which the fugitives
+took shelter. At last it was determined to march up to a row of chairs,
+and demolish them for standing on the pavement; the chairmen formed a
+line of battle, and blows were exchanged for a time with equal courage
+on both sides. At last the assailants were overpowered, and the
+chairmen, when they knew then-captives, brought them home by force.
+
+The young gentleman, next morning, hung his head, and was so much
+ashamed of his outrages and defeat, that perhaps he might have been
+checked in his first follies, had not his mother, partly in pity of his
+dejection, and partly in approbation of his spirit, relieved him from
+his perplexity by paying the damages privately, and discouraging all
+animadversion and reproof.
+
+This indulgence could not wholly preserve him from the remembrance of
+his disgrace, nor at once restore his confidence and elation. He was for
+three days silent, modest, and compliant, and thought himself neither
+too wise for instruction, nor too manly for restraint. But his levity
+overcame this salutary sorrow; he began to talk with his former raptures
+of masquerades, taverns, and frolicks; blustered when his wig was not
+combed with exactness; and threatened destruction to a tailor who had
+mistaken his directions about the pocket.
+
+I knew that he was now rising again above control, and that his
+inflation of spirits would burst out into some mischievous absurdity. I
+therefore watched him with great attention; but one evening, having
+attended his mother at a visit, he withdrew himself, unsuspected, while
+the company was engaged at cards. His vivacity and officiousness were
+soon missed, and his return impatiently expected; supper was delayed,
+and conversation suspended; every coach that rattled through the street
+was expected to bring him, and every servant that entered the room was
+examined concerning his departure. At last the lady returned home, and
+was with great difficulty preserved from fits by spirits and cordials.
+The family was despatched a thousand ways without success, and the house
+was filled with distraction, till, as we were deliberating what further
+measures to take, he returned from a petty gaming-table, with his coat
+torn and his head broken; without his sword, snuff-box, sleeve-buttons,
+and watch.
+
+Of this loss or robbery, he gave little account; but, instead of sinking
+into his former shame, endeavoured to support himself by surliness and
+asperity. "He was not the first that had played away a few trifles, and
+of what use were birth and fortune if they would not admit some sallies
+and expenses?" His mamma was so much provoked by the cost of this prank,
+that she would neither palliate nor conceal it; and his father, after
+some threats of rustication which his fondness would not suffer him to
+execute, reduced the allowance of his pocket, that he might not be
+tempted by plenty to profusion. This method would have succeeded in a
+place where there are no panders to folly and extravagance, but was now
+likely to have produced pernicious consequences; for we have discovered
+a treaty with a broker, whose daughter he seems disposed to marry, on
+condition that he shall be supplied with present money, for which he is
+to repay thrice the value at the death of his father.
+
+There was now no time to be lost. A domestick consultation was
+immediately held, and he was doomed to pass two years in the country;
+but his mother, touched with his tears, declared, that she thought him
+too much of a man to be any longer confined to his book, and he
+therefore begins his travels to-morrow under a French governour.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+EUMATHES.
+
+
+
+No. 196. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1752.
+
+ _Multa ferunt anni venientes commoda secum,
+ Multa recedentes adimunt.--_ HOR. De Ar. Poet. 175.
+
+ The blessings flowing in with life's full tide,
+ Down with our ebb of life decreasing glide. FRANCIS.
+
+Baxter, in the narrative of his own life, has enumerated several
+opinions, which, though he thought them evident and incontestable at his
+first entrance into the world, time and experience disposed him to
+change.
+
+Whoever reviews the state of his own mind from the dawn of manhood to
+its decline, and considers what he pursued or dreaded, slighted or
+esteemed, at different periods of his age, will have no reason to
+imagine such changes of sentiment peculiar to any station or character.
+Every man, however careless and inattentive, has conviction forced upon
+him; the lectures of time obtrude themselves upon the most unwilling or
+dissipated auditor; and, by comparing our past with our present
+thoughts, we perceive that we have changed our minds, though perhaps we
+cannot discover when the alteration happened, or by what causes it was
+produced.
+
+This revolution of sentiments occasions a perpetual contest between the
+old and young. They who imagine themselves entitled to veneration by the
+prerogative of longer life, are inclined to treat the notions of those
+whose conduct they superintend with superciliousness and contempt, for
+want of considering that the future and the past have different
+appearances; that the disproportion will always be great between
+expectation and enjoyment, between new possession and satiety; that the
+truth of many maxims of age gives too little pleasure to be allowed till
+it is felt; and that the miseries of life would be increased beyond all
+human power of endurance, if we were to enter the world with the same
+opinions as we carry from it.
+
+We naturally indulge those ideas that please us. Hope will predominate
+in every mind, till it has been suppressed by frequent disappointments.
+The youth has not yet discovered how many evils are continually hovering
+about us, and when he is set free from the shackles of discipline, looks
+abroad into the world with rapture; he sees an elysian region open
+before him, so variegated with beauty, and so stored with pleasure, that
+his care is rather to accumulate good, than to shun evil; he stands
+distracted by different forms of delight, and has no other doubt, than
+which path to follow of those which all lead equally to the bowers of
+happiness.
+
+He who has seen only the superficies of life believes every thing to be
+what it appears, and rarely suspects that external splendour conceals
+any latent sorrow or vexation. He never imagines that there may be
+greatness without safety, affluence without content, jollity without
+friendship, and solitude without peace. He fancies himself permitted to
+cull the blessings of every condition, and to leave its inconveniencies
+to the idle and the ignorant. He is inclined to believe no man miserable
+but by his own fault, and seldom looks with much pity upon failings or
+miscarriages, because he thinks them willingly admitted, or negligently
+incurred.
+
+It is impossible, without pity and contempt, to hear a youth of generous
+sentiments and warm imagination, declaring, in the moment of openness
+and confidence, his designs and expectations; because long life is
+possible, he considers it as certain, and therefore promises himself all
+the changes of happiness, and provides gratifications for every desire.
+He is, for a time, to give himself wholly to frolick and diversion, to
+range the world in search of pleasure, to delight every eye, to gain
+every heart, and to be celebrated equally for his pleasing levities and
+solid attainments, his deep reflections and his sparkling repartees. He
+then elevates his views to nobler enjoyments, and finds all the
+scattered excellencies of the female world united in a woman, who
+prefers his addresses to wealth and titles; he is afterwards to engage
+in business, to dissipate difficulty, and overpower opposition: to
+climb, by the mere force of merit, to fame and greatness; and reward all
+those who countenanced his rise, or paid due regard to his early
+excellence. At last he will retire in peace and honour; contract his
+views to domestick pleasures; form the manners of children like himself;
+observe how every year expands the beauty of his daughters, and how his
+sons catch ardour from their father's history; he will give laws to the
+neighbourhood; dictate axioms to posterity; and leave the world an
+example of wisdom and of happiness.
+
+With hopes like these, he sallies jocund into life; to little purpose is
+he told, that the condition of humanity admits no pure and unmingled
+happiness; that the exuberant gaiety of youth ends in poverty or
+disease; that uncommon qualifications and contrarieties of excellence,
+produce envy equally with applause; that whatever admiration and
+fondness may promise him, he must marry a wife like the wives of others,
+with some virtues and some faults, and be as often disgusted by her
+vices, as delighted by her elegance; that if he adventures into the
+circle of action, he must expect to encounter men as artful, as daring,
+as resolute as himself; that of his children, some may be deformed, and
+others vicious; some may disgrace him by their follies, some offend him
+by their insolence, and some exhaust him by their profusion. He hears
+all this with obstinate incredulity, and wonders by what malignity old
+age is influenced, that it cannot forbear to fill his ears with
+predictions of misery.
+
+Among other pleasing errours of young minds, is the opinion of their own
+importance. He that has not yet remarked, how little attention his
+contemporaries can spare from their own affairs, conceives all eyes
+turned upon himself, and imagines every one that approaches him to be an
+enemy or a follower, an admirer or a spy. He therefore considers his
+fame as involved in the event of every action. Many of the virtues and
+vices of youth proceed from this quick sense of reputation. This it is
+that gives firmness and constancy, fidelity, and disinterestedness, and
+it is this that kindles resentment for slight injuries, and dictates all
+the principles of sanguinary honour.
+
+But as time brings him forward into the world, he soon discovers that he
+only shares fame or reproach with innumerable partners; that he is left
+unmarked in the obscurity of the crowd; and that what he does, whether
+good or bad, soon gives way to new objects of regard. He then easily
+sets himself free from the anxieties of reputation, and considers praise
+or censure as a transient breath, which, while he hears it, is passing
+away, without any lasting mischief or advantage.
+
+In youth, it is common to measure right and wrong by the opinion of the
+world, and, in age, to act without any measure but interest, and to lose
+shame without substituting virtue.
+
+Such is the condition of life, that something is always wanting to
+happiness. In youth, we have warm hopes, which are soon blasted by
+rashness and negligence, and great designs, which are defeated by
+inexperience. In age, we have knowledge and prudence without spirit to
+exert, or motives to prompt them; we are able to plan schemes and
+regulate measures, but have not time remaining to bring them to
+completion.
+
+
+
+No. 197. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1752.
+
+ _Cujus vulturis hoc erit cadaver_? MART. Lib. vi. Ep. lxii. 4.
+
+ Say, to what vulture's share this carcase falls? F. LEWIS
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I belong to an order of mankind, considerable at least for their number,
+to which your notice has never been formally extended, though equally
+entitled to regard with those triflers, who have hitherto supplied you
+with topicks of amusement or instruction. I am, Mr. Rambler, a
+legacy-hunter; and, as every man is willing to think well of the tribe
+in which his name is registered, you will forgive my vanity, if I remind
+you that the legacy-hunter, however degraded by an ill-compounded
+appellation in our barbarous language, was known, as I am told, in
+ancient Rome, by the sonorous titles of Captator and Hæredipeta.
+
+My father was an attorney in the country, who married his master's
+daughter in hopes of a fortune which he did not obtain, having been, as
+he afterwards discovered, chosen by her only because she had no better
+offer, and was afraid of service. I was the first offspring of a
+marriage, thus reciprocally fraudulent, and therefore could not be
+expected to inherit much dignity or generosity, and if I had them not
+from nature, was not likely ever to attain them; for, in the years which
+I spent at home, I never heard any reason for action or forbearance, but
+that we should gain money or lose it; nor was taught any other style of
+commendation, than that Mr. Sneaker is a warm man, Mr. Gripe has done
+his business, and needs care for nobody.
+
+My parents, though otherwise not great philosophers, knew the force of
+early education, and took care that the blank of my understanding should
+be filled with impressions of the value of money. My mother used, upon
+all occasions, to inculcate some salutary axioms, such as might incite
+me _to keep what I had, and get what I could_; she informed me that we
+were in a world, where _all must catch that catch can_; and as I grew
+up, stored my memory with deeper observations; restrained me from the
+usual puerile expenses, by remarking that _many a little made a mickle_;
+and, when I envied the finery of my neighbours, told me that _brag was a
+good dog, but hold-fast was a better_.
+
+I was soon sagacious enough to discover that I was not born to great
+wealth; and having heard no other name for happiness, was sometimes
+inclined to repine at my condition. But my mother always relieved me, by
+saying, that there was money enough in the family, that _it was good to
+be of kin to means_, that I had nothing to do but to please my friends,
+and I might come to hold up my head with the best squire in the country.
+
+These splendid expectations arose from our alliance to three persons of
+considerable fortune. My mother's aunt had attended on a lady, who, when
+she died, rewarded her officiousness and fidelity with a large legacy.
+My father had two relations, of whom one had broken his indentures and
+run to sea, from whence, after an absence of thirty years, he returned
+with ten thousand pounds; and the other had lured an heiress out of a
+window, who, dying of her first child, had left him her estate, on which
+he lived, without any other care than to collect his rents, and preserve
+from poachers that game which he could not kill himself.
+
+These hoarders of money were visited and courted by all who had any
+pretence to approach them, and received presents and compliments from
+cousins who could scarcely tell the degree of their relation. But we had
+peculiar advantages, which encouraged us to hope, that we should by
+degrees supplant our competitors. My father, by his profession, made
+himself necessary in their affairs; for the sailor and the chambermaid,
+he inquired out mortgages and securities, and wrote bonds and contracts;
+and had endeared himself to the old woman, who once rashly lent an
+hundred pounds without consulting him, by informing her, that her
+debtor, was on the point of bankruptcy, and posting so expeditiously
+with an execution, that all the other creditors were defrauded.
+
+To the squire he was a kind of steward, and had distinguished himself in
+his office by his address in raising the rents, his inflexibility in
+distressing the tardy tenants, and his acuteness in setting the parish
+free from burdensome inhabitants, by shifting them off to some other
+settlement.
+
+Business made frequent attendance necessary; trust soon produced
+intimacy; and success gave a claim to kindness; so that we had
+opportunity to practise all the arts of flattery and endearment. My
+mother, who could not support the thoughts of losing any thing,
+determined, that all their fortunes should centre in me; and, in the
+prosecution of her schemes, took care to inform me that _nothing cost
+less than good words_, and that it is comfortable to leap into an estate
+which another has got.
+
+She trained me by these precepts to the utmost ductility of obedience,
+and the closest attention to profit. At an age when other boys are
+sporting in the fields or murmuring in the school, I was contriving some
+new method of paying my court; inquiring the age of my future
+benefactors; or considering how I should employ their legacies.
+
+If our eagerness of money could have been satisfied with the possessions
+of any one of my relations, they might perhaps have been obtained; but
+as it was impossible to be always present with all three, our
+competitors were busy to efface any trace of affection which we might
+have left behind; and since there was not, on any part, such superiority
+of merit as could enforce a constant and unshaken preference, whoever
+was the last that flattered or obliged, had, for a time, the ascendant.
+
+My relations maintained a regular exchange of courtesy, took care to
+miss no occasion of condolence or congratulation, and sent presents at
+stated times, but had in their hearts not much esteem for one another.
+The seaman looked with contempt upon the squire as a milksop and a
+landman, who had lived without knowing the points of the compass, or
+seeing any part of the world beyond the county-town; and whenever they
+met, would talk of longitude and latitude, and circles and tropicks,
+would scarcely tell him the hour without some mention of the horizon and
+meridian, nor shew him the news without detecting his ignorance of the
+situation of other countries.
+
+The squire considered the sailor as a rude uncultivated savage, with
+little more of human than his form, and diverted himself with his
+ignorance of all common objects and affairs; when he could persuade him
+to go into the field, he always exposed him to the sportsmen, by sending
+him to look for game in improper places; and once prevailed upon him to
+be present at the races, only that he might shew the gentlemen how a
+sailor sat upon a horse.
+
+The old gentlewoman thought herself wiser than both, for she lived with
+no servant but a maid, and saved her money. The others were indeed
+sufficiently frugal; but the squire could not live without dogs and
+horses, and the sailor never suffered the day to pass but over a bowl of
+punch, to which, as he was not critical in the choice of his company,
+every man was welcome that could roar out a catch, or tell a story.
+
+All these, however, I was to please; an arduous task; but what will not
+youth and avarice undertake? I had an unresisting suppleness of temper,
+and an insatiable wish for riches; I was perpetually instigated by the
+ambition of my parents, and assisted occasionally by their instructions.
+What these advantages enabled me to perform, shall be told in the next
+letter of,
+
+Yours, &c.
+
+CAPTATOR.
+
+
+
+No. 198. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1752.
+
+ _Nil mihi das vivus: dicis, post fata daturum.
+ Si non es stultus, scis, Maro, quid cupiam_. MART. Lib. xi. 67.
+
+ You've told me, Maro, whilst you live,
+ You'd not a single penny give,
+ But that whene'er you chance to die,
+ You'd leave a handsome legacy:
+ You must be mad beyond redress,
+ If my next wish you cannot guess. F. LEWIS.
+
+MR. RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+You, who must have observed the inclination which almost every man,
+however unactive or insignificant, discovers of representing his life as
+distinguished by extraordinary events, will not wonder that Captator
+thinks his narrative important enough to be continued. Nothing is more
+common than for those to tease their companions with their history, who
+have neither done nor suffered any thing that can excite curiosity, or
+afford instruction.
+
+As I was taught to flatter with the first essays of speech, and had very
+early lost every other passion in the desire of money, I began my
+pursuit with omens of success; for I divided my officiousness so
+judiciously among my relations, that I was equally the favourite of all.
+When any of them entered the door, I went to welcome him with raptures;
+when he went away, I hung down my head, and sometimes entreated to go
+with him with so much importunity, that I very narrowly escaped a
+consent which I dreaded in my heart. When at an annual entertainment
+they were altogether, I had a harder task; but plied them so impartially
+with caresses, that none could charge me with neglect; and when they
+were wearied with my fondness and civilities, I was always dismissed
+with money to buy playthings.
+
+Life cannot be kept at a stand: the years of innocence and prattle were
+soon at an end, and other qualifications were necessary to recommend me
+to continuance of kindness. It luckily happened that none of my friends
+had high notions of book-learning. The sailor hated to see tall boys
+shut up in a school, when they might more properly be seeing the world,
+and making their fortunes; and was of opinion, that when the first rules
+of arithmetick were known, all that was necessary to make a man complete
+might be learned on ship-board. The squire only insisted, that so much
+scholarship was indispensably necessary, as might confer ability to draw
+a lease and read the court hands; and the old chambermaid declared
+loudly her contempt of books, and her opinion that they only took the
+head off the main chance.
+
+To unite, as well as we could, all their systems, I was bred at home.
+Each was taught to believe, that I followed his directions, and I gained
+likewise, as my mother observed, this advantage, that I was always in
+the way; for she had known many favourite children sent to schools or
+academies, and forgotten.
+
+As I grew fitter to be trusted to my own discretion, I was often
+despatched upon various pretences to visit my relations, with directions
+from my parents how to ingratiate myself, and drive away competitors.
+
+I was, from my infancy, considered by the sailor as a promising genius,
+because I liked punch better than wine; and I took care to improve this
+prepossession by continual inquiries about the art of navigation, the
+degree of heat and cold in different climates, the profits of trade, and
+the dangers of shipwreck. I admired the courage of the seamen, and
+gained his heart by importuning him for a recital of his adventures, and
+a sight of his foreign curiosities. I listened with an appearance of
+close attention to stories which I could already repeat, and at the
+close never failed to express my resolution to visit distant countries,
+and my contempt of the cowards and drones that spend all their lives in
+their native parish; though I had in reality no desire of any thing but
+money, nor ever felt the stimulations of curiosity or ardour of
+adventure, but would contentedly have passed the years of Nestor in
+receiving rents, and lending upon mortgages.
+
+The squire I was able to please with less hypocrisy, for I really
+thought it pleasant enough to kill the game and eat it. Some arts of
+falsehood, however, the hunger of gold persuaded me to practise, by
+which, though no other mischief was produced, the purity of my thoughts
+was vitiated, and the reverence for truth gradually destroyed. I
+sometimes purchased fish, and pretended to have caught them; I hired the
+countrymen to shew me partridges, and then gave my uncle intelligence of
+their haunt; I learned the seats of hares at night, and discovered them
+in the morning with a sagacity that raised the wonder and envy of old
+sportsmen. One only obstruction to the advancement of my reputation I
+could never fully surmount; I was naturally a coward, and was therefore
+always left shamefully behind, when there was a necessity to leap a
+hedge, to swim a river, or force the horses to the utmost speed; but as
+these exigencies did not frequently happen, I maintained my honour with
+sufficient success, and was never left out of a hunting party.
+
+The old chambermaid was not so certainly, nor so easily pleased, for she
+had no predominant passion but avarice, and was therefore cold and
+inaccessible. She had no conception of any virtue in a young man but
+that of saving his money. When she heard of my exploits in the field,
+she would shake her head, inquire how much I should be the richer for
+all my performances, and lament that such sums should be spent upon dogs
+and horses. If the sailor told her of my inclination to travel, she was
+sure there was no place like England, and could not imagine why any man
+that can live in his own country should leave it. This sullen and frigid
+being I found means, however, to propitiate by frequent commendations of
+frugality, and perpetual care to avoid expense.
+
+From the sailor was our first and most considerable expectation; for he
+was richer than the chambermaid, and older than the squire. He was so
+awkward and bashful among women, that we concluded him secure from
+matrimony; and the noisy fondness with which he used to welcome me to
+his house, made us imagine that he would look out for no other heir, and
+that we had nothing to do but wait patiently for his death. But in the
+midst of our triumph, my uncle saluted us one morning with a cry of
+transport, and, clapping his hand hard on my shoulder, told me, I was a
+happy fellow to have a friend like him in the world, for he came to fit
+me out for a voyage with one of his old acquaintances. I turned pale,
+and trembled; my father told him, that he believed my constitution not
+fitted to the sea; and my mother, bursting into tears, cried out, that
+her heart would break if she lost me. All this had no effect; the sailor
+was wholly insusceptive of the softer passions, and, without regard to
+tears or arguments, persisted in his resolution to make me a man. We
+were obliged to comply in appearance, and preparations were accordingly
+made. I took leave of my friends with great alacrity, proclaimed the
+beneficence of my uncle with the highest strains of gratitude, and
+rejoiced at the opportunity now put into my hands of gratifying my
+thirst of knowledge. But, a week before the day appointed for my
+departure, I fell sick by my mother's direction, and refused all food
+but what she privately brought me; whenever my uncle visited me I was
+lethargick or delirious, but took care in my raving fits to talk
+incessantly of travel and merchandize. The room was kept dark; the table
+was filled with vials and gallipots; my mother was with difficulty
+persuaded not to endanger her life with nocturnal attendance; my father
+lamented the loss of the profits of the voyage; and such superfluity of
+artifices was employed, as perhaps might have discovered the cheat to a
+man of penetration. But the sailor, unacquainted with subtilties and
+stratagems, was easily deluded; and as the ship could not stay for my
+recovery, sold the cargo, and left me to re-establish my health at
+leisure.
+
+I was sent to regain my flesh in a purer air, lest it should appear
+never to have been wasted, and in two months returned to deplore my
+disappointment. My uncle pitied my dejection, and bid me prepare myself
+against next year, for no land-lubber should touch his money.
+
+A reprieve however was obtained, and perhaps some new stratagem might
+have succeeded another spring; but my uncle unhappily made amorous
+advances to my mother's maid, who, to promote so advantageous a match,
+discovered the secret with which only she had been entrusted. He
+stormed, and raved, and declaring that he would have heirs of his own,
+and not give his substance to cheats and cowards, married the girl in
+two days, and has now four children.
+
+Cowardice is always scorned, and deceit universally detested. I found my
+friends, if not wholly alienated, at least cooled in their affection;
+the squire, though he did not wholly discard me, was less fond, and
+often inquired when I would go to sea. I was obliged to bear his
+insults, and endeavoured to rekindle his kindness by assiduity and
+respect; but all my care was vain; he died without a will, and the
+estate devolved to the legal heir.
+
+Thus has the folly of my parents condemned me to spend in flattery and
+attendance those years in which I might have been qualified to place
+myself above hope or fear. I am arrived at manhood without any useful
+art, or generous sentiment; and, if the old woman should likewise at
+last deceive me, am in danger at once of beggary and ignorance.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+CAPTATOR.
+
+
+
+No. 199. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1752.
+
+ _Decolor, obscurus, cilis. Non ille repexam
+ Cæsariem Regum, nec Candida virginis ornat
+ Colla, nec insigni splendet per cingula morsu:
+ Sed nova si nigri videas miracula suai,
+ Tum pulcros superat cultus, et quldquid Evis
+ Indus litoribus rubra scrutatur in alga_. CLAUDIANUS, xlviii. 10.
+
+ Obscure, unpris'd, and dark, the magnet lies,
+ Nor lures the search of avaricious eyes,
+ Nor binds the neck, nor sparkles in the hair,
+ Nor dignifies the great, nor decks the fair.
+ But search the wonders of the dusky stone,
+ And own all glories of the mine outdone,
+ Each grace of form, each ornament of state,
+ That decks the fair, or dignifies the great.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Though you have seldom digressed from moral subjects, I suppose you are
+not so rigorous or cynical as to deny the value or usefulness of natural
+philosophy; or to have lived in this age of inquiry and experiment,
+without any attention to the wonders every day produced by the pokers of
+magnetism and the wheels of electricity. At least, I may be allowed to
+hope that, since nothing is more contrary to moral excellence than envy,
+you will not refuse to promote the happiness of others, merely because
+you cannot partake of their enjoyments.
+
+In confidence, therefore, that your ignorance has not made you an enemy
+to knowledge, I offer you the honour of introducing to the notice of the
+publick, an adept, who, having long laboured for the benefit of mankind,
+is not willing, like too many of his predecessors, to conceal his
+secrets in the grave.
+
+Many have signalized themselves by melting their estates in crucibles. I
+was born to no fortune, and therefore had only my mind and body to
+devote to knowledge, and the gratitude of posterity will attest, that
+neither mind nor body have been spared. I have sat whole weeks without
+sleep by the side of an athanor, to watch the moment of projection; I
+have made the first experiment in nineteen diving engines of new
+construction; I have fallen eleven times speechless under the shock of
+electricity; I have twice dislocated my limbs, and once fractured my
+skull, in essaying to fly[l]; and four times endangered my life by
+submitting to the transfusion of blood.
+
+In the first period of my studies, I exerted the powers of my body more
+than those of my mind, and was not without hopes that fame might be
+purchased by a few broken bones without the toil of thinking; but having
+been shattered by some violent experiments, and constrained to confine
+myself to my books, I passed six-and-thirty years in searching the
+treasures of ancient wisdom, but am at last amply recompensed for all my
+perseverance.
+
+The curiosity of the present race of philosophers, having been long
+exercised upon electricity, has been lately transferred to magnetism;
+the qualities of the loadstone have been investigated, if not with much
+advantage, yet with great applause; and as the highest praise of art is
+to imitate nature, I hope no man will think the makers of artificial
+magnets celebrated or reverenced above their deserts.
+
+I have, for some time, employed myself in the same practice, but with
+deeper knowledge and more extensive views. While my contemporaries were
+touching needles and raising weights, or busying themselves with
+inclination and variation, I have been examining those qualities of
+magnetism which may be applied to the accommodation and happiness of
+common life. I have left to inferior understandings the care of
+conducting the sailor through the hazards of the ocean, and reserved to
+myself the more difficult and illustrious province of preserving the
+connubial compact from violation, and setting mankind free for ever from
+the danger of supposititious children, and the torments of fruitless
+vigilance and anxious suspicion.
+
+To defraud any man of his due praise is unworthy of a philosopher; I
+shall, therefore, openly confess that I owe the first hint of this
+inestimable secret to the rabbi Abraham Ben Hannase, who, in his
+treatise of precious stones, has left this account of the magnet:
+[Hebrew: chkalamta],&c. "The calamita, or loadstone that attracts iron,
+produces many bad fantasies in man. Women fly from this stone. If,
+therefore, any husband be disturbed with jealousy, and fear lest his
+wife converses with other men, let him lay this stone upon her while she
+is asleep. If she be pure, she will, when she wakes, clasp her husband
+fondly in her arms; but if she be guilty, she will fall out of bed, and
+run away."
+
+When I first read this wonderful passage, I could not easily conceive
+why it had remained hitherto unregarded in such a zealous competition
+for magnetical fame. It would surely be unjust to suspect that any of
+the candidates are strangers to the name or works of rabbi Abraham, or
+to conclude, from a late edict of the Royal Society in favour of the
+English language, that philosophy and literature are no longer to act in
+concert. Yet, how should a quality so useful escape promulgation, but by
+the obscurity of the language in which it was delivered? Why are footmen
+and chambermaids paid on every side for keeping secrets, which no
+caution nor expense could secure from the all-penetrating magnet? Or,
+why are so many witnesses summoned, and so many artifices practised, to
+discover what so easy an experiment would infallibly reveal?
+
+Full of this perplexity, I read the lines of Abraham to a friend, who
+advised me not to expose my life by a mad indulgence of the love of
+fame: he warned me by the fate of Orpheus, that knowledge or genius
+could give no protection to the invader of female prerogatives; assured
+me that neither the armour of Achilles, nor the antidote of Mithridates,
+would be able to preserve me; and counselled me, if I could not live
+without renown, to attempt the acquisition of universal empire, in which
+the honour would perhaps be equal, and the danger certainly be less.
+
+I, a solitary student, pretend not to much knowledge of the world, but
+am unwilling to think it so generally corrupt, as that a scheme for the
+detection of incontinence should bring any danger upon its inventor. My
+friend has indeed told me that all the women will be my enemies, and
+that, however I flatter myself with hopes of defence from the men, I
+shall certainly find myself deserted in the hour of danger. Of the young
+men, said he, some will be afraid of sharing the disgrace of their
+mothers, and some the danger of their mistresses; of those who are
+married, part are already convinced of the falsehood of their wives, and
+part shut their eyes to avoid conviction; few ever sought for virtue in
+marriage, and therefore few will try whether they have found it. Almost
+every man is careless or timorous, and to trust is easier and safer than
+to examine.
+
+These observations discouraged me, till I began to consider what
+reception I was likely to find among the ladies, whom I have reviewed
+under the three classes of maids, wives, and widows, and cannot but hope
+that I may obtain some countenance among them. The single ladies I
+suppose universally ready to patronise my method, by which connubial
+wickedness may be detected, since no woman marries with a previous
+design to be unfaithful to her husband. And to keep them steady in my
+cause, I promise never to sell one of my magnets to a man who steals a
+girl from school; marries a woman of forty years younger than himself;
+or employs the authority of parents to obtain a wife without her own
+consent.
+
+Among the married ladies, notwithstanding the insinuations of slander,
+yet I resolve to believe, that the greater part are my friends, and am
+at least convinced, that they who demand the test, and appear on my
+side, will supply, by their spirit, the deficiency of their numbers, and
+that their enemies will shrink and quake at the sight of a magnet, as
+the slaves of Scythia fled from the scourge.
+
+The widows will be confederated in my favour by their curiosity, if not
+by their virtue; for it may be observed, that women who have outlived
+their husbands, always think themselves entitled to superintend the
+conduct of young wives; and as they are themselves in no danger from
+this magnetick trial, I shall expect them to be eminently and
+unanimously zealous in recommending it.
+
+With these hopes I shall, in a short time, offer to sale magnets armed
+with a particular metallick composition, which concentrates their
+virtue, and determines their agency. It is known that the efficacy of
+the magnet, in common operations, depends much upon its armature, and it
+cannot be imagined, that a stone, naked, or cased only in a common
+manner, will discover the virtues ascribed to it by Rabbi Abraham. The
+secret of this metal I shall carefully conceal, and, therefore, am not
+afraid of imitators, nor shall trouble the offices with solicitations
+for a patent.
+
+I shall sell them of different sizes, and various degrees of strength. I
+have some of a bulk proper to be hung at the bed's head, as scare-crows,
+and some so small that they may be easily concealed. Some I have ground
+into oval forms to be hung at watches; and some, for the curious, I have
+set in wedding rings, that ladies may never want an attestation of their
+innocence. Some I can produce so sluggish and inert, that they will not
+act before the third failure; and others so vigorous and animated, that
+they exert their influence against unlawful wishes, if they have been
+willingly and deliberately indulged. As it is my practice honestly to
+tell my customers the properties of my magnets, I can judge, by their
+choice, of the delicacy of their sentiments. Many have been content to
+spare cost by purchasing only the lowest degree of efficacy, and all
+have started with terrour from those which operate upon the thoughts.
+One young lady only fitted on a ring of the strongest energy, and
+declared that she scorned to separate her wishes from her acts, or allow
+herself to think what she was forbidden to practise.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+HERMETICUS.
+
+[Footnote l: In the sixth chapter of Rasselas we have an excellent story
+of an experimentalist in the art of flying. Dr. Johnson sketched perhaps
+from life, for we are informed that he once lodged in the same house
+with a man who broke his legs in the daring attempt.]
+
+
+
+No. 200. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1752.
+
+ _Nemo petit, modicis quae mittebantur amicis
+ A Seneca, quae Piso bonus, quae Cotta solebut
+ Largiri; namque et titulis, et fascibus olim
+ Major habebatur donandi gloria: solum
+ Poscimus, ut caenes civiliter. Hoc face, el esto,
+ Esto, ut nunc multi, dives tibi, pauper amicis_. JUV. Sat. v. 108.
+
+ No man expects (for who so much a sot
+ Who has the times he lives in so forgot?)
+ What Seneca, what Piso us'd to send,
+ To raise or to support a sinking friend.
+ Those godlike men, to wanting virtue kind,
+ Bounty well plac'd, preferr'd, and well design'd,
+ To all their titles, all that height of pow'r,
+ Which turns the brains of fools, and fools alone adore.
+ When your poor client is condemn'd t' attend,
+ 'Tis all we ask, receive him as a friend:
+ Descend to this, and then we ask no more;
+ Rich to yourself, to all beside be poor. BOWLES.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+MR. RAMBLER,
+
+Such is the tenderness or infirmity of many minds, that when any
+affliction oppresses them, they have immediate recourse to lamentation
+and complaint, which, though it can only be allowed reasonable when
+evils admit of remedy, and then only when addressed to those from whom
+the remedy is expected, yet seems even in hopeless and incurable
+distresses to be natural, since those by whom it is not indulged,
+imagine that they give a proof of extraordinary fortitude by suppressing
+it.
+
+I am one of those who, with the Sancho of Cervantes, leave to higher
+characters the merit of suffering in silence, and give vent without
+scruple to any sorrow that swells in my heart. It is therefore to me a
+severe aggravation of a calamity, when it is such as in the common
+opinion will not justify the acerbity of exclamation, or support the
+solemnity of vocal grief. Yet many pains are incident to a man of
+delicacy, which the unfeeling world cannot be persuaded to pity, and
+which, when they are separated from their peculiar and personal
+circumstances, will never be considered as important enough to claim
+attention, or deserve redress.
+
+Of this kind will appear to gross and vulgar apprehensions, the miseries
+which I endured in a morning visit to Prospero, a man lately raised to
+wealth by a lucky project, and too much intoxicated by sudden elevation,
+or too little polished by thought and conversation, to enjoy his present
+fortune with elegance and decency.
+
+We set out in the world together; and for a long time mutually assisted
+each other in our exigencies, as either happened to have money or
+influence beyond his immediate necessities. You know that nothing
+generally endears men so much as participation of dangers and
+misfortunes; I therefore always considered Prospero as united with me in
+the strongest league of kindness, and imagined that our friendship was
+only to be broken by the hand of death. I felt at his sudden shoot of
+success an honest and disinterested joy; but as I want no part of his
+superfluities, am not willing to descend from that equality in which we
+hitherto have lived.
+
+Our intimacy was regarded by me as a dispensation from ceremonial
+visits; and it was so long before I saw him at his new house, that he
+gently complained of my neglect, and obliged me to come on a day
+appointed. I kept my promise, but found that the impatience of my friend
+arose not from any desire to communicate his happiness, but to enjoy his
+superiority.
+
+When I told my name at the door, the footman went to see if his master
+was at home, and, by the tardiness of his return, gave me reason to
+suspect that time was taken to deliberate. He then informed me, that
+Prospero desired my company, and shewed the staircase carefully secured
+by mats from the pollution of my feet. The best apartments were
+ostentatiously set open, that I might have a distant view of the
+magnificence which I was not permitted to approach; and my old friend
+receiving me with all the insolence of condescension at the top of the
+stairs, conducted me to a back room, where he told me he always
+breakfasted when he had not great company.
+
+On the floor where we sat lay a carpet covered with a cloth, of which
+Prospero ordered his servant to lift up a corner, that I might
+contemplate the brightness of the colours, and the elegance of the
+texture, and asked me whether I had ever seen any thing so fine before?
+I did not gratify his folly with any outcries of admiration, but coldly
+bade the footman let down the cloth.
+
+We then sat down, and I began to hope that pride was glutted with
+persecution, when Prospero desired that I would give the servant leave
+to adjust the cover of my chair, which was slipt a little aside, to shew
+the damask; he informed me that he had bespoke ordinary chairs for
+common use, but had been disappointed by his tradesman. I put the chair
+aside with my foot, and drew another so hastily, that I was entreated
+not to rumple the carpet.
+
+Breakfast was at last set, and as I was not willing to indulge the
+peevishness that began to seize me, I commended the tea: Prospero then
+told me, that another time I should taste his finest sort, but that he
+had only a very small quantity remaining, and reserved it for those whom
+he thought himself obliged to treat with particular respect.
+
+While we were conversing upon such subjects as imagination happened to
+suggest, he frequently digressed into directions to the servant that
+waited, or made a slight inquiry after the jeweller or silversmith; and
+once, as I was pursuing an argument with some degree of earnestness, he
+started from his posture of attention, and ordered, that if lord Lofty
+called on him that morning, he should be shown into the best parlour.
+
+My patience was yet not wholly subdued. I was willing to promote his
+satisfaction, and therefore observed that the figures on the china were
+eminently pretty. Prospero had now an opportunity of calling for his
+Dresden china, which, says he, I always associate with my chased
+teakettle. The cups were brought; I once resolved not to have looked
+upon them, but my curiosity prevailed. When I had examined them a
+little, Prospero desired me to set them down, for they who were
+accustomed only to common dishes, seldom handled china with much care.
+You will, I hope, commend my philosophy, when I tell you that I did not
+dash his baubles to the ground.
+
+He was now so much elevated with his own greatness, that he thought some
+humility necessary to avert the glance of envy, and therefore told me,
+with an air of soft composure, that I was not to estimate life by
+external appearance, that all these shining acquisitions had added
+little to his happiness, that he still remembered with pleasure the days
+in which he and I were upon the level, and had often, in the moment of
+reflection, been doubtful, whether he should lose much by changing his
+condition for mine.
+
+I began now to be afraid lest his pride should, by silence and
+submission be emboldened to insults that could not easily be borne, and
+therefore coolly considered, how I should repress it without such
+bitterness of reproof as I was yet unwilling to use. But he interrupted
+my meditation, by asking leave to be dressed, and told me, that he had
+promised to attend some ladies in the park, and, if I was going the same
+way, would take me in his chariot. I had no inclination to any other
+favours, and therefore left him without any intention of seeing him
+again, unless some misfortune should restore his understanding.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+ASPER.
+
+Though I am not wholly insensible of the provocations which my
+correspondent has received, I cannot altogether commend the keenness of
+his resentment, nor encourage him to persist in his resolution of
+breaking off all commerce with his old acquaintance. One of the golden
+precepts of Pythagoras directs, that _a friend should not be hated for
+little faults_; and surely he, upon whom nothing worse can be charged,
+than that he mats his stairs, and covers his carpet, and sets out his
+finery to show before those whom he does not admit to use it, has yet
+committed nothing that should exclude him from common degrees of
+kindness. Such improprieties often proceed rather from stupidity than
+malice. Those who thus shine only to dazzle, are influenced merely by
+custom and example, and neither examine, nor are qualified to examine,
+the motives of their own practice, or to state the nice limits between
+elegance and ostentation. They are often innocent of the pain which
+their vanity produces, and insult others when they have no worse purpose
+than to please themselves.
+
+He that too much refines his delicacy will always endanger his quiet. Of
+those with whom nature and virtue oblige us to converse, some are
+ignorant of the art of pleasing, and offend when they design to caress;
+some are negligent, and gratify themselves without regard to the quiet
+of another; some, perhaps, are malicious, and feel no greater
+satisfaction in prosperity, than that of raising envy and trampling
+inferiority. But, whatever be the motive of insult, it is always best to
+overlook it, for folly scarcely can deserve resentment, and malice is
+punished by neglect[m].
+
+[Footnote m: Garrick's little vanities are recognized by all in the
+character of Prospero. Mr. Boswell informs us, that he never forgave its
+pointed satire. On the same authority we are assured, that though
+Johnson so dearly loved to ridicule his pupil, yet he so habitually
+considered him as his own property, that he would permit no one beside
+to hold up his weaknesses to derision.]
+
+
+
+No. 201. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1752.
+
+ --_Sanctus haberi
+ Justitiæque tenat factis dictisque mereris,
+ Adnosco procerem_. JUV. Sat. Lib. viii. 24.
+
+ Convince the world that you're devout and true;
+ Be just in all you say, and all you do;
+ Whatever be your birth, you're sure to be
+ A peer of the first magnitude to me. STEPNEY.
+
+Boyle has observed, that the excellency of manufactures, and the
+facility of labour, would be much promoted, if the various expedients
+and contrivances which lie concealed in private hands, were by
+reciprocal communications made generally known; for there are few
+operations that are not performed by one or other with some peculiar
+advantages, which, though singly of little importance, would, by
+conjunction and concurrence, open new inlets to knowledge, and give new
+powers to diligence.
+
+There are, in like manner, several moral excellencies distributed among
+the different classes of a community. It was said by Cujacius, that he
+never read more than one book by which he was not instructed; and he
+that shall inquire after virtue with ardour and attention, will seldom
+find a man by whose example or sentiments he may not be improved.
+
+Every profession has some essential and appropriate virtue, without
+which there can be no hope of honour or success, and which, as it is
+more or less cultivated, confers within its sphere of activity different
+degrees of merit and reputation. As the astrologers range the
+subdivisions of mankind under the planets which they suppose to
+influence their lives, the moralist may distribute them according to the
+virtues which they necessarily practise, and consider them as
+distinguished by prudence or fortitude, diligence or patience.
+
+So much are the modes of excellence settled by time and place, that men
+may be heard boasting in one street of that which they would anxiously
+conceal in another. The grounds of scorn and esteem, the topicks of
+praise and satire, are varied according to the several virtues or vices
+which the course of life has disposed men to admire or abhor; but he who
+is solicitous for his own improvement, must not be limited by local
+reputation, but select from every tribe of mortals their
+characteristical virtues, and constellate in himself the scattered
+graces which shine single in other men.
+
+The chief praise to which a trader aspires is that of punctuality, or an
+exact and rigorous observance of commercial engagements; nor is there
+any vice of which he so much dreads the imputation, as of negligence and
+instability. This is a quality which the interest of mankind requires to
+be diffused through all the ranks of life, but which many seem to
+consider as a vulgar and ignoble virtue, below the ambition of greatness
+or attention of wit, scarcely requisite among men of gaiety and spirit,
+and sold at its highest rate when it is sacrificed to a frolick or a
+jest.
+
+Every man has daily occasion to remark what vexations arise from this
+privilege of deceiving one another. The active and vivacious have so
+long disdained the restraints of truth, that promises and appointments
+have lost their cogency, and both parties neglect their stipulations,
+because each concludes that they will be broken by the other.
+
+Negligence is first admitted in small affairs, and strengthened by petty
+indulgences. He that is not yet hardened by custom, ventures not on the
+violation of important engagements, but thinks himself bound by his word
+in cases of property or danger, though he allows himself to forget at
+what time he is to meet ladies in the park, or at what tavern his
+friends are expecting him.
+
+This laxity of honour would be more tolerable, if it could be restrained
+to the play-house, the ball-room, or the card-table; yet even there it
+is sufficiently troublesome, and darkens those moments with expectation,
+suspense, and resentment, which are set aside for pleasure, and from
+which we naturally hope for unmingled enjoyment, and total relaxation.
+But he that suffers the slightest breach in his morality, can seldom
+tell what shall enter it, or how wide it shall be made; when a passage
+is open, the influx of corruption is every moment wearing down
+opposition, and by slow degrees deluges the heart.
+
+Aliger entered the world a youth of lively imagination, extensive views,
+and untainted principles. His curiosity incited him to range from place
+to place, and try all the varieties of conversation; his elegance of
+address and fertility of ideas gained him friends wherever he appeared;
+or at least he found the general kindness of reception always shown to a
+young man whose birth and fortune give him a claim to notice, and who
+has neither by vice nor folly destroyed his privileges. Aliger was
+pleased with this general smile of mankind, and was industrious to
+preserve it by compliance and officiousness, but did not suffer his
+desire of pleasing to vitiate his integrity. It was his established
+maxim, that a promise is never to be broken; nor was it without long
+reluctance that he once suffered himself to be drawn away from a festal
+engagement by the importunity of another company.
+
+He spent the evening, as is usual in the rudiments of vice, in
+perturbation and imperfect enjoyment, and met his disappointed friends
+in the morning with confusion and excuses. His companions, not
+accustomed to such scrupulous anxiety, laughed at his uneasiness,
+compounded the offence for a bottle, gave him courage to break his word
+again, and again levied the penalty. He ventured the same experiment
+upon another society, and found them equally ready to consider it as a
+venial fault, always incident to a man of quickness and gaiety; till, by
+degrees, he began to think himself at liberty to follow the last
+invitation, and was no longer shocked at the turpitude of falsehood. He
+made no difficulty to promise his presence at distant places, and if
+listlessness happened to creep upon him, would sit at home with great
+tranquillity, and has often sunk to sleep in a chair, while he held ten
+tables in continual expectations of his entrance.
+
+It was so pleasant to live in perpetual vacancy, that he soon dismissed
+his attention as an useless incumbrance, and resigned himself to
+carelessness and dissipation, without any regard to the future or the
+past, or any other motive of action than the impulse of a sudden desire,
+or the attraction of immediate pleasure. The absent were immediately
+forgotten, and the hopes or fears felt by others, had no influence upon
+his conduct. He was in speculation completely just, but never kept his
+promise to a creditor; he was benevolent, but always deceived those
+friends whom he undertook to patronise or assist; he was prudent, but
+suffered his affairs to be embarrassed for want of regulating his
+accounts at stated times. He courted a young lady, and when the
+settlements were drawn, took a ramble into the country on the day
+appointed to sign them. He resolved to travel, and sent his chests on
+shipboard, but delayed to follow them till he lost his passage. He was
+summoned as an evidence in a cause of great importance, and loitered on
+the way till the trial was past. It is said that when he had, with great
+expense, formed an interest in a borough, his opponent contrived, by
+some agents who knew his temper, to lure him away on the day of
+election.
+
+His benevolence draws him into the commission of a thousand crimes,
+which others less kind or civil would escape. His courtesy invites
+application; his promises produce dependence; he has his pockets filled
+with petitions, which he intends some time to deliver and enforce, and
+his table covered with letters of request, with which he purposes to
+comply; but time slips imperceptibly away, while he is either idle or
+busy; his friends lose their opportunities, and charge upon him their
+miscarriages and calamities.
+
+This character, however contemptible, is not peculiar to Aliger. They
+whose activity of imagination is often shifting the scenes of
+expectation, are frequently subject to such sallies of caprice as make
+all their actions fortuitous, destroy the value of their friendship,
+obstruct the efficacy of their virtues, and set them below the meanest
+of those that persist in their resolutions, execute what they design,
+and perform what they have promised.
+
+
+
+No. 202. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1752.
+
+ [Greek: Pros apanta deilos estin o penaes pragmata,
+ Kai pantas autou kataphronein upolambanei
+ O de metrios pratton periskegesteron
+ Apanta t aniara, dampria, phepei.] CALLIMACHUS.
+
+ From no affliction is the poor exempt,
+ He thinks each eye surveys him with contempt;
+ Unmanly poverty subdues the heart,
+ Cankers each wound, and sharpen's[1] ev'ry dart. F. LEWIS.
+[1] Transcriber's note: sic.
+
+Among those who have endeavoured to promote learning, and rectify
+judgment, it has been long customary to complain of the abuse of words,
+which are often admitted to signify things so different, that, instead
+of assisting the understanding as vehicles of knowledge, they produce
+errour, dissention, and perplexity, because what is affirmed in one
+sense, is received in another.
+
+If this ambiguity sometimes embarrasses the most solemn controversies,
+and obscures the demonstrations of science, it may well be expected to
+infest the pompous periods of declaimers, whose purpose is often only to
+amuse with fallacies, and change the colours of truth and falsehood; or
+the musical compositions of poets, whose style is professedly
+figurative, and whose art is imagined to consist in distorting words
+from their original meaning.
+
+There are few words of which the reader believes himself better to know
+the import, than of _poverty_; yet, whoever studies either the poets or
+philosophers, will find such an account of the condition expressed by
+that term as his experience or observation will not easily discover to
+be true. Instead of the meanness, distress, complaint, anxiety, and
+dependance, which have hitherto been combined in his ideas of poverty,
+he will read of content, innocence, and cheerfulness, of health and
+safety, tranquillity and freedom; of pleasures not known but to men
+unencumbered with possessions; and of sleep that sheds his balsamick
+anodynes only on the cottage. Such are the blessings to be obtained by
+the resignation of riches, that kings might descend from their thrones,
+and generals retire from a triumph, only to slumber undisturbed in the
+elysium of poverty.
+
+If these authors do not deceive us, nothing can be more absurd than that
+perpetual contest for wealth which keeps the world in commotion; nor any
+complaints more justly censured than those which proceed from want of
+the gifts of fortune, which we are taught by the great masters of moral
+wisdom to consider as golden shackles, by which the wearer is at once
+disabled and adorned; as luscious poisons which may for a time please
+the palate, but soon betray their malignity by languor and by pain. It
+is the great privilege of poverty to be happy unenvied, to be healthful
+without physick, and secure without a guard; to obtain from the bounty
+of nature, what the great and wealthy are compelled to procure by the
+help of artists and attendants, of flatterers and spies.
+
+But it will be found upon a nearer view, that they who extol the
+happiness of poverty, do not mean the same state with those who deplore
+its miseries. Poets have their imaginations filled with ideas of
+magnificence; and being accustomed to contemplate the downfall of
+empires, or to contrive forms of lamentations, for monarchs in distress,
+rank all the classes of mankind in a state of poverty, who make no
+approaches to the dignity of crowns. To be poor, in the epick language,
+is only not to command the wealth of nations, nor to have fleets and
+armies in pay.
+
+Vanity has perhaps contributed to this impropriety of style. He that
+wishes to become a philosopher at a cheap rate, easily gratifies his
+ambition by submitting to poverty when he does not feel it, and by
+boasting his contempt of riches when he has already more than he enjoys.
+He who would shew the extent of his views, and grandeur of his
+conceptions, or discover his acquaintance with splendour and
+magnificence, may talk like Cowley, of an humble station and quiet
+obscurity, of the paucity of nature's wants, and the inconveniencies of
+superfluity, and at last, like him, limit his desires to five hundred
+pounds a year; a fortune, indeed, not exuberant, when we compare it with
+the expenses of pride and luxury, but to which it little becomes a
+philosopher to affix the name of poverty, since no man can, with any
+propriety, be termed poor, who does not see the greater part of mankind
+richer than himself.
+
+As little is the general condition of human life understood by the
+panegyrists and historians, who amuse us with accounts of the poverty of
+heroes and sages. Riches are of no value in themselves, their use is
+discovered only in that which they procure. They are not coveted, unless
+by narrow understandings, which confound the means with the end, but for
+the sake of power, influence, and esteem; or, by some of less elevated
+and refined sentiments, as necessary to sensual enjoyment.
+
+The pleasures of luxury, many have, without uncommon virtue, been able
+to despise, even when affluence and idleness have concurred to tempt
+them; and therefore he who feels nothing from indigence but the want of
+gratifications which he could not in any other condition make consistent
+with innocence, has given no proof of eminent patience. Esteem and
+influence every man desires, but they are equally pleasing, and equally
+valuable, by whatever means they are obtained; and whoever has found the
+art of securing them without the help of money, ought, in reality, to be
+accounted rich, since he has all that riches can purchase to a wise man.
+Cincinnatus, though he lived upon a few acres cultivated by his own
+hand, was sufficiently removed from all the evils generally comprehended
+under the name of poverty, when his reputation was such, that the voice
+of his country called him from his farm to take absolute command into
+his hand; nor was Diogenes much mortified by his residence in a tub,
+where he was honoured with the visit of Alexander the Great.
+
+The same fallacy has conciliated veneration to the religious orders.
+When we behold a man abdicating the hope of terrestrial possessions, and
+precluding himself, by an irrevocable vow, from the pursuit and
+acquisition of all that his fellow-beings consider as worthy of wishes
+and endeavours, we are immediately struck with the purity, abstraction,
+and firmness of his mind, and regard him as wholly employed in securing
+the interests of futurity, and devoid of any other care than to gain, at
+whatever price, the surest passage to eternal rest.
+
+Yet, what can the votary be justly said to have lost of his present
+happiness? If he resides in a convent, he converses only with men whose
+condition is the same with his own; he has, from the munificence of the
+founder, all the necessaries of life, and is safe from that destitution,
+which Hooker declares to be "such an impediment to virtue, as, till it
+be removed, suffereth not the mind of man to admit any other care." All
+temptations to envy and competition are shut out from his retreat; he is
+not pained with the sight of unattainable dignity, nor insulted with the
+bluster of insolence, or the smile of forced familiarity. If he wanders
+abroad, the sanctity of his character amply compensates all other
+distinctions; he is seldom seen but with reverence, nor heard but with
+submission.
+
+It has been remarked, that death, though often defied in the field,
+seldom fails to terrify when it approaches the bed of sickness in its
+natural horrour; so poverty may easily be endured, while associated with
+dignity and reputation, but will always be shunned and dreaded, when it
+is accompanied with ignominy and contempt.
+
+
+
+No. 203. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1752.
+
+ _Cum volet illa dies, quae nil nisi corporis hujus
+ Jus habet, incerti spatium mihi finiat avi_. OVID. Met. xv. 873.
+
+ Come, soon or late, death's undetermin'd day,
+ This mortal being only can decay. WELSTED.
+
+It seems to be the fate of man to seek all his consolations in futurity.
+The time present is seldom able to fill desire or imagination with
+immediate enjoyment, and we are forced to supply its deficiencies by
+recollection or anticipation.
+
+Every one has so often detected the fallaciousness of hope, and the
+inconvenience of teaching himself to expect what a thousand accidents
+may preclude, that, when time has abated the confidence with which youth
+rushes out to take possession of the world, we endeavour, or wish, to
+find entertainment in the review of life, and to repose upon real facts,
+and certain experience. This is perhaps one reason, among many, why age
+delights in narratives.
+
+But so full is the world of calamity, that every source of pleasure is
+polluted, and every retirement of tranquillity disturbed. When time has
+supplied us with events sufficient to employ our thoughts, it has
+mingled them with so many disasters, that we shrink from their
+remembrance, dread their intrusion upon our minds, and fly from them as
+from enemies that pursue us with torture.
+
+No man past the middle point of life can sit down to feast upon the
+pleasures of youth without finding the banquet embittered by the cup of
+sorrow; he may revive lucky accidents, and pleasing extravagancies; many
+days of harmless frolick, or nights of honest festivity, will perhaps
+recur; or, if he has been engaged in scenes of action, and acquainted
+with affairs of difficulty and vicissitudes of fortune, he may enjoy the
+nobler pleasure of looking back upon distress firmly supported, dangers
+resolutely encountered, and opposition artfully defeated. Aeneas
+properly comforts his companions, when, after the horrours of a storm,
+they have landed on an unknown and desolate country, with the hope that
+their miseries will be at some distant time recounted with delight.
+There are few higher gratifications, than that of reflection on
+surmounted evils, when they are not incurred nor protracted by our
+fault, and neither reproach us with cowardice nor guilt.
+
+But this felicity is almost always abated by the reflection that they
+with whom we should be most pleased to share it are now in the grave. A
+few years make such havock in human generations, that we soon see
+ourselves deprived of those with whom we entered the world, and whom the
+participation of pleasures or fatigues had endeared to our remembrance.
+The man of enterprise recounts his adventures and expedients, but is
+forced, at the close of the relation, to pay a sigh to the names of
+those that contributed to his success; he that passes his life among the
+gayer part of mankind, has his remembrance stored with remarks and
+repartees of wits, whose sprightliness and merriment are now lost in
+perpetual silence; the trader, whose industry has supplied the want of
+inheritance, repines in solitary plenty at the absence of companions,
+with whom he had planned out amusements for his latter years; and the
+scholar, whose merit, after a long series of efforts, raises him from
+obscurity, looks round in vain from his exaltation for his old friends
+or enemies, whose applause or mortification would heighten his triumph.
+
+Among Martial's requisites to happiness is, _Res non parta labore, sed
+relicta_, "an estate not gained by industry, but left by inheritance."
+It is necessary to the completion of every good, that it be timely
+obtained; for whatever comes at the close of life will come too late to
+give much delight; yet all human happiness has its defects. Of what we
+do not gain for ourselves we have only a faint and imperfect fruition,
+because we cannot compare the difference between want and possession, or
+at least can derive from it no conviction of our own abilities, nor any
+increase of self-esteem; what we acquire by bravery or science, by
+mental or corporeal diligence, comes at last when we cannot communicate,
+and, therefore, cannot enjoy it.
+
+Thus every period of life is obliged to borrow its happiness from the
+time to come. In youth we have nothing past to entertain us, and in age,
+we derive little from retrospect but hopeless sorrow. Yet the future
+likewise has its limits, which the imagination dreads to approach, but
+which we see to be not far distant. The loss of our friends and
+companions impresses hourly upon us the necessity of our own departure;
+we know that the schemes of man are quickly at an end, that we must soon
+lie down in the grave with the forgotten multitudes of former ages, and
+yield our place to others, who, like us, shall be driven awhile by hope
+or fear about the surface of the earth, and then like us be lost in the
+shades of death.
+
+Beyond this termination of our material existence, we are therefore
+obliged to extend our hopes; and almost every man indulges his
+imagination with something, which is not to happen till he has changed
+his manner of being: some amuse themselves with entails and settlements,
+provide for the perpetuation of families and honours, or contrive to
+obviate the dissipation of the fortunes, which it has been their
+business to accumulate; others, more refined or exalted, congratulate
+their own hearts upon the future extent of their reputation, the
+reverence of distant nations, and the gratitude of unprejudiced
+posterity.
+
+They whose souls are so chained down to coffers and tenements, that they
+cannot conceive a state in which they shall look upon them with less
+solicitude, are seldom attentive or flexible to arguments; but the
+votaries of fame are capable of reflection, and therefore may be called
+to reconsider the probability of their expectations.
+
+Whether to be remembered in remote times be worthy of a wise man's wish,
+has not yet been satisfactorily decided; and, indeed, to be long
+remembered, can happen to so small a number, that the bulk of mankind
+has very little interest in the question. There is never room in the
+world for more than a certain quantity or measure of renown. The
+necessary business of life, the immediate pleasures or pains of every
+condition, leave us not leisure beyond a fixed proportion for
+contemplations which do not forcibly influence our present welfare. When
+this vacuity is filled, no characters can be admitted into the
+circulation of fame, but by occupying the place of some that must be
+thrust into oblivion. The eye of the mind, like that of the body, can
+only extend its view to new objects, by losing sight of those which are
+now before it.
+
+Reputation is therefore a meteor, which blazes a while and disappears
+for ever; and, if we except a few transcendent and invincible names,
+which no revolutions of opinion or length of time is able to suppress;
+all those that engage our thoughts, or diversify our conversation, are
+every moment hasting to obscurity, as new favourites are adopted by
+fashion.
+
+It is not therefore from this world, that any ray of comfort can
+proceed, to cheer the gloom of the last hour. But futurity has still its
+prospects; there is yet happiness in reserve, which, if we transfer our
+attention to it, will support us in the pains of disease, and the
+languor of decay. This happiness we may expect with confidence, because
+it is out of the power of chance, and may be attained by all that
+sincerely desire and earnestly pursue it. On this therefore every mind
+ought finally to rest. Hope is the chief blessing of man, and that hope
+only is rational, of which we are certain that it cannot deceive us.
+
+
+
+No. 204. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1752
+
+ _Nemo tam divos habuit faventes,
+ Crastinum ut possit sibi polliceit_. SENECA.
+
+ Of heaven's protection who can be
+ So confident to utter this?--
+ To-morrow I will spend in bliss. F. LEWIS.
+
+Seged, lord of Ethiopia, to the inhabitants of the world: To the sons of
+_Presumption_, humility and fear; and to the daughters of _Sorrow_,
+content and acquiescence.
+
+Thus, in the twenty-seventh year of his reign, spoke Seged, the monarch
+of forty nations, the distributor of the waters of the Nile: "At length,
+Seged, thy toils are at an end; thou hast reconciled disaffection, thou
+hast suppressed rebellion, thou hast pacified the jealousies of thy
+courtiers, thou hast chased war from thy confines, and erected
+fortresses in the lands of thine enemies. All who have offended thee
+tremble in thy presence, and wherever thy voice is heard, it is obeyed.
+Thy throne is surrounded by armies, numerous as the locusts of the
+summer, and resistless as the blasts of pestilence. Thy magazines are
+stored with ammunition, thy treasures overflow with the tribute of
+conquered kingdoms. Plenty waves upon thy fields, and opulence glitters
+in thy cities. Thy nod is as the earthquake that shakes the mountains,
+and thy smile as the dawn of the vernal day. In thy hand is the strength
+of thousands, and thy health is the health of millions. Thy palace is
+gladdened by the song of praise, and thy path perfumed by the breath of
+benediction. Thy subjects gaze upon thy greatness, and think of danger
+or misery no more. Why, Seged, wilt not thou partake the blessings thou
+bestowest? Why shouldst thou only forbear to rejoice in this general
+felicity? Why should thy face be clouded with anxiety, when the meanest
+of those who call thee sovereign, gives the day to festivity, and the
+night to peace? At length, Seged, reflect and be wise. What is the gift
+of conquest but safety? Why are riches collected but to purchase
+happiness?"
+
+Seged then ordered the house of pleasure, built in an island of the lake
+of Dambea, to be prepared for his reception. "I will retire," says he,
+"for ten days from tumult and care, from counsels and decrees. Long
+quiet is not the lot of the governours of nations, but a cessation of
+ten days cannot be denied me. This short interval of happiness may
+surely be secured from the interruption of fear or perplexity, sorrow or
+disappointment. I will exclude all trouble from my abode, and remove
+from my thoughts whatever may confuse the harmony of the concert, or
+abate the sweetness of the banquet. I will fill the whole capacity of my
+soul with enjoyment, and try what it is to live without a wish
+unsatisfied."
+
+In a few days the orders were performed, and Seged hasted to the palace
+of Dambea, which stood in an island cultivated only for pleasure,
+planted with every flower that spreads its colours to the sun, and every
+shrub that sheds fragrance in the air. In one part of this extensive
+garden, were open walks for excursions in the morning; in another, thick
+groves, and silent arbours, and bubbling fountains for repose at noon.
+All that could solace the sense, or flatter the fancy, all that industry
+could extort from nature, or wealth furnish to art, all that conquest
+could seize, or beneficence attract, was collected together, and every
+perception of delight was excited and gratified.
+
+Into this delicious region Seged summoned all the persons of his court,
+who seemed eminently qualified to receive or communicate pleasure. His
+call was readily obeyed; the young, the fair, the vivacious, and the
+witty, were all in haste to be sated with felicity. They sailed jocund
+over the lake, which seemed to smooth its surface before them: their
+passage was cheered with musick, and their hearts dilated with
+expectation.
+
+Seged, landing here with his band of pleasure, determined from that hour
+to break off all acquaintance with discontent, to give his heart for ten
+days to ease and jollity, and then fall back to the common state of man,
+and suffer his life to be diversified, as before, with joy and sorrow.
+
+He immediately entered his chamber, to consider where he should begin
+his circle of happiness. He had all the artists of delight before him,
+but knew not whom to call, since he could not enjoy one, but by delaying
+the performance of another. He chose and rejected, he resolved and
+changed his resolution, till his faculties were harassed, and his
+thoughts confused; then returned to the apartment where his presence was
+expected, with languid eyes and clouded countenance, and spread the
+infection of uneasiness over the whole assembly. He observed their
+depression, and was offended, for he found his vexation increased by
+those whom he expected to dissipate and relieve it. He retired again to
+his private chamber, and sought for consolation in his own mind; one
+thought flowed in upon another; a long succession of images seized his
+attention; the moments crept imperceptibly away through the gloom of
+pensiveness, till, having recovered his tranquillity, he lifted his
+head, and saw the lake brightened by the setting sun. "Such," said
+Seged, sighing, "is the longest day of human existence: before we have
+learned to use it, we find it at, an end."
+
+The regret which he felt for the loss of so great a part of his first
+day, took from him all disposition to enjoy the evening; and, after
+having endeavoured, for the sake of his attendants, to force an air of
+gaiety, and excite that mirth which he could not share, he resolved to
+refer his hopes to the next morning, and lay down to partake with the
+slaves of labour and poverty the blessing of sleep.
+
+He rose early the second morning, and resolved now to be happy. He
+therefore fixed upon the gate of the palace an edict, importing, that
+whoever, during nine days, should appear in the presence of the king
+with a dejected countenance, or utter any expression of discontent or
+sorrow, should be driven for ever from the palace of Dambea.
+
+This edict was immediately made known in every chamber of the court, and
+bower of the gardens. Mirth was frighted away, and they who were before
+dancing in the lawns, or singing in the shades, were at once engaged in
+the care of regulating their looks, that Seged might find his will
+punctually obeyed, and see none among them liable to banishment.
+
+Seged now met every face settled in a smile; but a smile that betrayed
+solicitude, timidity, and constraint. He accosted his favourites with
+familiarity and softness; but they durst not speak without
+premeditation, lest they should be convicted of discontent or sorrow. He
+proposed diversions, to which no objection was made, because objection
+would have implied uneasiness; but they were regarded with indifference
+by the courtiers, who had no other desire than to signalize themselves
+by clamorous exultation. He offered various topicks of conversation, but
+obtained only forced jests, and laborious laughter; and after many
+attempts to animate his train to confidence and alacrity, was obliged to
+confess to himself the impotence of command, and resign another day to
+grief and disappointment.
+
+He at last relieved his companions from their terrours, and shut himself
+up in his chamber to ascertain, by different measures, the felicity of
+the succeeding days. At length he threw himself on the bed, and closed
+his eyes, but imagined, in his sleep, that his palace and gardens were
+overwhelmed by an inundation, and waked with all the terrours of a man
+struggling in the water. He composed himself again to rest, but was
+affrighted by an imaginary irruption into his kingdom; and striving, as
+is usual in dreams, without ability to move, fancied himself betrayed to
+his enemies, and again started up with horrour and indignation.
+
+It was now day, and fear was so strongly impressed on his mind, that he
+could sleep no more. He rose, but his thoughts were filled with the
+deluge and invasion, nor was he able to disengage his attention, or
+mingle with vacancy and ease in any amusement. At length his
+perturbation gave way to reason, and he resolved no longer to be
+harassed by visionary miseries; but, before this resolution could be
+completed, half the day had elapsed: he felt a new conviction of the
+uncertainty of human schemes, and could not forbear to bewail the
+weakness of that being whose quiet was to be interrupted by vapours of
+the fancy. Having been first disturbed by a dream, he afterwards grieved
+that a dream could disturb him. He at last discovered, that his terrours
+and grief were equally vain, and that to lose the present in lamenting
+the past, was voluntarily to protract a melancholy vision. The third day
+was now declining, and Seged again resolved to be happy on the morrow.
+
+
+
+No. 205. TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1752.
+
+ _Volat ambiguis
+ Mobilis alis hora, nec ulli
+ Præstat velox Fortuna fidem_. SENECA. Hippol. 1141.
+
+ On fickle wings the minutes haste,
+ And fortune's favours never last. F. LEWIS.
+
+On the fourth morning Seged rose early, refreshed with sleep, vigorous
+with health, and eager with expectation. He entered the garden, attended
+by the princes and ladies of his court, and seeing nothing about him but
+airy cheerfulness, began to say to his heart, "This day shall be a day
+of pleasure." The sun played upon the water, the birds warbled in the
+groves, and the gales quivered among the branches. He roved from walk to
+walk as chance directed him, and sometimes listened to the songs,
+sometimes mingled with the dancers, sometimes let loose his imagination
+in flights of merriment; and sometimes uttered grave reflections, and
+sententious maxims, and feasted on the admiration with which they were
+received.
+
+Thus the day rolled on, without any accident of vexation, or intrusion
+of melancholy thoughts. All that beheld him caught gladness from his
+looks, and the sight of happiness conferred by himself filled his heart
+with satisfaction: but having passed three hours in this harmless
+luxury, he was alarmed on a sudden by an universal scream among the
+women, and turning back saw the whole assembly flying in confusion. A
+young crocodile had risen out of the lake, and was ranging the garden in
+wantonness or hunger. Seged beheld him with indignation, as a disturber
+of his felicity, and chased him back into the lake, but could not
+persuade his retinue to stay, or free their hearts from the terrour
+which had seized upon them. The princesses inclosed themselves in the
+palace, and could yet scarcely believe themselves in safety. Every
+attention was fixed upon the late danger and escape, and no mind was any
+longer at leisure for gay sallies or careless prattle.
+
+Seged had now no other employment than to contemplate the innumerable
+casualties which lie in ambush on every side to intercept the happiness
+of man, and break in upon the hour of delight and tranquillity. He had,
+however, the consolation of thinking, that he had not been now
+disappointed by his own fault, and that the accident which had blasted
+the hopes of the day, might easily be prevented by future caution.
+
+That he might provide for the pleasure of the next morning, he resolved
+to repeal his penal edict, since he had already found that discontent
+and melancholy were not to be frighted away by the threats of authority,
+and that pleasure would only reside where she was exempted from control.
+He therefore invited all the companions of his retreat to unbounded
+pleasantry, by proposing prizes for those who should, on the following
+day, distinguish themselves by any festive performances; the tables of
+the antechamber were covered with gold and pearls, and robes and
+garlands decreed the rewards of those who could refine elegance or
+heighten pleasure.
+
+At this display of riches every eye immediately sparkled, and every
+tongue was busied in celebrating the bounty and magnificence of the
+emperour. But when Seged entered, in hopes of uncommon entertainment
+from universal emulation, he found that any passion too strongly
+agitated, puts an end to that tranquillity which is necessary to mirth,
+and that the mind, that is to be moved by the gentle ventilations of
+gaiety, must be first smoothed by a total calm. Whatever we ardently
+wish to gain, we must in the same degree be afraid to lose, and fear and
+pleasure cannot dwell together.
+
+All was now care and solicitude. Nothing was done or spoken, but with so
+visible an endeavour at perfection, as always failed to delight, though
+it sometimes forced admiration: and Seged could not but observe with
+sorrow, that his prizes had more influence than himself. As the evening
+approached, the contest grew more earnest, and those who were forced to
+allow themselves excelled, began to discover the malignity of defeat,
+first by angry glances, and at last by contemptuous murmurs. Seged
+likewise shared the anxiety of the day, for considering himself as
+obliged to distribute with exact justice the prizes which had been so
+zealously sought, he durst never remit his attention, but passed his
+time upon the rack of doubt, in balancing different kinds of merit, and
+adjusting the claims of all the competitors.
+
+At last, knowing that no exactness could satisfy those whose hopes he
+should disappoint, and thinking that on a day set apart for happiness,
+it would be cruel to oppress any heart with sorrow, he declared that all
+had pleased him alike, and dismissed all with presents of equal value.
+
+Seged soon saw that his caution had not been able to avoid offence. They
+who had believed themselves secure of the highest prizes, were not
+pleased to be levelled with the crowd: and though, by the liberality of
+the king, they received more than his promise had entitled them to
+expect, they departed unsatisfied, because they were honoured with no
+distinction, and wanted an opportunity to triumph in the mortification
+of their opponents. "Behold here," said Seged, "the condition of him who
+places his happiness in the happiness of others." He then retired to
+meditate, and, while the courtiers were repining at his distributions,
+saw the fifth sun go down in discontent.
+
+The next dawn renewed his resolution to be happy. But having learned how
+little he could effect by settled schemes or preparatory measures, he
+thought it best to give up one day entirely to chance, and left every
+one to please and be pleased his own way.
+
+This relaxation of regularity diffused a general complacence through the
+whole court, and the emperour imagined that he had at last found the
+secret of obtaining an interval of felicity. But as he was roving in
+this careless assembly with equal carelessness, he overheard one of his
+courtiers in a close arbour murmuring alone: "What merit has Seged above
+us, that we should thus fear and obey him, a man, whom, whatever he may
+have formerly performed, his luxury now shows to have the same weakness
+with ourselves." This charge affected him the more, as it was uttered by
+one whom he had always observed among the most abject of his flatterers.
+At first his indignation prompted him to severity; but reflecting, that
+what was spoken without intention to be heard, was to be considered as
+only thought, and was perhaps but the sudden burst of casual and
+temporary vexation, he invented some decent pretence to send him away,
+that his retreat might not be tainted with the breath of envy, and,
+after the struggle of deliberation was past, and all desire of revenge
+utterly suppressed, passed the evening not only with tranquillity, but
+triumph, though none but himself was conscious of the victory.
+
+The remembrance of his clemency cheered the beginning of the seventh
+day, and nothing happened to disturb the pleasure of Seged, till,
+looking on the tree that shaded him, he recollected, that, under a tree
+of the same kind he had passed the night after his defeat in the kingdom
+of Goiama. The reflection on his loss, his dishonour, and the miseries
+which his subjects suffered from the invader, filled him with sadness.
+At last he shook off the weight of sorrow, and began to solace himself
+with his usual pleasures, when his tranquillity was again disturbed by
+jealousies which the late contest for the prizes had produced, and
+which, having in vain tried to pacify them by persuasion, he was forced
+to silence by command.
+
+On the eighth morning Seged was awakened early by an unusual hurry in
+the apartments, and inquiring the cause, was told that the princess
+Balkis was seized with sickness. He rose, and calling the physicians,
+found that they had little hope of her recovery. Here was an end of
+jollity: all his thoughts were now upon his daughter, whose eyes he
+closed on the tenth day.
+
+Such were the days which Seged of Ethiopia had appropriated to a short
+respiration from the fatigues of war and the cares of government. This
+narrative he has bequeathed to future generations, that no man hereafter
+may presume to say, "This day shall be a day of happiness."
+
+
+
+No. 206. SATURDAY, MARCH 7, 1752.
+
+ _--Propositi nondum pudet, atque eadem est mens,
+ Ut bona summa putes, alienâ vivere quadrâ_. JUV. Sat. v. 1.
+
+ But harden'd by affronts, and still the same,
+ Lost to all sense of honour and of fame,
+ Thou yet canst love to haunt the great man's board,
+ And think no supper good but with a lord. BOWLES.
+
+When Diogenes was once asked, what kind of wine he liked best? he
+answered, "That which is drunk at the cost of others."
+
+Though the character of Diogenes has never excited any general zeal of
+imitation, there are many who resemble him in his taste of wine; many
+who are frugal, though not abstemious; whose appetites, though too
+powerful for reason, are kept under restraint by avarice; and to whom
+all delicacies lose their flavour, when they cannot be obtained but at
+their own expense.
+
+Nothing produces more singularity of manners and inconstancy of life,
+than the conflict of opposite vices in the same mind. He that uniformly
+pursues any purpose, whether good or bad, has a settled principle of
+action; and as he may always find associates who are travelling the same
+way, is countenanced by example, and sheltered in the multitude; but a
+man, actuated at once by different desires, must move in a direction
+peculiar to himself, and suffer that reproach which we are naturally
+inclined to bestow on those who deviate from the rest of the world, even
+without inquiring whether they are worse or better.
+
+Yet this conflict of desires sometimes produces wonderful efforts. To
+riot in far-fetched dishes, or surfeit with unexhausted variety, and yet
+practise the most rigid economy, is surely an art which may justly draw
+the eyes of mankind upon them whose industry or judgment has enabled
+them to attain it. To him, indeed, who is content to break open the
+chests, or mortgage the manours, of his ancestors, that he may hire the
+ministers of excess at the highest price, gluttony is an easy science;
+yet we often hear the votaries of luxury boasting of the elegance which
+they owe to the taste of others, relating with rapture the succession of
+dishes with which their cooks and caterers supply them; and expecting
+their share of praise with the discoverers of arts and the civilizers of
+nations. But to shorten the way to convivial happiness, by eating
+without cost, is a secret hitherto in few hands, but which certainly
+deserves the curiosity of those whose principal enjoyment is their
+dinner, and who see the sun rise with no other hope than that they shall
+fill their bellies before it sets.
+
+Of them that have within my knowledge attempted this scheme of
+happiness, the greater part have been immediately obliged to desist; and
+some, whom their first attempts flattered with success, were reduced by
+degrees to a few tables, from which they were at last chased to make way
+for others; and having long habituated themselves to superfluous plenty,
+growled away their latter years in discontented competence.
+
+None enter the regions of luxury with higher expectations than men of
+wit, who imagine, that they shall never want a welcome to that company
+whose ideas they can enlarge, or whose imaginations they can elevate,
+and believe themselves able to pay for their wine with the mirth which
+it qualifies them to produce. Full of this opinion, they crowd with
+little invitation, wherever the smell of a feast allures them, but are
+seldom encouraged to repeat their visits, being dreaded by the pert as
+rivals, and hated by the dull as disturbers of the company.
+
+No man has been so happy in gaining and keeping the privilege of living
+at luxurious houses as Gulosulus, who, after thirty years of continual
+revelry, has now established, by uncontroverted prescription, his claim
+to partake of every entertainment, and whose presence they who aspire to
+the praise of a sumptuous table are careful to procure on a day of
+importance, by sending the invitation a fortnight before.
+
+Gulosulus entered the world without any eminent degree of merit; but was
+careful to frequent houses where persons of rank resorted. By being
+often seen, he became in time known; and, from sitting in the same room,
+was suffered to mix in idle conversation, or assisted to fill up a
+vacant hour, when better amusement was not readily to be had. From the
+coffee-house he was sometimes taken away to dinner; and as no man
+refuses the acquaintance of him whom he sees admitted to familiarity by
+others of equal dignity, when he had been met at a few tables, he with
+less difficulty found the way to more, till at last he was regularly
+expected to appear wherever preparations are made for a feast, within
+the circuit of his acquaintance.
+
+When he was thus by accident initiated in luxury, he felt in himself no
+inclination to retire from a life of so much pleasure, and therefore
+very seriously considered how he might continue it. Great qualities, or
+uncommon accomplishments, he did not find necessary; for he had already
+seen that merit rather enforces respect than attracts fondness; and as
+he thought no folly greater than that of losing a dinner for any other
+gratification, he often congratulated himself, that he had none of that
+disgusting excellence which impresses awe upon greatness, and condemns
+its possessors to the society of those who are wise or brave, and
+indigent as themselves.
+
+Gulosulus, having never allotted much of his time to books or
+meditation, had no opinion in philosophy or politicks, and was not in
+danger of injuring his interest by dogmatical positions or violent
+contradiction. If a dispute arose, he took care to listen with earnest
+attention; and, when either speaker grew vehement and loud, turned
+towards him with eager quickness, and uttered a short phrase of
+admiration, as if surprised by such cogency of argument as he had never
+known before. By this silent concession, he generally preserved in
+either controvertist such a conviction of his own superiority, as
+inclined him rather to pity than irritate his adversary, and prevented
+those outrages which are sometimes produced by the rage of defeat, or
+petulance of triumph.
+
+Gulosulus was never embarrassed but when he was required to declare his
+sentiments before he had been able to discover to which side the master
+of the house inclined, for it was his invariable rule to adopt the
+notions of those that invited him.
+
+It will sometimes happen that the insolence of wealth breaks into
+contemptuousness, or the turbulence of wine requires a vent; and
+Gulosulus seldom fails of being singled out on such emergencies, as one
+on whom any experiment of ribaldry may be safely tried. Sometimes his
+lordship finds himself inclined to exhibit a specimen of raillery for
+the diversion of his guests, and Gulosulus always supplies him with a
+subject of merriment. But he has learned to consider rudeness and
+indignities as familiarities that entitle him to greater freedom: he
+comforts himself, that those who treat and insult him pay for their
+laughter, and that he keeps his money while they enjoy their jest.
+
+His chief policy consists in selecting some dish from every course, and
+recommending it to the company, with an air so decisive, that no one
+ventures to contradict him. By this practice he acquires at a feast a
+kind of dictatorial authority; his taste becomes the standard of pickles
+and seasoning, and he is venerated by the professors of epicurism, as
+the only man who understands the niceties of cookery.
+
+Whenever a new sauce is imported, or any innovation made in the culinary
+system, he procures the earliest intelligence, and the most authentick
+receipt; and, by communicating his knowledge under proper injunctions of
+secrecy, gains a right of tasting his own dish whenever it is prepared,
+that he may tell whether his directions have been fully understood.
+
+By this method of life Gulosulus has so impressed on his imagination the
+dignity of feasting, that he has no other topick of talk, or subject of
+meditation. His calendar is a bill of fare; he measures the year by
+successive dainties. The only common-places of his memory are his meals;
+and if you ask him at what time an event happened, he considers whether
+he heard it after a dinner of turbot or venison. He knows, indeed, that
+those who value themselves upon sense, learning, or piety, speak of him
+with contempt; but he considers them as wretches, envious or ignorant,
+who do not know his happiness, or wish to supplant him; and declares to
+his friends, that he is fully satisfied with his own conduct, since he
+has fed every day on twenty dishes, and yet doubled his estate.
+
+
+
+No. 207. TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1752.
+
+ _Solve senescentem mature sanus equum, ne
+ Peccet ad extremum ridendus.--_ HOR. Lib. i. Ep. i. 8.
+
+ The voice of reason cries with winning force,
+ Loose from the rapid car your aged horse,
+ Lest, in the race derided, left behind,
+ He drag his jaded limbs, and burst his wind. FRANCIS.
+
+Such is the emptiness of human enjoyment, that we are always impatient
+of the present. Attainment is followed by neglect, and possession by
+disgust; and the malicious remark of the Greek epigrammatist on marriage
+may be applied to every other course of life, that its two days of
+happiness are the first and the last.
+
+Few moments are more pleasing than those in which the mind is concerting
+measures for a new undertaking. From the first hint that wakens the
+fancy, till the hour of actual execution, all is improvement and
+progress, triumph and felicity. Every hour brings additions to the
+original scheme, suggests some new expedient to secure success, or
+discovers consequential advantages not hitherto foreseen. While
+preparations are made, and materials accumulated, day glides after day
+through elysian prospects, and the heart dances to the song of hope.
+
+Such is the pleasure of projecting, that many content themselves with a
+succession of visionary schemes, and wear out their allotted time in the
+calm amusement of contriving what they never attempt or hope to execute.
+
+Others, not able to feast their imagination with pure ideas, advance
+somewhat nearer to the grossness of action, with great diligence collect
+whatever is requisite to their design, and, after a thousand researches
+and consultations, are snatched away by death, as they stand _in
+procinctu_, waiting for a proper opportunity to begin.
+
+If there were no other end of life, than to find some adequate solace
+for every day, I know not whether any condition could be preferred to
+that of the man who involves himself in his own thoughts, and never
+suffers experience to show him the vanity of speculation; for no sooner
+are notions reduced to practice, than tranquillity and confidence
+forsake the breast; every day brings its task, and often without
+bringing abilities to perform it: difficulties embarrass, uncertainty
+perplexes, opposition retards, censure exasperates, or neglect
+depresses. We proceed because we have begun; we complete our design,
+that the labour already spent may not be vain; but as expectation
+gradually dies away, the gay smile of alacrity disappears, we are
+compelled to implore severer powers, and trust the event to patience and
+constancy.
+
+When once our labour has begun, the comfort that enables us to endure it
+is the prospect of its end; for though in every long work there are some
+joyous intervals of self-applause, when the attention is recreated by
+unexpected facility, and the imagination soothed by incidental
+excellencies; yet the toil with which performance struggles after idea,
+is so irksome and disgusting, and so frequent is the necessity of
+resting below that perfection which we imagined within our reach, that
+seldom any man obtains more from his endeavours than a painful
+conviction of his defects, and a continual resuscitation of desires
+which he feels himself unable to gratify.
+
+So certainly is weariness the concomitant of our undertakings, that
+every man, in whatever he is engaged, consoles himself with the hope of
+change; if he has made his way by assiduity to publick employment, he
+talks among his friends of the delight of retreat; if by the necessity
+of solitary application he is secluded from the world, he listens with a
+beating heart to distant noises, longs to mingle with living beings, and
+resolves to take hereafter his fill of diversions, or display his
+abilities on the universal theatre, and enjoy the pleasure of
+distinction and applause.
+
+Every desire, however innocent, grows dangerous, as by long indulgence
+it becomes ascendant in the mind. When we have been much accustomed to
+consider any thing as capable of giving happiness, it is not easy to
+restrain our ardour, or to forbear some precipitation in our advances,
+and irregularity in our pursuits. He that has cultivated the tree,
+watched the swelling bud and opening blossom, and pleased himself with
+computing how much every sun and shower add to its growth, scarcely
+stays till the fruit has obtained its maturity, but defeats his own
+cares by eagerness to reward them. When we have diligently laboured for
+any purpose, we are willing to believe that we have attained it, and,
+because we have already done much, too suddenly conclude that no more is
+to be done.
+
+All attraction is increased by the approach of the attracting body. We
+never find ourselves so desirous to finish as in the latter part of our
+work, or so impatient of delay, as when we know that delay cannot be
+long. This unseasonable importunity of discontent may be partly imputed
+to languor and weariness, which must always oppress those more whose
+toil has been longer continued; but the greater part usually proceeds
+from frequent contemplation of that ease which is now considered as
+within reach, and which, when it has once flattered our hopes, we cannot
+suffer to be withheld.
+
+In some of the noblest compositions of wit, the conclusion falls below
+the vigour and spirit of the first books; and as a genius is not to be
+degraded by the imputation of human failings, the cause of this
+declension is commonly sought in the structure of the work, and
+plausible reasons are given why, in the defective part, less ornament
+was necessary, or less could be admitted. But, perhaps, the author would
+have confessed, that his fancy was tired, and his perseverance broken;
+that he knew his design to be unfinished, but that, when he saw the end
+so near, he could no longer refuse to be at rest.
+
+Against the instillations of this frigid opiate, the heart should be
+secured by all the considerations which once concurred to kindle the
+ardour of enterprise. Whatever motive first incited action, has still
+greater force to stimulate perseverance; since he that might have lain
+still at first in blameless obscurity, cannot afterwards desist but with
+infamy and reproach. He, whom a doubtful promise of distant good could
+encourage to set difficulties at defiance, ought not to remit his
+vigour, when he has almost obtained his recompense. To faint or loiter,
+when only the last efforts are required, is to steer the ship through
+tempests, and abandon it to the winds in sight of land; it is to break
+the ground and scatter the seed, and at last to neglect the harvest.
+
+The masters of rhetorick direct, that the most forcible arguments be
+produced in the latter part of an oration, lest they should be effaced
+or perplexed by supervenient images. This precept may be justly extended
+to the series of life: nothing is ended with honour, which does not
+conclude better than it began. It is not sufficient to maintain the
+first vigour; for excellence loses its effect upon the mind by custom,
+as light after a time ceases to dazzle. Admiration must be continued by
+that novelty which first produced it, and how much soever is given,
+there must always be reason to imagine that more remains.
+
+We not only are most sensible of the last impressions, but such is the
+unwillingness of mankind to admit transcendant merit, that, though it be
+difficult to obliterate the reproach of miscarriages by any subsequent
+achievement, however illustrious, yet the reputation raised by a long
+train of success may be finally ruined by a single failure; for weakness
+or errour will be always remembered by that malice and envy which it
+gratifies.
+
+For the prevention of that disgrace, which lassitude and negligence may
+bring at last upon the greatest performances, it is necessary to
+proportion carefully our labour to our strength. If the design comprises
+many parts, equally essential, and, therefore, not to be separated, the
+only time for caution is before we engage; the powers of the mind must
+be then impartially estimated, and it must be remembered that, not to
+complete the plan, is not to have begun it; and that nothing is done
+while any thing is omitted.
+
+But, if the task consists in the repetition of single acts, no one of
+which derives its efficacy from the rest, it may be attempted with less
+scruple, because there is always opportunity to retreat with honour. The
+danger is only, lest we expect from the world the indulgence with which
+most are disposed to treat themselves; and in the hour of listlessness
+imagine, that the diligence of one day will atone for the idleness of
+another, and that applause begun by approbation will be continued by
+habit.
+
+He that is himself weary will soon weary the publick. Let him therefore
+lay down his employment, whatever it be, who can no longer exert his
+former activity or attention; let him not endeavour to struggle with
+censure, or obstinately infest the stage till a general hiss commands
+him to depart.
+
+
+
+No. 208. SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1752.
+
+ [Greek: Aerakleitos ego ti me o kato helket amousoi,
+ Ouch hymin eponoun, tois de m' episgamenoi;
+ Eis emoi anthropos trismurioi; oi d' anarithmoi
+ Oudeis; taut audo kai para Persephonae] DIOG. LAERT.
+
+ Begone, ye blockheads, Heraclitus cries,
+ And leave my labours to the learn'd and wise;
+ By wit, by knowledge, studious to be read,
+ I scorn the multitude, alive and dead.
+
+ Time, which puts an end to all human pleasures and sorrows, has
+likewise concluded the labours of the Rambler. Having supported, for two
+years, the anxious employment of a periodical writer, and multiplied my
+essays to upwards of two hundred, I have now determined to desist.
+
+The reasons of this resolution it is of little importance to declare,
+since justification is unnecessary when no objection is made. I am far
+from supposing, that the cessation of my performances will raise any
+inquiry, for I have never been much a favourite of the publick, nor can
+boast that, in the progress of my undertaking, I have been animated by
+the rewards of the liberal, the caresses of the great, or the praises of
+the eminent.
+
+But I have no design to gratify pride by submission, or malice by
+lamentation; nor think it reasonable to complain of neglect from those
+whose regard I never solicited. If I have not been distinguished by the
+distributors of literary honours, I have seldom descended to the arts by
+which favour is obtained. I have seen the meteors of fashions rise and
+fall, without any attempt to add a moment to their duration. I have
+never complied with temporary curiosity, nor enabled my readers to
+discuss the topick of the day; I have rarely exemplified my assertions
+by living characters; in my papers, no man could look for censures of
+his enemies, or praises of himself; and they only were expected to
+peruse them, whose passions left them leisure for abstracted truth, and
+whom virtue could please by its naked dignity.
+
+To some, however, I am indebted for encouragement, and to others for
+assistance. The number of my friends was never great, but they have been
+such as would not suffer me to think that I was writing in vain, and I
+did not feel much dejection from the want of popularity.
+
+My obligations having not been frequent, my acknowledgments may be soon
+despatched. I can restore to all my correspondents their productions,
+with little diminution of the bulk of my volumes, though not without the
+loss of some pieces to which particular honours have been paid.
+
+The parts from which I claim no other praise than that of having given
+them an opportunity of appearing, are the four billets in the tenth
+paper, the second letter in the fifteenth, the thirtieth, the
+forty-fourth, the ninety-seventh, and the hundredth papers, and the
+second letter in the hundred and seventh.
+
+Having thus deprived myself of many excuses which candour might have
+admitted for the inequality of my compositions, being no longer able to
+allege the necessity of gratifying correspondents, the importunity with
+which publication was solicited, or obstinacy with which correction was
+rejected, I must remain accountable for all my faults, and submit,
+without subterfuge, to the censures of criticism, which, however, I
+shall not endeavour to soften by a formal deprecation, or to overbear by
+the influence of a patron. The supplications of an author never yet
+reprieved him a moment from oblivion; and, though greatness has
+sometimes sheltered guilt, it can afford no protection to ignorance or
+dulness. Having hitherto attempted only the propagation of truth, I will
+not at last violate it by the confession of terrours which I do not
+feel; having laboured to maintain the dignity of virtue, I will not now
+degrade it by the meanness of dedication.
+
+The seeming vanity with which I have sometimes spoken of myself, would
+perhaps require an apology, were it not extenuated by the example of
+those who have published essays before me, and by the privilege which
+every nameless writer has been hitherto allowed. "A mask," says
+Castiglione, "confers a right of acting and speaking with less
+restraint, even when the wearer happens to be known." He that is
+discovered without his own consent, may claim some indulgence, and
+cannot be rigorously called to justify those sallies or frolicks which
+his disguise must prove him desirous to conceal.
+
+But I have been cautious lest this offence should be frequently or
+grossly committed; for, as one of the philosophers directs us to live
+with a friend, as with one that is some time to become an enemy, I have
+always thought it the duty of an anonymous author to write, as if he
+expected to be hereafter known.
+
+I am willing to flatter myself with hopes, that, by collecting these
+papers, I am not preparing, for my future life, either shame or
+repentance. That all are happily imagined, or accurately polished, that
+the same sentiments have not sometimes recurred, or the same expressions
+been too frequently repeated, I have not confidence in my abilities
+sufficient to warrant. He that condemns himself to compose on a stated
+day, will often bring to his task an attention dissipated, a memory
+embarrassed, an imagination overwhelmed, a mind distracted with
+anxieties, a body languishing with disease: he will labour on a barren
+topick, till it is too late to change it; or, in the ardour of
+invention, diffuse his thoughts into wild exuberance, which the pressing
+hour of publication cannot suffer judgment to examine or reduce.
+
+Whatever shall be the final sentence of mankind, I have at least
+endeavoured to deserve their kindness. I have laboured to refine our
+language to grammatical purity, and to clear it from colloquial
+barbarisms, licentious idioms, and irregular combinations. Something,
+perhaps, I have added to the elegance of its construction, and something
+to the harmony of its cadence. When common words were less pleasing to
+the ear, or less distinct in their signification, I have familiarized
+the terms of philosophy, by applying them to popular ideas, but have
+rarely admitted any words not authorized by former writers; for I
+believe that whoever knows the English tongue in its present extent,
+will be able to express his thoughts without further help from other
+nations.
+
+As it has been my principal design to inculcate wisdom or piety, I have
+allotted few papers to the idle sports of imagination. Some, perhaps,
+may be found, of which the highest excellence is harmless merriment; but
+scarcely any man is so steadily serious as not to complain, that the
+severity of dictatorial instruction has been too seldom relieved, and
+that he is driven by the sternness of the Rambler's philosophy to more
+cheerful and airy companions.
+
+Next to the excursions of fancy are the disquisitions of criticism,
+which, in my opinion, is only to be ranked among the subordinate and
+instrumental arts. Arbitrary decision and general exclamation I have
+carefully avoided, by asserting nothing without a reason, and
+establishing all my principles of judgment on unalterable and evident
+truth.
+
+In the pictures of life I have never been so studious of novelty or
+surprise, as to depart wholly from all resemblance; a fault which
+writers deservedly celebrated frequently commit, that they may raise, as
+the occasion requires, either mirth or abhorrence. Some enlargement may
+be allowed to declamation, and some exaggeration to burlesque; but as
+they deviate farther from reality, they become less useful, because
+their lessons will fail of application. The mind of the reader is
+carried away from the contemplation of his own manners; he finds in
+himself no likeness to the phantom before him; and though he laughs or
+rages, is not reformed.
+
+The essays professedly serious, if I have been able to execute my own
+intentions, will be found exactly conformable to the precepts of
+Christianity, without any accommodation to the licentiousness and levity
+of the present age. I therefore look back on this part of my work with
+pleasure, which no blame or praise of man shall diminish or augment. I
+shall never envy the honours which wit and learning obtain in any other
+cause, if I can be numbered among the writers who have given ardour to
+virtue, and confidence to truth.
+
+ [Greek: Auton ek makaron autaxios eiae amoibae.]
+
+ Celestial pow'rs! that piety regard,
+ From you my labours wait their last reward.
+
+END OF VOL. III.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Works of Samuel Johnson, LL.D, In
+Nine Volumes, by Samuel Johnson
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11397 ***
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #11397 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/11397)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Works of Samuel Johnson, LL.D, In Nine
+Volumes, by Samuel Johnson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Works of Samuel Johnson, LL.D, In Nine Volumes
+ Volume the Third: The Rambler, Vol. II
+
+Author: Samuel Johnson
+
+Release Date: March 2, 2004 [EBook #11397]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WORKS OF JOHNSON, VOL. 3 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Carol David and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+JOHNSON'S WORKS.
+
+
+THE RAMBLER.
+
+VOL. II.
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+WORKS
+
+OF
+
+SAMUEL JOHNSON, LL.D,
+
+IN NINE VOLUMES.
+
+
+
+VOLUME THE THIRD.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+MDCCCXXV.
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+OF
+
+THE SECOND VOLUME.
+
+
+NUMB.
+
+106. The vanity of an author's expectations.--Reasons why good authors
+ are sometimes neglected
+107. Properantia's hopes of a year of confusion. The misery of
+ prostitutes
+108. Life sufficient to all purposes if well employed
+109. The education of a fop
+110. Repentance stated and explained. Retirement and abstinence useful
+ to repentance
+111. Youth made unfortunate by its haste and eagerness
+112. Too much nicety not to be indulged. The character of Eriphile
+113. The history of Hymenæus's courtship
+114. The necessity of proportioning punishments to crimes
+115. The sequel of Hymenæus's courtship
+116. The young trader's attempt at politeness
+117. The advantages of living in a garret
+118. The narrowness of fame
+119. Tranquilla's account of her lovers, opposed to Hymenæus
+120. The history of Almamoulin the son of Nouradin
+121. The dangers of imitation. The impropriety of imitating Spenser
+122. A criticism on the English historians
+123. The young trader turned gentleman
+124. The lady's misery in a summer retirement
+125. The difficulty of defining comedy. Tragick and comick sentiments
+ confounded
+126. The universality of cowardice. The impropriety of extorting praise.
+ The impertinence of an astronomer
+127. Diligence too soon relaxed. Necessity of perseverance
+128. Anxiety universal. The unhappiness of a wit and a fine lady
+129. The folly of cowardice and inactivity
+130. The history of a beauty
+131. Desire of gain the general passion
+132. The difficulty of educating a young nobleman
+133. The miseries of a beauty defaced
+134. Idleness an anxious and miserable state
+135. The folly of annual retreats into the country
+136. The meanness and mischief of indiscriminate dedication
+137. The necessity of literary courage
+138. Original characters to be found in the country. The character of
+ Mrs. Busy
+139. A critical examination of Samson Agonistes
+140. The criticism continued
+141. The danger of attempting wit in conversation. The character of
+ Papilius
+142. An account of squire Bluster
+143. The criterions of plagiarism
+144. The difficulty of raising reputation. The various species of
+ detractors
+145. Petty writers not to be despised
+146. An account of an author travelling in quest of his own character.
+ The uncertainty of fame
+147. The courtier's esteem of assurance
+148. The cruelty of parental tyranny
+149. Benefits not always entitled to gratitude
+150. Adversity useful to the acquisition of knowledge
+151. The climactericks of the mind
+152. Criticism on epistolary writings
+153. The treatment incurred by loss of fortune
+154. The inefficacy of genius without learning
+155. The usefulness of advice. The danger of habits. The necessity of
+ reviewing life
+156. The laws of writing not always indisputable. Reflections on
+ tragi-comedy
+157. The scholar's complaint of his own bashfulness
+158. Rules of writing drawn from examples. Those examples often mistaken
+159. The nature and remedies of bashfulness
+160. Rules for the choice of associates
+161. The revolutions of a garret
+162. Old men in danger of falling into pupilage. The conduct of
+ Thrasybulus
+163. The mischiefs of following a patron
+164. Praise universally desired. The failings of eminent men often
+ imitated
+165. The impotence of wealth. The visit of Scrotinus to the place of his
+ nativity
+166. Favour not easily gained by the poor
+167. The marriage of Hymenæus and Tranquilla
+168. Poetry debased by mean expressions. An example from Shakespeare
+169. Labour necessary to excellence
+170. The history of Misella debauched by her relation
+171. Misella's description of the life of a prostitute
+172. The effect of sudden riches upon the manners
+173. Unreasonable fears of pedantry
+174. The mischiefs of unbounded raillery. History of Dicaculus
+175. The majority are wicked
+176. Directions to authors attacked by criticks. The various degrees of
+ critical perspicacity
+177. An account of a club of antiquaries
+178. Many advantages not to be enjoyed together
+179. The awkward merriment of a student
+180. The study of life not to be neglected for the sake of books
+181. The history of an adventurer in lotteries
+182. The history of Leviculus, the fortune-hunter
+183. The influence of envy and interest compared
+184. The subject of essays often suggested by chance. Chance equally
+ prevalent in other affairs
+185. The prohibition of revenge justifiable by reason. The meanness of
+ regulating our conduct by the opinions of men
+186. Anningait and Ajut; a Greenland history
+187. The history of Anningait and Ajut concluded
+188. Favour often gained with little assistance from understanding
+189. The mischiefs of falsehood. The character of Turpicula
+190. The history of Abouzaid, the son of Morad
+191. The busy life of a young lady
+192. Love unsuccessful without riches
+193. The author's art of praising himself
+194. A young nobleman's progress in politeness
+195. A young nobleman's introduction to the knowledge of the town
+196. Human opinions mutable. The hopes of youth fallacious
+197. The history of a legacy-hunter
+198. The legacy-hunter's history concluded
+199. The virtues of Rabbi Abraham's magnet
+200. Asper's complaint of the insolence of Prospero. Unpoliteness not
+ always the effect of pride
+201. The importance of punctuality
+202. The different acceptations of poverty. Cynicks and Monks not
+ poor
+203. The pleasures of life to be sought in prospects of futurity. Future
+ fame uncertain
+204. The history of ten days of Seged, emperour of Ethiopia
+205. The history of Seged concluded
+206. The art of living at the cost of others
+207. The folly of continuing too long upon the stage
+208. The Rambler's reception. His design
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+RAMBLER.
+
+
+
+No. 106. SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 1751.
+
+ _Opinionum commenta delet dies, naturæ judicia Confirmat_.
+ CICERO, vi. Att. 1.
+
+ Time obliterates the fictions of opinion, and confirms the decisions
+ of nature.
+
+It is necessary to the success of flattery, that it be accommodated to
+particular circumstances or characters, and enter the heart on that side
+where the passions stand ready to receive it. A lady seldom listens with
+attention to any praise but that of her beauty; a merchant always
+expects to hear of his influence at the bank, his importance on the
+exchange, the height of his credit, and the extent of his traffick: and
+the author will scarcely be pleased without lamentations of the neglect
+of learning, the conspiracies against genius, and the slow progress of
+merit, or some praises of the magnanimity of those who encounter poverty
+and contempt in the cause of knowledge, and trust for the reward of
+their labours to the judgment and gratitude of posterity.
+
+An assurance of unfading laurels, and immortal reputation, is the
+settled reciprocation of civility between amicable writers. To raise
+_monuments more durable than brass, and more conspicuous than
+pyramids_, has been long the common boast of literature; but, among
+the innumerable architects that erect columns to themselves, far the
+greater part, either for want of durable materials, or of art to dispose
+them, see their edifices perish as they are towering to completion, and
+those few that for a while attract the eye of mankind, are generally
+weak in the foundation, and soon sink by the saps of time.
+
+No place affords a more striking conviction of the vanity of human
+hopes, than a publick library; for who can see the wall crowded on every
+side by mighty volumes, the works of laborious meditation, and accurate
+inquiry, now scarcely known but by the catalogue, and preserved only to
+increase the pomp of learning, without considering how many hours have
+been wasted in vain endeavours, how often imagination has anticipated
+the praises of futurity, how many statues have risen to the eye of
+vanity, how many ideal converts have elevated zeal, how often wit has
+exulted in the eternal infamy of his antagonists, and dogmatism has
+delighted in the gradual advances of his authority, the immutability of
+his decrees, and the perpetuity of his power?
+
+ _--Non unquam dedit
+ Documenta fors majora, quam frugili loco
+ Starent superbi_.
+
+ Insulting chance ne'er call'd with louder voice,
+ On swelling mortals to be proud no more.
+
+Of the innumerable authors whose performances are thus treasured up in
+magnificent obscurity, most are forgotten, because they never deserved
+to be remembered, and owed the honours which they once obtained, not to
+judgment or to genius, to labour or to art, but to the prejudice of
+faction, the stratagem of intrigue, or the servility of adulation.
+
+Nothing is more common than to find men whose works are now totally
+neglected, mentioned with praises by their contemporaries, as the
+oracles of their age, and the legislators of science. Curiosity is
+naturally excited, their volumes after long inquiry are found, but
+seldom reward the labour of the search. Every period of time has
+produced these bubbles of artificial fame, which are kept up a while by
+the breath of fashion, and then break at once, and are annihilated. The
+learned often bewail the loss of ancient writers whose characters have
+survived their works; but, perhaps, if we could now retrieve them, we
+should find them only the Granvilles, Montagues, Stepneys, and
+Sheffields of their time, and wonder by what infatuation or caprice they
+could be raised to notice.
+
+It cannot, however, be denied, that many have sunk into oblivion, whom
+it were unjust to number with this despicable class. Various kinds of
+literary fame seem destined to various measures of duration. Some spread
+into exuberance with a very speedy growth, but soon wither and decay;
+some rise more slowly, but last long. Parnassus has its flowers of
+transient fragrance, as well as its oaks of towering height, and its
+laurels of eternal verdure.
+
+Among those whose reputation is exhausted in a short time by its own
+luxuriance, are the writers who take advantage of present incidents or
+characters which strongly interest the passions, and engage universal
+attention. It is not difficult to obtain readers, when we discuss a
+question which every one is desirous to understand, which is debated in
+every assembly, and has divided the nation into parties; or when we
+display the faults or virtues of him whose publick conduct has made
+almost every man his enemy or his friend. To the quick circulation of
+such productions all the motives of interest and vanity concur; the
+disputant enlarges his knowledge, the zealot animates his passion, and
+every man is desirous to inform himself concerning affairs so vehemently
+agitated and variously represented.
+
+It is scarcely to be imagined, through how many subordinations of
+interest the ardour of party is diffused; and what multitudes fancy
+themselves affected by every satire or panegyrick on a man of eminence.
+Whoever has, at any time, taken occasion to mention him with praise or
+blame, whoever happens to love or hate any of his adherents, as he
+wishes to confirm his opinion, and to strengthen his party, will
+diligently peruse every paper from which he can hope for sentiments like
+his own. An object, however small in itself, if placed near to the eye,
+will engross all the rays of light; and a transaction, however trivial,
+swells into importance when it presses immediately on our attention. He
+that shall peruse the political pamphlets of any past reign, will wonder
+why they were so eagerly read, or so loudly praised. Many of the
+performances which had power to inflame factions, and fill a kingdom
+with confusion, have now very little effect upon a frigid critick; and
+the time is coming, when the compositions of later hirelings shall lie
+equally despised. In proportion as those who write on temporary
+subjects, are exalted above their merit at first, they are afterwards
+depressed below it; nor can the brightest elegance of diction, or most
+artful subtilty of reasoning, hope for so much esteem from those whose
+regard is no longer quickened by curiosity or pride.
+
+It is, indeed, the fate of controvertists, even when they contend for
+philosophical or theological truth, to be soon laid aside and slighted.
+Either the question is decided, and there is no more place for doubt and
+opposition; or mankind despair of understanding it, and grow weary of
+disturbance, content themselves with quiet ignorance, and refuse to be
+harassed with labours which they have no hopes of recompensing with
+knowledge.
+
+The authors of new discoveries may surely expect to be reckoned among
+those whose writings are secure of veneration: yet it often happens that
+the general reception of a doctrine obscures the books in which it was
+delivered. When any tenet is generally received and adopted as an
+incontrovertible principle, we seldom look back to the arguments upon
+which it was first established, or can bear that tediousness of
+deduction, and multiplicity of evidence, by which its author was forced
+to reconcile it to prejudice, and fortify it in the weakness of novelty
+against obstinacy and envy.
+
+It is well known how much of our philosophy is derived from Boyle's
+discovery of the qualities of the air; yet of those who now adopt or
+enlarge his theory, very few have read the detail of his experiments.
+His name is, indeed, reverenced; but his works are neglected; we are
+contented to know, that he conquered his opponents, without inquiring
+what cavils were produced against him, or by what proofs they were
+confuted.
+
+Some writers apply themselves to studies boundless and inexhaustible, as
+experiments in natural philosophy. These are always lost in successive
+compilations, as new advances are made, and former observations become
+more familiar. Others spend their lives in remarks on language, or
+explanations of antiquities, and only afford materials for
+lexicographers and commentators, who are themselves overwhelmed by
+subsequent collectors, that equally destroy the memory of their
+predecessors by amplification, transposition, or contraction. Every new
+system of nature gives birth to a swarm of expositors, whose business is
+to explain and illustrate it, and who can hope to exist no longer than
+the founder of their sect preserves his reputation.
+
+There are, indeed, few kinds of composition from which an author,
+however learned or ingenious, can hope a long continuance of fame. He
+who has carefully studied human nature, and can well describe it, may
+with most reason flatter his ambition. Bacon, among all his pretensions
+to the regard of posterity, seems to have pleased himself chiefly with
+his Essays, _which come home to men's business and bosoms_, and of
+which, therefore, he declares his expectation, that they _will live as
+long as books last_. It may, however, satisfy an honest and benevolent
+mind to have been useful, though less conspicuous; nor will he that
+extends his hope to higher rewards, be so much anxious to obtain praise,
+as to discharge the duty which Providence assigns him.
+
+
+
+No. 107. TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1751.
+
+ _Alternis igitur contendere versibns ambo
+ Coepere: alternos Musoe meminisse volebant_. VIRG. Ec. vii. 18
+
+ On themes alternate now the swains recite;
+ The muses in alternate themes delight. ELPHINSTON.
+
+Among the various censures, which the unavoidable comparison of my
+performances with those of my predecessors has produced, there is none
+more general than that of uniformity. Many of my readers remark the want
+of those changes of colours, which formerly fed the attention with
+unexhausted novelty, and of that intermixture of subjects, or
+alternation of manner, by which other writers relieved weariness, and
+awakened expectation.
+
+I have, indeed, hitherto avoided the practice of uniting gay and solemn
+subjects in the same paper, because it seems absurd for an author to
+counteract himself, to press at once with equal force upon both parts of
+the intellectual balance, or give medicines, which, like the double
+poison of Dryden, destroy the force of one another. I have endeavoured
+sometimes to divert, and sometimes to elevate; but have imagined it an
+useless attempt to disturb merriment by solemnity, or interrupt
+seriousness by drollery. Yet I shall this day publish two letters of
+very different tendency, which I hope, like tragi-comedy, may chance to
+please even when they are not critically approved.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+DEAR SIR,
+
+Though, as my mamma tells me, I am too young to talk at the table, I
+have great pleasure in listening to the conversation of learned men,
+especially when they discourse of things which I do not understand; and
+have, therefore, been of late particularly delighted with many disputes
+about the _alteration of the stile_, which, they say, is to be made by
+act of parliament.
+
+One day when my mamma was gone out of the room, I asked a very great
+scholar what the style was. He told me he was afraid I should hardly
+understand him when he informed me, that it was the stated and
+established method of computing time. It was not, indeed, likely that I
+should understand him; for I never yet knew time computed in my life,
+nor can imagine why we should be at so much trouble to count what we
+cannot keep. He did not tell me whether we are to count the time past,
+or the time to come; but I have considered them both by myself, and
+think it as foolish to count time that is gone, as money that is spent;
+and as for the time which is to come, it only seems further off by
+counting; and therefore, when any pleasure is promised me, I always
+think of the time as little as I can.
+
+I have since listened very attentively to every one that talked upon
+this subject, of whom the greater part seem not to understand it better
+than myself; for though they often hint how much the nation has been
+mistaken, and rejoice that we are at last growing wiser than our
+ancestors, I have never been able to discover from them, that any body
+has died sooner, or been married later, for counting time wrong; and,
+therefore, I began to fancy that there was a great bustle with little
+consequence.
+
+At last, two friends of my papa, Mr. Cycle, and Mr. Starlight, being, it
+seems, both of high learning, and able to make an almanack, began to
+talk about the new style. Sweet Mr. Starlight--I am sure I shall love
+his name as long as I live; for he told Cycle roundly, with a fierce
+look, that we should never be right without a _year of confusion_. Dear
+Mr. Rambler, did you ever hear any thing so charming? a whole year of
+confusion! When there has been a rout at mamma's, I have thought one
+night of confusion worth a thousand nights of rest; and if I can but see
+a year of confusion, a whole year, of cards in one room, and dancings in
+another, here a feast, and there a masquerade, and plays, and coaches,
+and hurries, and messages, and milliners, and raps at the door, and
+visits, and frolicks, and new fashions, I shall not care what they do
+with the rest of the time, nor whether they count it by the old style or
+the new; for I am resolved to break loose from the nursery in the
+tumult, and play my part among the rest; and it will be strange if I
+cannot get a husband and a chariot in the year of confusion.
+
+Cycle, who is neither so young nor so handsome as Starlight, very
+gravely maintained, that all the perplexity may he avoided by leaping
+over eleven days in the reckoning; and, indeed, if it should come only
+to this, I think the new style is a delightful thing; for my mamma says
+I shall go to court when I am sixteen, and if they can but contrive
+often to leap over eleven days together, the months of restraint will
+soon be at an end. It is strange, that with all the plots that have been
+laid against time, they could never kill it by act of parliament before.
+Dear sir, if you have any vote or interest, get them but for once to
+destroy eleven months, and then I shall be as old as some married
+ladies. But this is desired only if you think they will not comply with
+Mr. Starlight's scheme; for nothing surely could please me like a year
+of confusion, when I shall no longer be fixed this hour to my pen, and
+the next to my needle, or wait at home for the dancing-master one day,
+and the next for the musick-master; but run from ball to ball, and from
+drum to drum; and spend all my time without tasks, and without account,
+and go out without telling whither, and come home without regard to
+prescribed hours, or family rules.
+
+I am, sir,
+
+Your humble servant,
+
+PROPERANTIA.
+
+MR. RAMBLER,
+
+I was seized this morning with an unusual pensiveness, and, finding that
+books only served to heighten it, took a ramble into the fields, in
+hopes of relief and invigoration from the keenness of the air and
+brightness of the sun.
+
+As I wandered wrapped up in thought, my eyes were struck with the
+hospital for the reception of deserted infants, which I surveyed with
+pleasure, till, by a natural train of sentiment, I began to reflect on
+the fate of the mothers. For to what shelter can they fly? Only to the
+arms of their betrayer, which, perhaps, are now no longer open to
+receive them; and then how quick must be the transition from deluded
+virtue to shameless guilt, and from shameless guilt to hopeless
+wretchedness?
+
+The anguish that I felt, left me no rest till I had, by your means,
+addressed myself to the publick on behalf of those forlorn creatures,
+the women of the town; whose misery here might satisfy the most rigorous
+censor, and whose participation of our common nature might surely induce
+us to endeavour, at least, their preservation from eternal punishment.
+
+These were all once, if not virtuous, at least innocent; and might still
+have continued blameless and easy, but for the arts and insinuations of
+those whose rank, fortune, or education, furnished them with means to
+corrupt or to delude them. Let the libertine reflect a moment on the
+situation of that woman, who, being forsaken by her betrayer, is reduced
+to the necessity of turning prostitute for bread, and judge of the
+enormity of his guilt by the evils which it produces.
+
+It cannot be doubted but that numbers follow this dreadful course of
+life, with shame, horrour, and regret; but where can they hope for
+refuge: "_The world is not their friend, nor the world's law_." Their
+sighs, and tears, and groans, are criminal in the eye of their tyrants,
+the bully and the bawd, who fatten on their misery, and threaten them
+with want or a gaol, if they show the least design of escaping from
+their bondage.
+
+"To wipe all tears from off all faces," is a task too hard for mortals;
+but to alleviate misfortunes is often within the most limited power: yet
+the opportunities which every day affords of relieving the most wretched
+of human beings are overlooked and neglected, with equal disregard of
+policy and goodness.
+
+There are places, indeed, set apart, to which these unhappy creatures
+may resort, when the diseases of incontinence seize upon them; but if
+they obtain a cure, to what are they reduced? Either to return with the
+small remains of beauty to their former guilt, or perish in the streets
+with nakedness and hunger.
+
+How frequently have the gay and thoughtless, in their evening frolicks,
+seen a band of those miserable females, covered with rags, shivering
+with cold, and pining with hunger; and, without either pitying their
+calamities, or reflecting upon the cruelty of those who, perhaps, first
+seduced them by caresses of fondness, or magnificence of promises, go on
+to reduce others to the same wretchedness by the same means!
+
+To stop the increase of this deplorable multitude, is undoubtedly the
+first and most pressing consideration. To prevent evil is the great end
+of government, the end for which vigilance and severity are properly
+employed. But surely those whom passion or interest has already
+depraved, have some claim to compassion, from beings equally frail and
+fallible with themselves. Nor will they long groan in their present
+afflictions, if none were to refuse them relief, but those that owe
+their exemption from the same distress only to their wisdom and their
+virtue.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+AMICUS[a].
+
+[Footnote a: The letter from Amicus was from an unknown correspondent.
+It breathes a tenderness of spirit worthy of Johnson himself. But he
+practised the lesson which it inculcates;--a harder task! Sterne could
+_write_ sentiment.]
+
+
+
+No. 108. SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 1751.
+
+ _--Sapere aude:
+ Incipe. Vivendi recte qui prorogat horam,
+ Rusticus expectat dum defluat amnis; at ille
+ Labitur et labetur in omne volubilis aevum_. HOR. Lib. i. Ep. ii. 39.
+
+ Begin, be bold, and venture to be wise;
+ He who defers this work from day to day,
+ Does on a river's bank expecting stay,
+ Till the whole stream, which stopp'd him, should be gone,
+ That runs, and as it runs, for ever will run on. COWLEY.
+
+An ancient poet, unreasonably discontented at the present state of
+things, which his system of opinions obliged him to represent in its
+worst form, has observed of the earth, "that its greater part is covered
+by the uninhabitable ocean; that of the rest some is encumbered with
+naked mountains, and some lost under barren sands; some scorched with
+unintermitted heat, and some petrified with perpetual frost; so that
+only a few regions remain for the production of fruits, the pasture of
+cattle, and the accommodation of man."
+
+The same observation may be transferred to the time allotted us in our
+present state. When we have deducted all that is absorbed in sleep, all
+that is inevitably appropriated to the demands of nature, or
+irresistibly engrossed by the tyranny of custom; all that passes in
+regulating the superficial decorations of life, or is given up in the
+reciprocations of civility to the disposal of others; all that is torn
+from us by the violence of disease, or stolen imperceptibly away by
+lassitude and languor; we shall find that part of our duration very
+small of which we can truly call ourselves masters, or which we can
+spend wholly at our own choice. Many of our hours are lost in a rotation
+of petty cares, in a constant recurrence of the same employments; many
+of our provisions for ease or happiness are always exhausted by the
+present day; and a great part of our existence serves no other purpose,
+than that of enabling us to enjoy the rest.
+
+Of the few moments which are left in our disposal, it may reasonably be
+expected, that we should be so frugal, as to let none of them slip from
+us without some equivalent; and perhaps it might be found, that as the
+earth, however straitened by rocks and waters, is capable of producing
+more than all its inhabitants are able to consume, our lives, though
+much contracted by incidental distraction, would yet afford us a large
+space vacant to the exercise of reason and virtue; that we want not
+time, but diligence, for great performances; and that we squander much
+of our allowance, even while we think it sparing and insufficient.
+
+This natural and necessary comminution of our lives, perhaps, often
+makes us insensible of the negligence with which we suffer them to slide
+away. We never consider ourselves as possessed at once of time
+sufficient for any great design, and therefore indulge ourselves, in
+fortuitous amusements. We think it unnecessary to take an account of a
+few supernumerary moments, which, however employed, could have produced
+little advantage, and which were exposed to a thousand chances of
+disturbance and interruption.
+
+It is observable, that, either by nature or by habit, our faculties are
+fitted to images of a certain extent, to which we adjust great things by
+division, and little things by accumulation. Of extensive surfaces we
+can only take a survey, as the parts succeed one another; and atoms we
+cannot perceive till they are united into masses. Thus we break the vast
+periods of time into centuries and years; and thus, if we would know the
+amount of moments, we must agglomerate them into days and weeks.
+
+The proverbial oracles of our parsimonious ancestors have informed us,
+that the fatal waste of fortune is by small expenses, by the profusion
+of sums too little singly to alarm our caution, and which we never
+suffer ourselves to consider together. Of the same kind is the
+prodigality of life; he that hopes to look back hereafter with
+satisfaction upon past years, must learn to know the present value of
+single minutes, and endeavour to let no particle of time fall useless to
+the ground.
+
+It is usual for those who are advised to the attainment of any new
+qualification, to look upon themselves as required to change the general
+course of their conduct, to dismiss business, and exclude pleasure, and
+to devote their days and nights to a particular attention. But all
+common degrees of excellence are attainable at a lower price; he that
+should steadily and resolutely assign to any science or language those
+interstitial vacancies which intervene in the most crowded variety of
+diversion or employment, would find every day new irradiations of
+knowledge, and discover how much more is to be hoped from frequency and
+perseverance, than from violent efforts and sudden desires; efforts
+which are soon remitted when they encounter difficulty, and desires,
+which, if they are indulged too often, will shake off the authority of
+reason, and range capriciously from one object to another.
+
+The disposition to defer every important design to a time of leisure,
+and a state of settled uniformity, proceeds generally from a false
+estimate of the human powers. If we except those gigantic and stupendous
+intelligences who are said to grasp a system by intuition, and bound
+forward from one series of conclusions to another, without regular steps
+through intermediate propositions, the most successful students make
+their advances in knowledge by short flights, between each of which the
+mind may lie at rest. For every single act of progression a short time
+is sufficient; and it is only necessary, that whenever that time is
+afforded, it be well employed.
+
+Few minds will be long confined to severe and laborious meditation; and
+when a successful attack on knowledge has been made, the student
+recreates himself with the contemplation of his conquest, and forbears
+another incursion, till the new-acquired truth has become familiar, and
+his curiosity calls upon him for fresh gratifications. Whether the time
+of intermission is spent in company, or in solitude, in necessary
+business, or in voluntary levities, the understanding is equally
+abstracted from the object of inquiry; but, perhaps, if it be detained
+by occupations less pleasing, it returns again to study with greater
+alacrity than when it is glutted with ideal pleasures, and surfeited
+with intemperance of application. He that will not suffer himself to be
+discouraged by fancied impossibilities, may sometimes find his abilities
+invigorated by the necessity of exerting them in short intervals, as the
+force of a current is increased by the contraction of its channel.
+
+From some cause like this, it has probably proceeded, that, among those
+who have contributed to the advancement of learning, many have risen to
+eminence in opposition to all the obstacles which external circumstances
+could place in their way, amidst the tumult of business, the distresses
+of poverty, or the dissipations of a wandering and unsettled state. A
+great part of the life of Erasmus was one continual peregrination; ill
+supplied with the gifts of fortune, and led from city to city, and from
+kingdom to kingdom, by the hopes of patrons and preferment, hopes which
+always flattered and always deceived him; he yet found means, by
+unshaken constancy, and a vigilant improvement of those hours, which, in
+the midst of the most restless activity, will remain unengaged, to write
+more than another in the same condition would have hoped to read.
+Compelled by want to attendance and solicitation, and so much versed in
+common life, that he has transmitted to us the most perfect delineation
+of the manners of his age, he joined to his knowledge of the world such
+application to books, that he will stand for ever in the first rank of
+literary heroes. How this proficiency was obtained he sufficiently
+discovers, by informing us, that the "Praise of Folly," one of his most
+celebrated performances, was composed by him on the road to Italy; _ne
+totum illud tempus quo equo fuit insidendum, illiteratis fabulis
+terreretur_: "lest the hours which he was obliged to spend on horseback
+should be tattled away without regard to literature."
+
+An Italian philosopher expressed in his motto, that _time was his
+estate_; an estate, indeed, which will produce nothing without
+cultivation, but will always abundantly repay the labours of industry,
+and satisfy the most extensive desires, if no part of it be suffered to
+lie waste by negligence, to be over-run with noxious plants, or laid out
+for shew, rather than for use.
+
+
+
+No. 109. TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1751.
+
+ _Gratum est, quod patriæ civem populoque dedisti,
+ Si facis, ut patriæ sit idoneus, utilis agris,
+ Utilis et bellorum et pacis rebus agendis.
+ Plurimum enim intererit, quibus artibus, et quibus hunc tu
+ Moribus instituas_ Juv. SAT, xiv. 70.
+
+ Grateful the gift! a member to the state,
+ If you that member useful shall create;
+ Train'd both to war, and, when the war shall cease,
+ As fond, as fit t'improve the arts of peace.
+ For much it boots which way you train your boy,
+ The hopeful object of your future joy. ELPHINSTON.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Though you seem to have taken a view sufficiently extensive of the
+miseries of life, and have employed much of your speculation on mournful
+subjects, you have not yet exhausted the whole stock of human
+infelicity. There is still a species of wretchedness which escapes your
+observation, though it might supply you with many sage remarks, and
+salutary cautions.
+
+I cannot but imagine the start of attention awakened by this welcome
+hint; and at this instant see the Rambler snuffing his candle, rubbing
+his spectacles, stirring his fire, locking out interruption, and
+settling himself in his easy chair, that he may enjoy a new calamity
+without disturbance. For, whether it be that continued sickness or
+misfortune has acquainted you only with the bitterness of being; or that
+you imagine none but yourself able to discover what I suppose has been
+seen and felt by all the inhabitants of the world; whether you intend
+your writings as antidotal to the levity and merriment with which your
+rivals endeavour to attract the favour of the publick; or fancy that you
+have some particular powers of dolorous declamation, and _warble out
+your groans_ with uncommon elegance or energy; it is certain, that
+whatever be your subject, melancholy for the most part bursts in upon
+your speculation, your gaiety is quickly overcast, and though your
+readers may be flattered with hopes of pleasantry, they are seldom
+dismissed but with heavy hearts.
+
+That I may therefore gratify you with an imitation of your own syllables
+of sadness, I will inform you that I was condemned by some disastrous
+influence to be an only son, born to the apparent prospect of a large
+fortune, and allotted to my parents at that time of life when satiety of
+common diversions allows the mind to indulge parental affection with
+greater intenseness. My birth was celebrated by the tenants with feasts,
+and dances, and bag-pipes: congratulations were sent from every family
+within ten miles round; and my parents discovered in my first cries such
+tokens of future virtue and understanding, that they declared themselves
+determined to devote the remaining part of life to my happiness and the
+increase of their estate.
+
+The abilities of my father and mother were not perceptibly unequal, and
+education had given neither much advantage over the other. They had both
+kept good company, rattled in chariots, glittered in playhouses, and
+danced at court, and were both expert in the games that were in their
+time called in as auxiliaries against the intrusion of thought.
+
+When there is such a parity between two persons associated for life, the
+dejection which the husband, if he be not completely stupid, must always
+suffer for want of superiority, sinks him to submissiveness. My mamma
+therefore governed the family without controul; and except that my
+father still retained some authority in the stables, and, now and then,
+after a supernumerary bottle, broke a looking-glass or china dish to
+prove his sovereignty, the whole course of the year was regulated by her
+direction, the servants received from her all their orders, and the
+tenants were continued or dismissed at her discretion.
+
+She, therefore, thought herself entitled to the superintendence of her
+son's education; and when my father, at the instigation of the parson,
+faintly proposed that I should be sent to school, very positively told
+him, that she should not suffer so fine a child to be ruined; that she
+never knew any boys at a grammar-school that could come into a room
+without blushing, or sit at table without some awkward uneasiness; that
+they were always putting themselves into danger by boisterous plays, or
+vitiating their behaviour with mean company, and that, for her part, she
+would rather follow me to the grave, than see me tear my clothes, and
+hang down my head, and sneak about with dirty shoes, and blotted
+fingers, my hair unpowdered, and my hat uncocked.
+
+My father, who had no other end in his proposal than to appear wise and
+manly, soon acquiesced, since I was not to live by my learning; for,
+indeed, he had known very few students that had not some stiffness in
+their manner. They, therefore, agreed, that a domestick tutor should be
+procured, and hired an honest gentleman of mean conversation and narrow
+sentiments, but whom, having passed the common forms of literary
+education, they implicitly concluded qualified to teach all that was to
+be learned from a scholar. He thought himself sufficiently exalted by
+being placed at the same table with his pupil, and had no other view
+than to perpetuate his felicity by the utmost flexibility of submission
+to all my mother's opinions and caprices. He frequently took away my
+book, lest I should mope with too much application, charged me never to
+write without turning up my ruffles, and generally brushed my coat
+before he dismissed me into the parlour. He had no occasion to complain
+of too burdensome an employment: for my mother very judiciously
+considered, that I was not likely to grow politer in his company, and
+suffered me not to pass any more time in his apartment than my lesson
+required. When I was summoned to my task, she enjoined me not to get any
+of my tutor's ways, who was seldom mentioned before me but for practices
+to be avoided. I was every moment admonished not to lean on my chair,
+cross my legs, or swing my hands like my tutor; and once my mother very
+seriously deliberated upon his total dismission, because I began, she
+said, to learn his manner of sticking on my hat, and had his bend in my
+shoulders, and his totter in my gait.
+
+Such, however, was her care, that I escaped all these depravities; and
+when I was only twelve years old, had rid myself of every appearance of
+childish diffidence. I was celebrated round the country for the
+petulance of my remarks, and the quickness of my replies; and many a
+scholar, five years older than myself, have I dashed into confusion by
+the steadiness of my countenance, silenced by my readiness of repartee,
+and tortured with envy by the address with which I picked up a fan,
+presented a snuff-box, or received an empty tea-cup.
+
+At fourteen I was completely skilled in all the niceties of dress, and I
+could not only enumerate all the variety of silks, and distinguish the
+product of a French loom, but dart my eye through a numerous company,
+and observe every deviation from the reigning mode. I was universally
+skilful in all the changes of expensive finery; but as every one, they
+say, has something to which he is particularly born, was eminently
+knowing in Brussels' lace.
+
+The next year saw me advanced to the trust and power of adjusting the
+ceremonial of an assembly. All received their partners from my hand, and
+to me every stranger applied for introduction. My heart now disdained
+the instructions of a tutor, who was rewarded with a small annuity for
+life, and left me qualified, in my own opinion, to govern myself.
+
+In a short time I came to London, and as my father was well known among
+the higher classes of life, soon obtained admission to the most splendid
+assemblies and most crowded card-tables. Here I found myself universally
+caressed and applauded; the ladies praised the fancy of my clothes, the
+beauty of my form, and the softness of my voice; endeavoured in every
+place to force themselves to my notice; and invited, by a thousand
+oblique solicitations, my attendance to the playhouse, and my
+salutations in the park. I was now happy to the utmost extent of my
+conception; I passed every morning in dress, every afternoon in visits,
+and every night in some select assemblies, where neither care nor
+knowledge were suffered to molest us.
+
+After a few years, however, these delights became familiar, and I had
+leisure to look round me with more attention. I then found that my
+flatterers had very little power to relieve the languor of satiety, or
+recreate weariness, by varied amusement; and therefore endeavoured to
+enlarge the sphere of my pleasures, and to try what satisfaction might
+be found in the society of men. I will not deny the mortification with
+which I perceived, that every man whose name I had heard mentioned with
+respect, received me with a kind of tenderness, nearly bordering on
+compassion; and that those whose reputation was not well established,
+thought it necessary to justify their understandings, by treating me
+with contempt. One of these witlings elevated his crest, by asking me in
+a full coffee-house the price of patches; and another whispered that he
+wondered why Miss Frisk did not keep me that afternoon to watch her
+squirrel.
+
+When I found myself thus hunted from all masculine conversation by those
+who were themselves barely admitted, I returned to the ladies, and
+resolved to dedicate my life to their service and their pleasure. But I
+find that I have now lost my charms. Of those with whom I entered the
+gay world, some are married, some have retired, and some have so much
+changed their opinion, that they scarcely pay any regard to my
+civilities, if there is any other man in the place. The new flight of
+beauties to whom I have made my addresses, suffer me to pay the treat,
+and then titter with boys. So that I now find myself welcome only to a
+few grave ladies, who, unacquainted with all that gives either use or
+dignity to life, are content to pass their hours between their bed and
+their cards, without esteem from the old, or reverence from the young.
+
+I cannot but think, Mr. Rambler, that I have reason to complain; for
+surely the females ought to pay some regard to the age of him whose
+youth was passed in endeavours to please them. They that encourage folly
+in the boy, have no right to punish it in the man. Yet I find that,
+though they lavish their first fondness upon pertness and gaiety, they
+soon transfer their regard to other qualities, and ungratefully abandon
+their adorers to dream out their last years in stupidity and contempt.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+FLORENTULUS.
+
+
+
+No. 110. SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 1751
+
+ At nobis vitæ dominum quærentibus unum
+ Lux iter est, et clara dies, et gratia simplex.
+ Spem sequimur, gradimurque fide, fruimurque futuris,
+ Ad quæ non veniunt præsentis gaudia vitæ,
+ Nec currunt pariter capta, et capienda voluptus.
+ PRUDENTIUS, Cont. Sym. ii. 904.
+
+ We through this maze of life one Lord obey;
+ Whose light and grace unerring lead the way.
+ By hope and faith secure of future bliss,
+ Gladly the joys of present life we miss:
+ For baffled mortals still attempt in vain,
+ Present and future bliss at once to gain. F. LEWIS.
+
+That to please the Lord and Father of the universe, is the supreme
+interest of created and dependent beings, as it is easily proved, has
+been universally confessed; and since all rational agents are conscious
+of having neglected or violated the duties prescribed to them, the fear
+of being rejected, or punished by God, has always burdened the human
+mind. The expiation of crimes, and renovation of the forfeited hopes of
+divine favour, therefore constitute a large part of every religion.
+
+The various methods of propitiation and atonement which fear and folly
+have dictated, or artifice and interest tolerated in the different parts
+of the world, however they may sometimes reproach or degrade humanity,
+at least shew the general consent of all ages and nations in their
+opinion of the placability of the divine nature. That God will forgive,
+may, indeed, be established as the first and fundamental truth of
+religion; for, though the knowledge of his existence is the origin of
+philosophy, yet, without the belief of his mercy, it would have little
+influence upon our moral conduct. There could be no prospect of enjoying
+the protection or regard of him, whom the least deviation from rectitude
+made inexorable for ever; and every man would naturally withdraw his
+thoughts from the contemplation of a Creator, whom he must consider as a
+governor too pure to be pleased, and too severe to be pacified; as an
+enemy infinitely wise, and infinitely powerful, whom he could neither
+deceive, escape, nor resist.
+
+Where there is no hope, there can be no endeavour. A constant and
+unfailing obedience is above the reach of terrestrial diligence; and
+therefore the progress of life could only have been the natural descent
+of negligent despair from crime to crime, had not the universal
+persuasion of forgiveness, to be obtained by proper means of
+reconciliation, recalled those to the paths of virtue, whom their
+passions had solicited aside; and animated to new attempts, and firmer
+perseverance, those whom difficulty had discouraged, or negligence
+surprised.
+
+In times and regions so disjoined from each other, that there can
+scarcely be imagined any communication of sentiments either by commerce
+or tradition, has prevailed a general and uniform expectation of
+propitiating God by corporal austerities, of anticipating his vengeance
+by voluntary inflictions, and appeasing his justice by a speedy and
+cheerful submission to a less penalty, when a greater is incurred.
+
+Incorporated minds will always feel some inclination towards exterior
+acts and ritual observances. Ideas not represented by sensible objects
+are fleeting, variable, and evanescent. We are not able to judge of the
+degree of conviction which operated at any particular time upon our own
+thoughts, but as it is recorded by some certain and definite effect. He
+that reviews his life in order to determine the probability of his
+acceptance with God, if he could once establish the necessary proportion
+between crimes and sufferings, might securely rest upon his performance
+of the expiation; but while safety remains the reward only of mental
+purity, he is always afraid lest he should decide too soon in his own
+favour; lest he should not have felt the pangs of true contrition; lest
+he should mistake satiety for detestation, or imagine that his passions
+are subdued when they are only sleeping.
+
+From this natural and reasonable diffidence arose, in humble and
+timorous piety, a disposition to confound penance with repentance, to
+repose on human determinations, and to receive from some judicial
+sentence the stated and regular assignment of reconciliatory pain. We
+are never willing to be without resource: we seek in the knowledge of
+others a succour for our own ignorance, and are ready to trust any that
+will undertake to direct us when we have no confidence in ourselves.
+
+This desire to ascertain by some outward marks the state of the soul,
+and this willingness to calm the conscience by some settled method, have
+produced, as they are diversified in their effects by various tempers
+and principles, most of the disquisitions and rules, the doubts and
+solutions, that have embarrassed the doctrine of repentance, and
+perplexed tender and flexible minds with innumerable scruples concerning
+the necessary measures of sorrow, and adequate degrees of
+self-abhorrence; and these rules, corrupted by fraud, or debased by
+credulity, have, by the common resiliency of the mind from one extreme
+to another, incited others to an open contempt of all subsidiary
+ordinances, all prudential caution, and the whole discipline of
+regulated piety.
+
+Repentance, however difficult to be practised, is, if it be explained
+without superstition, easily understood. _Repentance is the
+relinquishment of any practice, from the conviction that it has offended
+God_. Sorrow, and fear, and anxiety, are properly not parts, but
+adjuncts of repentance; yet they are too closely connected with it to be
+easily separated; for they not only mark its sincerity, but promote its
+efficacy.
+
+No man commits any act of negligence or obstinacy, by which his safety
+or happiness in this world is endangered, without feeling the pungency
+of remorse. He who is fully convinced, that he suffers by his own
+failure, can never forbear to trace back his miscarriage to its first
+cause, to image to himself a contrary behaviour, and to form involuntary
+resolutions against the like fault, even when he knows that he shall
+never again have the power of committing it. Danger, considered as
+imminent, naturally produces such trepidations of impatience as leave
+all human means of safety behind them; he that has once caught an alarm
+of terrour, is every moment seized with useless anxieties, adding one
+security to another, trembling with sudden doubts, and distracted by the
+perpetual occurrence of new expedients. If, therefore, he whose crimes
+have deprived him of the favour of God, can reflect upon his conduct
+without disturbance, or can at will banish the reflection; if he who
+considers himself as suspended over the abyss of eternal perdition only
+by the thread of life, which must soon part by its own weakness, and
+which the wing of every minute may divide, can cast his eyes round him
+without shuddering with horrour, or panting with security; what can he
+judge of himself, but that he is not yet awakened to sufficient
+conviction, since every loss is more lamented than the loss of the
+divine favour, and every danger more dreadful than the danger of final
+condemnation?
+
+Retirement from the cares and pleasures of the world has been often
+recommended as useful to repentance. This at least is evident, that
+every one retires, whenever ratiocination and recollection are required
+on other occasions; and surely the retrospect of life, the
+disentanglement of actions complicated with innumerable circumstances,
+and diffused in various relations, the discovery of the primary
+movements of the heart, and the extirpation of lusts and appetites
+deeply rooted and widely spread, may be allowed to demand some secession
+from sport and noise, business and folly. Some suspension of common
+affairs, some pause of temporal pain and pleasure, is doubtless
+necessary to him that deliberates for eternity, who is forming the only
+plan in which miscarriage cannot be repaired, and examining the only
+question in which mistake cannot be rectified.
+
+Austerities and mortifications are means by which the mind is
+invigorated and roused, by which the attractions of pleasure are
+interrupted, and the chains of sensuality are broken. It is observed by
+one of the fathers, that _he who restrains himself in the use of things
+lawful, will never encroach upon things forbidden_. Abstinence, if
+nothing more, is, at least, a cautious retreat from the utmost verge of
+permission, and confers that security which cannot be reasonably hoped
+by him that dares always to hover over the precipice of destruction, or
+delights to approach the pleasures which he knows it fatal to partake.
+Austerity is the proper antidote to indulgence; the diseases of mind as
+well as body are cured by contraries, and to contraries we should
+readily have recourse, if we dreaded guilt as we dread pain.
+
+The completion and sum of repentance is a change of life. That sorrow
+which dictates no caution, that fear which does not quicken our escape,
+that austerity which fails to rectify our affections, are vain and
+unavailing. But sorrow and terrour must naturally precede reformation;
+for what other cause can produce it? He, therefore, that feels himself
+alarmed by his conscience, anxious for the attainment of a better state,
+and afflicted by the memory of his past faults, may justly conclude,
+that the great work of repentance is begun, and hope by retirement and
+prayer, the natural and religious means of strengthening his conviction,
+to impress upon his mind such a sense of the divine presence, as may
+overpower the blandishments of secular delights, and enable him to
+advance from one degree of holiness to another, till death shall set him
+free from doubt and contest, misery and temptation[b].
+
+ What better can we do than prostrate fall
+ Before him reverent; and there confess
+ Humbly our faults, and pardon beg; with tears
+ Wat'ring the ground, and with our sighs the air
+ Frequenting, sent from hearts contrite, in sign
+ Of sorrow unfeign'd, and humiliation meek? Par. Lost. B. x. 1087.
+
+
+
+No. 111. TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: phronein gar hoi tacheis, ouk asphaleis.] SOPHOC.
+
+ Disaster always waits on early wit.
+
+It has been observed, by long experience, that late springs produce the
+greatest plenty. The delay of blooms and fragrance, of verdure and
+breezes, is for the most part liberally recompensed by the exuberance
+and fecundity of the ensuing seasons; the blossoms which lie concealed
+till the year is advanced, and the sun is high, escape those chilling
+blasts, and nocturnal frosts, which are often fatal to early luxuriance,
+prey upon the first smiles of vernal beauty, destroy the feeble
+principles of vegetable life, intercept the fruit in the gem, and beat
+down the flowers unopened to the ground.
+
+I am afraid there is little hope of persuading the young and sprightly
+part of my readers, upon whom the spring naturally forces my attention,
+to learn, from the great process of nature, the difference between
+diligence and hurry, between speed and precipitation; to prosecute their
+designs with calmness, to watch the concurrence of opportunity, and
+endeavour to find the lucky moment which they cannot make. Youth is the
+time of enterprize and hope: having yet no occasion of comparing our
+force with any opposing power, we naturally form presumptions in our own
+favour, and imagine that obstruction and impediment will give way before
+us. The first repulses rather inflame vehemence than teach prudence; a
+brave and generous mind is long before it suspects its own weakness, or
+submits to sap the difficulties which it expected to subdue by storm.
+Before disappointments have enforced the dictates of philosophy, we
+believe it in our power to shorten the interval between the first cause
+and the last effect; we laugh at the timorous delays of plodding
+industry, and fancy that, by increasing the fire, we can at pleasure
+accelerate the projection.
+
+At our entrance into the world, when health and vigour give us fair
+promises of time sufficient for the regular maturation of our schemes,
+and a long enjoyment of our acquisitions, we are eager to seize the
+present moment; we pluck every gratification within our reach, without
+suffering it to ripen into perfection, and crowd all the varieties of
+delight into a narrow compass; but age seldom fails to change our
+conduct; we grow negligent of time in proportion as we have less
+remaining, and suffer the last part of life to steal from us in languid
+preparations for future undertakings, or slow approaches to remote
+advantages, in weak hopes of some fortuitous occurrence, or drowsy
+equilibrations of undetermined counsel: whether it be that the aged,
+having tasted the pleasures of man's condition, and found them delusive,
+become less anxious for their attainment; or that frequent miscarriages
+have depressed them to despair, and frozen them to inactivity; or that
+death shocks them more as it advances upon them, and they are afraid to
+remind themselves of their decay, or to discover to their own hearts
+that the time of trifling is past. A perpetual conflict with natural
+desires seems to be the lot of our present state. In youth we require
+something of the tardiness and frigidity of age; and in age we must
+labour to recal the fire and impetuosity of youth; in youth we must
+learn to expect, and in age to enjoy.
+
+The torment of expectation is, indeed, not easily to be borne at a time
+when every idea of gratification fires the blood, and flashes on the
+fancy; when the heart is vacant to every fresh form of delight, and has
+no rival engagements to withdraw it from the importunities of a new
+desire. Yet, since the fear of missing what we seek must always be
+proportionable to the happiness expected from possessing it, the
+passions, even in this tempestuous state, might be somewhat moderated by
+frequent inculcation of the mischief of temerity, and the hazard of
+losing that which we endeavour to seize before our time.
+
+He that too early aspires to honours, must resolve to encounter not only
+the opposition of interest, but the malignity of envy. He that is too
+eager to be rich, generally endangers his fortune in wild adventures,
+and uncertain projects; and he that hastens too speedily to reputation,
+often raises his character by artifices and fallacies, decks himself in
+colours which quickly fade, or in plumes which accident may shake off,
+or competition pluck away.
+
+The danger of early eminence has been extended by some, even to the
+gifts of nature; and an opinion has been long conceived, that quickness
+of invention, accuracy of judgment, or extent of knowledge, appearing
+before the usual time, presage a short life. Even those who are less
+inclined to form general conclusions, from instances which by their own
+nature must be rare, have yet been inclined to prognosticate no suitable
+progress from the first sallies of rapid wits; but have observed, that
+after a short effort they either loiter or faint, and suffer themselves
+to be surpassed by the even and regular perseverance of slower
+understandings.
+
+It frequently happens, that applause abates diligence. Whoever finds
+himself to have performed more than was demanded, will be contented to
+spare the labour of unnecessary performances, and sit down to enjoy at
+ease his superfluities of honour. He whom success has made confident of
+his abilities, quickly claims the privilege of negligence, and looks
+contemptuously on the gradual advances of a rival, whom he imagines
+himself able to leave behind whenever he shall again summon his force to
+the contest. But long intervals of pleasure dissipate attention, and
+weaken constancy; nor is it easy for him that has sunk from diligence
+into sloth, to rouse out of his lethargy, to recollect his notions,
+rekindle his curiosity, and engage with his former ardour in the toils
+of study.
+
+Even that friendship which intends the reward of genius, too often tends
+to obstruct it. The pleasure of being caressed, distinguished, and
+admired, easily seduces the student from literary solitude. He is ready
+to follow the call which summons him to hear his own praise, and which,
+perhaps, at once flatters his appetite with certainty of pleasures, and
+his ambition with hopes of patronage; pleasures which he conceives
+inexhaustible, and hopes which he has not yet learned to distrust.
+
+These evils, indeed, are by no means to be imputed to nature, or
+considered as inseparable from an early display of uncommon abilities.
+They may be certainly escaped by prudence and resolution, and must
+therefore be recounted rather as consolations to those who are less
+liberally endowed, than as discouragements to such as are born with
+uncommon qualities. Beauty is well known to draw after it the
+persecutions of impertinence, to incite the artifices of envy, and to
+raise the flames of unlawful love; yet, among the ladies whom prudence
+or modesty have made most eminent, who has ever complained of the
+inconveniences of an amiable form? or would have purchased safety by the
+loss of charms?
+
+Neither grace of person, nor vigour of understanding, are to be regarded
+otherwise than as blessings, as means of happiness indulged by the
+Supreme Benefactor; but the advantages of either may be lost by too much
+eagerness to obtain them. A thousand beauties in their first blossom, by
+an imprudent exposure to the open world, have suddenly withered at the
+blast of infamy; and men who might have subjected new regions to the
+empire of learning, have been lured by the praise of their first
+productions from academical retirement, and wasted their days in vice
+and dependance. The virgin who too soon aspires to celebrity and
+conquest, perishes by childish vanity, ignorant credulity, or guiltless
+indiscretion. The genius who catches at laurels and preferment before
+his time, mocks the hopes that he had excited, and loses those years
+which might have been most usefully employed, the years of youth, of
+spirit, and vivacity.
+
+It is one of the innumerable absurdities of pride, that we are never
+more impatient of direction, than in that part of life when we need it
+most; we are in haste to meet enemies whom we have not strength to
+overcome, and to undertake tasks which we cannot perform: and as he that
+once miscarries does not easily persuade mankind to favour another
+attempt, an ineffectual struggle for fame is often followed by perpetual
+obscurity.
+
+[Footnote b: The perusal of these profound remarks on penance and
+repentance had so powerful an effect on one of the English Benedictine
+monks (The Rev. James Compton) at Paris, as to lead him from the errours
+of Popery! For an account of Dr. Johnson's true benevolence through the
+whole of this interesting occasion, see Malone's note to Boswell's Life
+of Johnson, vol. iv. p. 210--edit. 1822.]
+
+
+
+No. 112. SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 1751.
+
+ _In mea vesanas habui dispendia vires,
+ Et valui pænam fortis in ipse meain_. OVID, Am. Lib. i. vii. 25.
+
+ Of strength pernicious to myself I boast;
+ The pow'rs I have were given me to my cost. F. LEWIS.
+
+We are taught by Celsus, that health is best preserved by avoiding
+settled habits of life, and deviating sometimes into slight aberrations
+from the laws of medicine; by varying the proportions of food and
+exercise, interrupting the successions of rest and labour, and mingling
+hardships with indulgence. The body, long accustomed to stated
+quantities and uniform periods, is disordered by the smallest
+irregularity; and since we cannot adjust every day by the balance or
+barometer, it is fit sometimes to depart from rigid accuracy, that we
+may be able to comply with necessary affairs, or strong inclinations. He
+that too long observes nice punctualities, condemns himself to voluntary
+imbecility, and will not long escape the miseries of disease.
+
+The same laxity of regimen is equally necessary to intellectual health,
+and to a perpetual susceptibility of occasional pleasure. Long
+confinement to the same company which perhaps similitude of taste
+brought first together, quickly contracts the faculties, and makes a
+thousand things offensive that are in themselves indifferent; a man
+accustomed to hear only the echo of his own sentiments, soon bars all
+the common avenues of delight, and has no part in the general
+gratifications of mankind.
+
+In things which are not immediately subject to religious or moral
+consideration, it is dangerous to be too rigidly in the right.
+Sensibility may, by an incessant attention to elegance and propriety, be
+quickened to a tenderness inconsistent with the condition of humanity,
+irritable by the smallest asperity, and vulnerable by the gentlest
+touch. He that pleases himself too much with minute exactness, and
+submits to endure nothing in accommodations, attendance, or address,
+below the point of perfection, will, whenever he enters the crowd of
+life, be harassed with innumerable distresses, from which those who have
+not in the same manner increased their sensations find no disturbance.
+His exotick softness will shrink at the coarseness of vulgar felicity,
+like a plant transplanted to northern nurseries, from the dews and
+sunshine of the tropical regions.
+
+There will always be a wide interval between practical and ideal
+excellence; and, therefore, if we allow not ourselves to be satisfied
+while we can perceive any errour or defect, we must refer our hopes of
+ease to some other period of existence. It is well known, that, exposed
+to a microscope, the smoothest polish of the most solid bodies discovers
+cavities and prominences; and that the softest bloom of roseate
+virginity repels the eye with excrescences and discolorations. The
+perceptions as well as the senses may be improved to our own disquiet,
+and we may, by diligent cultivation of the powers of dislike, raise in
+time an artificial fastidiousness, which shall fill the imagination with
+phantoms of turpitude, shew us the naked skeleton of every delight, and
+present us only with the pains of pleasure, and the deformities of
+beauty.
+
+Peevishness, indeed, would perhaps very little disturb the peace of
+mankind, were it always the consequence of superfluous delicacy; for it
+is the privilege only of deep reflection, or lively fancy, to destroy
+happiness by art and refinement. But by continual indulgence of a
+particular humour, or by long enjoyment of undisputed superiority, the
+dull and thoughtless may likewise acquire the power of tormenting
+themselves and others, and become sufficiently ridiculous or hateful to
+those who are within sight of their conduct, or reach of their
+influence.
+
+They that have grown old in a single state are generally found to be
+morose, fretful, and captious; tenacious of their own practices and
+maxims; soon offended by contradiction or negligence; and impatient of
+any association, but with those that will watch their nod, and submit
+themselves to unlimited authority. Such is the effect of having lived
+without the necessity of consulting any inclination but their own.
+
+The irascibility of this class of tyrants is generally exerted upon
+petty provocations, such as are incident to understandings not far
+extended beyond the instincts of animal life; but, unhappily, he that
+fixes his attention on things always before him, will never have long
+cessations of anger. There are many veterans of luxury upon whom every
+noon brings a paroxysm of violence, fury, and execration; they never sit
+down to their dinner without finding the meat so injudiciously bought,
+or so unskilfully dressed, such blunders in the seasoning, or such
+improprieties in the sauce, as can scarcely be expiated without blood;
+and, in the transports of resentment, make very little distinction
+between guilt and innocence, but let fly their menaces, or growl out
+their discontent, upon all whom fortune exposes to the storm.
+
+It is not easy to imagine a more unhappy condition than that of
+dependance on a peevish man. In every other state of inferiority the
+certainty of pleasing is perpetually increased by a fuller knowledge of
+our duty; and kindness and confidence are strengthened by every new act
+of trust, and proof of fidelity. But peevishness sacrifices to a
+momentory offence the obsequiousness or usefulness of half a life, and,
+as more is performed, increases her exactions.
+
+Chrysalus gained a fortune by trade, and retired into the country; and,
+having a brother burthened by the number of his children, adopted one of
+his sons. The boy was dismissed with many prudent admonitions; informed
+of his father's inability to maintain him in his native rank; cautioned
+against all opposition to the opinions or precepts of his uncle; and
+animated to perseverance by the hopes of supporting the honour of the
+family, and overtopping his elder brother. He had a natural ductility of
+mind, without much warmth of affection, or elevation of sentiment; and
+therefore readily complied with every variety of caprice; patiently
+endured contradictory reproofs; heard false accusations without pain,
+and opprobrious reproaches without reply; laughed obstreperously at the
+ninetieth repetition of a joke; asked questions about the universal
+decay of trade; admired the strength of those heads by which the price
+of stocks is changed and adjusted; and behaved with such prudence and
+circumspection, that after six years the will was made, and Juvenculus
+was declared heir. But unhappily, a month afterwards, retiring at night
+from his uncle's chamber, he left the door open behind him: the old man
+tore his will, and being then perceptibly declining, for want of time to
+deliberate, left his money to a trading company.
+
+When female minds are embittered by age or solitude, their malignity is
+generally exerted in a rigorous and spiteful superintendance of domestic
+trifles. Eriphile has employed her eloquence for twenty years upon the
+degeneracy of servants, the nastiness of her house, the ruin of her
+furniture, the difficulty of preserving tapestry from the moths, and the
+carelessness of the sluts whom she employs in brushing it. It is her
+business every morning to visit all the rooms, in hopes of finding a
+chair without its cover, a window shut or open contrary to her orders, a
+spot on the hearth, or a feather on the floor, that the rest of the day
+may be justifiably spent in taunts of contempt, and vociferations of
+anger. She lives for no other purpose but to preserve the neatness of a
+house and gardens, and feels neither inclination to pleasure, nor
+aspiration after virtue, while she is engrossed by the great employment
+of keeping gravel from grass, and wainscot from dust. Of three amiable
+nieces she has declared herself an irreconcileable enemy; to one,
+because she broke off a tulip with her hoop; to another, because she
+spilt her coffee on a Turkey carpet; and to the third, because she let a
+wet dog run into the parlour. She has broken off her intercourse of
+visits, because company makes a house dirty; and resolves to confine
+herself more to her own affairs, and to live no longer in mire by
+foolish lenity.
+
+Peevishness is generally the vice of narrow minds, and, except when it
+is the effect of anguish and disease, by which the resolution is broken,
+and the mind made too feeble to bear the lightest addition to its
+miseries, proceeds from an unreasonable persuasion of the importance of
+trifles. The proper remedy against it is, to consider the dignity of
+human nature, and the folly of suffering perturbation and uneasiness
+from causes unworthy of our notice.
+
+He that resigns his peace to little casualties, and suffers the course
+of his life to be interrupted by fortuitous inadvertencies, or offences,
+delivers up himself to the direction of the wind, and loses all that
+constancy and equanimity which constitute the chief praise of a wise
+man.
+
+The province of prudence lies between the greatest things and the least;
+some surpass our power by their magnitude, and some escape our notice by
+their number and their frequency. But the indispensable business of life
+will afford sufficient exercise to every understanding; and such is the
+limitation of the human powers, that by attention to trifles we must let
+things of importance pass unobserved: when we examine a mite with a
+glass, we see nothing but a mite.
+
+That it is every man's interest to be pleased, will need little proof:
+that it is his interest to please others, experience will inform him. It
+is therefore not less necessary to happiness than to virtue, that he rid
+his mind of passions which make him uneasy to himself, and hateful to
+the world, which enchain his intellects, and obstruct his improvement.
+
+
+
+No. 113. TUESDAY, APRIL 16, 1751.
+
+ --_Uxorem, Postume, ducis?
+ Die, qua Tisiphone, quibus exagitere colubris?_ JUV. Sat. vi. 28.
+
+ A sober man like thee to change his life!
+ What fury would possess thee with a wife? DRYDEN.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I know not whether it is always a proof of innocence to treat censure
+with contempt. We owe so much reverence to the wisdom of mankind, as
+justly to wish, that our own opinion of our merit may be ratified by the
+concurrence of other suffrages; and since guilt and infamy must have the
+same effect upon intelligences unable to pierce beyond external
+appearance, and influenced often rather by example than precept, we are
+obliged to refute a false charge, lest we should countenance the crime
+which we have never committed. To turn away from an accusation with
+supercilious silence, is equally in the power of him that is hardened by
+villany, and inspirited by innocence. The wall of brass which Horace
+erects upon a clear conscience, may be sometimes raised by impudence or
+power; and we should always wish to preserve the dignity of virtue by
+adorning her with graces which wickedness cannot assume.
+
+For this reason I have determined no longer to endure, with either
+patient or sullen resignation, a reproach, which is, at least in my
+opinion, unjust; but will lay my case honestly before you, that you or
+your readers may at length decide it.
+
+Whether you will be able to preserve your boasted impartiality, when you
+hear that I am considered as an adversary by half the female world, you
+may surely pardon me for doubting, notwithstanding the veneration to
+which you may imagine yourself entitled by your age, your learning, your
+abstraction, or your virtue. Beauty, Mr. Rambler, has often overpowered
+the resolutions of the firm, and the reasonings of the wise, roused the
+old to sensibility, and subdued the rigorous to softness.
+
+I am one of those unhappy beings, who have been marked out as husbands
+for many different women, and deliberated a hundred times on the brink
+of matrimony. I have discussed all the nuptial preliminaries so often,
+that I can repeat the forms in which jointures are settled, pin-money
+secured, and provisions for younger children ascertained; but am at last
+doomed by general consent to everlasting solitude, and excluded by an
+irreversible decree from all hopes of connubial felicity. I am pointed
+out by every mother, as a man whose visits cannot be admitted without
+reproach; who raises hopes only to embitter disappointment, and makes
+offers only to seduce girls into a waste of that part of life, in which
+they might gain advantageous matches, and become mistresses and mothers.
+
+I hope you will think, that some part of this penal severity may justly
+be remitted, when I inform you, that I never yet professed love to a
+woman without sincere intentions of marriage; that I have never
+continued an appearance of intimacy from the hour that my inclination
+changed, but to preserve her whom I was leaving from the shock of
+abruptness, or the ignominy of contempt; that I always endeavoured to
+give the ladies an opportunity of seeming to discard me; and that I
+never forsook a mistress for larger fortune, or brighter beauty, but
+because I discovered some irregularity in her conduct, or some depravity
+in her mind; not because I was charmed by another, but because I was
+offended by herself.
+
+I was very early tired of that succession of amusements by which the
+thoughts of most young men are dissipated, and had not long glittered in
+the splendour of an ample patrimomy [Transcriber's note: sic] before I
+wished for the calm of domestick happiness. Youth is naturally delighted
+with sprightliness and ardour, and therefore I breathed out the sighs of
+my first affection at the feet of the gay, the sparkling, the vivacious
+Ferocula. I fancied to myself a perpetual source of happiness in wit
+never exhausted, and spirit never depressed; looked with veneration on
+her readiness of expedients, contempt of difficulty, assurance of
+address, and promptitude of reply; considered her as exempt by some
+prerogative of nature from the weakness and timidity of female minds;
+and congratulated myself upon a companion superior to all common
+troubles and embarrassments. I was, indeed, somewhat disturbed by the
+unshaken perseverance with which she enforced her demands of an
+unreasonable settlement; yet I should have consented to pass my life in
+union with her, had not my curiosity led me to a crowd gathered in the
+street, where I found Ferocula, in the presence of hundreds, disputing
+for six-pence with a chairman. I saw her in so little need of
+assistance, that it was no breach of the laws of chivalry to forbear
+interposition, and I spared myself the shame of owning her acquaintance.
+I forgot some point of ceremony at our next interview, and soon provoked
+her to forbid me her presence.
+
+My next attempt was upon a lady of great eminence for learning and
+philosophy. I had frequently observed the barrenness and uniformity of
+connubial conversation, and therefore thought highly of my own prudence
+and discernment, when I selected from a multitude of wealthy beauties,
+the deep-read Misothea, who declared herself the inexorable enemy of
+ignorant pertness, and puerile levity; and scarcely condescended to make
+tea, but for the linguist, the geometrician, the astronomer, or the
+poet. The queen of the Amazons was only to be gained by the hero who
+could conquer her in single combat; and Misothea's heart was only to
+bless the scholar who could overpower her by disputation. Amidst the
+fondest transports of courtship she could call for a definition of
+terms, and treated every argument with contempt that could not be
+reduced to regular syllogism. You may easily imagine, that I wished this
+courtship at an end; but when I desired her to shorten my torments, and
+fix the day of my felicity, we were led into a long conversation, in
+which Misothea endeavoured to demonstrate the folly of attributing
+choice and self-direction to any human being. It was not difficult to
+discover the danger of committing myself for ever to the arms of one who
+might at any time mistake the dictates of passion, or the calls of
+appetite, for the decree of fate; or consider cuckoldom as necessary to
+the general system, as a link in the everlasting chain of successive
+causes. I therefore told her, that destiny had ordained us to part, and
+that nothing should have torn me from her but the talons of necessity.
+
+I then solicited the regard of the calm, the prudent, the economical
+Sophronia, a lady who considered wit as dangerous, and learning as
+superfluous, and thought that the woman who kept her house clean, and
+her accounts exact, took receipts for every payment, and could find them
+at a sudden call, inquired nicely after the condition of the tenants,
+read the price of stocks once a-week, and purchased every thing at the
+best market, could want no accomplishments necessary to the happiness of
+a wise man. She discoursed with great solemnity on the care and
+vigilance which the superintendance of a family demands; observed how
+many were ruined by confidence in servants; and told me, that she never
+expected honesty but from a strong chest, and that the best storekeeper
+was the mistress's eye. Many such oracles of generosity she uttered, and
+made every day new improvements in her schemes for the regulations of
+her servants, and the distribution of her time. I was convinced that,
+whatever I might suffer from Sophronia, I should escape poverty; and we
+therefore proceeded to adjust the settlements according to her own rule,
+fair and softly. But one morning her maid came to me in tears to intreat
+my interest for a reconciliation with her mistress, who had turned her
+out at night for breaking six teeth in a tortoise-shell comb; she had
+attended her lady from a distant province, and having not lived long
+enough to save much money, was destitute among strangers, and, though of
+a good family, in danger of perishing in the streets, or of being
+compelled by hunger to prostitution. I made no scruple of promising to
+restore her; but upon my first application to Sophronia, was answered
+with an air which called for approbation, that if she neglected her own
+affairs, I might suspect her of neglecting mine; that the comb stood her
+in three half crowns; that no servant should wrong her twice; and that
+indeed she took the first opportunity of parting with Phillida, because,
+though she was honest, her constitution was bad, and she thought her
+very likely to fall sick. Of our conferrence I need not tell you the
+effect; it surely may be forgiven me, if on this occasion I forgot the
+decency of common forms.
+
+From two more ladies I was disengaged by finding, that they entertained
+my rivals at the same time, and determined their choice by the
+liberality of our settlements. Another, I thought myself justified in
+forsaking, because she gave my attorney a bribe to favour her in the
+bargain; another because I could never soften her to tenderness, till
+she heard that most of my family had died young; and another, because,
+to increase her fortune by expectations, she represented her sister as
+languishing and consumptive.
+
+I shall in another letter give the remaining part of my history of
+courtship. I presume that I should hitherto have injured the majesty of
+female virtue, had I not hoped to transfer my affection to higher merit.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+HYMENAEUS.
+
+
+
+No. 114. SATURDAY, APRIL 20, 1751.
+
+ --_Audi,
+ Nulla umquum de morte hominis cunctatio longa est._ JUV. Sat. vi. 220.
+
+ --When man's life is in debate,
+ The judge can ne'er too long deliberate. DRYDEN.
+
+Power and superiority are so flattering and delightful, that, fraught
+with temptation, and exposed to danger, as they are, scarcely any virtue
+is so cautious, or any prudence so timorous, as to decline them. Even
+those that have most reverence for the laws of right, are pleased with
+shewing that not fear, but choice, regulates their behaviour; and would
+be thought to comply, rather than obey. We love to overlook the
+boundaries which we do not wish to pass; and, as the Roman satirist
+remarks, he that has no design to take the life of another, is yet glad
+to have it in his hands.
+
+From the same principle, tending yet more to degeneracy and corruption,
+proceeds the desire of investing lawful authority with terrour, and
+governing by force rather than persuasion. Pride is unwilling to believe
+the necessity of assigning any other reason than her own will; and would
+rather maintain the most equitable claims by violence and penalties,
+than descend from the dignity of command to dispute and expostulation.
+
+It may, I think, be suspected, that this political arrogance has
+sometimes found its way into legislative assemblies, and mingled with
+deliberations upon property and life. A slight perusal of the laws by
+which the measures of vindictive and coercive justice are established,
+will discover so many disproportions between crimes and punishments,
+such capricious distinctions of guilt, and such confusion of remissness
+and severity, as can scarcely be believed to have been produced by
+publick wisdom, sincerely and calmly studious of publick happiness.
+
+The learned, the judicious, the pious Boerhaave relates, that he never
+saw a criminal dragged to execution without asking himself, "Who knows
+whether this man is not less culpable than me?" On the days when the
+prisons of this city are emptied into the grave, let every spectator of
+the dreadful procession put the same question to his own heart. Few
+among those that crowd in thousands to the legal massacre, and look with
+carelessness, perhaps with triumph, on the utmost exacerbations of human
+misery, would then be able to return without horrour and dejection. For,
+who can congratulate himself upon a life passed without some act more
+mischievous to the peace or prosperity of others, than the theft of a
+piece of money?
+
+It has been always the practice, when any particular species of robbery
+becomes prevalent and common, to endeavour its suppression by capital
+denunciations. Thus one generation of malefactors is commonly cut off,
+and their successors are frighted into new expedients; the art of
+thievery is augmented with greater variety of fraud, and subtilized to
+higher degrees of dexterity, and more occult methods of conveyance. The
+law then renews the pursuit in the heat of anger, and overtakes the
+offender again with death. By this practice capital inflictions are
+multiplied, and crimes, very different in their degrees of enormity, are
+equally subjected to the severest punishment that man has the power of
+exercising upon man.
+
+The lawgiver is undoubtedly allowed to estimate the malignity of an
+offence, not merely by the loss or pain which single acts may produce,
+but by the general alarm and anxiety arising from the fear of mischief,
+and insecurity of possession: he therefore exercises the right which
+societies are supposed to have over the lives of those that compose
+them, not simply to punish a transgression, but to maintain order, and
+preserve quiet; he enforces those laws with severity, that are most in
+danger of violation, as the commander of a garrison doubles the guard on
+that side which is threatened by the enemy.
+
+This method has been long tried, but tried with so little success, that
+rapine and violence are hourly increasing, yet few seem willing to
+despair of its efficacy; and of those who employ their speculations upon
+the present corruption of the people, some propose the introduction of
+more horrid, lingering, and terrifick punishments; some are inclined to
+accelerate the executions; some to discourage pardons; and all seem to
+think that lenity has given confidence to wickedness, and that we can
+only be rescued from the talons of robbery by inflexible rigour, and
+sanguinary justice.
+
+Yet, since the right of setting an uncertain and arbitrary value upon
+life has been disputed, and since experience of past times gives us
+little reason to hope that any reformation will be effected by a
+periodical havock of our fellow-beings, perhaps it will not be useless
+to consider what consequences might arise from relaxations of the law,
+and a more rational and equitable adaptation of penalties to offences.
+
+Death is, as one of the ancients observes, [Greek: to ton phoberon
+phoberotaton], _of dreadful things the most dreadful_: an evil, beyond
+which nothing can be threatened by sublunary power, or feared from human
+enmity or vengeance. This terrour should, therefore, be reserved as the
+last resort of authority, as the strongest and most operative of
+prohibitory sanctions, and placed before the treasure of life, to guard
+from invasion what cannot be restored. To equal robbery with murder is
+to reduce murder to robbery; to confound in common minds the gradations
+of iniquity, and incite the commission of a greater crime to prevent the
+detection of a less. If only murder were punished with death, very few
+robbers would stain their hands in blood; but when, by the last act of
+cruelty, no new danger is incurred, and greater security may be
+obtained, upon what principle shall we bid them forbear?
+
+It may be urged, that the sentence is often mitigated to simple robbery;
+but surely this is to confess that our laws are unreasonable in our own
+opinion; and, indeed, it may be observed, that all but murderers have,
+at their last hour, the common sensations of mankind pleading in their
+favour.
+
+From this conviction of the inequality of the punishment to the offence,
+proceeds the frequent solicitation of pardons. They who would rejoice at
+the correction of a thief, are yet shocked at the thought of destroying
+him. His crime shrinks to nothing, compared with his misery; and
+severity defeats itself by exciting pity.
+
+The gibbet, indeed, certainly disables those who die upon it from
+infesting the community; but their death seems not to contribute more to
+the reformation of their associates, than any other method of
+separation. A thief seldom passes much of his time in recollection or
+anticipation, but from robbery hastens to riot, and from riot to
+robbery; nor, when the grave closes on his companion, has any other care
+than to find another.
+
+The frequency of capital punishments, therefore, rarely hinders the
+commission of a crime, but naturally and commonly prevents its
+detection, and is, if we proceed only upon prudential principles,
+chiefly for that reason to be avoided. Whatever may be urged by casuists
+or politicians, the greater part of mankind, as they can never think
+that to pick the pocket and to pierce the heart is equally criminal,
+will scarcely believe that two malefactors so different in guilt can be
+justly doomed to the same punishment: nor is the necessity of submitting
+the conscience to human laws so plainly evinced, so clearly stated, or
+so generally allowed, but that the pious, the tender, and the just, will
+always scruple to concur with the community in an act which their
+private judgment cannot approve.
+
+He who knows not how often rigorous laws produce total impunity, and how
+many crimes are concealed and forgotten for fear of hurrying the
+offender to that state in which there is no repentance, has conversed
+very little with mankind. And whatever epithets of reproach or contempt
+this compassion may incur from those who confound cruelty with firmness,
+I know not whether any wise man would wish it less powerful, or less
+extensive.
+
+If those whom the wisdom of our laws has condemned to die, had been
+detected in their rudiments of robbery, they might, by proper discipline
+and useful labour, have been disentangled from their habits, they might
+have escaped all the temptation to subsequent crimes, and passed their
+days in reparation and penitence; and detected they might all have been,
+had the prosecutors been certain that their lives would have been
+spared. I believe, every thief will confess, that he has been more than
+once seized and dismissed; and that he has sometimes ventured upon
+capital crimes, because he knew, that those whom he injured would rather
+connive at his escape, than cloud their minds with the horrours of his
+death.
+
+All laws against wickedness are ineffectual, unless some will inform,
+and some will prosecute; but till we mitigate the penalties for mere
+violations of property, information will always be hated, and
+prosecution dreaded. The heart of a good man cannot but recoil at the
+thought of punishing a slight injury with death; especially when he
+remembers that the thief might have procured safety by another crime,
+from which he was restrained only by his remaining virtue.
+
+The obligations to assist the exercise of publick justice are indeed
+strong; but they will certainly be overpowered by tenderness for life.
+What is punished with severity contrary to our ideas of adequate
+retribution, will be seldom discovered; and multitudes will be suffered
+to advance from crime to crime, till they deserve death, because, if
+they had been sooner prosecuted, they would have suffered death before
+they deserved it.
+
+This scheme of invigorating the laws by relaxation, and extirpating
+wickedness by lenity, is so remote from common practice, that I might
+reasonably fear to expose it to the publick, could it be supported only
+by my own observations: I shall, therefore, by ascribing it to its
+author, Sir Thomas More, endeavour to procure it that attention, which I
+wish always paid to prudence, to justice, and to mercy.[c]
+
+
+
+No. 115. TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 1751.
+
+ _Quaedam parvu quidem; sed non toleranda maritis_. JUV. Sat vi. 184.
+
+ Some faults, though small, intolerable grow. DRYDEN.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I sit down, in pursuance of my late engagement, to recount the remaining
+part of the adventures that befel me in my long quest of conjugal
+felicity, which, though I have not yet been so happy as to obtain it, I
+have at least endeavoured to deserve by unwearied diligence, without
+suffering from repeated disappointments any abatement of my hope, or
+repression of my activity.
+
+You must have observed in the world a species of mortals who employ
+themselves in promoting matrimony, and without any visible motive of
+interest or vanity, without any discoverable impulse of malice or
+benevolence, without any reason, but that they want objects of attention
+and topicks of conversation, are incessantly busy in procuring wives and
+husbands. They fill the ears of every single man and woman with some
+convenient match; and when they are informed of your age and fortune,
+offer a partner for life with the same readiness, and the same
+indifference, as a salesman, when he has taken measure by his eye, fits
+his customer with a coat.
+
+It might be expected that they should soon be discouraged from this
+officious interposition by resentment or contempt; and that every man
+should determine the choice on which so much of his happiness must
+depend, by his own judgment and observation: yet it happens, that as
+these proposals are generally made with a shew of kindness, they seldom
+provoke anger, but are at worst heard with patience, and forgotten. They
+influence weak minds to approbation; for many are sure to find in a new
+acquaintance, whatever qualities report has taught them to expect; and
+in more powerful and active understandings they excite curiosity, and
+sometimes, by a lucky chance, bring persons of similar tempers within
+the attraction of each other.
+
+I was known to possess a fortune, and to want a wife; and therefore was
+frequently attended by these hymeneal solicitors, with whose importunity
+I was sometimes diverted, and sometimes perplexed; for they contended
+for me as vultures for a carcase; each employing all his eloquence, and
+all his artifices, to enforce and promote his own scheme, from the
+success of which he was to receive no other advantage than the pleasure
+of defeating others equally eager, and equally industrious.
+
+An invitation to sup with one of those busy friends, made me, by a
+concerted chance, acquainted with Camilla, by whom it was expected that
+I should be suddenly and irresistibly enslaved. The lady, whom the same
+kindness had brought without her own concurrence into the lists of love,
+seemed to think me at least worthy of the honour of captivity; and
+exerted the power, both of her eyes and wit, with so much art and
+spirit, that though I had been too often deceived by appearances to
+devote myself irrevocably at the first interview, yet I could not
+suppress some raptures of admiration, and flutters of desire. I was
+easily persuaded to make nearer approaches; but soon discovered, that an
+union with Camilla was not much to be wished. Camilla professed a
+boundless contempt for the folly, levity, ignorance, and impertinence of
+her own sex; and very frequently expressed her wonder that men of
+learning or experience could submit to trifle away life with beings
+incapable of solid thought. In mixed companies, she always associated
+with the men, and declared her satisfaction when the ladies retired. If
+any short excursion into the country was proposed, she commonly insisted
+upon the exclusion of women from the party; because, where they were
+admitted, the time was wasted in frothy compliments, weak indulgences,
+and idle ceremonies. To shew the greatness of her mind, she avoided all
+compliance with the fashion; and to boast the profundity of her
+knowledge, mistook the various textures of silk, confounded tabbies with
+damasks, and sent for ribands by wrong names. She despised the commerce
+of stated visits, a farce of empty form without instruction; and
+congratulated herself, that she never learned to write message cards.
+She often applauded the noble sentiment of Plato, who rejoiced that he
+was born a man rather than a woman; proclaimed her approbation of
+Swift's opinion, that women are only a higher species of monkeys; and
+confessed, that when she considered the behaviour, or heard the
+conversation, of her sex, she could not but forgive the Turks for
+suspecting them to want souls.
+
+It was the joy and pride of Camilla to have provoked, by this insolence,
+all the rage of hatred, and all the persecutions of calumny; nor was she
+ever more elevated with her own superiority, than when she talked of
+female anger, and female cunning. Well, says she, has nature provided
+that such virulence should be disabled by folly, and such cruelty be
+restrained by impotence.
+
+Camilla doubtless expected, that what she lost on one side, she should
+gain on the other; and imagined that every male heart would be open to a
+lady, who made such generous advances to the borders of virility. But
+man, ungrateful man, instead of springing forward to meet her, shrunk
+back at her approach. She was persecuted by the ladies as a deserter,
+and at best received by the men only as a fugitive. I, for my part,
+amused myself awhile with her fopperies, but novelty soon gave way to
+detestation, for nothing out of the common order of nature can be long
+borne. I had no inclination to a wife who had the ruggedness of a man
+without his force, and the ignorance of a woman without her softness;
+nor could I think my quiet and honour to be entrusted to such audacious
+virtue as was hourly courting danger, and soliciting assault.
+
+My next mistress was Nitella, a lady of gentle mien, and soft voice,
+always speaking to approve, and ready to receive direction from those
+with whom chance had brought her into company. In Nitella I promised
+myself an easy friend, with whom I might loiter away the day without
+disturbance or altercation. I therefore soon resolved to address her,
+but was discouraged from prosecuting my courtship, by observing, that
+her apartments were superstitiously regular; and that, unless she had
+notice of my visit, she was never to be seen. There is a kind of anxious
+cleanliness which I have always noted as the characteristick of a
+slattern; it is the superfluous scrupulosity of guilt, dreading
+discovery, and shunning suspicion: it is the violence of an effort
+against habit, which, being impelled by external motives, cannot stop at
+the middle point.
+
+Nitella was always tricked out rather with nicety than elegance; and
+seldom could forbear to discover, by her uneasiness and constraint, that
+her attention was burdened, and her imagination engrossed: I therefore
+concluded, that being only occasionally and ambitiously dressed, she was
+not familiarized to her own ornaments. There are so many competitors for
+the fame of cleanliness, that it is not hard to gain information of
+those that fail, from those that desire to excel: I quickly found that
+Nitella passed her time between finery and dirt; and was always in a
+wrapper, night-cap, and slippers, when she was not decorated for
+immediate show.
+
+I was then led by my evil destiny to Charybdis, who never neglected an
+opportunity of seizing a new prey when it came within her reach. I
+thought myself quickly made happy by permission to attend her to publick
+places; and pleased my own vanity with imagining the envy which I should
+raise in a thousand hearts, by appearing as the acknowledged favourite
+of Charybdis. She soon after hinted her intention to take a ramble for a
+fortnight, into a part of the kingdom which she had never seen. I
+solicited the happiness of accompanying her, which, after a short
+reluctance, was indulged me. She had no other curiosity on her journey,
+than after all possible means of expense; and was every moment taking
+occasion to mention some delicacy, which I knew it my duty upon such
+notices to procure.
+
+After our return, being now more familiar, she told me, whenever we met,
+of some new diversion; at night she had notice of a charming company
+that would breakfast in the gardens; and in the morning had been
+informed of some new song in the opera, some new dress at the playhouse,
+or some performer at a concert whom she longed to hear. Her intelligence
+was such, that there never was a show, to which she did not summon me on
+the second day; and as she hated a crowd, and could not go alone, I was
+obliged to attend at some intermediate hour, and pay the price of a
+whole company. When we passed the streets, she was often charmed with
+some trinket in the toy-shops; and from moderate desires of seals and
+snuff-boxes, rose, by degrees, to gold and diamonds. I now began to find
+the smile of Charybdis too costly for a private purse, and added one
+more to six and forty lovers, whose fortune and patience her rapacity
+had exhausted.
+
+Imperia then took possession of my affections; but kept them only for a
+short time. She had newly inherited a large fortune, and having spent
+the early part of her life in the perusal of romances, brought with her
+into the gay world all the pride of Cleopatra; expected nothing less
+than vows, altars, and sacrifices; and thought her charms dishonoured,
+and her power infringed, by the softest opposition to her sentiments, or
+the smallest transgression of her commands. Time might indeed cure this
+species of pride in a mind not naturally undiscerning, and vitiated only
+by false representations; but the operations of time are slow; and I
+therefore left her to grow wise at leisure, or to continue in errour at
+her own expense.
+
+Thus I have hitherto, in spite of myself, passed my life in frozen
+celibacy. My friends, indeed, often tell me, that I flatter my
+imagination with higher hopes than human nature can gratify; that I
+dress up an ideal charmer in all the radiance of perfection, and then
+enter the world to look for the same excellence in corporeal beauty. But
+surely, Mr. Rambler, it is not madness to hope for some terrestrial lady
+unstained by the spots which I have been describing; at least I am
+resolved to pursue my search; for I am so far from thinking meanly of
+marriage, that I believe it able to afford the highest happiness decreed
+to our present state; and if, after all these miscarriages, I find a
+woman that fills up my expectation, you shall hear once more from,
+
+Yours, &c.
+
+HYMENAEUS.
+
+[Footnote c: The arguments of the revered Sir Samuel Romilly on Criminal
+Law, have almost been anticipated in this luminous paper, which would
+have gained praise even for a legislator. On the correction of our
+English Criminal Code, see Mr. Buxton's speech in the House of Commons,
+1820. It is a fund of practical information, and, apart from its own
+merits, will repay perusal by the valuable collection of opinions which
+it contains on this momentous and interesting subject. ED.]
+
+
+
+No. 116. SATURDAY, APRIL 27, 1751.
+
+ _Optat ephippia bos piger: optat arare caballus_.
+ HOR. Lib. i. Ep. xiv. 43.
+
+ Thus the slow ox would gaudy trappings claim;
+ The sprightly horse would plough.--FRANCIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I was the second son of a country gentleman by the daughter of a wealthy
+citizen of London. My father having by his marriage freed the estate
+from a heavy mortgage, and paid his sisters their portions, thought
+himself discharged from all obligation to further thought, and entitled
+to spend the rest of his life in rural pleasures. He therefore spared
+nothing that might contribute to the completion of his felicity; he
+procured the best guns and horses that the kingdom could supply, paid
+large salaries to his groom and huntsman, and became the envy of the
+country for the discipline of his hounds. But, above all his other
+attainments, he was eminent for a breed of pointers and setting-dogs,
+which by long and vigilant cultivation he had so much improved, that not
+a partridge or heathcock could rest in security, and game of whatever
+species that dared to light upon his manor, was beaten down by his shot,
+or covered with his nets.
+
+My elder brother was very early initiated in the chace, and, at an age
+when other boys are _creeping like snails unwillingly to school_, he
+could wind the horn, beat the bushes, bound over hedges, and swim
+rivers. When the huntsman one day broke his leg, he supplied his place
+with equal abilities, and came home with the scut in his hat, amidst the
+acclamations of the whole village. I being either delicate or timorous,
+less desirous of honour, or less capable of sylvan heroism, was always
+the favourite of my mother; because I kept my coat clean, and my
+complexion free from freckles, and did not come home, like my brother,
+mired and tanned, nor carry corn in my hat to the horse, nor bring dirty
+curs into the parlour.
+
+My mother had not been taught to amuse herself with books, and being
+much inclined to despise the ignorance and barbarity of the country
+ladies, disdained to learn their sentiments or conversation, and had
+made no addition to the notions which she had brought from the precincts
+of Cornhill. She was, therefore, always recounting the glories of the
+city; enumerating the succession of mayors; celebrating the magnificence
+of the banquets at Guildhall; and relating the civilities paid her at
+the companies' feasts by men of whom some are now made aldermen, some
+have fined for sheriffs, and none are worth less than forty thousand
+pounds. She frequently displayed her father's greatness; told of the
+large bills which he had paid at sight; of the sums for which his word
+would pass upon the Exchange; the heaps of gold which he used on
+Saturday night to toss about with a shovel; the extent of his warehouse,
+and the strength of his doors; and when she relaxed her imagination with
+lower subjects, described the furniture of their country-house, or
+repeated the wit of the clerks and porters.
+
+By these narratives I was fired with the splendour and dignity of
+London, and of trade. I therefore devoted myself to a shop, and warmed
+my imagination from year to year with inquiries about the privileges of
+a freeman, the power of the common council, the dignity of a wholesale
+dealer, and the grandeur of mayoralty, to which my mother assured me
+that many had arrived who began the world with less than myself.
+
+I was very impatient to enter into a path, which led to such honour and
+felicity; but was forced for a time to endure some repression of my
+eagerness, for it was my grandfather's maxim, that a _young man seldom
+makes much money, who is out of his time before two-and-twenty_. They
+thought it necessary, therefore, to keep me at home till the proper age,
+without any other employment than that of learning merchants' accounts,
+and the art of regulating books; but at length the tedious days elapsed,
+I was transplanted to town, and, with great satisfaction to myself,
+bound to a haberdasher.
+
+My master, who had no conception of any virtue, merit, or dignity, but
+that of being rich, had all the good qualities which naturally arise
+from a close and unwearied attention to the main chance; his desire to
+gain wealth was so well tempered by the vanity of shewing it, that
+without any other principle of action, he lived in the esteem of the
+whole commercial world; and was always treated with respect by the only
+men whose good opinion he valued or solicited, those who were
+universally allowed to be richer than himself.
+
+By his instructions I learned in a few weeks to handle a yard with great
+dexterity, to wind tape neatly upon the ends of my fingers, and to make
+up parcels with exact frugality of paper and packthread; and soon caught
+from my fellow-apprentices the true grace of a counter-bow, the careless
+air with which a small pair of scales is to be held between the fingers,
+and the vigour and sprightliness with which the box, after the riband
+has been cut, is returned into its place. Having no desire of any higher
+employment, and therefore applying all my powers to the knowledge of my
+trade, I was quickly master of all that could be known, became a critick
+in small wares, contrived new variations of figures, and new mixtures of
+colours, and was sometimes consulted by the weavers when they projected
+fashions for the ensuing spring.
+
+With all these accomplishments, in the fourth year of my apprenticeship,
+I paid a visit to my friends in the country, where I expected to be
+received as a new ornament of the family, and consulted by the
+neighbouring gentlemen as a master of pecuniary knowledge, and by the
+ladies as an oracle of the mode. But, unhappily, at the first publick
+table to which I was invited, appeared a student of the Temple, and an
+officer of the guards, who looked upon me with a smile of contempt,
+which destroyed at once all my hopes of distinction, so that I durst
+hardly raise my eyes for fear of encountering their superiority of mien.
+Nor was my courage revived by any opportunities of displaying my
+knowledge; for the templar entertained the company for part of the day
+with historical narratives and political observations; and the colonel
+afterwards detailed the adventures of a birth-night, told the claims and
+expectations of the courtiers, and gave an account of assemblies,
+gardens, and diversions. I, indeed, essayed to fill up a pause in a
+parliamentary debate with a faint mention of trade and Spaniards; and
+once attempted, with some warmth, to correct a gross mistake about a
+silver breast-knot; but neither of my antagonists seemed to think a
+reply necessary; they resumed their discourse without emotion, and again
+engrossed the attention of the company; nor did one of the ladies appear
+desirous to know my opinion of her dress, or to hear how long the
+carnation shot with white, that was then new amongst them, had been
+antiquated in town.
+
+As I knew that neither of these gentlemen had more money than myself, I
+could not discover what had depressed me in their presence; nor why they
+were considered by others as more worthy of attention and respect; and
+therefore resolved, when we met again, to rouse my spirit, and force
+myself into notice. I went very early to the next weekly meeting, and
+was entertaining a small circle very successfully with a minute
+representation of my lord mayor's show, when the colonel entered
+careless and gay, sat down with a kind of unceremonious civility, and
+without appearing to intend any interruption, drew my audience away to
+the other part of the room, to which I had not the courage to follow
+them. Soon after came in the lawyer, not indeed with the same attraction
+of mien, but with greater powers of language: and by one or other the
+company was so happily amused, that I was neither heard nor seen, nor
+was able to give any other proof of my existence than that I put round
+the glass, and was in my turn permitted to name the toast.
+
+My mother, indeed, endeavoured to comfort me in my vexation, by telling
+me, that perhaps these showy talkers were hardly able to pay every one
+his own; that he who has money in his pocket need not care what any man
+says of him; that, if I minded my trade, the time will come when lawyers
+and soldiers would be glad to borrow out of my purse; and that it is
+fine, when a man can set his hands to his sides, and say he is worth
+forty thousand pounds every day of the year. These and many more such
+consolations and encouragements, I received from my good mother, which,
+however, did not much allay my uneasiness; for having by some accident
+heard, that the country ladies despised her as a cit, I had therefore no
+longer much reverence for her opinions, but considered her as one whose
+ignorance and prejudice had hurried me, though without ill intentions,
+into a state of meanness and ignominy, from which I could not find any
+possibility of rising to the rank which my ancestors had always held.
+
+I returned, however, to my master, and busied myself among thread, and
+silks, and laces, but without my former cheerfulness and alacrity. I had
+now no longer any felicity in contemplating the exact disposition of my
+powdered curls, the equal plaits of my ruffles, or the glossy blackness
+of my shoes; nor heard with my former elevation those compliments which
+ladies sometimes condescended to pay me upon my readiness in twisting a
+paper, or counting out the change. The term of Young Man, with which I
+was sometimes honoured, as I carried a parcel to the door of a coach,
+tortured my imagination; I grew negligent of my person, and sullen in my
+temper; often mistook the demands of the customers, treated their
+caprices and objections with contempt, and received and dismissed them
+with surly silence.
+
+My master was afraid lest the shop should suffer by this change of my
+behaviour; and, therefore, after some expostulations, posted me in the
+warehouse, and preserved me from the danger and reproach of desertion,
+to which my discontent would certainly have urged me, had I continued
+any longer behind the counter.
+
+In the sixth year of my servitude my brother died of drunken joy, for
+having run down a fox that had baffled all the packs in the province. I
+was now heir, and with the hearty consent of my master commenced
+gentleman. The adventures in which my new character engaged me shall be
+communicated in another letter, by, Sir,
+
+Yours, &c.
+
+MISOCAPELUS.
+
+
+
+No. 117. TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Hossan ep Oulumpo memasan Themen autar ep Ossae
+ Paelion einosiphullon, in ouranos ambatos eiae.] HOMER, Od.
+ [Greek: L] 314.
+
+ The gods they challenge, and affect the skies:
+ Heav'd on Olympus tott'ring Ossa stood;
+ On Ossa, Pelion nods with all his wood. POPE.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Nothing has more retarded the advancement of learning than the
+disposition of vulgar minds to ridicule and vilify what they cannot
+comprehend. All industry must be excited by hope; and as the student
+often proposes no other reward to himself than praise, he is easily
+discouraged by contempt and insult. He who brings with him into a
+clamorous multitude the timidity of recluse speculation, and has never
+hardened his front in publick life, or accustomed his passions to the
+vicissitudes and accidents, the triumphs and defeats of mixed
+conversation, will blush at the stare of petulant incredulity, and
+suffer himself to be driven by a burst of laughter, from the fortresses
+of demonstration. The mechanist will be afraid to assert before hardy
+contradiction, the possibility of tearing down bulwarks with a
+silk-worm's thread; and the astronomer of relating the rapidity of
+light, the distance of the fixed stars, and the height of the lunar
+mountains.
+
+If I could by any efforts have shaken off this cowardice, I had not
+sheltered myself under a borrowed name, nor applied to you for the means
+of communicating to the publick the theory of a garret; a subject which,
+except some slight and transient strictures, has been hitherto neglected
+by those who were best qualified to adorn it, either for want of leisure
+to prosecute the various researches in which a nice discussion must
+engage them, or because it requires such diversity of knowledge, and
+such extent of curiosity, as is scarcely to be found in any single
+intellect: or perhaps others foresaw the tumults which would be raised
+against them, and confined their knowledge to their own breasts, and
+abandoned prejudice and folly to the direction of chance.
+
+That the professors of literature generally reside in the highest
+stories, has been immemorially observed. The wisdom of the ancients was
+well acquainted with the intellectual advantages of an elevated
+situation: why else were the Muses stationed on Olympus or Parnassus, by
+those who could with equal right have raised them bowers in the vale of
+Tempe, or erected their altars among the flexures of Meander? Why was
+Jove himself nursed upon a mountain? or why did the goddesses, when the
+prize of beauty was contested, try the cause upon the top of Ida? Such
+were the fictions by which the great masters of the earlier ages
+endeavoured to inculcate to posterity the importance of a garret, which,
+though they had been long obscured by the negligence and ignorance of
+succeeding times, were well enforced by the celebrated symbol of
+Pythagoras, [Greek: anemon pneonton taen aecho proskunei]; "when the
+wind blows, worship its echo." This could not but be understood by his
+disciples as an inviolable injunction to live in a garret, which I have
+found frequently visited by the echo and the wind. Nor was the tradition
+wholly obliterated in the age of Augustus, for Tibullus evidently
+congratulates himself upon his garret, not without some allusion to the
+Pythagorean precept:
+
+ _Quam juvat immites ventos audire cubantem--
+ Aut, gelidas hibernus aquas quum fuderit Auster,
+ Securum somnos imbre juvante sequi_! Lib. i. El. i. 45.
+
+ How sweet in sleep to pass the careless hours,
+ Lull'd by the beating winds and dashing show'rs!
+
+And it is impossible not to discover the fondness of Lucretius, an
+earlier writer, for a garret, in his description of the lofty towers of
+serene learning, and of the pleasure with which a wise man looks down
+upon the confused and erratick state of the world moving below him:
+
+ _Sed nil dulcius est, bene quam munita tenere
+ Edita doctrina Sapientum templa serena;
+ Despicere unde queas alios, passimque videre
+ Errare, atque viam palanteis quaerere vitae_. Lib. ii. 7.
+
+ --'Tis sweet thy lab'ring steps to guide
+ To virtue's heights, with wisdom well supplied,
+ And all the magazines of learning fortified:
+ From thence to look below on human kind,
+ Bewilder'd in the maze of life, and blind. DRYDEN.
+
+The institution has, indeed, continued to our own time; the garret is
+still the usual receptacle of the philosopher and poet; but this, like
+many ancient customs, is perpetuated only by an accidental imitation,
+without knowledge of the original reason for which it was established.
+
+ _Causa latet; res est notissima_.
+
+ The cause is secret, but th' effect is known. ADDISON.
+
+Conjectures have, indeed, been advanced concerning these habitations of
+literature, but without much satisfaction to the judicious inquirer.
+Some have imagined, that the garret is generally chosen by the wits as
+most easily rented; and concluded that no man rejoices in his aerial
+abode, but on the days of payment. Others suspect, that a garret is
+chiefly convenient, as it is remoter than any other part of the house
+from the outer door, which is often observed to be infested by
+visitants, who talk incessantly of beer, or linen, or a coat, and repeat
+the same sounds every morning, and sometimes again in the afternoon,
+without any variation, except that they grow daily more importunate and
+clamorous, and raise their voices in time from mournful murmurs to
+raging vociferations. This eternal monotony is always detestable to a
+man whose chief pleasure is to enlarge his knowledge, and vary his
+ideas. Others talk of freedom from noise, and abstraction from common
+business or amusements; and some, yet more visionary, tell us, that the
+faculties are enlarged by open prospects, and that the fancy is at more
+liberty, when the eye ranges without confinement.
+
+These conveniences may perhaps all be found in a well-chosen garret; but
+surely they cannot be supposed sufficiently important to have operated
+unvariably upon different climates, distant ages, and separate nations.
+Of an universal practice, there must still be presumed an universal
+cause, which, however recondite and abstruse, may be perhaps reserved to
+make me illustrious by its discovery, and you by its promulgation.
+
+It is universally known that the faculties of the mind are invigorated
+or weakened by the state of the body, and that the body is in a great
+measure regulated by the various compressions of the ambient element.
+The effects of the air in the production or cure of corporeal maladies
+have been acknowledged from the time of Hippocrates; but no man has yet
+sufficiently considered how far it may influence the operations of the
+genius, though every day affords instances of local understanding, of
+wits and reasoners, whose faculties are adapted to some single spot, and
+who, when they are removed to any other place, sink at once into silence
+and stupidity. I have discovered, by a long series of observations, that
+invention and elocution suffer great impediments from dense and impure
+vapours, and that the tenuity of a defecated air at a proper distance
+from the surface of the earth, accelerates the fancy, and sets at
+liberty those intellectual powers which were before shackled by too
+strong attraction, and unable to expand themselves under the pressure of
+a gross atmosphere. I have found dulness to quicken into sentiment in a
+thin ether, as water, though not very hot, boils in a receiver partly
+exhausted; and heads, in appearance empty, have teemed with notions upon
+rising ground, as the flaccid sides of a football would have swelled out
+into stiffness and extension.
+
+For this reason I never think myself qualified to judge decisively of
+any man's faculties, whom I have only known in one degree of elevation;
+but take some opportunity of attending him from the cellar to the
+garret, and try upon him all the various degrees of rarefaction and
+condensation, tension and laxity. If he is neither vivacious aloft, nor
+serious below, I then consider him as hopeless; but as it seldom
+happens, that I do not find the temper to which the texture of his brain
+is fitted, I accommodate him in time with a tube of mercury, first
+marking the points most favourable to his intellects, according to rules
+which I have long studied, and which I may, perhaps, reveal to mankind
+in a complete treatise of barometrical pneumatology.
+
+Another cause of the gaiety and sprightliness of the dwellers in garrets
+is probably the increase of that vertiginous motion, with which we are
+carried round by the diurnal revolution of the earth. The power of
+agitation upon the spirits is well known; every man has felt his heart
+lightened in a rapid vehicle, or on a galloping horse; and nothing is
+plainer, than that he who towers to the fifth story, is whirled through
+more space by every circumrotation, than another that grovels upon the
+ground-floor. The nations between the topicks are known to be fiery,
+inconstant, inventive, and fanciful; because, living at the utmost
+length of the earth's diameter, they are carried about with more
+swiftness than those whom nature has placed nearer to the poles; and
+therefore, as it becomes a wise man to struggle with the inconveniencies
+of his country, whenever celerity and acuteness are requisite, we must
+actuate our languor by taking a few turns round the centre in a garret.
+
+If you imagine that I ascribe to air and motion effects which they
+cannot produce, I desire you to consult your own memory, and consider
+whether you have never known a man acquire reputation in his garret,
+which, when fortune or a patron had placed him upon the first floor, he
+was unable to maintain; and who never recovered his former vigour of
+understanding, till he was restored to his original situation. That a
+garret will make every man a wit, I am very far from supposing; I know
+there are some who would continue blockheads even on the summit of the
+Andes, or on the peak of Teneriffe. But let not any man be considered as
+unimprovable till this potent remedy has been tried; for perhaps he was
+formed to be great only in a garret, as the joiner of Aretaeus was
+rational in no other place but his own shop.
+
+I think a frequent removal to various distances from the centre, so
+necessary to a just estimate of intellectual abilities, and consequently
+of so great use in education, that if I hoped that the publick could be
+persuaded to so expensive an experiment, I would propose, that there
+should be a cavern dug, and a tower erected, like those which Bacon
+describes in Solomon's house, for the expansion and concentration of
+understanding, according to the exigence of different employments, or
+constitutions. Perhaps some that fume away in meditations upon time and
+space in the tower, might compose tables of interest at a certain depth;
+and he that upon level ground stagnates in silence, or creeps in
+narrative, might at the height of half a mile, ferment into merriment,
+sparkle with repartee, and froth with declamation.
+
+Addison observes, that we may find the heat of Virgil's climate, in some
+lines of his Georgick: so, when I read a composition, I immediately
+determine the height of the author's habitation. As an elaborate
+performance is commonly said to smell of the lamp, my commendation of a
+noble thought, a sprightly sally, or a bold figure, is to pronounce it
+fresh from the garret; an expression which would break from me upon the
+perusal of most of your papers, did I not believe, that you sometimes
+quit the garret, and ascend into the cock-loft.
+
+HYPERTATUS.
+
+
+
+No. 118. SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1751.
+
+ --Omnes illacrymabiles
+ Urgentur, ignotique longâ
+ Nocte. Hon. Lib. iv. Ode ix. 26.
+
+ In endless night they sleep, unwept, unknown. FRANCIS.
+
+Cicero has, with his usual elegance and magnificence of language,
+attempted, in his relation of the dream of Scipio, to depreciate those
+honours for which he himself appears to have panted with restless
+solicitude, by shewing within what narrow limits all that fame and
+celebrity which man can hope for from men is circumscribed.
+
+"You see," says Africanus, pointing at the earth, from the celestial
+regions, "that the globe assigned to the residence and habitation of
+human beings is of small dimensions: how then can you obtain from the
+praise of men, any glory worthy of a wish? Of this little world the
+inhabited parts are neither numerous nor wide; even the spots where men
+are to be found are broken by intervening deserts, and the nations are
+so separated as that nothing can be transmitted from one to another.
+With the people of the south, by whom the opposite part of the earth is
+possessed, you have no intercourse; and by how small a tract do you
+communicate with the countries of the north? The territory which you
+inhabit is no more than a scanty island, inclosed by a small body of
+water, to which you give the name of the great sea and the Atlantick
+ocean. And even in this known and frequented continent, what hope can
+you entertain, that your renown will pass the stream of Ganges, or the
+cliffs of Caucasus? or by whom will your name be uttered in the
+extremities of the north or south, towards the rising or the setting
+sun? So narrow is the space to which your fame can be propagated; and
+even there how long will it remain?"
+
+He then proceeds to assign natural causes why fame is not only narrow in
+its extent, but short in its duration; he observes the difference
+between the computation of time in earth and heaven, and declares, that
+according to the celestial chronology, no human honours can last a
+single year.
+
+Such are the objections by which Tully has made a shew of discouraging
+the pursuit of fame; objections which sufficiently discover his
+tenderness and regard for his darling phantom. Homer, when the plan of
+his poem made the death of Patroclus necessary, resolved, at least, that
+he should die with honour; and therefore brought down against him the
+patron god of Troy, and left to Hector only the mean task of giving the
+last blow to an enemy whom a divine hand had disabled from resistance.
+Thus Tully ennobles fame, which he professes to degrade, by opposing it
+to celestial happiness; he confines not its extent but by the boundaries
+of nature, nor contracts its duration but by representing it small in
+the estimation of superior beings. He still admits it the highest and
+noblest of terrestrial objects, and alleges little more against it, than
+that it is neither without end, nor without limits.
+
+What might be the effect of these observations conveyed in Ciceronian
+eloquence to Roman understandings, cannot be determined; but few of
+those who shall in the present age read my humble version will find
+themselves much depressed in their hopes, or retarded in their designs;
+for I am not inclined to believe, that they who among us pass their
+lives in the cultivation of knowledge, or acquisition of power, have
+very anxiously inquired what opinions prevail on the further banks of
+the Ganges, or invigorated any effort by the desire of spreading their
+renown among the clans of Caucasus. The hopes and fears of modern minds
+are content to range in a narrower compass; a single nation, and a few
+years, have generally sufficient amplitude to fill our imaginations.
+
+A little consideration will indeed teach us, that fame has other limits
+than mountains and oceans; and that he who places happiness in the
+frequent repetition of his name, may spend his life in propagating it,
+without any danger of weeping for new worlds, or necessity of passing
+the Atlantick sea.
+
+The numbers to whom any real and perceptible good or evil can be derived
+by the greatest power, or most active diligence, are inconsiderable; and
+where neither benefit nor mischief operate, the only motive to the
+mention or remembrance of others is curiosity; a passion, which, though
+in some degree universally associated to reason, is easily confined,
+overborne, or diverted from any particular object.
+
+Among the lower classes of mankind, there will be found very little
+desire of any other knowledge, than what may contribute immediately to
+the relief of some pressing uneasiness, or the attainment of some near
+advantage. The Turks are said to hear with wonder a proposal to walk
+out, only that they may walk back; and inquire why any man should labour
+for nothing: so those whose condition has always restrained them to the
+contemplation of their own necessities, and who have been accustomed to
+look forward only to a small distance, will scarcely understand, why
+nights and days should be spent in studies, which end in new studies,
+and which, according to Malherbe's observation, do not tend to lessen
+the price of bread; nor will the trader or manufacturer easily be
+persuaded, that much pleasure can arise from the mere knowledge of
+actions, performed in remote regions, or in distant times; or that any
+thing can deserve their inquiry, of which, [Greek: kleos oion akouomen,
+oide ti idmen], we can only hear the report, but which cannot influence
+our lives by any consequences.
+
+The truth is, that very few have leisure from indispensable business, to
+employ their thoughts upon narrative or characters; and among those to
+whom fortune has given the liberty of living more by their own choice,
+many create to themselves engagements, by the indulgence of some petty
+ambition, the admission of some insatiable desire, or the toleration of
+some predominant passion. The man whose whole wish is to accumulate
+money, has no other care than to collect interest, to estimate
+securities, and to engage for mortgages: the lover disdains to turn his
+ear to any other name than that of Corinna; and the courtier thinks the
+hour lost which is not spent in promoting his interest, and facilitating
+his advancement. The adventures of valour, and the discoveries of
+science, will find a cold reception, when they are obtruded upon an
+attention thus busy with its favourite amusement, and impatient of
+interruption or disturbance.
+
+But not only such employments as seduce attention by appearances of
+dignity, or promises of happiness, may restrain the mind from excursion
+and inquiry; curiosity may be equally destroyed by less formidable
+enemies; it may be dissipated in trifles, or congealed by indolence. The
+sportsman and the man of dress have their heads filled with a fox or a
+horse-race, a feather or a ball; and live in ignorance of every thing
+beside, with as much content as he that heaps up gold, or solicits
+preferment, digs the field, or beats the anvil; and some yet lower in
+the ranks of intellect, dream out their days without pleasure or
+business, without joy or sorrow, nor ever rouse from their lethargy to
+hear or think.
+
+Even of those who have dedicated themselves to knowledge, the far
+greater part have confined their curiosity to a few objects, and have
+very little inclination to promote any fame, but that which their own
+studies entitle them to partake. The naturalist has no desire to know
+the opinions or conjectures of the philologer: the botanist looks upon
+the astronomer as a being unworthy of his regard: the lawyer scarcely
+hears the name of a physician without contempt; and he that is growing
+great and happy by electrifying a bottle, wonders how the world can be
+engaged by trifling prattle about war or peace.
+
+If, therefore, he that imagines the world filled with his actions and
+praises, shall subduct from the number of his encomiasts, all those who
+are placed below the flight of fame, and who hear in the valleys of life
+no voice but that of necessity; all those who imagine themselves too
+important to regard him, and consider the mention of his name as an
+usurpation of their time; all who are too much or too little pleased
+with themselves, to attend to any thing external; all who are attracted
+by pleasure, or chained down by pain, to unvaried ideas; all who are
+withheld from attending his triumph by different pursuits; and all who
+slumber in universal negligence; he will find his renown straitened by
+nearer bounds than the rocks of Caucasus, and perceive that no man can
+be venerable or formidable, but to a small part of his fellow-creatures.
+
+That we may not languish in our endeavours after excellence, it is
+necessary, that, as Africanus counsels his descendant, "we raise our
+eyes to higher prospects, and contemplate our future and eternal state,
+without giving up our hearts to the praise of crowds, or fixing our
+hopes on such rewards as human power can bestow."
+
+
+
+No. 119. TUESDAY, MAY 7, 1751.
+
+ _Iliacos intra muros peccatur, et extra_. HOR. Lib. i. Ep. ii, 16.
+
+ Faults lay on either side the Trojan tow'rs. ELPHINSTON.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+As, notwithstanding all that wit, or malice, or pride, or prudence will
+be able to suggest, men and women must at last pass their lives
+together, I have never therefore thought those writers friends to human
+happiness, who endeavour to excite in either sex a general contempt or
+suspicion of the other. To persuade them who are entering the world, and
+looking abroad for a suitable associate, that all are equally vicious,
+or equally ridiculous; that they who trust are certainly betrayed, and
+they who esteem are always disappointed; is not to awaken judgment, but
+to inflame temerity. Without hope there can be no caution. Those who are
+convinced, that no reason for preference can be found, will never harass
+their thoughts with doubt and deliberation; they will resolve, since
+they are doomed to misery, that no needless anxiety shall disturb their
+quiet; they will plunge at hazard into the crowd, and snatch the first
+hand that shall be held toward them.
+
+That the world is over-run with vice, cannot be denied; but vice,
+however predominant, has not yet gained an unlimited dominion. Simple
+and unmingled good is not in our power, but we may generally escape a
+greater evil by suffering a less; and therefore, those who undertake to
+initiate the young and ignorant in the knowledge of life, should be
+careful to inculcate the possibility of virtue and happiness, and to
+encourage endeavours by prospects of success.
+
+You, perhaps, do not suspect, that these are the sentiments of one who
+has been subject for many years to all the hardships of antiquated
+virginity; has been long accustomed to the coldness of neglect, and the
+petulance of insult; has been mortified in full assemblies by inquiries
+after forgotten fashions, games long disused, and wits and beauties of
+ancient renown; has been invited, with malicious importunity, to the
+second wedding of many acquaintances; has been ridiculed by two
+generations of coquets in whispers intended to be heard; and been long
+considered by the airy and gay, as too venerable for familiarity, and
+too wise for pleasure. It is indeed natural for injury to provoke anger,
+and by continual repetition to produce an habitual asperity; yet I have
+hitherto struggled with so much vigilance against my pride and my
+resentment, that I have preserved my temper uncorrupted. I have not yet
+made it any part of my employment to collect sentences against marriage;
+nor am inclined to lessen the number of the few friends whom time has
+left me, by obstructing that happiness which I cannot partake, and
+venting my vexation in censures of the forwardness and indiscretion of
+girls, or the inconstancy, tastelessness, and perfidy of men.
+
+It is, indeed, not very difficult to bear that condition to which we are
+not condemned by necessity, but induced by observation and choice; and
+therefore I, perhaps, have never yet felt all the malignity with which a
+reproach, edged with the appellation of old maid, swells some of those
+hearts in which it is infixed. I was not condemned in my youth to
+solitude, either by indigence or deformity, nor passed the earlier part
+of life without the flattery of courtship, and the joys of triumph. I
+have danced the round of gaiety amidst the murmurs of envy, and
+gratulations of applause; been attended from pleasure to pleasure by the
+great, the sprightly, and the vain; and seen my regard solicited by the
+obsequiousness of gallantry, the gaiety of wit, and the timidity of
+love. If, therefore, I am yet a stranger to nuptial happiness, I suffer
+only the consequences of my own resolves, and can look back upon the
+succession of lovers, whose addresses I have rejected, without grief,
+and without malice.
+
+When my name first began to be inscribed upon glasses, I was honoured
+with the amorous professions of the gay Venustulus, a gentleman, who,
+being the only son of a wealthy family, had been educated in all the
+wantonness of expense, and softness of effeminacy. He was beautiful in
+his person, and easy in his address, and, therefore, soon gained upon my
+eye at an age when the sight is very little over-ruled by the
+understanding. He had not any power in himself of gladdening or amusing;
+but supplied his want of conversation by treats and diversions; and his
+chief art of courtship was to fill the mind of his mistress with
+parties, rambles, musick, and shows. We were often engaged in short
+excursions to gardens and seats, and I was for a while pleased with the
+care which Venustulus discovered in securing me from any appearance of
+danger, or possibility of mischance. He never failed to recommend
+caution to his coachman, or to promise the waterman a reward if he
+landed us safe; and always contrived to return by daylight, for fear of
+robbers. This extraordinary solicitude was represented for a time as the
+effect of his tenderness for me; but fear is too strong for continued
+hypocrisy. I soon discovered that Venustulus had the cowardice as well
+as elegance of a female. His imagination was perpetually clouded with
+terrours, and he could scarcely refrain from screams and outcries at any
+accidental surprise. He durst not enter a room if a rat was heard behind
+the wainscot, nor cross a field where the cattle were frisking in the
+sunshine; the least breeze that waved upon the river was a storm, and
+every clamour in the street was a cry of fire. I have seen him lose his
+colour when my squirrel had broke his chain; and was forced to throw
+water in his face on the sudden entrance of a black cat. Compassion once
+obliged me to drive away with my fan, a beetle that kept him in
+distress, and chide off a dog that yelped at his heels, to which he
+would gladly have given up me to facilitate his own escape. Women
+naturally expect defence and protection from a lover or a husband, and,
+therefore, you will not think me culpable in refusing a wretch, who
+would have burdened life with unnecessary fears, and flown to me for
+that succour which it was his duty to have given.
+
+My next lover was Fungoso, the son of a stockjobber, whose visits my
+friends, by the importunity of persuasion, prevailed upon me to allow.
+Fungoso was no very suitable companion; for having been bred in a
+counting-house, he spoke a language unintelligible in any other place.
+He had no desire of any reputation but that of an acute prognosticator
+of the changes in the funds; nor had any means of raising merriment, but
+by telling how somebody was overreached in a bargain by his father. He
+was, however, a youth of great sobriety and prudence, and frequently
+informed us how carefully he would improve my fortune. I was not in
+haste to conclude the match, but was so much awed by my parents, that I
+durst not dismiss him, and might, perhaps, have been doomed for ever to
+the grossness of pedlary, and the jargon of usury, had not a fraud been
+discovered in the settlement, which set me free from the persecution of
+grovelling pride, and pecuniary impudence. I was afterwards six months
+without any particular notice but at last became the idol of the
+glittering Flosculus, who prescribed the mode of embroidery to all the
+fops of his time, and varied at pleasure the cock of every hat, and the
+sleeve of every coat that appeared in fashionable assemblies. Flosculus
+made some impression upon my heart by a compliment which few ladies can
+hear without emotion; he commended my skill in dress, my judgment in
+suiting colours, and my art in disposing ornaments. But Flosculus was
+too much engaged by his own elegance, to be sufficiently attentive to
+the duties of a lover, or to please with varied praise an ear made
+delicate by riot of adulation. He expected to be repaid part of his
+tribute, and staid away three days, because I neglected to take notice
+of a new coat. I quickly found, that Flosculus was rather a rival than
+an admirer; and that we should probably live in a perpetual struggle of
+emulous finery, and spend our lives in stratagems to be first in the
+fashion.
+
+I had soon after the honour at a feast of attracting the eyes of
+Dentatus, one of those human beings whose only happiness is to dine.
+Dentatus regaled me with foreign varieties, told me of measures that he
+had laid for procuring the best cook in France, and entertained me with
+bills of fare, prescribed the arrangement of dishes, and taught me two
+sauces invented by himself. At length, such is the uncertainty of human
+happiness, I declared my opinion too hastily upon a pie made under his
+own direction; after which he grew so cold and negligent, that he was
+easily dismissed.
+
+Many other lovers, or pretended lovers, I have had the honour to lead
+awhile in triumph. But two of them I drove from me, by discovering that
+they had no taste or knowledge in musick; three I dismissed, because
+they were drunkards; two, because they paid their addresses at the same
+time to other ladies; and six, because they attempted to influence my
+choice by bribing my maid. Two more I discarded at the second visit for
+obscene allusions; and five for drollery on religion. In the latter part
+of my reign, I sentenced two to perpetual exile, for offering me
+settlements, by which the children of a former marriage would have been
+injured; four, for representing falsely the value of their estates;
+three for concealing their debts; and one, for raising the rent of a
+decrepit tenant.
+
+I have now sent you a narrative, which the ladies may oppose, to the
+tale of Hymenaeus. I mean not to depreciate the sex which has produced
+poets and philosophers, heroes and martyrs; but will not suffer the
+rising generation of beauties to be dejected by partial satire; or to
+imagine that those who censured them have not likewise their follies,
+and their vices. I do not yet believe happiness unattainable in
+marriage, though I have never yet been able to find a man, with whom I
+could prudently venture an inseparable union. It is necessary to expose
+faults, that their deformity may be seen; but the reproach ought not to
+be extended beyond the crime, nor either sex to be contemned, because
+some women, or men, are indelicate or dishonest.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+TRANQUILLA.
+
+
+
+No. 120. SATURDAY, MAY 11, 1751.
+
+ Redditum Cyri solio Phraaten.
+ Dissidens plebi, numero beatorum
+ Eiimit virtus, populumque falsis
+ Dedocet uti
+ Vocibus.--HOR. Lib. ii. Od. ii. 17.
+
+ True virtue can the crowd unteach
+ Their false mistaken forms of speech;
+ Virtue, to crowds a foe profest,
+ Disdains to number with the blest
+ Phraates, by his slaves ador'd,
+ And to the Parthian crown restor'd. FRANCIS.
+
+In the reign of Jenghiz Can, conqueror of the east, in the city of
+Samarcand, lived Nouradin the merchant, renowned throughout all the
+regions of India, for the extent of his commerce, and the integrity of
+his dealings. His warehouses were filled with all the commodities of the
+remotest nations; every rarity of nature, every curiosity of art,
+whatever was valuable, whatever was useful, hasted to his hand. The
+streets were crowded with his carriages; the sea was covered with his
+ships; the streams of Oxus were wearied with conveyance, and every
+breeze of the sky wafted wealth to Nouradin.
+
+At length Nouradin felt himself seized with a slow malady, which he
+first endeavoured to divert by application, and afterwards to relieve by
+luxury and indulgence; but finding his strength every day less, he was
+at last terrified, and called for help upon the sages of physick; they
+filled his apartments with alexipharmicks, restoratives, and essential
+virtues; the pearls of the ocean were dissolved, the spices of Arabia
+were distilled, and all the powers of nature were employed to give new
+spirits to his nerves, and new balsam to his blood. Nouradin was for
+some time amused with promises, invigorated with cordials, or soothed
+with anodynes; but the disease preyed upon his vitals, and he soon
+discovered with indignation, that health was not to be bought. He was
+confined to his chamber, deserted by his physicians, and rarely visited
+by his friends; but his unwillingness to die flattered him long with
+hopes of life.
+
+At length, having passed the night in tedious languor, he called to him
+Almamoulin, his only son, and dismissing his attendants, "My son," says
+he, "behold here the weakness and fragility of man; look backward a few
+days, thy father was great and happy, fresh as the vernal rose, and
+strong as the cedar of the mountain; the nations of Asia drank his dews,
+and art and commerce delighted in his shade. Malevolence beheld me, and
+sighed: 'His root,' she cried, 'is fixed in the depths; it is watered by
+the fountains of Oxus; it sends out branches afar, and bids defiance to
+the blast; prudence reclines against his trunk, and prosperity dances on
+his top.' Now, Almamoulin, look upon me withering and prostrate; look
+upon me, and attend. I have trafficked, I have prospered, I have rioted
+in gain; my house is splendid, my servants are numerous; yet I displayed
+only a small part of my riches; the rest, which I was hindered from
+enjoying by the fear of raising envy, or tempting rapacity, I have piled
+in towers, I have buried in caverns, I have hidden in secret
+repositories, which this scroll will discover. My purpose was, after ten
+months more spent in commerce, to have withdrawn my wealth to a safer
+country; to have given seven years to delight and festivity, and the
+remaining part of my days to solitude and repentance; but the hand of
+death is upon me; a frigorifick torpor encroaches upon my veins; I am
+now leaving the produce of my toil, which it must be thy business to
+enjoy with wisdom." The thought of leaving his wealth filled Nouradin
+with such grief, that he fell into convulsions, became delirious, and
+expired.
+
+Almamoulin, who loved his father, was touched a while with honest
+sorrow, and sat two hours in profound meditation, without perusing the
+paper which he held in his hand. He then retired to his own chamber, as
+overborne with affliction, and there read the inventory of his new
+possessions, which swelled his heart with such transports, that he no
+longer lamented his father's death. He was now sufficiently composed to
+order a funeral of modest magnificence, suitable at once to the rank of
+Nouradin's profession, and the reputation of his wealth. The two next
+nights he spent in visiting the tower and the caverns, and found the
+treasures greater to his eye than to his imagination.
+
+Almamoulin had been bred to the practice of exact frugality, and had
+often looked with envy on the finery and expenses of other young men: he
+therefore believed, that happiness was now in his power, since he could
+obtain all of which he had hitherto been accustomed to regret the want.
+He resolved to give a loose to his desires, to revel in enjoyment, and
+feel pain or uneasiness no more.
+
+He immediately procured a splendid equipage, dressed his servants in
+rich embroidery, and covered his horses with golden caparisons. He
+showered down silver on the populace, and suffered their acclamations to
+swell him with insolence. The nobles saw him with anger, the wise men of
+the state combined against him, the leaders of armies threatened his
+destruction. Almamoulin was informed of his danger: he put on the robe
+of mourning in the presence of his enemies, and appeased them with gold,
+and gems, and supplication.
+
+He then sought to strengthen himself by an alliance with the princes of
+Tartary, and offered the price of kingdoms for a wife of noble birth.
+His suit was generally rejected, and his presents refused; but the
+princess of Astracan once condescended to admit him to her presence. She
+received him, sitting on a throne, attired in the robe of royalty, and
+shining with the jewels of Golconda; command sparkled in her eyes, and
+dignity towered on her forehead. Almamoulin approached and trembled. She
+saw his confusion and disdained him: "How," says she, "dares the wretch
+hope my obedience, who thus shrinks at my glance? Retire, and enjoy thy
+riches in sordid ostentation; thou wast born to be wealthy, but never
+canst be great."
+
+He then contracted his desires to more private and domestick pleasures.
+He built palaces, he laid out gardens[d], he changed the face of the
+land, he transplanted forests, he levelled mountains, opened prospects
+into distant regions, poured fountains from the tops of turrets, and
+rolled rivers through new channels.
+
+These amusements pleased him for a time; but languor and weariness soon
+invaded him. His bowers lost their fragrance, and the waters murmured
+without notice. He purchased large tracts of land in distant provinces,
+adorned them with houses of pleasure, and diversified them with
+accommodations for different seasons. Change of place at first relieved
+his satiety, but all the novelties of situation were soon exhausted; he
+found his heart vacant, and his desires, for want of external objects,
+ravaging himself.
+
+He therefore returned to Samarcand, and set open his doors to those whom
+idleness sends out in search of pleasure. His tables were always covered
+with delicacies; wines of every vintage sparkled in his bowls, and his
+lamps scattered perfumes. The sound of the lute, and the voice of the
+singer, chased away sadness; every hour was crowded with pleasure; and
+the day ended and began with feasts and dances, and revelry and
+merriment. Almamoulin cried out, "I have at last found the use of
+riches; I am surrounded by companions, who view my greatness without
+envy; and I enjoy at once the raptures of popularity, and the safety of
+an obscure station. What trouble can he feel, whom all are studious to
+please, that they may be repaid with pleasure? What danger can he dread,
+to whom every man is a friend?"
+
+Such were the thoughts of Almamoulin, as he looked down from a gallery
+upon the gay assembly regaling at his expense; but, in the midst of this
+soliloquy, an officer of justice entered the house, and in the form of
+legal citation, summoned Almamoulin to appear before the emperor. The
+guests stood awhile aghast, then stole imperceptibly away, and he was
+led off without a single voice to witness his integrity. He now found
+one of his most frequent visitants accusing him of treason, in hopes of
+sharing his confiscation; yet, unpatronized and unsupported, he cleared
+himself by the openness of innocence, and the consistence of truth; he
+was dismissed with honour, and his accuser perished in prison.
+
+Almamoulin now perceived with how little reason he had hoped for justice
+or fidelity from those who live only to gratify their senses; and, being
+now weary with vain experiments upon life and fruitless researches after
+felicity, he had recourse to a sage, who, after spending his youth in
+travel and observation, had retired from all human cares, to a small
+habitation on the banks of Oxus, where he conversed only with such as
+solicited his counsel. "Brother," said the philosopher, "thou hast
+suffered thy reason to be deluded by idle hopes, and fallacious
+appearances. Having long looked with desire upon riches, thou hadst
+taught thyself to think them more valuable than nature designed them,
+and to expect from them, what experience has now taught thee, that they
+cannot give. That they do not confer wisdom, thou mayest be convinced,
+by considering at how dear a price they tempted thee, upon thy first
+entrance into the world, to purchase the empty sound of vulgar
+acclamation. That they cannot bestow fortitude or magnanimity, that man
+may be certain, who stood trembling at Astracan, before a being not
+naturally superior to himself. That they will not supply unexhausted
+pleasure, the recollection of forsaken palaces, and neglected gardens,
+will easily inform thee. That they rarely purchase friends, thou didst
+soon discover, when thou wert left to stand thy trial uncountenanced and
+alone. Yet think not riches useless; there are purposes to which a wise
+man may be delighted to apply them; they may, by a rational distribution
+to those who want them, ease the pains of helpless disease, still the
+throbs of restless anxiety, relieve innocence from oppression, and raise
+imbecility to cheerfulness and vigour. This they will enable thee to
+perform, and this will afford the only happiness ordained for our
+present state, the confidence of Divine favour, and the hope of future
+rewards."
+
+[Footnote d: See Vathek.]
+
+
+
+No. 121. TUESDAY, MAY 14, 1751.
+
+ O imitatores, servum pecus! Hor. Lib. i. Ep. xix. 19.
+
+ Away, ye imitators, servile herd! ELPHINSTON.
+
+I have been informed by a letter from one of the universities, that
+among the youth from whom the next swarm of reasoners is to learn
+philosophy, and the next flight of beauties to hear elegies and sonnets,
+there are many, who, instead of endeavouring by books and meditation to
+form their own opinions, content themselves with the secondary
+knowledge, which a convenient bench in a coffee-house can supply; and
+without any examination or distinction, adopt the criticisms and
+remarks, which happen to drop from those who have risen, by merit or
+fortune, to reputation and authority.
+
+These humble retailers of knowledge my correspondent stigmatises with
+the name of Echoes; and seems desirous that they should be made ashamed
+of lazy submission, and animated to attempts after new discoveries and
+original sentiments.
+
+It is very natural for young men to be vehement, acrimonious, and
+severe. For, as they seldom comprehend at once all the consequences of a
+position, or perceive the difficulties by which cooler and more
+experienced reasoners are restrained from confidence, they form their
+conclusions with great precipitance. Seeing nothing that can darken or
+embarrass the question, they expect to find their own opinion
+universally prevalent, and are inclined to impute uncertainty and
+hesitation to want of honesty, rather than of knowledge. I may, perhaps,
+therefore, be reproached by my lively correspondent, when it shall be
+found, that I have no inclination to persecute these collectors of
+fortuitous knowledge with the severity required; yet, as I am now too
+old to be much pained by hasty censure, I shall not be afraid of taking
+into protection those whom I think condemned without a sufficient
+knowledge of their cause.
+
+He that adopts the sentiments of another, whom he has reason to believe
+wiser than himself, is only to be blamed when he claims the honours
+which are not due but to the author, and endeavours to deceive the world
+into praise and veneration; for, to learn, is the proper business of
+youth; and whether we increase our knowledge by books or by
+conversation, we are equally indebted to foreign assistance.
+
+The greater part of students are not born with abilities to construct
+systems, or advance knowledge; nor can have any hope beyond that of
+becoming intelligent hearers in the schools of art, of being able to
+comprehend what others discover, and to remember what others teach. Even
+those to whom Providence hath allotted greater strength of
+understanding, can expect only to improve a single science. In every
+other part of learning, they must be content to follow opinions, which
+they are not able to examine; and, even in that which they claim as
+peculiarly their own, can seldom add more than some small particle of
+knowledge, to the hereditary stock devolved to them from ancient times,
+the collective labour of a thousand intellects.
+
+In science, which, being fixed and limited, admits of no other variety
+than such as arises from new methods of distribution, or new arts of
+illustration, the necessity of following the traces of our predecessors
+is indisputably evident; but there appears no reason, why imagination
+should be subject to the same restraint. It might be conceived, that of
+those who profess to forsake the narrow paths of truth, every one may
+deviate towards a different point, since, though rectitude is uniform
+and fixed, obliquity may be infinitely diversified. The roads of science
+are narrow, so that they who travel them, must either follow or meet one
+another; but in the boundless regions of possibility, which fiction
+claims for her dominion, there are surely a thousand recesses
+unexplored, a thousand flowers unplucked, a thousand fountains
+unexhausted, combinations of imagery yet unobserved, and races of ideal
+inhabitants not hitherto described.
+
+Yet, whatever hope may persuade, or reason evince, experience can boast
+of very few additions to ancient fable. The wars of Troy, and the
+travels of Ulysses, have furnished almost all succeeding poets with
+incidents, characters, and sentiments. The Romans are confessed to have
+attempted little more than to display in their own tongue the inventions
+of the Greeks. There is, in all their writings, such a perpetual
+recurrence of allusions to the tales of the fabulous age, that they must
+be confessed often to want that power of giving pleasure which novelty
+supplies; nor can we wonder that they excelled so much in the graces of
+diction, when we consider how rarely they were employed in search of new
+thoughts.
+
+The warmest admirers of the great Mantuan poet can extol him for little
+more than the skill with which he has, by making his hero both a
+traveller and a warrior, united the beauties of the Iliad and the
+Odyssey in one composition: yet his judgment was perhaps sometimes
+overborne by his avarice of the Homeric treasures; and, for fear of
+suffering a sparkling ornament to be lost, he has inserted it where it
+cannot shine with its original splendour.
+
+When Ulysses visited the infernal regions, he found among the heroes
+that perished at Troy, his competitor, Ajax, who, when the arms of
+Achilles were adjudged to Ulysses, died by his own hand in the madness
+of disappointment. He still appeared to resent, as on earth, his loss
+and disgrace, Ulysses endeavoured to pacify him with praises and
+submission; but Ajax walked away without reply. This passage has always
+been considered as eminently beautiful; because Ajax, the haughty chief,
+the unlettered soldier, of unshaken courage, of immovable constancy, but
+without the power of recommending his own virtues by eloquence, or
+enforcing his assertions by any other argument than the sword, had no
+way of making his anger known, but by gloomy sullenness and dumb
+ferocity. His hatred of a man whom he conceived to have defeated him
+only by volubility of tongue, was therefore naturally shewn by silence
+more contemptuous and piercing than any words that so rude an orator
+could have found, and by which he gave his enemy no opportunity of
+exerting the only power in which he was superior.
+
+When Æneas is sent by Virgil to the shades, he meets Dido the queen of
+Carthage, whom his perfidy had hurried to the grave; he accosts her with
+tenderness and excuses; but the lady turns away like Ajax in mute
+disdain. She turns away like Ajax; but she resembles him in none of
+those qualities which give either dignity or propriety to silence. She
+might, without any departure from the tenour of her conduct, have burst
+out like other injured women into clamour, reproach, and denunciation;
+but Virgil had his imagination full of Ajax, and therefore could not
+prevail on himself to teach Dido any other mode of resentment.
+
+If Virgil could be thus seduced by imitation, there will be little hope,
+that common wits should escape; and accordingly we find, that besides
+the universal and acknowledged practice of copying the ancients, there
+has prevailed in every age a particular species of fiction. At one time
+all truth was conveyed in allegory; at another, nothing was seen but in
+a vision; at one period all the poets followed sheep, and every event
+produced a pastoral; at another they busied themselves wholly in giving
+directions to a painter.
+
+It is indeed easy to conceive why any fashion should become popular, by
+which idleness is favoured, and imbecility assisted; but surely no man
+of genius can much applaud himself for repeating a tale with which the
+audience is already tired, and which could bring no honour to any but
+its inventor.
+
+There are, I think, two schemes of writing, on which the laborious wits
+of the present time employ their faculties. One is the adaptation of
+sense to all the rhymes which our language can supply to some word, that
+makes the burden of the stanza; but this, as it has been only used in a
+kind of amorous burlesque, can scarcely be censured with much acrimony.
+The other is the imitation of Spenser, which, by the influence of some
+men of learning and genius, seems likely to gain upon the age, and
+therefore deserves to be more attentively considered.
+
+To imitate the fictions and sentiments of Spenser can incur no reproach,
+for allegory is perhaps one of the most pleasing vehicles of
+instruction. But I am very far from extending the same respect to his
+diction or his stanza. His style was in his own time allowed to be
+vicious, so darkened with old words and peculiarities of phrase, and so
+remote from common use, that Jonson boldly pronounces him _to have
+written no language_. His stanza is at once difficult and unpleasing;
+tiresome to the ear by its uniformity, and to the attention by its
+length. It was at first formed in imitation of the Italian poets,
+without due regard to the genius of our language. The Italians have
+little variety of termination, and were forced to contrive such a stanza
+as might admit the greatest number of similar rhymes; but our words end
+with so much diversity, that it is seldom convenient for us to bring
+more than two of the same sound together. If it be justly observed by
+Milton, that rhyme obliges poets to express their thoughts in improper
+terms, these improprieties must always be multiplied, as the difficulty
+of rhyme is increased by long concatenations.
+
+The imitators of Spenser are indeed not very rigid censors of
+themselves, for they seem to conclude, that when they have disfigured
+their lines with a few obsolete syllables, they have accomplished their
+design, without considering that they ought not only to admit old words,
+but to avoid new. The laws of imitation are broken by every word
+introduced since the time of Spenser, as the character of Hector is
+violated by quoting Aristotle in the play. It would, indeed, be
+difficult to exclude from a long poem all modern phrases, though it is
+easy to sprinkle it with gleanings of antiquity. Perhaps, however, the
+style of Spenser might by long labour be justly copied; but life is
+surely given us for higher purposes than to gather what our ancestors
+have wisely thrown away, and to learn what is of no value, but because
+it has been forgotten.
+
+
+
+No. 122. SATURDAY, MAY 18, 1751.
+
+ Nescio qua natale solum dulcedine captos
+ Ducit. OVID, Ex Pon. Lib. i. Ep. iii. 35.
+
+ By secret charms our native land attracts.
+
+Nothing is more subject to mistake and disappointment than anticipated
+judgment concerning the easiness or difficulty of any undertaking,
+whether we form our opinion from the performances of others, or from
+abstracted contemplation of the thing to be attempted.
+
+Whatever is done skilfully appears to be done with ease; and art, when
+it is once matured to habit, vanishes from observation. We are therefore
+more powerfully excited to emulation, by those who have attained the
+highest degree of excellence, and whom we can therefore with least
+reason hope to equal.
+
+In adjusting the probability of success by a previous consideration of
+the undertaking, we are equally in danger of deceiving ourselves. It is
+never easy, nor often possible, to comprise the series of any process
+with all its circumstances, incidents, and variations, in a speculative
+scheme. Experience soon shows us the tortuosities of imaginary
+rectitude, the complications of simplicity, and the asperities of
+smoothness. Sudden difficulties often start up from the ambushes of art,
+stop the career of activity, repress the gaiety of confidence, and when
+we imagine ourselves almost at the end of our labours, drive us back to
+new plans and different measures.
+
+There are many things which we every day see others unable to perform,
+and perhaps have even ourselves miscarried in attempting; and yet can
+hardly allow to be difficult; nor can we forbear to wonder afresh at
+every new failure, or to promise certainty of success to our next essay;
+but when we try, the same hindrances recur, the same inability is
+perceived, and the vexation of disappointment must again be suffered.
+
+Of the various kinds of speaking or writing, which serve necessity, or
+promote pleasure, none appears so artless or easy as simple narration;
+for what should make him that knows the whole order and progress of an
+affair unable to relate it? Yet we hourly find such as endeavour to
+entertain or instruct us by recitals, clouding the facts which they
+intend to illustrate, and losing themselves and their auditors in wilds
+and mazes, in digression and confusion. When we have congratulated
+ourselves upon a new opportunity of inquiry, and new means of
+information, it often happens, that without designing either deceit or
+concealment, without ignorance of the fact, or unwillingness to disclose
+it, the relator fills the ear with empty sounds, harasses the attention
+with fruitless impatience, and disturbs the imagination by a tumult of
+events, without order of time, or train of consequence.
+
+It is natural to believe, upon the same principle, that no writer has a
+more easy task than the historian. The philosopher has the works of
+omniscience to examine; and is therefore engaged in disquisitions, to
+which finite intellects are utterly unequal. The poet trusts to his
+invention, and is not only in danger of those inconsistencies, to which
+every one is exposed by departure from truth; but may be censured as
+well for deficiencies of matter, as for irregularity of disposition, or
+impropriety of ornament. But the happy historian has no other labour
+than of gathering what tradition pours down before him, or records
+treasure for his use. He has only the actions and designs of men like
+himself to conceive and to relate; he is not to form, but copy
+characters, and therefore is not blamed for the inconsistency of
+statesmen, the injustice of tyrants, or the cowardice of commanders. The
+difficulty of making variety consistent, or uniting probability with
+surprise, needs not to disturb him; the manners and actions of his
+personages are already fixed; his materials are provided and put into
+his hands, and he is at leisure to employ all his powers in arranging
+and displaying them.
+
+Yet, even with these advantages, very few in any age have been able to
+raise themselves to reputation by writing histories; and among the
+innumerable authors, who fill every nation with accounts of their
+ancestors, or undertake to transmit to futurity the events of their own
+time, the greater part, when fashion and novelty have ceased to
+recommend them, are of no other use than chronological memorials, which
+necessity may sometimes require to be consulted, but which fright away
+curiosity, and disgust delicacy.
+
+It is observed, that our nation, which has produced so many authors
+eminent for almost every other species of literary excellence, has been
+hitherto remarkably barren of historical genius; and so far has this
+defect raised prejudices against us, that some have doubted whether an
+Englishman can stop at that mediocrity of style, or confine his mind to
+that even tenour of imagination, which narrative requires.
+
+They who can believe that nature has so capriciously distributed
+understanding, have surely no claim to the honour of serious
+confutation. The inhabitants of the same country have opposite
+characters in different ages; the prevalence or neglect of any
+particular study can proceed only from the accidental influence of some
+temporary cause; and if we have failed in history, we can have failed
+only because history has not hitherto been diligently cultivated.
+
+But how is it evident, that we have not historians among us, whom we may
+venture to place in comparison with any that the neighbouring nations
+can produce? The attempt of Raleigh is deservedly celebrated for the
+labour of his researches, and the elegance of his style; but he has
+endeavoured to exert his judgment more than his genius, to select facts,
+rather than adorn them; and has produced an historical dissertation, but
+seldom risen to the majesty of history.
+
+The works of Clarendon deserve more regard. His diction is indeed
+neither exact in itself, nor suited to the purpose of history. It is the
+effusion of a mind crowded with ideas, and desirous of imparting them;
+and therefore always accumulating words, and involving one clause and
+sentence in another. But there is in his negligence a rude inartificial
+majesty, which, without the nicety of laboured elegance, swells the mind
+by its plenitude and diffusion. His narration is not perhaps
+sufficiently rapid, being stopped too frequently by particularities,
+which, though they might strike the author who was present at the
+transactions, will not equally detain the attention of posterity. But
+his ignorance or carelessness of the art of writing is amply compensated
+by his knowledge of nature and of policy; the wisdom of his maxims, the
+justness of his reasonings, and the variety, distinctness, and strength
+of his characters.
+
+But none of our writers can, in my opinion, justly contest the
+superiority of Knolles, who, in his history of the Turks, has displayed
+all the excellencies that narration can admit. His style, though
+somewhat obscured by time, and sometimes vitiated by false wit, is pure,
+nervous, elevated, and clear. A wonderful multiplicity of events is so
+artfully arranged, and so distinctly explained, that each facilitates
+the knowledge of the next. Whenever a new personage is introduced, the
+reader is prepared by his character for his actions; when a nation is
+first attacked, or city besieged, he is made acquainted with its
+history, or situation; so that a great part of the world is brought into
+view. The descriptions of this author are without minuteness, and the
+digressions without ostentation. Collateral events are so artfully woven
+into the contexture of his principal story, that they cannot be
+disjoined without leaving it lacerated and broken. There is nothing
+turgid in his dignity, nor superfluous in his copiousness. His orations
+only, which he feigns, like the ancient historians, to have been
+pronounced on remarkable occasions, are tedious and languid; and since
+they are merely the voluntary sports of imagination, prove how much the
+most judicious and skilful may be mistaken in the estimate of their own
+powers.
+
+Nothing could have sunk this author in obscurity, but the remoteness and
+barbarity of the people, whose story he relates. It seldom happens, that
+all circumstances concur to happiness or fame. The nation which produced
+this great historian, has the grief of seeing his genius employed upon a
+foreign and uninteresting subject; and that writer who might have
+secured perpetuity to his name, by a history of his own country, has
+exposed himself to the danger of oblivion, by recounting enterprises and
+revolutions, of which none desire to be informed.
+
+
+No. 123. TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1751.
+
+ _Quo semet est imbuta recens, servabit odorem
+ Testa din_.--HOR. Lib. i. Ep. ii. 69.
+
+ What season'd first the vessel, keeps the taste. CREECH.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Though I have so long found myself deluded by projects of honour and
+distinction, that I often resolve to admit them no more into my heart;
+yet how determinately soever excluded, they always recover their
+dominion by force or stratagem; and whenever, after the shortest
+relaxation of vigilance, reason and caution return to their charge, they
+find hope again in possession, with all her train of pleasures dancing
+about her.
+
+Even while I am preparing to write a history of disappointed
+expectations, I cannot forbear to flatter myself, that you and your
+readers are impatient for my performance; and that the sons of learning
+have laid down several of your late papers with discontent, when they
+found that Misocapelus had delayed to continue his narrative.
+
+But the desire of gratifying the expectations that I have raised, is not
+the only motive of this relation, which, having once promised it, I
+think myself no longer at liberty to forbear. For, however I may have
+wished to clear myself from every other adhesion of trade, I hope I
+shall be always wise enough to retain my punctuality, and amidst all my
+new arts of politeness, continue to despise negligence, and detest
+falsehood.
+
+When the death of my brother had dismissed me from the duties of a shop,
+I considered myself as restored to the rights of my birth, and entitled
+to the rank and reception which my ancestors obtained. I was, however,
+embarrassed with many difficulties at my first re-entrance into the
+world; for my haste to be a gentleman inclined me to precipitate
+measures; and every accident that forced me back towards my old station,
+was considered by me as an obstruction of my happiness.
+
+It was with no common grief and indignation, that I found my former
+companions still daring to claim my notice, and the journeymen and
+apprentices sometimes pulling me by the sleeve as I was walking in the
+street, and without any terrour of my new sword, which was,
+notwithstanding, of an uncommon size, inviting me to partake of a bottle
+at the old house, and entertaining me with histories of the girls in the
+neighbourhood. I had always, in my officinal state, been kept in awe by
+lace and embroidery; and imagined that, to fright away these unwelcome
+familiarities, nothing was necessary, but that I should, by splendour of
+dress, proclaim my re-union with a higher rank. I, therefore, sent for
+my tailor; ordered a suit with twice the usual quantity of lace; and
+that I might not let my persecutors increase their confidence, by the
+habit of accosting me, staid at home till it was made.
+
+This week of confinement I passed in practising a forbidding frown, a
+smile of condescension, a slight salutation, and an abrupt departure;
+and in four mornings was able to turn upon my heel, with so much levity
+and sprightliness, that I made no doubt of discouraging all publick
+attempts upon my dignity. I therefore issued forth in my new coat, with
+a resolution of dazzling intimacy to a fitter distance; and pleased
+myself with the timidity and reverence, which I should impress upon all
+who had hitherto presumed to harass me with their freedoms. But,
+whatever was the cause, I did not find myself received with any new
+degree of respect; those whom I intended to drive from me, ventured to
+advance with their usual phrases of benevolence; and those whose
+acquaintance I solicited, grew more supercilious and reserved. I began
+soon to repent the expense, by which I had procured no advantage, and to
+suspect that a shining dress, like a weighty weapon, has no force in
+itself, but owes all its efficacy to him that wears it.
+
+Many were the mortifications and calamities which I was condemned to
+suffer in my initiation to politeness. I was so much tortured by the
+incessant civilities of my companions, that I never passed through that
+region of the city but in a chair with the curtains drawn; and at last
+left my lodgings, and fixed myself in the verge of the court. Here I
+endeavoured to be thought a gentleman just returned from his travels,
+and was pleased to have my landlord believe that I was in some danger
+from importunate creditors; but this scheme was quickly defeated by a
+formal deputation sent to offer me, though I had now retired from
+business, the freedom of my company.
+
+I was now detected in trade, and therefore resolved to stay no longer. I
+hired another apartment, and changed my servants. Here I lived very
+happily for three months, and, with secret satisfaction, often overheard
+the family celebrating the greatness and felicity of the esquire; though
+the conversation seldom ended without some complaint of my covetousness,
+or some remark upon my language, or my gait. I now began to venture in
+the publick walks, and to know the faces of nobles and beauties; but
+could not observe, without wonder, as I passed by them, how frequently
+they were talking of a tailor. I longed, however, to be admitted to
+conversation, and was somewhat weary of walking in crowds without a
+companion, yet continued to come and go with the rest, till a lady whom
+I endeavoured to protect in a crowded passage, as she was about to step
+into her chariot, thanked me for my civility, and told me, that, as she
+had often distinguished me for my modest and respectful behaviour,
+whenever I set up for myself, I might expect to see her among my first
+customers.
+
+Here was an end of all my ambulatory projects. I indeed sometimes
+entered the walks again, but was always blasted by this destructive
+lady, whose mischievous generosity recommended me to her acquaintance.
+Being therefore forced to practise my adscititious character upon
+another stage, I betook myself to a coffee-house frequented by wits,
+among whom I learned in a short time the cant of criticism, and talked
+so loudly and volubly of nature, and manners, and sentiment, and
+diction, and similies, and contrasts, and action, and pronunciation,
+that I was often desired to lead the hiss and clap, and was feared and
+hated by the players and the poets. Many a sentence have I hissed, which
+I did not understand, and many a groan have I uttered, when the ladies
+were weeping in the boxes. At last a malignant author, whose performance
+I had persecuted through the nine nights, wrote an epigram upon Tape the
+critick, which drove me from the pit for ever.
+
+My desire to be a fine gentleman still continued: I therefore, after a
+short suspense, chose a new set of friends at the gaming-table, and was
+for some time pleased with the civility and openness with which I found
+myself treated. I was indeed obliged to play; but being naturally
+timorous and vigilant, was never surprised into large sums. What might
+have been the consequence of long familiarity with these plunderers, I
+had not an opportunity of knowing; for one night the constables entered
+and seized us, and I was once more compelled to sink into my former
+condition, by sending for my old master to attest my character.
+
+When I was deliberating to what new qualifications I should aspire, I
+was summoned into the country, by an account of my father's death. Here
+I had hopes of being able to distinguish myself, and to support the
+honour of my family. I therefore bought guns and horses, and, contrary
+to the expectation of the tenants, increased the salary of the huntsman.
+But when I entered the field, it was soon discovered, that I was not
+destined to the glories of the chase. I was afraid of thorns in the
+thicket, and of dirt in the marsh; I shivered on the brink of a river
+while the sportsmen crossed it, and trembled at the sight of a five-bar
+gate. When the sport and danger were over, I was still equally
+disconcerted; for I was effeminate, though not delicate, and could only
+join a feeble whispering voice in the clamours of their triumph.
+
+A fall, by which my ribs were broken, soon recalled me to domestick
+pleasures, and I exerted all my art to obtain the favour of the
+neighbouring ladies; but wherever I came, there was always some unlucky
+conversation upon ribands, fillets, pins, or thread, which drove all my
+stock of compliments out of my memory, and overwhelmed me with shame and
+dejection.
+
+Thus I passed the ten first years after the death of my brother, in
+which I have learned at last to repress that ambition, which I could
+never gratify; and, instead of wasting more of my life in vain
+endeavours after accomplishments, which, if not early acquired, no
+endeavours can obtain, I shall confine my care to those higher
+excellencies which are in every man's power, and though I cannot enchant
+affection by elegance and ease, hope to secure esteem by honesty and
+truth.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+MISOCAPELUS.
+
+
+
+No. 124. SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1751.
+
+ --Taciturn sylvas inter reptare salubres,
+ Curantem quicquid dignim sapiente bonoque est?
+ HOR. Lib. i. Ep. iv. 4.
+
+ To range in silence through each healthful wood,
+ And muse what's worthy of the wise and good. ELPHINSTON.
+
+The season of the year is now come, in which the theatres are shut, and
+the card-tables forsaken; the regions of luxury are for a while
+unpeopled, and pleasure leads out her votaries to groves and gardens, to
+still scenes and erratick gratifications. Those who have passed many
+months in a continual tumult of diversion; who have never opened their
+eyes in the morning, but upon some new appointment; nor slept at night
+without a dream of dances, musick, and good hands, or of soft sighs and
+humble supplications; must now retire to distant provinces, where the
+syrens of flattery are scarcely to be heard, where beauty sparkles
+without praise or envy, and wit is repeated only by the echo.
+
+As I think it one of the most important duties of social benevolence to
+give warning of the approach of calamity, when by timely prevention it
+may be turned aside, or by preparatory measures be more easily endured,
+I cannot feel the increasing warmth, or observe the lengthening days,
+without considering the condition of my fair readers, who are now
+preparing to leave all that has so long filled up their hours, all from
+which they have been accustomed to hope for delight; and who, till
+fashion proclaims the liberty of returning to the seats of mirth and
+elegance, must endure the rugged 'squire, the sober housewife, the loud
+huntsman, or the formal parson, the roar of obstreperous jollity, or the
+dulness of prudential instruction; without any retreat, but to the gloom
+of solitude, where they will yet find greater inconveniencies, and must
+learn, however unwillingly, to endure themselves.
+
+In winter, the life of the polite and gay may be said to roll on with a
+strong and rapid current; they float along from pleasure to pleasure,
+without the trouble of regulating their own motions, and pursue the
+course of the stream in all the felicity of inattention; content that
+they find themselves in progression, and careless whither they are
+going. But the months of summer are a kind of sleeping stagnation
+without wind or tide, where they are left to force themselves forward by
+their own labour, and to direct their passage by their own skill; and
+where, if they have not some internal principle of activity, they must
+be stranded upon shallows, or lie torpid in a perpetual calm.
+
+There are, indeed, some to whom this universal dissolution of gay
+societies affords a welcome opportunity of quitting, without disgrace,
+the post which they have found themselves unable to maintain; and of
+seeming to retreat only at the call of nature, from assemblies where,
+after a short triumph of uncontested superiority, they are overpowered
+by some new intruder of softer elegance or sprightlier vivacity. By
+these, hopeless of victory, and yet ashamed to confess a conquest, the
+summer is regarded as a release from the fatiguing service of celebrity,
+a dismission to more certain joys and a safer empire. They now solace
+themselves with the influence which they shall obtain, where they have
+no rival to fear; and with the lustre which they shall effuse, when
+nothing can be seen of brighter splendour. They imagine, while they are
+preparing for their journey, the admiration with which the rusticks will
+crowd about them; plan the laws of a new assembly; or contrive to delude
+provincial ignorance with a fictitious mode. A thousand pleasing
+expectations swarm in the fancy; and all the approaching weeks are
+filled with distinctions, honours, and authority.
+
+But others, who have lately entered the world, or have yet had no proofs
+of its inconstancy and desertion, are cut off, by this cruel
+interruption, from the enjoyment of their prerogatives, and doomed to
+lose four months in inactive obscurity. Many complaints do vexation and
+desire extort from those exiled tyrants of the town, against the
+inexorable sun, who pursues his course without any regard to love or
+beauty; and visits either tropick at the stated time, whether shunned or
+courted, deprecated or implored.
+
+To them who leave the places of publick resort in the full bloom of
+reputation, and withdraw from admiration, courtship, submission, and
+applause, a rural triumph can give nothing equivalent. The praise of
+ignorance, and the subjection of weakness, are little regarded by
+beauties who have been accustomed to more important conquests, and more
+valuable panegyricks. Nor indeed should the powers which have made
+havock in the theatres, or borne down rivalry in courts, be degraded to
+a mean attack upon the untravelled heir, or ignoble contest with the
+ruddy milkmaid.
+
+How then must four long months be worn away? Four months, in which there
+will be no routes, no shows, no ridottos; in which visits must be
+regulated by the weather, and assemblies will depend upon the moon! The
+Platonists imagine, that the future punishment of those who have in this
+life debased their reason by subjection to their senses, and have
+preferred the gross gratifications of lewdness and luxury, to the pure
+and sublime felicity of virtue and contemplation, will arise from the
+predominance and solicitations of the same appetites, in a state which
+can furnish no means of appeasing them. I cannot but suspect that this
+month, bright with sunshine, and fragrant with perfumes; this month,
+which covers the meadow with verdure, and decks the gardens with all the
+mixtures of colorifick radiance; this month, from which the man of fancy
+expects new infusions of imagery, and the naturalist new scenes of
+observation; this month will chain down multitudes to the Platonick
+penance of desire without enjoyment, and hurry them from the highest
+satisfactions, which they have yet learned to conceive, into a state of
+hopeless wishes and pining recollection, where the eye of vanity will
+look round for admiration to no purpose, and the hand of avarice shuffle
+cards in a bower with ineffectual dexterity.
+
+From the tediousness of this melancholy suspension of life, I would
+willingly preserve those who are exposed to it, only by inexperience;
+who want not inclination to wisdom or virtue, though they have been
+dissipated by negligence, or misled by example; and who would gladly
+find the way to rational happiness, though it should be necessary to
+struggle with habit, and abandon fashion. To these many arts of spending
+time might be recommended, which would neither sadden the present hour
+with weariness, nor the future with repentance.
+
+It would seem impossible to a solitary speculatist, that a human being
+can want employment. To be born in ignorance with a capacity of
+knowledge, and to be placed in the midst of a world filled with variety,
+perpetually pressing upon the senses and irritating curiosity, is surely
+a sufficient security against the languishment of inattention. Novelty
+is indeed necessary to preserve eagerness and alacrity; but art and
+nature have stores inexhaustible by human intellects; and every moment
+produces something new to him, who has quickened his faculties by
+diligent observation.
+
+Some studies, for which the country and the summer afford peculiar
+opportunities, I shall perhaps endeavour to recommend in a future essay;
+but if there be any apprehension not apt to admit unaccustomed ideas, or
+any attention so stubborn and inflexible, as not easily to comply with
+new directions, even these obstructions cannot exclude the pleasure of
+application; for there is a higher and nobler employment, to which all
+faculties are adapted by Him who gave them. The duties of religion,
+sincerely and regularly performed, will always be sufficient to exalt
+the meanest, and to exercise the highest understanding. That mind will
+never be vacant, which is frequently recalled by stated duties to
+meditations on eternal interests; nor can any hour be long, which is
+spent in obtaining some new qualification for celestial happiness.
+
+
+
+No. 125. TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1751.
+
+ _Descriptas servare vices, operumque colores,
+ Cur ego, si nequeo ignoroque, poëta salutor?_ HOR. De Ar. Poet. 86.
+
+ But if, through weakness, or my want of art,
+ I can't to every different style impart
+ The proper strokes and colours it may claim,
+ Why am I honour'd with a poet's name? FRANCIS.
+
+It is one of the maxims of the civil law, that _definitions are
+hazardous_. Things modified by human understandings, subject to
+varieties of complication, and changeable as experience advances
+knowledge, or accident influences caprice, are scarcely to be included
+in any standing form of expression, because they are always suffering
+some alteration of their state. Definition is, indeed, not the province
+of man; every thing is set above or below our faculties. The works and
+operations of nature are too great in their extent, or too much diffused
+in their relations, and the performances of art too inconstant and
+uncertain, to be reduced to any determinate idea. It is impossible to
+impress upon our minds an adequate and just representation of an object
+so great that we can never take it into our view, or so mutable that it
+is always changing under our eye, and has already lost its form while we
+are labouring to conceive it.
+
+Definitions have been no less difficult or uncertain in criticisms than
+in law. Imagination, a licentious and vagrant faculty, unsusceptible of
+limitations, and impatient of restraint, has always endeavoured to
+baffle the logician, to perplex the confines of distinction, and burst
+the inclosures of regularity. There is therefore scarcely any species of
+writing, of which we can tell what is its essence, and what are its
+constituents; every new genius produces some innovation, which, when
+invented and approved, subverts the rules which the practice of
+foregoing authors had established.
+
+Comedy has been particularly unpropitious to definers; for though
+perhaps they might properly have contented themselves, with declaring it
+to be _such a dramatick representation of human life, as may excite
+mirth_, they have embarrassed their definition with the means by which
+the comick writers attain their end, without considering that the
+various methods of exhilarating their audience, not being limited by
+nature, cannot be comprised in precept. Thus, some make comedy a
+representation of mean and others of bad men; some think that its
+essence consists in the unimportance, others in the fictitiousness of
+the transaction. But any man's reflections will inform him, that every
+dramatick composition which raises mirth, is comick; and that, to raise
+mirth, it is by no means universally necessary, that the personages
+should be either mean or corrupt, nor always requisite, that the action
+should be trivial, nor ever, that it should be fictitious.
+
+If the two kinds of dramatick poetry had been defined only by their
+effects upon the mind, some absurdities might have been prevented, with
+which the compositions of our greatest poets are disgraced, who, for
+want of some settled ideas and accurate distinctions, have unhappily
+confounded tragick with comick sentiments. They seem to have thought,
+that as the meanest of personages constituted comedy, their greatness
+was sufficient to form a tragedy; and that nothing was necessary but
+that they should crowd the scene with monarchs, and generals, and
+guards; and make them talk, at certain intervals, of the downfall of
+kingdoms, and the rout of armies. They have not considered, that
+thoughts or incidents, in themselves ridiculous, grow still more
+grotesque by the solemnity of such characters; that reason and nature
+are uniform and inflexible: and that what is despicable and absurd, will
+not, by any association with splendid titles, become rational or great;
+that the most important affairs, by an intermixture of an unseasonable
+levity, may be made contemptible; and that the robes of royalty can give
+no dignity to nonsense or to folly.
+
+"Comedy," says Horace, "sometimes raises her voice;" and Tragedy may
+likewise on proper occasions abate her dignity; but as the comick
+personages can only depart from their familiarity of style, when the
+more violent passions are put in motion, the heroes and queens of
+tragedy should never descend to trifle, but in the hours of ease, and
+intermissions of danger. Yet in the tragedy of Don Sebastian, when the
+king of Portugal is in the hands of his enemy, and having just drawn the
+lot, by which he is condemned to die, breaks out into a wild boast that
+his dust shall take possession of Africk, the dialogue proceeds thus
+between the captive and his conqueror:
+
+ _Muley Moluch_. What shall I do to conquer thee?
+
+ _Seb_. Impossible!
+ Souls know no conquerors.
+
+ _M. Mol_. I'll shew thee for a monster thro' my Afric.
+
+ _Seb_. No, thou canst only shew me for a man:
+ Afric is stored with monsters; man's a prodigy
+ Thy subjects have not seen.
+
+ _M. Mol_. Thou talk'st as if
+ Still at the head of battle.
+
+ _Seb_. Thou mistak'st,
+ For there I would not talk.
+
+ _Benducar, the Minister_. Sure he would sleep.
+ This conversation, with the sly remark of the minister, can only be
+found not to be comick, because it wants the probability necessary to
+representations of common life, and degenerates too much towards
+buffoonery and farce.
+
+The same play affords a smart return of the general to to the emperor,
+who, enforcing his orders for the death of Sebastian, vents his
+impatience in this abrupt threat:
+
+ --No more replies,
+ But see thou dost it: Or--
+
+To which Dorax answers,
+
+ Choak in that threat: I can say Or as loud.
+
+A thousand instances of such impropriety might be produced, were not one
+scene in Aureng-Zebe sufficient to exemplify it. Indamora, a captive
+queen, having Aureng-Zebe for her lover, employs Arimant, to whose
+charge she had been entrusted, and whom she had made sensible of her
+charms, to carry her message to his rival.
+
+ ARIMANT, _with a letter in his hand_: INDAMORA.
+
+ _Arim_. And I the messenger to him from you?
+ Your empire you to tyranny pursue:
+ You lay commands both cruel and unjust,
+ To serve my rival, and betray my trust.
+
+ _Ind_. You first betray'd your trust in loving me:
+ And should not I my own advantage see?
+ Serving my love, you may my friendship gain;
+ You know the rest of your pretences vain.
+ You must, my Arimant, you must be kind:
+ 'Tis in your nature, and your noble mind.
+
+ _Arim_. I'll to the king, and straight my trust resign.
+
+ _Ind_. His trust you may, but you shall never mine.
+ Heaven made you love me for no other end,
+ But to become my confidant and friend:
+ As such, I keep no secret from your sight,
+ And therefore make you judge how ill I write:
+ Read it, and tell me freely then your mind,
+ If 'tis indited, as I meant it, kind.
+
+ Arim. _I ask not heaven my freedom to restore_--[Reading.
+ _But only for your sake_--I'll read no more.
+ And yet I must--
+ _Less for my own, than for your sorrow sad_--[Reading.
+ Another line like this, would make me mad--
+ Heav'n! she goes on--yet more--and yet more kind!
+ [--_As reading_.
+ Each sentence is a dagger to my mind.
+ _See me this night_--[Reading.
+ _Thank fortune who did such a friend provide;
+ For faithful Arimant shall be your guide_.
+ Not only to be made an instrument,
+ But pre-engaged without my own consent!
+
+ _Ind_. Unknown to engage you still augments my score,
+ And gives you scope of meriting the more.
+
+ _Arim_. The best of men
+ Some int'rest in their actions must confess;
+ None merit, but in hope they may possess:
+ The fatal paper rather let me tear,
+ Than, like Bellerophon, my own sentence hear.
+
+ _Ind_. You may; but 'twill not be your best advice:
+ 'Twill only give me pains of writing twice.
+ You know you must obey me, soon or late:
+ Why should you vainly struggle with your fate?
+
+ _Arim_. I thank thee, heav'n! thou hast been wondrous kind!
+ Why am I thus to slavery design'd,
+ And yet am cheated with a free-born mind!
+ Or make thy orders with my reason suit,
+ Or let me live by sense, a glorious brute--[_She frowns_.
+ You frown, and I obey with speed, before
+ That dreadful sentence comes, _See me no more_.
+
+In this scene, every circumstance concurs to turn tragedy to farce. The
+wild absurdity of the expedient; the contemptible subjection of the
+lover; the folly of obliging him to read the letter, only because it
+ought to have been concealed from him; the frequent interruptions of
+amorous impatience; the faint expostulations of a voluntary slave; the
+imperious haughtiness of a tyrant without power; the deep reflection of
+the yielding rebel upon fate and free-will; and his wise wish to lose
+his reason as soon as he finds himself about to do what he cannot
+persuade his reason to approve, are sufficient to awaken the most torpid
+risibility.
+
+There is scarce a tragedy of the last century which has not debased its
+most important incidents, and polluted its most serious interlocutions,
+with buffoonery and meanness; but though, perhaps, it cannot be
+pretended that the present age has added much to the force and efficacy
+of the drama, it has at least been able to escape many faults, which
+either ignorance had overlooked, or indulgence had licensed. The later
+tragedies, indeed, have faults of another kind, perhaps more destructive
+to delight, though less open to censure. That perpetual tumour of phrase
+with which every thought is now expressed by every personage, the
+paucity of adventures which regularity admits, and the unvaried equality
+of flowing dialogue, has taken away from our present writers almost all
+that dominion over the passions which was the boast of their
+predecessors. Yet they may at least claim this commendation, that they
+avoid gross faults, and that if they cannot often move terrour or pity,
+they are always careful not to provoke laughter.
+
+
+
+No. 126. SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1751.
+
+ _--Nihil est aliud magnum quam multa minuta_. VET. AUCT.
+
+ Sands form the mountain, moments make the year. YOUNG.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Among other topicks of conversation which your papers supply, I was
+lately engaged in a discussion of the character given by Tranquilla of
+her lover Venustulus, whom, notwithstanding the severity of his
+mistress, the greater number seemed inclined to acquit of unmanly or
+culpable timidity.
+
+One of the company remarked that prudence ought to be distinguished from
+fear; and that if Venustulus was afraid of nocturnal adventures, no man
+who considered how much every avenue of the town was infested with
+robbers could think him blameable; for why should life be hazarded
+without prospect of honour or advantage? Another was of opinion, that a
+brave man might be afraid of crossing the river in the calmest weather,
+and declared, that, for his part, while there were coaches and a bridge,
+he would never be seen tottering in a wooden case, out of which he might
+be thrown by any irregular agitation, or which might be overset by
+accident, or negligence, or by the force of a sudden gust, or the rush
+of a larger vessel. It was his custom, he said, to keep the security of
+daylight, and dry ground; for it was a maxim with him, that no wise man
+ever perished by water, or was lost in the dark.
+
+The next was humbly of opinion, that if Tranquilla had seen, like him,
+the cattle run roaring about the meadows in the hot months, she would
+not have thought meanly of her lover for not venturing his safety among
+them. His neighbour then told us, that for his part he was not ashamed
+to confess, that he could not see a rat, though it was dead, without
+palpitation; that he had been driven six times out of his lodgings
+either by rats or mice; and that he always had a bed in the closet for
+his servant, whom he called up whenever the enemy was in motion. Another
+wondered that any man should think himself disgraced by a precipitate
+retreat from a dog; for there was always a possibility that a dog might
+be mad; and that surely, though there was no danger but of being bit by
+a fierce animal, there was more wisdom in flight than contest. By all
+these declarations another was encouraged to confess, that if he had
+been admitted to the honour of paying his addresses to Tranquilla, he
+should have been likely to incur the same censure; for, among all the
+animals upon which nature has impressed deformity and horrour, there is
+none whom he durst not encounter rather than a beetle.
+
+Thus, Sir, though cowardice is universally defined too close and anxious
+an attention to personal safety, there will be found scarcely any fear,
+however excessive in its degree, or unreasonable in its object, which
+will be allowed to characterise a coward. Fear is a passion which every
+man feels so frequently predominant in his own breast, that he is
+unwilling to hear it censured with great asperity; and, perhaps, if we
+confess the truth, the same restraint which would hinder a man from
+declaiming against the frauds of any employment among those who profess
+it, should withhold him from treating fear with contempt among human
+beings.
+
+Yet, since fortitude is one of those virtues which the condition of our
+nature makes hourly necessary, I think you cannot better direct your
+admonitions than against superfluous and panick terrours. Fear is
+implanted in us as a preservative from evil; but its duty, like that of
+other passions, is not to overbear reason, but to assist it; nor should
+it be suffered to tyrannize in the imagination, to raise phantoms of
+horrour, or beset life with supernumerary distresses.
+
+To be always afraid of losing life is, indeed, scarcely to enjoy a life
+that can deserve the care of preservation. He that once indulges idle
+fears will never be at rest. Our present state admits only of a kind of
+negative security; we must conclude ourselves safe when we see no
+danger, or none inadequate to our powers of opposition. Death, indeed,
+continually hovers about us, but hovers commonly unseen, unless we
+sharpen our sight by useless curiosity.
+
+There is always a point at which caution, however solicitous, must limit
+its preservatives, because one terrour often counteracts another. I once
+knew one of the speculatists of cowardice, whose reigning disturbance
+was the dread of housebreakers. His inquiries were for nine years
+employed upon the best method of barring a window, or a door; and many
+an hour has he spent in establishing the preference of a bolt to a lock.
+He had at last, by the daily superaddition of new expedients, contrived
+a door which could never be forced; for one bar was secured by another
+with such intricacy of subordination, that he was himself not always
+able to disengage them in the proper method. He was happy in this
+fortification, till being asked how he would escape if he was threatened
+by fire, he discovered, that with all his care and expense, he had only
+been assisting his own destruction. He then immediately tore off his
+bolts, and now leaves at night his outer door half-locked, that he may
+not by his own folly perish in the flames.
+
+There is one species of terrour which those who are unwilling to suffer
+the reproach of cowardice have wisely dignified with the name of
+_antipathy_. A man who talks with intrepidity of the monsters of the
+wilderness while they are out of sight, will readily confess his
+antipathy to a mole, a weasel, or a frog. He has indeed no dread of harm
+from an insect or a worm, but his antipathy turns him pale whenever they
+approach him. He believes that a boat will transport him with as much
+safety as his neighbours, but he cannot conquer his antipathy to the
+water. Thus he goes on without any reproach from his own reflections,
+and every day multiplies antipathies, till he becomes contemptible to
+others, and burdensome to himself. It is indeed certain, that
+impressions of dread may sometimes be unluckily made by objects not in
+themselves justly formidable; but when fear is discovered to be
+groundless, it is to be eradicated like other false opinions, and
+antipathies are generally superable by a single effort. He that has been
+taught to shudder at a mouse, if he can persuade himself to risk one
+encounter, will find his own superiority, and exchange his terrours for
+the pride of conquest.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+THRASO.
+
+SIR, As you profess to extend your regard to the minuteness of decency,
+as well as to the dignity of science, I cannot forbear to lay before you
+a mode of persecution by which I have been exiled to taverns and
+coffee-houses, and deterred from entering the doors of my friends. Among
+the ladies who please themselves with splendid furniture, or elegant
+entertainment, it is a practice very common, to ask every guest how he
+likes the carved work of the cornice, or the figures of the tapestry;
+the china at the table, or the plate on the side-board: and on all
+occasions to inquire his opinion of their judgment and their choice.
+Melania has laid her new watch in the window nineteen times, that she
+may desire me to look upon it. Calista has an art of dropping her
+snuff-box by drawing out her handkerchief, that when I pick it up I may
+admire it; and Fulgentia has conducted me, by mistake, into the wrong
+room, at every visit I have paid since her picture was put into a new
+frame.
+
+I hope, Mr. Rambler, you will inform them, that no man should be denied
+the privilege of silence, or tortured to false declarations; and that
+though ladies may justly claim to be exempt from rudeness, they have no
+right to force unwilling civilities. To please is a laudable and elegant
+ambition, and is properly rewarded with honest praise; but to seize
+applause by violence, and call out for commendation, without knowing, or
+caring to know, whether it be given from conviction, is a species of
+tyranny by which modesty is oppressed, and sincerity corrupted. The
+tribute of admiration, thus exacted by impudence and importunity,
+differs from the respect paid to silent merit, as the plunder of a
+pirate from the merchant's profit.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+MISOCOLAX
+
+
+
+SIR,
+
+Your great predecessor, the Spectator, endeavoured to diffuse among his
+female readers a desire of knowledge; nor can I charge you, though you
+do not seem equally attentive to the ladies, with endeavouring to
+discourage them from any laudable pursuit. But however either he or you
+may excite our curiosity, you have not yet informed us how it may be
+gratified. The world seems to have formed an universal conspiracy
+against our understandings; our questions are supposed not to expect
+answers, our arguments are confuted with a jest, and we are treated like
+beings who transgress the limits of our nature whenever we aspire to
+seriousness or improvement.
+
+I inquired yesterday of a gentleman eminent for astronomical skill, what
+made the day long in summer, and short in winter; and was told that
+nature protracted the days in summer, lest ladies should want time to
+walk in the park; and the nights in winter, lest they should not have
+hours sufficient to spend at the card-table.
+
+I hope you do not doubt but I heard such information with just contempt,
+and I desire you to discover to this great master of ridicule, that I
+was far from wanting any intelligence which he could have given me. I
+asked the question with no other intention than to set him free from the
+necessity of silence, and give him an opportunity of mingling on equal
+terms with a polite assembly, from which, however uneasy, he could not
+then escape, by a kind introduction of the only subject on which I
+believed him able to speak with propriety.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+GENEROSA.
+
+
+
+No. 127. TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 1751.
+
+ _Capisti meliust, quam desinis. Ultima primis
+ Cedunt: dissimiles hic vir et ille puer_. Ovid. Ep. ix. 24.
+
+ Succeeding years thy early fame destroy;
+ Thou, who began'st a man, wilt end a boy.
+
+Politian, a name eminent among the restorers of polite literature, when
+he published a collection of epigrams, prefixed to many of them the year
+of his age at which they were composed. He might design, by this
+information, either to boast the early maturity of his genius, or to
+conciliate indulgence to the puerility of his performances. But whatever
+was his intent, it is remarked by Scaliger, that he very little promoted
+his own reputation, because he fell below the promise which his first
+productions had given, and, in the latter part of his life, seldom
+equalled the sallies of his youth.
+
+It is not uncommon for those who, at their first entrance into the
+world, were distinguished for attainments or abilities, to disappoint
+the hopes which they had raised, and to end in neglect and obscurity
+that life which they began in celebrity and honour. To the long
+catalogue of the inconveniencies of old age, which moral and satirical
+writers have so copiously displayed, may be often added the loss of
+fame.
+
+The advance of the human mind towards any object of laudable pursuit,
+may be compared to the progress of a body driven by a blow. It moves,
+for a time, with great velocity and vigour, but the force of the first
+impulse is perpetually decreasing, and though it should encounter no
+obstacle capable of quelling it by a sudden stop, the resistance of the
+medium through which it passes, and the latent inequalities of the
+smoothest surface, will, in a short time, by continued retardation,
+wholly overpower it. Some hindrances will be found in every road of
+life, but he that fixes his eyes upon any thing at a distance,
+necessarily loses sight of all that fills up the intermediate space, and
+therefore sets forward with alacrity and confidence, nor suspects a
+thousand obstacles, by which he afterwards finds his passage embarrassed
+and obstructed. Some are indeed stopt at once in their career by a
+sudden shock of calamity, or diverted to a different direction by the
+cross impulse of some violent passion; but far the greater part languish
+by slow degrees, deviate at first into slight obliquities, and
+themselves scarcely perceive at what time their ardour forsook them, or
+when they lost sight of their original design.
+
+Weariness and negligence are perpetually prevailing by silent
+encroachments, assisted by different causes, and not observed till they
+cannot, without great difficulty, be opposed. Labour necessarily
+requires pauses of ease and relaxation, and the deliciousness of ease
+commonly makes us unwilling to return to labour. We, perhaps, prevail
+upon ourselves to renew our attempts, but eagerly listen to every
+argument for frequent interpositions of amusement; for, when indolence
+has once entered upon the mind, it can scarcely be dispossessed but by
+such efforts as very few are willing to exert.
+
+It is the fate of industry to be equally endangered by miscarriage and
+success, by confidence and despondency. He that engages in a great
+undertaking, with a false opinion of its facility, or too high
+conceptions of his own strength, is easily discouraged by the first
+hindrance of his advances, because he had promised himself an equal and
+perpetual progression without impediment or disturbance; when unexpected
+interruptions break in upon him, he is in the state of a man surprised
+by a tempest, where he purposed only to bask in the calm, or sport in
+the shallows.
+
+It is not only common to find the difficulty of an enterprize greater,
+but the profit less, than hope had pictured it. Youth enters the world
+with very happy prejudices in her own favour. She imagines herself not
+only certain of accomplishing every adventure, but of obtaining those
+rewards which the accomplishment may deserve. She is not easily
+persuaded to believe that the force of merit can be resisted by
+obstinacy and avarice, or its lustre darkened by envy and malignity. She
+has not yet learned that the most evident claims to praise or preferment
+may be rejected by malice against conviction, or by indolence without
+examination; that they may be sometimes defeated by artifices, and
+sometimes overborne by clamour; that, in the mingled numbers of mankind,
+many need no other provocation to enmity than that they find themselves
+excelled; that others have ceased their curiosity, and consider every
+man who fills the mouth of report with a new name, as an intruder upon
+their retreat, and disturber of their repose; that some are engaged in
+complications of interest which they imagine endangered by every
+innovation; that many yield themselves up implicitly to every report
+which hatred disseminates or folly scatters; and that whoever aspires to
+the notice of the publick, has in almost every man an enemy and a rival;
+and must struggle with the opposition of the daring, and elude the
+stratagems of the timorous, must quicken the frigid and soften the
+obdurate, must reclaim perverseness and inform stupidity.
+
+It is no wonder that when the prospect of reward has vanished, the zeal
+of enterprize should cease; for who would persevere to cultivate the
+soil which he has, after long labour, discovered to be barren? He who
+hath pleased himself with anticipated praises, and expected that he
+should meet in every place with patronage or friendship, will soon remit
+his vigour, when he finds that, from those who desire to be considered
+as his admirers, nothing can be hoped but cold civility, and that many
+refuse to own his excellence, lest they should be too justly expected to
+reward it.
+
+A man, thus cut off from the prospect of that port to which his address
+and fortitude had been employed to steer him, often abandons himself to
+chance and to the wind, and glides careless and idle down the current of
+life, without resolution to make another effort, till he is swallowed up
+by the gulph of mortality.
+
+Others are betrayed to the same desertion of themselves by a contrary
+fallacy. It was said of Hannibal, that he wanted nothing to the
+completion of his martial virtues, but that when he had gained a victory
+he should know how to use it. The folly of desisting too soon from
+successful labours, and the haste of enjoying advantages before they are
+secured, are often fatal to men of impetuous desire, to men whose
+consciousness of uncommon powers fills them with presumption, and who,
+having borne opposition down before them, and left emulation panting
+behind, are early persuaded to imagine that they have reached the
+heights of perfection, and that now, being no longer in danger from
+competitors, they may pass the rest of their days in the enjoyment of
+their acquisitions, in contemplation of their own superiority, and in
+attention to their own praises, and look unconcerned from their eminence
+upon the toils and contentions of meaner beings.
+
+It is not sufficiently considered in the hour of exultation, that all
+human excellence is comparative; that no man performs much but in
+proportion to what others accomplish, or to the time and opportunities
+which have been allowed him; and that he who stops at any point of
+excellence is every day sinking in estimation, because his improvement
+grows continually more incommensurate to his life. Yet, as no man
+willingly quits opinions favourable to himself, they who have once been
+justly celebrated, imagine that they still have the same pretensions to
+regard, and seldom perceive the diminution of their character while
+there is time to recover it. Nothing then remains but murmurs and
+remorse; for if the spendthrift's poverty be embittered by the
+reflection that he once was rich, how must the idler's obscurity be
+clouded by remembering that he once had lustre!
+
+These errours all arise from an original mistake of the true motives of
+action. He that never extends his view beyond the praises or rewards of
+men will be dejected by neglect and envy, or infatuated by honours and
+applause. But the consideration that life is only deposited in his hands
+to be employed in obedience to a Master who will regard his endeavours,
+not his success, would have preserved him from trivial elations and
+discouragements, and enabled him to proceed with constancy and
+cheerfulness, neither enervated by commendation, nor intimidated by
+censure.
+
+
+
+No. 128. SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1751.
+
+ [Greek:
+ Aion d asphalaes
+ Ouk egent, out Aiakida para Paelei,
+ Oute par antitheo
+ Kadmo legontai man broton
+ Olbon hupertaton hoi
+ Schein.] PIND. Py. iii. 153.
+
+ For not the brave, or wise, or great,
+ E'er yet had happiness complete:
+ Nor Peleus, grandson of the sky,
+ Nor Cadmus, scap'd the shafts of pain,
+ Though favour'd by the Pow'rs on high,
+ With every bliss that man can gain.
+
+The writers who have undertaken the task of reconciling mankind to their
+present state, and relieving the discontent produced by the various
+distribution of terrestrial advantages, frequently remind us that we
+judge too hastily of good and evil, that we view only the superfices of
+life, and determine of the whole by a very small part; and that in the
+condition of men it frequently happens, that grief and anxiety lie hid
+under the golden robes of prosperity, and the gloom of calamity is
+cheered by secret radiations of hope and comfort; as in the works of
+nature the bog is sometimes covered with flowers, and the mine concealed
+in the barren crags.
+
+None but those who have learned the art of subjecting their senses as
+well as reason to hypothetical systems, can be persuaded by the most
+specious rhetorician that the lots of life are equal; yet it cannot be
+denied that every one has his peculiar pleasures and vexations, that
+external accidents operate variously upon different minds, and that no
+man can exactly judge from his own sensations, what another would feel
+in the same circumstances.
+
+If the general disposition of things be estimated by the representation
+which every one makes of his own estate, the world must be considered as
+the abode of sorrow and misery; for how few can forbear to relate their
+troubles and distresses? If we judge by the account which may be
+obtained of every man's fortune from others, it may be concluded, that
+we all are placed in an elysian region, overspread with the luxuriance
+of plenty, and fanned by the breezes of felicity; since scarcely any
+complaint is uttered without censure from those that hear it, and almost
+all are allowed to have obtained a provision at least adequate to their
+virtue or their understanding, to possess either more than they deserve,
+or more than they enjoy.
+
+We are either born with such dissimilitude of temper and inclination, or
+receive so many of our ideas and opinions from the state of life in
+which we are engaged, that the griefs and cares of one part of mankind
+seem to the other hypocrisy, folly, and affectation. Every class of
+society has its cant of lamentation, which is understood or regarded by
+none but themselves; and every part of life has its uneasiness, which
+those who do not feel them will not commiserate. An event which spreads
+distraction over half the commercial world, assembles the trading
+companies in councils and committees, and shakes the nerves of a
+thousand stockjobbers, is read by the landlord and the farmer with
+frigid indifference. An affair of love, which fills the young breast
+with incessant alternations of hope and fear, and steals away the night
+and day from every other pleasure or employment, is regarded by them
+whose passions time has extinguished, as an amusement, which can
+properly raise neither joy nor sorrow, and, though it may be suffered to
+fill the vacuity of an idle moment, should always give way to prudence
+or interest.
+
+He that never had any other desire than to fill a chest with money, or
+to add another manor to his estate, who never grieved but at a bad
+mortgage, or entered a company but to make a bargain, would be
+astonished to hear of beings known among the polite and gay by the
+denomination of wits. How would he gape with curiosity, or grin with
+contempt, at the mention of beings who have no wish but to speak what
+was never spoken before; who, if they happen to inherit wealth, often
+exhaust their patrimonies in treating those who will hear them talk; and
+if they are poor, neglect opportunities of improving their fortunes, for
+the pleasure of making others laugh? How slowly would he believe that
+there are men who would rather lose a legacy than the reputation of a
+distich; who think it less disgrace to want money than repartee; whom
+the vexation of having been foiled in a contest of raillery is sometimes
+sufficient to deprive of sleep; and who would esteem it a lighter evil
+to miss a profitable bargain by some accidental delay, than not to have
+thought of a smart reply till the time of producing it was past? How
+little would he suspect that this child of idleness and frolick enters
+every assembly with a beating bosom, like a litigant on the day of
+decision, and revolves the probability of applause with the anxiety of a
+conspirator, whose fate depends upon the next night; that at the hour of
+retirement he carries home, under a show of airy negligence, a heart
+lacerated with envy, or depressed with disappointment; and immures
+himself in his closet, that he may disencumber his memory at leisure,
+review the progress of the day, state with accuracy his loss or gain of
+reputation, and examine the causes of his failure or success?
+
+Yet more remote from common conceptions are the numerous and restless
+anxieties, by which female happiness is particularly disturbed. A
+solitary philosopher would imagine ladies born with an exemption from
+care and sorrow, lulled in perpetual quiet, and feasted with unmingled
+pleasure; for what can interrupt the content of those, upon whom one age
+has laboured after another to confer honours, and accumulate immunities;
+those to whom rudeness is infamy, and insult is cowardice; whose eye
+commands the brave, and whose smiles soften the severe; whom the sailor
+travels to adorn, the soldier bleeds to defend, and the poet wears out
+life to celebrate; who claim tribute from every art and science, and for
+whom all who approach them endeavour to multiply delights, without
+requiring from them any returns but willingness to be pleased?
+
+Surely, among these favourites of nature, thus unacquainted with toil
+and danger, felicity must have fixed her residence; they must know only
+the changes of more vivid or more gentle joys: their life must always
+move either to the slow or sprightly melody of the lyre of gladness;
+they can never assemble but to pleasure, or retire but to peace.
+
+Such would be the thoughts of every man who should hover at a distance
+round the world, and know it only by conjecture and speculation. But
+experience will soon discover how easily those are disgusted who have
+been made nice by plenty and tender by indulgence. He will soon see to
+how many dangers power is exposed which has no other guard than youth
+and beauty, and how easily that tranquillity is molested which can only
+be soothed with the songs of flattery. It is impossible to supply wants
+as fast as an idle imagination may be able to form them, or to remove
+all inconveniencies by which elegance refined into impatience may be
+offended. None are so hard to please, as those whom satiety of pleasure
+makes weary of themselves; nor any so readily provoked as those who have
+been always courted with an emulation of civility.
+
+There are, indeed, some strokes which the envy of fate aims immediately
+at the fair. The mistress of Catullus wept for her sparrow many
+centuries ago, and lapdogs will be sometimes sick in the present age.
+The most fashionable brocade is subject to stains; a pinner, the pride
+of Brussels, may be torn by a careless washer; a picture may drop from a
+watch; or the triumph of a new suit may be interrupted on the first day
+of its enjoyment, and all distinctions of dress unexpectedly obliterated
+by a general mourning.
+
+Such is the state of every age, every sex, and every condition: all have
+their cares, either from nature or from folly: and whoever therefore
+finds himself inclined to envy another, should remember that he knows
+not the real condition which he desires to obtain, but is certain that
+by indulging a vicious passion, he must lessen that happiness which he
+thinks already too sparingly bestowed.
+
+
+
+No. 129. TUESDAY, JUNE 11. 1751.
+
+ _--Nunc, O nunc, Daedale, dixit,
+ Materiam, qua sis ingeniosus, habes.
+ Possidet en terras, et possidet aequara, Minos:
+ Nec tellus nostrae, nec patet undo fugae.
+ Restat iter coelo: tentabimus ire.
+ Da veniam caepto, Jupiter alte, meo. OVID. Ar. Am. Lib. ii. 33_.
+
+ Now, Daedalus, behold, by fate assign'd,
+ A task proportion'd to thy mighty mind!
+ Unconquer'd bars on earth and sea withstand;
+ Thine, Minos, is the main, and thine the land.
+ The skies are open--let us try the skies:
+ Forgive, great Jove, the daring enterprize.
+
+Moralists, like other writers, instead of casting their eyes abroad in
+the living world, and endeavouring to form maxims of practice and new
+hints of theory, content their curiosity with that secondary knowledge
+which books afford, and think themselves entitled to reverence by a new
+arrangement of an ancient system, or new illustration of established
+principles[e]. The sage precepts of the first instructors of the world
+are transmitted from age to age with little variation, and echoed from
+one author to another, not perhaps without some loss of their original
+force at every repercussion.
+
+I know not whether any other reason than this idleness of imitation can
+be assigned for that uniform and constant partiality, by which some
+vices have hitherto escaped censure, and some virtues wanted
+recommendation; nor can I discover why else we have been warned only
+against part of our enemies, while the rest have been suffered to steal
+upon us without notice; why the heart has on one side been doubly
+fortified, and laid open on the other to the incursions of errour, and
+the ravages of vice.
+
+Among the favourite topicks of moral declamation, may be numbered the
+miscarriages of imprudent boldness, and the folly of attempts beyond our
+power. Every page of every philosopher is crowded with examples of
+temerity that sunk under burdens which she laid upon herself, and called
+out enemies to battle by whom she was destroyed.
+
+Their remarks are too just to be disputed, and too salutary to be
+rejected; but there is likewise some danger lest timorous prudence
+should be inculcated, till courage and enterprise are wholly repressed,
+and the mind congealed in perpetual inactivity by the fatal influence of
+frigorifick wisdom.
+
+Every man should, indeed, carefully compare his force with his
+undertaking; for though we ought not to live only for our own sakes, and
+though therefore danger or difficulty should not be avoided merely
+because we may expose ourselves to misery or disgrace; yet it may be
+justly required of us, not to throw away our lives upon inadequate and
+hopeless designs, since we might, by a just estimate of our abilities,
+become more useful to mankind.
+
+There is an irrational contempt of danger, which approaches nearly to
+the folly, if not the guilt of suicide; there is a ridiculous
+perseverance in impracticable schemes, which is justly punished with
+ignominy and reproach. But in the wide regions of probability, which are
+the proper province of prudence and election, there is always room to
+deviate on either side of rectitude without rushing against apparent
+absurdity; and according to the inclinations of nature, or the
+impressions of precept, the daring and the cautious may move in
+different directions without touching upon rashness or cowardice.
+
+That there is a middle path which it is every man's duty to find, and to
+keep, is unanimously confessed: but it is likewise acknowledged that
+this middle path is so narrow, that it cannot easily be discovered, and
+so little beaten, that there are no certain marks by which it can be
+followed: the care, therefore, of all those who conduct others has been,
+that whenever they decline into obliquities, they should tend towards
+the side of safety.
+
+It can, indeed, raise no wonder that temerity has been generally
+censured; for it is one of the vices with which few can be charged, and
+which therefore, great numbers are ready to condemn. It is the vice of
+noble and generous minds, the exuberance of magnanimity, and the
+ebullition of genius; and is therefore not regarded with much
+tenderness, because it never flatters us by that appearance of softness
+and imbecility which is commonly necessary to conciliate compassion. But
+if the same attention had been applied to the search of arguments
+against the folly of pre-supposing impossibilities, and anticipating
+frustration, I know not whether many would not have been roused to
+usefulness, who, having been taught to confound prudence with timidity,
+never ventured to excel, lest they should unfortunately fail.
+
+It is necessary to distinguish our own interest from that of others, and
+that distinction will perhaps assist us in fixing the just limits of
+caution and adventurousness. In an undertaking that involves the
+happiness or the safety of many, we have certainly no right to hazard
+more than is allowed by those who partake the danger; but where only
+ourselves can suffer by miscarriage, we are not confined within such
+narrow limits; and still less is the reproach of temerity, when numbers
+will receive advantage by success, and only one be incommoded by
+failure.
+
+Men are generally willing to hear precepts by which ease is favoured;
+and as no resentment is raised by general representations of human
+folly, even in those who are most eminently jealous of comparative
+reputation, we confess, without reluctance, that vain man is ignorant of
+his own weakness, and therefore frequently presumes to attempt what he
+can never accomplish; but it ought likewise to be remembered, that man
+is no less ignorant of his own powers, and might perhaps have
+accomplished a thousand designs, which the prejudices of cowardice
+restrained him from attempting.
+
+It is observed in the golden verses of Pythagoras, that "Power is never
+far from necessity." The vigour of the human mind quickly appears, when
+there is no longer any place for doubt and hesitation, when diffidence
+is absorbed in the sense of danger, or overwhelmed by some resistless
+passion. We then soon discover, that difficulty is, for the most part,
+the daughter of idleness, that the obstacles with which our way seemed
+to be obstructed were only phantoms, which we believed real, because we
+durst not advance to a close examination; and we learn that it is
+impossible to determine without experience how much constancy may
+endure, or perseverance perform.
+
+But whatever pleasure may be found in the review of distresses when art
+or courage has surmounted them, few will be persuaded to wish that they
+may be awakened by want, or terrour, to the conviction of their own
+abilities. Every one should therefore endeavour to invigorate himself by
+reason and reflection, and determine to exert the latent force that
+nature may have reposed in him, before the hour of exigence comes upon
+him, and compulsion shall torture him to diligence. It is below the
+dignity of a reasonable being to owe that strength to necessity which
+ought always to act at the call of choice, or to need any other motive
+to industry than the desire of performing his duty.
+
+Reflections that may drive away despair, cannot be wanting to him who
+considers how much life is now advanced beyond the state of naked,
+undisciplined, uninstructed nature. Whatever has been effected for
+convenience or elegance, while it was yet unknown, was believed
+impossible; and therefore would never have been attempted, had not some,
+more daring than the rest, adventured to bid defiance to prejudice and
+censure. Nor is there yet any reason to doubt that the same labour would
+be rewarded with the same success. There are qualities in the products
+of nature yet undiscovered, and combinations in the powers of art yet
+untried. It is the duty of every man to endeavour that something may be
+added by his industry to the hereditary aggregate of knowledge and
+happiness. To add much can indeed be the lot of few, but to add
+something, however little, every one may hope; and of every honest
+endeavour, it is certain, that, however unsuccessful, it will be at last
+rewarded.
+
+[Footnote e: Johnson gained _his_ knowledge from actual experience. He
+told Boswell that before he wrote the Rambler he had been running about
+the world more than almost any body. Boswell's Life of Johnson, vol. i.
+p. 196.; and vol. iii. pp. 20, 21.]
+
+
+
+No. 130. SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1751.
+
+ Non sic prata novo vere decentia
+ Æstatis calidtæ dispoliat vapor:
+ Sævit solstitio cum medius dies;--
+ Ut fulgor teneris qui radiat genis
+ Momento rapitur! nullaque non dies
+ Formosi spolium corporis abstulit.
+ Res est forma fugax: quis sapiens bono
+ Confidat fragili? SENECA, Hippol. act. ii. 764.
+
+ Not faster in the summer's ray
+ The spring's frail beauty fades away,
+ Than anguish and decay consume
+ The smiling virgin's rosy bloom.
+ Some beauty's snatch'd each day, each hour;
+ For beauty is a fleeting flow'r:
+ Then how can wisdom e'er confide
+ In beauty's momentary pride? ELPHINSTON
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+You have very lately observed that in the numerous subdivisions of the
+world, every class and order of mankind have joys and sorrows of their
+own; we all feel hourly pain and pleasure from events which pass
+unheeded before other eyes, but can scarcely communicate our perceptions
+to minds pre-occupied by different objects, any more than the delight of
+well-disposed colours or harmonious sounds can be imparted to such as
+want the senses of hearing or of sight.
+
+I am so strongly convinced of the justness of this remark, and have on
+so many occasions discovered with how little attention pride looks upon
+calamity of which she thinks herself not in danger, and indolence
+listens to complaint when it is not echoed by her own remembrance, that
+though I am about to lay the occurrences of my life before you, I
+question whether you will condescend to peruse my narrative, or, without
+the help of some female speculatists, to be able to understand it.
+
+I was born a beauty. From the dawn of reason I had my regard turned
+wholly upon myself, nor can recollect any thing earlier than praise and
+admiration. My mother, whose face had luckily advanced her to a
+condition above her birth, thought no evil so great as deformity. She
+had not the power of imagining any other defect than a cloudy
+complexion, or disproportionate features; and therefore contemplated me
+as an assemblage of all that could raise envy or desire, and predicted
+with triumphant fondness the extent of my conquests, and the number of
+my slaves.
+
+She never mentioned any of my young acquaintance before me, but to
+remark how much they fell below my perfection; how one would have had a
+fine face, but that her eyes were without lustre; how another struck the
+sight at a distance, but wanted my hair and teeth at a nearer view;
+another disgraced an elegant shape with a brown skin; some had short
+fingers, and others dimples in a wrong place.
+
+As she expected no happiness nor advantage but from beauty, she thought
+nothing but beauty worthy of her care; and her maternal kindness was
+chiefly exercised in contrivances to protect me from any accident that
+might deface me with a scar, or stain me with a freckle: she never
+thought me sufficiently shaded from the sun, or screened from the fire.
+She was severe or indulgent with no other intention than the
+preservation of my form; she excused me from work, lest I should learn
+to hang down my head, or harden my finger with a needle; she snatched
+away my book, because a young lady in the neighbourhood had made her
+eyes red with reading by a candle; but she would scarcely suffer me to
+eat, lest I should spoil my shape, nor to walk lest I should swell my
+ancle with a sprain. At night I was accurately surveyed from head to
+foot, lest I should have suffered any diminution of my charms in the
+adventures of the day; and was never permitted to sleep, till I had
+passed through the cosmetick discipline, part of which was a regular
+lustration performed with bean-flower water and May-dews; my hair was
+perfumed with variety of unguents, by some of which it was to be
+thickened, and by others to be curled. The softness of my hands was
+secured by medicated gloves, and my bosom rubbed with a pomade prepared
+by my mother, of virtue to discuss pimples, and clear discolorations.
+
+I was always called up early, because the morning air gives a freshness
+to the cheeks; but I was placed behind a curtain in my mother's chamber,
+because the neck is easily tanned by the rising sun. I was then dressed
+with a thousand precautions, and again heard my own praises, and
+triumphed in the compliments and prognostications of all that approached
+me.
+
+My mother was not so much prepossessed with an opinion of my natural
+excellencies as not to think some cultivation necessary to their
+completion. She took care that I should want none of the accomplishments
+included in female education, or considered necessary in fashionable
+life. I was looked upon in my ninth year as the chief ornament of the
+dancing-master's ball; and Mr. Ariet used to reproach his other scholars
+with my performances on the harpsichord. At twelve I was remarkable for
+playing my cards with great elegance of manner, and accuracy of
+judgment.
+
+At last the time came when my mother thought me perfect in my exercises,
+and qualified to display in the open world those accomplishments which
+had yet only been discovered in select parties, or domestick assemblies.
+Preparations were therefore made for my appearance on a publick night,
+which she considered as the most important and critical moment of my
+life. She cannot be charged with neglecting any means of recommendation,
+or leaving any thing to chance which prudence could ascertain. Every
+ornament was tried in every position, every friend was consulted about
+the colour of my dress, and the mantua-makers were harassed with
+directions and alterations.
+
+At last the night arrived from which my future life was to be reckoned.
+I was dressed and sent out to conquer, with a heart beating like that of
+an old knight-errant at his first sally. Scholars have told me of a
+Spartan matron, who, when she armed her son for battle, bade him bring
+back his shield, or be brought upon it. My venerable parent dismissed me
+to a field, in her opinion of equal glory, with a command to shew that I
+was her daughter, and not to return without a lover.
+
+I went, and was received like other pleasing novelties with a tumult of
+applause. Every man who valued himself upon the graces of his person, or
+the elegance of his address, crowded about me, and wit and splendour
+contended for my notice. I was delightfully fatigued with incessant
+civilities, which were made more pleasing by the apparent envy of those
+whom my presence exposed to neglect, and returned with an attendant
+equal in rank and wealth to my utmost wishes, and from this time stood
+in the first rank of beauty, was followed by gazers in the Mall,
+celebrated in the papers of the day, imitated by all who endeavoured to
+rise into fashion, and censured by those whom age or disappointment
+forced to retire.
+
+My mother, who pleased herself with the hopes of seeing my exaltation,
+dressed me with all the exuberance of finery; and when I represented to
+her that a fortune might be expected proportionate to my appearance,
+told me that she should scorn the reptile who could inquire after the
+fortune of a girl like me. She advised me to prosecute my victories, and
+time would certainly bring me a captive who might deserve the honour of
+being enchained for ever.
+
+My lovers were indeed so numerous, that I had no other care than that of
+determining to whom I should seem to give the preference. But having
+been steadily and industriously instructed to preserve my heart from any
+impressions which might hinder me from consulting my interest, I acted
+with less embarrassment, because my choice was regulated by principles
+more clear and certain than the caprice of approbation. When I had
+singled out one from the rest as more worthy of encouragement, I
+proceeded in my measures by the rules of art; and yet when the ardour of
+the first visits was spent, generally found a sudden declension of my
+influence; I felt in myself the want of some power to diversify
+amusement, and enliven conversation, and could not but suspect that my
+mind failed in performing the promises of my face. This opinion was soon
+confirmed by one of my lovers, who married Lavinia with less beauty and
+fortune than mine, because he thought a wife ought to have qualities
+which might make her amiable when her bloom was past.
+
+The vanity of my mother would not suffer her to discover any defect in
+one that had been formed by her instructions, and had all the excellence
+which she herself could boast. She told me that nothing so much hindered
+the advancement of women as literature and wit, which generally
+frightened away those that could make the best settlements, and drew
+about them a needy tribe of poets and philosophers, that filled their
+heads with wild notions of content, and contemplation, and virtuous
+obscurity. She therefore enjoined me to improve my minuet-step with a
+new French dancing-master, and wait the event of the next birth-night.
+
+I had now almost completed my nineteenth year: if my charms had lost any
+of their softness, it was more than compensated by additional dignity;
+and if the attractions of innocence were impaired, their place was
+supplied by the arts of allurement. I was therefore preparing for a new
+attack, without any abatement of my confidence, when, in the midst of my
+hopes and schemes, I was seized by that dreadful malady which has so
+often put a sudden end to the tyranny of beauty. I recovered my health
+after a long confinement; but when I looked again on that face which had
+been often flushed with transport at its own reflection, and saw all
+that I had learned to value, all that I had endeavoured to improve, all
+that had procured me honours or praises, irrecoverably destroyed, I sunk
+at once into melancholy and despondence. My pain was not much consoled
+or alleviated by my mother, who grieved that I had not lost my life
+together with my beauty; and declared, that she thought a young woman
+divested of her charms had nothing for which those who loved her could
+desire to save her from the grave.
+
+Having thus continued my relation to the period from which my life took
+a new course, I shall conclude it in another letter, if, by publishing
+this, you shew any regard for the correspondence of,
+
+Sir, &c.
+
+VICTORIA.
+
+
+
+No. 131. TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 1751.
+
+ _--Fatis accede, Deisque,
+ Et cole felices, miseros fuge. sidera terrae
+ Ut distant, ut flamma mari, sic utile recto_. LUCAN. Lib. viii. 486.
+[Transcriber's note: punctuation in original.]
+
+ Still follow where auspicious fates invite;
+ Caress the happy, and the wretched slight.
+ Sooner shall jarring elements unite,
+ Than truth with gain, than interest with right. F. LEWIS.
+
+There is scarcely any sentiment in which, amidst the innumerable
+varieties of inclination that nature or accident have scattered in the
+world, we find greater numbers concurring, than in the wish for riches;
+a wish, indeed, so prevalent that it may be considered as universal and
+transcendental, as the desire in which all other desires are included,
+and of which the various purposes which actuate mankind are only
+subordinate species and different modifications.
+
+Wealth is the general centre of inclination, the point to which all
+minds preserve an invariable tendency, and from which they afterwards
+diverge in numberless directions. Whatever is the remote or ultimate
+design, the immediate care is to be rich; and in whatever enjoyment we
+intend finally to acquiesce, we seldom consider it as attainable but by
+the means of money. Of wealth therefore all unanimously confess the
+value, nor is there any disagreement but about the use.
+
+No desire can be formed which riches do not assist to gratify. He that
+places his happiness in splendid equipage or numerous dependants, in
+refined praise or popular acclamations, in the accumulation of
+curiosities or the revels of luxury, in splendid edifices or wide
+plantations, must still, either by birth or acquisition, possess riches.
+They may be considered as the elemental principles of pleasure, which
+may be combined with endless diversity; as the essential and necessary
+substance, of which only the form is left to be adjusted by choice.
+
+The necessity of riches being thus apparent, it is not wonderful that
+almost every mind has been employed in endeavours to acquire them; that
+multitudes have vied in arts by which life is furnished with
+accommodations, and which therefore mankind may reasonably be expected
+to reward.
+
+It had, indeed, been happy, if this predominant appetite had operated
+only in concurrence with virtue, by influencing none but those who were
+zealous to deserve what they were eager to possess, and had abilities to
+improve their own fortunes by contributing to the ease or happiness of
+others. To have riches and to have merit would then have been the same,
+and success might reasonably have been considered as a proof of
+excellence.
+
+But we do not find that any of the wishes of men keep a stated
+proportion to their powers of attainment. Many envy and desire wealth,
+who can never procure it by honest industry or useful knowledge. They
+therefore turn their eyes about to examine what other methods can be
+found of gaining that which none, however impotent or worthless, will be
+content to want.
+
+A little inquiry will discover that there are nearer ways to profit than
+through the intricacies of art, or up the steeps of labour; what wisdom
+and virtue scarcely receive at the close of life, as the recompense of
+long toil and repeated efforts, is brought within the reach of subtilty
+and dishonesty by more expeditious and compendious measures: the wealth
+of credulity is an open prey to falsehood; and the possessions of
+ignorance and imbecility are easily stolen away by the conveyances of
+secret artifice, or seized by the gripe of unresisted violence.
+
+It is likewise not hard to discover that riches always procure
+protection for themselves, that they dazzle the eyes of inquiry, divert
+the celerity of pursuit, or appease the ferocity of vengeance. When any
+man is incontestably known to have large possessions, very few think it
+requisite to inquire by what practices they were obtained; the
+resentment of mankind rages only against the struggles of feeble and
+timorous corruption, but when it has surmounted the first opposition, it
+is afterwards supported by favour, and animated by applause.
+
+The prospect of gaining speedily what is ardently desired, and the
+certainty of obtaining by every accession of advantage an addition of
+security, have so far prevailed upon the passions of mankind, that the
+peace of life is destroyed by a general and incessant struggle for
+riches. It is observed of gold, by an old epigrammatist, that "To have
+it is to be in fear, and to want it is to be in sorrow." There is no
+condition which is not disquieted either with the care of gaining or of
+keeping money; and the race of man may be divided in a political
+estimate between those who are practising fraud, and those who are
+repelling it.
+
+If we consider the present state of the world, it will be found, that
+all confidence is lost among mankind, that no man ventures to act, where
+money can be endangered upon the faith of another. It is impossible to
+see the long scrolls in which every contract is included, with all their
+appendages of seals and attestation, without wondering at the depravity
+of those beings, who must be restrained from violation of promise by
+such formal and publick evidences, and precluded from equivocation and
+subterfuge by such punctilious minuteness. Among all the satires to
+which folly and wickedness have given occasion, none is equally severe
+with a bond or a settlement.
+
+Of the various arts by which riches may be obtained, the greater part
+are at the first view irreconcileable with the laws of virtue; some are
+openly flagitious, and practised not only in neglect, but in defiance of
+faith and justice; and the rest are on every side so entangled with
+dubious tendencies, and so beset with perpetual temptations, that very
+few, even of those who are not yet abandoned, are able to preserve their
+innocence, or can produce any other claim to pardon than that they
+deviated from the right less than others, and have sooner and more
+diligently endeavoured to return.
+
+One of the chief characteristicks of the golden age, of the age in which
+neither care nor danger had intruded on mankind, is the community of
+possessions: strife and fraud were totally excluded, and every turbulent
+passion was stilled by plenty and equality. Such were indeed happy
+times, but such times can return no more. Community of possession must
+include spontaneity of production; for what is obtained by labour will
+be of right the property of him by whose labour it is gained. And while
+a rightful claim to pleasure or to affluence must be procured either by
+slow industry or uncertain hazard, there will always be multitudes whom
+cowardice or impatience incite to more safe and more speedy methods, who
+strive to pluck the fruit without cultivating the tree, and to share the
+advantages of victory without partaking the danger of the battle. In
+later ages, the conviction of the danger to which virtue is exposed
+while the mind continues open to the influence of riches, has determined
+many to vows of perpetual poverty; they have suppressed desire by
+cutting off the possibility of gratification, and secured their peace by
+destroying the enemy whom they had no hope of reducing to quiet
+subjection. But, by debarring themselves from evil, they have rescinded
+many opportunities of good; they have too often sunk into inactivity and
+uselessness; and, though they have forborne to injure society, have not
+fully paid their contributions to its happiness.
+
+While riches are so necessary to present convenience, and so much more
+easily obtained by crimes than virtues, the mind can only be secured
+from yielding to the continual impulse of covetousness by the
+preponderation of unchangeable and eternal motives. Gold will turn the
+intellectual balance, when weighed only against reputation; but will be
+light and ineffectual when the opposite scale is charged with justice,
+veracity, and piety[f].
+
+
+
+No. 132. SATURDAY, JUNE 22, 1751.
+
+ --_Dociles imitandis
+ Turpibus ac pravis omnes sumus_.--JUV. Sat. xiv. 40.
+
+ The mind of mortals, in perverseness strong,
+ Imbibes with dire docility the wrong.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+MR. RAMBLER,
+
+I was bred a scholar, and after the usual course of education, found it
+necessary to employ for the support of life that learning which I had
+almost exhausted my little fortune in acquiring. The lucrative
+professions drew my regard with equal attraction; each presented ideas
+which excited my curiosity, and each imposed duties which terrified my
+apprehension.
+
+There is no temper more unpropitious to interest than desultory
+application and unlimited inquiry, by which the desires are held in a
+perpetual equipoise, and the mind fluctuates between different purposes
+without determination. I had books of every kind round me, among which I
+divided my time as caprice or accident directed. I often spent the first
+hours of the day, in considering to what study I should devote the rest,
+and at last snatched up any author that lay upon the table, or perhaps
+fled to a coffee-house for deliverance from the anxiety of irresolution,
+and the gloominess of solitude.
+
+Thus my little patrimony grew imperceptibly less, till I was roused from
+my literary slumber by a creditor, whose importunity obliged me to
+pacify him with so large a sum, that what remained was not sufficient to
+support me more than eight months. I hope you will not reproach me with
+avarice or cowardice, if I acknowledge that I now thought myself in
+danger of distress, and obliged to endeavour after some certain
+competence.
+
+There have been heroes of negligence, who have laid the price of their
+last acre in a drawer, and, without the least interruption of their
+tranquillity, or abatement of their expenses, taken out one piece after
+another, till there was no more remaining. But I was not born to such
+dignity of imprudence, or such exaltation above the cares and
+necessities of life; I therefore immediately engaged my friends to
+procure me a little employment, which might set me free from the dread
+of poverty, and afford me time to plan out some final scheme of lasting
+advantage.
+
+My friends were struck with honest solicitude, and immediately promised
+their endeavours for my extrication. They did not suffer their kindness
+to languish by delay, but prosecuted their inquiries with such success,
+that in less than a month I was perplexed with variety of offers and
+contrariety of prospects.
+
+I had however no time for long pauses of consideration; and therefore
+soon resolved to accept the office of instructing a young nobleman in
+the house of his father: I went to the seat at which the family then
+happened to reside, was received with great politeness, and invited to
+enter immediately on my charge. The terms offered were such as I should
+willingly have accepted, though my fortune had allowed me greater
+liberty of choice: the respect with which I was treated, flattered my
+vanity; and perhaps the splendour of the apartments, and the luxury of
+the table, were not wholly without their influence. I immediately
+complied with the proposals, and received the young lord into my care.
+
+Having no desire to gain more than I should truly deserve, I very
+diligently prosecuted my undertaking, and had the satisfaction of
+discovering in my pupil a flexible temper, a quick apprehension, and a
+retentive memory. I did not much doubt that my care would, in time,
+produce a wise and useful counsellor to the state, though my labours
+were somewhat obstructed by want of authority, and the necessity of
+complying with the freaks of negligence, and of waiting patiently for
+the lucky moment of voluntary attention. To a man whose imagination was
+filled with the dignity of knowledge, and to whom a studious life had
+made all the common amusements insipid and contemptible, it was not very
+easy to suppress his indignation, when he saw himself forsaken in the
+midst of his lecture, for an opportunity to catch an insect, and found
+his instructions debarred from access to the intellectual faculties, by
+the memory of a childish frolick, or the desire of a new play-thing.
+
+Those vexations would have recurred less frequently, had not his mamma,
+by entreating at one time that he should be excused from a task as a
+reward for some petty compliance, and withholding him from his book at
+another, to gratify herself or her visitants with his vivacity, shewn
+him that every thing was more pleasing and more important than
+knowledge, and that study was to be endured rather than chosen, and was
+only the business of those hours which pleasure left vacant, or
+discipline usurped.
+
+I thought it my duty to complain, in tender terms, of these frequent
+avocations; but was answered, that rank and fortune might reasonably
+hope for some indulgence; that the retardation of my pupil's progress
+would not be imputed to any negligence or inability of mine; and that
+with the success which satisfied every body else, I might surely satisfy
+myself. I had now done my duty, and without more remonstrances continued
+to inculcate my precepts whenever they could be heard, gained every day
+new influence, and found that by degrees my scholar began to feel the
+quick impulses of curiosity, and the honest ardour of studious ambition.
+
+At length it was resolved to pass a winter in London. The lady had too
+much fondness for her son to live five months without him, and too high
+an opinion of his wit and learning to refuse her vanity the
+gratification of exhibiting him to the publick. I remonstrated against
+too early an acquaintance with cards and company; but, with a soft
+contempt of my ignorance and pedantry, she said, that he had been
+already confined too long to solitary study, and it was now time to shew
+him the world; nothing was more a brand of meanness than bashful
+timidity; gay freedom and elegant assurance were only to be gained by
+mixed conversation, a frequent intercourse with strangers, and a timely
+introduction to splendid assemblies; and she had more than once
+observed, that his forwardness and complaisance began to desert him,
+that he was silent when he had not something of consequence to say,
+blushed whenever he happened to find himself mistaken, and hung down his
+head in the presence of the ladies, without the readiness of reply, and
+activity of officiousness, remarkable in young gentlemen that are bred
+in London.
+
+Again I found resistance hopeless, and again thought it proper to
+comply. We entered the coach, and in four days were placed in the gayest
+and most magnificent region of the town. My pupil, who had for several
+years lived at a remote seat, was immediately dazzled with a thousand
+beams of novelty and shew. His imagination was filled with the perpetual
+tumult of pleasure that passed before him, and it was impossible to
+allure him from the window, or to overpower by any charm of eloquence
+the rattle of coaches, and the sounds which echoed from the doors in the
+neighbourhood. In three days his attention, which he began to regain,
+was disturbed by a rich suit, in which he was equipped for the reception
+of company, and which, having been long accustomed to a plain dress, he
+could not at first survey without ecstacy.
+
+The arrival of the family was now formally notified; every hour of every
+day brought more intimate or more distant acquaintances to the door; and
+my pupil was indiscriminately introduced to all, that he might accustom
+himself to change of faces, and be rid with speed of his rustick
+diffidence. He soon endeared himself to his mother by the speedy
+acquisition or recovery of her darling qualities; his eyes sparkle at a
+numerous assembly, and his heart dances at the mention of a ball. He has
+at once caught the infection of high life, and has no other test of
+principles or actions than the quality of those to whom they are
+ascribed. He begins already to look down on me with superiority, and
+submits to one short lesson in a week, as an act of condescension rather
+than obedience; for he is of opinion, that no tutor is properly
+qualified who cannot speak French; and having formerly learned a few
+familiar phrases from his sister's governess, he is every day soliciting
+his mamma to procure him a foreign footman, that he may grow polite by
+his conversation. I am not yet insulted, but find myself likely to
+become soon a superfluous incumbrance, for my scholar has now no time
+for science, or for virtue; and the lady yesterday declared him so much
+the favourite of every company, that she was afraid he would not have an
+hour in the day to dance and fence.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+EUMATHES.
+
+[Footnote f: Johnson often conversed, as well as wrote, on riches. In
+his conversations on the subject, amidst his often indulged laxity of
+talk, there was ever a deep insight into the human heart. "All the
+arguments," he once with keen satire remarked, "which are brought to
+represent poverty as no evil, shew it to be evidently a great evil. You
+never find people _labouring_ to convince you that you may live happily
+upon a plentiful fortune. So you hear people talking how miserable a
+king must be, and yet they all wish to be in his place." _Boswell_ vol.
+i. p. 422.
+
+When Simonides was asked whether it were better to be wise or rich, he
+gave an answer in favour of wealth. "For," said he, "I always behold the
+wise lingering at the gates of the wealthy." Aristot. Rhet. ii. 18.]
+
+
+
+No. 133. TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 1751.
+
+ _Magna quidem, sacris quæ dat præcepta libellis
+ Victrix fortune sapientia. Dicimus autem
+ Hos quoque felices, qui ferre incommoda vitæ,
+ Nec jactare jugum, vita didicere magistra._ Juv. Sat. xiii. 19.
+
+ Let Stoicks ethicks' haughty rules advance
+ To combat fortune, and to conquer chance:
+ Yet happy those, though not so learn'd are thought,
+ Whom life instructs, who by experience taught,
+ For new to come from past misfortunes look,
+ Nor shake the yoke, which galls the more 'tis shook. CREECH.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+You have shewn, by the publication of my letter, that you think the
+life of Victoria not wholly unworthy of the notice of a philosopher: I
+shall therefore continue my narrative, without any apology for
+unimportance which you have dignified, or for inaccuracies which you are
+to correct.
+
+When my life appeared to be no longer in danger, and as much of my
+strength was recovered as enabled me to bear the agitation of a coach, I
+was placed at a lodging in a neighbouring village, to which my mother
+dismissed me with a faint embrace, having repeated her command not to
+expose my face too soon to the sun or wind, and told me that with care I
+might perhaps become tolerable again. The prospect of being tolerable
+had very little power to elevate the imagination of one who had so long
+been accustomed to praise and ecstacy; but it was some satisfaction to
+be separated from my mother, who was incessantly ringing the knell of
+departed beauty, and never entered my room without the whine of
+condolence, or the growl of anger. She often wandered over my face, as
+travellers over the ruins of a celebrated city, to note every place
+which had once been remarkable for a happy feature. She condescended to
+visit my retirement, but always left me more melancholy; for after a
+thousand trifling inquiries about my diet, and a minute examination of
+my looks, she generally concluded with a sigh, that I should never more
+be fit to be seen.
+
+At last I was permitted to return home, but found no great improvement
+of my condition; for I was imprisoned in my chamber as a criminal, whose
+appearance would disgrace my friends, and condemn me to be tortured into
+new beauty. Every experiment which the officiousness of folly could
+communicate, or the credulity of ignorance admit, was tried upon me.
+Sometimes I was covered with emollients, by which it was expected that
+all the scars would be filled, and my cheeks plumped up to their former
+smoothness; and sometimes I was punished with artificial excoriations,
+in hopes of gaining new graces with a new skin. The cosmetick science
+was exhausted upon me; but who can repair the ruins of nature? My mother
+was forced to give me rest at last, and abandon me to the fate of a
+fallen toast, whose fortune she considered as a hopeless game, no longer
+worthy of solicitude or attention.
+
+The condition of a young woman who has never thought or heard of any
+other excellence than beauty, and whom the sudden blast of disease
+wrinkles in her bloom, is indeed sufficiently calamitous. She is at once
+deprived of all that gave her eminence or power; of all that elated her
+pride, or animated her activity; all that filled her days with pleasure,
+and her nights with hope; all that gave gladness to the present hour, or
+brightened her prospects of futurity. It is perhaps not in the power of
+a man whose attention has been divided by diversity of pursuits, and who
+has not been accustomed to derive from others much of his happiness, to
+image to himself such helpless destitution, such dismal inanity. Every
+object of pleasing contemplation is at once snatched away, and the soul
+finds every receptacle of ideas empty, or filled only with the memory of
+joys that can return no more. All is gloomy privation, or impotent
+desire; the faculties of anticipation slumber in despondency, or the
+powers of pleasure mutiny for employment.
+
+I was so little able to find entertainment for myself, that I was forced
+in a short time to venture abroad as the solitary savage is driven by
+hunger from his cavern. I entered with all the humility of disgrace into
+assemblies, where I had lately sparkled with gaiety, and towered with
+triumph. I was not wholly without hope, that dejection had
+misrepresented me to myself, and that the remains of my former face
+might yet have some attraction and influence; but the first circle of
+visits convinced me, that my reign was at an end; that life and death
+were no longer in my hands; that I was no more to practise the glance of
+command, or the frown of prohibition; to receive the tribute of sighs
+and praises, or be soothed with the gentle murmurs of amorous timidity.
+My opinion was now unheard, and my proposals were unregarded; the
+narrowness of my knowledge, and the meanness of my sentiments, were
+easily discovered, when the eyes were no longer engaged against the
+judgment; and it was observed, by those who had formerly been charmed
+with my vivacious loquacity, that my understanding was impaired as well
+as my face, and that I was no longer qualified to fill a place in any
+company but a party at cards.
+
+It is scarcely to be imagined how soon the mind sinks to a level with
+the condition. I, who had long considered all who approached me as
+vassals condemned to regulate their pleasures by my eyes, and harass
+their inventions for my entertainment, was in less than three weeks
+reduced to receive a ticket with professions of obligation; to catch
+with eagerness at a compliment; and to watch with all the anxiousness of
+dependance, lest any little civility that was paid me should pass
+unacknowledged.
+
+Though the negligence of the men was not very pleasing when compared
+with vows and adoration, yet it was far more supportable than the
+insolence of my own sex. For the first ten months after my return into
+the world, I never entered a single house in which the memory of my
+downfall was not revived. At one place I was congratulated on my escape
+with life; at another I heard of the benefits of early inoculation; by
+some I have been told in express terms, that I am not yet without my
+charms; others have whispered at my entrance, This is the celebrated
+beauty. One told me of a wash that would smooth the skin; and another
+offered me her chair that I might not front the light. Some soothed me
+with the observation that none can tell how soon my case may be her own;
+and some thought it proper to receive me with mournful tenderness,
+formal condolence, and consolatory blandishments.
+
+Thus was I every day harassed with all the stratagems of well-bred
+malignity; yet insolence was more tolerable than solitude, and I
+therefore persisted to keep my time at the doors of my acquaintance,
+without gratifying them with any appearance of resentment or depression.
+I expected that their exultation would in time vapour away; that the joy
+of their superiority would end with its novelty; and that I should be
+suffered to glide along in my present form among the nameless multitude,
+whom nature never intended to excite envy or admiration, nor enabled to
+delight the eye or inflame the heart.
+
+This was naturally to be expected, and this I began to experience. But
+when I was no longer agitated by the perpetual ardour of resistance, and
+effort of perseverance, I found more sensibly the want of those
+entertainments which had formerly delighted me; the day rose upon me
+without an engagement; and the evening closed in its natural gloom,
+without summoning me to a concert or a ball. None had any care to find
+amusements for me, and I had no power of amusing myself. Idleness
+exposed me to melancholy, and life began to languish in motionless
+indifference.
+
+Misery and shame are nearly allied. It was not without many struggles
+that I prevailed on myself to confess my uneasiness to Euphemia, the
+only friend who had never pained me with comfort or with pity. I at last
+laid my calamities before her, rather to ease my heart, than receive
+assistance. "We must distinguish," said she, "my Victoria, those evils
+which are imposed by Providence, from those to which we ourselves give
+the power of hurting us. Of your calamity, a small part is the
+infliction of Heaven, the rest is little more than the corrosion of idle
+discontent. You have lost that which may indeed sometimes contribute to
+happiness, but to which happiness is by no means inseparably annexed.
+You have lost what the greater number of the human race never have
+possessed; what those on whom it is bestowed for the most part possess
+in vain; and what you, while it was yours, knew not how to use: you have
+only lost early what the laws of nature forbid you to keep long, and
+have lost it while your mind is yet flexible, and while you have time to
+substitute more valuable and more durable excellencies. Consider
+yourself, my Victoria, as a being born to know, to reason, and to act;
+rise at once from your dream of melancholy to wisdom and to piety; you
+will find that there are other charms than those of beauty, and other
+joys than the praise of fools."
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+VICTORIA.
+
+
+
+No. 134. SATURDAY, JUNE 29, 1751.
+
+ _Quis scit an adjiciant hodiernae crastina summae
+ Tempora Dii superi?_ HOR. Lib. iv. Ode vii. 16.
+
+ Who knows if Heav'n, with ever-bounteous pow'r,
+ Shall add to-morrow to the present hour? FRANCIS.
+
+I sat yesterday morning employed in deliberating on which, among the
+various subjects that occurred to my imagination, I should bestow the
+paper of to-day. After a short effort of meditation by which nothing was
+determined, I grew every moment more irresolute, my ideas wandered from
+the first intention, and I rather wished to think, than thought upon any
+settled subject; till at last I was awakened from this dream of study by
+a summons from the press; the time was now come for which I had been
+thus negligently purposing to provide, and, however dubious or sluggish,
+I was now necessitated to write.
+
+Though to a writer whose design is so comprehensive and miscellaneous,
+that he may accommodate himself with a topick from every scene of life,
+or view of nature, it is no great aggravation of his task to be obliged
+to a sudden composition; yet I could not forbear to reproach myself for
+having so long neglected what was unavoidably to be done, and of which
+every moment's idleness increased the difficulty. There was however some
+pleasure in reflecting that I, who had only trifled till diligence was
+necessary, might still congratulate myself upon my superiority to
+multitudes, who have trifled till diligence is vain; who can by no
+degree of activity or resolution recover the opportunities which have
+slipped away; and who are condemned by their own carelessness to
+hopeless calamity and barren sorrow.
+
+The folly of allowing ourselves to delay what we know cannot be finally
+escaped, is one of the general weaknesses, which, in spite of the
+instruction of moralists, and the remonstrances of reason, prevail to a
+greater or less degree in every mind; even they who most steadily
+withstand it, find it, if not the most violent, the most pertinacious of
+their passions, always renewing its attacks, and though often
+vanquished, never destroyed.
+
+It is indeed natural to have particular regard to the time present, and
+to be most solicitous for that which is by its nearness enabled to make
+the strongest impressions. When therefore any sharp pain is to be
+suffered, or any formidable danger to be incurred, we can scarcely
+exempt ourselves wholly from the seducements of imagination; we readily
+believe that another day will bring some support or advantage which we
+now want; and are easily persuaded, that the moment of necessity which
+we desire never to arrive, is at a great distance from us.
+
+Thus life is languished away in the gloom of anxiety, and consumed in
+collecting resolutions which the next morning dissipates; in forming
+purposes which we scarcely hope to keep, and reconciling ourselves to
+our own cowardice by excuses, which, while we admit them, we know to be
+absurd. Our firmness is by the continual contemplation of misery, hourly
+impaired; every submission to our fear enlarges its dominion; we not
+only waste that time in which the evil we dread might have been suffered
+and surmounted, but even where procrastination produces no absolute
+increase of our difficulties, make them less superable to ourselves by
+habitual terrours. When evils cannot be avoided, it is wise to contract
+the interval of expectation; to meet the mischiefs which will overtake
+us if we fly; and suffer only their real malignity, without the
+conflicts of doubt, and anguish of anticipation.
+
+To act is far easier than to suffer; yet we every day see the progress
+of life retarded by the _vis inertiae_, the mere repugnance to motion,
+and find multitudes repining at the want of that which nothing but
+idleness hinders them from enjoying. The case of Tantalus, in the region
+of poetick punishment, was somewhat to be pitied, because the fruits
+that hung about him retired from his hand; but what tenderness can be
+claimed by those who, though perhaps they suffer the pains of Tantalus,
+will never lift their hands for their own relief?
+
+There is nothing more common among this torpid generation than murmurs
+and complaints; murmurs at uneasiness which only vacancy and suspicion
+expose them to feel, and complaints of distresses which it is in their
+own power to remove. Laziness is commonly associated with timidity.
+Either fear originally prohibits endeavours by infusing despair of
+success; or the frequent failure of irresolute struggles, and the
+constant desire of avoiding labour, impress by degrees false terrours on
+the mind. But fear, whether natural or acquired, when once it has full
+possession of the fancy, never fails to employ it upon visions of
+calamity, such as, if they are not dissipated by useful employment, will
+soon overcast it with horrours, and embitter life not only with those
+miseries by which all earthly beings are really more or less tormented,
+but with those which do not yet exist, and which can only be discerned
+by the perspicacity of cowardice.
+
+Among all who sacrifice future advantage to present inclination,
+scarcely any gain so little as those that suffer themselves to freeze in
+idleness. Others are corrupted by some enjoyment of more or less power
+to gratify the passions; but to neglect our duties, merely to avoid the
+labour of performing them, a labour which is always punctually rewarded,
+is surely to sink under weak temptations. Idleness never can secure
+tranquillity; the call of reason and of conscience will pierce the
+closest pavilion of the sluggard, and though it may not have force to
+drive him from his down, will be loud enough to hinder him from sleep.
+Those moments which he cannot resolve to make useful, by devoting them
+to the great business of his being, will still be usurped by powers that
+will not leave them to his disposal; remorse and vexation will seize
+upon them, and forbid him to enjoy what he is so desirous to
+appropriate.
+
+There are other causes of inactivity incident to more active faculties
+and more acute discernment. He to whom many objects of pursuit arise at
+the same time, will frequently hesitate between different desires, till
+a rival has precluded him, or change his course as new attractions
+prevail, and harass himself without advancing. He who sees different
+ways to the same end, will, unless he watches carefully over his own
+conduct, lay out too much of his attention upon the comparison of
+probabilities, and the adjustment of expedients, and pause in the choice
+of his road till some accident intercepts his journey. He whose
+penetration extends to remote consequences, and who, whenever he applies
+his attention to any design, discovers new prospects of advantage, and
+possibilities of improvement, will not easily be persuaded that his
+project is ripe for execution; but will superadd one contrivance to
+another, endeavour to unite various purposes in one operation, multiply
+complications, and refine niceties, till he is entangled in his own
+scheme, and bewildered in the perplexity of various intentions. He that
+resolves to unite all the beauties of situation in a new purchase, must
+waste his life in roving to no purpose from province to province. He
+that hopes in the same house to obtain every convenience, may draw plans
+and study Palladio, but will never lay a stone. He will attempt a
+treatise on some important subject, and amass materials, consult
+authors, and study all the dependant and collateral parts of learning,
+but never conclude himself qualified to write. He that has abilities to
+conceive perfection, will not easily be content without it; and since
+perfection cannot be reached, will lose the opportunity of doing well in
+the vain hope of unattainable excellence.
+
+The certainty that life cannot be long, and the probability that it will
+be much shorter than nature allows, ought to awaken every man to the
+active prosecution of whatever he is desirous to perform. It is true,
+that no diligence can ascertain success; death may intercept the
+swiftest career; but he who is cut off in the execution of an honest
+undertaking, has at least the honour of falling in his rank, and has
+fought the battle though he missed the victory.
+
+
+
+No. 135. TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1751.
+
+ Coelum, non animum, mutant. HOR. Lib. i. Ep. xi. 27.
+
+ Place may be chang'd; but who can change his mind?
+
+It is impossible to take a view on any side, or observe any of the
+various classes that form the great community of the world, without
+discovering the influence of example; and admitting with new conviction
+the observation of Aristotle, that _man is an imitative being_. The
+greater, far the greater number, follow the track which others have
+beaten, without any curiosity after new discoveries, or ambition of
+trusting themselves to their own conduct. And, of those who break the
+ranks and disorder the uniformity of the march, most return in a short
+time from their deviation, and prefer the equal and steady satisfaction
+of security before the frolicks of caprice and the honours of adventure.
+
+In questions difficult or dangerous it is indeed natural to repose upon
+authority, and, when fear happens to predominate, upon the authority of
+those whom we do not in general think wiser than ourselves. Very few
+have abilities requisite for the discovery of abstruse truth; and of
+those few some want leisure, and some resolution. But it is not so easy
+to find the reason of the universal submission to precedent where every
+man might safely judge for himself; where no irreparable loss can be
+hazarded, nor any mischief of long continuance incurred. Vanity might be
+expected to operate where the more powerful passions are not awakened;
+the mere pleasure of acknowledging no superior might produce slight
+singularities, or the hope of gaining some new degree of happiness
+awaken the mind to invention or experiment.
+
+If in any case the shackles of prescription could be wholly shaken off,
+and the imagination left to act without control, on what occasion should
+it be expected, but in the selection of lawful pleasure? Pleasure, of
+which the essence is choice; which compulsion dissociates from every
+thing to which nature has united it; and which owes not only its vigour
+but its being to the smiles of liberty. Yet we see that the senses, as
+well as the reason, are regulated by credulity; and that most will feel,
+or say that they feel, the gratifications which others have taught them
+to expect.
+
+At this time of universal migration, when almost every one, considerable
+enough to attract regard, has retired, or is preparing with all the
+earnestness of distress to retire, into the country; when nothing is to
+be heard but the hopes of speedy departure, or the complaints of
+involuntary delay; I have often been tempted to inquire what happiness
+is to be gained, or what inconvenience to be avoided, by this stated
+recession? Of the birds of passage, some follow the summer and some the
+winter, because they live upon sustenance which only summer or winter
+can supply; but of the annual flight of human rovers it is much harder
+to assign the reason, because they do not appear either to find or seek
+any thing which is not equally afforded by the town and country.
+
+I believe that many of these fugitives may have heard of men whose
+continual wish was for the quiet of retirement, who watched every
+opportunity to steal away from observation, to forsake the crowd, and
+delight themselves with _the society of solitude_. There is indeed
+scarcely any writer who has not celebrated the happiness of rural
+privacy, and delighted himself and his reader with the melody of birds,
+the whisper of groves, and the murmur of rivulets; nor any man eminent
+for extent of capacity, or greatness of exploits, that has not left
+behind him some memorials of lonely wisdom, and silent dignity.
+
+But almost all absurdity of conduct arises from the imitation of those
+whom we cannot resemble. Those who thus testified their weariness of
+tumult and hurry, and hasted with so much eagerness to the leisure of
+retreat, were either men overwhelmed with the pressure of difficult
+employments, harassed with importunities, and distracted with
+multiplicity; or men wholly engrossed by speculative sciences, who
+having no other end of life but to learn and teach, found their searches
+interrupted by the common commerce of civility, and their reasonings
+disjointed by frequent interruptions. Such men might reasonably fly to
+that ease and convenience which their condition allowed them to find
+only in the country. The statesman who devoted the greater part of his
+time to the publick, was desirous of keeping the remainder in his own
+power. The general, ruffled with dangers, wearied with labours, and
+stunned with acclamations, gladly snatched an interval of silence and
+relaxation. The naturalist was unhappy where the works of Providence
+were not always before him. The reasoner could adjust his systems only
+where his mind was free from the intrusion of outward objects.
+
+Such examples of solitude very few of those who are now hastening from
+the town, have any pretensions to plead in their own justification,
+since they cannot pretend either weariness of labour, or desire of
+knowledge. They purpose nothing more than to quit one scene of idleness
+for another, and after having trifled in publick, to sleep in secrecy.
+The utmost that they can hope to gain is the change of ridiculousness to
+obscurity, and the privilege of having fewer witnesses to a life of
+folly. He who is not sufficiently important to be disturbed in his
+pursuits, but spends all his hours according to his own inclination, and
+has more hours than his mental faculties enable him to fill either with
+enjoyment or desires, can have nothing to demand of shades and valleys.
+As bravery is said to be a panoply, insignificancy is always a shelter.
+
+There are, however, pleasures and advantages in a rural situation, which
+are not confined to philosophers and heroes. The freshness of the air,
+the verdure of the woods, the paint of the meadows, and the unexhausted
+variety which summer scatters upon the earth, may easily give delight to
+an unlearned spectator. It is not necessary that he who looks with
+pleasure on the colours of a flower should study the principles of
+vegetation, or that the Ptolemaick and Copernican system should be
+compared before the light of the sun can gladden, or its warmth
+invigorate. Novelty is itself a source of gratification; and Milton
+justly observes, that to him who has been long pent up in cities, no
+rural object can be presented, which will not delight or refresh some of
+his senses.
+
+Yet even these easy pleasures are missed by the greater part of those
+who waste their summer in the country. Should any man pursue his
+acquaintances to their retreats, he would find few of them listening to
+Philomel, loitering in woods, or plucking daisies, catching the healthy
+gale of the morning, or watching the gentle coruscations of declining
+day. Some will be discovered at a window by the road side, rejoicing
+when a new cloud of dust gathers towards them, as at the approach of a
+momentary supply of conversation, and a short relief from the
+tediousness of unideal vacancy. Others are placed in the adjacent
+villages, where they look only upon houses as in the rest of the year,
+with no change of objects but what a remove to any new street in London
+might have given them. The same set of acquaintances still settle
+together, and the form of life is not otherwise diversified than by
+doing the same things in a different place. They pay and receive visits
+in the usual form, they frequent the walks in the morning, they deal
+cards at night, they attend to the same tattle, and dance with the same
+partners; nor can they, at their return to their former habitation,
+congratulate themselves on any other advantage, than that they have
+passed their time like others of the same rank; and have the same right
+to talk of the happiness and beauty of the country, of happiness which
+they never felt, and beauty which they never regarded.
+
+To be able to procure its own entertainments, and to subsist upon its
+own stock, is not the prerogative of every mind. There are indeed
+understandings so fertile and comprehensive, that they can always feed
+reflection with new supplies, and suffer nothing from the preclusion of
+adventitious amusements; as some cities have within their own walls
+enclosed ground enough to feed their inhabitants in a siege. But others
+live only from day to day, and must be constantly enabled, by foreign
+supplies, to keep out the encroachments of languor and stupidity. Such
+could not indeed be blamed for hovering within reach of their usual
+pleasure, more than any other animal for not quitting its native
+element, were not their faculties contracted by their own fault. But let
+not those who go into the country, merely because they dare not be left
+alone at home, boast their love of nature, or their qualifications for
+solitude; nor pretend that they receive instantaneous infusions of
+wisdom from the Dryads, and are able, when they leave smoke and noise
+behind, to act, or think, or reason for themselves.
+
+
+
+No. 136. SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Echthrus gar moi keimos, omos aidao pulusin,
+ Os ch eteron men keuthei eni phresin, allo de bazei.]
+ HOMER, [Greek: I'.] 313.
+
+ Who dares think one thing, and another tell,
+ My heart detests him as the gates of Hell. POPE.
+
+The regard which they whose abilities are employed in the works of
+imagination claim from the rest of mankind, arises in a great measure
+from their influence on futurity. Rank may be conferred by princes, and
+wealth bequeathed by misers or by robbers; but the honours of a lasting
+name, and the veneration of distant ages, only the sons of learning have
+the power of bestowing. While therefore it continues one of the
+characteristicks of rational nature to decline oblivion, authors never
+can be wholly overlooked in the search after happiness, nor become
+contemptible but by their own fault.
+
+The man who considers himself as constituted the ultimate judge of
+disputable characters, and entrusted with the distribution of the last
+terrestrial rewards of merit, ought to summon all his fortitude to the
+support of his integrity, and resolve to discharge an office of such
+dignity with the most vigilant caution and scrupulous justice. To
+deliver examples to posterity, and to regulate the opinion of future
+times, is no slight or trivial undertaking; nor is it easy to commit
+more atrocious treason against the great republick of humanity, than by
+falsifying its records and misguiding its decrees.
+
+To scatter praise or blame without regard to justice, is to destroy the
+distinction of good and evil. Many have no other test of actions than
+general opinion; and all are so far influenced by a sense of reputation,
+that they are often restrained by fear of reproach, and excited by hope
+of honour, when other principles have lost their power; nor can any
+species of prostitution promote general depravity more than that which
+destroys the force of praise, by shewing that it may be acquired without
+deserving it, and which, by setting free the active and ambitious from
+the dread of infamy, lets loose the rapacity of power, and weakens the
+only authority by which greatness is controlled.
+
+Praise, like gold and diamonds, owes its value only to its scarcity. It
+becomes cheap as it becomes vulgar, and will no longer raise
+expectation, or animate enterprise. It is therefore not only necessary,
+that wickedness, even when it is not safe to censure it, be denied
+applause, but that goodness be commended only in proportion to its
+degree; and that the garlands, due to the great benefactors of mankind,
+be not suffered to fade upon the brow of him who can boast only petty
+services and easy virtues.
+
+Had these maxims been universally received, how much would have been
+added to the task of dedication, the work on which all the power of
+modern wit has been exhausted. How few of these initial panegyricks had
+appeared, if the author had been obliged first to find a man of virtue,
+then to distinguish the distinct species and degree of his desert, and
+at last to pay him only the honours which he might justly claim. It is
+much easier to learn the name of the last man whom chance has exalted to
+wealth and power, to obtain by the intervention of some of his
+domesticks the privilege of addressing him, or, in confidence of the
+general acceptance of flattery, to venture on an address without any
+previous solicitation; and after having heaped upon him all the virtues
+to which philosophy had assigned a name, inform him how much more might
+be truly said, did not the fear of giving pain to his modesty repress
+the raptures of wonder and the zeal of veneration.
+
+Nothing has so much degraded literature from its natural rank, as the
+practice of indecent and promiscuous dedication; for what credit can he
+expect who professes himself the hireling of vanity, however profligate,
+and without shame or scruple, celebrates the worthless, dignifies the
+mean, and gives to the corrupt, licentious, and oppressive, the
+ornaments which ought only to add grace to truth, and loveliness to
+innocence? Every other kind of adulation, however shameful, however
+mischievous, is less detestable than the crime of counterfeiting
+characters, and fixing the stamp of literary sanction upon the dross and
+refuse of the world.
+
+Yet I would not overwhelm the authors with the whole load of infamy, of
+which part, perhaps the greater part, ought to fall upon their patrons.
+If he that hires a bravo, partakes the guilt of murder, why should he
+who bribes a flatterer, hope to be exempted from the shame of falsehood?
+The unhappy dedicator is seldom without some motives which obstruct,
+though not destroy, the liberty of choice; he is oppressed by miseries
+which he hopes to relieve, or inflamed by ambition which he expects to
+gratify. But the patron has no incitements equally violent; he can
+receive only a short gratification, with which nothing but stupidity
+could dispose him to be pleased. The real satisfaction which praise can
+afford is by repeating aloud the whispers of conscience, and by shewing
+us that we have not endeavoured to deserve well in vain. Every other
+encomium is, to an intelligent mind, satire and reproach; the
+celebration of those virtues which we feel ourselves to want, can only
+impress a quicker sense of our own defects, and shew that we have not
+yet satisfied the expectations of the world, by forcing us to observe
+how much fiction must contribute to the completion of our character.
+
+Yet sometimes the patron may claim indulgence; for it does not always
+happen, that the encomiast has been much encouraged to his attempt. Many
+a hapless author, when his book, and perhaps his dedication, was ready
+for the press, has waited long before any one would pay the price of
+prostitution, or consent to hear the praises destined to insure his name
+against the casualties of time; and many a complaint has been vented
+against the decline of learning, and neglect of genius, when either
+parsimonious prudence has declined expense, or honest indignation
+rejected falsehood. But if at last, after long inquiry and innumerable
+disappointments, he find a lord willing to hear of his own eloquence and
+taste, a statesman desirous of knowing how a friendly historian will
+represent his conduct, or a lady delighted to leave to the world some
+memorial of her wit and beauty, such weakness cannot be censured as an
+instance of enormous depravity. The wisest man may, by a diligent
+solicitor, be surprised in the hour of weakness, and persuaded to solace
+vexation, or invigorate hope, with the musick of flattery.
+
+To censure all dedications as adulatory and servile, would discover
+rather envy than justice. Praise is the tribute of merit, and he that
+has incontestably distinguished himself by any publick performance, has
+a right to all the honours which the publick can bestow. To men thus
+raised above the rest of the community, there is no need that the book
+or its author should have any particular relation; that the patron is
+known to deserve respect, is sufficient to vindicate him that pays it.
+To the same regard from particular persons, private virtue and less
+conspicuous excellence may be sometimes entitled. An author may with
+great propriety inscribe his work to him by whose encouragement it was
+undertaken, or by whose liberality he has been enabled to prosecute it,
+and he may justly rejoice in his own fortitude that dares to rescue
+merit from obscurity.
+
+ _Acribus exemplis videor te claudere: misce
+ Ergo aliquid nostris de moribus.--_
+
+ Thus much I will indulge thee for thy ease,
+ And mingle something of our times to please. Dryden, jun.
+
+I know not whether greater relaxation may not he indulged, and whether
+hope as well as gratitude may not unblamably produce a dedication; but
+let the writer who pours out his praises only to propitiate power, or
+attract the attention of greatness, be cautious lest his desire betray
+him to exuberant eulogies. We are naturally more apt to please ourselves
+with the future than the past, and while we luxuriate in expectation,
+may be easily persuaded to purchase what we yet rate, only by
+imagination, at a higher price than experience will warrant.
+
+But no private views of personal regard can discharge any man from his
+general obligations to virtue and to truth. It may happen in the various
+combinations of life, that a good man may receive favours from one, who,
+notwithstanding his accidental beneficence, cannot be justly proposed to
+the imitation of others, and whom therefore he must find some other way
+of rewarding than by public celebrations. Self-love has indeed many
+powers of seducement; but it surely ought not to exalt any individual to
+equality with the collective body of mankind, or persuade him that a
+benefit conferred on him is equivalent to every other virtue. Yet many,
+upon false principles of gratitude, have ventured to extol wretches,
+whom all but their dependents numbered among the reproaches of the
+species, and whom they would likewise have beheld with the same scorn,
+had they not been hired to dishonest approbation.
+
+To encourage merit with praise is the great business of literature; but
+praise must lose its influence, by unjust or negligent distribution; and
+he that impairs its value may be charged with misapplication of the
+power that genius puts into his hands, and with squandering on guilt the
+recompense of virtue.
+
+
+
+No. 137. TUESDAY, JULY 9, 1751.
+
+ _Dum vitant stulti vitia, in contraria currunt_.
+ Hor. Lib. i. Sat. ii. 24.
+
+ --Whilst fools one vice condemn,
+ They run into the opposite extreme. CREECH.
+
+That wonder is the effect of ignorance, has been often observed. The
+awful stillness of attention, with which the mind is overspread at the
+first view of an unexpected effect, ceases when we have leisure to
+disentangle complications and investigate causes. Wonder is a pause of
+reason, a sudden cessation of the mental progress, which lasts only
+while the understanding is fixed upon some single idea, and is at an end
+when it recovers force enough to divide the object into its parts, or
+mark the intermediate gradations from the first agent to the last
+consequence.
+
+It may be remarked with equal truth, that ignorance is often the effect
+of wonder. It is common for those who have never accustomed themselves
+to the labour of inquiry, nor invigorated their confidence by conquests
+over difficulty, to sleep in the gloomy quiescence of astonishment,
+without any effort to animate inquiry, or dispel obscurity. What they
+cannot immediately conceive, they consider as too high to be reached, or
+too extensive to be comprehended; they therefore content themselves with
+the gaze of folly, forbear to attempt what they have no hopes of
+performing, and resign the pleasure of rational contemplation to more
+pertinacious study, or more active faculties.
+
+Among the productions of mechanick art, many are of a form so different
+from that of their first materials, and many consist of parts so
+numerous and so nicely adapted to each other, that it is not possible to
+view them without amazement. But when we enter the shops of artificers,
+observe the various tools by which every operation is facilitated, and
+trace the progress of a manufacture through the different hands, that,
+in succession to each other, contribute to its perfection, we soon
+discover that every single man has an easy task, and that the extremes,
+however remote, of natural rudeness and artificial elegance, are joined
+by a regular concatenation of effects, of which every one is introduced
+by that which precedes it, and equally introduces that which is to
+follow.
+
+The same is the state of intellectual and manual performances. Long
+calculations or complex diagrams affright the timorous and unexperienced
+from a second view; but if we have skill sufficient to analyze them into
+simple principles, it will be discovered that our fear was groundless.
+_Divide and conquer_, is a principle equally just in science as in
+policy. Complication is a species of confederacy, which, while it
+continues united, bids defiance to the most active and vigorous
+intellect; but of which every member is separately weak, and which may
+therefore be quickly subdued, if it can once be broken.
+
+The chief art of learning, as Locke has observed, is to attempt but
+little at a time. The widest excursions of the mind are made by short
+flights frequently repeated; the most lofty fabricks of science are
+formed by the continued accumulation of single propositions.
+
+It often happens, whatever be the cause, that impatience of labour, or
+dread of miscarriage, seizes those who are most distinguished for
+quickness of apprehension; and that they who might with greatest reason
+promise themselves victory, are least willing to hazard the encounter.
+This diffidence, where the attention is not laid asleep by laziness, or
+dissipated by pleasures, can arise only from confused and general views,
+such as negligence snatches in haste, or from the disappointment of the
+first hopes formed by arrogance without reflection. To expect that the
+intricacies of science will be pierced by a careless glance, or the
+eminences of fame ascended without labour, is to expect a particular
+privilege, a power denied to the rest of mankind; but to suppose that
+the maze is inscrutable to diligence, or the heights inaccessible to
+perseverance, is to submit tamely to the tyranny of fancy, and enchain
+the mind in voluntary shackles.
+
+It is the proper ambition of the heroes in literature to enlarge the
+boundaries of knowledge by discovering and conquering new regions of the
+intellectual world. To the success of such undertakings perhaps some
+degree of fortuitous happiness is necessary, which no man can promise or
+procure to himself; and therefore doubt and irresolution may be forgiven
+in him that ventures into the unexplored abysses of truth, and attempts
+to find his way through the fluctuations of uncertainty, and the
+conflicts of contradiction. But when nothing more is required, than to
+pursue a path already beaten, and to trample obstacles which others have
+demolished, why should any man so much distrust his own intellect as to
+imagine himself unequal to the attempt?
+
+It were to be wished that they who devote their lives to study would at
+once believe nothing too great for their attainment, and consider
+nothing as too little for their regard; that they would extend their
+notice alike to science and to life, and unite some knowledge of the
+present world to their acquaintance with past ages and remote events.
+
+Nothing has so much exposed men of learning to contempt and ridicule, as
+their ignorance of things which are known to all but themselves. Those
+who have been taught to consider the institutions of the schools, as
+giving the last perfection to human abilities, are surprised to see men
+wrinkled with study, yet wanting to be instructed in the minute
+circumstances of propriety, or the necessary forms of daily transaction;
+and quickly shake off their reverence for modes of education, which they
+find to produce no ability above the rest of mankind.
+
+"Books," says Bacon, "can never teach the use of books." The student
+must learn by commerce with mankind to reduce his speculations to
+practice, and accommodate his knowledge to the purposes of life.
+
+It is too common for those who have been bred to scholastick
+professions, and passed much of their time in academies where nothing
+but learning confers honours, to disregard every other qualification,
+and to imagine that they shall find mankind ready to pay homage to their
+knowledge, and to crowd about them for instruction. They therefore step
+out from their cells into the open world with all the confidence of
+authority and dignity of importance; they look round about them at once
+with ignorance and scorn on a race of beings to whom they are equally
+unknown and equally contemptible, but whose manners they must imitate,
+and with whose opinions they must comply, if they desire to pass their
+time happily among them.
+
+To lessen that disdain with which scholars are inclined to look on the
+common business of the world, and the unwillingness with which they
+condescend to learn what is not to be found in any system of philosophy,
+it may be necessary to consider that though admiration is excited by
+abstruse researches and remote discoveries, yet pleasure is not given,
+nor affection conciliated, but by softer accomplishments, and qualities
+more easily communicable to those about us. He that can only converse
+upon questions, about which only a small part of mankind has knowledge
+sufficient to make them curious, must lose his days in unsocial silence,
+and live in the crowd of life without a companion. He that can only be
+useful on great occasions, may die without exerting his abilities, and
+stand a helpless spectator of a thousand vexations which fret away
+happiness, and which nothing is required to remove but a little
+dexterity of conduct and readiness of expedients.
+
+No degree of knowledge attainable by man is able to set him above the
+want of hourly assistance, or to extinguish the desire of fond
+endearments, and tender officiousness; and therefore, no one should
+think it unnecessary to learn those arts by which friendship may be
+gained. Kindness is preserved by a constant reciprocation of benefits or
+interchange of pleasures; but such benefits only can be bestowed, as
+others are capable to receive, and such pleasures only imparted, as
+others are qualified to enjoy.
+
+By this descent from the pinnacles of art no honour will be lost; for
+the condescensions of learning are always overpaid by gratitude. An
+elevated genius employed in little things, appears, to use the simile of
+Longinus, like the sun in his evening declination: he remits his
+splendour but retains his magnitude, and pleases more though he dazzles
+less.
+
+
+
+No. 138. SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1751.
+
+ _O tantum libeat mecum tibi sordida rura,
+ Atque humiles habitare casas, et figere cervos_. VIRG. EC. ii 28.
+
+ With me retire, and leave the pomp of courts
+ For humble cottages and rural sports.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Though the contempt with which you have treated the annual migrations of
+the gay and busy part of mankind is justified by daily observation;
+since most of those who leave the town, neither vary their
+entertainments nor enlarge their notions; yet I suppose you do not
+intend to represent the practice itself as ridiculous, or to declare
+that he whose condition puts the distribution of his time into his own
+power may not properly divide it between the town and country.
+
+That the country, and only the country, displays the inexhaustible
+varieties of nature, and supplies the philosophical mind with matter for
+admiration and inquiry, never was denied; but my curiosity is very
+little attracted by the colour of a flower, the anatomy of an insect, or
+the structure of a nest; I am generally employed upon human manners, and
+therefore fill up the months of rural leisure with remarks on those who
+live within the circle of my notice. If writers would more frequently
+visit those regions of negligence and liberty, they might diversify
+their representations, and multiply their images, for in the country are
+original characters chiefly to be found. In cities, and yet more in
+courts, the minute discriminations which distinguish one from another
+are for the most part effaced, the peculiarities of temper and opinion
+are gradually worn away by promiscuous converse, as angular bodies and
+uneven surfaces lose their points and asperities by frequent attrition
+against one another, and approach by degrees to uniform rotundity. The
+prevalence of fashion, the influence of example, the desire of applause,
+and the dread of censure, obstruct the natural tendencies of the mind,
+and check the fancy in its first efforts to break forth into experiments
+of caprice.
+
+Few inclinations are so strong as to grow up into habits, when they must
+struggle with the constant opposition of settled forms and established
+customs. But in the country every man is a separate and independent
+being: solitude flatters irregularity with hopes of secrecy; and wealth,
+removed from the mortification of comparison, and the awe of equality,
+swells into contemptuous confidence, and sets blame and laughter at
+defiance; the impulses of nature act unrestrained, and the disposition
+dares to shew itself in its true form, without any disguise of
+hypocrisy, or decorations of elegance. Every one indulges the full
+enjoyment of his own choice, and talks and lives with no other view than
+to please himself, without inquiring how far he deviates from the
+general practice, or considering others as entitled to any account of
+his sentiments or actions. If he builds or demolishes, opens or
+encloses, deluges or drains, it is not his care what may be the opinion
+of those who are skilled in perspective or architecture, it is
+sufficient that he has no landlord to controul him, and that none has
+any right to examine in what projects the lord of the manour spends his
+own money on his own grounds.
+
+For this reason it is not very common to want subjects for rural
+conversation. Almost every man is daily doing something which produces
+merriment, wonder, or resentment, among his neighbours. This utter
+exemption from restraint leaves every anomalous quality to operate in
+its full extent, and suffers the natural character to diffuse itself to
+every part of life. The pride which, under the check of publick
+observation, would have been only vented among servants and domesticks,
+becomes in a country baronet the torment of a province, and instead of
+terminating in the destruction of China-ware and glasses, ruins tenants,
+dispossesses cottagers, and harasses villages with actions of trespass
+and bills of indictment.
+
+It frequently happens that, even without violent passions, or enormous
+corruption, the freedom and laxity of a rustick life produces remarkable
+particularities of conduct or manner. In the province where I now
+reside, we have one lady eminent for wearing a gown always of the same
+cut and colour; another for shaking hands with those that visit her; and
+a third for unshaken resolution never to let tea or coffee enter her
+house.
+
+But of all the female characters which this place affords, I have found
+none so worthy of attention as that of Mrs. Busy, a widow, who lost her
+husband in her thirtieth year, and has since passed her time at the
+manour-house in the government of her children, and the management of
+the estate.
+
+Mrs. Busy was married at eighteen from a boarding-school, where she had
+passed her time like other young ladies, in needle-work, with a few
+intervals of dancing and reading. When she became a bride she spent one
+winter with her husband in town, where, having no idea of any
+conversation beyond the formalities of a visit, she found nothing to
+engage her passions: and when she had been one night at court, and two
+at an opera, and seen the Monument, the Tombs, and the Tower, she
+concluded that London had nothing more to shew, and wondered that when
+women had once seen the world, they could not be content to stay at
+home. She therefore went willingly to the ancient seat, and for some
+years studied housewifery under Mr. Busy's mother, with so much
+assiduity, that the old lady, when she died, bequeathed her a
+caudle-cup, a soup-dish, two beakers, and a chest of table-linen spun
+by herself.
+
+Mr. Busy, finding the economical qualities of his lady, resigned his
+affairs wholly into her hands, and devoted his life to his pointers and
+his hounds. He never visited his estates but to destroy the partridges
+or foxes; and often committed such devastations in the rage of pleasure,
+that some of his tenants refused to hold their lands at the usual rent.
+Their landlady persuaded them to be satisfied, and entreated her husband
+to dismiss his dogs, with many exact calculations of the ale drunk by
+his companions, and corn consumed by the horses, and remonstrances
+against the insolence of the huntsman, and the frauds of the groom. The
+huntsman was too necessary to his happiness to be discarded; and he had
+still continued to ravage his own estate, had he not caught a cold and a
+fever by shooting mallards in the fens. His fever was followed by a
+consumption, which in a few months brought him to the grave.
+
+Mrs. Busy was too much an economist to feel either joy or sorrow at his
+death. She received the compliments and consolations of her neighbours
+in a dark room, out of which she stole privately every night and morning
+to see the cows milked; and after a few days declared that she thought a
+widow might employ herself better than in nursing grief; and that, for
+her part, she was resolved that the fortunes of her children should not
+be impaired by her neglect.
+
+She therefore immediately applied herself to the reformation of abuses.
+She gave away the dogs, discharged the servants of the kennel and
+stable, and sent the horses to the next fair, but rated at so high a
+price that they returned unsold. She was resolved to have nothing idle
+about her, and ordered them to be employed in common drudgery. They lost
+their sleekness and grace, and were soon purchased at half the value.
+
+She soon disencumbered herself from her weeds, and put on a riding-hood,
+a coarse apron, and short petticoats, and has turned a large manour into
+a farm, of which she takes the management wholly upon herself. She rises
+before the sun to order the horses to their gears, and sees them well
+rubbed down at their return from work; she attends the dairy morning and
+evening, and watches when a calf falls that it may be carefully nursed;
+she walks out among the sheep at noon, counts the lambs, and observes
+the fences, and, where she finds a gap, stops it with a bush till it can
+be better mended. In harvest she rides a-field in the waggon, and is
+very liberal of her ale from a wooden bottle. At her leisure hours she
+looks goose eggs, airs the wool-room, and turns the cheese.
+
+When respect or curiosity brings visitants to her house, she entertains
+them with prognosticks of a scarcity of wheat, or a rot among the sheep,
+and always thinks herself privileged to dismiss them, when she is to see
+the hogs fed, or to count her poultry on the roost.
+
+The only things neglected about her are her children, whom she has
+taught nothing but the lowest household duties. In my last visit I met
+Miss Busy carrying grains to a sick cow, and was entertained with the
+accomplishments of her eldest son, a youth of such early maturity, that
+though he is only sixteen, she can trust him to sell corn in the market.
+Her younger daughter, who is eminent for her beauty, though somewhat
+tanned in making hay, was busy in pouring out ale to the ploughmen, that
+every one might have an equal share.
+
+I could not but look with pity on this young family, doomed by the
+absurd prudence of their mother to ignorance and meanness: but when I
+recommended a more elegant education, was answered, that she never saw
+bookish or finical people grow rich, and that she was good for nothing
+herself till she had forgotten the nicety of the boarding-school.
+
+I am, Yours, &c.
+
+BUCOLUS.
+
+
+
+No. 139. TUESDAY, JULY 16, 1751
+
+ --_Sit quod vis simplex duntanat et unum_. Hor. Art. Poet. 23.
+
+ Let ev'ry piece be simple and be one.
+
+It is required by Aristotle to the perfection of a tragedy, and is
+equally necessary to every other species of regular composition, that it
+should have a beginning, a middle, and an end. "The beginning," says he,
+"is that which hath nothing necessarily previous, but to which that
+which follows is naturally consequent; the end, on the contrary, is that
+which by necessity, or, at least, according to the common course of
+things, succeeds something else, but which implies nothing consequent to
+itself; the middle is connected on one side to something that naturally
+goes before, and on the other to something that naturally follows it."
+
+Such is the rule laid down by this great critick, for the disposition of
+the different parts of a well-constituted fable. It must begin where it
+may be made intelligible without introduction; and end where the mind is
+left in repose, without expectation of any further event. The
+intermediate passages must join the last effect to the first cause, by a
+regular and unbroken concatenation; nothing must be, therefore,
+inserted, which does not apparently arise from something foregoing, and
+properly make way for something that succeeds it.
+
+This precept is to be understood in its rigour only with respect to
+great and essential events, and cannot be extended in the same force to
+minuter circumstances and arbitrary decorations, which yet are more
+happy, as they contribute more to the main design; for it is always a
+proof of extensive thought and accurate circumspection, to promote
+various purposes by the same act; and the idea of an ornament admits
+use, though it seems to exclude necessity.
+
+Whoever purposes, as it is expressed by Milton, _to build the lofty
+rhyme_, must acquaint himself with this law of poetical architecture,
+and take care that his edifice be solid as well as beautiful; that
+nothing stand single or independent, so as that it may be taken away
+without injuring the rest; but that, from the foundation to the
+pinnacles, one part rest firm upon another.
+
+The regular and consequential distribution is among common authors
+frequently neglected; but the failures of those, whose example can have
+no influence, may be safely overlooked, nor is it of much use to recall
+obscure and unguarded names to memory for the sake of sporting with
+their infamy. But if there is any writer whose genius can embellish
+impropriety, and whose authority can make errour venerable, his works
+are the proper objects of critical inquisition. To expunge faults where
+there are no excellencies is a task equally useless with that of the
+chymist, who employs the arts of separation and refinement upon ore in
+which no precious metal is contained to reward his operations.
+
+The tragedy of Samson Agonistes has been celebrated as the second work
+of the great author of Paradise Lost, and opposed, with all the
+confidence of triumph, to the dramatick performances of other nations.
+It contains, indeed, just sentiments, maxims of wisdom, and oracles of
+piety, and many passages written with the ancient spirit of choral
+poetry, in which there is a just and pleasing mixture of Seneca's moral
+declamation, with the wild enthusiasm of the Greek writers. It is,
+therefore, worthy of examination, whether a performance thus illuminated
+with genius, and enriched with learning, is composed according to the
+indispensable laws of Aristotelian criticism: and, omitting, at present,
+all other considerations, whether it exhibits a beginning, a middle, and
+an end.
+
+The beginning is undoubtedly beautiful and proper, opening with a
+graceful abruptness, and proceeding naturally to a mournful recital of
+facts necessary to be known:
+
+ _Samson_. A little onward lend thy guiding hand
+ To these dark steps, a little further on;
+ For yonder bank hath choice of sun and shade:
+ There I am wont to sit, when any chance
+ Relieves me from my task of servile toil,
+ Daily in the common prison else enjoin'd me.--
+ O, wherefore was my birth from Heav'n foretold
+ Twice by an Angel?--
+ Why was my breeding order'd and prescrib'd,
+ As of a person separate to God,
+ Design'd for great exploits; if I must die
+ Betray'd, captiv'd, and both my eyes put out?--
+ Whom have I to complain of but myself?
+ Who this high gift of strength committed to me,
+ In what part lodg'd, how easily bereft me,
+ Under the seal of silence could not keep:
+ But weakly to a woman must reveal it.
+
+His soliloquy is interrupted by a chorus or company of men of his own
+tribe, who condole his miseries, extenuate his fault, and conclude with
+a solemn vindication of divine justice. So that at the conclusion of the
+first act there is no design laid, no discovery made, nor any
+disposition formed towards the consequent event.
+
+In the second act, Manoah, the father of Samson, comes to seek his son,
+and, being shewn him by the chorus, breaks out into lamentations of his
+misery, and comparisons of his present with his former state,
+representing to him the ignominy which his religion suffers, by the
+festival this day celebrated in honour of Dagon, to whom the idolaters
+ascribed his overthrow.
+
+ --Thou bear'st
+ Enough, and more, the burthen of that fault;
+ Bitterly hast thou paid, and still art paying
+ That rigid score. A worse thing yet remains,
+ This day the Philistines a popular feast
+ Here celebrate in Gaza; and proclaim
+ Great pomp, and sacrifice, and praises loud
+ To Dagon, as their God who hath deliver'd
+ Thee, Samson, bound and blind, into their hands,
+ Them out of thine, who slew'st them many a slain.
+
+Samson, touched with this reproach, makes a reply equally penitential
+and pious, which his father considers as the effusion of prophetick
+confidence:
+
+ _Samson_.--He, be sure,
+ Will not connive, or linger, thus provok'd,
+ But will arise and his great name assert:
+ Dagon must stoop, and shall ere long receive
+ Such a discomfit, as shall quite despoil him
+ Of all these boasted trophies won on me.
+
+ _Manoah_. With cause this hope relieves thee, and these words
+ I as a prophecy receive; for God,
+ Nothing more certain, will not long defer
+ To vindicate the glory of his name.
+
+This part of the dialogue, as it might tend to animate or exasperate
+Samson, cannot, I think, be censured as wholly superfluous; but the
+succeeding dispute, in which Samson contends to die, and which his
+father breaks off, that he may go to solicit his release, is only
+valuable for its own beauties, and has no tendency to introduce any
+thing that follows it.
+
+The next event of the drama is the arrival of Dalila, with all her
+graces, artifices, and allurements. This produces a dialogue, in a very
+high degree elegant and instructive, from which she retires, after she
+has exhausted her persuasions, and is no more seen nor heard of; nor has
+her visit any effect but that of raising the character of Samson.
+
+In the fourth act enters Harapha, the giant of Gath, whose name had
+never been mentioned before, and who has now no other motive of coming,
+than to see the man whose strength and actions are so loudly celebrated:
+
+ _Haraph_.--Much I have heard
+ Of thy prodigious might and feats perform'd,
+ Incredible to me, in this displeas'd,
+ That I was never present in the place
+ Of those encounters, where we might have tried
+ Each other's force in camp or listed fields;
+ And now am come to see of whom such noise
+ Hath walk'd about, and each limb to survey,
+ If thy appearance answer loud report.
+
+Samson challenges him to the combat; and, after an interchange of
+reproaches, elevated by repeated defiance on one side, and imbittered by
+contemptuous insults on the other, Harapha retires; we then hear it
+determined by Samson, and the chorus, that no consequence good or bad
+will proceed from their interview:
+
+ _Chorus_. He will directly to the lords, I fear,
+ And with malicious counsel stir them up
+ Some way or other yet farther to afflict thee.
+
+ _Sams_. He must allege some cause, and offer'd fight
+ Will not dare mention, lest a question rise
+ Whether he durst accept the offer or not;
+ And, that he durst not, plain enough appear'd.
+
+At last, in the fifth act, appears a messenger from the lords assembled
+at the festival of Dagon, with a summons by which Samson is required to
+come and entertain them with some proof of his strength. Samson, after a
+short expostulation, dismisses him with a firm and resolute refusal;
+but, during the absence of the messenger, having a while defended the
+propriety of his conduct, he at last declares himself moved by a secret
+impulse to comply, and utters some dark presages of a great event to be
+brought to pass by his agency, under the direction of Providence:
+
+ _Sams_. Be of good courage, I begin to feel
+ Some rousing motions in me, which dispose
+ To something extraordinary my thoughts.
+ I with this messenger will go along,
+ Nothing to do, be sure, that may dishonour
+ Our Law, or stain my vow of Nazarite.
+ If there be aught of presage in the mind,
+ This day will be remarkable in my life
+ By some great act, or of my days the last.
+
+While Samson is conducted off by the messenger, his father returns with
+hopes of success in his solicitation, upon which he confers with the
+chorus till their dialogue is interrupted, first by a shout of triumph,
+and afterwards by screams of horrour and agony. As they stand
+deliberating where they shall be secure, a man who had been present at
+the show enters, and relates how Samson, having prevailed on his guide
+to suffer him to lean against the main pillars of the theatrical
+edifice, tore down the roof upon the spectators and himself:
+
+ --Those two massy pillars,
+ With horrible convulsion, to and fro
+ He tugg'd, he shook, till down they came, and drew
+ The whole roof after them, with burst of thunder
+ Upon the heads of all who sat beneath--
+ Samson, with these immixt, inevitably
+ Pull'd down the same destruction on himself.
+
+This is undoubtedly a just and regular catastrophe, and the poem,
+therefore, has a beginning and an end which Aristotle himself could not
+have disapproved; but it must be allowed to want a middle, since nothing
+passes between the first act and the last, that either hastens or delays
+the death of Samson. The whole drama, if its superfluities were cut off,
+would scarcely fill a single act; yet this is the tragedy which
+ignorance has admired, and bigotry applauded.
+
+
+
+No. 140. SATURDAY, JULY 20, 1751.
+
+ --_Quis tam Lucili fautor inepte est,
+ Ut non hoc fateatur?_ HOR. Lib. i. Sat. x. 2.
+
+ What doating bigot, to his faults so blind,
+ As not to grant me this, can Milton find?
+
+It is common, says Bacon, to desire the end without enduring the means.
+Every member of society feels and acknowledges the necessity of
+detecting crimes, yet scarce any degree of virtue or reputation is able
+to secure an informer from publick hatred. The learned world has always
+admitted the usefulness of critical disquisitions, yet he that attempts
+to show, however modestly, the failures of a celebrated writer, shall
+surely irritate his admirers, and incur the imputation of envy,
+captiousness, and malignity.
+
+With this danger full in my view, I shall proceed to examine the
+sentiments of Milton's tragedy, which, though much less liable to
+censure than the disposition of his plan, are, like those of other
+writers, sometimes exposed to just exceptions for want of care, or want
+of discernment.
+
+Sentiments are proper and improper as they consist more or less with the
+character and circumstances of the person to whom they are attributed,
+with the rules of the composition in which they are found, or with the
+settled and unalterable nature of things.
+
+It is common among the tragick poets to introduce their persons alluding
+to events or opinions, of which they could not possibly have any
+knowledge. The barbarians of remote or newly discovered regions often
+display their skill in European learning. The god of love is mentioned
+in Tamerlane with all the familiarity of a Roman epigrammatist; and a
+late writer has put Harvey's doctrine of the circulation of the blood
+into the mouth of a Turkish statesman, who lived near two centuries
+before it was known even to philosophers or anatomists.
+
+Milton's learning, which acquainted him with the manners of the ancient
+eastern nations, and his invention, which required no assistance from
+the common cant of poetry, have preserved him from frequent outrages of
+local or chronological propriety. Yet he has mentioned Chalybean steel,
+of which it is not very likely that his chorus should have heard, and
+has made Alp the general name of a mountain, in a region where the Alps
+could scarcely be known:
+
+ No medicinal liquor can assuage,
+ Nor breath of cooling air from snowy Alp.
+
+He has taught Samson the tales of Circe, and the Syrens, at which he
+apparently hints in his colloquy with Dalila:
+
+ --I know thy trains,
+ Though dearly to my cost, thy gins, and toils;
+ Thy fair _enchanted cup_, and _warbling charms_
+ No more on me have pow'r.
+
+But the grossest errour of this kind is the solemn introduction of the
+Phoenix in the last scene; which is faulty, not only as it is
+incongruous to the personage to whom it is ascribed, but as it is so
+evidently contrary to reason and nature, that it ought never to be
+mentioned but as a fable in any serious poem:
+
+ --Virtue giv'n for lost,
+ Deprest, and overthrown, as seem'd,
+ Like that self-begotten bird
+ In the Arabian woods embost,
+ That no second knows nor third,
+ And lay ere while a holocaust,
+ From out her ashy womb now teem'd,
+ Revives, reflourishes, then vigorous most
+ When most unactive deem'd,
+ And though her body die, her fame survives
+ A secular bird, ages of lives.
+
+Another species of impropriety is the unsuitableness of thoughts to the
+general character of the poem. The seriousness and solemnity of tragedy
+necessarily reject all pointed or epigrammatical expressions, all remote
+conceits and opposition of ideas. Samson's complaint is therefore too
+elaborate to be natural:
+
+ As in the land of darkness, yet in light,
+ To live a life half dead, a living death,
+ And bury'd; but, O yet more miserable!
+ Myself, my sepulchre, a moving grave,
+ Buried, yet not exempt,
+ By privilege of death and burial,
+ From worst of other evils, pains and wrongs.
+
+All allusions to low and trivial objects, with which contempt is usually
+associated, are doubtless unsuitable to a species of composition which
+ought to be always awful, though not always magnificent. The remark
+therefore of the chorus on good or bad news seems to want elevation:
+
+ _Manoah_. A little stay will bring some notice hither.
+ _Chor_. Of good _or_ bad so great, of bad the sooner;
+ For evil news _rides post_, while good news _baits_.
+
+But of all meanness that has least to plead which is produced by mere
+verbal conceits, which, depending only upon sounds, lose their existence
+by the change of a syllable. Of this kind is the following dialogue:
+
+ _Chor_. But had we best retire? I see a _storm_.
+
+ _Sams_. Fair days have oft contracted wind and rain.
+
+ _Chor_. But this another kind of tempest brings.
+
+ _Sams_. Be less abstruse, my riddling days are past.
+
+ _Chor_. Look now for no enchanting voice, nor fear
+ The bait of honied words; a rougher tongue
+ Draws hitherward; I know him by his stride,
+ The giant _Harapha_.--
+
+And yet more despicable are the lines in which Manoah's paternal
+kindness is commended by the chorus:
+
+ Fathers are wont to _lay up_ for their sons,
+ Thou for thy son art bent to _lay out_ all.
+
+Samson's complaint of the inconveniencies of imprisonment is not wholly
+without verbal quaintness:
+
+ --I, a prisoner chain'd, scarce freely draw
+ The air, imprison'd also, close and damp.
+
+From the sentiments we may properly descend to the consideration of the
+language, which, in imitation of the ancients, is through the whole
+dialogue remarkably simple and unadorned, seldom heightened by epithets,
+or varied by figures; yet sometimes metaphors find admission, even where
+their consistency is not accurately preserved. Thus Samson confounds
+loquacity with a shipwreck:
+
+ How could I once look up, or heave the head,
+ Who, like a foolish _pilot_, have _shipwreck'd_
+ My _vessel_ trusted to me from above,
+ Gloriously _rigg'd_; and for a word, a tear,
+ Fool! have _divulg'd_ the _secret gift_ of God
+ To a deceitful woman?--
+
+And the chorus talks of adding fuel to flame in a report:
+
+ He's gone, and who knows how he may _report_
+ Thy _words_, by _adding fuel to the flame_?
+
+The versification is in the dialogue much more smooth and harmonious,
+than in the parts allotted to the chorus, which are often so harsh and
+dissonant, as scarce to preserve, whether the lines end with or without
+rhymes, any appearance of metrical regularity:
+
+ Or do my eyes misrepresent? Can this be he,
+ That heroic, that renown'd,
+ Irresistible Samson? whom unarm'd
+ No strength of man, or fiercest wild beast, could withstand;
+ Who tore the lion, as the lion tears the kid.
+
+Since I have thus pointed out the faults of Milton, critical integrity
+requires that I should endeavour to display his excellencies, though
+they will not easily be discovered in short quotations, because they
+consist in the justness of diffuse reasonings, or in the contexture and
+method of continued dialogues; this play having none of those
+descriptions, similies, or splendid sentences, with which other
+tragedies are so lavishly adorned. Yet some passages may be selected
+which seem to deserve particular notice, either as containing sentiments
+of passion, representations of life, precepts of conduct, or sallies of
+imagination. It is not easy to give a stronger representation of the
+weariness of despondency, than in the words of Samson to his father:
+
+ --I feel my genial spirits droop,
+ My hopes all flat, Nature within me seems
+ In all her functions weary of herself,
+ My race of glory run, and race of shame,
+ And I shall shortly be with them that rest.
+
+The reply of Samson to the flattering Dalila affords a just and striking
+description of the stratagems and allurements of feminine hypocrisy:
+
+ --These are thy wonted arts,
+ And arts of every woman false like thee,
+ To break all faith, all vows, deceive, betray,
+ Then as repentant to submit, beseech,
+ And reconcilement move with feign'd remorse,
+ Confess and promise wonders in her change;
+ Not truly penitent, but chief to try
+ Her husband, how far urg'd his patience bears,
+ His virtue or weakness which way to assail:
+ Then with more cautious and instructed skill
+ Again transgresses, and again submits.
+
+When Samson has refused to make himself a spectacle at the feast of
+Dagon, he first justifies his behaviour to the chorus, who charge him
+with having served the Philistines, by a very just distinction: and then
+destroys the common excuse of cowardice and servility, which always
+confound temptation with compulsion:
+
+ _Chor_. Yet with thy strength thou serv'st the Philistines.
+
+ _Sams_. Not in their idol worship, but by labour
+ Honest and lawful to deserve my food
+ Of those, who have me in their civil power.
+
+ _Chor_. Where the heart joins not, outward acts defile not.
+
+ _Sams_. Where outward force constrains, the sentence holds.
+ But who constrains me to the temple of Dagon,
+ Not dragging? The Philistine lords command.
+ Commands are no constraints. If I obey them,
+ I do it freely, venturing to displease
+ God for the fear of Man, and Man prefer,
+ Set God behind.
+
+The complaint of blindness which Samson pours out at the beginning of
+the tragedy is equally addressed to the passions and the fancy. The
+enumeration of his miseries is succeeded by a very pleasing train of
+poetical images, and concluded by such expostulation and wishes, as
+reason too often submits to learn from despair:
+
+ O first created Beam, and thou great Word
+ "Let there be light, and light was over all;"
+ Why am I thus bereav'd thy prime decree?
+ The sun to me is dark
+ And silent as the moon,
+ When she deserts the night
+ Hid in her vacant interlunar cave.
+ Since light so necessary is to life,
+ And almost life itself, if it be true
+ That light is in the soul,
+ She all in every part; why was the sight
+ To such a tender hall as the eye confin'd,
+ So obvious and so easy to be quench'd?
+ And not, as feeling, through all parts diffus'd,
+ That she may look at will through every pore?
+
+Such are the faults and such the beauties of Samson Agonistes, which I
+have shown with no other purpose than to promote the knowledge of true
+criticism. The everlasting verdure of Milton's laurels has nothing to
+fear from the blasts of malignity; nor can my attempt produce any other
+effect, than to strengthen their shoots by lopping their luxuriance[g].
+[Footnote g: This is not the language of an accomplice in Lauder's
+imposition.--ED.]
+
+
+
+No. 141. TUESDAY, JULY 23, 1751.
+
+ _Hilarisque, tamen cum pondere, virtus_. STAT.
+
+ Greatness with ease, and gay severity.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Politicians have long observed, that the greatest events may be
+often traced back to slender causes. Petty competition or casual
+friendship, the prudence of a slave, or the garrulity of a woman, have
+hindered or promoted the most important schemes, and hastened or
+retarded the revolutions of empire.
+
+Whoever shall review his life will generally find, that the whole tenour
+of his conduct has been determined by some accident of no apparent
+moment, or by a combination of inconsiderable circumstances, acting when
+his imagination was unoccupied, and his judgment unsettled; and that his
+principles and actions have taken their colour from some secret
+infusion, mingled without design in the current of his ideas. The
+desires that predominate in our hearts, are instilled by imperceptible
+communications at the time when we look upon the various scenes of the
+world, and the different employments of men, with the neutrality of
+inexperience; and we come forth from the nursery or the school,
+invariably destined to the pursuit of great acquisitions, or petty
+accomplishments.
+
+Such was the impulse by which I have been kept in motion from my
+earliest years. I was born to an inheritance which gave my childhood a
+claim to distinction and caresses, and was accustomed to hear applauses,
+before they had much influence on my thoughts. The first praise of which
+I remember myself sensible was that of good-humour, which, whether I
+deserved it or not when it was bestowed, I have since made it my whole
+business to propagate and maintain.
+
+When I was sent to school, the gaiety of my look, and the liveliness of
+my loquacity, soon gained me admission to hearts not yet fortified
+against affection by artifice or interest. I was entrusted with every
+stratagem, and associated in every sport; my company gave alacrity to a
+frolick, and gladness to a holiday. I was indeed so much employed in
+adjusting or executing schemes of diversion, that I had no leisure for
+my tasks, but was furnished with exercises, and instructed in my
+lessons, by some kind patron of the higher classes. My master, not
+suspecting my deficiency, or unwilling to detect what his kindness would
+not punish nor his impartiality excuse, allowed me to escape with a
+slight examination, laughed at the pertness of my ignorance, and the
+sprightliness of my absurdities, and could not forbear to show that he
+regarded me with such tenderness, as genius and learning can seldom
+excite.
+
+From school I was dismissed to the university, where I soon drew upon me
+the notice of the younger students, and was the constant partner of
+their morning walks, and evening compotations. I was not indeed much
+celebrated for literature, but was looked on with indulgence as a man of
+parts, who wanted nothing but the dulness of a scholar, and might become
+eminent whenever he should condescend to labour and attention. My tutor
+a while reproached me with negligence, and repressed my sallies with
+supercilious gravity; yet, having natural good-humour lurking in his
+heart, he could not long hold out against the power of hilarity, but
+after a few months began to relax the muscles of disciplinarian
+moroseness, received me with smiles after an elopement, and, that he
+might not betray his trust to his fondness, was content to spare my
+diligence by increasing his own.
+
+Thus I continued to dissipate the gloom of collegiate austerity, to
+waste my own life in idleness, and lure others from their studies, till
+the happy hour arrived, when I was sent to London. I soon discovered the
+town to be the proper element of youth and gaiety, and was quickly
+distinguished as a wit by the ladies, a species of beings only heard of
+at the university, whom I had no sooner the happiness of approaching
+than I devoted all my faculties to the ambition of pleasing them.
+
+A wit, Mr. Rambler, in the dialect of ladies, is not always a man who,
+by the action of a vigorous fancy upon comprehensive knowledge, brings
+distant ideas unexpectedly together, who, by some peculiar acuteness,
+discovers resemblance in objects dissimilar to common eyes, or, by
+mixing heterogeneous notions, dazzles the attention with sudden
+scintillations of conceit. A lady's wit is a man who can make ladies
+laugh, to which, however easy it may seem, many gifts of nature, and
+attainments of art, must commonly concur. He that hopes to be received
+as a wit in female assemblies, should have a form neither so amiable as
+to strike with admiration, nor so coarse as to raise disgust, with an
+understanding too feeble to be dreaded, and too forcible to be despised.
+The other parts of the character are more subject to variation; it was
+formerly essential to a wit, that half his back should be covered with a
+snowy fleece, and, at a time yet more remote, no man was a wit without
+his boots. In the days of the _Spectator_ a snuff-box seems to have been
+indispensable; but in my time an embroidered coat was sufficient,
+without any precise regulation of the rest of his dress.
+
+But wigs and boots and snuff-boxes are vain, without a perpetual
+resolution to be merry, and who can always find supplies of mirth?
+Juvenal indeed, in his comparison of the two opposite philosophers,
+wonders only whence an unexhausted fountain of tears could be
+discharged: but had Juvenal, with all his spirit, undertaken my
+province, he would have found constant gaiety equally difficult to be
+supported. Consider, Mr. Rambler, and compassionate the condition of a
+man, who has taught every company to expect from him a continual feast
+of laughter, an unintermitted stream of jocularity. The task of every
+other slave has an end. The rower in time reaches the port; the
+lexicographer at last finds the conclusion of his alphabet; only the
+hapless wit has his labour always to begin, the call for novelty is
+never satisfied, and one jest only raises expectation of another.
+
+I know that among men of learning and asperity the retainers to the
+female world are not much regarded: yet I cannot but hope that if you
+knew at how dear a rate our honours are purchased, you would look with
+some gratulation on our success, and with some pity on our miscarriages.
+Think on the misery of him who is condemned to cultivate barrenness and
+ransack vacuity; who is obliged to continue his talk when his meaning is
+spent, to raise merriment without images, to harass his imagination in
+quest of thoughts which he cannot start, and his memory in pursuit of
+narratives which he cannot overtake; observe the effort with which he
+strains to conceal despondency by a smile, and the distress in which he
+sits while the eyes of the company are fixed upon him as the last refuge
+from silence and dejection.
+
+It were endless to recount the shifts to which I have been reduced, or
+to enumerate the different species of artificial wit. I regularly
+frequented coffee-houses, and have often lived a week upon an
+expression, of which he who dropped it did not know the value. When
+fortune did not favour my erratick industry, I gleaned jests at home
+from obsolete farces. To collect wit was indeed safe, for I consorted
+with none that looked much into books, but to disperse it was the
+difficulty. A seeming negligence was often useful, and I have very
+successfully made a reply not to what the lady had said, but to what it
+was convenient for me to hear; for very few were so perverse as to
+rectify a mistake which had given occasion to a burst of merriment.
+Sometimes I drew the conversation up by degrees to a proper point, and
+produced a conceit which I had treasured up, like sportsmen who boast of
+killing the foxes which they lodge in the covert. Eminence is, however,
+in some happy moments, gained at less expense; I have delighted a whole
+circle at one time with a series of quibbles, and made myself good
+company at another, by scalding my fingers, or mistaking a lady's lap
+for my own chair.
+
+These are artful deceits and useful expedients; but expedients are at
+length exhausted, and deceits detected. Time itself, among other
+injuries, diminishes the power of pleasing, and I now find, in my
+forty-fifth year, many pranks and pleasantries very coldly received,
+which had formerly filled a whole room with jollity and acclamation.
+I am under the melancholy necessity of supporting that character by study,
+which I gained by levity, having learned too late that gaiety must be
+recommended by higher qualities, and that mirth can never please long
+but as the efflorescence of a mind loved for its luxuriance, but
+esteemed for its usefulness.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+PAPILIUS.
+
+
+
+No. 142. SATURDAY, JULY 27, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Entha d aner eniaue pelorios--
+ --oude, met allous
+ Poleit, all apaneuthen eon athemistia ede.
+ Kai gar Oaum etetukto pelorion oude epskei
+ Andri ge sitophagps.] HOMER. Od. [Greek: I'.] 187.
+
+ A giant shepherd here his flock maintains
+ Far from the rest, and solitary reigns,
+ In shelter thick of horrid shade reclin'd;
+ And gloomy mischiefs labour in the mind.
+ A form enormous! far unlike the race
+ Of human birth, in stature or in face. POPE.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Having been accustomed to retire annually from the town, I lately
+accepted the invitation of Eugenio, who has an estate and seat in a
+distant county. As we were unwilling to travel without improvement, we
+turned often from the direct road to please ourselves with the view of
+nature or of art; we examined every wild mountain and medicinal spring,
+criticised every edifice, contemplated every ruin, and compared every
+scene of action with the narratives of historians. By this succession of
+amusements we enjoyed the exercise of a journey without suffering the
+fatigue, and had nothing to regret but that, by a progress so leisurely
+and gentle, we missed the adventures of a post-chaise, and the pleasure
+of alarming villages with the tumult of our passage, and of disguising
+our insignificancy by the dignity of hurry.
+
+The first week after our arrival at Eugenio's house was passed in
+receiving visits from his neighbours, who crowded about him with all the
+eagerness of benevolence; some impatient to learn the news of the court
+and town, that they might be qualified by authentick information to
+dictate to the rural politicians on the next bowling day; others
+desirous of his interest to accommodate disputes, or his advice in the
+settlement of their fortunes and the marriage of their children.
+
+The civilities which he had received were soon to be returned; and I
+passed sometime with great satisfaction in roving through the country,
+and viewing the seats, gardens, and plantations, which are scattered
+over it. My pleasure would indeed have been greater had I been sometimes
+allowed to wander in a park or wilderness alone; but to appear as a
+friend of Eugenio was an honour not to be enjoyed without some
+inconveniencies: so much was every one solicitous for my regard, that I
+could seldom escape to solitude, or steal a moment from the emulation of
+complaisance, and the vigilance of officiousness.
+
+In these rambles of good neighbourhood, we frequently passed by a house
+of unusual magnificence. While I had my curiosity yet distracted among
+many novelties, it did not much attract my observation; but in a short
+time I could not forbear surveying it with particular notice; for the
+length of the wall which inclosed the gardens, the disposition of the
+shades that waved over it, and the canals of which I could obtain some
+glimpses through the trees from our own windows, gave me reason to
+expect more grandeur and beauty than I had yet seen in that province. I
+therefore inquired, as we rode by it, why we never, amongst our
+excursions, spent an hour where there was such an appearance of
+splendour and affluence? Eugenio told me that the seat which I so much
+admired, was commonly called in the country the _haunted house_, and
+that no visits were paid there by any of the gentlemen whom I had yet
+seen. As the haunts of incorporeal beings are generally ruinous,
+neglected, and desolate, I easily conceived that there was something to
+be explained, and told him that I supposed it only fairy ground, on
+which we might venture by day-light without danger. The danger, says he,
+is indeed only that of appearing to solicit the acquaintance of a man,
+with whom it is not possible to converse without infamy, and who has
+driven from him, by his insolence or malignity, every human being who
+can live without him.
+
+Our conversation was then accidentally interrupted; but my inquisitive
+humour being now in motion, could not rest without a full account of
+this newly discovered prodigy. I was soon informed that the fine house
+and spacious gardens were haunted by squire Bluster, of whom it was very
+easy to learn the character, since nobody had regard for him sufficient
+to hinder them from telling whatever they could discover.
+
+Squire Bluster is descended of an ancient family. The estate which his
+ancestors had immemorially possessed was much augmented by captain
+Bluster, who served under Drake in the reign of Elizabeth; and the
+Blusters, who were before only petty gentlemen, have from that time
+frequently represented the shire in parliament, been chosen to present
+addresses, and given laws at hunting-matches and races. They were
+eminently hospitable and popular, till the father of this gentleman died
+of an election. His lady went to the grave soon after him, and left the
+heir, then only ten years old, to the care of his grandmother, who would
+not suffer him to be controlled, because she could not bear to hear him
+cry; and never sent him to school, because she was not able to live
+without his company. She taught him however very early to inspect the
+steward's accounts, to dog the butler from the cellar, and to catch the
+servants at a junket; so that he was at the age of eighteen a complete
+master of all the lower arts of domestick policy, had often on the road
+detected combinations between the coachman and the ostler, and procured
+the discharge of nineteen maids for illicit correspondence with
+cottagers and charwomen.
+
+By the opportunities of parsimony which minority affords, and which the
+probity of his guardians had diligently improved, a very large sum of
+money was accumulated, and he found himself, when he took his affairs
+into his own hands, the richest man in the county. It has been long the
+custom of this family to celebrate the heir's completion of his
+twenty-first year, by an entertainment, at which the house is thrown
+open to all that are inclined to enter it, and the whole province flocks
+together as to a general festivity. On this occasion young Bluster
+exhibited the first tokens of his future eminence, by shaking his purse
+at an old gentleman who had been the intimate friend of his father, and
+offering to wager a greater sum than he could afford to venture; a
+practice with which he has, at one time or other, insulted every
+freeholder within ten miles round him.
+
+His next acts of offence were committed in a contentious and spiteful
+vindication of the privileges of his manours, and a rigorous and
+relentless prosecution of every man that presumed to violate his game.
+As he happens to have no estate adjoining equal to his own, his
+oppressions are often borne without resistance, for fear of a long suit,
+of which he delights to count the expenses without the least solicitude
+about the event; for he knows, that where nothing but an honorary right
+is contested, the poorer antagonist must always suffer, whatever shall
+be the last decision of the law.
+
+By the success of some of these disputes, he has so elated his
+insolence, and, by reflection upon the general hatred which they have
+brought upon him, so irritated his virulence, that his whole life is
+spent in meditating or executing mischief. It is his common practice to
+procure his hedges to be broken in the night, and then to demand
+satisfaction for damages which his grounds have suffered from his
+neighbour's cattle. An old widow was yesterday soliciting Eugenio to
+enable her to replevin her only cow, then in the pound by squire
+Bluster's order, who had sent one of his agents to take advantage of her
+calamity, and persuade her to sell the cow at an under rate. He has
+driven a day-labourer from his cottage, for gathering blackberries in a
+hedge for his children, and has now an old woman in the county-gaol for
+a trespass which she committed, by coming into his ground to pick up
+acorns for her hog.
+
+Money, in whatever hands, will confer power. Distress will fly to
+immediate refuge, without much consideration of remote consequences.
+Bluster has therefore a despotick authority in many families, whom he
+has assisted, on pressing occasions, with larger sums than they can
+easily repay. The only visits that he makes are to these houses of
+misfortune, where he enters with the insolence of absolute command,
+enjoys the terrours of the family, exacts their obedience, riots at
+their charge, and in the height of his joy insults the father with
+menaces, and the daughters with obscenity.
+
+He is of late somewhat less offensive; for one of his debtors, after
+gentle expostulations, by which he was only irritated to grosser
+outrage, seized him by the sleeve, led him trembling into the
+court-yard, and closed the door upon him in a stormy night. He took his
+usual revenge next morning by a writ; but the debt was discharged by the
+assistance of Eugenio.
+
+It is his rule to suffer his tenants to owe him rent, because by this
+indulgence he secures to himself the power of seizure whenever he has an
+inclination to amuse himself with calamity, and feast his ears with
+entreaties and lamentations. Yet as he is sometimes capriciously liberal
+to those whom he happens to adopt as favourites, and lets his lands at a
+cheap rate, his farms are never long unoccupied; and when one is ruined
+by oppression, the possibility of better fortune quickly lures another
+to supply his place.
+
+Such is the life of squire Bluster; a man in whose power fortune has
+liberally placed the means of happiness, but who has defeated all her
+gifts of their end by the depravity of his mind. He is wealthy without
+followers; he is magnificent without witnesses; he has birth without
+alliance, and influence without dignity. His neighbours scorn him as a
+brute; his dependants dread him as an oppressor; and he has only the
+gloomy comfort of reflecting, that if he is hated, he is likewise
+feared.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+VAGULUS.
+
+
+
+No. 143. TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1751.
+
+ _--Moveat cornicula risum
+ Furtivis nudata coloribus.--_ HOR. Lib. i. Ep. i. 19.
+
+ Lest when the birds their various colours claim,
+ Stripp'd of his stolen pride, the crow forlorn
+ Should stand the laughter of the publick scorn. FRANCIS.
+
+Among the innumerable practices by which interest or envy have taught
+those who live upon literary fame to disturb each other at their airy
+banquets, one of the most common is the charge of plagiarism. When the
+excellence of a new composition can no longer be contested, and malice
+is compelled to give way to the unanimity of applause, there is yet this
+one expedient to be tried, by which the author may be degraded, though
+his work be reverenced; and the excellence which we cannot obscure, may
+be set at such a distance as not to overpower our fainter lustre.
+
+This accusation is dangerous, because, even when it is false, it may be
+sometimes urged with probability. Bruyere declares, that we are come
+into the world too late to produce any thing new, that nature and life
+are preoccupied, and that description and sentiment have been long
+exhausted. It is indeed certain, that whoever attempts any common
+topick, will find unexpected coincidences of his thoughts with those of
+other writers; nor can the nicest judgment always distinguish accidental
+similitude from artful imitation. There is likewise a common stock of
+images, a settled mode of arrangement, and a beaten track of transition,
+which all authors suppose themselves at liberty to use, and which
+produce the resemblance generally observable among contemporaries. So
+that in books which best deserve the name of originals, there is little
+new beyond the disposition of materials already provided; the same ideas
+and combinations of ideas have been long in the possession of other
+hands; and, by restoring to every man his own, as the Romans must have
+returned to their cots from the possession of the world, so the most
+inventive and fertile genius would reduce his folios to a few pages. Yet
+the author who imitates his predecessors only by furnishing himself with
+thoughts and elegancies out of the same general magazine of literature,
+can with little more propriety be reproached as a plagiary, than the
+architect can be censured as a mean copier of Angelo or Wren, because he
+digs his marble from the same quarry, squares his stones by the same
+art, and unites them in the columns of the same orders.
+
+Many subjects fall under the consideration of an author, which, being
+limited by nature, can admit only of slight and accidental diversities.
+All definitions of the same thing must be nearly the same; and
+descriptions, which are definitions of a more lax and fanciful kind,
+must always have in some degree that resemblance to each other which
+they all have to their object. Different poets describing the spring or
+the sea would mention the zephyrs and the flowers, the billows and the
+rocks; reflecting on human life, they would, without any communication
+of opinions, lament the deceitfulness of hope, the fugacity of pleasure,
+the fragility of beauty, and the frequency of calamity; and for
+palliatives of these incurable miseries, they would concur in
+recommending kindness, temperance, caution, and fortitude.
+
+When therefore there are found in Virgil and Horace two similar
+passages--
+
+ _Hæ tibi erunt artes--
+ Parcere subjectis, et debellare superbos_. VIRG.
+
+ To tame the proud, the fetter'd slave to free:
+ These are imperial arts, and worthy thee. DRYDEN.
+
+ _Imperet bellante prior, jacentem
+ Lenis in hostem_. HOR.
+
+ Let Cæsar spread his conquests far,
+ Less pleas'd to triumph than to spare--
+
+it is surely not necessary to suppose with a late critick, that one is
+copied from the other, since neither Virgil nor Horace can be supposed
+ignorant of the common duties of humanity, and the virtue of moderation
+in success.
+
+Cicero and Ovid have on very different occasions remarked how little of
+the honour of a victory belongs to the general, when his soldiers and
+his fortune have made their deductions; yet why should Ovid be suspected
+to have owed to Tully an observation which perhaps occurs to every man
+that sees or hears of military glories?
+
+Tully observes of Achilles, that had not Homer written, his valour had
+been without praise:
+
+ _Nisi Ilias illa extitisset, idem tumulus qui corpus ejus contexerat,
+ nomen ejus obruisset_.
+
+ Unless the Iliad had been published, his name had been lost in the
+ tomb that covered his body.
+
+Horace tells us with more energy that there were brave men before the
+wars of Troy, but they were lost in oblivion for want of a poet:
+
+ _Vixere fortes ante Agamemnona
+ Multi; sed omnes illachrymabiles
+ Urgentur, ignotique longá
+ Nocte, carent quia vate sacro_.
+
+ Before great Agamemnon reign'd,
+ Reign'd kings as great as he, and brave,
+ Whose huge ambition's now contain'd
+ In the small compass of a grave:
+ In endless night they sleep, unwept, unknown:
+ No bard had they to make all time their own. FRANCIS.
+
+Tully inquires, in the same oration, why, but for fame, we disturb a
+short life with so many fatigues?
+
+ _Quid est quod in hoc tam exiguo vitae curriculo et tam brevi, tantis
+ nos in laboribus exerceamus?_
+
+ Why in so small a circuit of life should we employ ourselves in so
+ many fatigues?
+
+Horace inquires in the same manner,
+
+ _Quid brevi fortes jaculamur aevo
+ Multa?_
+
+ Why do we aim, with eager strife,
+ At things beyond the mark of life? FRANCIS.
+
+when our life is of so short duration, why we form such numerous
+designs? But Horace, as well as Tully, might discover that records are
+needful to preserve the memory of actions, and that no records were so
+durable as poems; either of them might find out that life is short, and
+that we consume it in unnecessary labour.
+
+There are other flowers of fiction so widely scattered and so easily
+cropped, that it is scarcely just to tax the use of them as an act by
+which any particular writer is despoiled of his garland; for they may be
+said to have been planted by the ancients in the open road of poetry for
+the accommodation of their successors, and to be the right of every one
+that has art to pluck them without injuring their colours or their
+fragrance. The passage of Orpheus to hell, with the recovery and second
+loss of Eurydice, have been described after Boetius by Pope, in such a
+manner as might justly leave him suspected of imitation, were not the
+images such as they might both have derived from more ancient writers.
+
+ _Quae sontes agitant metu,
+ Ultrices scelerum deæ
+ Jam masta: lacrymis madent,
+ Non Ixionium caput
+ Velox præcipitat rota_.
+
+ The pow'rs of vengeance, while they hear,
+ Touch'd with compassion, drop a tear:
+ Ixion's rapid wheel is bound,
+ Fix'd in attention to the sound. F. LEWIS.
+
+ Thy stone, O Sysiphus, stands still,
+ Ixion rests upon the wheel,
+ And the pale spectres dance!
+ The furies sink upon their iron beds. POPE
+
+ _Tandem, vincimur, arbiter
+ Umbrarum, miserans, ait--
+ Donemus, comitem viro,
+ Emtam carmine, conjugem_.
+
+ Subdu'd at length, Hell's pitying monarch cry'd,
+ The song rewarding, let us yield the bride. F. LEWIS.
+
+ He sung; and hell consented
+ To hear the poet's prayer;
+ Stern Proserpine relented,
+ And gave him back the fair. POPE
+
+ _Heu, noctis prope terminos
+ Orpheus Eurydicen suam
+ Vidit, perdidit, occidit_.
+
+ Nor yet the golden verge of day begun,
+ When Orpheus, her unhappy lord,
+ Eurydice to life restor'd,
+ At once beheld, and lost, and was undone. F. LEWIS.
+
+ But soon, too soon, the lover turns his eyes:
+ Again she falls, again she dies, she dies! POPE.
+
+No writer can be fully convicted of imitation, except there is a
+concurrence of more resemblance than can be imagined to have happened by
+chance; as where the same ideas are conjoined without any natural series
+or necessary coherence, or where not only the thought but the words are
+copied. Thus it can scarcely be doubted, that in the first of the
+following passages Pope remembered Ovid, and that in the second he
+copied Crashaw:
+
+ _Saepe pater dixit, studium quid inutile tentas?
+ Maeonides nullas ipse reliquit opes--
+ Sponte suâ carmen numeros veniebat ad aptos,
+ Et quod conabar scribere, versus erat_. OVID.
+
+ Quit, quit this barren trade, my father cry'd:
+ Ev'n Homer left no riches when he dy'd--
+ In verse spontaneous flow'd my native strain,
+ Forc'd by no sweat or labour of the brain. F. LEWIS.
+
+ I left no calling for this idle trade;
+ No duty broke, no father disobey'd;
+ While yet a child, ere yet a fool to fame,
+ I lisp'd in numbers, for the numbers came. POPE.
+
+ --This plain floor,
+ Believe me, reader, can say more
+ Than many a braver marble can,
+ Here lies a truly honest man. CRASHAW.
+
+ This modest stone, what few vain marbles can,
+ May truly say, Here lies an honest man. POPE.
+
+Conceits, or thoughts not immediately impressed by sensible objects, or
+necessarily arising from the coalition or comparison of common
+sentiments, may be with great justice suspected whenever they are found
+a second time. Thus Wallar probably owed to Grotius an elegant
+compliment:
+
+ Here lies the learned Savil's heir,
+ So early wise, and lasting fair,
+ That none, except her years they told,
+ Thought her a child, or thought her old. WALLER.
+
+[Transcriber's note: Inconsistency in spelling Waller/Wallar in
+original]
+
+ _Unica lux saecli, genitoris gloria, nemo
+ Quem puerum, nemo credidit esse senem_. GROT.
+
+ The age's miracle, his father's joy!
+ Nor old you would pronounce him, nor a boy. F. LEWIS.
+
+And Prior was indebted for a pretty illustration to Alleyne's poetical
+history of Henry the Seventh:
+
+ For nought but light itself, itself can shew,
+ And only kings can write, what kings can do. ALLEYNE.
+
+ Your musick's pow'r, your musick must disclose,
+ For what light is, 'tis only light that shews. PRIOR.
+
+And with yet more certainty may the same writer be censured, for
+endeavouring the clandestine appropriation of a thought which he
+borrowed, surely without thinking himself disgraced, from an epigram of
+Plato:
+
+ [Greek: Tae Paphiae to katoptron, epei toiae men orasthai
+ Ouk ethelo, oiae d' aen paros, ou dunamai.]
+
+ Venus, take my votive glass,
+ Since I am not what I was;
+ What from this day I shall be,
+ Venus, let me never see.
+
+As not every instance of similitude can be considered as a proof of
+imitation, so not every imitation ought to be stigmatized as plagiarism.
+The adoption of a noble sentiment, or the insertion of a borrowed
+ornament, may sometimes display so much judgment as will almost
+compensate for invention: and an inferior genius may, without any
+imputation of servility, pursue the path of the ancients, provided he
+declines to tread in their footsteps.
+
+
+
+No. 144. SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1751.
+
+ --_Daphnidis arcum
+ Fregisti et calamos: quae tu, perverse Menalea,
+ Et quum vidisti puero donata, dolebas;
+ Et si non aliqua nocuisses, mortuus esses._ VIRG. EC. iii. 12.
+
+ The bow of Daphnis and the shafts you broke;
+ When the fair boy receiv'd the gift of right;
+ And but for mischief, you had dy'd for spite. DRYDEN.
+
+It is impossible to mingle in conversation without observing the
+difficulty with which a new name makes its way into the world. The first
+appearance of excellence unites multitudes against it; unexpected
+opposition rises up on every side; the celebrated and the obscure join
+in the confederacy; subtlety furnishes arms to impudence, and invention
+leads on credulity.
+
+The strength and unanimity of this alliance is not easily conceived. It
+might be expected that no man should suffer his heart to be inflamed
+with malice, but by injuries; that none should busy himself in
+contesting the pretensions of another, but when some right of his own
+was involved in the question; that at least hostilities, commenced
+without cause, should quickly cease; that the armies of malignity should
+soon disperse, when no common interest could be found to hold them
+together; and that the attack upon a rising character should be left to
+those who had something to hope or fear from the event.
+
+The hazards of those that aspire to eminence, would be much diminished
+if they had none but acknowledged rivals to encounter. Their enemies
+would then be few, and, what is yet of greater importance, would be
+known. But what caution is sufficient to ward off the blows of invisible
+assailants, or what force can stand against uninterrupted attacks, and a
+continual succession of enemies? Yet such is the state of the world,
+that no sooner can any man emerge from the crowd, and fix the eyes of
+the publick upon him, than he stands as a mark to the arrows of lurking
+calumny, and receives in the tumult of hostility, from distant and from
+nameless hands, wounds not always easy to be cured.
+
+It is probable that the onset against the candidates for renown, is
+originally incited by those who imagine themselves in danger of
+suffering by their success; but, when war is once declared, volunteers
+flock to the standard, multitudes follow the camp only for want of
+employment, and flying squadrons are dispersed to every part, so pleased
+with an opportunity of mischief, that they toil without prospect of
+praise, and pillage without hope of profit.
+
+When any man has endeavoured to deserve distinction, he will be
+surprised to hear himself censured where he could not expect to have
+been named; he will find the utmost acrimony of malice among those whom
+he never could have offended.
+
+As there are to be found in the service of envy men of every diversity
+of temper and degree of understanding, calumny is diffused by all arts
+and methods of propagation. Nothing is too gross or too refined, too
+cruel or too trifling, to be practised; very little regard is had to the
+rules of honourable hostility, but every weapon is accounted lawful, and
+those that cannot make a thrust at life are content to keep themselves
+in play with petty malevolence, to tease with feeble blows and impotent
+disturbance.
+
+But as the industry of observation has divided the most miscellaneous
+and confused assemblages into proper classes, and ranged the insects of
+the summer, that torment us with their drones or stings, by their
+several tribes; the persecutors of merit, notwithstanding their numbers,
+may be likewise commodiously distinguished into Roarers, Whisperers, and
+Moderators.
+
+The Roarer is an enemy rather terrible than dangerous. He has no other
+qualification for a champion of controversy than a hardened front and
+strong voice. Having seldom so much desire to confute as to silence, he
+depends rather upon vociferation than argument, and has very little care
+to adjust one part of his accusation to another, to preserve decency in
+his language, or probability in his narratives.
+
+He has always a store of reproachful epithets and contemptuous
+appellations, ready to be produced as occasion may require, which by
+constant use he pours out with resistless volubility. If the wealth of a
+trader is mentioned, he without hesitation devotes him to bankruptcy; if
+the beauty and elegance of a lady be commended, he wonders how the town
+can fall in love with rustick deformity; if a new performance of genius
+happens to be celebrated, he pronounces the writer a hopeless idiot,
+without knowledge of books or life, and without the understanding by
+which it must be acquired. His exaggerations are generally without
+effect upon those whom he compels to hear them; and though it will
+sometimes happen that the timorous are awed by his violence, and the
+credulous mistake his confidence for knowledge, yet the opinions which
+he endeavours to suppress soon recover their former strength, as the
+trees that bend to the tempest erect themselves again when its force is
+past.
+
+The Whisperer is more dangerous. He easily gains attention by a soft
+address, and excites curiosity by an air of importance. As secrets are
+not to be made cheap by promiscuous publication, he calls a select
+audience about him, and gratifies their vanity with an appearance of
+trust by communicating his intelligence in a low voice. Of the trader he
+can tell that, though he seems to manage an extensive commerce, and
+talks in high terms of the funds, yet his wealth is not equal to his
+reputation; he has lately suffered much by an expensive project, and had
+a greater share than is acknowledged in the rich ship that perished by
+the storm. Of the beauty he has little to say, but that they who see her
+in a morning do not discover all those graces which are admired in the
+Park. Of the writer he affirms with great certainty, that though the
+excellence of the work be incontestible, he can claim but a small part
+of the reputation; that he owed most of the images and sentiments to a
+secret friend; and that the accuracy and equality of the style was
+produced by the successive correction of the chief criticks of the age.
+
+As every one is pleased with imagining that he knows something not yet
+commonly divulged, secret history easily gains credit; but it is for the
+most part believed only while it circulates in whispers; and when once
+it is openly told, is openly confuted.
+
+The most pernicious enemy is the man of Moderation. Without interest in
+the question, or any motive but honest curiosity, this impartial and
+zealous inquirer after truth is ready to hear either side, and always
+disposed to kind interpretations and favourable opinions. He hath heard
+the trader's affairs reported with great variation, and, after a
+diligent comparison of the evidence, concludes it probable that the
+splendid superstructure of business being originally built upon a narrow
+basis, has lately been found to totter; but between dilatory payment and
+bankruptcy there is a great distance; many merchants have supported
+themselves by expedients for a time, without any final injury to their
+creditors; and what is lost by one adventure may be recovered by
+another. He believes that a young lady pleased with admiration, and
+desirous to make perfect what is already excellent, may heighten her
+charms by artificial improvements, but surely most of her beauties must
+be genuine, and who can say that he is wholly what he endeavours to
+appear? The author he knows to be a man of diligence, who perhaps does
+not sparkle with the fire of Homer, but has the judgment to discover his
+own deficiencies, and to supply them by the help of others; and, in his
+opinion, modesty is a quality so amiable and rare, that it ought to find
+a patron wherever it appears, and may justly be preferred by the publick
+suffrage to petulant wit and ostentatious literature.
+
+He who thus discovers failings with unwillingness, and extenuates the
+faults which cannot be denied, puts an end at once to doubt or
+vindication; his hearers repose upon his candour and veracity, and admit
+the charge without allowing the excuse.
+
+Such are the arts by which the envious, the idle, the peevish, and the
+thoughtless, obstruct that worth which they cannot equal, and, by
+artifices thus easy, sordid, and detestable, is industry defeated,
+beauty blasted, and genius depressed.
+
+
+
+No. 145. TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1751.
+
+ _Non, si priores Maeonius tenet
+ Sedes Homerus, Pindaricae latent,
+ Ceaeque, et Alcaei minaces,
+ Stesichorique graves Camoenae_. HOR. Lib. iv. Od. ix. 5.
+
+ What though the muse her Homer thrones
+ High above all the immortal quire;
+ Nor Pindar's raptures she disowns,
+ Nor hides the plaintive Caean lyre;
+ Alcaeus strikes the tyrant soul with dread,
+ Nor yet is grave Stesichorus unread. FRANCIS.
+
+It is allowed that vocations and employments of least dignity are of the
+most apparent use; that the meanest artizan or manufacturer contributes
+more to the accommodation of life, than the profound scholar and
+argumentative theorist; and that the publick would suffer less present
+inconvenience from the banishment of philosophers than from the
+extinction of any common trade.
+
+Some have been so forcibly struck with this observation, that they have,
+in the first warmth of their discovery, thought it reasonable to alter
+the common distribution of dignity, and ventured to condemn mankind of
+universal ingratitude. For justice exacts, that those by whom we are
+most benefited should be most honoured. And what labour can be more
+useful than that which procures to families and communities those
+necessaries which supply the wants of nature, or those conveniencies by
+which ease, security, and elegance, are conferred?
+
+This is one of the innumerable theories which the first attempt to
+reduce them into practice certainly destroys. If we estimate dignity by
+immediate usefulness, agriculture is undoubtedly the first and noblest
+science; yet we see the plough driven, the clod broken, the manure
+spread, the seeds scattered, and the harvest reaped, by men whom those
+that feed upon their industry will never be persuaded to admit into the
+same rank with heroes, or with sages; and who, after all the confessions
+which truth may extort in favour of their occupation, must be content to
+fill up the lowest class of the commonwealth, to form the base of the
+pyramid of subordination, and lie buried in obscurity themselves, while
+they support all that is splendid, conspicuous, or exalted.
+
+It will be found upon a closer inspection, that this part of the conduct
+of mankind is by no means contrary to reason or equity. Remuneratory
+honours are proportioned at once to the usefulness and difficulty of
+performances, and are properly adjusted by comparison of the mental and
+corporeal abilities, which they appear to employ. That work, however
+necessary, which is carried on only by muscular strength and manual
+dexterity, is not of equal esteem, in the consideration of rational
+beings, with the tasks that exercise the intellectual powers, and
+require the active vigour of imagination or the gradual and laborious
+investigations of reason.
+
+The merit of all manual occupations seems to terminate in the inventor;
+and surely the first ages cannot be charged with ingratitude; since
+those who civilized barbarians, and taught them how to secure themselves
+from cold and hunger, were numbered amongst their deities. But these
+arts once discovered by philosophy, and facilitated by experience, are
+afterwards practised with very little assistance from the faculties of
+the soul; nor is any thing necessary to the regular discharge of these
+inferior duties, beyond that rude observation which the most sluggish
+intellect may practise, and that industry which the stimulations of
+necessity naturally enforce.
+
+Yet though the refusal of statues and panegyrick to those who employ
+only their hands and feet in the service of mankind may be easily
+justified, I am far from intending to incite the petulance of pride, to
+justify the superciliousness of grandeur, or to intercept any part of
+that tenderness and benevolence which, by the privilege of their common
+nature, one may claim from another.
+
+That it would be neither wise nor equitable to discourage the
+husbandman, the labourer, the miner, or the smith, is generally granted;
+but there is another race of beings equally obscure and equally
+indigent, who, because their usefulness is less obvious to vulgar
+apprehensions, live unrewarded and die unpitied, and who have been long
+exposed to insult without a defender, and to censure without an
+apologist.
+
+The authors of London were formerly computed by Swift at several
+thousands, and there is not any reason for suspecting that their number
+has decreased. Of these only a very few can be said to produce, or
+endeavour to produce, new ideas, to extend any principle of science, or
+gratify the imagination with any uncommon train of images or contexture
+of events; the rest, however laborious, however arrogant, can only be
+considered as the drudges of the pen, the manufacturers of literature,
+who have set up for authors, either with or without a regular
+initiation, and, like other artificers, have no other care than to
+deliver their tale of wares at the stated time.
+
+It has been formerly imagined, that he who intends the entertainment or
+instruction of others, must feel in himself some peculiar impulse of
+genius; that he must watch the happy minute in which his natural fire is
+excited, in which his mind is elevated with nobler sentiments,
+enlightened with clearer views, and invigorated with stronger
+comprehension; that he must carefully select his thoughts and polish his
+expressions; and animate his efforts with the hope of raising a monument
+of learning, which neither time nor envy shall be able to destroy.
+
+But the authors whom I am now endeavouring to recommend have been too
+long _hackneyed in the ways of men_ to indulge the chimerical ambition
+of immortality; they have seldom any claim to the trade of writing, but
+that they have tried some other without success; they perceive no
+particular summons to composition, except the sound of the clock; they
+have no other rule than the law or the fashion for admitting their
+thoughts or rejecting them; and about the opinion of posterity they have
+little solicitude, for their productions are seldom intended to remain
+in the world longer than a week.
+
+That such authors are not to be rewarded with praise is evident, since
+nothing can be admired when it ceases to exist; but surely, though they
+cannot aspire to honour, they may be exempted from ignominy, and adopted
+in that order of men which deserves our kindness, though not our
+reverence. These papers of the day, the _Ephemerae_ of learning, have
+uses more adequate to the purposes of common life than more pompous and
+durable volumes. If it is necessary for every man to be more acquainted
+with his contemporaries than with past generations, and to rather know
+the events which may immediately affect his fortune or quiet, than the
+revolutions of ancient kingdoms, in which he has neither possessions nor
+expectations; if it be pleasing to hear of the preferment and dismission
+of statesmen, the birth of heirs, and the marriage of beauties, the
+humble author of journals and gazettes must be considered as a liberal
+dispenser of beneficial knowledge.
+
+Even the abridger, compiler, and translator, though their labours cannot
+be ranked with those of the diurnal historiographer, yet must not be
+rashly doomed to annihilation. Every size of readers requires a genius
+of correspondent capacity; some delight in abstracts and epitomes,
+because they want room in their memory for long details, and content
+themselves with effects, without inquiry after causes; some minds are
+overpowered by splendour of sentiment, as some eyes are offended by a
+glaring light; such will gladly contemplate an author in an humble
+imitation, as we look without pain upon the sun in the water.
+
+As every writer has his use, every writer ought to have his patrons; and
+since no man, however high he may now stand, can be certain that he
+shall not be soon thrown down from his elevation by criticism or
+caprice, the common interest of learning requires that her sons should
+cease from intestine hostilities, and, instead of sacrificing each other
+to malice and contempt, endeavour to avert persecution from the meanest
+of their fraternity.
+
+
+
+No. 146. SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1751.
+
+ _Sunt illic duo, tresve, qui revolvant
+ Nostrarum tineas ineptiarum;
+ Sed cum sponsio, fabultaeque lassae
+ De scarpo fuerint incitato_. MART.
+
+ 'Tis possible that one or two
+ These fooleries of mine may view;
+ But then the bettings must be o'er,
+ Nor Crab or Childers talk'd of more. F. LEWIS.
+
+None of the projects or designs which exercise the mind of man are
+equally subject to obstructions and disappointments with the pursuit of
+fame. Riches cannot easily be denied to them who have something of
+greater value to offer in exchange; he whose fortune is endangered by
+litigation, will not refuse to augment the wealth of the lawyer; he
+whose days are darkened by langour, or whose nerves are excruciated by
+pain, is compelled to pay tribute to the science of healing. But praise
+may be always omitted without inconvenience. When once a man has made
+celebrity necessary to his happiness, he has put it in the power of the
+weakest and most timorous malignity, if not to take away his
+satisfaction, at least to withhold it. His enemies may indulge their
+pride by airy negligence, and gratify their malice by quiet neutrality.
+They that could never have injured a character by invectives, may
+combine to annihilate it by silence; as the women of Rome threatened to
+put an end to conquest and dominion, by supplying no children to the
+commonwealth.
+
+When a writer has with long toil produced a work intended to burst upon
+mankind with unexpected lustre, and withdraw the attention of the
+learned world from every other controversy or inquiry, he is seldom
+contented to wait long without the enjoyment of his new praises. With an
+imagination full of his own importance, he walks out like a monarch in
+disguise to learn the various opinions of his readers. Prepared to feast
+upon admiration; composed to encounter censures without emotion; and
+determined not to suffer his quiet to be injured by a sensibility too
+exquisite of praise or blame, but to laugh with equal contempt at vain
+objections and injudicious commendations, he enters the places of
+mingled conversation, sits down to his tea in an obscure corner, and,
+while he appears to examine a file of antiquated journals, catches the
+conversation of the whole room. He listens, but hears no mention of his
+book, and therefore supposes that he has disappointed his curiosity by
+delay; and that as men of learning would naturally begin their
+conversation with such a wonderful novelty, they had digressed to other
+subjects before his arrival. The company disperses, and their places are
+supplied by others equally ignorant, or equally careless. The same
+expectation hurries him to another place, from which the same
+disappointment drives him soon away. His impatience then grows violent
+and tumultuous; he ranges over the town with restless curiosity, and
+hears in one quarter of a cricket-match, in another of a pick-pocket; is
+told by some of an unexpected bankruptcy; by others of a turtle feast;
+is sometimes provoked by importunate inquiries after the white bear, and
+sometimes with praises of the dancing dog; he is afterwards entreated to
+give his judgment upon a wager about the height of the Monument; invited
+to see a foot-race in the adjacent villages; desired to read a ludicrous
+advertisement; or consulted about the most effectual method of making
+inquiry after a favourite cat. The whole world is busied in affairs
+which he thinks below the notice of reasonable creatures, and which are
+nevertheless sufficient to withdraw all regard from his labours and his
+merits.
+
+He resolves at last to violate his own modesty, and to recall the
+talkers from their folly by an inquiry after himself. He finds every one
+provided with an answer; one has seen the work advertised, but never met
+with any that had read it; another has been so often imposed upon by
+specious titles, that he never buys a book till its character is
+established; a third wonders what any man can hope to produce after so
+many writers of greater eminence; the next has inquired after the
+author, but can hear no account of him, and therefore suspects the name
+to be fictitious; and another knows him to be a man condemned by
+indigence to write too frequently what he does not understand.
+
+Many are the consolations with which the unhappy author endeavours to
+allay his vexation, and fortify his patience. He has written with too
+little indulgence to the understanding of common readers; he has fallen
+upon an age in which solid knowledge, and delicate refinement, have
+given way to a low merriment, and idle buffoonery, and therefore no
+writer can hope for distinction, who has any higher purpose than to
+raise laughter. He finds that his enemies, such as superiority will
+always raise, have been industrious, while his performance was in the
+press, to vilify and blast it; and that the bookseller, whom he had
+resolved to enrich, has rivals that obstruct the circulation of the
+copies. He at last reposes upon the consideration, that the noblest
+works of learning and genius have always made their way slowly against
+ignorance and prejudice; and that reputation, which is never to be lost,
+must be gradually obtained, as animals of longest life are observed not
+soon to attain their full stature and strength.
+
+By such arts of voluntary delusion does every man endeavour to conceal
+his own unimportance from himself. It is long before we are convinced of
+the small proportion which every individual bears to the collective body
+of mankind; or learn how few can be interested in the fortune of any
+single man; how little vacancy is left in the world for any new object
+of attention; to how small extent the brightest blaze of merit can be
+spread amidst the mists of business and of folly; and how soon it is
+clouded by the intervention of other novelties. Not only the writer of
+books, but the commander of armies, and the deliverer of nations, will
+easily outlive all noisy and popular reputation; he may be celebrated
+for a time by the publick voice, but his actions and his name will soon
+be considered as remote and unaffecting, and be rarely mentioned but by
+those whose alliance gives them some vanity to gratify by frequent
+commemoration.
+
+It seems not to be sufficiently considered how little renown can be
+admitted in the world. Mankind are kept perpetually busy by their fears
+or desires, and have not more leisure from their own affairs, than to
+acquaint themselves with the accidents of the current day. Engaged in
+contriving some refuge from calamity, or in shortening the way to some
+new possession, they seldom suffer their thoughts to wander to the past
+or future; none but a few solitary students have leisure to inquire into
+the claims of ancient heroes or sages; and names which hoped to range
+over kingdoms and continents, shrink at last into cloisters or colleges.
+
+Nor is it certain, that even of these dark and narrow habitations, these
+last retreats of fame, the possession will be long kept. Of men devoted
+to literature, very few extend their views beyond some particular
+science, and the greater part seldom inquire, even in their own
+profession, for any authors but those whom the present mode of study
+happens to force upon their notice; they desire not to fill their minds
+with unfashionable knowledge, but contentedly resign to oblivion those
+books which they now find censured or neglected.
+
+The hope of fame is necessarily connected with such considerations as
+must abate the ardour of confidence, and repress the vigour of pursuit.
+Whoever claims renown from any kind of excellence, expects to fill the
+place which is now possessed by another; for there are already names of
+every class sufficient to employ all that will desire to remember them;
+and surely he that is pushing his predecessors into the gulph of
+obscurity, cannot but sometimes suspect, that he must himself sink in
+like manner, and, as he stands upon the same precipice, be swept away
+with the same violence.
+
+It sometimes happens, that fame begins when life is at an end; but far
+the greater number of candidates for applause have owed their reception
+in the world to some favourable casualties, and have therefore
+immediately sunk into neglect, when death stripped them of their casual
+influence, and neither fortune nor patronage operated in their favour.
+Among those who have better claims to regard, the honour paid to their
+memory is commonly proportionate to the reputation which they enjoyed in
+their lives, though still growing fainter, as it is at a greater
+distance from the first emission; and since it is so difficult to obtain
+the notice of contemporaries, how little is to be hoped from future
+times? What can merit effect by its own force, when the help of art or
+friendship can scarcely support it?
+
+
+
+No. 147. TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1751.
+
+ Tu nihil invitâ dices faciesve Minervâ. Hon. Ar. Poet. 385.
+
+ --You are of too quick a sight,
+ Not to discern which way your talent lies. ROSCOMMON.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+As little things grow great by continual accumulation, I hope you will
+not think the dignity of your character impaired by an account of a
+ludicrous persecution, which, though it produced no scenes of horrour or
+of ruin, yet, by incessant importunity of vexation, wears away my
+happiness, and consumes those years which nature seems particularly to
+have assigned to cheerfulness, in silent anxiety and helpless
+resentment.
+
+I am the eldest son of a gentleman, who having inherited a large estate
+from his ancestors, and feeling no desire either to increase or lessen
+it, has from the time of his marriage generally resided at his own seat;
+where, by dividing his time among the duties of a father, a master, and
+a magistrate, the study of literature, and the offices of civility, he
+finds means to rid himself of the day, without any of those amusements,
+which all those with whom my residence in this place has made me
+acquainted, think necessary to lighten the burthen of existence.
+
+When my age made me capable of instruction, my father prevailed upon a
+gentleman, long known at Oxford for the extent of his learning and the
+purity of his manners, to undertake my education. The regard with which
+I saw him treated, disposed me to consider his instructions as
+important, and I therefore soon formed a habit of attention, by which I
+made very quick advances in different kinds of learning, and heard,
+perhaps too often, very flattering comparisons of my own proficiency
+with that of others, either less docile by nature, or less happily
+forwarded by instruction. I was caressed by all that exchanged visits
+with my father; and as young men are with little difficulty taught to
+judge favourably of themselves, began to think that close application
+was no longer necessary, and that the time was now come when I was at
+liberty to read only for amusement, and was to receive the reward of my
+fatigues in praise and admiration.
+
+While I was thus banqueting upon my own perfections, and longing in
+secret to escape from tutorage, my father's brother came from London to
+pass a summer at his native place. A lucrative employment which he
+possessed, and a fondness for the conversation and diversions of the gay
+part of mankind, had so long kept him from rural excursions, that I had
+never seen him since my infancy. My curiosity was therefore strongly
+excited by the hope of observing a character more nearly, which I had
+hitherto reverenced only at a distance.
+
+From all private and intimate conversation, I was long withheld by the
+perpetual confluence of visitants with whom the first news of my uncle's
+arrival crowded the house; but was amply recompensed by seeing an exact
+and punctilious practice of the arts of a courtier, in all the
+stratagems of endearment, the gradations of respect, and variations of
+courtesy. I remarked with what justice of distribution he divided his
+talk to a wide circle; with what address he offered to every man an
+occasion of indulging some favourite topick, or displaying some
+particular attainment; the judgment with which he regulated his
+inquiries after the absent; and the care with which he shewed all the
+companions of his early years how strongly they were infixed in his
+memory, by the mention of past incidents and the recital of puerile
+kindnesses, dangers, and frolicks. I soon discovered that he possessed
+some science of graciousness and attraction which books had not taught,
+and of which neither I nor my father had any knowledge; that he had the
+power of obliging those whom he did not benefit; that he diffused, upon
+his cursory behaviour and most trifling actions, a gloss of softness and
+delicacy by which every one was dazzled; and that, by some occult method
+of captivation, he animated the timorous, softened the supercilious, and
+opened the reserved. I could not but repine at the inelegance of my own
+manners, which left me no hopes but not to offend, and at the inefficacy
+of rustick benevolence, which gained no friends but by real service.
+
+My uncle saw the veneration with which I caught every accent of his
+voice, and watched every motion of his hand; and the awkward diligence
+with which I endeavoured to imitate his embrace of fondness, and his bow
+of respect. He was, like others, easily flattered by an imitator by whom
+he could not fear ever to be rivalled, and repaid my assiduities with
+compliments and professions. Our fondness was so increased by a mutual
+endeavour to please each other, that when he returned to London, he
+declared himself unable to leave a nephew so amiable and so accomplished
+behind him; and obtained my father's permission to enjoy my company for
+a few months, by a promise to initiate me in the arts of politeness, and
+introduce me into publick life.
+
+The courtier had little inclination to fatigue, and therefore, by
+travelling very slowly, afforded me time for more loose and familiar
+conversation; but I soon found, that by a few inquiries which he was not
+well prepared to satisfy, I had made him weary of his young companion.
+His element was a mixed assembly, where ceremony and healths,
+compliments and common topicks, kept the tongue employed with very
+little assistance from memory or reflection; but in the chariot, where
+he was necessitated to support a regular tenour of conversation, without
+any relief from a new comer, or any power of starting into gay
+digressions, or destroying argument by a jest, he soon discovered that
+poverty of ideas which had been hitherto concealed under the tinsel of
+politeness. The first day he entertained me with the novelties and
+wonders with which I should be astonished at my entrance into London,
+and cautioned me with apparent admiration of his own wisdom against the
+arts by which rusticity is frequently deluded. The same detail and the
+same advice he would have repeated on the second day; but as I every
+moment diverted the discourse to the history of the towns by which we
+passed, or some other subject of learning or of reason, he soon lost his
+vivacity, grew peevish and silent, wrapped his cloak about him, composed
+himself to slumber, and reserved his gaiety for fitter auditors.
+
+At length I entered London, and my uncle was reinstated in his
+superiority. He awaked at once to loquacity as soon as our wheels
+rattled on the pavement, and told me the name of every street as we
+crossed it, and owner of every house as we passed by. He presented me to
+my aunt, a lady of great eminence for the number of her acquaintances,
+and splendour of her assemblies, and either in kindness or revenge
+consulted with her, in my presence, how I might be most advantageously
+dressed for my first appearance, and most expeditiously disencumbered
+from my villatick bashfulness. My indignation at familiarity thus
+contemptuous flushed in my face; they mistook anger for shame, and
+alternately exerted their eloquence upon the benefits of publick
+education, and the happiness of an assurance early acquired.
+
+Assurance is, indeed, the only qualification to which they seem to have
+annexed merit, and assurance, therefore, is perpetually recommended to
+me as the supply of every defect, and the ornament of every excellence.
+I never sit silent in company when secret history is circulating, but I
+am reproached for want of assurance. If I fail to return the stated
+answer to a compliment; if I am disconcerted by unexpected raillery; if
+I blush when I am discovered gazing on a beauty, or hesitate when I find
+myself embarrassed in an argument; if I am unwilling to talk of what I
+do not understand, or timorous in undertaking offices which I cannot
+gracefully perform; if I suffer a more lively tatler to recount the
+casualties of a game, or a nimbler fop to pick up a fan, I am censured
+between pity and contempt, as a wretch doomed to grovel in obscurity for
+want of assurance.
+
+I have found many young persons harassed in the same manner, by those to
+whom age has given nothing but the assurance which they recommend; and
+therefore cannot but think it useful to inform them, that cowardice and
+delicacy are not to be confounded; and that he whose stupidity has armed
+him against the shafts of ridicule, will always act and speak with
+greater audacity, than they whose sensibility represses their ardour,
+and who dare never let their confidence outgrow their abilities.
+
+
+
+No. 148. SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1751.
+
+ _Me pater saevis oneret catenis,
+ Quod viro clemens misero peperci:
+ Me vel extremis Numidarum in agros
+ Classe releget._ HOR. Lib. iii. Od. xi. 45.
+
+ Me let my father load with chains,
+ Or banish to Numidia's farthest plains!
+ My crime, that I, a loyal wife,
+ In kind compassion sav'd my husband's life. FRANCIS.
+
+Politicians remark, that no oppression is so heavy or lasting as that
+which is inflicted by the perversion and exorbitance of legal authority.
+The robber may be seized, and the invader repelled, whenever they are
+found; they who pretend no right but that of force, may by force be
+punished or suppressed. But when plunder bears the name of impost, and
+murder is perpetrated by a judicial sentence, fortitude is intimidated,
+and wisdom confounded: resistance shrinks from an alliance with
+rebellion, and the villain remains secure in the robes of the
+magistrate.
+
+Equally dangerous and equally detestable are the cruelties often
+exercised in private families, under the venerable sanction of parental
+authority; the power which we are taught to honour from the first
+moments of reason; which is guarded from insult and violation by all
+that can impress awe upon the mind of man; and which therefore may
+wanton in cruelty without control, and trample the bounds of right with
+innumerable transgressions, before duty and piety will dare to seek
+redress, or think themselves at liberty to recur to any other means of
+deliverance than supplications by which insolence is elated, and tears
+by which cruelty is gratified.
+
+It was for a long time imagined by the Romans, that no son could be the
+murderer of his father; and they had therefore no punishment
+appropriated to parricide. They seem likewise to have believed with
+equal confidence, that no father could be cruel to his child; and
+therefore they allowed every man the supreme judicature in his own
+house, and put the lives of his offspring into his hands. But experience
+informed them by degrees, that they determined too hastily in favour of
+human nature; they found that instinct and habit were not able to
+contend with avarice or malice; that the nearest relation might be
+violated; and that power, to whomsoever intrusted, might be ill
+employed. They were therefore obliged to supply and to change their
+institutions; to deter the parricide by a new law, and to transfer
+capital punishments from the parent to the magistrate.
+
+There are indeed many houses which it is impossible to enter familiarly,
+without discovering that parents are by no means exempt from the
+intoxications of dominion; and that he who is in no danger of hearing
+remonstrances but from his own conscience, will seldom be long without
+the art of controling his convictions, and modifying justice by his own
+will.
+
+If in any situation the heart were inaccessible to malignity, it might
+be supposed to be sufficiently secured by parental relation. To have
+voluntarily become to any being the occasion of its existence, produces
+an obligation to make that existence happy. To see helpless infancy
+stretching out her hands, and pouring out her cries in testimony of
+dependence, without any powers to alarm jealousy, or any guilt to
+alienate affection, must surely awaken tenderness in every human mind;
+and tenderness once excited will be hourly increased by the natural
+contagion of felicity, by the repercussion of communicated pleasure, by
+the consciousness of the dignity of benefaction. I believe no generous
+or benevolent man can see the vilest animal courting his regard, and
+shrinking at his anger, playing his gambols of delight before him,
+calling on him in distress, and flying to him in danger, without more
+kindness than he can persuade himself to feel for the wild and unsocial
+inhabitants of the air and water. We naturally endear to ourselves those
+to whom we impart any kind of pleasure, because we imagine their
+affection and esteem secured to us by the benefits which they receive.
+
+There is, indeed, another method by which the pride of superiority may
+be likewise gratified. He that has extinguished all the sensations of
+humanity, and has no longer any satisfaction in the reflection that he
+is loved as the distributor of happiness, may please himself with
+exciting terrour as the inflictor of pain: he may delight his solitude
+with contemplating the extent of his power and the force of his
+commands; in imagining the desires that flutter on the tongue which is
+forbidden to utter them, or the discontent which preys on the heart in
+which fear confines it: he may amuse himself with new contrivances of
+detection, multiplications of prohibition, and varieties of punishment;
+and swell with exultation when he considers how little of the homage
+that he receives he owes to choice.
+
+That princes of this character have been known, the history of all
+absolute kingdoms will inform us; and since, as Aristotle observes,
+_[Greek: hae oikonomikae monarchia], the government of a family is
+naturally monarchical_, it is, like other monarchies, too often
+arbitrarily administered. The regal and parental tyrant differ only in
+the extent of their dominions, and the number of their slaves. The same
+passions cause the same miseries; except that seldom any prince, however
+despotick, has so far shaken off all awe of the publick eye, as to
+venture upon those freaks of injustice, which are sometimes indulged
+under the secrecy of a private dwelling. Capricious injunctions, partial
+decisions, unequal allotments, distributions of reward, not by merit,
+but by fancy, and punishments, regulated not by the degree of the
+offence, but by the humour of the judge, are too frequent where no power
+is known but that of a father.
+
+That he delights in the misery of others, no man will confess, and yet
+what other motive can make a father cruel? The king may be instigated by
+one man to the destruction of another; he may sometimes think himself
+endangered by the virtues of a subject; he may dread the successful
+general or the popular orator; his avarice may point out golden
+confiscations; and his guilt may whisper that he can only be secure by
+cutting off all power of revenge.
+
+But what can a parent hope from the oppression of those who were born to
+his protection, of those who can disturb him with no competition, who
+can enrich him with no spoils? Why cowards are cruel may be easily
+discovered; but for what reason, not more infamous than cowardice, can
+that man delight in oppression who has nothing to fear?
+
+The unjustifiable severity of a parent is loaded with this aggravation,
+that those whom he injures are always in his sight. The injustice of a
+prince is often exercised upon those of whom he never had any personal
+or particular knowledge; and the sentence which he pronounces, whether
+of banishment, imprisonment, or death, removes from his view the man
+whom he condemns. But the domestick oppressor dooms himself to gaze upon
+those faces which he clouds with terrour and with sorrow; and beholds
+every moment the effects of his own barbarities. He that can bear to
+give continual pain to those who surround him, and can walk with
+satisfaction in the gloom of his own presence; he that can see
+submissive misery without relenting, and meet without emotion the eye
+that implores mercy, or demands justice, will scarcely be amended by
+remonstrance or admonition; he has found means of stopping the avenues
+of tenderness, and arming his heart against the force of reason.
+
+Even though no consideration should be paid to the great law of social
+beings, by which every individual is commanded to consult the happiness
+of others, yet the harsh parent is less to be vindicated than any other
+criminal, because he less provides for the happiness of himself. Every
+man, however little he loves others, would willingly be loved; every man
+hopes to live long, and therefore hopes for that time at which he shall
+sink back to imbecility, and must depend for ease and cheerfulness upon
+the officiousness of others. But how has he obviated the inconveniencies
+of old age, who alienates from him the assistance of his children, and
+whose bed must be surrounded in the last hours, in the hours of languor
+and dejection, of impatience and of pain, by strangers to whom his life
+is indifferent, or by enemies to whom his death is desirable?
+
+Piety will, indeed, in good minds overcome provocation, and those who
+have been harassed by brutality will forget the injuries which they have
+suffered, so far as to perform the last duties with alacrity and zeal.
+But surely no resentment can be equally painful with kindness thus
+undeserved, nor can severer punishment be imprecated upon a man not
+wholly lost in meanness and stupidity, than, through the tediousness of
+decrepitude, to be reproached by the kindness of his own children, to
+receive not the tribute but the alms of attendance, and to owe every
+relief of his miseries, not to gratitude but to mercy.
+
+
+
+No. 149. TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1751.
+
+ _Quod non sit Pylades hoc tempore, non sit Orestes,
+ Miraris? Pylades, Marce, bibebat idem.
+ Nec melior panis, turdusve dabatur Oresti:
+ Sed par, atque eadem coena duobus erat.--
+ Te Cadmea Tyrus, me pinguis Gallia vestit:
+ Vis te purpureum, Marce, sagatus amem?
+ Ut praestem Pyladen, aliquis mihi praestet Orestem.
+ Hoc non fit verbis, Marce: ut ameris, ama_. MART. Lib. vi. Ep. xi.
+
+ You wonder now that no man sees
+ Such friends as those of ancient Greece.
+ Here lay the point--Orestes' meat
+ Was just the same his friend did eat;
+ Nor can it yet be found, his wine
+ Was better, Pylades, than thine.
+ In home-spun russet, I am drest,
+ Your cloth is always of the best;
+ But, honest Marcus, if you please
+ To chuse me for your Pylades,
+ Remember, words alone are vain;
+ Love--if you would be lov'd again. F. LEWIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+No depravity of the mind has been more frequently or justly censured
+than ingratitude. There is indeed sufficient reason for looking on those
+that can return evil for good, and repay kindness and assistance with
+hatred or neglect, as corrupted beyond the common degrees of wickedness;
+nor will he, who has once been clearly detected in acts of injury to his
+benefactor, deserve to be numbered among social beings; he has
+endeavoured to destroy confidence, to intercept sympathy, and to turn
+every man's attention wholly on himself.
+
+There is always danger lest the honest abhorrence of a crime should
+raise the passions with too much violence against the man to whom it is
+imputed. In proportion as guilt is more enormous, it ought to be
+ascertained by stronger evidence. The charge against ingratitude is very
+general; almost every man can tell what favours he has conferred upon
+insensibility, and how much happiness he has bestowed without return;
+but perhaps, if these patrons and protectors were confronted with any
+whom they boast of having befriended, it would often appear that they
+consulted only their pleasure or vanity, and repaid themselves their
+petty donatives by gratifications of insolence and indulgence of
+contempt.
+
+It has happened that much of my time has been passed in a dependent
+state, and consequently I have received many favours in the opinion of
+those at whose expense I have been maintained; yet I do not feel in my
+heart any burning gratitude or tumultuous affection; and, as I would not
+willingly suppose myself less susceptible of virtuous passions than the
+rest of mankind, I shall lay the history of my life before you, that you
+may, by your judgment of my conduct, either reform, or confirm, my
+present sentiments. My father was the second son of a very ancient and
+wealthy family. He married a lady of equal birth, whose fortune, joined
+to his own, might have supported his posterity in honour; but being gay
+and ambitious, he prevailed on his friends to procure him a post, which
+gave him an opportunity of displaying his elegance and politeness. My
+mother was equally pleased with splendour, and equally careless of
+expense; they both justified their profusion to themselves, by
+endeavouring to believe it necessary to the extension of their
+acquaintance, and improvement of their interest; and whenever any place
+became vacant, they expected to be repaid. In the midst of these hopes
+my father was snatched away by an apoplexy; and my mother, who had no
+pleasure but in dress, equipage, assemblies, and compliments, finding
+that she could live no longer in her accustomed rank, sunk into
+dejection, and in two years wore out her life with envy and discontent.
+
+I was sent with a sister, one year younger than myself, to the elder
+brother of my father. We were not yet capable of observing how much
+fortune influences affection, but flattered ourselves on the road with
+the tenderness and regard with which we should be treated by our uncle.
+Our reception was rather frigid than malignant; we were introduced to
+our young cousins, and for the first month more frequently consoled than
+upbraided; but in a short time we found our prattle repressed, our dress
+neglected, our endearments unregarded, and our requests referred to the
+housekeeper.
+
+The forms of decency were now violated, and every day produced new
+insults. We were soon brought to the necessity of receding from our
+imagined equality with our cousins, to whom we sunk into humble
+companions without choice or influence, expected only to echo their
+opinions, facilitate their desires, and accompany their rambles. It was
+unfortunate that our early introduction into polite company, and
+habitual knowledge of the arts of civility, had given us such an
+appearance of superiority to the awkward bashfulness of our relations,
+as naturally drew respect and preference from every stranger; and my
+aunt was forced to assert the dignity of her own children, while they
+were sculking in corners for fear of notice, and hanging down their
+heads in silent confusion, by relating the indiscretion of our father,
+displaying her own kindness, lamenting the misery of birth without
+estate, and declaring her anxiety for our future provision, and the
+expedients which she had formed to secure us from those follies or
+crimes, to which the conjunction of pride and want often gives occasion.
+In a short time care was taken to prevent such vexatious mistakes; we
+were told, that fine clothes would only fill our heads with false
+expectations, and our dress was therefore accommodated to our fortune.
+
+Childhood is not easily dejected or mortified. We felt no lasting pain
+from insolence or neglect; but finding that we were favoured and
+commended by all whose interest did not prompt them to discountenance
+us, preserved our vivacity and spirit to years of greater sensibility.
+It then became irksome and disgusting to live without any principle of
+action but the will of another, and we often met privately in the garden
+to lament our condition, and to ease our hearts with mutual narratives
+of caprice, peevishness, and affront.
+
+There are innumerable modes of insult and tokens of contempt, for which
+it is not easy to find a name, which vanish to nothing in an attempt to
+describe them, and yet may, by continual repetition, make day pass after
+day in sorrow and in terrour. Phrases of cursory compliment and
+established salutation may, by a different modulation of the voice, or
+cast of the countenance, convey contrary meanings, and be changed from
+indications of respect to expressions of scorn. The dependant who
+cultivates delicacy in himself, very little consults his own
+tranquillity. My unhappy vigilance is every moment discovering some
+petulance of accent, or arrogance of mien, some vehemence of
+interrogation, or quickness of reply, that recals my poverty to my mind,
+and which I feel more acutely, as I know not how to resent it.
+
+You are not, however, to imagine, that I think myself discharged from
+the duties of gratitude, only because my relations do not adjust their
+looks, or tune their voices to my expectation. The insolence of
+benefaction terminates not in negative rudeness or obliquities of
+insult. I am often told in express terms of the miseries from which
+charity has snatched me, while multitudes are suffered by relations
+equally near to devolve upon the parish; and have more than once heard
+it numbered among other favours, that I am admitted to the same table
+with my cousins.
+
+That I sit at the first table I must acknowledge, but I sit there only
+that I may feel the stings of inferiority. My inquiries are neglected,
+my opinion is overborne, my assertions are controverted, and, as
+insolence always propagates itself, the servants overlook me, in
+imitation of their master; if I call modestly, I am not heard; if
+loudly, my usurpation of authority is checked by a general frown. I am
+often obliged to look uninvited upon delicacies, and sometimes desired
+to rise upon very slight pretences.
+
+The incivilities to which I am exposed would give me less pain, were
+they not aggravated by the tears of my sister, whom the young ladies are
+hourly tormenting with every art of feminine persecution. As it is said
+of the supreme magistrate of Venice, that he is a prince in one place
+and a slave in another, my sister is a servant to her cousins in their
+apartments, and a companion only at the table. Her wit and beauty drew
+so much regard away from them, that they never suffer her to appear with
+them in any place where they solicit notice, or expect admiration; and
+when they are visited by neighbouring ladies and pass their hours in
+domestick amusements, she is sometimes called to fill a vacancy,
+insulted with contemptuous freedoms, and dismissed to her needle, when
+her place is supplied. The heir has of late, by the instigation of his
+sisters, begun to harass her with clownish jocularity; he seems inclined
+to make his first rude essays of waggery upon her; and by the
+connivance, if not encouragement, of his father, treats her with such
+licentious brutality, as I cannot bear, though I cannot punish it.
+
+I beg to be informed, Mr. Rambler, how much we can be supposed to owe to
+beneficence, exerted on terms like these? to beneficence which pollutes
+its gifts with contumely, and may be truly said to pander to pride? I
+would willingly be told, whether insolence does not reward its own
+liberalities, and whether he that exacts servility can, with justice, at
+the same time, expect affection?
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+HYPERDULUS.
+
+
+
+No. 150. SATURDAY, AUGUST 24, 1751.
+
+ --_O munera nondum
+ Intellecta Deum!_ LUCAN.
+
+ --Thou chiefest good!
+ Bestow'd by Heav'n, but seldom understood. ROWE.
+
+As daily experience makes it evident that misfortunes are unavoidably
+incident to human life, that calamity will neither be repelled by
+fortitude, nor escaped by flight; neither awed by greatness, nor eluded
+by obscurity; philosophers have endeavoured to reconcile us to that
+condition which they cannot teach us to mend, by persuading us that most
+of our evils are made afflictive only by ignorance or perverseness, and
+that nature has annexed to every vicissitude of external circumstances
+some advantage sufficient to over-balance all its inconveniencies.
+
+This attempt may, perhaps, be justly suspected of resemblance to the
+practice of physicians, who, when they cannot mitigate pain, destroy
+sensibility, and endeavour to conceal, by opiates, the inefficacy of
+their other medicines. The panegyrists of calamity have more frequently
+gained applause to their wit, than acquiescence to their arguments; nor
+has it appeared that the most musical oratory, or subtle ratiocination,
+has been able long to overpower the anguish of oppression, the
+tediousness of languor, or the longings of want.
+
+Yet, it may be generally remarked, that, where much has been attempted,
+something has been performed; though the discoveries or acquisitions of
+man are not always adequate to the expectations of his pride, they are
+at least sufficient to animate his industry. The antidotes with which
+philosophy has medicated the cup of life, though they cannot give it
+salubrity and sweetness, have at least allayed its bitterness, and
+contempered its malignity; the balm which she drops upon the wounds of
+the mind abates their pain, though it cannot heal them.
+
+By suffering willingly what we cannot avoid, we secure ourselves from
+vain and immoderate disquiet; we preserve for better purposes that
+strength which would be unprofitably wasted in wild efforts of
+desperation, and maintain that circumspection which may enable us to
+seize every support, and improve every alleviation. This calmness will
+be more easily obtained, as the attention is more powerfully withdrawn
+from the contemplation of unmingled unabated evil, and diverted to those
+accidental benefits which prudence may confer on every state.
+
+Seneca has attempted, not only to pacify us in misfortune, but almost to
+allure us to it, by representing it as necessary to the pleasures of the
+mind. _He that never was acquainted with adversity_, says he, _has seen
+the world but on one side, and is ignorant of half the scenes of
+nature_. He invites his pupil to calamity, as the Syrens allured the
+passenger to their coasts, by promising that he shall return [Greek:
+pleiona eidos], with increase of knowledge, with enlarged views, and
+multiplied ideas.
+
+Curiosity is, in great and generous minds, the first passion and the
+last; and perhaps always predominates in proportion to the strength of
+the contemplative faculties. He who easily comprehends all that is
+before him, and soon exhausts any single subject, is always eager for
+new inquiries; and, in proportion as the intellectual eye takes in a
+wider prospect, it must be gratified with variety by more rapid flights,
+and bolder excursions; nor perhaps can there be proposed to those who
+have been accustomed to the pleasures of thought, a more powerful
+incitement to any undertaking, than the hope of filling their fancy with
+new images, of clearing their doubts, and enlightening their reason.
+
+When Jason, in Valerius Flaccus, would incline the young prince Acastus
+to accompany him in the first essay of navigation, he disperses his
+apprehensions of danger by representations of the new tracts of earth
+and heaven, which the expedition would spread before their eyes; and
+tells him with what grief he will hear, at their return, of the
+countries which they shall have seen, and the toils which they have
+surmounted:
+
+ _O quantum terrae, quantum cognoscere coeli
+ Permissum est! pelagus quantos aperimus in usus!
+ Nunc forsan grave reris opus: sed laeta recurret
+ Cum ratis, et caram cum jam mihi reddet Iolcon;
+ Quis pudor heu nostros tibi tunc audire labores!
+ Quam referam visas tua per suspiria gentes!_ ARG. Lib. i. 168.
+
+ Led by our stars, what tracts immense we trace!
+ From seas remote, what funds of science raise!
+ A pain to thought! but when the heroick band
+ Returns applauded to their native land,
+ A life domestick you will then deplore,
+ And sigh while I describe the various, shore. EDW. CAVE.
+
+Acastus was soon prevailed upon by his curiosity to set rocks and
+hardships at defiance, and commit his life to the winds; and the same
+motives have in all ages had the same effect upon those whom the desire
+of fame or wisdom has distinguished from the lower orders of mankind.
+
+If, therefore, it can be proved that distress is necessary to the
+attainment of knowledge, and that a happy situation hides from us so
+large a part of the field of meditation, the envy of many who repine at
+the sight of affluence and splendour will be much diminished; for such
+is the delight of mental superiority, that none on whom nature or study
+have conferred it, would purchase the gifts of fortune by its loss.
+
+It is certain, that however the rhetorick of Seneca may have dressed
+adversity with extrinsick ornaments, he has justly represented it as
+affording some opportunities of observation, which cannot be found in
+continual success; he has truly asserted, that to escape misfortune is
+to want instruction, and that to live at ease is to live in ignorance.
+
+As no man can enjoy happiness without thinking that he enjoys it, the
+experience of calamity is necessary to a just sense of better fortune:
+for the good of our present state is merely comparative, and the evil
+which every man feels will be sufficient to disturb and harass him, if
+he does not know how much he escapes. The lustre of diamonds is
+invigorated by the interposition of darker bodies; the lights of a
+picture are created by the shades. The highest pleasure which nature has
+indulged to sensitive perception, is that of rest after fatigue; yet,
+that state which labour heightens into delight, is of itself only ease,
+and is incapable of satisfying the mind without the superaddition of
+diversified amusements.
+
+Prosperity, as is truly asserted by Seneca, very much obstructs the
+knowledge of ourselves. No man can form a just estimate of his own
+powers by unactive speculation. That fortitude which has encountered no
+dangers, that prudence which has surmounted no difficulties, that
+integrity which has been attacked by no temptations, can at best be
+considered but as gold not yet brought to the test, of which therefore
+the true value cannot be assigned. _He that traverses the lists without
+an adversary, may receive_, says the philosopher, _the reward of
+victory, but he has no pretensions to the honour_. If it be the highest
+happiness of man to contemplate himself with satisfaction, and to
+receive the gratulations of his own conscience; he whose courage has
+made way amidst the turbulence of opposition, and whose vigour has
+broken through the snares of distress, has many advantages over those
+that have slept in the shades of indolence, and whose retrospect of time
+can entertain them with nothing but day rising upon day, and year
+gliding after year.
+
+Equally necessary is some variety of fortune to a nearer inspection of
+the manners, principles, and affections of mankind. Princes, when they
+would know the opinions or grievances of their subjects, find it
+necessary to steal away from guards and attendants, and mingle on equal
+terms among the people. To him who is known to have the power of doing
+good or harm, nothing is shewn in its natural form. The behaviour of all
+that approach him is regulated by his humour, their narratives are
+adapted to his inclination, and their reasonings determined by his
+opinions; whatever can alarm suspicion, or excite resentment, is
+carefully suppressed, and nothing appears but uniformity of sentiments,
+and ardour of affection. It may be observed, that the unvaried
+complaisance which ladies have the right of exacting, keeps them
+generally unskilled in human nature; prosperity will always enjoy the
+female prerogatives, and therefore must be always in danger of female
+ignorance. Truth is scarcely to be heard, but by those from whom it can
+serve no interest to conceal it.
+
+
+
+No. 151. TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1751.
+
+ [Greek:--Amphi d anthro-
+ pon phresin amplakiai
+ Anarithmatoi kremantai
+ Touto d amachanon eurein,
+ O ti nun, kai en teleu-
+ ta, phertaton andri tuchein.] PINDAR, Ol. vii. 43.
+[Transcriber's note: line breaks and hyphenation in original.]
+
+ But wrapt in error is the human mind,
+ And human bliss is ever insecure:
+ Know we what fortune yet remains behind?
+ Know we how long the present shall endure? WEST.
+
+The writers of medicine and physiology have traced, with great
+appearance of accuracy, the effects of time upon the human body, by
+marking the various periods of the constitution, and the several stages
+by which animal life makes its progress from infancy to decrepitude.
+Though their observations have not enabled them to discover how manhood
+may be accelerated, or old age retarded, yet surely, if they be
+considered only as the amusements of curiosity, they are of equal
+importance with conjectures on things more remote, with catalogues of
+the fixed stars, and calculations of the bulk of planets.
+
+It had been a task worthy of the moral philosophers to have considered
+with equal care the climactericks of the mind; to have pointed out the
+time at which every passion begins and ceases to predominate, and noted
+the regular variations of desire, and the succession of one appetite to
+another.
+
+The periods of mental change are not to be stated with equal certainty;
+our bodies grow up under the care of nature, and depend so little on our
+own management, that something more than negligence is necessary to
+discompose their structure, or impede their vigour. But our minds are
+committed in a great measure first to the direction of others, and
+afterwards of ourselves. It would be difficult to protract the weakness
+of infancy beyond the usual time, but the mind may be very easily
+hindered from its share of improvement, and the bulk and strength of
+manhood must, without the assistance of education and instruction, be
+informed only with the understanding of a child.
+
+Yet, amidst all the disorder and inequality which variety of discipline,
+example, conversation, and employment, produce in the intellectual
+advances of different men, there is still discovered, by a vigilant
+spectator, such a general and remote similitude, as may be expected in
+the same common nature affected by external circumstances indefinitely
+varied. We all enter the world in equal ignorance, gaze round about us
+on the same objects, and have our first pains and pleasures, our first
+hopes and fears, our first aversions and desires, from the same causes;
+and though, as we proceed farther, life opens wider prospects to our
+view, and accidental impulses determine us to different paths, yet as
+every mind, however vigorous or abstracted, is necessitated, in its
+present state of union, to receive its informations, and execute its
+purposes, by the intervention of the body, the uniformity of our
+corporeal nature communicates itself to our intellectual operations; and
+those whose abilities or knowledge incline them most to deviate from the
+general round of life, are recalled from eccentricity by the laws of
+their existence.
+
+If we consider the exercises of the mind, it will be found that in each
+part of life some particular faculty is more eminently employed. When
+the treasures of knowledge are first opened before us, while novelty
+blooms alike on either hand, and every thing equally unknown and
+unexamined seems of equal value, the power of the soul is principally
+exerted in a vivacious and desultory curiosity. She applies by turns to
+every object, enjoys it for a short time, and flies with equal ardour to
+another. She delights to catch up loose and unconnected ideas, but
+starts away from systems and complications, which would obstruct the
+rapidity of her transitions, and detain her long in the same pursuit.
+
+When a number of distinct images are collected by these erratick and
+hasty surveys, the fancy is busied in arranging them; and combines them
+into pleasing pictures with more resemblance to the realities of life as
+experience advances, and new observations rectify the former. While the
+judgment is yet uninformed, and unable to compare the draughts of
+fiction with their originals, we are delighted with improbable
+adventures, impracticable virtues, and inimitable characters: but, in
+proportion as we have more opportunities of acquainting ourselves with
+living nature, we are sooner disgusted with copies in which there
+appears no resemblance. We first discard absurdity and impossibility,
+then exact greater and greater degrees of probability, but at last
+become cold and insensible to the charms of falsehood, however specious,
+and, from the imitations of truth, which are never perfect, transfer our
+affection to truth itself.
+
+Now commences the reign of judgment or reason; we begin to find little
+pleasure but in comparing arguments, stating propositions, disentangling
+perplexities, clearing ambiguities, and deducing consequences. The
+painted vales of imagination are deserted, and our intellectual activity
+is exercised in winding through the labyrinths of fallacy, and toiling
+with firm and cautious steps up the narrow tracks of demonstration.
+Whatever may lull vigilance, or mislead attention, is contemptuously
+rejected, and every disguise in which errour may be concealed, is
+carefully observed, till, by degrees, a certain number of incontestable
+or unsuspected propositions are established, and at last concatenated
+into arguments, or compacted into systems.
+
+At length weariness succeeds to labour, and the mind lies at ease in the
+contemplation of her own attainments, without any desire of new
+conquests or excursions. This is the age of recollection and narrative;
+the opinions are settled, and the avenues of apprehension shut against
+any new intelligence; the days that are to follow must pass in the
+inculcation of precepts already collected, and assertion of tenets
+already received; nothing is henceforward so odious as opposition, so
+insolent as doubt, or so dangerous as novelty.
+
+In like manner the passions usurp the separate command of the successive
+periods of life. To the happiness of our first years nothing more seems
+necessary than freedom from restraint: every man may remember that if he
+was left to himself, and indulged in the disposal of his own time, he
+was once content without the superaddition of any actual pleasure. The
+new world is itself a banquet; and, till we have exhausted the freshness
+of life, we have always about us sufficient gratifications: the sunshine
+quickens us to play, and the shade invites us to sleep.
+
+But we soon become unsatisfied with negative felicity, and are solicited
+by our senses and appetites to more powerful delights, as the taste of
+him who has satisfied his hunger must be excited by artificial
+stimulations. The simplicity of natural amusement is now past, and art
+and contrivance must improve our pleasures; but, in time, art, like
+nature, is exhausted, and the senses can no longer supply the cravings
+of the intellect.
+
+The attention is then transferred from pleasure to interest, in which
+pleasure is perhaps included, though diffused to a wider extent, and
+protracted through new gradations. Nothing now dances before the eyes
+but wealth and power, nor rings in the ear, but the voice of fame;
+wealth, to which, however variously denominated, every man at some time
+or other aspires; power, which all wish to obtain within their circle of
+action; and fame, which no man, however high or mean, however wise or
+ignorant, was yet able to despise. Now prudence and foresight exert
+their influence: no hour is devoted wholly to any present enjoyment, no
+act or purpose terminates in itself, but every motion is referred to
+some distant end; the accomplishment of one design begins another, and
+the ultimate wish is always pushed off to its former distance.
+
+At length fame is observed to be uncertain, and power to be dangerous;
+the man whose vigour and alacrity begin to forsake him, by degrees
+contracts his designs, remits his former multiplicity of pursuits, and
+extends no longer his regard to any other honour than the reputation of
+wealth, or any other influence than his power. Avarice is generally the
+last passion of those lives of which the first part has been squandered
+in pleasure, and the second devoted to ambition. He that sinks under the
+fatigue of getting wealth, lulls his age with the milder business of
+saving it.
+
+I have in this view of life considered man as actuated only by natural
+desires, and yielding to their own inclinations, without regard to
+superior principles, by which the force of external agents may be
+counteracted, and the temporary prevalence of passions restrained.
+Nature will indeed always operate, human desires will be always ranging;
+but these motions, though very powerful, are not resistless; nature may
+be regulated, and desires governed; and, to contend with the
+predominance of successive passions, to be endangered first by one
+affection, and then by another, is the condition upon which we are to
+pass our time, the time of our preparation for that state which shall
+put an end to experiment, to disappointment, and to change.
+
+
+
+No. 152. SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1751.
+
+ --Tristia maestum
+ Vullum verba decent, iratum plena minarum. HOR. De Ar. Poet. 105.
+
+ Disastrous words can best disaster shew;
+ In angry phrase the angry passions glow. ELPHINSTON.
+
+"It was the wisdom," says Seneca, "of ancient times, to consider what is
+most useful as most illustrious." If this rule be applied to works of
+genius, scarcely any species of composition deserves more to be
+cultivated than the epistolary style, since none is of more various or
+frequent use through the whole subordination of human life.
+
+It has yet happened that, among the numerous writers which our nation
+has produced, equal, perhaps, always in force and genius, and of late in
+elegance and accuracy, to those of any other country, very few have
+endeavoured to distinguish themselves by the publication of letters,
+except such as were written in the discharge of publick trusts, and
+during the transaction of great affairs; which, though they afford
+precedents to the minister, and memorials to the historian, are of no
+use as examples of the familiar style, or models of private
+correspondence.
+
+If it be inquired by foreigners, how this deficiency has happened in the
+literature of a country, where all indulge themselves with so little
+danger in speaking and writing, may we not without either bigotry or
+arrogance inform them, that it must be imputed to our contempt of
+trifles, and our due sense of the dignity of the publick? We do not
+think it reasonable to fill the world with volumes from which nothing
+can be learned, nor expect that the employments of the busy, or the
+amusements of the gay, should give way to narratives of our private
+affairs, complaints of absence, expressions of fondness, or declarations
+of fidelity.
+
+A slight perusal of the innumerable letters by which the wits of France
+have signalized their names, will prove that other nations need not be
+discouraged from the like attempts by the consciousness of inability;
+for surely it is not very difficult to aggravate trifling misfortunes,
+to magnify familiar incidents, repeat adulatory professions, accumulate
+servile hyperboles, and produce all that can be found in the despicable
+remains of Voiture and Scarron.
+
+Yet, as much of life must be passed in affairs considerable only by
+their frequent occurrence, and much of the pleasure which our condition
+allows, must be produced by giving elegance to trifles, it is necessary
+to learn how to become little without becoming mean, to maintain the
+necessary intercourse of civility, and fill up the vacuities of actions
+by agreeable appearances. It had therefore been of advantage, if such of
+our writers as have excelled in the art of decorating insignificance,
+had supplied us with a few sallies of innocent gaiety, effusions of
+honest tenderness, or exclamations of unimportant hurry.
+
+Precept has generally been posterior to performance. The art of
+composing works of genius has never been taught but by the example of
+those who performed it by natural vigour of imagination, and rectitude
+of judgment. As we have few letters, we have likewise few criticisms
+upon the epistolary style. The observations with which Walsh has
+introduced his pages of inanity, are such as give him little claim to
+the rank assigned him by Dryden among the criticks. _Letters_, says he,
+_are intended as resemblances of conversation, and the chief
+excellencies of conversation are good humour and good breeding_. This
+remark, equally valuable for its novelty and propriety, he dilates and
+enforces with an appearance of complete acquiescence in his own
+discovery.
+
+No man was ever in doubt about the moral qualities of a letter. It has
+been always known that he who endeavours to please must appear pleased,
+and he who would not provoke rudeness must not practise it. But the
+question among those who establish rules for an epistolary performance
+is how gaiety or civility may be properly expressed; as among the
+criticks in history it is not contested whether truth ought to be
+preserved, but by what mode of diction it is best adorned.
+
+As letters are written on all subjects, in all states of mind, they
+cannot be properly reduced to settled rules, or described by any single
+characteristick; and we may safely disentangle our minds from critical
+embarrassments, by determining that a letter has no peculiarity but its
+form, and that nothing is to be refused admission, which would be proper
+in any other method of treating the same subject. The qualities of the
+epistolary style most frequently required, are ease and simplicity, an
+even flow of unlaboured diction, and an artless arrangement of obvious
+sentiments. But these directions are no sooner applied to use, than
+their scantiness and imperfection become evident. Letters are written to
+the great and to the mean, to the learned and the ignorant, at rest and
+in distress, in sport and in passion. Nothing can be more improper than
+ease and laxity of expression, when the importance of the subject
+impresses solicitude, or the dignity of the person exacts reverence.
+
+That letters should be written with strict conformity to nature is true,
+because nothing but conformity to nature can make any composition
+beautiful or just. But it is natural to depart from familiarity of
+language upon occasions not familiar. Whatever elevates the sentiments
+will consequently raise the expression; whatever fills us with hope or
+terrour, will produce some perturbation of images and some figurative
+distortions of phrase. Wherever we are studious to please, we are afraid
+of trusting our first thoughts, and endeavour to recommend our opinion
+by studied ornaments, accuracy of method, and elegance of style.
+
+If the personages of the comick scene be allowed by Horace to raise
+their language in the transports of anger to the turgid vehemence of
+tragedy, the epistolary writer may likewise without censure comply with
+the varieties of his matter. If great events are to be related, he may
+with all the solemnity of an historian deduce them from their causes,
+connect them with their concomitants, and trace them to their
+consequences. If a disputed position is to be established, or a remote
+principle to be investigated, he may detail his reasonings with all the
+nicety of syllogistick method. If a menace is to be averted, or a
+benefit implored, he may, without any violation of the edicts of
+criticism, call every power of rhetorick to his assistance, and try
+every inlet at which love or pity enters the heart.
+
+Letters that have no other end than the entertainment of the
+correspondents are more properly regulated by critical precepts, because
+the matter and style are equally arbitrary, and rules are more
+necessary, as there is a larger power of choice. In letters of this
+kind, some conceive art graceful, and others think negligence amiable;
+some model them by the sonnet, and will allow them no means of
+delighting but the soft lapse of calm mellifluence; others adjust them
+by the epigram, and expect pointed sentences and forcible periods. The
+one party considers exemption from faults as the height of excellence,
+the other looks upon neglect of excellence as the most disgusting fault;
+one avoids censure, the other aspires to praise; one is always in danger
+of insipidity, the other continually on the brink of affectation.
+
+When the subject has no intrinsick dignity, it must necessarily owe its
+attractions to artificial embellishments, and may catch at all
+advantages which the art of writing can supply. He that, like Pliny,
+sends his friend a portion for his daughter, will, without Pliny's
+eloquence or address, find means of exciting gratitude, and securing
+acceptance; but he that has no present to make but a garland, a riband,
+or some petty curiosity, must endeavour to recommend it by his manner of
+giving it.
+
+The purpose for which letters are written when no intelligence is
+communicated, or business transacted, is to preserve in the minds of the
+absent either love or esteem: to excite love we must impart pleasure,
+and to raise esteem we must discover abilities. Pleasure will generally
+be given, as abilities are displayed by scenes of imagery, points of
+conceit, unexpected sallies, and artful compliments. Trifles always
+require exuberance of ornament; the building which has no strength can
+be valued only for the grace of its decorations. The pebble must be
+polished with care, which hopes to be valued as a diamond; and words
+ought surely to be laboured, when they are intended to stand for things.
+
+
+
+No. 153. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1751
+
+ _Turba Remi? Sequitur Fortunam, ut semper, et odit
+ Damnatos_. JUV. Sat. x. 73.
+
+ The fickle crowd with fortune comes and goes;
+ Wealth still finds followers, and misfortune foes.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+There are occasions on which all apology is rudeness. He that has an
+unwelcome message to deliver, may give some proof of tenderness and
+delicacy, by a ceremonial introduction and gradual discovery, because
+the mind, upon which the weight of sorrow is to fall, gains time for the
+collection of its powers; but nothing is more absurd than to delay the
+communication of pleasure, to torment curiosity by impatience, and to
+delude hope by anticipation.
+
+I shall therefore forbear the arts by which correspondents generally
+secure admission, for I have too long remarked the power of vanity, to
+doubt that I shall be read by you with a disposition to approve, when I
+declare that my narrative has no other tendency than to illustrate and
+corroborate your own observations.
+
+I was the second son of a gentleman, whose patrimony had been wasted by
+a long succession of squanderers, till he was unable to support any of
+his children, except his heir, in the hereditary dignity of idleness.
+Being therefore obliged to employ that part of life in study which my
+progenitors had devoted to the hawk and hound, I was in my eighteenth
+year despatched to the university, without any rural honours. I had
+never killed a single woodcock, nor partaken one triumph over a
+conquered fox.
+
+At the university I continued to enlarge my acquisitions with little
+envy of the noisy happiness which my elder brother had the fortune to
+enjoy; and, having obtained my degree, retired to consider at leisure to
+what profession I should confine that application which had hitherto
+been dissipated in general knowledge. To deliberate upon a choice which
+custom and honour forbid to be retracted, is certainly reasonable; yet
+to let loose the attention equally to the advantages and inconveniencies
+of every employment is not without danger; new motives are every moment
+operating on every side; and mechanicks have long ago discovered, that
+contrariety of equal attractions is equivalent to rest.
+
+While I was thus trifling in uncertainty, an old adventurer, who had
+been once the intimate friend of my father, arrived from the Indies with
+a large fortune; which he had so much harassed himself in obtaining,
+that sickness and infirmity left him no other desire than to die in his
+native country. His wealth easily procured him an invitation to pass his
+life with us; and, being incapable of any amusement but conversation, he
+necessarily became familiarized to me, whom he found studious and
+domestick. Pleased with an opportunity of imparting my knowledge, and
+eager of any intelligence that might increase it, I delighted his
+curiosity with historical narratives and explications of nature, and
+gratified his vanity by inquiries after the products of distant
+countries, and the customs of their inhabitants.
+
+My brother saw how much I advanced in the favour of our guest, who,
+being without heirs, was naturally expected to enrich the family of his
+friend, but never attempted to alienate me, nor to ingratiate himself.
+He was, indeed, little qualified to solicit the affection of a
+traveller, for the remissness of his education had left him without any
+rule of action but his present humour. He often forsook the old
+gentleman in the midst of an adventure, because the horn sounded in the
+court-yard, and would have lost an opportunity, not only of knowing the
+history, but sharing the wealth of the mogul, for the trial of a new
+pointer, or the sight of a horse-race.
+
+It was therefore not long before our new friend declared his intention
+of bequeathing to me the profits of his commerce, as the only man in the
+family by whom he could expect them to be rationally enjoyed. This
+distinction drew upon me the envy not only of my brother but my father.
+
+As no man is willing to believe that he suffers by his own fault, they
+imputed the preference which I had obtained to adulatory compliances, or
+malignant calumnies. To no purpose did I call upon my patron to attest
+my innocence, for who will believe what he wishes to be false? In the
+heat of disappointment they forced their inmate by repeated insults to
+depart from the house, and I was soon, by the same treatment, obliged to
+follow him.
+
+He chose his residence in the confines of London, where rest,
+tranquillity, and medicine, restored him to part of the health which he
+had lost. I pleased myself with perceiving that I was not likely to
+obtain the immediate possession of wealth which no labour of mine had
+contributed to acquire; and that he, who had thus distinguished me,
+might hope to end his life without a total frustration of those
+blessings, which, whatever be their real value, he had sought with so
+much diligence, and purchased with so many vicissitudes of danger and
+fatigue.
+
+He, indeed, left me no reason to repine at his recovery, for he was
+willing to accustom me early to the use of money, and set apart for my
+expenses such a revenue as I had scarcely dared to image. I can yet
+congratulate myself that fortune has seen her golden cup once tasted
+without inebriation. Neither my modesty nor prudence was overwhelmed by
+affluence; my elevation was without insolence, and my expense without
+profusion. Employing the influence which money always confers, to the
+improvement of my understanding, I mingled in parties of gaiety, and in
+conferences of learning, appeared in every place where instruction was
+to be found, and imagined that, by ranging through all the diversities
+of life, I had acquainted myself fully with human nature, and learned
+all that was to be known of the ways of men.
+
+It happened, however, that I soon discovered how much was wanted to the
+completion of my knowledge, and found that, according to Seneca's
+remark, I had hitherto seen the world but on one side. My patron's
+confidence in his increase of strength tempted him to carelessness and
+irregularity; he caught a fever by riding in the rain, of which he died
+delirious on the third day. I buried him without any of the heir's
+affected grief or secret exultation; then preparing to take a legal
+possession of his fortune, I opened his closet, where I found a will,
+made at his first arrival, by which my father was appointed the chief
+inheritor, and nothing was left me but a legacy sufficient to support me
+in the prosecution of my studies.
+
+I had not yet found such charms in prosperity as to continue it by any
+acts of forgery or injustice, and made haste to inform my father of the
+riches which had been given him, not by the preference of kindness, but
+by the delays of indolence and cowardice of age. The hungry family flew
+like vultures on their prey, and soon made my disappointment publick, by
+the tumult of their claims, and the splendour of their sorrow.
+
+It was now my part to consider how I should repair the disappointment. I
+could not but triumph in my long list of friends, which comprised almost
+every name that power or knowledge entitled to eminence; and, in the
+prospect of the innumerable roads to honour and preferment, which I had
+laid open to myself by the wise use of temporary riches, I believed
+nothing necessary but that I should continue that acquaintance to which
+I had been so readily admitted, and which had hitherto been cultivated
+on both sides with equal ardour.
+
+Full of these expectations, I one morning ordered a chair, with an
+intention to make my usual circle of morning visits. Where I first
+stopped I saw two footmen lolling at the door, who told me without any
+change of posture, or collection of countenance, that their master was
+at home, and suffered me to open the inner door without assistance. I
+found my friend standing, and, as I was tattling with my former freedom,
+was formally entreated to sit down; but did not stay to be favoured with
+any further condescensions.
+
+My next experiment was made at the levee of a statesman, who received me
+with an embrace of tenderness, that he might with more decency publish
+my change of fortune to the sycophants about him. After he had enjoyed
+the triumph of condolence, he turned to a wealthy stockjobber, and left
+me exposed to the scorn of those who had lately courted my notice, and
+solicited my interest.
+
+I was then set down at the door of another, who, upon my entrance,
+advised me, with great solemnity, to think of some settled provision for
+life. I left him, and hurried away to an old friend, who professed
+himself unsusceptible of any impressions from prosperity or misfortune,
+and begged that he might see me when he was more at leisure.
+
+Of sixty-seven doors, at which I knocked in the first week after my
+appearance in a mourning dress, I was denied admission at forty-six; was
+suffered at fourteen to wait in the outer room till business was
+despatched; at four, was entertained with a few questions about the
+weather; at one, heard the footman rated for bringing my name; and at
+two was informed, in the flow of casual conversation, how much a man of
+rank degrades himself by mean company.
+
+My curiosity now led me to try what reception I should find among the
+ladies; but I found that my patron had carried all my powers of pleasing
+to the grave. I had formerly been celebrated as a wit, and not
+perceiving any languor in my imagination, I essayed to revive that
+gaiety which had hitherto broken out involuntarily before my sentences
+were finished. My remarks were now heard with a steady countenance, and
+if a girl happened to give way to habitual merriment, her forwardness
+was repressed with a frown by her mother or her aunt.
+
+Wherever I come I scatter infirmity and disease; every lady whom I meet
+in the Mall is too weary to walk; all whom I entreat to sing are
+troubled with colds: if I propose cards, they are afflicted with the
+head-ach; [Transcriber's note: sic] if I invite them to the gardens,
+they cannot bear a crowd.
+
+All this might be endured; but there is a class of mortals who think my
+understanding impaired with my fortune, exalt themselves to the dignity
+of advice, and, whenever we happen to meet, presume to prescribe my
+conduct, regulate my economy, and direct my pursuits. Another race,
+equally impertinent and equally despicable, are every moment
+recommending to me an attention to my interest, and think themselves
+entitled, by their superior prudence, to reproach me if I speak or move
+without regard to profit.
+
+Such, Mr. Rambler, is the power of wealth, that it commands the ear of
+greatness and the eye of beauty, gives spirit to the dull, and authority
+to the timorous, and leaves him from whom it departs, without virtue and
+without understanding, the sport of caprice, the scoff of insolence, the
+slave of meanness, and the pupil of ignorance.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+
+
+No. 154. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1751.
+
+ _--Tibi res antiquae laudis et artis
+ Ingredior, sanctos ausus recludere fontes_. VIR. Geo. ii. 174.
+
+ For thee my tuneful accents will I raise,
+ And treat of arts disclos'd in ancient days;
+ Once more unlock for thee the sacred spring. DRYDEN.
+
+The direction of Aristotle to those that study politicks, is first to
+examine and understand what has been written by the ancients upon
+government; then to cast their eyes round upon the world, and consider
+by what causes the prosperity of communities is visibly influenced, and
+why some are worse, and others better administered.
+
+The same method must be pursued by him who hopes to become eminent in
+any other part of knowledge. The first task is to search books, the next
+to contemplate nature. He must first possess himself of the intellectual
+treasures which the diligence of former ages has accumulated, and then
+endeavour to increase them by his own collections.
+
+The mental disease of the present generation, is impatience of study,
+contempt of the great masters of ancient wisdom, and a disposition to
+rely wholly upon unassisted genius and natural sagacity. The wits of
+these happy days have discovered a way to fame, which the dull caution
+of our laborious ancestors durst never attempt; they cut the knots of
+sophistry which it was formerly the business of years to untie, solve
+difficulties by sudden irradiations of intelligence, and comprehend long
+processes of argument by immediate intuition.
+
+Men who have flattered themselves into this opinion of their own
+abilities, look down on all who waste their lives over books, as a race
+of inferior beings, condemned by nature to perpetual pupilage, and
+fruitlessly endeavouring to remedy their barrenness by incessant
+cultivation, or succour their feebleness by subsidiary strength. They
+presume that none would be more industrious than they, if they were not
+more sensible of deficiencies; and readily conclude, that he who places
+no confidence in his own powers, owes his modesty only to his weakness.
+
+It is however certain, that no estimate is more in danger of erroneous
+calculations than those by which a man computes the force of his own
+genius. It generally happens at our entrance into the world, that, by
+the natural attraction of similitude, we associate with men like
+ourselves, young, sprightly, and ignorant, and rate our accomplishments
+by comparison with theirs; when we have once obtained an acknowledged
+superiority over our acquaintances, imagination and desire easily extend
+it over the rest of mankind, and if no accident forces us into new
+emulations, we grow old, and die in admiration of ourselves.
+
+Vanity, thus confirmed in her dominion, readily listens to the voice of
+idleness, and sooths the slumber of life with continual dreams of
+excellence and greatness. A man, elated by confidence in his natural
+vigour of fancy and sagacity of conjecture, soon concludes that he
+already possesses whatever toil and inquiry can confer. He then listens
+with eagerness to the wild objections which folly has raised against the
+common means of improvement; talks of the dark chaos of indigested
+knowledge; describes the mischievous effects of heterogeneous sciences
+fermenting in the mind; relates the blunders of lettered ignorance;
+expatiates on the heroick merit of those who deviate from prescription,
+or shake off authority; and gives vent to the inflations of his heart by
+declaring that he owes nothing to pedants and universities.
+
+All these pretensions, however confident, are very often vain. The
+laurels which superficial acuteness gains in triumphs over ignorance
+unsupported by vivacity, are observed by Locke to be lost, whenever real
+learning and rational diligence appear against her; the sallies of
+gaiety are soon repressed by calm confidence; and the artifices of
+subtilty are readily detected by those, who, having carefully studied
+the question, are not easily confounded or surprised.
+
+But, though the contemner of books had neither been deceived by others
+nor himself, and was really born with a genius surpassing the ordinary
+abilities of mankind; yet surely such gifts of Providence may be more
+properly urged as incitements to labour, than encouragements to
+negligence. He that neglects the culture of ground naturally fertile, is
+more shamefully culpable, than he whose field would scarcely recompense
+his husbandry.
+
+Cicero remarks, that not to know what has been transacted in former
+times, is to continue always a child. If no use is made of the labours
+of past ages, the world must remain always in the infancy of knowledge.
+The discoveries of every man must terminate in his own advantage, and
+the studies of every age be employed on questions which the past
+generation had discussed and determined. We may with as little reproach
+borrow science as manufactures from our ancestors; and it is as rational
+to live in caves till our own hands have erected a palace, as to reject
+all knowledge of architecture which our understandings will not supply.
+
+To the strongest and quickest mind it is far easier to learn than to
+invent. The principles of arithmetick and geometry may be comprehended
+by a close attention in a few days; yet who can flatter himself that the
+study of a long life would have enabled him to discover them, when he
+sees them yet unknown to so many nations, whom he cannot suppose less
+liberally endowed with natural reason, than the Grecians or Egyptians?
+
+Every science was thus far advanced towards perfection, by the emulous
+diligence of contemporary students, and the gradual discoveries of one
+age improving on another. Sometimes unexpected flashes of instruction
+were struck out by the fortuitous collision of happy incidents, or an
+involuntary concurrence of ideas, in which the philosopher to whom they
+happened had no other merit than that of knowing their value, and
+transmitting, unclouded, to posterity, that light which had been kindled
+by causes out of his power. The happiness of these casual illuminations
+no man can promise to himself, because no endeavours can procure them;
+and therefore whatever be our abilities or application, we must submit
+to learn from others what perhaps would have lain hid for ever from
+human penetration, had not some remote inquiry brought it to view; as
+treasures are thrown up by the ploughman and the digger in the rude
+exercise of their common occupations. The man whose genius qualifies him
+for great undertakings, must at least be content to learn from books the
+present state of human knowledge; that he may not ascribe to himself the
+invention of arts generally known; weary his attention with experiments
+of which the event has been long registered; and waste, in attempts
+which have already succeeded or miscarried, that time which might have
+been spent with usefulness and honour upon new undertakings.
+
+But, though the study of books is necessary, it is not sufficient to
+constitute literary eminence. He that wishes to be counted among the
+benefactors of posterity, must add by his own toil to the acquisitions
+of his ancestors, and secure his memory from neglect by some valuable
+improvement. This can only be effected by looking out upon the wastes of
+the intellectual world, and extending the power of learning over regions
+yet undisciplined and barbarous; or by surveying more exactly our
+ancient dominions, and driving ignorance from the fortresses and
+retreats where she skulks undetected and undisturbed. Every science has
+its difficulties, which yet call for solution before we attempt new
+systems of knowledge; as every country has its forests and marshes,
+which it would be wise to cultivate and drain, before distant colonies
+are projected as a necessary discharge of the exuberance of inhabitants.
+
+No man ever yet became great by imitation. Whatever hopes for the
+veneration of mankind must have invention in the design or the
+execution; either the effect must itself be new, or the means by which
+it is produced. Either truths hitherto unknown must be discovered, or
+those which are already known enforced by stronger evidence, facilitated
+by clearer method, or elucidated by brighter illustrations.
+
+Fame cannot spread wide or endure long that is not rooted in nature, and
+matured by art. That which hopes to resist the blast of malignity, and
+stand firm against the attacks of time, must contain in itself some
+original principle of growth. The reputation which arises from the
+detail or transposition of borrowed sentiments, may spread for awhile,
+like ivy on the rind of antiquity, but will be torn away by accident or
+contempt, and suffered to rot unheeded on the ground.
+
+
+
+No. 155. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1751.
+
+ _--Steriles transmisimus annos,
+ Haec aevi mihi prima dies, haec limina vitae_. STAT. i. 362.
+
+ --Our barren years are past;
+ Be this of life the first, of sloth the last. ELPHINSTON.
+
+No weakness of the human mind has more frequently incurred
+animadversion, than the negligence with which men overlook their own
+faults, however flagrant, and the easiness with which they pardon them,
+however frequently repeated.
+
+It seems generally believed, that as the eye cannot see itself, the mind
+has no faculties by which it can contemplate its own state, and that
+therefore we have not means of becoming acquainted with our real
+characters; an opinion which, like innumerable other postulates, an
+inquirer finds himself inclined to admit upon very little evidence,
+because it affords a ready solution of many difficulties. It will
+explain why the greatest abilities frequently fail to promote the
+happiness of those who possess them; why those who can distinguish with
+the utmost nicety the boundaries of vice and virtue, suffer them to be
+confounded in their own conduct; why the active and vigilant resign
+their affairs implicitly to the management of others; and why the
+cautious and fearful make hourly approaches towards ruin, without one
+sigh of solicitude or struggle for escape.
+
+When a position teems thus with commodious consequences, who can without
+regret confess it to be false? Yet it is certain that declaimers have
+indulged a disposition to describe the dominion of the passions as
+extended beyond the limits that nature assigned. Self-love is often
+rather arrogant than blind; it does not hide our faults from ourselves,
+but persuades us that they escape the notice of others, and disposes us
+to resent censures lest we should confess them to be just. We are
+secretly conscious of defects and vices, which we hope to conceal from
+the publick eye, and please ourselves with innumerable impostures, by
+which, in reality, nobody is deceived.
+
+In proof of the dimness of our internal sight, or the general inability
+of man to determine rightly concerning his own character, it is common
+to urge the success of the most absurd and incredible flattery, and the
+resentment always raised by advice, however soft, benevolent, and
+reasonable. But flattery, if its operation be nearly examined, will be
+found to owe its acceptance, not to our ignorance, but knowledge of our
+failures, and to delight us rather as it consoles our wants than
+displays our possessions. He that shall solicit the favour of his patron
+by praising him for qualities which he can find in himself, will be
+defeated by the more daring panegyrist who enriches him with
+adscititious excellence. Just praise is only a debt, but flattery is a
+present. The acknowledgment of those virtues on which conscience
+congratulates us, is a tribute that we can at any time exact with
+confidence; but the celebration of those which we only feign, or desire
+without any vigorous endeavours to attain them, is received as a
+confession of sovereignty over regions never conquered, as a favourable
+decision of disputable claims, and is more welcome as it is more
+gratuitous.
+
+Advice is offensive, not because it lays us open to unexpected regret,
+or convicts us of any fault which had escaped our notice, but because it
+shews us that we are known to others as well as to ourselves; and the
+officious monitor is persecuted with hatred, not because his accusation
+is false, but because he assumes that superiority which we are not
+willing to grant him, and has dared to detect what we desired to
+conceal.
+
+For this reason advice is commonly ineffectual. If those who follow the
+call of their desires, without inquiry whither they are going, had
+deviated ignorantly from the paths of wisdom, and were rushing upon
+dangers unforeseen, they would readily listen to information that recals
+them from their errours, and catch the first alarm by which destruction
+or infamy is denounced. Few that wander in the wrong way mistake it for
+the right, they only find it more smooth and flowery, and indulge their
+own choice rather than approve it: therefore few are persuaded to quit
+it by admonition or reproof, since it impresses no new conviction, nor
+confers any powers of action or resistance. He that is gravely informed
+how soon profusion will annihilate his fortune, hears with little
+advantage what he knew before, and catches at the next occasion of
+expense, because advice has no force to suppress his vanity. He that is
+told how certainly intemperance will hurry him to the grave, runs with
+his usual speed to a new course of luxury, because his reason is not
+invigorated, nor his appetite weakened.
+
+The mischief of flattery is, not that it persuades any man that he is
+what he is not, but that it suppresses the influence of honest ambition,
+by raising an opinion that honour may be gained without the toil of
+merit; and the benefit of advice arises commonly not from any new light
+imparted to the mind, but from the discovery which it affords of the
+publick suffrages. He that could withstand conscience is frighted at
+infamy, and shame prevails when reason is defeated.
+
+As we all know our own faults, and know them commonly with many
+aggravations which human perspicacity cannot discover, there is,
+perhaps, no man, however hardened by impudence or dissipated by levity,
+sheltered by hypocrisy or blasted by disgrace, who does not intend some
+time to review his conduct, and to regulate the remainder of his life by
+the laws of virtue. New temptations indeed attack him, new invitations
+are offered by pleasure and interest, and the hour of reformation is
+always delayed; every delay gives vice another opportunity of fortifying
+itself by habit; and the change of manners, though sincerely intended
+and rationally planned, is referred to the time when some craving
+passion shall be fully gratified, or some powerful allurement cease its
+importunity.
+
+Thus procrastination is accumulated on procrastination, and one
+impediment succeeds another, till age shatters our resolution, or death
+intercepts the project of amendment. Such is often the end of salutary
+purposes, after they have long delighted the imagination, and appeased
+that disquiet which every mind feels from known misconduct, when the
+attention is not diverted by business or by pleasure.
+
+Nothing surely can be more unworthy of a reasonable nature, than to
+continue in a state so opposite to real happiness, as that all the peace
+of solitude, and felicity of meditation, must arise from resolutions of
+forsaking it. Yet the world will often afford examples of men, who pass
+months and years in a continual war with their own convictions, and are
+daily dragged by habit, or betrayed by passion, into practices which
+they closed and opened their eyes with purposes to avoid; purposes
+which, though settled on conviction, the first impulse of momentary
+desire totally overthrows.
+
+The influence of custom is indeed such, that to conquer it will require
+the utmost efforts of fortitude and virtue; nor can I think any man more
+worthy of veneration and renown, than those who have burst the shackles
+of habitual vice. This victory, however, has different degrees of glory
+as of difficulty; it is more, heroick as the objects of guilty
+gratification are more familiar, and the recurrence of solicitation more
+frequent. He that, from experience of the folly of ambition, resigns his
+offices, may set himself free at once from temptation to squander his
+life in courts, because he cannot regain his former station. He who is
+enslaved by an amorous passion, may quit his tyrant in disgust, and
+absence will, without the help of reason, overcome by degrees the desire
+of returning. But those appetites to which every place affords their
+proper object, and which require no preparatory measures or gradual
+advances, are more tenaciously adhesive; the wish is so near the
+enjoyment, that compliance often precedes consideration, and, before the
+powers of reason can be summoned, the time for employing them is past.
+
+Indolence is therefore one of the vices from which those whom it once
+infects are seldom reformed. Every other species of luxury operates upon
+some appetite that is quickly satiated, and requires some concurrence of
+art or accident which every place will not supply; but the desire of
+ease acts equally at all hours, and the longer it is indulged is the
+more increased. To do nothing is in every man's power; we can never want
+an opportunity of omitting duties. The lapse to indolence is soft and
+imperceptible, because it is only a mere cessation of activity; but the
+return to diligence is difficult, because it implies a change from rest
+to motion, from privation to reality:
+
+ --_Facilis descensus Averni:
+ Noctes atque dies patet atri junua ditis;
+ Sed revocare gradum, saperasque evadere ad auras,
+ Hoc opus, hic labor est_.--VIR. Aen. Lib. vi. 126.
+
+ The gates of Hell are open night and day;
+ Smooth the descent, and easy is the way;
+ But to return, and view the cheerful skies,
+ In this the task and mighty labour lies. DRYDEN.
+
+Of this vice, as of all others, every man who indulges it is conscious:
+we all know our own state, if we could be induced to consider it, and it
+might perhaps be useful to the conquest of all these ensnarers of the
+mind, if, at certain stated days, life was reviewed. Many things
+necessary are omitted, because we vainly imagine that they may be always
+performed; and what cannot be done without pain will for ever be
+delayed, if the time of doing it be left unsettled. No corruption is
+great but by long negligence, which can scarcely prevail in a mind
+regularly and frequently awakened by periodical remorse. He that thus
+breaks his life into parts, will find in himself a desire to distinguish
+every stage of his existence by some improvement, and delight himself
+with the approach of the day of recollection, as of the time which is to
+begin a new series of virtue and felicity.
+
+
+
+No. 156. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1751.
+
+ _Nunquam aliud Natura, aliud Sapientia dicit_. Juv. Sat. xiv. 321.
+
+ For Wisdom ever echoes Nature's voice.
+
+Every government, say the politicians, is perpetually degenerating
+towards corruption, from which it must be rescued at certain periods by
+the resuscitation of its first principles, and the re-establishment of
+its original constitution. Every animal body, according to the methodick
+physicians, is, by the predominance of some exuberant quality,
+continually declining towards disease and death, which must be obviated
+by a seasonable reduction of the peccant humour to the just equipoise
+which health requires.
+
+In the same manner the studies of mankind, all at least which, not being
+subject to rigorous demonstration, admit the influence of fancy and
+caprice, are perpetually tending to errour and confusion. Of the great
+principles of truth which the first speculatists discovered, the
+simplicity is embarrassed by ambitious additions, or the evidence
+obscured by inaccurate argumentation; and as they descend from one
+succession of writers to another, like light transmitted from room to
+room, they lose their strength and splendour, and fade at last in total
+evanescence.
+
+The systems of learning therefore must be sometimes reviewed,
+complications analyzed into principles, and knowledge disentangled from
+opinion. It is not always possible, without a close inspection, to
+separate the genuine shoots of consequential reasoning, which grow out
+of some radical postulate, from the branches which art has ingrafted on
+it. The accidental prescriptions of authority, when time has procured
+them veneration, are often confounded with the laws of nature, and those
+rules are supposed coëval with reason, of which the first rise cannot be
+discovered.
+
+Criticism has sometimes permitted fancy to dictate the laws by which
+fancy ought to be restrained, and fallacy to perplex the principles by
+which fallacy is to be detected; her superintendence of others has
+betrayed her to negligence of herself; and, like the ancient Scythians,
+by extending her conquests over distant regions, she has left her throne
+vacant to her slaves.
+
+Among the laws of which the desire of extending authority, or ardour of
+promoting knowledge, has prompted the prescription, all which writers
+have received, had not the same original right to our regard. Some are
+to be considered as fundamental and indispensable, others only as useful
+and convenient; some as dictated by reason and necessity, others as
+enacted by despotick antiquity; some as invincibly supported by their
+conformity to the order of nature and operations of the intellect;
+others as formed by accident, or instituted by example, and therefore
+always liable to dispute and alteration.
+
+That many rules have been advanced without consulting nature or reason,
+we cannot but suspect, when we find it peremptorily decreed by the
+ancient masters, that only three speaking personages should appear at
+once upon the stage; a law, which, as the variety and intricacy of
+modern plays has made it impossible to be observed, we now violate
+without scruple, and, as experience proves, without inconvenience.
+
+The original of this precept was merely accidental. Tragedy was a
+monody, or solitary song in honour of Bacchus, improved afterwards into
+a dialogue by the addition of another speaker; but the ancients,
+remembering that the tragedy was at first pronounced only by one, durst
+not for some time venture beyond two; at last, when custom and impunity
+had made them daring, they extended their liberty to the admission of
+three, but restrained themselves by a critical edict from further
+exorbitance.
+
+By what accident the number of acts was limited to five, I know not that
+any author has informed us; but certainly it is not determined by any
+necessity arising either from the nature of action, or propriety of
+exhibition. An act is only the representation of such a part of the
+business of the play as proceeds in an unbroken tenour, or without any
+intermediate pause. Nothing is more evident than that of every real, and
+by consequence of every dramatick action, the intervals may be more or
+fewer than five; and indeed the rule is upon the English stage every day
+broken in effect, without any other mischief than that which arises from
+an absurd endeavour to observe it in appearance. Whenever the scene is
+shifted the act ceases, since some time is necessarily supposed to
+elapse while the personages of the drama change their place.
+
+With no greater right to our obedience have the criticks confined the
+dramatick action to a certain number of hours. Probability requires that
+the time of action should approach somewhat nearly to that of
+exhibition, and those plays will always be thought most happily
+conducted which crowd the greatest, variety into the least space. But
+since it will frequently happen that some delusion must be admitted, I
+know not where the limits of imagination can be fixed. It is rarely
+observed that minds, not prepossessed by mechanical criticism, feel any
+offence from the extension of the intervals between the acts; nor can I
+conceive it absurd or impossible, that he who can multiply three hours
+into twelve or twenty-four, might imagine with equal ease a greater
+number.
+
+I know not whether he that professes to regard no other laws than those
+of nature, will not be inclined to receive tragi-comedy to his
+protection, whom, however generally condemned, her own laurels have
+hitherto shaded from the fulminations of criticism. For what is there in
+the mingled drama which impartial reason can condemn? The connexion of
+important with trivial incidents, since it is not only common but
+perpetual in the world, may surely be allowed upon the stage, which
+pretends only to be the mirror of life. The impropriety of suppressing
+passions before we have raised them to the intended agitation, and of
+diverting the expectation from an event which we keep suspended only to
+raise it, may be speciously urged. But will not experience shew this
+objection to be rather subtle than just? Is it not certain that the
+tragick and comick affections have been moved alternately with equal
+force, and that no plays have oftener filled the eye with tears, and the
+breast with palpitation, than those which are variegated with interludes
+of mirth?
+
+I do not however think it safe to judge of works of genius merely by the
+event. The resistless vicissitudes of the heart, this alternate
+prevalence of merriment and solemnity, may sometimes be more properly
+ascribed to the vigour of the writer than the justness of the design:
+and, instead of vindicating tragi-comedy by the success of Shakspeare,
+we ought, perhaps, to pay new honours to that transcendent and unbounded
+genius that could preside over the passions in sport; who, to actuate
+the affections, needed not the slow gradation of common means, but could
+fill the heart with instantaneous jollity or sorrow, and vary our
+disposition as he changed his scenes. Perhaps the effects even of
+Shakspeare's poetry might have been yet greater, had he not counteracted
+himself; and we might have been more interested in the distresses of his
+heroes, had we not been so frequently diverted by the jokes of his
+buffoons.
+
+There are other rules more fixed and obligatory. It is necessary that of
+every play the chief action should be single; for since a play
+represents some transaction, through its regular maturation to its final
+event, two actions equally important must evidently constitute two
+plays.
+
+As the design of tragedy is to instruct by moving the passions, it must
+always have a hero, a personage apparently and incontestably superior to
+the rest, upon whom the attention may be fixed, and the anxiety
+suspended. For though, of two persons opposing each other with equal
+abilities and equal virtue, the auditor will inevitably, in time, choose
+his favourite, yet as that choice must be without any cogency of
+conviction, the hopes or fears which it raises will be faint and
+languid. Of two heroes acting in confederacy against a common enemy, the
+virtues or dangers will give little emotion, because each claims our
+concern with the same right, and the heart lies at rest between equal
+motives.
+
+It ought to be the first endeavour of a writer to distinguish nature
+from custom; or that which is established because it is right, from that
+which is right only because it is established; that he may neither
+violate essential principles by a desire of novelty, nor debar himself
+from the attainment of beauties within his view, by a needless fear of
+breaking rules which no literary dictator had authority to enact.
+
+
+
+No. 157. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1751.
+
+ [Greek:--Oi aidos
+ Ginetai ae t' andras mega sinetai aed' oninaesi.]
+ HOM. Il. [Greek: O.] 44.
+
+ Shame greatly hurts or greatly helps mankind. ELPHINSTON.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Though one of your correspondents has presumed to mention with some
+contempt that presence of attention and easiness of address, which the
+polite have long agreed to celebrate and esteem, yet I cannot be
+persuaded to think them unworthy of regard or cultivation; but am
+inclined to believe that, as we seldom value rightly what we have never
+known the misery of wanting, his judgment has been vitiated by his
+happiness; and that a natural exuberance of assurance has hindered him
+from discovering its excellence and use.
+
+This felicity, whether bestowed by constitution, or obtained by early
+habitudes, I can scarcely contemplate without envy. I was bred under a
+man of learning in the country, who inculcated nothing but the dignity
+of knowledge, and the happiness of virtue. By frequency of admonition,
+and confidence of assertion, he prevailed upon me to believe, that the
+splendour of literature would always attract reverence, if not darkened
+by corruption. I therefore pursued my studies with incessant industry,
+and avoided every thing which I had been taught to consider either as
+vicious or tending to vice, because I regarded guilt and reproach as
+inseparably united, and thought a tainted reputation the greatest
+calamity.
+
+At the university, I found no reason for changing my opinion; for though
+many among my fellow-students took the opportunity of a more remiss
+discipline to gratify their passions; yet virtue preserved her natural
+superiority, and those who ventured to neglect, were not suffered to
+insult her. The ambition of petty accomplishments found its way into the
+receptacles of learning, but was observed to seize commonly on those who
+either neglected the sciences or could not attain them; and I was
+therefore confirmed in the doctrines of my old master, and thought
+nothing worthy of my care but the means of gaining or imparting
+knowledge.
+
+This purity of manners, and intenseness of application, soon extended my
+renown, and I was applauded by those, whose opinion I then thought
+unlikely to deceive me, as a young man that gave uncommon hopes of
+future eminence. My performances in time reached my native province, and
+my relations congratulated themselves upon the new honours that were
+added to their family.
+
+I returned home covered with academical laurels, and fraught with
+criticism and philosophy. The wit and the scholar excited curiosity, and
+my acquaintance was solicited by innumerable invitations. To please will
+always be the wish of benevolence, to be admired must be the constant
+aim of ambition; and I therefore considered myself as about to receive
+the reward of my honest labours, and to find the efficacy of learning
+and of virtue.
+
+The third day after my arrival I dined at the house of a gentleman who
+had summoned a multitude of his friends to the annual celebration of his
+wedding-day. I set forward with great exultation, and thought myself
+happy that I had an opportunity of displaying my knowledge to so
+numerous an assembly. I felt no sense of my own insufficiency, till,
+going up stairs to the dining-room, I heard the mingled roar of
+obstreperous merriment. I was, however, disgusted rather than terrified,
+and went forward without dejection. The whole company rose at my
+entrance; but when I saw so many eyes fixed at once upon me, I was
+blasted with a sudden imbecility, I was quelled by some nameless power
+which I found impossible to be resisted. My sight was dazzled, my cheeks
+glowed, my perceptions were confounded; I was harassed by the multitude
+of eager salutations, and returned the common civilities with hesitation
+and impropriety; the sense of my own blunders increased my confusion,
+and, before the exchange of ceremonies allowed me to sit down, I was
+ready to sink under the oppression of surprise; my voice grew weak, and
+my knees trembled.
+
+The assembly then resumed their places, and I sat with my eyes fixed
+upon the ground. To the questions of curiosity, or the appeals of
+complaisance, I could seldom answer but with negative monosyllables, or
+professions of ignorance; for the subjects on which they conversed, were
+such as are seldom discussed in books, and were therefore out of my
+range of knowledge. At length an old clergyman, who rightly conjectured
+the reason of my conciseness, relieved me by some questions about the
+present state of natural knowledge, and engaged me, by an appearance of
+doubt and opposition, in the explication and defence of the Newtonian
+philosophy.
+
+The consciousness of my own abilities roused me from depression, and
+long familiarity with my subject enabled me to discourse with ease and
+volubility; but, however I might please myself, I found very little
+added by my demonstrations to the satisfaction of the company; and my
+antagonist, who knew the laws of conversation too well to detain their
+attention long upon an unpleasing topick, after he had commended my
+acuteness and comprehension, dismissed the controversy, and resigned me
+to my former insignificance and perplexity.
+
+After dinner, I received from the ladies, who had heard that I was a
+wit, an invitation to the tea-table. I congratulated myself upon an
+opportunity to escape from the company, whose gaiety began to be
+tumultuous, and among whom several hints had been dropped of the
+uselessness of universities, the folly of book-learning, and the
+awkwardness of scholars. To the ladies, therefore, I flew, as to a
+refuge from clamour, insult, and rusticity; but found my heart sink as I
+approached their apartment, and was again disconcerted by the ceremonies
+of entrance, and confounded by the necessity of encountering so many
+eyes at once.
+
+When I sat down I considered that, something pretty was always said to
+ladies, and resolved to recover my credit by some elegant observation or
+graceful compliment. I applied myself to the recollection of all that I
+had read or heard in praise of beauty, and endeavoured to accommodate
+some classical compliment to the present occasion. I sunk into profound
+meditation, revolved the characters of the heroines of old, considered
+whatever the poets have sung in their praise, and, after having borrowed
+and invented, chosen and rejected a thousand sentiments, which, if I had
+uttered them, would not have been understood, I was awakened from my
+dream of learned gallantry, by the servant who distributed the tea.
+
+There are not many situations more incessantly uneasy than that in which
+the man is placed who is watching an opportunity to speak, without
+courage to take it when it is offered, and who, though he resolves to
+give a specimen of his abilities, always finds some reason or other for
+delaying it to the next minute. I was ashamed of silence, yet could find
+nothing to say of elegance or importance equal to my wishes. The ladies,
+afraid of my learning, thought themselves not qualified to propose any
+subject of prattle to a man so famous for dispute, and there was nothing
+on either side but impatience and vexation.
+
+In this conflict of shame, as I was re-assembling my scattered
+sentiments, and, resolving to force my imagination to some sprightly
+sally, had just found a very happy compliment, by too much attention to
+my own meditations, I suffered the saucer to drop from my hand. The cup
+was broken, the lap-dog was scalded, a brocaded petticoat was stained,
+and the whole assembly was thrown into disorder. I now considered all
+hopes of reputation at an end, and while they were consoling and
+assisting one another, stole away in silence.
+
+The misadventures of this unhappy day are not yet at an end; I am afraid
+of meeting the meanest of them that triumphed over me in this state of
+stupidity and contempt, and feel the same terrours encroaching upon my
+heart at the sight of those who have once impressed them. Shame, above
+any other passion, propagates itself. Before those who have seen me
+confused, I can never appear without new confusion, and the remembrance
+of the weakness which I formerly discovered, hinders me from acting or
+speaking with my natural force.
+
+But is this misery, Mr. Rambler, never to cease; have I spent my life in
+study only to become the sport of the ignorant, and debarred myself from
+all the common enjoyments of youth to collect ideas which must sleep in
+silence, and form opinions which I must not divulge? Inform me, dear
+Sir, by what means I may rescue my faculties from these shackles of
+cowardice, how I may rise to a level with my fellow-beings, recall
+myself from this langour of involuntary subjection to the free exertion
+of my intellects, and add to the power of reasoning the liberty of
+speech.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+VERECUNDULUS.
+
+
+
+No. 158. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1751.
+
+ Grammatici certunt, et adhuc sub judice lis est. HOR. Ar. Poet. 78.
+
+ --Criticks yet contend,
+ And of their vain disputings find no end. FRANCIS.
+
+Criticism, though dignified from the earliest ages by the labours of men
+eminent for knowledge and sagacity, and, since the revival of polite
+literature, the favourite study of European scholars, has not yet
+attained the certainty and stability of science. The rules hitherto
+received are seldom drawn from any settled principle or self-evident
+postulate, or adapted to the natural and invariable constitution of
+things; but will be found, upon examination, the arbitrary edicts of
+legislators, authorised only by themselves, who, out of various means by
+which the same end may be attained, selected such as happened to occur
+to their own reflection, and then, by a law which idleness and timidity
+were too willing to obey, prohibited new experiments of wit, restrained
+fancy from the indulgence of her innate inclination to hazard and
+adventure, and condemned all future flights of genius to pursue the path
+of the Meonian eagle.
+
+This authority may be more justly opposed, as it is apparently derived
+from them whom they endeavour to control; for we owe few of the rules of
+writing to the acuteness of criticks, who have generally no other merit
+than that, having read the works of great authors with attention, they
+have observed the arrangement of their matter, or the graces of their
+expression, and then expected honour and reverence for precepts which
+they never could have invented; so that practice has introduced rules,
+rather than rules have directed practice.
+
+For this reason the laws of every species of writing have been settled
+by the ideas of him who first raised it to reputation, without inquiry
+whether his performances were not yet susceptible of improvement. The
+excellencies and faults of celebrated writers have been equally
+recommended to posterity; and, so far has blind reverence prevailed,
+that even the number of their books has been thought worthy of
+imitation.
+
+The imagination of the first authors of lyrick poetry was vehement and
+rapid, and their knowledge various and extensive. Living in an age when
+science had been little cultivated, and when the minds of their
+auditors, not being accustomed to accurate inspection, were easily
+dazzled by glaring ideas, they applied themselves to instruct, rather by
+short sentences and striking thoughts, than by regular argumentation;
+and, finding attention more successfully excited by sudden sallies and
+unexpected exclamations, than by the more artful and placid beauties of
+methodical deduction, they loosed their genius to its own course, passed
+from one sentiment to another without expressing the intermediate ideas,
+and roved at large over the ideal world with such lightness and agility,
+that their footsteps are scarcely to be traced.
+
+From this accidental peculiarity of the ancient writers the criticks
+deduce the rules of lyrick poetry, which they have set free from all the
+laws by which other compositions are confined, and allow to neglect the
+niceties of transition, to start into remote digressions, and to wander
+without restraint from one scene of imagery to another.
+
+A writer of later times has, by the vivacity of his essays, reconciled
+mankind to the same licentiousness in short dissertations; and he
+therefore who wants skill to form a plan, or diligence to pursue it,
+needs only entitle his performance an essay, to acquire the right of
+heaping together the collections of half his life without order,
+coherence, or propriety.
+
+In writing, as in life, faults are endured without disgust when they are
+associated with transcendent merit, and may be sometimes recommended to
+weak judgments by the lustre which they obtain from their union with
+excellence; but it is the business of those who presume to superintend
+the taste or morals of mankind, to separate delusive combinations and
+distinguish that which may be praised from that which can only be
+excused. As vices never promote happiness, though, when overpowered by
+more active and more numerous virtues, they cannot totally destroy it;
+so confusion and irregularity produce no beauty, though they cannot
+always obstruct the brightness of genius and learning. To proceed from
+one truth to another, and connect distant propositions by regular
+consequences, is the great prerogative of man. Independent and
+unconnected sentiments flashing upon the mind in quick succession, may,
+for a time, delight by their novelty, but they differ from systematical
+reasoning, as single notes from harmony, as glances of lightning from
+the radiance of the sun.
+
+When rules are thus drawn, rather from precedents than reason, there is
+danger not only from the faults of an author, but from the errours of
+those who criticise his works; since they may often mislead their pupils
+by false representations, as the Ciceronians of the sixteenth century
+were betrayed into barbarisms by corrupt copies of their darling writer.
+
+It is established at present, that the proemial lines of a poem, in
+which the general subject is proposed, must be void of glitter and
+embellishment. "The first lines of Paradise Lost," says Addison, "are
+perhaps as plain, simple, and unadorned, as any of the whole poem, in
+which particular the author has conformed himself to the example of
+Homer, and the precept of Horace."
+
+This observation seems to have been made by an implicit adoption of the
+common opinion, without consideration either of the precept or example.
+Had Horace been consulted, he would have been found to direct only what
+should be comprised in the proposition, not how it should be expressed;
+and to have commended Homer in opposition to a meaner poet, not for the
+gradual elevation of his diction, but the judicious expansion of his
+plan; for displaying unpromised events, not for producing unexpected
+elegancies.
+
+ --Specivsa dehinc miracula prouiat;
+ Antiphaten, Scyllamque, et cum Cyclope Charybdim. Hon. Ar. Poet. 146.
+
+ But from a cloud of smoke he breaks to light,
+ And pours his specious miracles to sight;
+ Antiphates his hideous feast devours,
+ Charybdis barks, and Polyphemus roars. FRANCIS.
+
+If the exordial verses of Homer be compared with the rest of the poem,
+they will not appear remarkable for plainness or simplicity, but rather
+eminently adorned and illuminated:
+
+ [Greek:
+ Andra moi ennepe, Mousa, polutropon, os mala polla
+ Plagchthae, epei Troiaes ieron ptoliethron eperse;
+ Pollon d anthropon iden astea, kai noon egno;
+ Polla d og en pontps pathen algea on kata thumon,
+ Arnumenos aen te psuchaen kai noston etairon;
+ All oud os etarous errusato, iemenos per;
+ Auton gar spheteraesin atasthaliaesin olonto.
+ Naepioi, oi kata bous uperionos Aeelioio
+ Aesthion; autar o toisin apheileto vostimon aemao;
+ Ton amothen ge, thea, thugater Dios, eipe kai eamin.]
+
+ The man, for wisdom's various arts renown'd,
+ Long exercised in woes, O muse! resound.
+ Who, when his arms had wrought the destin'd fall
+ Of sacred Troy, and raz'd her heav'n-built wall,
+ Wandering from clime to clime, observant stray'd,
+ The manners noted, and their states survey'd.
+ On stormy seas unnumber'd toils he bore,
+ Safe with his friends to gain his natal shore:
+ Vain toils! their impious folly dar'd to prey
+ On herds devoted to the god of day;
+ The god vindictive doom'd them never more
+ (Ah! men unbless'd) to touch that natal shore.
+ O snatch some portion of these acts from fate,
+ Celestial muse! and to our world relate. POPE.
+
+The first verses of the Iliad are in like manner particularly splendid,
+and the proposition of the Aeneid closes with dignity and magnificence
+not often to be found even in the poetry of Virgil.
+
+The intent of the introduction is to raise expectation, and suspend it;
+something therefore must be discovered, and something concealed; and the
+poet, while the fertility of his invention is yet unknown, may properly
+recommend himself by the grace of his language.
+
+He that reveals too much, or promises too little; he that never
+irritates the intellectual appetite, or that immediately satiates it,
+equally defeats his own purpose. It is necessary to the pleasure of the
+reader, that the events should not be anticipated, and how then can his
+attention be invited, but by grandeur of expression?
+
+
+
+No. 159. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1751.
+
+ _Sunt verba et voces, quibus hunc lenire dolorem
+ Possis, et magnuum morbi deponere partem_. HOR. Ep. Lib. i. 34.
+
+ The power of words, and soothing sounds, appease
+ The raging pain, and lessen the disease. FRANCIS.
+
+The imbecility with which Verecundulus complains that the presence of a
+numerous assembly freezes his faculties, is particularly incident to the
+studious part of mankind, whose education necessarily secludes them in
+their earlier years from mingled converse, till, at their dismission
+from schools and academies, they plunge at once into the tumult of the
+world, and, coming forth from the gloom of solitude, are overpowered by
+the blaze of publick life.
+
+It is, perhaps, kindly provided by nature, that as the feathers and
+strength of a bird grow together, and her wings are not completed till
+she is able to fly, so some proportion should be preserved in the human
+kind between judgment and courage; the precipitation of inexperience is
+therefore restrained by shame, and we remain shackled by timidity, till
+we have learned to speak and act with propriety. I believe few can
+review the days of their youth without recollecting temptations, which
+shame, rather than virtue, enabled them to resist; and opinions which,
+however erroneous in their principles, and dangerous in their
+consequences, they have panted to advance at the hazard of contempt and
+hatred, when they found themselves irresistibly depressed by a languid
+anxiety, which seized them at the moment of utterance, and still
+gathered strength from their endeavours to resist it.
+
+It generally happens that assurance keeps an even pace with ability, and
+the fear of miscarriage, which hinders Our first attempts, is gradually
+dissipated as our skill advances towards certainty of success. That
+bashfulness, therefore, which prevents disgrace, that short and
+temporary shame which secures us from the danger of lasting reproach,
+cannot be properly counted among our misfortunes.
+
+Bashfulness, however it may incommode for a moment, scarcely ever
+produces evils of long continuance; it may flush the cheek, flutter in
+the heart, deject the eyes, and enchain the tongue, but its mischiefs
+soon pass off without remembrance. It may sometimes exclude pleasure,
+but seldom opens any avenue to sorrow or remorse. It is observed
+somewhere that _few have repented of having forborne to speak_.
+
+To excite opposition, and inflame malevolence, is the unhappy privilege
+of courage made arrogant by consciousness of strength. No man finds in
+himself any inclination to attack or oppose him who confesses his
+superiority by blushing in his presence. Qualities exerted with apparent
+fearfulness, receive applause from every voice, and support from every
+hand. Diffidence may check resolution and obstruct performance, but
+compensates its embarrassments by more important advantages; it
+conciliates the proud, and softens the severe, averts envy from
+excellence, and censure from miscarriage.
+
+It may indeed happen that knowledge and virtue remain too long congealed
+by this frigorifick power, as the principles of vegetation are sometimes
+obstructed by lingering frosts. He that enters late into a public
+station, though with all the abilities requisite to the discharge of his
+duty, will find his powers at first impeded by a timidity which he
+himself knows to be vicious, and must struggle long against dejection
+and reluctance, before he obtains the full command of his own attention,
+and adds the gracefulness of ease to the dignity of merit.
+
+For this disease of the mind I know not whether any remedies of much
+efficacy can be found. To advise a man unaccustomed to the eyes of
+multitudes to mount a tribunal without perturbation, to tell him whose
+life was passed in the shades of contemplation, that he must not be
+disconcerted or perplexed in receiving and returning the compliments of
+a splendid assembly, is to advise an inhabitant of Brasil or Sumatra not
+to shiver at an English winter, or him who has always lived upon a plain
+to look from a precipice without emotion. It is to suppose custom
+instantaneously controllable by reason, and to endeavour to communicate,
+by precept, that which only time and habit can bestow.
+
+He that hopes by philosophy and contemplation alone to fortify himself
+against that awe which all, at their first appearance on the stage of
+life, must feel from the spectators, will, at the hour of need, be
+mocked by his resolution; and I doubt whether the preservatives which
+Plato relates Alcibiades to have received from Socrates, when he was
+about to speak in publick, proved sufficient to secure him from the
+powerful fascination.
+
+Yet, as the effects of time may by art and industry be accelerated or
+retarded, it cannot be improper to consider how this troublesome
+instinct may be opposed when it exceeds its just proportion, and instead
+of repressing petulance and temerity, silences eloquence, and
+debilitates force; since, though it cannot be hoped that anxiety should
+be immediately dissipated, it may be at least somewhat abated; and the
+passions will operate with less violence, when reason rises against
+them, than while she either slumbers in neutrality, or, mistaking her
+interest, lends them her assistance.
+
+No cause more frequently produces bashfulness than too high an opinion
+of our own importance. He that imagines an assembly filled with his
+merit, panting with expectation, and hushed with attention, easily
+terrifies himself with the dread of disappointing them, and strains his
+imagination in pursuit of something that may vindicate the veracity of
+fame, and shew that his reputation was not gained by chance. He
+considers that what he shall say or do will never be forgotten; that
+renown or infamy is suspended upon every syllable, and that nothing
+ought to fall from him which will not bear the test of time. Under such
+solicitude, who can wonder that the mind is overwhelmed, and, by
+struggling with attempts above her strength, quickly sinks into
+languishment and despondency?
+
+The most useful medicines are often unpleasing to the taste. Those who
+are oppressed by their own reputation, will, perhaps, not be comforted
+by hearing that their cares are unnecessary. But the truth is, that no
+man is much regarded by the rest of the world. He that considers how
+little he dwells upon the condition of others, will learn how little the
+attention of others is attracted by himself. While we see multitudes
+passing before us, of whom, perhaps, not one appears to deserve our
+notice, or excite our sympathy, we should remember, that we likewise are
+lost in the same throng; that the eye which happens to glance upon us is
+turned in a moment on him that follows us, and that the utmost which we
+can reasonably hope or fear is, to fill a vacant hour with prattle, and
+be forgotten.
+
+
+
+No. 160. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1751
+
+ --Inter se convenit ursis. JUV. Sat. xv. 164.
+
+ Beasts of each kind their fellows spare;
+ Bear lives in amity with bear.
+
+"The world," says Locke, "has people of all sorts." As in the general
+hurry produced by the superfluities of some, and necessities of others,
+no man needs to stand still for want of employment, so in the
+innumerable gradations of ability, and endless varieties of study and
+inclination, no employment can be vacant for want of a man qualified to
+discharge it.
+
+Such is probably the natural state of the universe; but it is so much
+deformed by interest and passion, that the benefit of this adaptation of
+men to things is not always perceived. The folly or indigence of those
+who set their services to sale, inclines them to boast of qualifications
+which they do not possess, and attempt business which they do not
+understand; and they who have the power of assigning to others the task
+of life, are seldom honest or seldom happy in their nomination. Patrons
+are corrupted by avarice, cheated by credulity, or overpowered by
+resistless solicitation. They are sometimes too strongly influenced by
+honest prejudices of friendship, or the prevalence of virtuous
+compassion. For, whatever cool reason may direct, it is not easy for a
+man of tender and scrupulous goodness to overlook the immediate effect
+of his own actions, by turning his eyes upon remoter consequences, and
+to do that which must give present pain, for the sake of obviating evil
+yet unfelt, or securing advantage in time to come. What is distant is in
+itself obscure, and, when we have no wish to see it, easily escapes our
+notice, or takes such a form as desire or imagination bestows upon it.
+
+Every man might, for the same reason, in the multitudes that swarm about
+him, find some kindred mind with which he could unite in confidence and
+friendship; yet we see many straggling single about the world, unhappy
+for want of an associate, and pining with the necessity of confining
+their sentiments to their own bosoms.
+
+This inconvenience arises, in like manner, from struggles of the will
+against the understanding. It is not often difficult to find a suitable
+companion, if every man would be content with such as he is qualified to
+please. But if vanity tempts him to forsake his rank, and post himself
+among those with whom no common interest or mutual pleasure can ever
+unite him, he must always live in a state of unsocial separation,
+without tenderness and without trust.
+
+There are many natures which can never approach within a certain
+distance, and which, when any irregular motive impels them towards
+contact, seem to start back from each other by some invincible
+repulsion. There are others which immediately cohere whenever they come
+into the reach of mutual attraction, and with very little formality of
+preparation mingle intimately as soon as they meet. Every man, whom
+either business or curiosity has thrown at large into the world, will
+recollect many instances of fondness and dislike, which have forced
+themselves upon him without the intervention of his judgment; of
+dispositions to court some and avoid others, when he could assign no
+reason for the preference, or none adequate to the violence of his
+passions; of influence that acted instantaneously upon his mind, and
+which no arguments or persuasions could ever overcome.
+
+Among those with whom time and intercourse have made us familiar, we
+feel our affections divided in different proportions without much regard
+to moral or intellectual merit. Every man knows some whom he cannot
+induce himself to trust, though he has no reason to suspect that they
+would betray him; those to whom he cannot complain, though he never
+observed them to want compassion; those in whose presence he never can
+be gay, though excited by invitations to mirth and freedom; and those
+from whom he cannot be content to receive instruction, though they never
+insulted his ignorance by contempt or ostentation.
+
+That much regard is to be had to those instincts of kindness and
+dislike, or that reason should blindly follow them, I am far from
+intending to inculcate: it is very certain, that by indulgence we may
+give them strength which they have not from nature, and almost every
+example of ingratitude and treachery proves, that by obeying them we may
+commit our happiness to those who are very unworthy of so great a trust.
+But it may deserve to be remarked, that since few contend much with
+their inclinations, it is generally vain to solicit the good-will of
+those whom we perceive thus involuntarily alienated from us; neither
+knowledge nor virtue will reconcile antipathy, and though officiousness
+may be for a time admitted, and diligence applauded, they will at last
+be dismissed with coldness, or discouraged by neglect.
+
+Some have indeed an occult power of stealing upon the affections, of
+exciting universal benevolence, and disposing every heart to fondness
+and friendship. But this is a felicity granted only to the favourites of
+nature. The greater part of mankind find a different reception from
+different dispositions; they sometimes obtain unexpected caresses from
+those whom they never flattered with uncommon regard, and sometimes
+exhaust all their arts of pleasing without effect. To these it is
+necessary to look round, and attempt every breast in which they find
+virtue sufficient for the foundation of friendship; to enter into the
+crowd, and try whom chance will offer to their notice, till they fix on
+some temper congenial to their own, as the magnet rolled in the dust
+collects the fragments of its kindred metal from a thousand particles of
+other substances.
+
+Every man must have remarked the facility with which the kindness of
+others is sometimes gained by those to whom he never could have imparted
+his own. We are by our occupations, education, and habits of life,
+divided almost into different species, which regard one another, for the
+most part, with scorn and malignity. Each of these classes of the human
+race has desires, fears, and conversation, vexations and merriment
+peculiar to itself; cares which another cannot feel; pleasures which he
+cannot partake; and modes of expressing every sensation which he cannot
+understand. That frolick which shakes one man with laughter, will
+convulse another with indignation; the strain of jocularity which in one
+place obtains treats and patronage, would in another be heard with
+indifference, and in a third with abhorrence.
+
+To raise esteem we must benefit others, to procure love we must please
+them. Aristotle observes, that old men do not readily form friendships,
+because they are not easily susceptible of pleasure. He that can
+contribute to the hilarity of the vacant hour, or partake with equal
+gust the favourite amusement; he whose mind is employed on the same
+objects, and who therefore never harasses the understanding with
+unaccustomed ideas, will be welcomed with ardour, and left with regret,
+unless he destroys those recommendations by faults with which peace and
+security cannot consist.
+
+It were happy, if, in forming friendships, virtue could concur with
+pleasure; but the greatest part of human gratifications approach so
+nearly to vice, that few who make the delight of others their rule of
+conduct, can avoid disingenuous compliances; yet certainly he that
+suffers himself to be driven or allured from virtue, mistakes his own
+interest, since he gains succour by means, for which his friend, if ever
+he becomes wise, must scorn him, and for which at last he must scorn
+himself.
+
+
+
+No. 161. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Oiae gar phullon geneae, toiaede kai Andron.]
+ HOM. Il. [Greek: T.]
+
+ Frail as the leaves that quiver on the sprays,
+ Like them man flourishes, like them decays.
+
+MR. RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+You have formerly observed that curiosity often terminates in barren
+knowledge, and that the mind is prompted to study and inquiry rather by
+the uneasiness of ignorance, than the hope of profit. Nothing can be of
+less importance to any present interest, than the fortune of those who
+have been long lost in the grave, and from whom nothing now can be hoped
+or feared. Yet, to rouse the zeal of a true antiquary, little more is
+necessary than to mention a name which mankind have conspired to forget;
+he will make his way to remote scenes of action through obscurity and
+contradiction, as Tully sought amidst bushes and brambles the tomb of
+Archimedes.
+
+It is not easy to discover how it concerns him that gathers the produce,
+or receives the rent of an estate, to know through what families the
+land has passed, who is registered in the Conqueror's survey as its
+possessor, how often it has been forfeited by treason, or how often sold
+by prodigality. The power or wealth of the present inhabitants of a
+country cannot be much increased by an inquiry after the names of those
+barbarians, who destroyed one another twenty centuries ago, in contests
+for the shelter of woods, or convenience of pasturage. Yet we see that
+no man can be at rest in the enjoyment of a new purchase till he has
+learned the history of his grounds from the ancient inhabitants of the
+parish, and that no nation omits to record the actions of their
+ancestors, however bloody, savage, and rapacious.
+
+The same disposition, as different opportunities call it forth,
+discovers itself in great or little things. I have always thought it
+unworthy of a wise man to slumber in total inactivity, only because he
+happens to have no employment equal to his ambition or genius; it is
+therefore my custom to apply my attention to the objects before me, and
+as I cannot think any place wholly unworthy of notice that affords a
+habitation to a man of letters, I have collected the history and
+antiquities of the several garrets in which I have resided.
+
+ Quantulacunque estis, vos ego magna voco.
+
+ How small to others, but how great to me!
+
+Many of these narratives my industry has been able to extend to a
+considerable length; but the woman with whom I now lodge has lived only
+eighteen months in the house, and can give no account of its ancient
+revolutions; the plaisterer having, at her entrance, obliterated, by his
+white-wash, all the smoky memorials which former tenants had left upon
+the ceiling, and perhaps drawn the veil of oblivion over politicians,
+philosophers, and poets.
+
+When I first, cheapened my lodgings, the landlady told me, that she
+hoped I was not an author, for the lodgers on the first floor had
+stipulated that the upper rooms should not be occupied by a noisy trade.
+I very readily promised to give no disturbance to her family, and soon
+despatched a bargain on the usual terms.
+
+I had not slept many nights in my new apartment before I began to
+inquire after my predecessors, and found my landlady, whose imagination
+is filled chiefly with her own affairs, very ready to give me
+information.
+
+Curiosity, like all other desires, produces pain as wel as pleasure.
+Before she began her narrative, I had heated my head with expectations
+of adventures and discoveries, of elegance in disguise, and learning in
+distress; and was somewhat mortified when I heard that the first tenant
+was a tailor, of whom nothing was remembered but that he complained of
+his room for want of light; and, after having lodged in it a month, and
+paid only a week's rent, pawned a piece of cloth which he was trusted,
+to cut out, and was forced to make a precipitate retreat from this
+quarter of the town.
+
+The next was a young woman newly arrived from the country, who lived for
+five weeks with great regularity, and became by frequent treats very
+much the favourite of the family, but at last received visits so
+frequently from a cousin in Cheapside, that she brought the reputation
+of the house into danger, and was therefore dismissed with good advice.
+
+The room then stood empty for a fortnight; my landlady began to think
+that she had judged hardly, and often wished for such another lodger. At
+last, an elderly man of a grave aspect read the bill, and bargained for
+the room at the very first price that was asked. He lived in close
+retirement, seldom went out till evening, and then returned early,
+sometimes cheerful, and at other times dejected. It was remarkable, that
+whatever he purchased, he never had small money in his pocket; and,
+though cool and temperate on other occasions, was always vehement and
+stormy, till he received his change. He paid his rent with great
+exactness, and seldom failed once a week to requite my landlady's
+civility with a supper. At last, such is the fate of human felicity, the
+house was alarmed at midnight by the constable, who demanded to search
+the garrets. My landlady assuring him that he had mistaken the door,
+conducted him up stairs, where he found the tools of a coiner; but the
+tenant had crawled along the roof to an empty house, and escaped; much
+to the joy of my landlady, who declares him a very honest man, and
+wonders why any body should be hanged for making money when such numbers
+are in want of it. She however confesses that she shall, for the future,
+always question the character of those who take her garret without
+beating down the price.
+
+The bill was then placed again in the window, and the poor woman was
+teased for seven weeks by innumerable passengers, who obliged her to
+climb with them every hour up five stories, and then disliked the
+prospect, hated the noise of a publick street, thought the stairs
+narrow, objected to a low ceiling, required the walls to be hung with
+fresher paper, asked questions about the neighbourhood, could not think
+of living so far from their acquaintance, wished the windows had looked
+to the south rather than the west, told how the door and chimney might
+have been better disposed, bid her half the price that she asked, or
+promised to give her earnest the next day, and came no more.
+
+At last, a short meagre man, in a tarnished waistcoat, desired to see
+the garret, and when he had stipulated for two long shelves, and a
+larger table, hired it at a low rate. When the affair was completed, he
+looked round him with great satisfaction, and repeated some words which
+the woman did not understand. In two days he brought a great box of
+books, took possession of his room, and lived very inoffensively, except
+that he frequently disturbed the inhabitants of the next floor by
+unseasonable noises. He was generally in bed at noon, but from evening
+to midnight he sometimes talked aloud with great vehemence, sometimes
+stamped as in rage, sometimes threw down his poker, then clattered his
+chairs, then sat down in deep thought, and again burst out into loud
+vociferations; sometimes he would sigh as oppressed with misery, and
+sometimes shaked with convulsive laughter. When he encountered any of
+the family, he gave way or bowed, but rarely spoke, except that as he
+went up stairs he often repeated,
+
+ [Greek:--Hos hupertata domata naiei].
+
+ This habitant th' aerial regions boast;
+
+hard words, to which his neighbours listened so often, that they learned
+them without understanding them. What was his employment she did not
+venture to ask him, but at last heard a printer's boy inquire for the
+author.
+
+My landlady was very often advised to beware of this strange man, who,
+though he was quiet for the present, might perhaps become outrageous in
+the hot months; but, as she was punctually paid, she could not find any
+sufficient reason for dismissing him, till one night he convinced her,
+by setting fire to his curtains, that it was not safe to have an author
+for her inmate.
+
+She had then for six weeks a succession of tenants, who left the house
+on Saturday, and, instead of paying their rent, stormed at their
+landlady. At last she took in two sisters, one of whom had spent her
+little fortune in procuring remedies for a lingering disease, and was
+now supported and attended by the other: she climbed with difficulty to
+the apartment, where she languished eight weeks without impatience, or
+lamentation, except for the expense and fatigue which her sister
+suffered, and then calmly and contentedly expired. The sister followed
+her to the grave, paid the few debts which they had contracted, wiped
+away the tears of useless sorrow, and, returning to the business of
+common life, resigned to me the vacant habitation.
+
+Such, Mr. Rambler, are the changes which have happened in the narrow
+space where my present fortune has fixed my residence. So true it is
+that amusement and instruction are always at hand for those who have
+skill and willingness to find them; and, so just is the observation of
+Juvenal, that a single house will shew whatever is done or suffered in
+the world.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+
+
+No. 162. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1751.
+
+ Orbus es, et locuples, et Bruto consule natus,
+ Esse tibi veras credis amicitias?
+ Sunt veræ: sed quas juvenis, quas pauper habebas:
+ Qui novus est, mortem diligit ille tuam. MART. Lib. xi. Ep. 44.
+
+ What! old, and rich, and childless too,
+ And yet believe your friends are true?
+ Truth might perhaps to those belong,
+ To those who lov'd you poor and young;
+ But, trust me, for the new you have,
+ They'll love you dearly--in your grave. F. LEWIS.
+
+One of the complaints uttered by Milton's Samson, in the anguish of
+blindness, is, that he shall pass his life under the direction of
+others; that he cannot regulate his conduct by his own knowledge, but
+must lie at the mercy of those who undertake to guide him.
+
+There is no state more contrary to the dignity of wisdom than perpetual
+and unlimited dependance, in which the understanding lies useless, and
+every motion is received from external impulse. Reason is the great
+distinction of human nature, the faculty by which we approach to some
+degree of association with celestial intelligences; but as the
+excellence of every power appears only in its operations, not to have
+reason, and to have it useless and unemployed, is nearly the same.
+
+Such is the weakness of man, that the essence of things is seldom so
+much regarded as external and accidental appendages. A small variation
+of trifling circumstances, a slight change of form by an artificial
+dress, or a casual difference of appearance, by a new light and
+situation, will conciliate affection or excite abhorrence, and determine
+us to pursue or to avoid. Every man considers a necessity of compliance
+with any will but his own, as the lowest state of ignominy and meanness;
+few are so far lost in cowardice or negligence, as not to rouse at the
+first insult of tyranny, and exert all their force against him who
+usurps their property, or invades any privilege of speech or action. Yet
+we see often those who never wanted spirit to repel encroachment or
+oppose violence, at last, by a gradual relaxation of vigilance,
+delivering up, without capitulation, the fortress which they defended
+against assault, and laying down unbidden the weapons which they grasp
+the harder for every attempt to wrest them from their hands. Men eminent
+for spirit and wisdom often resign themselves to voluntary pupilage, and
+suffer their lives to be modelled by officious ignorance, and their
+choice to be regulated by presumptuous stupidity.
+
+This unresisting acquiescence in the determination of others, may be the
+consequence of application to some study remote from the beaten track of
+life, some employment which does not allow leisure for sufficient
+inspection of those petty affairs, by which nature has decreed a great
+part of our duration to be filled. To a mind thus withdrawn from common
+objects, it is more eligible to repose on the prudence of another, than
+to be exposed every moment to slight interruptions. The submission which
+such confidence requires, is paid without pain, because it implies no
+confession of inferiority. The business from which we withdraw our
+cognizance, is not above our abilities, but below our notice. We please
+our pride with the effects of our influence thus weakly exerted, and
+fancy ourselves placed in a higher orb, for which we regulate
+subordinate agents by a slight and distant superintendance. But,
+whatever vanity or abstraction may suggest, no man can safely do that by
+others which might be done by himself; he that indulges negligence will
+quickly become ignorant of his own affairs; and he that trusts without
+reserve will at last be deceived.
+
+It is, however, impossible but that, as the attention tends strongly
+towards one thing, it must retire from another; and he that omits the
+care of domestick business, because he is engrossed by inquiries of more
+importance to mankind, has, at least, the merit of suffering in a good
+cause. But there are many who can plead no such extenuation of their
+folly; who shake off the burden of their situation, not that they may
+soar with less incumbrance to the heights of knowledge or virtue, but
+that they may loiter at ease and sleep in quiet; and who select for
+friendship and confidence not the faithful and the virtuous, but the
+soft, the civil, and compliant.
+
+This openness to flattery is the common disgrace of declining life. When
+men feel weakness increasing on them, they naturally desire to rest from
+the struggles of contradiction, the fatigue of reasoning, the anxiety of
+circumspection; when they are hourly tormented with pains and diseases,
+they are unable to bear any new disturbance, and consider all opposition
+as an addition to misery, of which they feel already more than they can
+patiently endure. Thus desirous of peace, and thus fearful of pain, the
+old man seldom inquires after any other qualities in those whom he
+caresses, than quickness in conjecturing his desires, activity in
+supplying his wants, dexterity in intercepting complaints before they
+approach near enough to disturb him, flexibility to his present humour,
+submission to hasty petulance, and attention to wearisome narrations. By
+these arts alone many have been able to defeat the claims of kindred and
+of merit, and to enrich themselves with presents and legacies.
+
+Thrasybulus inherited a large fortune, and augmented it by the revenues
+of several lucrative employments, which he discharged with honour and
+dexterity. He was at last wise enough to consider, that life should not
+be devoted wholly to accumulation, and therefore retiring to his estate,
+applied himself to the education of his children, and the cultivation of
+domestick happiness.
+
+He passed several years in this pleasing amusement, and saw his care
+amply recompensed; his daughters were celebrated for modesty and
+elegance, and his sons for learning, prudence, and spirit. In time the
+eagerness with which the neighbouring gentlemen courted his alliance,
+obliged him to resign his daughters to other families; the vivacity and
+curiosity of his sons hurried them out of rural privacy into the open
+world, from whence they had not soon an inclination to return. This,
+however, he had always hoped; he pleased himself with the success of his
+schemes, and felt no inconvenience from solitude till an apoplexy
+deprived him of his wife.
+
+Thrasybulus had now no companion; and the maladies of increasing years
+having taken from him much of the power of procuring amusement for
+himself, he thought it necessary to procure some inferior friend, who
+might ease him of his economical solicitudes, and divert him by cheerful
+conversation. All these qualities he soon recollected in Vafer, a clerk
+in one of the offices over which he had formerly presided. Vafer was
+invited to visit his old patron, and being by his station acquainted
+with the present modes of life, and by constant practice dexterous in
+business, entertained him with so many novelties, and so readily
+disentangled his affairs, that he was desired to resign his clerkship,
+and accept a liberal salary in the house of Thrasybulus.
+
+Vafer, having always lived in a state of dependance, was well versed in
+the arts by which favour is obtained, and could, without repugnance or
+hesitation, accommodate himself to every caprice, and echo every
+opinion. He never doubted but to be convinced, nor attempted opposition
+but to flatter Thrasybulus with the pleasure of a victory. By this
+practice he found his way into his patron's heart, and, having first
+made himself agreeable, soon became important. His insidious diligence,
+by which the laziness of age was gratified, engrossed the management of
+affairs; and his petty offices of civility, and occasional
+intercessions, persuaded the tenants to consider him as their friend and
+benefactor, and to entreat his enforcement of their representations of
+hard years, and his countenance to petitions for abatement of rent.
+
+Thrasybulus had now banqueted on flattery, till he could no longer bear
+the harshness of remonstrance or the insipidity of truth. All
+contrariety to his own opinion shocked him like a violation of some
+natural right, and all recommendation of his affairs to his own
+inspection was dreaded by him as a summons to torture. His children were
+alarmed by the sudden riches of Vafer, but their complaints were heard
+by their father with impatience, as the result of a conspiracy against
+his quiet, and a design to condemn him, for their own advantage, to
+groan out his last hours in perplexity and drudgery. The daughters
+retired with tears in their eyes, but the son continued his
+importunities till he found his inheritance hazarded by his obstinacy.
+
+Vafer triumphed over all their efforts, and, continuing to confirm
+himself in authority, at the death of his master, purchased an estate,
+and bade defiance to inquiry and justice.
+
+
+
+No. 163. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1751.
+
+ Mitte superba pati fastidia, spemque caducam
+ Despice; vive tibi, nam moriere tibi. SENECA.
+
+ Bow to no patron's insolence; rely
+ On no frail hopes, in freedom live and die. F. LEWIS.
+
+None of the cruelties exercised by wealth and power upon indigence and
+dependance is more mischievous in its consequences, or more frequently
+practised with wanton negligence, than the encouragement of expectations
+which are never to be gratified, and the elation and depression of the
+heart by needless vicissitudes of hope and disappointment.
+
+Every man is rich or poor, according to the proportion between his
+desires and enjoyments; any enlargement of wishes is therefore equally
+destructive to happiness with the diminution of possession; and he that
+teaches another to long for what he never shall obtain, is no less an
+enemy to his quiet, than if he had robbed him of part of his patrimony.
+
+But representations thus refined exhibit no adequate idea of the guilt
+of pretended friendship; of artifices by which followers are attracted
+only to decorate the retinue of pomp, and swell the shout of popularity,
+and to be dismissed with contempt and ignominy, when their leader has
+succeeded or miscarried, when he is sick of show, and weary of noise.
+While a man infatuated with the promises of greatness, wastes his hours
+and days in attendance and solicitation, the honest opportunities of
+improving his condition pass by without his notice; he neglects to
+cultivate his own barren soil, because he expects every moment to be
+placed in regions of spontaneous fertility, and is seldom roused from
+his delusion, but by the gripe of distress which he cannot resist, and
+the sense of evils which cannot be remedied.
+
+The punishment of Tantalus in the infernal regions affords a just image
+of hungry servility, flattered with the approach of advantage, doomed to
+lose it before it comes into his reach, always within a few days of
+felicity, and always sinking back to his former wants:
+
+ [Greek:
+ Kai maen Tantalon eiseidon, chalep alge echonta,
+ Estaot en limnae hae de proseplaze geneio.
+ Steuto de dipsaon, pieein d ouk eichen elesthai.
+ Ossaki gar kupsei ho geron pieein meneainon,
+ Tossach hudor apolesket anabrochen. amphi de possi
+ Gaia melaina phaneske katazaenaske de daimon,
+ Dendrea d hupsipeteala katakoeathen chee kaopon
+ Onchnai, kai roiai, kai maeleai aglaokarpoi,
+ Sukai te glukeoai, kai elaiai taelethoosai.
+ Ton opot ithusei o geoon epi cheosi masasthai,
+ Tasd anemos riptaske poti nephea skioenta.]
+ HOM. Od. [Greek: A'.] 581.
+
+"I saw," says Homer's Ulysses, "the severe punishment of Tantalus. In a
+lake, whose waters approached to his lips, he stood burning with thirst,
+without the power to drink. Whenever he inclined his head to the stream,
+some deity commanded it to be dry, and the dark earth appeared at his
+feet. Around him lofty trees spread their fruits to view; the pear, the
+pomegranate and the apple, the green olive and the luscious fig quivered
+before him, which, whenever he extended his hand to seize them, were
+snatched by the winds into clouds and obscurity."
+
+This image of misery was perhaps originally suggested to some poet by
+the conduct of his patron, by the daily contemplation of splendour which
+he never must partake, by fruitless attempts to catch at interdicted
+happiness, and by the sudden evanescence of his reward, when he thought
+his labours almost at an end. To groan with poverty, when all about him
+was opulence, riot, and superfluity, and to find the favours which he
+had long been encouraged to hope, and had long endeavoured to deserve,
+squandered at last on nameless ignorance, was to thirst with water
+flowing before him, and to see the fruits, to which his hunger was
+hastening, scattered by the wind. Nor can my correspondent, whatever he
+may have suffered, express with more justness or force the vexations of
+dependance.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I am one of those mortals who have been courted and envied as the
+favourites of the great. Having often gained the prize of composition at
+the university, I began to hope that I should obtain the same
+distinction in every other place, and determined to forsake the
+profession to which I was destined by my parents, and in which the
+interest of my family would have procured me a very advantageous
+settlement. The pride of wit fluttered in my heart, and when I prepared
+to leave the college, nothing entered my imagination but honours,
+caresses, and rewards, riches without labour, and luxury without
+expense.
+
+I however delayed my departure for a time, to finish the performance by
+which I was to draw the first notice of mankind upon me. When it was
+completed I hurried to London, and considered every moment that passed
+before its publication, as lost in a kind of neutral existence, and cut
+off from the golden hours of happiness and fame. The piece was at last
+printed and disseminated by a rapid sale; I wandered from one place of
+concourse to another, feasted from morning to night on the repetition of
+my own praises, and enjoyed the various conjectures of criticks, the
+mistaken candour of my friends, and the impotent malice of my enemies.
+Some had read the manuscript, and rectified its inaccuracies; others had
+seen it in a state so imperfect, that they could not forbear to wonder
+at its present excellence; some had conversed with the author at the
+coffeehouse; and others gave hints that they had lent him money.
+
+I knew that no performance is so favourably read as that of a writer who
+suppresses his name, and therefore resolved to remain concealed, till
+those by whom literary reputation is established had given their
+suffrages too publickly to retract them. At length my bookseller
+informed me that Aurantius, the standing patron of merit, had sent
+inquiries after me, and invited me to his acquaintance.
+
+The time which I had long expected was now arrived. I went to Aurantius
+with a beating heart, for I looked upon our interview as the critical
+moment of my destiny. I was received with civilities which my academick
+rudeness made me unable to repay; but when I had recovered from my
+confusion, I prosecuted the conversation with such liveliness and
+propriety, that I confirmed my new friend in his esteem of my abilities,
+and was dismissed with the utmost ardour of profession, and raptures of
+fondness.
+
+I was soon summoned to dine with Aurantius, who had assembled the most
+judicious of his friends to partake of the entertainment. Again I
+exerted my powers of sentiment and expression, and again found every eye
+sparkling with delight, and every tongue silent with attention. I now
+became familiar at the table of Aurantius, but could never, in his most
+private or jocund hours, obtain more from him than general declarations
+of esteem, or endearments of tenderness, which included no particular
+promise, and therefore conferred no claim. This frigid reserve somewhat
+disgusted me, and when he complained of three days absence, I took care
+to inform him with how much importunity of kindness I had been detained
+by his rival Pollio.
+
+Aurantius now considered his honour as endangered by the desertion of a
+wit, and, lest I should have an inclination to wander, told me that I
+could never find a friend more constant and zealous than himself; that
+indeed he had made no promises, because he hoped to surprise me with
+advancement, but had been silently promoting my interest, and should
+continue his good offices, unless he found the kindness of others more
+desired.
+
+If you, Mr. Rambler, have ever ventured your philosophy within the
+attraction of greatness, you know the force of such language introduced
+with a smile of gracious tenderness, and impressed at the conclusion
+with an air of solemn sincerity. From that instant I gave myself up
+wholly to Aurantius, and, as he immediately resumed his former gaiety,
+expected every morning a summons to some employment of dignity and
+profit. One month succeeded another, and, in defiance of appearances, I
+still fancied myself nearer to my wishes, and continued to dream of
+success, and wake to disappointment. At last the failure of my little
+fortune compelled me to abate the finery which I hitherto thought
+necessary to the company with whom I associated, and the rank to which I
+should be raised. Aurantius, from the moment in which he discovered my
+poverty, considered me as fully in his power, and afterwards rather
+permitted my attendance than invited it; thought himself at liberty to
+refuse my visits, whenever he had other amusements within reach, and
+often suffered me to wait, without pretending any necessary business.
+When I was admitted to his table, if any man of rank equal to his own
+was present, he took occasion to mention my writings, and commend my
+ingenuity, by which he intended to apologize for the confusion of
+distinctions, and the improper assortment of his company; and often
+called upon me to entertain his friends with my productions, as a
+sportsman delights the squires of his neighbourhood with the curvets of
+his horse, or the obedience of his spaniels.
+
+To complete my mortification, it was his practice to impose tasks upon
+me, by requiring me to write upon such subjects as he thought
+susceptible of ornament and illustration. With these extorted
+performances he was little satisfied, because he rarely found in them
+the ideas which his own imagination had suggested, and which he
+therefore thought more natural than mine.
+
+When the pale of ceremony is broken, rudeness and insult soon enter the
+breach. He now found that he might safely harass me with vexation, that
+he had fixed the shackles of patronage upon me, and that I could neither
+resist him nor escape. At last, in the eighth year of my servitude, when
+the clamour of creditors was vehement, and my necessity known to be
+extreme, he offered me a small office, but hinted his expectation, that
+I should marry a young woman with whom he had been acquainted.
+
+I was not so far depressed by my calamities as to comply with this
+proposal; but, knowing that complaints and expostulations would but
+gratify his insolence, I turned away with that contempt with which I
+shall never want spirit to treat the wretch who can outgo the guilt of a
+robber without the temptation of his profit, and who lures the credulous
+and thoughtless to maintain the show of his levee, and the mirth of his
+table, at the expense of honour, happiness, and life.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+LIBERALIS.
+
+
+
+No. 164. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1751.
+
+ _--Vitium, Gaure, Catonis habes_. MART. Lib. ii. Ep. lxxxix. 2.
+
+ Gaurus pretends to Cato's fame;
+ And proves--by Cato's vice, his claim.
+
+Distinction is so pleasing to the pride of man, that a great part of the
+pain and pleasure of life arises from the gratification or
+disappointment of an incessant wish for superiority, from the success or
+miscarriage of secret competitions, from victories and defeats, of
+which, though they appear to us of great importance, in reality none are
+conscious except ourselves.
+
+Proportionate to the prevalence of this love of praise is the variety of
+means by which its attainment is attempted. Every man however hopeless
+his pretensions may appear to all but himself, has some project by which
+he hopes to rise to reputation; some art by which he imagines that the
+notice of the world will be attracted; some quality, good or bad, which
+discriminates him from the common herd of mortals, and by which others
+maybe persuaded to love, or compelled to fear him. The ascents of
+honour, however steep, never appear inaccessible; he that despairs to
+scale the precipices by which learning and valour have conducted their
+favourites, discovers some by-bath, or easier acclivity, which, though
+it cannot bring him to the summit, will yet enable him to overlook those
+with whom he is now contending for eminence; and we seldom require more
+to the happiness of the present hour, than to surpass him that stands
+next before us.
+
+As the greater part of human kind speak and act wholly by imitation,
+most of those who aspire to honour and applause propose to themselves
+some example which serves as the model of their conduct, and the limit
+of their hopes. Almost every man, if closely examined, will be found to
+have enlisted himself under some leader whom he expects to conduct him
+to renown; to have some hero or other, living or dead, in his view,
+whose character he endeavours to assume, and whose performances he
+labours to equal.
+
+When the original is well chosen, and judiciously copied, the imitator
+often arrives at excellence, which he could never have attained without
+direction; for few are formed with abilities to discover new
+possibilities of excellence, and to distinguish themselves by means
+never tried before.
+
+But folly and idleness often contrive to gratify pride at a cheaper
+rate: not the qualities which are most illustrious, but those which are
+of easiest attainment, are selected for imitation; and the honours and
+rewards which publick gratitude has paid to the benefactors of mankind,
+are expected by wretches who can only imitate them in their vices and
+defects, or adopt some petty singularities of which those from whom they
+are borrowed were secretly ashamed.
+
+No man rises to such a height as to become conspicuous, but he is on one
+side censured by undiscerning malice, which reproaches him for his best
+actions, and slanders his apparent and incontestable excellencies; and
+idolized on the other by ignorant admiration, which exalts his faults
+and follies into virtues. It may be observed, that he by whose intimacy
+his acquaintances imagine themselves dignified, generally diffuses among
+them his mien and his habits; and indeed, without more vigilance than is
+generally applied to the regulation of the minuter parts of behaviour,
+it is not easy, when we converse much with one whose general character
+excites our veneration, to escape all contagion of his peculiarities,
+even when we do not deliberately think them worthy of our notice, and
+when they would have excited laughter or disgust, had they not been
+protected by their alliance to nobler qualities, and accidentally
+consorted with knowledge or with virtue.
+
+The faults of a man loved or honoured, sometimes steal secretly and
+imperceptibly upon the wise and virtuous, but, by injudicious fondness
+or thoughtless vanity, are adopted with design. There is scarce any
+failing of mind or body, any errour of opinion, or depravity of
+practice, which instead of producing shame and discontent, its natural
+effects, has not at one time or other gladdened vanity with the hopes of
+praise, and been displayed with ostentatious industry by those who
+sought kindred minds among the wits or heroes, and could prove their
+relation only by similitude of deformity.
+
+In consequence of this perverse ambition, every habit which reason
+condemns may be indulged and avowed. When a man is upbraided with his
+faults, he may indeed be pardoned if he endeavours to run for shelter to
+some celebrated name; but it is not to be suffered that, from the
+retreats to which he fled from infamy, he should issue again with the
+confidence of conquests, and call upon mankind for praise. Yet we see
+men that waste their patrimony in luxury, destroy their health with
+debauchery, and enervate their minds with idleness, because there have
+been some whom luxury never could sink into contempt, nor idleness
+hinder from the praise of genius.
+
+This general inclination of mankind to copy characters in the gross, and
+the force which the recommendation of illustrious examples adds to the
+allurements of vice, ought to be considered by all whose character
+excludes them from the shades of secrecy, as incitements to scrupulous
+caution and universal purity of manners. No man, however enslaved to his
+appetites, or hurried by his passions, can, while he preserves his
+intellects unimpaired, please himself with promoting the corruption of
+others. He whose merit has enlarged his influence, would surely wish to
+exert it for the benefit of mankind. Yet such will be the effect of his
+reputation, while he suffers himself to indulge in any favourite fault,
+that they who have no hope to reach his excellence will catch at his
+failings, and his virtues will be cited to justify the copiers of his
+vices.
+
+It is particularly the duty of those who consign illustrious names to
+posterity, to take care lest their readers be misled by ambiguous
+examples. That writer may be justly condemned as an enemy to goodness,
+who suffers fondness or interest to confound right with wrong, or to
+shelter the faults which even the wisest and the best have committed
+from that ignominy which guilt ought always to suffer, and with which it
+should be more deeply stigmatized when dignified by its neighbourhood to
+uncommon worth, since we shall be in danger of beholding it without
+abhorrence, unless its turpitude be laid open, and the eye secured from
+the deception of surrounding splendour.
+
+
+
+No. 165. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Aen neos, alla penaes nun gaeron, plousios eimi
+ O monos ek panton oiktros en amphoterois,
+ Os tote men chraesthai dunamaen, hopot oud' en eichon.
+ Nun d' opote chraesthai mae dunamai, tot echo.] ANTIPHILUS.
+
+ Young was I once and poor, now rich and old;
+ A harder case than mine was never told;
+ Blest with the power to use them--I had none;
+ Loaded with _riches_ now, the power is gone. F. LEWIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+The writers who have undertaken the unpromising task of moderating
+desire, exert all the power of their eloquence, to shew that happiness
+is not the lot of man, and have, by many arguments and examples, proved
+the instability of every condition by which envy or ambition are
+excited. They have set before our eyes all the calamities to which we
+are exposed from the frailty of nature, the influence of accident, or
+the stratagems of malice; they have terrified greatness with
+conspiracies, and riches with anxieties, wit with criticism, and beauty
+with disease.
+
+All the force of reason, and all the charms of language, are indeed
+necessary to support positions which every man hears with a wish to
+confute them. Truth finds an easy entrance into the mind when she is
+introduced by desire, and attended by pleasure; but when she intrudes
+uncalled, and brings only fear and sorrow in her train, the passes of
+the intellect are barred against her by prejudice and passion; if she
+sometimes forces her way by the batteries of argument, she seldom long
+keeps possession of her conquests, but is ejected by some favoured
+enemy, or at best obtains only a nominal sovereignty, without influence
+and without authority.
+
+That life is short we are all convinced, and yet suffer not that
+conviction to repress our projects or limit our expectations; that life
+is miserable we all feel, and yet we believe that the time is near when
+we shall feel it no longer. But to hope happiness and immortality is
+equally vain. Our state may indeed be more or less embittered as our
+duration may be more or less contracted; yet the utmost felicity which
+we can ever attain will be little better than alleviation of misery, and
+we shall always feel more pain from our wants than pleasure from our
+enjoyments. The incident which I am going to relate will shew, that to
+destroy the effect of all our success, it is not necessary that any
+signal calamity should fall upon us, that we should be harassed by
+implacable persecution, or excruciated by irremediable pains: the
+brightest hours of prosperity have their clouds, and the stream of life,
+if it is not ruffled by obstructions, will grow putrid by stagnation.
+
+My father, resolving not to imitate the folly of his ancestors, who had
+hitherto left the younger sons encumbrances on the eldest, destined me
+to a lucrative profession; and I, being careful to lose no opportunity
+of improvement, was, at the usual time in which young men enter the
+world, well qualified for the exercise of the business which I had
+chosen.
+
+My eagerness to distinguish myself in publick, and my impatience of the
+narrow scheme of life to which my indigence confined me, did not suffer
+me to continue long in the town where I was born. I went away as from a
+place of confinement, with a resolution to return no more, till I should
+be able to dazzle with my splendour those who now looked upon me with
+contempt, to reward those who had paid honours to my dawning merit, and
+to shew all who had suffered me to glide by them unknown and neglected,
+how much they mistook their interest in omitting to propitiate a genius
+like mine.
+
+Such were my intentions when I sallied forth into the unknown world, in
+quest of riches and honours, which I expected to procure in a very short
+time; for what could withhold them from industry and knowledge? He that
+indulges hope will always be disappointed. Reputation I very soon
+obtained; but as merit is much more cheaply acknowledged than rewarded,
+I did not find myself yet enriched in proportion to my celebrity.
+
+I had, however, in time, surmounted the obstacles by which envy and
+competition obstruct the first attempts of a new claimant, and saw my
+opponents and censurers tacitly confessing their despair of success, by
+courting my friendship and yielding to my influence. They who once
+pursued me, were now satisfied to escape from me; and they who had
+before thought me presumptuous in hoping to overtake them, had now their
+utmost wish, if they were permitted, at no great distance, quietly to
+follow me.
+
+My wants were not madly multiplied as my acquisitions increased, and the
+time came, at length, when I thought myself enabled to gratify all
+reasonable desires, and when, therefore, I resolved to enjoy that plenty
+and serenity which I had been hitherto labouring to procure, to enjoy
+them while I was yet neither crushed by age into infirmity, nor so
+habituated to a particular manner of life as to be unqualified for new
+studies or entertainments.
+
+I now quitted my profession, and, to set myself at once free from all
+importunities to resume it, changed my residence, and devoted the
+remaining part of my time to quiet and amusement. Amidst innumerable
+projects of pleasure, which restless idleness incited me to form, and of
+which most, when they came to the moment of execution, were rejected for
+others of no longer continuance, some accident revived in my imagination
+the pleasing ideas of my native place. It was now in my power to visit
+those from whom I had been so long absent, in such a manner as was
+consistent with my former resolution, and I wondered how it could happen
+that I had so long delayed my own happiness.
+
+Full of the admiration which I should excite, and the homage which I
+should receive, I dressed my servants in a more ostentatious livery,
+purchased a magnificent chariot, and resolved to dazzle the inhabitants
+of the little town with an unexpected blaze of greatness.
+
+While the preparations that vanity required were made for my departure,
+which, as workmen will not easily be hurried beyond their ordinary rate,
+I thought very tedious, I solaced my impatience with imaging the various
+censures that my appearance would produce; the hopes which some would
+feel from my bounty; the terrour which my power would strike on others;
+the awkward respect with which I should be accosted by timorous
+officiousness; and the distant reverence with which others, less
+familiar to splendour and dignity, would be contented to gaze upon me. I
+deliberated a long time, whether I should immediately descend to a level
+with my former acquaintances; or make my condescension more grateful by
+a gentle transition from haughtiness and reserve. At length I determined
+to forget some of my companions, till they discovered themselves by some
+indubitable token, and to receive the congratulations of others upon my
+good fortune with indifference, to shew that I always expected what I
+had now obtained. The acclamations of the populace I purposed to reward
+with six hogsheads of ale, and a roasted ox, and then recommend to them
+to return to their work.
+
+At last all the trappings of grandeur were fitted, and I began the
+journey of triumph, which I could have wished to have ended in the same
+moment; but my horses felt none of their master's ardour, and I was
+shaken four days upon rugged roads. I then entered the town, and, having
+graciously let fall the glasses, that my person might be seen, passed
+slowly through the street. The noise of the wheels brought the
+inhabitants to their doors, but I could not perceive that I was known by
+them. At last I alighted, and my name, I suppose, was told by my
+servants, for the barber stepped from the opposite house, and seized me
+by the hand with honest joy in his countenance, which, according to the
+rule that I had prescribed to myself, I repressed with a frigid
+graciousness. The fellow, instead of sinking into dejection, turned away
+with contempt, and left me to consider how the second salutation should
+be received. The next fellow was better treated, for I soon found that I
+must purchase by civility that regard which I had expected to enforce by
+insolence.
+
+There was yet no smoke of bonfires, no harmony of bells, no shout of
+crowds, nor riot of joy; the business of the day went forward as before;
+and, after having ordered a splendid supper, which no man came to
+partake, and which my chagrin hindered me from tasting, I went to bed,
+where the vexation of disappointment overpowered the fatigue of my
+journey, and kept me from sleep.
+
+I rose so much humbled by those mortifications, as to inquire after the
+present state of the town, and found that I had been absent too long to
+obtain the triumph which had flattered my expectation. Of the friends
+whose compliments I expected, some had long ago moved to distant
+provinces, some had lost in the maladies of age all sense of another's
+prosperity, and some had forgotten our former intimacy amidst care and
+distresses. Of three whom I had resolved to punish for their former
+offences by a longer continuance of neglect, one was, by his own
+industry, raised above my scorn, and two were sheltered from it in the
+grave. All those whom I loved, feared, or hated, all whose envy or whose
+kindness I had hopes of contemplating with pleasure, were swept away,
+and their place was filled by a new generation with other views and
+other competitions; and among many proofs of the impotence of wealth, I
+found that it conferred upon me very few distinctions in my native
+place.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+SEROTINUS.
+
+
+
+No. 166. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1751.
+
+ _Semper, eris pauper si pauper es, Aemiliane:
+ Dantur opes nullis nunc nisi divitibus_. MART. Lib. v. Ep. xxxi.
+
+ Once poor, my friend, still poor you must remain,
+ The rich alone have all the means of gain. EDW. CAVF.
+[Transcriber's note: Difficult to make out in original--possibly CAVE?]
+
+No complaint has been more frequently repeated in all ages than that of
+the neglect of merit associated with poverty, and the difficulty with
+which valuable or pleasing qualities force themselves into view, when
+they are obscured by indigence. It has been long observed, that native
+beauty has little power to charm without the ornaments which fortune
+bestows, and that to want the favour of others is often sufficient to
+hinder us from obtaining it.
+
+Every day discovers that mankind are not yet convinced of their errour,
+or that their conviction is without power to influence their conduct;
+for poverty still continues to produce contempt, and still obstructs the
+claims of kindred and of virtue. The eye of wealth is elevated towards
+higher stations, and seldom descends to examine the actions of those who
+are placed below the level of its notice, and who in distant regions and
+lower situations are struggling with distress, or toiling for bread.
+Among the multitudes overwhelmed with insuperable calamity, it is common
+to find those whom a very little assistance would enable to support
+themselves with decency, and who yet cannot obtain from near relations,
+what they see hourly lavished in ostentation, luxury, or frolick.
+
+There are natural reasons why poverty does not easily conciliate
+affection. He that has been confined from his infancy to the
+conversation of the lowest classes of mankind, must necessarily want
+those accomplishments which are the usual means of attracting favour;
+and though truth, fortitude, and probity, give an indisputable right to
+reverence and kindness, they will not be distinguished by common eyes,
+unless they are brightened by elegance of manners, but are cast aside
+like unpolished gems, of which none but the artist knows the intrinsick
+value, till their asperities are smoothed, and their incrustations
+rubbed away.
+
+The grossness of vulgar habits obstructs the efficacy of virtue, as
+impurity and harshness of style impair the force of reason, and rugged
+numbers turn off the mind from artifice of disposition, and fertility of
+invention. Few have strength of reason to over-rule the perceptions of
+sense; and yet fewer have curiosity or benevolence to struggle long
+against the first impression; he therefore who fails to please in his
+salutation and address, is at once rejected, and never obtains an
+opportunity of shewing his latent excellencies, or essential qualities.
+
+It is, indeed, not easy to prescribe a successful manner of approach to
+the distressed or necessitous, whose condition subjects every kind of
+behaviour equally to miscarriage. He whose confidence of merit incites
+him to meet, without any apparent sense of inferiority, the eyes of
+those who flattered themselves with their own dignity, is considered as
+an insolent leveller, impatient of the just prerogatives of rank and
+wealth, eager to usurp the station to which he has no right, and to
+confound the subordinations of society; and who would contribute to the
+exaltation of that spirit which even want and calamity are not able to
+restrain from rudeness and rebellion?
+
+But no better success will commonly be found to attend servility and
+dejection, which often give pride the confidence to treat them with
+contempt. A request made with diffidence and timidity is easily denied,
+because the petitioner himself seems to doubt its fitness.
+
+Kindness is generally reciprocal; we are desirous of pleasing others,
+because we receive pleasure from them; but by what means can the man
+please, whose attention is engrossed by his distresses, and who has no
+leisure to be officious; whose will is restrained by his necessities,
+and who has no power to confer benefits; whose temper is perhaps
+vitiated by misery, and whose understanding is impeded by ignorance?
+
+It is yet a more offensive discouragement, that the same actions
+performed by different hands produce different effects, and, instead of
+rating the man by his performances, we rate too frequently the
+performance by the man. It sometimes happens in the combinations of
+life, that important services are performed by inferiors; but though
+their zeal and activity may be paid by pecuniary rewards, they seldom
+excite that flow of gratitude, or obtain that accumulation of
+recompense, with which all think it their duty to acknowledge the favour
+of those who descend to their assistance from a higher elevation. To be
+obliged, is to be in some respect inferior to another[h]; and few
+willingly indulge the memory of an action which raises one whom they
+have always been accustomed to think below them, but satisfy themselves
+with faint praise and penurious payment, and then drive it from their
+own minds, and endeavour to conceal it from the knowledge of others.
+
+It may be always objected to the services of those who can be supposed
+to want a reward, that they were produced not by kindness but interest;
+they are, therefore, when they are no longer wanted, easily disregarded
+as arts of insinuation, or stratagems of selfishness. Benefits which are
+received as gifts from wealth, are exacted as debts from indigence; and
+he that in a high station is celebrated for superfluous goodness, would
+in a meaner condition have barely been confessed to have done his duty.
+
+It is scarcely possible for the utmost benevolence to oblige, when
+exerted under the disadvantages of great inferiority; for, by the
+habitual arrogance of wealth, such expectations are commonly formed as
+no zeal or industry can satisfy; and what regard can he hope, who has
+done less than was demanded from him?
+
+There are indeed kindnesses conferred which were never purchased by
+precedent favours, and there is an affection not arising from gratitude
+or gross interest, by which similar natures, are attracted to each
+other, without prospect of any other advantage than the pleasure of
+exchanging sentiments, and the hope of confirming their esteem of
+themselves by the approbation of each other. But this spontaneous
+fondness seldom rises at the sight of poverty, which every one regards
+with habitual contempt, and of which the applause is no more courted by
+vanity, than the countenance is solicited by ambition. The most generous
+and disinterested friendship must be resolved at last into the love of
+ourselves; he therefore whose reputation or dignity inclines us to
+consider his esteem as a testimonial of desert, will always find our
+hearts open to his endearments. We every day see men of eminence
+followed with all the obsequiousness of dependance, and courted with all
+the blandishments of flattery, by those who want nothing from them but
+professions of regard, and who think themselves liberally rewarded by a
+bow, a smile, or an embrace.
+
+But those prejudices which every mind feels more or less in favour of
+riches, ought, like other opinions, which only custom and example have
+impressed upon us, to be in time subjected to reason. We must learn how
+to separate the real character from extraneous adhesions and casual
+circumstances, to consider closely him whom we are about to adopt or to
+reject; to regard his inclinations as well as his actions; to trace out
+those virtues which lie torpid in the heart for want of opportunity, and
+those vices that lurk unseen by the absence of temptation; that when we
+find worth faintly shooting in the shades of obscurity, we may let in
+light and sunshine upon it, and ripen barren volition into efficacy and
+power.
+
+[Footnote h: Sir Joshua Reynolds evinced great reach of mind and
+intimate acquaintance with humanity, when he observed, on overhearing a
+person condoling with some ladies on the death of one who had conferred
+the greatest favours upon them, that at all events they were relieved
+from the burden of gratitude.]
+
+
+
+No. 167. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1751.
+
+ Candida perpetuo reside, Concordia, lecto,
+ Tamque pari semper sit Venus æqua jugo.
+ Diligat illa senem quondam: sed et ipsa marito,
+ Tum quoque cum fuerit, non videatur, anus. MART. Lib, w. xii. 7.
+
+ Their nuptial bed may smiling concord dress,
+ And Venus still the happy union bless!
+ Wrinkled with age, may mutual love and truth
+ To their dim eyes recal the bloom of youth. F. LEWIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+It is not common to envy those with whom we cannot easily be placed in
+comparison. Every man sees without malevolence the progress of another
+in the tracks of life, which he has himself no desire to tread, and
+hears, without inclination to cavils or contradiction, the renown of
+those whose distance will not suffer them to draw the attention of
+mankind from his own merit. The sailor never thinks it necessary to
+contest the lawyer's abilities; nor would the Rambler, however jealous
+of his reputation, be much disturbed by the success of rival wits at
+Agra or Ispahan.
+
+We do not therefore ascribe to you any superlative degree of virtue,
+when we believe that we may inform you of our change of condition
+without danger of malignant fascination; and that when you read of the
+marriage of your correspondents Hymenæus and Tranquilla, you will join
+your wishes to those of their other friends for the happy event of an
+union in which caprice and selfishness had so little part.
+
+There is at least this reason why we should be less deceived in our
+connubial hopes than many who enter into the same state, that we have
+allowed our minds to form no unreasonable expectations, nor vitiated our
+fancies in the soft hours of courtship, with visions of felicity which
+human power cannot bestow, or of perfection which human virtue cannot
+attain. That impartiality with which we endeavour to inspect the manners
+of all whom we have known was never so much overpowered by our passion,
+but that we discovered some faults and weaknesses in each other; and
+joined our hands in conviction, that as there are advantages to be
+enjoyed in marriage, there are inconveniencies likewise to be endured;
+and that, together with confederate intellects and auxiliar virtues, we
+must find different opinions and opposite inclinations.
+
+We however flatter ourselves, for who is not flattered by himself as
+well as by others on the day of marriage? that we are eminently
+qualified to give mutual pleasure. Our birth is without any such
+remarkable disparity as can give either an opportunity of insulting the
+other with pompous names and splendid alliances, or of calling in, upon
+any domestick controversy, the overbearing assistance of powerful
+relations. Our fortune was equally suitable, so that we meet without any
+of those obligations, which always produce reproach or suspicion of
+reproach, which, though they may be forgotten in the gaities of the
+first month, no delicacy will always suppress, or of which the
+suppression must be considered as a new favour, to be repaid by tameness
+and submission, till gratitude takes the place of love, and the desire
+of pleasing degenerates by degrees into the fear of offending.
+
+The settlements caused no delay; for we did not trust our affairs to the
+negociation of wretches, who would have paid their court by multiplying
+stipulations. Tranquilla scorned to detain any part of her fortune from
+him into whose hands she delivered up her person; and Hymenæus thought
+no act of baseness more criminal than his who enslaves his wife by her
+own generosity, who by marrying without a jointure, condemns her to all
+the dangers of accident and caprice, and at last boasts his liberality,
+by granting what only the indiscretion of her kindness enabled him to
+withhold. He therefore received on the common terms the portion which
+any other woman might have brought him, and reserved all the exuberance
+of acknowledgment for those excellencies which he has yet been able to
+discover only in Tranquilla.
+
+We did not pass the weeks of courtship like those who consider
+themselves as taking the last draught of pleasure, and resolve not to
+quit the bowl without a surfeit, or who know themselves about to set
+happiness to hazard, and endeavour to lose their sense of danger in the
+ebriety of perpetual amusement, and whirl round the gulph before they
+sink. Hymenæus often repeated a medical axiom, that _the succours of
+sickness ought not to be wasted in health_. We know that however our
+eyes may yet sparkle, and our hearts bound at the presence of each
+other, the time of listlessness and satiety, of peevishness and
+discontent, must come at last, in which we shall be driven for relief to
+shows and recreations; that the uniformity of life must be sometimes
+diversified, and the vacuities of conversation sometimes supplied. We
+rejoice in the reflection that we have stores of novelty yet
+unexhausted, which may be opened when repletion shall call for change,
+and gratifications yet untasted, by which life, when it shall become
+vapid or bitter, may be restored to its former sweetness and
+sprightliness, and again irritate the appetite, and again sparkle in the
+cup.
+
+Our time will probably be less tasteless than that of those whom the
+authority and avarice of parents unite almost without their consent in
+their early years, before they have accumulated any fund of reflection,
+or collected materials for mutual entertainment. Such we have often seen
+rising in the morning to cards, and retiring in the afternoon to doze,
+whose happiness was celebrated by their neighbours, because they
+happened to grow rich by parsimony, and to be kept quiet in
+insensibility, and agreed to eat and to sleep together.
+
+We have both mingled with the world, and are therefore no strangers to
+the faults and virtues, the designs and competitions, the hopes and
+fears of our contemporaries. We have both amused our leisure with books,
+and can therefore recount the events of former times, or cite the
+dictates of ancient wisdom. Every occurrence furnishes us with some hint
+which one or the other can improve, and if it should happen that memory
+or imagination fail us, we can retire to no idle or unimproving
+solitude.
+
+Though our characters, beheld at a distance, exhibit this general
+resemblance, yet a nearer inspection discovers such a dissimilitude of
+our habitudes and sentiments, as leaves each some peculiar advantages,
+and affords that _concordia discors_, that suitable disagreement which
+is always necessary to intellectual harmony. There may be a total
+diversity of ideas which admits no participation of the same delight,
+and there may likewise be such a conformity of notions as leaves neither
+any thing to add to the decisions of the other. With such contrariety
+there can be no peace, with such similarity there can be no pleasure.
+Our reasonings, though often formed upon different views, terminate
+generally in the same conclusion. Our thoughts, like rivulets issuing
+from distant springs, are each impregnated in its course with various
+mixtures, and tinged by infusions unknown to the other, yet, at last,
+easily unite into one stream, and purify themselves by the gentle
+effervescence of contrary qualities.
+
+These benefits we receive in a greater degree as we converse without
+reserve, because we have nothing to conceal. We have no debts to be paid
+by imperceptible deductions from avowed expenses, no habits to be
+indulged by the private subserviency of a favoured servant, no private
+interviews with needy relations, no intelligence with spies placed upon
+each other. We considered marriage as the most solemn league of
+perpetual friendship, a state from which artifice and concealment are to
+be banished for ever, and in which every act of dissimulation is a
+breach of faith.
+
+The impetuous vivacity of youth, and that ardour of desire, which the
+first sight of pleasure naturally produces, have long ceased to hurry us
+into irregularity and vehemence; and experience has shewn us that few
+gratifications are too valuable to be sacrificed to complaisance.
+
+We have thought it convenient to rest from the fatigue of pleasure, and
+now only continue that course of life into which we had before entered,
+confirmed in our choice by mutual approbation, supported in our
+resolution by mutual encouragement, and assisted in our efforts by
+mutual exhortation.
+
+Such, Mr. Rambler, is our prospect of life, a prospect which, as it is
+beheld with more attention, seems to open more extensive happiness, and
+spreads, by degrees, into the boundless regions of eternity. But if all
+our prudence has been vain, and we are doomed to give one instance more
+of the uncertainty of human discernment, we shall comfort ourselves
+amidst our disappointments, that we were not betrayed but by such
+delusions as caution could not escape, since we sought happiness only in
+the arms of virtue.
+
+We are, Sir,
+Your humble Servants,
+HYMENÆUS.
+TRANQUILLA.
+
+
+
+No. 168. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1751.
+
+ _--Decipit
+ Frons prima multos: rara mens intelligit,
+ Quod interiore condidit cura angulo_. PHÆDRUS, Lib. iv. Fab. i. 5.
+
+ The tinsel glitter, and the specious mien,
+ Delude the most; few pry behind the scene.
+
+It has been observed by Boileau, that "a mean or common thought
+expressed in pompous diction, generally pleases more than a new or noble
+sentiment delivered in low and vulgar language; because the number is
+greater of those whom custom has enabled to judge of words, than whom
+study has qualified to examine things." This solution might satisfy, if
+such only were offended with meanness of expression as are unable to
+distinguish propriety of thought, and to separate propositions or images
+from the vehicles by which they are conveyed to the understanding. But
+this kind of disgust is by no means confined to the ignorant or
+superficial; it operates uniformly and universally upon readers of all
+classes; every man, however profound or abstracted, perceives himself
+irresistibly alienated by low terms; they who profess the most zealous
+adherence to truth are forced to admit that she owes part of her charms
+to her ornaments; and loses much of her power over the soul, when she
+appears disgraced by a dress uncouth or ill-adjusted.
+
+We are all offended by low terms, but are not disgusted alike by the
+same compositions, because we do not all agree to censure the same terms
+as low. No word is naturally or intrinsically meaner than another; our
+opinion therefore of words, as of other things arbitrarily and
+capriciously established, depends wholly upon accident and custom. The
+cottager thinks those apartments splendid and spacious, which an
+inhabitant of palaces will despise for their inelegance; and to him who
+has passed most of his hours with the delicate and polite, many
+expressions will seem sordid, which another, equally acute, may hear
+without offence; but a mean term never fails to displease him to whom it
+appears mean, as poverty is certainly and invariably despised, though he
+who is poor in the eyes of some, may, by others, be envied for his
+wealth.
+
+Words become low by the occasions to which they are applied, or the
+general character of them who use them; and the disgust which they
+produce, arises from the revival of those images with which they are
+commonly united. Thus if, in the most solemn discourse, a phrase happens
+to occur which has been successfully employed in some ludicrous
+narrative, the gravest auditor finds it difficult to refrain from
+laughter, when they who are not prepossessed by the same accidental
+association, are utterly unable to guess the reason of his merriment.
+Words which convey ideas of dignity in one age, are banished from
+elegant writing or conversation in another, because they are in time
+debased by vulgar mouths, and can be no longer heard without the
+involuntary recollection of unpleasing images.
+
+When Macbeth is confirming himself in the horrid purpose of stabbing his
+king, he breaks out amidst his emotions into a wish natural to a
+murderer:
+
+ --Come, thick night!
+ And pall thee in the dunnest smoke of hell,
+ That my keen knife see not the wound it makes;
+ Nor heav'n peep through the blanket of the dark,
+ To cry, Hold! hold!--
+
+In this passage is exerted all the force of poetry; that force which
+calls new powers into being, which embodies sentiment, and animates
+matter: yet, perhaps, scarce any man now peruses it without some
+disturbance of his attention from the counteraction of the words to the
+ideas. What can be more dreadful than to implore the presence of night,
+invested, not in common obscurity, but in the smoke of hell? Yet the
+efficacy of this invocation is destroyed by the insertion of an epithet
+now seldom heard but in the stable, and _dun_ night may come or go
+without any other notice than contempt.
+
+If we start into raptures when some hero of the Iliad tells us that
+[Greek: doru mainetai], his lance rages with eagerness to destroy; if we
+are alarmed at the terrour of the soldiers commanded by Caesar to hew
+down the sacred grove, who dreaded, says Lucan, lest the axe aimed at
+the oak should fly back upon the striker:
+
+ --_Si robora sacra ferirent,
+ In sua credebaut redituras membra secures_;
+
+ None dares with impious steel the grove to rend,
+ Lest on himself the destin'd stroke descend;
+
+we cannot surely but sympathise with the horrours of a wretch about to
+murder his master, his friend, his benefactor, who suspects that the
+weapon will refuse its office, and start back from the breast which he
+is preparing to violate. Yet this sentiment is weakened by the name of
+an instrument used by butchers and cooks in the meanest employments: we
+do not immediately conceive that any crime of importance is to be
+committed with a _knife_; or who does not, at last, from the long habit
+of connecting a knife with sordid offices, feel aversion rather than
+terrour?
+
+Macbeth proceeds to wish, in the madness of guilt, that the inspection
+of heaven may be intercepted, and that he may, in the involutions of
+infernal darkness, escape the eye of Providence. This is the utmost
+extravagance of determined wickedness; yet this is so debased by two
+unfortunate words, that while I endeavour to impress on my reader the
+energy of the sentiment, I can scarce check my risibility, when the
+expression forces itself upon my mind; for who, without some relaxation
+of his gravity, can hear of the avengers of guilt _peeping through a
+blanket_?
+
+These imperfections of diction are less obvious to the reader, as he is
+less acquainted with common usages; they are therefore wholly
+imperceptible to a foreigner, who learns our language from books, and
+will strike a solitary academick less forcibly than a modish lady.
+
+Among the numerous requisites that must concur to complete an author,
+few are of more importance than an early entrance into the living world.
+The seeds of knowledge may be planted in solitude, but must be
+cultivated in publick. Argumentation may be taught in colleges, and
+theories formed in retirement; but the artifice of embellishment, and
+the powers of attraction, can be gained only by general converse.
+
+An acquaintance with prevailing customs and fashionable elegance is
+necessary likewise for other purposes. The injury that grand imagery
+suffers from unsuitable language, personal merit may fear from rudeness
+and indelicacy. When the success of Æneas depended on the favour of the
+queen upon whose coasts he was driven, his celestial protectress thought
+him not sufficiently secured against rejection by his piety or bravery,
+but decorated him for the interview with preternatural beauty. Whoever
+desires, for his writings or himself, what none can reasonably contemn,
+the favour of mankind, must add grace to strength, and make his thoughts
+agreeable as well as useful. Many complain of neglect who never tried to
+attract regard. It cannot be expected that the patrons of science or
+virtue should be solicitous to discover excellencies, which they who
+possess them shade and disguise. Few have abilities so much needed by
+the rest of the world as to be caressed on their own terms; and he that
+will not condescend to recommend himself by external embellishments,
+must submit to the fate of just sentiment meanly expressed, and be
+ridiculed and forgotten before he is understood.
+
+
+
+No. 169. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1751.
+
+ _Nec pluteum cædit, nec demorsos sapit ungues_. PER. Sat. i. 106.
+
+ No blood from bitten nails those poems drew;
+ But churn'd, like spittle, from the lips they flew. DRYDEN.
+
+Natural historians assert, that whatever is formed for long duration
+arrives slowly to its maturity. Thus the firmest timber is of tardy
+growth, and animals generally exceed each other in longevity, in
+proportion to the time between their conception and their birth.
+
+The same observation may be extended to the offspring of the mind. Hasty
+compositions, however they please at first by flowery luxuriance, and
+spread in the sunshine of temporary favour, can seldom endure the change
+of seasons, but perish at the first blast of criticism, or frost of
+neglect. When Apelles was reproached with the paucity of his
+productions, and the incessant attention with which he retouched his
+pieces, he condescended to make no other answer than that _he painted
+for perpetuity_.
+
+No vanity can more justly incur contempt and indignation than that which
+boasts of negligence and hurry. For who can bear with patience the
+writer who claims such superiority to the rest of his species, as to
+imagine mankind are at leisure for attention to his extemporary sallies,
+and that posterity will reposite his casual effusions among the
+treasures of ancient wisdom?
+
+Men have sometimes appeared of such transcendent abilities, that their
+slightest and most cursory performances excel all that labour and study
+can enable meaner intellects to compose; as there are regions of which
+the spontaneous products cannot be equalled in other soils by care and
+culture. But it is no less dangerous for any man to place himself in
+this rank of understanding, and fancy that he is born to be illustrious
+without labour, than to omit the cares of husbandry, and expect from his
+ground the blossoms of Arabia.
+
+The greatest part of those who congratulate themselves upon their
+intellectual dignity, and usurp the privileges of genius, are men whom
+only themselves would ever have marked out as enriched by uncommon
+liberalities of nature, or entitled to veneration and immortality on
+easy terms. This ardour of confidence is usually found among those who,
+having not enlarged their notions by books or conversation, are
+persuaded, by the partiality which we all feel in our own favour, that
+they have reached the summit of excellence, because they discover none
+higher than themselves; and who acquiesce in the first thoughts that
+occur, because their scantiness of knowledge allows them little choice;
+and the narrowness of their views affords them no glimpse of perfection,
+of that sublime idea which human industry has from the first ages been
+vainly toiling to approach. They see a little, and believe that there is
+nothing beyond their sphere of vision, as the Patuecos of Spain, who
+inhabited a small valley, conceived the surrounding mountains to be the
+boundaries of the world. In proportion as perfection is more distinctly
+conceived, the pleasure of contemplating our own performances will be
+lessened; it may therefore be observed, that they who most deserve
+praise are often afraid to decide in favour of their own performances;
+they know how much is still wanting to their completion, and wait with
+anxiety and terrour the determination of the publick. _I please every
+one else_, says Tully, _but never satisfy myself_.
+
+It has often been inquired, why, notwithstanding the advances of later
+ages in science, and the assistance which the infusion of so many new
+ideas has given us, we fall below the ancients in the art of
+composition. Some part of their superiority may be justly ascribed to
+the graces of their language, from which the most polished of the
+present European tongues are nothing more than barbarous degenerations.
+Some advantage they might gain merely by priority, which put them in
+possession of the most natural sentiments, and left us nothing but
+servile repetition or forced conceits. But the greater part of their
+praise seems to have been the just reward of modesty and labour. Their
+sense of human weakness confined them commonly to one study, which their
+knowledge of the extent of every science engaged them to prosecute with
+indefatigable diligence.
+
+Among the writers of antiquity I remember none except Statius who
+ventures to mention the speedy production of his writings, either as an
+extenuation of his faults, or a proof of his facility. Nor did Statius,
+when he considered himself as a candidate for lasting reputation, think
+a closer attention unnecessary, but amidst all his pride and indigence,
+the two great hasteners of modern poems, employed twelve years upon the
+Thebaid, and thinks his claim to renown proportionate to his labour.
+
+ _Thebais, multa cruciata lima,
+ Tentat, audaci fide, Mantuanæ
+ Gaudia famæ_.
+
+ Polish'd with endless toil, my lays
+ At length aspire to Mantuan praise.
+
+Ovid indeed apologizes in his banishment for the imperfection of his
+letters, but mentions his want of leisure to polish them as an addition
+to his calamities; and was so far from imagining revisals and
+corrections unnecessary, that at his departure from Rome, he threw his
+Metamorphoses into the fire, lest he should be disgraced by a book which
+he could not hope to finish.
+
+It seems not often to have happened that the same writer aspired to
+reputation in verse and prose; and of those few that attempted such
+diversity of excellence, I know not that even one succeeded. Contrary
+characters they never imagined a single mind able to support, and
+therefore no man is recorded to have undertaken more than one kind of
+dramatick poetry.
+
+What they had written, they did not venture in their first fondness to
+thrust into the world, but, considering the impropriety of sending forth
+inconsiderately that which cannot be recalled, deferred the publication,
+if not nine years, according to the direction of Horace, yet till their
+fancy was cooled after the raptures of invention, and the glare of
+novelty had ceased to dazzle the judgment.
+
+There were in those days no weekly or diurnal writers; _multa dies et
+multa litura_, much time, and many rasures, were considered as
+indispensable requisites; and that no other method of attaining lasting
+praise has been yet discovered, may be conjectured from the blotted
+manuscripts of Milton now remaining, and from the tardy emission of
+Pope's compositions, delayed more than once till the incidents to which
+they alluded were forgotten, till his enemies were secure from his
+satire, and, what to an honest mind must be more painful, his friends
+were deaf to his encomiums.
+
+To him, whose eagerness of praise hurries his productions soon into the
+light, many imperfections are unavoidable, even where the mind furnishes
+the materials, as well as regulates their disposition, and nothing
+depends upon search or information. Delay opens new veins of thought,
+the subject dismissed for a time appears with a new train of dependent
+images, the accidents of reading or conversation supply new ornaments
+or allusions, or mere intermission of the fatigue of thinking enables
+the mind to collect new force, and make new excursions. But all those
+benefits come too late for him, who, when he was weary with labour,
+snatched at the recompense, and gave his work to his friends and his
+enemies, as soon as impatience and pride persuaded him to conclude it.
+
+One of the most pernicious effects of haste, is obscurity. He that teems
+with a quick succession of ideas, and perceives how one sentiment
+produces another, easily believes that he can clearly express what he so
+strongly comprehends; he seldom suspects his thoughts of embarrassment,
+while he preserves in his own memory the series of connection, or his
+diction of ambiguity, while only one sense is present to his mind. Yet
+if he has been employed on an abstruse, or complicated argument, he will
+find, when he has awhile withdrawn his mind, and returns as a new reader
+to his work, that he has only a conjectural glimpse of his own meaning,
+and that to explain it to those whom he desires to instruct, he must
+open his sentiments, disentangle his method, and alter his arrangement.
+
+Authors and lovers always suffer some infatuation, from which only
+absence can set them free; and every man ought to restore himself to the
+full exercise of his judgment, before he does that which he cannot do
+improperly, without injuring his honour and his quiet.
+
+
+
+No. 170. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1751.
+
+ _Confiteor; si quid prodest delicta fateri_.
+ OVID. Am. Lib. i. El. iv. 3.
+
+ I grant the charge; forgive the fault confess'd.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I am one of those beings from whom many, that melt at the sight of all
+other misery, think it meritorious to withhold relief; one whom the
+rigour of virtuous indignation dooms to suffer without complaint, and
+perish without regard; and whom I myself have formerly insulted in the
+pride of reputation and security of innocence.
+
+I am of a good family, but my father was burthened with more children
+than he could decently support. A wealthy relation, as he travelled from
+London to his country-seat, condescending to make him a visit, was
+touched with compassion of his narrow fortune, and resolved to ease him
+of part of his charge, by taking the care of a child upon himself.
+Distress on one side, and ambition on the other, were too powerful for
+parental fondness, and the little family passed in review before him,
+that he might, make his choice. I was then ten years old, and, without
+knowing for what purpose, I was called to my great cousin, endeavoured
+to recommend myself by my best courtesy, sung him my prettiest song,
+told the last story that I had read, and so much endeared myself by my
+innocence, that he declared his resolution to adopt me, and to educate
+me with his own daughters.
+
+My parents felt the common struggles at the thought of parting, and
+_some natural tears they dropp'd, but wip'd them soon_. They considered,
+not without that false estimation of the value of wealth, which poverty
+long continued always produces, that I was raised to higher rank than
+they could give me, and to hopes of more ample fortune than they could
+bequeath. My mother sold some of her ornaments to dress me in such a
+manner as might secure me from contempt at my first arrival; and when
+she dismissed me, pressed me to her bosom with an embrace that I still
+feel, gave me some precepts of piety, which, however neglected, I have
+not forgotten, and uttered prayers for my final happiness, of which I
+have not yet ceased to hope that they will at last be granted.
+
+My sisters envied my new finery, and seemed not much to regret our
+separation; my father conducted me to the stage-coach with a kind of
+cheerful tenderness; and in a very short time I was transported to
+splendid apartments, and a luxurious table, and grew familiar to shew,
+noise, and gaiety.
+
+In three years my mother died, having implored a blessing on her family
+with her last breath. I had little opportunity to indulge a sorrow which
+there was none to partake with me, and therefore soon ceased to reflect
+much upon my loss. My father turned all his care upon his other
+children, whom some fortunate adventures and unexpected legacies enabled
+him, when he died, four years after my mother, to leave in a condition
+above their expectations.
+
+I should have shared the increase of his fortune, and had once a portion
+assigned me in his will; but my cousin assuring him that all care for me
+was needless, since he had resolved to place me happily in the world,
+directed him to divide my part amongst my sisters.
+
+Thus I was thrown upon dependance without resource. Being now at an age
+in which young women are initiated into company, I was no longer to be
+supported in my former character, but at a considerable expense; so that
+partly lest I should waste money, and partly lest my appearance might
+draw too many compliments and assiduities, I was insensibly degraded
+from my equality, and enjoyed few privileges above the head servant, but
+that of receiving no wages.
+
+I felt every indignity, but knew that resentment would precipitate my
+fall. I therefore endeavoured to continue my importance by little
+services and active officiousness, and, for a time, preserved myself
+from neglect, by withdrawing all pretences to competition, and studying
+to please rather than to shine. But my interest, notwithstanding this
+expedient, hourly declined, and my cousin's favourite maid began to
+exchange repartees with me, and consult me about the alterations of a
+cast gown.
+
+I was now completely depressed; and, though I had seen mankind enough to
+know the necessity of outward cheerfulness, I often withdrew to my
+chamber to vent my grief, or turn my condition in my mind, and examine
+by what means I might escape from perpetual mortification. At last my
+schemes and sorrows were interrupted by a sudden change of my relation's
+behaviour, who one day took an occasion when we were left together in a
+room, to bid me suffer myself no longer to be insulted, but assume the
+place which he always intended me to hold in the family. He assured me
+that his wife's preference of her own daughters should never hurt me;
+and, accompanying his professions with a purse of gold, ordered me to
+bespeak a rich suit at the mercer's, and to apply privately to him for
+money when I wanted it, and insinuate that my other friends supplied me,
+which he would take care to confirm.
+
+By this stratagem, which I did not then understand, he filled me with
+tenderness and gratitude, compelled me to repose on him as my only
+support, and produced a necessity of private conversation. He often
+appointed interviews at the house of an acquaintance, and sometimes
+called on me with a coach, and carried me abroad. My sense of his
+favour, and the desire of retaining it, disposed me to unlimited
+complaisance, and, though I saw his kindness grow every day more fond, I
+did not suffer any suspicion to enter my thoughts. At last the wretch
+took advantage of the familiarity which he enjoyed as my relation, and
+the submission which he exacted as my benefactor, to complete the ruin
+of an orphan, whom his own promises had made indigent, whom his
+indulgence had melted, and his authority subdued.
+
+I know not why it should afford subject of exultation to overpower on
+any terms the resolution, or surprise the caution of a girl; but of all
+the boasters that deck themselves in the spoils of innocence and beauty,
+they surely have the least pretensions to triumph, who submit to owe
+their success to some casual influence. They neither employ the graces
+of fancy, nor the force of understanding, in their attempts; they cannot
+please their vanity with the art of their approaches, the delicacy of
+their adulations, the elegance of their address, or the efficacy of
+their eloquence; nor applaud themselves as possessed of any qualities,
+by which affection is attracted. They surmount no obstacles, they defeat
+no rivals, but attack only those who cannot resist, and are often
+content to possess the body, without any solicitude to gain the heart.
+
+Many of those despicable wretches does my present acquaintance with
+infamy and wickedness enable me to number among the heroes of
+debauchery. Reptiles whom their own servants would have despised, had
+they not been their servants, and with whom beggary would have disdained
+intercourse, had she not been allured by hopes of relief. Many of the
+beings which are now rioting in taverns, or shivering in the streets,
+have been corrupted, not by arts of gallantry which stole gradually upon
+the affections and laid prudence asleep, but by the fear of losing
+benefits which were never intended, or of incurring resentment which
+they could not escape; some have been frighted by masters, and some awed
+by guardians into ruin.
+
+Our crime had its usual consequence, and he soon perceived that I could
+not long continue in his family. I was distracted at the thought of the
+reproach which I now believed inevitable. He comforted me with hopes of
+eluding all discovery, and often upbraided me with the anxiety, which
+perhaps none but himself saw in my countenance; but at last mingled his
+assurances of protection and maintenance with menaces of total
+desertion, if, in the moments of perturbation I should suffer his secret
+to escape, or endeavour to throw on him any part of my infamy.
+
+Thus passed the dismal hours, till my retreat could no longer be
+delayed. It was pretended that my relations had sent for me to a distant
+county, and I entered upon a state which shall be described in my next
+letter.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+MISELLA.
+
+
+
+No. 171. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1751.
+
+ _Tædet coeli convexa tueri_. VIRG. Æn. iv. 451.
+
+ Dark is the sun, and loathsome is the day.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Misella now sits down to continue her narrative. I am convinced that
+nothing would more powerfully preserve youth from irregularity, or guard
+inexperience from seduction, than a just description of the condition
+into which the wanton plunges herself; and therefore hope that my letter
+may be a sufficient antidote to my example.
+
+After the distraction, hesitation, and delays which the timidity of
+guilt naturally produces, I was removed to lodgings in a distant part of
+the town, under one of the characters commonly assumed upon such
+occasions. Here being by my circumstances condemned to solitude, I
+passed most of my hours in bitterness and anguish. The conversation of
+the people with whom I was placed was not at all capable of engaging my
+attention, or dispossessing the reigning ideas. The books which I
+carried to my retreat were such as heightened my abhorrence of myself;
+for I was not so far abandoned as to sink voluntarily into corruption,
+or endeavour to conceal from my own mind the enormity of my crime.
+
+My relation remitted none of his fondness, but visited me so often, that
+I was sometimes afraid lest his assiduity should expose him to
+suspicion. Whenever he came he found me weeping, and was therefore less
+delightfully entertained than he expected. After frequent expostulations
+upon the unreasonableness of my sorrow, and innumerable protestations of
+everlasting regard, he at last found that I was more affected with the
+loss of my innocence, than the danger of my fame, and that he might not
+be disturbed by my remorse, began to lull my conscience with the opiates
+of irreligion. His arguments were such as my course of life has since
+exposed me often to the necessity of hearing, vulgar, empty, and
+fallacious; yet they at first confounded me by their novelty, filled me
+with doubt and perplexity, and interrupted that peace which I began to
+feel from the sincerity of my repentance, without substituting any other
+support. I listened a while to his impious gabble, but its influence was
+soon overpowered by natural reason and early education, and the
+convictions which this new attempt gave me of his baseness completed my
+abhorrence. I have heard of barbarians, who, when tempests drive ships
+upon their coast, decoy them to the rocks that they may plunder their
+lading, and have always thought that wretches, thus merciless in their
+depredations, ought to be destroyed by a general insurrection of all
+social beings; yet how light is this guilt to the crime of him, who, in
+the agitations of remorse, cuts away the anchor of piety, and, when he
+has drawn aside credulity from the paths of virtue, hides the light of
+heaven which would direct her to return. I had hitherto considered him
+as a man equally betrayed with myself by the concurrence of appetite and
+opportunity; but I now saw with horrour that he was contriving to
+perpetuate his gratification, and was desirous to fit me to his purpose,
+by complete and radical corruption.
+
+To escape, however, was not yet in my power. I could support the
+expenses of my condition only by the continuance of his favour. He
+provided all that was necessary, and in a few weeks congratulated me
+upon my escape from the danger which we had both expected with so much
+anxiety. I then began to remind him of his promise to restore me with my
+fame uninjured to the world. He promised me in general terms, that
+nothing should be wanting which his power could add to my happiness, but
+forbore to release me from my confinement. I knew how much my reception
+in the world depended upon my speedy return, and was therefore
+outrageously impatient of his delays, which I now perceived to be only
+artifices of lewdness. He told me at last, with an appearance of sorrow,
+that all hopes of restoration to my former state were for ever
+precluded; that chance had discovered my secret, and malice divulged it;
+and that nothing now remained, but to seek a retreat more private, where
+curiosity or hatred could never find us.
+
+The rage, anguish, and resentment, which I felt at this account are not
+to be expressed. I was in so much dread of reproach and infamy, which he
+represented as pursuing me with full cry, that I yielded myself
+implicitly to his disposal and was removed, with a thousand studied
+precautions, through by-ways and dark passages to another house, where I
+harassed him with perpetual solicitations for a small annuity that might
+enable me to live in the country in obscurity and innocence.
+
+This demand he at first evaded with ardent professions, but in time
+appeared offended at my importunity and distrust; and having one day
+endeavoured to sooth me with uncommon expressions of tenderness, when he
+found my discontent immoveable, left me with some inarticulate murmurs
+of anger. I was pleased that he was at last roused to sensibility, and
+expecting that at his next visit he would comply with my request, lived
+with great tranquillity upon the money in my hands, and was so much
+pleased with this pause of persecution, that I did not reflect how much
+his absence had exceeded the usual intervals, till I was alarmed with
+the danger of wanting subsistence. I then suddenly contracted my
+expenses, but was unwilling to supplicate for assistance. Necessity,
+however, soon overcame my modesty or my pride, and I applied to him by a
+letter, but had no answer. I writ in terms more pressing, but without
+effect. I then sent an agent to inquire after him, who informed me, that
+he had quitted his house, and was gone with his family to reside for
+some time on his estate in Ireland.
+
+However shocked at this abrupt departure, I was yet unwilling to believe
+that he could wholly abandon me, and therefore, by the sale of my
+clothes, I supported myself, expecting that every post would bring me
+relief. Thus I passed seven months between hope and dejection, in a
+gradual approach to poverty and distress, emaciated with discontent, and
+bewildered with uncertainty. At last my landlady, after many hints of
+the necessity of a new lover, took the opportunity of my absence to
+search my boxes, and missing some of my apparel, seized the remainder
+for rent, and led me to the door.
+
+To remonstrate against legal cruelty, was vain; to supplicate obdurate
+brutality, was hopeless. I went away I knew not whither, and wandered
+about without any settled purpose, unacquainted with the usual
+expedients of misery, unqualified for laborious offices, afraid to meet
+an eye that had seen me before, and hopeless of relief from those who
+were strangers to my former condition. Night came on in the midst of my
+distraction, and I still continued to wander till the menaces of the
+watch obliged me to shelter myself in a covered passage.
+
+Next day, I procured a lodging in the backward garret of a mean house,
+and employed my landlady to inquire for a service. My applications were
+generally rejected for want of a character. At length I was received at
+a draper's, but when it was known to my mistress that I had only one
+gown, and that of silk, she was of opinion that I looked like a thief,
+and without warning hurried me away. I then tried to support myself by
+my needle; and, by my landlady's recommendation obtained a little work
+from a shop, and for three weeks lived without repining; but when my
+punctuality had gained me so much reputation, that I was trusted to make
+up a head of some value, one of my fellow-lodgers stole the lace, and I
+was obliged to fly from a prosecution.
+
+Thus driven again into the streets, I lived upon the least that could
+support me, and at night accommodated myself under pent-houses as well
+as I could. At length I became absolutely pennyless, and having strolled
+all day without sustenance, was, at the close of evening, accosted by an
+elderly man, with an invitation to a tavern. I refused him with
+hesitation; he seized me by the hand, and drew me into a neighbouring
+house, where, when he saw my face pale with hunger, and my eyes swelling
+with tears, he spurned me from him, and bade me cant and whine in some
+other place; he for his part would take care of his pockets.
+
+I still continued to stand in the way, having scarcely strength to walk
+further, when another soon addressed me in the same manner. When he saw
+the same tokens of calamity, he considered that I might be obtained at a
+cheap rate, and therefore quickly made overtures, which I no longer had
+firmness to reject. By this man I was maintained four months in
+penurious wickedness, and then abandoned to my former condition, from
+which I was delivered by another keeper.
+
+In this abject state I have now passed four years, the drudge of
+extortion and the sport of drunkenness; sometimes the property of one
+man, and sometimes the common prey of accidental lewdness; at one time
+tricked up for sale by the mistress of a brothel, at another begging in
+the streets to be relieved from hunger by wickedness; without any hope
+in the day but of finding some whom folly or excess may expose to my
+allurements, and without any reflections at night, but such as guilt and
+terrour impress upon me.
+
+If those who pass their days in plenty and security, could visit for an
+hour the dismal receptacles to which the prostitute retires from her
+nocturnal excursions, and see the wretches that lie crowded together,
+mad with intemperance, ghastly with famine, nauseous with filth, and
+noisome with disease; it would not be easy for any degree of abhorrence
+to harden them against compassion, or to repress the desire which they
+must immediately feel to rescue such numbers of human beings from a
+state so dreadful.
+
+It is said, that in France they annually evacuate their streets, and
+ship their prostitutes and vagabonds to their colonies. If the women
+that infest this city had the same opportunity of escaping from their
+miseries, I believe very little force would be necessary; for who among
+them can dread any change? Many of us indeed are wholly unqualified for
+any but the most servile employments, and those perhaps would require
+the care of a magistrate to hinder them from following the same
+practices in another country; but others are only precluded by infamy
+from reformation, and would gladly be delivered on any terms from the
+necessity of guilt, and the tyranny of chance. No place but a populous
+city, can afford opportunities for open prostitution; and where the eye
+of justice can attend to individuals, those who cannot be made good may
+be restrained from mischief. For my part, I should exult at the
+privilege of banishment, and think myself happy in any region that
+should restore me once again to honesty and peace.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+MISELLA.
+
+
+
+No. 172. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1751.
+
+ _Sæpe rogare soles, qualis sim, Prisce, futurus,
+ Si fiam locuples, simque repente potens.
+ Quemquam posse putas mores narrare futuros?
+ Die mihi, si fias tu leo, qualis eris?_ MART. Lib. xii. Ep. 93.
+
+ Priscus, you've often ask'd me how I'd live,
+ Should fate at once both wealth and honour give.
+ What soul his future conduct can foresee?
+ Tell me what sort of lion you would be. F. LEWIS.
+
+Nothing has been longer observed, than that a change of fortune causes a
+change of manners; and that it is difficult to conjecture from the
+conduct of him whom we see in a low condition, how he would act, if
+wealth and power were put into his hands. But it is generally agreed,
+that few men are made better by affluence or exaltation; and that the
+powers of the mind, when they are unbound and expanded by the sunshine
+of felicity, more frequently luxuriate into follies, than blossom into
+goodness.
+
+Many observations have concurred to establish this opinion, and it is
+not likely soon to become obsolete, for want of new occasions to revive
+it. The greater part of mankind are corrupt in every condition, and
+differ in high and in low stations, only as they have more or fewer
+opportunities of gratifying their desires, or as they are more or less
+restrained by human censures. Many vitiate their principles in the
+acquisition of riches; and who can wonder that what is gained by fraud
+and extortion is enjoyed with tyranny and excess?
+
+Yet I am willing to believe that the depravation of the mind by external
+advantages, though certainly not uncommon, yet approaches not so nearly
+to universality, as some have asserted in the bitterness of resentment,
+or heat of declamation.
+
+Whoever rises above those who once pleased themselves with equality,
+will have many malevolent gazers at his eminence. To gain sooner than
+others that which all pursue with the same ardour, and to which all
+imagine themselves entitled, will for ever be a crime. When those who
+started with us in the race of life, leave us so far behind, that we
+have little hope to overtake them, we revenge our disappointment by
+remarks on the arts of supplantation by which they gained the advantage,
+or on the folly and arrogance with which they possess it. Of them, whose
+rise we could not hinder, we solace ourselves by prognosticating the
+fall.
+
+It is impossible for human purity not to betray to an eye, thus
+sharpened by malignity, some stains which lay concealed and unregarded,
+while none thought it their interest to discover them; nor can the most
+circumspect attention, or steady rectitude, escape blame from censors,
+who have no inclination to approve. Riches therefore, perhaps, do not so
+often produce crimes as incite accusers.
+
+The common charge against those who rise above their original condition,
+is that of pride. It is certain that success naturally confirms us in a
+favourable opinion of our own abilities. Scarce any man is willing to
+allot to accident, friendship, and a thousand causes, which concur in
+every event without human contrivance or interposition, the part which
+they may justly claim in his advancement. We rate ourselves by our
+fortune rather than our virtues, and exorbitant claims are quickly
+produced by imaginary merit. But captiousness and jealousy are likewise
+easily offended, and to him who studiously looks for an affront, every
+mode of behaviour will supply it; freedom will be rudeness, and reserve
+sullenness; mirth will be negligence, and seriousness formality; when he
+is received with ceremony, distance and respect are inculcated; if he is
+treated with familiarity, he concludes himself insulted by
+condescensions.
+
+It must however be confessed, that as all sudden changes are dangerous,
+a quick transition from poverty to abundance can seldom be made with
+safety. He that has long lived within sight of pleasures which he could
+not reach, will need more than common moderation, not to lose his reason
+in unbounded riot, when they are first put into his power.
+
+Every possession is endeared by novelty; every gratification is
+exaggerated by desire. It is difficult not to estimate what is lately
+gained above its real value; it is impossible not to annex greater
+happiness to that condition from which we are unwillingly excluded, than
+nature has qualified us to obtain. For this reason, the remote inheritor
+of an unexpected fortune, may be generally distinguished from those who
+are enriched in the common course of lineal descent, by his greater
+haste to enjoy his wealth, by the finery of his dress, the pomp of his
+equipage, the splendour of his furniture, and the luxury of his table.
+
+A thousand things which familiarity discovers to be of little value,
+have power for a time to seize the imagination. A Virginian king, when
+the Europeans had fixed a lock on his door, was so delighted to find his
+subjects admitted or excluded with such facility, that it was from
+morning to evening his whole employment to turn the key. We, among whom
+locks and keys have been longer in use, are inclined to laugh at this
+American amusement; yet I doubt whether this paper will have a single
+reader that may not apply the story to himself, and recollect some hours
+of his life in which he has been equally overpowered by the transitory
+charms of trifling novelty.
+
+Some indulgence is due to him whom a happy gale of fortune has suddenly
+transported into new regions, where unaccustomed lustre dazzles his
+eyes, and untasted delicacies solicit his appetite. Let him not be
+considered as lost in hopeless degeneracy, though he for a while forgets
+the regard due to others, to indulge the contemplation of himself, and
+in the extravagance of his first raptures expects that his eye should
+regulate the motions of all that approach him, and his opinion be
+received as decisive and oraculous. His intoxication will give way to
+time; the madness of joy will fume imperceptibly away; the sense of his
+insufficiency will soon return; he will remember that the co-operation
+of others is necessary to his happiness, and learn to conciliate their
+regard by reciprocal beneficence.
+
+There is, at least, one consideration which ought to alleviate our
+censures of the powerful and rich. To imagine them chargeable with all
+the guilt and folly of their own actions, is to be very little
+acquainted with the world.
+
+ _De l'absolu pouvoir vous ignorez l'yvresse,
+ Et du lache flateur la voix enchanteresse_.
+
+ Thou hast not known the giddy whirls of fate,
+ Nor servile flatteries which enchant the great. Miss A. W.
+
+He that can do much good or harm, will not find many whom ambition or
+cowardice will suffer to be sincere. While we live upon the level with
+the rest of mankind, we are reminded of our duty by the admonitions of
+friends and reproaches of enemies; but men who stand in the highest
+ranks of society, seldom hear of their faults; if by any accident an
+opprobrious clamour reaches their ears, flattery is always at hand to
+pour in her opiates, to quiet conviction, and obtund remorse.
+
+Favour is seldom gained but by conformity in vice. Virtue can stand
+without assistance, and considers herself as very little obliged by
+countenance and approbation: but vice, spiritless and timorous, seeks
+the shelter of crowds, and support of confederacy. The sycophant,
+therefore, neglects the good qualities of his patron, and employs all
+his art on his weaknesses and follies, regales his reigning vanity, or
+stimulates his prevalent desires.
+
+Virtue is sufficiently difficult with any circumstances, but the
+difficulty is increased when reproof and advice are frighted away. In
+common life, reason and conscience have only the appetites and passions
+to encounter; but in higher stations, they must oppose artifice and
+adulation. He, therefore, that yields to such temptations, cannot give
+those who look upon his miscarriage much reason for exultation, since
+few can justly presume that from the same snare they should have been
+able to escape.
+
+
+
+No. 173. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1751.
+
+ _Quo virtus, quo ferat error_. HOR. De Ar. Poet. 308.
+
+ Now say, where virtue stops, and vice begins?
+
+As any action or posture, long continued, will distort and disfigure the
+limbs; so the mind likewise is crippled and contracted by perpetual
+application to the same set of ideas. It is easy to guess the trade of
+an artizan by his knees, his fingers, or his shoulders: and there are
+few among men of the more liberal professions, whose minds do not carry
+the brand of their calling, or whose conversation does not quickly
+discover to what class of the community they belong.
+
+These peculiarities have been of great use, in the general hostility
+which every part of mankind exercises against the rest, to furnish
+insults and sarcasms. Every art has its dialect, uncouth and ungrateful
+to all whom custom has not reconciled to its sound, and which therefore
+becomes ridiculous by a slight misapplication, or unnecessary
+repetition.
+
+The general reproach with which ignorance revenges the superciliousness
+of learning, is that of pedantry; a censure which every man incurs, who
+has at any time the misfortune to talk to those who cannot understand
+him, and by which the modest and timorous are sometimes frighted from
+the display of their acquisitions, and the exertion of their powers.
+
+The name of a pedant is so formidable to young men when they first sally
+from their colleges, and is so liberally scattered by those who mean to
+boast their elegance of education, easiness of manners, and knowledge of
+the world, that it seems to require particular consideration; since,
+perhaps, if it were once understood, many a heart might be freed from
+painful apprehensions, and many a tongue, delivered from restraint.
+
+Pedantry is the unseasonable ostentation of learning. It may be
+discovered either in the choice of a subject, or in the manner of
+treating it. He is undoubtedly guilty of pedantry, who, when he has made
+himself master of some abstruse and uncultivated part of knowledge,
+obtrudes his remarks and discoveries upon those whom he believes unable
+to judge of his proficiency, and from whom, as he cannot fear
+contradiction, he cannot properly expect applause.
+
+To this errour the student is sometimes betrayed by the natural
+recurrence of the mind to its common employment, by the pleasure which
+every man receives from the recollection of pleasing images, and the
+desire of dwelling upon topicks, on which he knows himself able to speak
+with justness. But because we are seldom so far prejudiced in favour of
+each other, as to search out for palliations, this failure of politeness
+is imputed always to vanity; and the harmless collegiate, who, perhaps,
+intended entertainment and instruction, or at worst only spoke without
+sufficient reflection upon the character of his hearers, is censured as
+arrogant or overbearing, and eager to extend his renown, in contempt of
+the convenience of society and the laws of conversation.
+
+All discourse of which others cannot partake, is not only an irksome
+usurpation of the time devoted to pleasure and entertainment, but what
+never fails to excite very keen resentment, an insolent assertion of
+superiority, and a triumph over less enlightened understandings. The
+pedant is, therefore, not only heard with weariness, but malignity; and
+those who conceive themselves insulted by his knowledge, never fail to
+tell with acrimony how injudiciously it was exerted.
+
+To avoid this dangerous imputation, scholars sometimes divest themselves
+with too much haste of their academical formality, and in their
+endeavours to accommodate their notions and their style to common
+conceptions, talk rather of any thing than of that which they
+understand, and sink into insipidity of sentiment and meanness of
+expression.
+
+There prevails among men of letters an opinion, that all appearance of
+science is particularly hateful to women; and that therefore, whoever
+desires to be well received in female assemblies, must qualify himself
+by a total rejection of all that is serious, rational, or important;
+must consider argument or criticism, as perpetually interdicted; and
+devote all his attention to trifles, and all his eloquence to
+compliment.
+
+Students often form their notions of the present generation from the
+writings of the past, and are not very early informed of those changes
+which the gradual diffusion of knowledge, or the sudden caprice of
+fashion, produces in the world. Whatever might be the state of female
+literature in the last century, there is now no longer any danger lest
+the scholar should want an adequate audience at the tea-table; and
+whoever thinks it necessary to regulate his conversation by antiquated
+rules, will be rather despised for his futility than caressed for his
+politeness.
+
+To talk intentionally in a manner above the comprehension of those whom
+we address, is unquestionable pedantry; but surely complaisance
+requires, that no man should, without proof, conclude his company
+incapable of following him to the highest elevation of his fancy, or the
+utmost extent of his knowledge. It is always safer to err in favour of
+others than of ourselves, and therefore we seldom hazard much by
+endeavouring to excel.
+
+It ought at least to be the care of learning, when she quits her
+exaltation, to descend with dignity. Nothing is more despicable than the
+airiness and jocularity of a man bred to severe science, and solitary
+meditation. To trifle agreeably is a secret which schools cannot impart;
+that gay negligence and vivacious levity, which charm down resistance
+wherever they appear, are never attainable by him who, having spent his
+first years among the dust of libraries, enters late into the gay world
+with an unpliant attention and established habits.
+
+It is observed in the panegyrick on Fabricius the mechanist, that,
+though forced by publick employments into mingled conversation, he never
+lost the modesty and seriousness of the convent, nor drew ridicule upon
+himself by an affected imitation of fashionable life. To the same praise
+every man devoted to learning ought to aspire. If he attempts the softer
+arts of pleasing, and endeavours to learn the graceful bow and the
+familiar embrace, the insinuating accent and the general smile, he will
+lose the respect due to the character of learning, without arriving at
+the envied honour of doing any thing with elegance and facility.
+
+Theophrastus was discovered not to be a native of Athens, by so strict
+an adherence to the Attick dialect, as shewed that he had learned it not
+by custom, but by rule. A man not early formed to habitual elegance,
+betrays, in like manner, the effects of his education, by an unnecessary
+anxiety of behaviour. It is as possible to become pedantick, by fear of
+pedantry, as to be troublesome by ill-timed civility. There is no kind
+of impertinence more justly censurable than his who is always labouring
+to level thoughts to intellects higher than his own; who apologizes for
+every word which his own narrowness of converse inclines him to think
+unusual; keeps the exuberance of his faculties under visible restraint;
+is solicitous to anticipate inquiries by needless explanations; and
+endeavours to shade his own abilities, lest weak eyes should be dazzled
+with their lustre.
+
+
+
+No. 174. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1751.
+
+ _Faenum habet in cornu, longe fuge; dummodo risum
+ Excutiat sibi, non hic cuiquam parcet amico_.
+ HOR. Lib. i. Sat. iv. 34.
+
+ Yonder he drives--avoid that furious beast:
+ If he may have his jest, he never cares
+ At whose expense; nor friend nor patron spares. FRANCIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+MR. RAMBLER,
+
+The laws of social benevolence require, that every man should endeavour
+to assist others by his experience. He that has at last escaped into
+port from the fluctuations of chance, and the gusts of opposition, ought
+to make some improvements in the chart of life, by marking the rocks on
+which he has been dashed, and the shallows where he has been stranded.
+
+The errour into which I was betrayed, when custom first gave me up to my
+own direction, is very frequently incident to the quick, the sprightly,
+the fearless, and the gay; to all whose ardour hurries them into
+precipitate execution of their designs, and imprudent declaration of
+their opinions; who seldom count the cost of pleasure, or examine the
+distant consequences of any practice that flatters them with immediate
+gratification.
+
+I came forth into the crowded world with the usual juvenile ambition,
+and desired nothing beyond the title of a wit. Money I considered as
+below my care; for I saw such multitudes grow rich without
+understanding, that I could not forbear to look on wealth as an
+acquisition easy to industry directed by genius, and therefore threw it
+aside as a secondary convenience, to be procured when my principal wish
+should be satisfied, and the claim to intellectual excellence
+universally acknowledged.
+
+With this view I regulated my behaviour in publick, and exercised my
+meditations in solitude. My life was divided between the care of
+providing topicks for the entertainment of my company, and that of
+collecting company worthy to be entertained; for I soon found, that wit,
+like every other power, has its boundaries; that its success depends
+upon the aptitude of others to receive impressions; and that as some
+bodies, indissoluble by heat, can set the furnace and crucible at
+defiance, there are minds upon which the rays of fancy may be pointed
+without effect, and which no fire of sentiment can agitate or exalt.
+
+It was, however, not long before I fitted myself with a set of
+companions who knew how to laugh, and to whom no other recommendation
+was necessary than the power of striking out a jest. Among those I fixed
+my residence, and for a time enjoyed the felicity of disturbing the
+neighbours every night with the obstreperous applause which my sallies
+forced from the audience. The reputation of our club every day
+increased, and as my flights and remarks were circulated by my admirers,
+every day brought new solicitations for admission into our society.
+
+To support this perpetual fund of merriment, I frequented every place of
+concourse, cultivated the acquaintance of all the fashionable race, and
+passed the day in a continual succession of visits, in which I collected
+a treasure of pleasantry for the expenses of the evening. Whatever
+errour of conduct I could discover, whatever peculiarity of manner I
+could observe, whatever weakness was betrayed by confidence, whatever
+lapse was suffered by neglect, all was drawn together for the diversion
+of my wild companions, who when they had been taught the art of
+ridicule, never failed to signalize themselves by a zealous imitation,
+and filled the town on the ensuing day with scandal and vexation, with
+merriment and shame.
+
+I can scarcely believe, when I recollect my own practice, that I could
+have been so far deluded with petty praise, as to divulge the secrets of
+trust, and to expose the levities of frankness; to waylay the walks of
+the cautious, and surprise the security of the thoughtless. Yet it is
+certain, that for many years I heard nothing but with design to tell it,
+and saw nothing with any other curiosity than after some failure that
+might furnish out a jest.
+
+My heart, indeed, acquits me of deliberate malignity, or interested
+insidiousness. I had no other purpose than to heighten the pleasure of
+laughter by communication, nor ever raised any pecuniary advantage from
+the calamities of others. I led weakness and negligence into
+difficulties, only that I might divert myself with their perplexities
+and distresses; and violated every law of friendship, with no other hope
+than that of gaining the reputation of smartness and waggery.
+
+I would not be understood to charge myself with any crimes of the
+atrocious or destructive kind. I never betrayed an heir to gamesters, or
+a girl to bebauchees; [Transcriber's note: sic] never intercepted the
+kindness of a patron, or sported away the reputation of innocence. My
+delight was only in petty mischief, and momentary vexations, and my
+acuteness was employed not upon fraud and oppression, which it had been
+meritorious to detect, but upon harmless ignorance or absurdity,
+prejudice or mistake.
+
+This inquiry I pursued with so much diligence and sagacity, that I was
+able to relate, of every man whom I knew, some blunder or miscarriage;
+to betray the most circumspect of my friends into follies, by a
+judicious flattery of his predominant passion; or expose him to
+contempt, by placing him in circumstances which put his prejudices into
+action, brought to view his natural defects, or drew the attention of
+the company on his airs of affectation.
+
+The power had been possessed in vain if it had never been exerted; and
+it was not my custom to let any arts of jocularity remain unemployed. My
+impatience of applause brought me always early to the place of
+entertainment; and I seldom failed to lay a scheme with the small knot
+that first gathered round me, by which some of those whom we expected
+might be made subservient to our sport. Every man has some favourite
+topick of conversation, on which, by a feigned seriousness of attention,
+he may be drawn to expatiate without end. Every man has some habitual
+contortion of body, or established mode of expression, which never fails
+to raise mirth if it be pointed out to notice. By premonitions of these
+particularities I secured our pleasantry. Our companion entered with his
+usual gaiety, and began to partake of our noisy cheerfulness, when the
+conversation was imperceptibly diverted to a subject which pressed upon
+his tender part, and extorted the expected shrug, the customary
+exclamation, or the predicted remark. A general clamour of joy then
+burst from all that were admitted to the stratagem. Our mirth was often
+increased by the triumph of him that occasioned it; for as we do not
+hastily form conclusions against ourselves, seldom any one suspected,
+that he had exhilarated us otherwise than by wit.
+
+You will hear, I believe, with very little surprise, that by this
+conduct I had in a short time united mankind against me, and that every
+tongue was diligent in prevention or revenge. I soon perceived myself
+regarded with malevolence or distrust, but wondered what had been
+discovered in me either terrible or hateful. I had invaded no man's
+property; I had rivalled no man's claims: nor had ever engaged in any of
+those attempts which provoke the jealousy of ambition or the rage of
+faction. I had lived but to laugh, and make others laugh; and believed
+that I was loved by all who caressed, and favoured by all who applauded
+me. I never imagined, that he who, in the mirth of a nocturnal revel,
+concurred in ridiculing his friend, would consider, in a cooler hour,
+that the same trick might be played against himself; or that even where
+there is no sense of danger, the natural pride of human nature rises
+against him, who, by general censures, lays claim to general
+superiority.
+
+I was convinced, by a total desertion, of the impropriety of my conduct;
+every man avoided, and cautioned others to avoid me. Wherever I came, I
+found silence and dejection, coldness and terrour. No one would venture
+to speak, lest he should lay himself open to unfavourable
+representations; the company, however numerous, dropped off at my
+entrance upon various pretences; and, if I retired to avoid the shame of
+being left, I heard confidence and mirth revive at my departure.
+
+If those whom I had thus offended could have contented themselves with
+repaying one insult for another, and kept up the war only by a
+reciprocation of sarcasms, they might have perhaps vexed, but would
+never have much hurt me; for no man heartily hates him at whom he can
+laugh. But these wounds which they give me as they fly, are without
+cure; this alarm which they spread by their solicitude to escape me,
+excludes me from all friendship and from all pleasure. I am condemned to
+pass a long interval of my life in solitude, as a man suspected of
+infection is refused admission into cities; and must linger in
+obscurity, till my conduct shall convince the world, that I may be
+approached without hazard.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+DICACULUS.
+
+
+
+No. 175. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1751.
+
+ _Rari quippe boni: numerus vix est totidem quot
+ Thebarum portae, vel divitis ostia Nili_. Juv. Sat. xiii. 26.
+
+ Good men are scarce; the just are thinly sown:
+ They thrive but ill, nor can they last when grown;
+ And should we count them, and our store compile,
+ Yet Thebes more gates could show, more mouths the Nile. CREECH.
+
+None of the axioms of wisdom which recommend the ancient sages to
+veneration, seem to have required less extent of knowledge or
+perspicacity of penetration, than the remarks of Bias, that [Greek: oi
+pleones kakoi], "the majority are wicked."
+
+The depravity of mankind is so easily discoverable, that nothing but the
+desert or the cell can exclude it from notice. The knowledge of crimes
+intrudes uncalled and undesired. They whom their abstraction from common
+occurrences hinders from seeing iniquity, will quickly have their
+attention awakened by feeling it. Even he who ventures not into the
+world, may learn its corruption in his closet. For what are treatises of
+morality, but persuasives to the practice of duties, for which no
+arguments would be necessary, but that we are continually tempted to
+violate or neglect them? What are all the records of history, but
+narratives of successive villanies, of treasons and usurpations,
+massacres and wars?
+
+But, perhaps, the excellence of aphorisms consists not so much in the
+expression of some rare and abstruse sentiment, as in the comprehension
+of some obvious and useful truths in a few words. We frequently fall
+into errour and folly, not because the true principles of action are not
+known, but because, for a time, they are not remembered; and he may,
+therefore, be justly numbered among the benefactors of mankind, who
+contracts the great rules of life into short sentences, that may be
+easily impressed on the memory, and taught by frequent recollection to
+recur habitually to the mind.
+
+However those who have passed through half the life of man, may now
+wonder that any should require to be cautioned against corruption, they
+will find that they have themselves purchased their conviction by many
+disappointments and vexations which an earlier knowledge would have
+spared them; and may see, on every side, some entangling themselves in
+perplexities, and some sinking into ruin, by ignorance or neglect of the
+maxim of Bias.
+
+Every day sends out, in quest of pleasure and distinction, some heir
+fondled in ignorance, and flattered into pride. He comes forth with all
+the confidence of a spirit unacquainted with superiors, and all the
+benevolence of a mind not yet irritated by opposition, alarmed by fraud,
+or embittered by cruelty. He loves all, because he imagines himself the
+universal favourite. Every exchange of salutation produces new
+acquaintance, and every acquaintance kindles into friendship.
+
+Every season brings a new flight of beauties into the world, who have
+hitherto heard only of their own charms, and imagine that the heart
+feels no passion but that of love. They are soon surrounded by admirers
+whom they credit, because they tell them only what is heard with
+delight. Whoever gazes upon them is a lover; and whoever forces a sigh,
+is pining in despair.
+
+He surely is a useful monitor, who inculcates to these thoughtless
+strangers, that the _majority are wicked_; who informs them, that the
+train which wealth and beauty draw after them, is lured only by the
+scent of prey; and that, perhaps, among all those who crowd about them
+with professions and flatteries, there is not one who does not hope for
+some opportunity to devour or betray them, to glut himself by their
+destruction, or to share their spoils with a stronger savage.
+
+Virtue presented singly to the imagination or the reason, is so well
+recommended by its own graces, and so strongly supported by arguments,
+that a good man wonders how any can be bad; and they who are ignorant of
+the force of passion and interest, who never observed the arts of
+seduction, the contagion of example, the gradual descent from one crime
+to another, or the insensible depravation of the principles by loose
+conversation, naturally expect to find integrity in every bosom, and
+veracity on every tongue.
+
+It is, indeed, impossible not to hear from those who have lived longer,
+of wrongs and falsehoods, of violence and circumvention; but such
+narratives are commonly regarded by the young, the heady, and the
+confident, as nothing more than the murmurs of peevishness, or the
+dreams of dotage; and, notwithstanding all the documents of hoary
+wisdom, we commonly plunge into the world fearless and credulous,
+without any foresight of danger, or apprehension of deceit.
+
+I have remarked, in a former paper, that credulity is the common failing
+of unexperienced virtue; and that he who is spontaneously suspicious,
+may be justly charged with radical corruption; for, if he has not known
+the prevalence of dishonesty by information, nor had time to observe it
+with his own eyes, whence can he take his measures of judgment but from
+himself?
+
+They who best deserve to escape the snares of artifice, are most likely
+to be entangled. He that endeavours to live for the good of others, must
+always be exposed to the arts of them who live only for themselves,
+unless he is taught by timely precepts the caution required in common
+transactions, and shewn at a distance the pitfalls of treachery.
+
+To youth, therefore, it should be carefully inculcated, that, to enter
+the road of life without caution or reserve, in expectation of general
+fidelity and justice, is to launch on the wide ocean without the
+instruments of steerage, and to hope that every wind will be prosperous,
+and that every coast will afford a harbour.
+
+To enumerate the various motives to deceit and injury, would be to count
+all the desires that prevail among the sons of men; since there is no
+ambition however petty, no wish however absurd, that by indulgence will
+not be enabled to overpower the influence of virtue. Many there are, who
+openly and almost professedly regulate all their conduct by their love
+of money; who have no other reason for action or forbearance, for
+compliance or refusal, than that they hope to gain more by one than by
+the other. These are indeed the meanest and cruellest of human beings, a
+race with whom, as with some pestiferous animals, the whole creation
+seems to be at war; but who, however detested or scorned, long continue
+to add heap to heap, and when they have reduced one to beggary, are
+still permitted to fasten on another.
+
+Others, yet less rationally wicked, pass their lives in mischief,
+because they cannot bear the sight of success, and mark out every man
+for hatred, whose fame or fortune they believe increasing.
+
+Many who have not advanced to these degrees of guilt are yet wholly
+unqualified for friendship, and unable to maintain any constant or
+regular course of kindness. Happiness may be destroyed not only by union
+with the man who is apparently the slave of interest, but with him whom
+a wild opinion of the dignity of perseverance, in whatever cause,
+disposes to pursue every injury with unwearied and perpetual resentment;
+with him whose vanity inclines him to consider every man as a rival in
+every pretension; with him whose airy negligence puts his friend's
+affairs or secrets in continual hazard, and who thinks his forgetfulness
+of others excused by his inattention to himself; and with him whose
+inconstancy ranges without any settled rule of choice through varieties
+of friendship, and who adopts and dismisses favourites by the sudden
+impulse of caprice.
+
+Thus numerous are the dangers to which the converse of mankind exposes
+us, and which can be avoided only by prudent distrust. He therefore
+that, remembering this salutary maxim, learns early to withhold his
+fondness from fair appearances, will have reason to pay some honours to
+Bias of Priene, who enabled him to become wise without the cost of
+experience.
+
+
+
+No. 176. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1751
+
+ --_Naso suspendis adunco_. HOR. Lib. i. Sat. vi. 5.
+
+ On me you turn the nose.--
+
+There are many vexatious accidents and uneasy situations which raise
+little compassion for the sufferer, and which no man but those whom they
+immediately distress can regard with seriousness. Petty mischiefs, that
+have no influence on futurity, nor extend their effects to the rest of
+life, are always seen with a kind of malicious pleasure. A mistake or
+embarrassment, which for the present moment fills the face with blushes,
+and the mind with confusion, will have no other effect upon those who
+observe it, than that of convulsing them with irresistible laughter.
+Some circumstances of misery are so powerfully ridiculous, that neither
+kindness nor duty can withstand them; they bear down love, interest, and
+reverence, and force the friend, the dependent, or the child, to give
+way to, instantaneous motions of merriment.
+
+Among the principal of comick calamities, may be reckoned the pain which
+an author, not yet hardened into insensibility, feels at the onset of a
+furious critick, whose age, rank, or fortune, gives him confidence to
+speak without reserve; who heaps one objection upon another, and
+obtrudes his remarks, and enforces his corrections, without tenderness
+or awe.
+
+The author, full of the importance of his work, and anxious for the
+justification of every syllable, starts and kindles at the slightest
+attack; the critick, eager to establish his superiority, triumphing in
+every discovery of failure, and zealous to impress the cogency of his
+arguments, pursues him from line to line without cessation or remorse.
+The critick, who hazards little, proceeds with vehemence, impetuosity,
+and fearlessness; the author, whose quiet and fame, and life and
+immortality, are involved in the controversy, tries every art of
+subterfuge and defence; maintains modestly what he resolves never to
+yield, and yields unwillingly what cannot be maintained. The critick's
+purpose is to conquer, the author only hopes to escape; the critick
+therefore knits his brow, and raises his voice, and rejoices whenever he
+perceives any tokens of pain excited by the pressure of his assertions,
+or the point of his sarcasms. The author, whose endeavour is at once to
+mollify and elude his persecutor, composes his features and softens his
+accent, breaks the force of assault by retreat, and rather steps aside
+than flies or advances.
+
+As it very seldom happens that the rage of extemporary criticism
+inflicts fatal or lasting wounds, I know not that the laws of
+benevolence entitle this distress to much sympathy. The diversion of
+baiting an author has the sanction of all ages and nations, and is more
+lawful than the sport of teasing other animals, because, for the most
+part, he comes voluntarily to the stake, furnished, as he imagines, by
+the patron powers of literature, with resistless weapons, and
+impenetrable armour, with the mail of the boar of Erymanth, and the paws
+of the lion of Nemea.
+
+But the works of genius are sometimes produced by other motives than
+vanity; and he whom necessity or duty enforces to write, is not always
+so well satisfied with himself, as not to be discouraged by censorious
+impudence. It may therefore be necessary to consider, how they whom
+publication lays open to the insults of such as their obscurity secures
+against reprisals, may extricate themselves from unexpected encounters.
+
+Vida, a man of considerable skill in the politicks of literature,
+directs his pupil wholly to abandon his defence, and even when he can
+irrefragably refute all objections, to suffer tamely the exultations of
+his antagonist.
+
+This rule may perhaps be just, when advice is asked, and severity
+solicited, because no man tells his opinion so freely as when he
+imagines it received with implicit veneration; and criticks ought never
+to be consulted, but while errours may yet be rectified or insipidity
+suppressed. But when the book has once been dismissed into the world,
+and can be no more retouched, I know not whether a very different
+conduct should not be prescribed, and whether firmness and spirit may
+not sometimes be of use to overpower arrogance and repel brutality.
+Softness, diffidence, and moderation, will often be mistaken for
+imbecility and dejection; they hire cowardice to the attack by the hopes
+of easy victory, and it will soon be found that he whom every man thinks
+he can conquer, shall never be at peace.
+
+The animadversions of criticks are commonly such as may easily provoke
+the sedatest writer to some quickness of resentment and asperity of
+reply. A man, who by long consideration has familiarized a subject to
+his own mind, carefully surveyed the series of his thoughts, and planned
+all the parts of his composition into a regular dependance on each
+other, will often start at the sinistrous interpretations or absurd
+remarks of haste and ignorance, and wonder by what infatuation they have
+been led away from the obvious sense, and upon what peculiar principles
+of judgment they decide against him.
+
+The eye of the intellect, like that of the body, is not equally perfect
+in all, nor equally adapted in any to all objects; the end of criticism
+is to supply its defects; rules are the instruments of mental vision,
+which may indeed assist our faculties when properly used, but produce
+confusion and obscurity by unskilful application.
+
+Some seem always to read with the microscope of criticism, and employ
+their whole attention upon minute elegance, or faults scarcely visible
+to common observation. The dissonance of a syllable, the recurrence of
+the same sound, the repetition of a particle, the smallest deviation
+from propriety, the slightest defect in construction or arrangement,
+swell before their eyes into enormities. As they discern with great
+exactness, they comprehend but a narrow compass, and know nothing of the
+justness of the design, the general spirit of the performance, the
+artifice of connection, or the harmony of the parts; they never,
+conceive how small a proportion that which they are busy in
+contemplating bears to the whole, or how the petty inaccuracies, with
+which they are offended, are absorbed and lost in general excellence.
+
+Others are furnished by criticism with a telescope. They see with great
+clearness whatever is too remote to be discovered by the rest of
+mankind, but are totally blind to all that lies immediately before them.
+They discover in every passage some secret meaning, some remote
+allusion, some artful allegory, or some occult imitation, which no other
+reader ever suspected; but they have no perception of the cogency of
+arguments, the force of pathetick sentiments, the various colours of
+diction, or the flowery embellishments of fancy; of all that engages the
+attention of others they are totally insensible, while they pry into
+worlds of conjecture, and amuse themselves with phantoms in the clouds.
+
+In criticism, as in every other art, we fail sometimes by our weakness,
+but more frequently by our fault. We are sometimes bewildered by
+ignorance, and sometimes by prejudice, but we seldom deviate far from
+the right, but when we deliver ourselves up to the direction of vanity.
+
+
+
+No. 177. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1751.
+
+ _Turpe est difficiles habere nugas_. MART. Lib. ii. Ep. lxxxvi. 9.
+
+ Those things which now seem frivolous and slight,
+ Will be of serious consequence to you,
+ When they have made you once ridiculous. ROSCOMMON.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+When I was, at the usual time, about to enter upon the profession to
+which my friends had destined me, being summoned, by the death of my
+father, into the country, I found myself master of an unexpected sum of
+money, and of an estate, which, though not large, was, in my opinion,
+sufficient to support me in a condition far preferable to the fatigue,
+dependance, and uncertainty of any gainful occupation. I therefore
+resolved to devote the rest of my life wholly to curiosity, and without
+any confinement of my excursions, or termination of my views, to wander
+over the boundless regions of general knowledge.
+
+This scheme of life seemed pregnant with inexhaustible variety, and
+therefore I could not forbear to congratulate myself upon the wisdom of
+my choice. I furnished a large room with all conveniences for study;
+collected books of every kind; quitted every science at the first
+perception of disgust; returned to it again as soon as my former ardour
+happened to revive; and having no rival to depress me by comparison, nor
+any critick to alarm me with objections, I spent day after day in
+profound tranquillity, with only so much complaisance in my own
+improvements, as served to excite and animate my application.
+
+Thus I lived for some years with complete acquiescence in my own plan of
+conduct, rising early to read, and dividing the latter part of the day
+between economy, exercise, and reflection. But, in time, I began to find
+my mind contracted and stiffened by solitude. My ease and elegance were
+sensibly impaired; I was no longer able to accommodate myself with
+readiness to the accidental current of conversation; my notions grew
+particular and paradoxical, and my phraseology formal and unfashionable;
+I spoke, on common occasions, the language of books. My quickness of
+apprehension, and celerity of reply, had entirely deserted me; when I
+delivered my opinion, or detailed my knowledge, I was bewildered by an
+unseasonable interrogatory, disconcerted by any slight opposition, and
+overwhelmed and lost in dejection, when the smallest advantage was
+gained against me in dispute. I became decisive and dogmatical,
+impatient of contradiction, perpetually jealous of my character,
+insolent to such as acknowledged my superiority, and sullen and
+malignant to all who refused to receive my dictates.
+
+This I soon discovered to be one of those intellectual diseases which a
+wise man should make haste to cure. I therefore resolved for a time to
+shut my books, and learn again the art of conversation; to defecate and
+clear my mind by brisker motions, and stronger impulses; and to unite
+myself once more to the living generation.
+
+For this purpose I hasted to London, and entreated one of my academical
+acquaintances to introduce me into some of the little societies of
+literature which are formed in taverns and coffee-houses. He was pleased
+with an opportunity of shewing me to his friends, and soon obtained me
+admission among a select company of curious men, who met once a week to
+exhilarate their studies, and compare their acquisitions.
+
+The eldest and most venerable of this society was Hirsutus, who, after
+the first civilities of my reception, found means to introduce the
+mention of his favourite studies, by a severe censure of those who want
+the due regard for their native country. He informed me, that he had
+early withdrawn his attention from foreign trifles, and that since he
+began to addict his mind to serious and manly studies, he had very
+carefully amassed all the English books that were printed in the black
+character. This search he had pursued so diligently, that he was able to
+shew the deficiencies of the best catalogues. He had long since
+completed his Caxton, had three sheets of Treveris unknown to the
+antiquaries, and wanted to a perfect Pynson but two volumes, of which
+one was promised him as a legacy by its present possessor, and the other
+he was resolved to buy, at whatever price, when Quisquilius's library
+should be sold. Hirsutus had no other reason for the valuing or
+slighting a book, than that it was printed in the Roman or the Gothic
+letter, nor any ideas but such as his favourite volumes had supplied;
+when he was serious he expatiated on the narratives "of Johan de
+Trevisa," and when he was merry, regaled us with a quotation from the
+"Shippe of Foles."
+
+While I was listening to this hoary student, Ferratus entered in a
+hurry, and informed us with the abruptness of ecstacy, that his set of
+halfpence was now complete; he had just received in a handful of change,
+the piece that he had so long been seeking, and could now defy mankind
+to outgo his collection of English copper.
+
+Chartophylax then observed how fatally human sagacity was sometimes
+baffled, and how often the most valuable discoveries are made by chance.
+He had employed himself and his emissaries seven years at great expense
+to perfect his series of Gazettes, but had long wanted a single paper,
+which, when he despaired of obtaining it, was sent him wrapped round a
+parcel of tobacco.
+
+Cantilenus turned all his thoughts upon old ballads, for he considered
+them as the genuine records of the national taste. He offered to shew me
+a copy of "The Children in the Wood," which he firmly believed to be of
+the first edition, and, by the help of which, the text might be freed
+from several corruptions, if this age of barbarity had any claim to such
+favours from him.
+
+Many were admitted into this society as inferior members, because they
+had collected old prints and neglected pamphlets, or possessed some
+fragment of antiquity, as the seal of an ancient corporation, the
+charter of a religious house, the genealogy of a family extinct, or a
+letter written in the reign of Elizabeth.
+
+Every one of these virtuosos looked on all his associates as wretches of
+depraved taste and narrow notions. Their conversation was, therefore,
+fretful and waspish, their behaviour brutal, their merriment bluntly
+sarcastick, and their seriousness gloomy and suspicious. They were
+totally ignorant of all that passes, or has lately passed, in the world;
+unable to discuss any question of religious, political, or military
+knowledge; equally strangers to science and politer learning, and
+without any wish to improve their minds, or any other pleasure than that
+of displaying rarities, of which they would not suffer others to make
+the proper use.
+
+Hirsutus graciously informed me, that the number of their society was
+limited, but that I might sometimes attend as an auditor. I was pleased
+to find myself in no danger of an honour, which I could not have
+willingly accepted, nor gracefully refused, and left them without any
+intention of returning; for I soon found that the suppression of those
+habits with which I was vitiated, required association with men very
+different from this solemn race.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+VIVACULUS.
+
+It is natural to feel grief or indignation when any thing necessary or
+useful is wantonly wasted, or negligently destroyed; and therefore my
+correspondent cannot be blamed for looking with uneasiness on the waste
+of life. Leisure and curiosity might soon make great advances in useful
+knowledge, were they not diverted by minute emulation and laborious
+trifles. It may, however, somewhat mollify his anger to reflect, that
+perhaps none of the assembly which he describes, was capable of any
+nobler employment, and that he who does his best, however little, is
+always to be distinguished from him who does nothing. Whatever busies
+the mind without corrupting it, has at least this use, that it rescues
+the day from idleness, and he that is never idle will not often be
+vicious.
+
+
+
+No. 178. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1751.
+
+ _Purs sanitatis velle sanuria fuit_. SENECA.
+
+ To yield to remedies is half the cure.
+
+Pythagoras is reported to have required from those whom he instructed in
+philosophy a probationary silence of five years. Whether this
+prohibition of speech extended to all the parts of this time, as seems
+generally to be supposed, or was to be observed only in the school or in
+the presence of their master, as is more probable, it was sufficient to
+discover the pupil's disposition; to try whether he was willing to pay
+the price of learning, or whether he was one of those whose ardour was
+rather violent than lasting, and who expected to grow wise on other
+terms than those of patience and obedience.
+
+Many of the blessings universally desired, are very frequently wanted,
+because most men, when they should labour, content themselves to
+complain, and rather linger in a state in which they cannot be at rest,
+than improve their condition by vigour and resolution.
+
+Providence has fixed the limits of human enjoyment by immoveable
+boundaries, and has set different gratifications at such a distance from
+each other, that no art or power can bring them together. This great law
+it is the business of every rational being to understand, that life may
+not pass away in an attempt to make contradictions consistent, to
+combine opposite qualities, and to unite things which the nature of
+their being must always keep asunder.
+
+Of two objects tempting at a distance on contrary sides, it is
+impossible to approach one but by receding from the other; by long
+deliberation and dilatory projects, they may be both lost, but can never
+be both gained. It is, therefore, necessary to compare them, and, when
+we have determined the preference, to withdraw our eyes and our thoughts
+at once from that which reason directs us to reject. This is more
+necessary, if that which we are forsaking has the power of delighting
+the senses, or firing the fancy. He that once turns aside to the
+allurements of unlawful pleasure, can have no security that he shall
+ever regain the paths of virtue.
+
+The philosophick goddess of Boethius, having related the story of
+Orpheus, who, when he had recovered his wife from the dominions of
+death, lost her again by looking back upon her in the confines of light,
+concludes with a very elegant and forcible application. "Whoever you are
+that endeavour to elevate your minds to the illuminations of Heaven,
+consider yourselves as represented in this fable; for he that is once so
+far overcome as to turn back his eyes towards the infernal caverns,
+loses at the first sight all that influence which attracted him on
+high:"
+
+ Vos haec fabula respicit,
+ Quicunque in superum diem
+ Mentem ducere quaeritis.
+ Nam qui Tartareum in specus
+ Victus lumina flexerit,
+ Quidquid praecipuum trahit,
+ Perdit, dum videt inferos.
+
+It may be observed, in general, that the future is purchased by the
+present. It is not possible to secure instant or permanent happiness but
+by the forbearance of some immediate gratification. This is so evidently
+true with regard to the whole of our existence, that all the precepts of
+theology have no other tendency than to enforce a life of faith; a life
+regulated not by our senses but our belief; a life in which pleasures
+are to be refused for fear of invisible punishments, and calamities
+sometimes to be sought, and always endured, in hope of rewards that
+shall be obtained in another state.
+
+Even if we take into our view only that particle of our duration which
+is terminated by the grave, it will be found that we cannot enjoy one
+part of life beyond the common limitations of pleasure, but by
+anticipating some of the satisfaction which should exhilarate the
+following years. The heat of youth may spread happiness into wild
+luxuriance, but the radical vigour requisite to make it perennial is
+exhausted, and all that can be hoped afterwards is languor and
+sterility.
+
+The reigning errour of mankind is, that we are not content with the
+conditions on which the goods of life are granted. No man is insensible
+of the value of knowledge, the advantages of health, or the convenience
+of plenty, but every day shews us those on whom the conviction is
+without effect.
+
+Knowledge is praised and desired by multitudes whom her charms could
+never rouse from the couch of sloth; whom the faintest invitation of
+pleasure draws away from their studies; to whom any other method of
+wearing out the day is more eligible than the use of books, and who are
+more easily engaged by any conversation, than such as may rectify their
+notions or enlarge their comprehension.
+
+Every man that has felt pain, knows how little all other comforts can
+gladden him to whom health is denied. Yet who is there does not
+sometimes hazard it for the enjoyment of an hour? All assemblies of
+jollity, all places of public entertainment, exhibit examples of
+strength wasting in riot, and beauty withering in irregularity; nor is
+it easy to enter a house in which part of the family is not groaning in
+repentance of past intemperance, and part admitting disease by
+negligence, or soliciting it by luxury.
+
+There is no pleasure which men of every age and sect have more generally
+agreed to mention with contempt, than the gratifications of the palate;
+an entertainment so far removed from intellectual happiness, that
+scarcely the most shameless of the sensual herd have dared to defend it:
+yet even to this, the lowest of our delights, to this, though neither
+quick nor lasting, is health with all its activity and sprightliness
+daily sacrificed; and for this are half the miseries endured which urge
+impatience to call on death.
+
+The whole world is put in motion by the wish for riches and the dread of
+poverty. Who, then, would not imagine that such conduct as will
+inevitably destroy what all are thus labouring to acquire, must
+generally be avoided? That he who spends more than he receives, must in
+time become indigent, cannot be doubted; but, how evident soever this
+consequence may appear, the spendthrift moves in the whirl of pleasure
+with too much rapidity to keep it before his eyes, and, in the
+intoxication of gaiety, grows every day poorer without any such sense of
+approaching ruin as is sufficient to wake him into caution.
+
+Many complaints are made of the misery of life; and indeed it must be
+confessed that we are subject to calamities by which the good and bad,
+the diligent and slothful, the vigilant and heedless, are equally
+afflicted. But surely, though some indulgence may be allowed to groans
+extorted by inevitable misery, no man has a right to repine at evils
+which, against warning, against experience, he deliberately and
+leisurely brings upon his own head; or to consider himself as debarred
+from happiness by such obstacles as resolution may break or dexterity
+may put aside.
+
+Great numbers who quarrel with their condition, have wanted not the
+power but the will to obtain a better state. They have never
+contemplated the difference between good and evil sufficiently to
+quicken aversion, or invigorate desire; they have indulged a drowsy
+thoughtlessness or giddy levity; have committed the balance of choice to
+the management of caprice; and when they have long accustomed themselves
+to receive all that chance offered them, without examination, lament at
+last that they find themselves deceived.
+
+
+
+No. 179. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1751.
+
+ _Perpetuo risu pulmonem agitare solebat_. JUV. Sat. x. 33.
+
+ Democritus would feed his spleen, and shake
+ His sides and shoulders till he felt them ake. DRYDEN
+
+Every man, says Tully, has two characters; one which he partakes with
+all mankind, and by which he is distinguished from brute animals;
+another which discriminates him from the rest of his own species, and
+impresses on him a manner and temper peculiar to himself; this
+particular character, if it be not repugnant to the laws of general
+humanity, it is always his business to cultivate and preserve.
+
+Every hour furnishes some confirmation of Tully's precept. It seldom
+happens, that an assembly of pleasure is so happily selected, but that
+some one finds admission, with whom the rest are deservedly offended;
+and it will appear, on a close inspection, that scarce any man becomes
+eminently disagreeable, but by a departure from his real character, and
+an attempt at something for which nature or education have left him
+unqualified.
+
+Ignorance or dulness have indeed no power of affording delight, but they
+never give disgust except when they assume the dignity of knowledge, or
+ape the sprightliness of wit. Awkwardness and inelegance have none of
+those attractions by which ease and politeness take possession of the
+heart; but ridicule and censure seldom rise against them, unless they
+appear associated with that confidence which belongs only to long
+acquaintance with the modes of life, and to consciousness of unfailing
+propriety of behaviour. Deformity itself is regarded with tenderness
+rather than aversion, when it does not attempt to deceive the sight by
+dress and decoration, and to seize upon fictitious claims the
+prerogatives of beauty.
+
+He that stands to contemplate the crowds that fill the streets of a
+populous city, will see many passengers whose air and motion it will be
+difficult to behold without contempt and laughter; but if he examines
+what are the appearances that thus powerfully excite his risibility, he
+will find among them neither poverty nor disease, nor any involuntary or
+painful defect. The disposition to derision and insult is awakened by
+the softness of foppery, the swell of insolence, the liveliness of
+levity, or the solemnity of grandeur; by the sprightly trip, the stately
+stalk, the formal strut, the lofty mien; by gestures intended to catch
+the eye, and by looks elaborately formed as evidences of importance.
+
+It, has, I think, been sometimes urged in favour of affectation, that it
+is only a mistake of the means to a good end, and that the intention
+with which it is practised is always to please. If all attempts to
+innovate the constitutional or habitual character have really proceeded
+from publick spirit and love of others, the world has hitherto been
+sufficiently ungrateful, since no return but scorn has yet been made to
+the most difficult of all enterprises, a contest with nature; nor has
+any pity been shown to the fatigues of labour which never succeeded, and
+the uneasiness of disguise by which nothing was concealed.
+
+It seems therefore to be determined by the general suffrage of mankind,
+that he who decks himself in adscititious qualities rather purposes to
+command applause than impart pleasure: and he is therefore treated as a
+man who, by an unreasonable ambition, usurps the place in society to
+which he has no right. Praise is seldom paid with willingness even to
+incontestable merit, and it can be no wonder that he who calls for it
+without desert is repulsed with universal indignation.
+
+Affectation naturally counterfeits those excellencies which are placed
+at the greatest distance from possibility of attainment. We are
+conscious of our own defects, and eagerly endeavour to supply them by
+artificial excellence; nor would such efforts be wholly without excuse,
+were they not often excited by ornamental trifles, which he, that thus
+anxiously struggles for the reputation of possessing them, would not
+have been known to want, had not his industry quickened observation.
+
+Gelasimus passed the first part of his life in academical privacy and
+rural retirement, without any other conversation than that of scholars,
+grave, studious, and abstracted as himself. He cultivated the
+mathematical sciences with indefatigable diligence, discovered many
+useful theorems, discussed with great accuracy the resistance of fluids,
+and, though his priority was not generally acknowledged, was the first
+who fully explained all the properties of the catenarian curve.
+
+Learning, when if rises to eminence, will be observed in time, whatever
+mists may happen to surround it. Gelasimus, in his forty-ninth year, was
+distinguished by those who have the rewards of knowledge in their hands,
+and called out to display his acquisitions for the honour of his
+country, and add dignity by his presence to philosophical assemblies. As
+he did not suspect his unfitness for common affairs, he fell no
+reluctance to obey the invitation, and what he did not feel he had yet
+too much honesty to feign. He entered into the world as a larger and
+more populous college, where his performances would be more publick, and
+his renown farther extended; and imagined that he should find his
+reputation universally prevalent, and the influence of learning every
+where the same.
+
+His merit introduced him to splendid tables and elegant acquaintance;
+but he did not find himself always qualified to join in the
+conversation. He was distressed by civilities, which he knew not how to
+repay, and entangled in many ceremonial perplexities, from which his
+books and diagrams could not extricate him. He was sometimes unluckily
+engaged in disputes with ladies, with whom algebraick axioms had no
+great weight, and saw many whose favour and esteem he could not but
+desire, to whom he was very little recommended by his theories of the
+tides, or his approximations to the quadrature of the circle.
+
+Gelasimus did not want penetration to discover, that no charm was more
+generally irresistible than that of easy facetiousness and flowing
+hilarity. He saw that diversion was more frequently welcome than
+improvement; that authority and seriousness were rather feared than
+loved; and that the grave scholar was a kind of imperious ally, hastily
+dismissed when his assistance was no longer necessary. He came to a
+sudden resolution of throwing off those cumbrous ornaments of learning
+which hindered his reception, and commenced a man of wit and jocularity.
+Utterly unacquainted with every topick of merriment, ignorant of the
+modes and follies, the vices and virtues of mankind, and unfurnished
+with any ideas but such as Pappas and Archimedes had given him, he began
+to silence all inquiries with a jest instead of a solution, extended his
+face with a grin, which he mistook for a smile, and in the place of
+scientifick discourse, retailed in a new language, formed between the
+college and the tavern, the intelligence of the newspaper.
+
+Laughter, he knew, was a token of alacrity; and, therefore, whatever he
+said or heard, he was careful not to fail in that great duty of a wit.
+If he asked or told the hour of the day, if he complained of heat or
+cold, stirred the fire, or filled a glass, removed his chair, or snuffed
+a candle, he always found some occasion to laugh. The jest was indeed a
+secret to all but himself; but habitual confidence in his own
+discernment hindered him from suspecting any weakness or mistake. He
+wondered that his wit was so little understood, but expected that his
+audience would comprehend it by degrees, and persisted all his life to
+shew by gross buffoonery, how little the strongest faculties can perform
+beyond the limits of their own province.
+
+
+
+No. 180. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Taut eidos sophos isthi, mataen d' Epikouron eason
+ Poy to kenon zaetein, kai tines ai monades.] AUTOMEDON.
+
+ On life, on morals, be thy thoughts employ'd;
+ Leave to the schools their atoms and their void.
+
+It is somewhere related by Le Clerc, that a wealthy trader of good
+understanding, having the common ambition to breed his son a scholar,
+carried him to an university, resolving to use his own judgment in the
+choice of a tutor. He had been taught, by whatever intelligence, the
+nearest way to the heart of an academick, and at his arrival entertained
+all who came about him with such profusion, that the professors were
+lured by the smell of his table from their books, and flocked round him
+with all the cringes of awkward complaisance. This eagerness answered
+the merchant's purpose: he glutted them with delicacies, and softened
+them with caresses, till he prevailed upon one after another to open his
+bosom, and make a discovery of his competitions, jealousies, and
+resentments. Having thus learned each man's character, partly from
+himself, and partly from his acquaintances, he resolved to find some
+other education for his son, and went away convinced, that a scholastick
+life has no other tendency than to vitiate the morals and contract the
+understanding: nor would he afterwards hear with patience the praises of
+the ancient authors, being persuaded that scholars of all ages must have
+been the same, and that Xenophon and Cicero were professors of some
+former university, and therefore mean and selfish, ignorant and servile,
+like those whom he had lately visited and forsaken.
+
+Envy, curiosity, and a sense of the imperfection of our present state,
+incline us to estimate the advantages which are in the possession of
+others above their real value. Every one must have remarked, what powers
+and prerogatives the vulgar imagine to be conferred by learning. A man
+of science is expected to excel the unlettered and unenlightened even on
+occasions where literature is of no use, and among weak minds, loses
+part of his reverence, by discovering no superiority in those parts of
+life, in which all are unavoidably equal; as when a monarch makes a
+progress to the remoter provinces, the rustics are said sometimes to
+wonder that they find him of the same size with themselves.
+
+These demands of prejudice and folly can never be satisfied; and
+therefore many of the imputations which learning suffers from
+disappointed ignorance, are without reproach. But there are some
+failures, to which men of study are peculiarly exposed. Every condition
+has its disadvantages. The circle of knowledge is too wide for the most
+active and diligent intellect, and while science is pursued, other
+accomplishments are neglected; as a small garrison must leave one part
+of an extensive fortress naked, when an alarm calls them to another.
+
+The learned, however, might generally support their dignity with more
+success, if they suffered not themselves to be misled by the desire of
+superfluous attainments. Raphael, in return to Adam's inquiries into the
+courses of the stars, and the revolutions of heaven, counsels him to
+withdraw his mind from idle speculations, and employ his faculties upon
+nearer and more interesting objects, the survey of his own life, the
+subjection of his passions, the knowledge of duties which must daily be
+performed, and the detection of dangers which must daily be incurred.
+
+This angelick counsel every man of letters should always have before
+him. He that devotes himself to retired study naturally sinks from
+omission to forgetfulness of social duties; he must be therefore
+sometimes awakened and recalled to the general condition of mankind.
+
+I am far from any intention to limit curiosity, or confine the labours
+of learning to arts of immediate and necessary use. It is only from the
+various essays of experimental industry, and the vague excursions of
+minds sent out upon discovery, that any advancement of knowledge can be
+expected; and, though many must be disappointed in their labours, yet
+they are not to be charged with having spent their time in vain; their
+example contributed to inspire emulation, and their miscarriages taught
+others the way to success.
+
+But the distant hope of being one day useful or eminent, ought not to
+mislead us too far from that study which is equally requisite to the
+great and mean, to the celebrated and obscure; the art of moderating the
+desires, of repressing the appetites, and of conciliating or retaining
+the favour of mankind.
+
+No man can imagine the course of his own life, or the conduct of the
+world around him, unworthy his attention; yet, among the sons of
+learning, many seem to have thought of every thing rather than of
+themselves, and to have observed every thing but what passes before
+their eyes: many who toil through the intricacy of complicated systems,
+are insuperably embarrassed with the least perplexity in common affairs;
+many who compare the actions, and ascertain the characters of ancient
+heroes, let their own days glide away without examination, and suffer
+vicious habits to encroach upon their minds without resistance or
+detection.
+
+The most frequent reproach of the scholastick race is the want of
+fortitude, not martial but philosophick. Men bred in shades and silence,
+taught to immure themselves at sunset, and accustomed to no other weapon
+than syllogism, may be allowed to feel terrour at personal danger, and
+to be disconcerted by tumult and alarm. But why should he whose life is
+spent in contemplation, and whose business is only to discover truth, be
+unable to rectify the fallacies of imagination, or contend successfully
+against prejudice and passion? To what end has he read and meditated, if
+he gives up his understanding to false appearances, and suffers himself
+to be enslaved by fear of evils to which only folly or vanity can expose
+him, or elated by advantages to which, as they are equally conferred
+upon the good and bad, no real dignity is annexed.
+
+Such, however, is the state of the world, that the most obsequious of
+the slaves of pride, the most rapturous of the gazers upon wealth, the
+most officious of the whisperers of greatness, are collected from
+seminaries appropriated to the study of wisdom and of virtue, where it
+was intended that appetite should learn to be content with little, and
+that hope should aspire only to honours which no human power can give or
+take away[j].
+
+The student, when he comes forth into the world, instead of
+congratulating himself upon his exemption from the errours of those
+whose opinions have been formed by accident or custom, and who live
+without any certain principles of conduct, is commonly in haste to
+mingle with the multitude, and shew his sprightliness and ductility by
+an expeditious compliance with fashions or vices. The first smile of a
+man, whose fortune gives him power to reward his dependants, commonly
+enchants him beyond resistance; the glare of equipage, the sweets of
+luxury, the liberality of general promises, the softness of habitual
+affability, fill his imagination; and he soon ceases to have any other
+wish than to be well received, or any measure of right and wrong but the
+opinion of his patron.
+
+A man flattered and obeyed, learns to exact grosser adulation, and
+enjoin lower submission. Neither our virtues nor vices are all our own.
+If there were no cowardice, there would be little insolence; pride
+cannot rise to any great degree, but by the concurrence of blandishment
+or the sufferance of tameness. The wretch who would shrink and crouch
+before one that should dart his eyes upon him with the spirit of natural
+equality, becomes capricious and tyrannical when he sees himself
+approached with a downcast look, and hears the soft address of awe and
+servility. To those who are willing to purchase favour by cringes and
+compliance, is to be imputed the haughtiness that leaves nothing to be
+hoped by firmness and integrity.
+
+If, instead of wandering after the meteors of philosophy, which fill the
+world with splendour for a while, and then sink and are forgotten, the
+candidates of learning fixed their eyes upon the permanent lustre of
+moral and religious truth, they would find a more certain direction to
+happiness. A little plausibility of discourse, and acquaintance with
+unnecessary speculations, is dearly purchased, when it excludes those
+instructions which fortify the heart with resolution, and exalt the
+spirit to independence.
+
+[Footnote j: "Such are a sort of sacrilegious ministers in the temple of
+intellect. They profane its shew-bread to pamper the palate, its
+everlasting lamp they use to light unholy fires within their breast, and
+show them the way to the sensual chambers of sense and worldliness."
+IRVING.]
+
+
+
+No. 181. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1751.
+
+ _--Neu fluitem dubue spe pendulus horae_. HOR. Lib. i. Ep. xviii. 110.
+
+ Nor let me float in fortune's pow'r,
+ Dependent on the future hour. FRANCIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+As I have passed much of my life in disquiet and suspense, and lost many
+opportunities of advantage by a passion which I have reason to believe
+prevalent in different degrees over a great part of mankind, I cannot
+but think myself well qualified to warn those who are yet uncaptivated,
+of the danger which they incur by placing themselves within its
+influence.
+
+I served an apprenticeship to a linen-draper, with uncommon reputation
+for diligence and fidelity; and at the age of three-and-twenty opened a
+shop for myself with a large stock, and such credit among all the
+merchants, who were acquainted with my master, that I could command
+whatever was imported curious or valuable. For five years I proceeded
+with success proportionate to close application and untainted integrity;
+was a daring bidder at every sale; always paid my notes before they were
+due; and advanced so fast in commercial reputation, that I was
+proverbially marked out as the model of young traders, and every one
+expected that a few years would make me an alderman.
+
+In this course of even prosperity, I was one day persuaded to buy a
+ticket in the lottery. The sum was inconsiderable, part was to be repaid
+though fortune might fail to favour me, and therefore my established
+maxims of frugality did not restrain me from so trifling an experiment.
+The ticket lay almost forgotten till the time at which every man's fate
+was to be determined; nor did the affair even then seem of any
+importance, till I discovered by the publick papers that the number next
+to mine had conferred the great prize.
+
+My heart leaped at the thought of such an approach to sudden riches,
+which I considered myself, however contrarily to the laws of
+computation, as having missed by a single chance; and I could not
+forbear to revolve the consequences which such a bounteous allotment
+would have produced, if it had happened to me. This dream of felicity,
+by degrees, took possession of my imagination. The great delight of my
+solitary hours was to purchase an estate, and form plantations with
+money which once might have been mine, and I never met my friends but I
+spoiled all their merriment by perpetual complaints of my ill luck.
+
+At length another lottery was opened, and I had now so heated my
+imagination with the prospect of a prize, that I should have pressed
+among the first purchasers, had not my ardour been withheld by
+deliberation upon the probability of success from one ticket rather than
+another. I hesitated long between even and odd; considered the square
+and cubick numbers through the lottery; examined all those to which good
+luck had been hitherto annexed; and at last fixed upon one, which, by
+some secret relation to the events of my life, I thought predestined to
+make me happy. Delay in great affairs is often mischievous; the ticket
+was sold, and its possessor could not be found.
+
+I returned to my conjectures, and after many arts of prognostication,
+fixed upon another chance, but with less confidence. Never did captive,
+heir, or lover, feel so much vexation from the slow pace of time, as I
+suffered between the purchase of my ticket and the distribution of the
+prizes. I solaced my uneasiness as well as I could, by frequent
+contemplation of approaching happiness; when the sun rose I knew it
+would set, and congratulated myself at night that I was so much nearer
+to my wishes. At last the day came, my ticket appeared, and rewarded all
+my care and sagacity with a despicable prize of fifty pounds.
+
+My friends, who honestly rejoiced upon my success, were very coldly
+received; I hid myself a fortnight in the country, that my chagrin might
+fume away without observation, and then returning to my shop, began to
+listen after another lottery.
+
+With the news of a lottery I was soon gratified, and having now found
+the vanity of conjecture, and inefficacy of computation, I resolved to
+take the prize by violence, and therefore bought forty tickets, not
+omitting, however, to divide them between the even and odd numbers, that
+I might not miss the lucky class. Many conclusions did I form, and many
+experiments did I try, to determine from which of those tickets I might
+most reasonably expect riches. At last, being unable to satisfy myself
+by any modes of reasoning, I wrote the numbers upon dice, and allotted
+five hours every day to the amusement of throwing them in a garret; and,
+examining the event by an exact register, found, on the evening before
+the lottery was drawn, that one of my numbers had been turned up five
+times more than any of the rest in three hundred and thirty thousand
+throws.
+
+This experiment was fallacious; the first day presented the hopeful
+ticket, a detestable blank. The rest came out with different fortune,
+and in conclusion I lost thirty pounds by this great adventure.
+
+I had now wholly changed the cast of my behaviour and the conduct of my
+life. The shop was for the most part abandoned to my servants, and if I
+entered it, my thoughts were so engrossed by my tickets, that I scarcely
+heard or answered a question, but considered every customer as an
+intruder upon my meditations, whom I was in haste to despatch. I mistook
+the price of my goods, committed blunders in my bills, forgot to file my
+receipts, and neglected to regulate my books. My acquaintances by
+degrees began to fall away; but I perceived the decline of my business
+with little emotion, because whatever deficience there might be in my
+gains, I expected the next lottery to supply.
+
+Miscarriage naturally produces diffidence; I began now to seek
+assistance against ill luck, by an alliance with those that had been
+more successful. I inquired diligently at what office any prize had been
+sold, that I might purchase of a propitious vender; solicited those who
+had been fortunate in former lotteries, to partake with me in my new
+tickets; and whenever I met with one that had in any event of his life
+been eminently prosperous, I invited him to take a larger share. I had,
+by this rule of conduct, so diffused my interest, that I had a fourth
+part of fifteen tickets, an eighth of forty, and a sixteenth of ninety.
+
+I waited for the decision of my fate with my former palpitations, and
+looked upon the business of my trade with the usual neglect. The wheel
+at last was turned, and its revolutions brought me a long succession of
+sorrows and disappointments. I indeed often partook of a small prize,
+and the loss of one day was generally balanced by the gain of the next;
+but my desires yet remained unsatisfied, and when one of my chances had
+failed, all my expectation was suspended on those which remained yet
+undetermined. At last a prize of five thousand pounds was proclaimed; I
+caught fire at the cry, and inquiring the number, found it to be one of
+my own tickets, which I had divided among those on whose luck I
+depended, and of which I had retained only a sixteenth part.
+
+You will easily judge with what detestation of himself, a man thus
+intent upon gain reflected that he had sold a prize which was once in
+his possession. It was to no purpose, that I represented to my mind the
+impossibility of recalling the past, or the folly of condemning an act,
+which only its event, an event which no human intelligence could
+foresee, proved to be wrong. The prize which, though put in my hands,
+had been suffered to slip from me, filled me with anguish, and knowing
+that complaint would only expose me to ridicule, I gave myself up
+silently to grief, and lost by degrees my appetite and my rest.
+
+My indisposition soon became visible; I was visited by my friends, and
+among them by Eumathes, a clergyman, whose piety and learning gave him
+such an ascendant over me, that I could not refuse to open my heart.
+There are, said he, few minds sufficiently firm to be trusted in the
+hands of chance. Whoever finds himself inclined to anticipate futurity,
+and exalt possibility to certainty, should avoid every kind of casual
+adventure, since his grief must be always proportionate to his hope. You
+have long wasted that time, which, by a proper application, would have
+certainly, though moderately, increased your fortune, in a laborious and
+anxious pursuit of a species of gain, which no labour or anxiety, no art
+or expedient, can secure or promote. You are now fretting away your life
+in repentance of an act, against which repentance can give no caution,
+but to avoid the occasion of committing it. Rouse from this lazy dream
+of fortuitous riches, which, if obtained, you could scarcely have
+enjoyed, because they could confer no consciousness of desert; return to
+rational and manly industry, and consider the mere gift of luck as below
+the care of a wise man.
+
+
+
+No. 182. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1751.
+
+ _--Dives qui fieri vult,
+ Et cilo vult fieri.--_ JUV. Sat. xiv. 176
+
+ The lust of wealth can never bear delay.
+
+It has been observed in a late paper, that we are unreasonably desirous
+to separate the goods of life from those evils which Providence has
+connected with them, and to catch advantages without paying the price at
+which they are offered us. Every man wishes to be rich, but very few
+have the powers necessary to raise a sudden fortune, either by new
+discoveries, or by superiority of skill, in any necessary employment;
+and among lower understandings, many want the firmness and industry
+requisite to regular gain and gradual acquisitions.
+
+From the hope of enjoying affluence by methods more compendious than
+those of labour, and more generally practicable than those of genius,
+proceeds the common inclination to experiment and hazard, and that
+willingness to snatch all opportunities of growing rich by chance,
+which, when it has once taken possession of the mind, is seldom driven
+out either by time or argument, but continues to waste life in perpetual
+delusion, and generally ends in wretchedness and want.
+
+The folly of untimely exultation and visionary prosperity, is by no
+means peculiar to the purchasers of tickets; there are multitudes whose
+life is nothing but a continual lottery; who are always within a few
+months of plenty and happiness, and how often soever they are mocked
+with blanks, expect a prize from the next adventure.
+
+Among the most resolute and ardent of the votaries of chance, may be
+numbered the mortals whose hope is to raise themselves by a wealthy
+match; who lay out all their industry on the assiduities of courtship,
+and sleep and wake with no other ideas than of treats, compliments,
+guardians and rivals.
+
+One of the most indefatigable of this class, is my old friend Leviculus,
+whom I have never known for thirty years without some matrimonial
+project of advantage. Leviculus was bred under a merchant, and by the
+graces of his person, the sprightliness of his prattle, and the neatness
+of his dress, so much enamoured his master's second daughter, a girl of
+sixteen, that she declared her resolution to have no other husband. Her
+father, after having chidden her for undutifulness, consented to the
+match, not much to the satisfaction of Leviculus, who was sufficiently
+elated with his conquest to think himself entitled to a larger fortune.
+He was, however, soon rid of his perplexity, for his mistress died
+before their marriage.
+
+He was now so well satisfied with his own accomplishments, that he
+determined to commence fortune-hunter; and when his apprenticeship
+expired, instead of beginning, as was expected, to walk the Exchange
+with a face of importance, or associating himself with those who were
+most eminent for their knowledge of the stocks, he at once threw off the
+solemnity of the counting-house, equipped himself with a modish wig,
+listened to wits in coffee-houses, passed his evenings behind the scenes
+in the theatres, learned the names of beauties of quality, hummed the
+last stanzas of fashionable songs, talked with familiarity of high play,
+boasted of his achievements upon drawers and coachmen, was often brought
+to his lodgings at midnight in a chair, told with negligence and
+jocularity of bilking a tailor, and now and then let fly a shrewd jest
+at a sober citizen.
+
+Thus furnished with irresistible artillery, he turned his batteries upon
+the female world, and, in the first warmth of self-approbation, proposed
+no less than the possession of riches and beauty united. He therefore
+paid his civilities to Flavilla, the only daughter of a wealthy
+shop-keeper, who not being accustomed to amorous blandishments, or
+respectful addresses, was delighted with the novelty of love, and easily
+suffered him to conduct her to the play, and to meet her where she
+visited. Leviculus did not doubt but her father, however offended by a
+clandestine marriage, would soon be reconciled by the tears of his
+daughter, and the merit of his son-in-law, and was in haste to conclude
+the affair. But the lady liked better to be courted than married, and
+kept him three years in uncertainty and attendance. At last she fell in
+love with a young ensign at a ball, and having danced with him all
+night, married him in the morning.
+
+Leviculus, to avoid the ridicule of his companions, took a journey to a
+small estate in the country, where, after his usual inquiries concerning
+the nymphs in the neighbourhood, he found it proper to fall in love with
+Altilia, a maiden lady, twenty years older than himself, for whose
+favour fifteen nephews and nieces were in perpetual contention. They
+hovered round her with such jealous officiousness, as scarcely left a
+moment vacant for a lover. Leviculus, nevertheless, discovered his
+passion in a letter, and Altilia could not withstand the pleasure of
+hearing vows and sighs, and flatteries and protestations. She admitted
+his visits, enjoyed for five years the happiness of keeping all her
+expectants in perpetual alarms, and amused herself with the various
+stratagems which were practised to disengage her affections. Sometimes
+she was advised with great earnestness to travel for her health, and
+sometimes entreated to keep her brother's house. Many stories were
+spread to the disadvantage of Leviculus, by which she commonly seemed
+affected for a time, but took care soon afterwards to express her
+conviction of their falsehood. But being at last satiated with this
+ludicrous tyranny, she told her lover, when he pressed for the reward of
+his services, that she was very sensible of his merit, but was resolved
+not to impoverish an ancient family.
+
+He then returned to the town, and soon after his arrival, became
+acquainted with Latronia, a lady distinguished by the elegance of her
+equipage, and the regularity of her conduct. Her wealth was evident in
+her magnificence, and her prudence in her economy, and therefore
+Leviculus, who had scarcely confidence to solicit her favour, readily
+acquitted fortune of her former debts, when he found himself
+distinguished by her with such marks of preference as a woman of modesty
+is allowed to give. He now grew bolder, and ventured to breathe out his
+impatience before her. She heard him without resentment, in time
+permitted him to hope for happiness, and at last fixed the nuptial day,
+without any distrustful reserve of pin-money, or sordid stipulations for
+jointure, and settlements.
+
+Leviculus was triumphing on the eve of marriage, when he heard on the
+stairs the voice of Latronia's maid, whom frequent bribes had secured in
+his service. She soon burst into his room, and told him that she could
+not suffer him to be longer deceived; that her mistress was now spending
+the last payment of her fortune, and was only supported in her expense
+by the credit of his estate. Leviculus shuddered to see himself so near
+a precipice, and found that he was indebted for his escape to the
+resentment of the maid, who having assisted Latronia to gain the
+conquest, quarrelled with her at last about the plunder.
+
+Leviculus was now hopeless and disconsolate, till one Sunday he saw a
+lady in the Mall, whom her dress declared a widow, and whom, by the
+jolting prance of her gait, and the broad resplendence of her
+countenance, he guessed to have lately buried some prosperous citizen.
+He followed her home, and found her to be no less than the relict of
+Prune the grocer, who, having no children, had bequeathed to her all his
+debts and dues, and his estates real and personal. No formality was
+necessary in addressing madam Prune, and therefore Leviculus went next
+morning without an introductor. His declaration was received with a loud
+laugh; she then collected her countenance, wondered at his impudence,
+asked if he knew to whom he was talking, then shewed him the door, and
+again laughed to find him confused. Leviculus discovered that this
+coarseness was nothing more than the coquetry of Cornhill, and next day
+returned to the attack. He soon grew familiar to her dialect, and in a
+few weeks heard, without any emotion, hints of gay clothes with empty
+pockets; concurred in many sage remarks on the regard due to people of
+property; and agreed with her in detestation of the ladies at the other
+end of the town, who pinched their bellies to buy fine laces, and then
+pretended to laugh at the city.
+
+He sometimes presumed to mention marriage; but was always answered with
+a slap, a hoot, and a flounce. At last he began to press her closer, and
+thought himself more favourably received; but going one morning, with a
+resolution to trifle no longer, he found her gone to church with a young
+journeyman from the neighbouring shop, of whom she had become enamoured
+at her window.
+
+In these, and a thousand intermediate adventures, has Leviculus spent
+his time, till he is now grown grey with age, fatigue, and
+disappointment. He begins at last to find that success is not to be
+expected, and being unfit for any employment that might improve his
+fortune, and unfurnished with any arts that might amuse his leisure, is
+condemned to wear out a tasteless life in narratives which few will
+hear, and complaints which none will pity.
+
+
+
+No. 183. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1751.
+
+ _Nidla fides regni sociis, omnisque potestas
+ Impatiens consortis erit_. LUCAN. Lib. i. 92.
+
+ No faith of partnership dominion owns;
+ Still discord hovers o'er divided thrones.
+
+The hostility perpetually exercised between one man and another, is
+caused by the desire of many for that which only few can possess. Every
+man would be rich, powerful, and famous; yet fame, power, and riches are
+only the names of relative conditions, which imply the obscurity,
+dependance, and poverty of greater numbers. This universal and incessant
+competition produces injury and malice by two motives, interest and
+envy; the prospect of adding to our possessions what we can take from
+others, and the hope of alleviating the sense of our disparity by
+lessening others, though we gain nothing to ourselves.
+
+Of these two malignant and destructive powers, it seems probable at the
+first view, that interest has the strongest and most extensive
+influence. It is easy to conceive that opportunities to seize what has
+been long wanted, may excite desires almost irresistible; but surely the
+same eagerness cannot be kindled by an accidental power of destroying
+that which gives happiness to another. It must be more natural to rob
+for gain, than to ravage only for mischief.
+
+Yet I am inclined to believe, that the great law of mutual benevolence
+is oftener violated by envy than by interest, and that most of the
+misery which the defamation of blameless actions, or the obstruction of
+honest endeavours, brings upon the world, is inflicted by men that
+propose no advantage to themselves but the satisfaction of poisoning the
+banquet which they cannot taste, and blasting the harvest which they
+have no right to reap.
+
+Interest can diffuse itself but to a narrow compass. The number is never
+large of those who can hope to fill the posts of degraded power, catch
+the fragments of shattered fortune, or succeed to the honours of
+depreciated beauty. But the empire of envy has no limits, as it requires
+to its influence very little help from external circumstances. Envy may
+always be produced by idleness and pride, and in what place will they
+not be found?
+
+Interest requires some qualities not universally bestowed. The ruin of
+another will produce no profit to him who has not discernment to mark
+his advantage, courage to seize, and activity to pursue it; but the cold
+malignity of envy may be exerted in a torpid and quiescent state, amidst
+the gloom of stupidity, in the coverts of cowardice. He that falls by
+the attacks of interest, is torn by hungry tigers; he may discover and
+resist his enemies. He that perishes in the ambushes of envy, is
+destroyed by unknown and invisible assailants, and dies like a man
+suffocated by a poisonous vapour, without knowledge of his danger, or
+possibility of contest.
+
+Interest is seldom pursued but at some hazard. He that hopes to gain
+much, has commonly something to lose, and when he ventures to attack
+superiority, if he fails to conquer, is irrecoverably crushed. But envy
+may act without expense or danger. To spread suspicion, to invent
+calumnies, to propagate scandal, requires neither labour nor courage. It
+is easy for the author of a lie, however malignant, to escape detection,
+and infamy needs very little industry to assist its circulation.
+
+Envy is almost the only vice which is practicable at all times, and in
+every place; the only passion which can never lie quiet for want of
+irritation: its effects therefore are every where discoverable, and its
+attempts always to be dreaded.
+
+It is impossible to mention a name which any advantageous distinction
+has made eminent, but some latent animosity will burst out. The wealthy
+trader, however he may abstract himself from publick affairs, will never
+want those who hint, with Shylock, that ships are but boards. The
+beauty, adorned only with the unambitious graces of innocence and
+modesty, provokes, whenever she appears, a thousand murmurs of
+detraction. The genius, even when he endeavours only to entertain or
+instruct, yet suffers persecution from innumerable criticks, whose
+acrimony is excited merely by the pain of seeing others pleased, and of
+hearing applauses which another enjoys.
+
+The frequency of envy makes it so familiar, that it escapes our notice;
+nor do we often reflect upon its turpitude or malignity, till we happen
+to feel its influence. When he that has given no provocation to malice,
+but by attempting to excel, finds himself pursued by multitudes whom he
+never saw, with all the implacability of personal resentment; when he
+perceives clamour and malice let loose upon him as a publick enemy, and
+incited by every stratagem of defamation; when he hears the misfortunes
+of his family, or the follies of his youth, exposed to the world; and
+every failure of conduct, or defect of nature, aggravated and ridiculed;
+he then learns to abhor those artifices at which he only laughed before,
+and discovers how much the happiness of life would be advanced by the
+eradication of envy from the human heart.
+
+Envy is, indeed, a stubborn weed of the mind, and seldom yields to the
+culture of philosophy. There are, however, considerations, which, if
+carefully implanted and diligently propagated, might in time overpower
+and repress it, since no one can nurse it for the sake of pleasure, as
+its effects are only shame, anguish, and perturbation. It is above all
+other vices inconsistent with the character of a social being, because
+it sacrifices truth and kindness to very weak temptations. He that
+plunders a wealthy neighbour gains as much as he takes away, and may
+improve his own condition in the same proportion as he impairs
+another's; but he that blasts a flourishing reputation, must be content
+with a small dividend of additional fame, so small as can afford very
+little consolation to balance the guilt by which it is obtained.
+
+I have hitherto avoided that dangerous and empirical morality, which
+cures one vice by means of another. But envy is so base and detestable,
+so vile in its original, and so pernicious in its effects, that the
+predominance of almost any other quality is to be preferred. It is one
+of those lawless enemies of society, against which poisoned arrows may
+honestly be used. Let it therefore be constantly remembered, that
+whoever envies another, confesses his superiority, and let those be
+reformed by their pride who have lost their virtue.
+
+It is no slight aggravation of the injuries which envy incites, that
+they are committed against those who have given no intentional
+provocation; and that the sufferer is often marked out for ruin, not
+because he has failed in any duty, but because he has dared to do more
+than was required.
+
+Almost every other crime is practised by the help of some quality which
+might have produced esteem or love, if it had been well employed; but
+envy is mere unmixed and genuine evil; it pursues a hateful end by
+despicable means, and desires not so much its own happiness as another's
+misery. To avoid depravity like this, it is not necessary that any one
+should aspire to heroism or sanctity, but only that he should resolve
+not to quit the rank which nature assigns him, and wish to maintain the
+dignity of a human being.
+
+
+
+No. 184. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1751.
+
+ _Permittes ipsis expendere numinibus, quid
+ Conveniat nobis, rebusque sit utile nostris_. JUV. Sat. x. 347.
+
+ Intrust thy fortune to the pow'rs above;
+ Leave them to manage for thee, and to grant
+ What their unerring wisdom sees thee want. DRYDEN.
+
+As every scheme of life, so every form of writing, has its advantages
+and inconveniencies, though not mingled in the same proportions. The
+writer of essays escapes many embarrassments to which a large work would
+have exposed him; he seldom harasses his reason with long trains of
+consequences, dims his eyes with the perusal of antiquated volumes, or
+burthens his memory with great accumulations of preparatory knowledge. A
+careless glance upon a favourite author, or transient survey of the
+varieties of life, is sufficient to supply the first hint or seminal
+idea, which, enlarged by the gradual accretion of matter stored in the
+mind, is by the warmth of fancy easily expanded into flowers, and
+sometimes ripened into fruit.
+
+The most frequent difficulty by which the authors of these petty
+compositions are distressed, arises from the perpetual demand of novelty
+and change. The compiler of a system of science lays his invention at
+rest, and employs only his judgment, the faculty exerted with least
+fatigue. Even the relator of feigned adventures, when once the principal
+characters are established, and the great events regularly connected,
+finds incidents and episodes crowding upon his mind; every change opens
+new views, and the latter part of the story grows without labour out of
+the former. But he that attempts to entertain his reader with
+unconnected pieces, finds the irksomeness of his task rather increased
+than lessened by every production. The day calls afresh upon him for a
+new topick, and he is again obliged to choose, without any principle to
+regulate his choice.
+
+It is indeed true, that there is seldom any necessity of looking far, or
+inquiring long for a proper subject. Every diversity of art or nature,
+every publick blessing or calamity, every domestick pain or
+gratification, every sally of caprice, blunder of absurdity, or
+stratagem of affectation, may supply matter to him whose only rule is to
+avoid uniformity. But it often happens, that the judgment is distracted
+with boundless multiplicity, the imagination ranges from one design to
+another, and the hours pass imperceptibly away, till the composition can
+be no longer delayed, and necessity enforces the use of those thoughts
+which then happen to be at hand. The mind, rejoicing at deliverance on
+any terms from perplexity and suspense, applies herself vigorously to
+the work before her, collects embellishments and illustrations, and
+sometimes finishes, with great elegance and happiness, what in a state
+of ease and leisure she never had begun.
+
+It is not commonly observed, how much, even of actions, considered as
+particularly subject to choice, is to be attributed to accident, or some
+cause out of our own power, by whatever name it be distinguished. To
+close tedious deliberations with hasty resolves, and after long
+consultations with reason to refer the question to caprice, is by no
+means peculiar to the essayist. Let him that peruses this paper review
+the series of his life, and inquire how he was placed in his present
+condition. He will find, that of the good or ill which he has
+experienced, a great part came unexpected, without any visible
+gradations of approach; that every event has been influenced by causes
+acting without his intervention; and that whenever he pretended to the
+prerogative of foresight, he was mortified with new conviction of the
+shortness of his views.
+
+The busy, the ambitious, the inconstant, and the adventurous, may be
+said to throw themselves by design into the arms of fortune, and
+voluntarily to quit the power of governing themselves; they engage in a
+course of life in which little can be ascertained by previous measures;
+nor is it any wonder that their time is passed between elation and
+despondency, hope and disappointment.
+
+Some there are who appear to walk the road of life with more
+circumspection, and make no step till they think themselves secure from
+the hazard of a precipice, when neither pleasure nor profit can tempt
+them from the beaten path; who refuse to climb lest they should fall, or
+to run lest they should stumble, and move slowly forward without any
+compliance with those passions by which the heady and vehement are
+seduced and betrayed.
+
+Yet even the timorous prudence of this judicious class is far from
+exempting them from the dominion of chance, a subtle and insidious
+power, who will intrude upon privacy and embarrass caution. No course of
+life is so prescribed and limited, but that many actions must result
+from arbitrary election. Every one must form the general plan of his
+conduct by his own reflections; he must resolve whether he will
+endeavour at riches or at content; whether he will exercise private or
+publick virtues; whether he will labour for the general benefit of
+mankind, or contract his beneficence to his family and dependants.
+
+This question has long exercised the schools of philosophy, but remains
+yet undecided; and what hope is there that a young man, unacquainted
+with the arguments on either side, should determine his own destiny
+otherwise than by chance?
+
+When chance has given him a partner of his bed, whom he prefers to all
+other women, without any proof of superior desert, chance must again
+direct him in the education of his children; for, who was ever able to
+convince himself by arguments, that he had chosen for his son that mode
+of instruction to which his understanding was best adapted, or by which
+he would most easily be made wise or virtuous?
+
+Whoever shall inquire by what motives he was determined on these
+important occasions, will find them such as his pride will scarcely
+suffer him to confess; some sudden ardour of desire, some uncertain
+glimpse of advantage, some petty competition, some inaccurate
+conclusion, or some example implicitly reverenced. Such are often the
+first causes of our resolves; for it is necessary to act, but impossible
+to know the consequences of action, or to discuss all the reasons which
+offer themselves on every part to inquisitiveness and solicitude.
+
+Since life itself is uncertain, nothing which has life for its basis can
+boast much stability. Yet this is but a small part of our perplexity. We
+set out on a tempestuous sea in quest of some port, where we expect to
+find rest, but where we are not sure of admission, we are not only in
+danger of sinking in the way, but of being misled by meteors mistaken
+for stars, of being driven from our course by the changes of the wind,
+and of losing it by unskilful steerage; yet it sometimes happens, that
+cross winds blow us to a safer coast, that meteors draw us aside from
+whirlpools, and that negligence or errour contributes to our escape from
+mischiefs to which a direct course would have exposed us. Of those that,
+by precipitate conclusions, involve themselves in calamities without
+guilt, very few, however they may reproach themselves, can be certain
+that other measures would have been more successful.
+
+In this state of universal uncertainty, where a thousand dangers hover
+about us, and none can tell whether the good that he pursues is not evil
+in disguise, or whether the next step will lead him to safety or
+destruction, nothing can afford any rational tranquillity, but the
+conviction that, however we amuse ourselves with unideal sounds, nothing
+in reality is governed by chance, but that the universe is under the
+perpetual superintendance of Him who created it; that our being is in
+the hands of omnipotent Goodness, by whom what appears casual to us, is
+directed for ends ultimately kind and merciful; and that nothing can
+finally hurt him who debars not himself from the Divine favour.
+
+
+
+No. 185. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1751.
+
+ _At vindicta bonum vita jucundius ipsa,
+ Nempe hoc indocti.--
+ Chrysippus non dicet idem, nec mite Thaletis
+ Ingenium, dulcique senex vicinus Hymetto,
+ Qui partem adceptæ sæva inter vincla Cicutæ
+ Adcusatori nollet dare.--
+ --Quippe minuti
+ Semper et infirmi est animi exiguique voluptas
+ Ultio_. JUV. Sat. xiii. 180.
+
+ _But O! revenge is sweet_.
+ Thus think the crowd; who, eager to engage,
+ Take quickly fire, and kindle into rage.
+ Not so mild Thales nor Chrysippus thought,
+ Nor that good man, who drank the poisonous draught.
+ With mind serene; and could not wish to see
+ His vile accuser drink as deep as he:
+ Exalted Socrates! divinely brave!
+ Injur'd he fell, and dying he forgave!
+ Too noble for revenge; which still we find
+ The weakest frailty of a feeble mind. DRYDEN.
+
+No vicious dispositions of the mind more obstinately resist both the
+counsels of philosophy and the injunctions of religion, than those which
+are complicated with an opinion of dignity; and which we cannot dismiss
+without leaving in the hands of opposition some advantage iniquitously
+obtained, or suffering from our own prejudices some imputation of
+pusillanimity.
+
+For this reason scarcely any law of our Redeemer is more openly
+transgressed, or more industriously evaded, than that by which he
+commands his followers to forgive injuries, and prohibits, under the
+sanction of eternal misery, the gratification of the desire which every
+man feels to return pain upon him that inflicts it. Many who could have
+conquered their anger, are unable to combat pride, and pursue offences
+to extremity of vengeance, lest they should be insulted by the triumph
+of an enemy.
+
+But certainly no precept could better become him, at whose birth _peace_
+was proclaimed _to the earth_. For, what would so soon destroy all the
+order of society, and deform life with violence and ravage, as a
+permission to every one to judge his own cause, and to apportion his own
+recompense for imagined injuries?
+
+It is difficult for a man of the strictest justice not to favour himself
+too much, in the calmest moments of solitary meditation. Every one
+wishes for the distinctions for which thousands are wishing at the same
+time, in their own opinion, with better claims. He that, when his reason
+operates in its full force, can thus, by the mere prevalence of
+self-love, prefer himself to his fellow-beings, is very unlikely to
+judge equitably when his passions are agitated by a sense of wrong, and
+his attention wholly engrossed by pain, interest, or danger. Whoever
+arrogates, to himself the right of vengeance, shews how little he is
+qualified to decide his own claims, since he certainly demands what he
+would think unfit to be granted to another.
+
+Nothing is more apparent than that, however injured, or however
+provoked, some must at last be contented to forgive. For it can never be
+hoped, that he who first commits an injury, will contentedly acquiesce
+in the penalty required: the same haughtiness of contempt, or vehemence
+of desire, that prompt the act of injustice, will more strongly incite
+its justification; and resentment can never so exactly balance the
+punishment with the fault, but there will remain an overplus of
+vengeance which even he who condemns his first action will think himself
+entitled to retaliate. What then can ensue but a continual exacerbation
+of hatred, an unextinguishable feud, an incessant reciprocation of
+mischief, a mutual vigilance to entrap, and eagerness to destroy.
+
+Since then the imaginary right of vengeance must be at last remitted,
+because it is impossible to live in perpetual hostility, and equally
+impossible that of two enemies, either should first think himself
+obliged by justice to submission, it is surely eligible to forgive
+early. Every passion is more easily subdued before it has been long
+accustomed to possession of the heart; every idea is obliterated with
+less difficulty, as it has been more slightly impressed, and less
+frequently renewed. He who has often brooded over his wrongs, pleased
+himself with schemes of malignity, and glutted his pride with the
+fancied supplications of humbled enmity, will not easily open his bosom
+to amity and reconciliation, or indulge the gentle sentiments of
+benevolence and peace.
+
+It is easiest to forgive, while there is yet little to be forgiven. A
+single injury may be soon dismissed from the memory; but a long
+succession of ill offices by degrees associates itself with every idea;
+a long contest involves so many circumstances, that every place and
+action will recall it to the mind, and fresh remembrance of vexation
+must still enkindle rage, and irritate revenge.
+
+A wise man will make haste to forgive, because he knows the true value
+of time, and will not suffer it to pass away in unnecessary pain. He
+that willingly suffers the corrosions of inveterate hatred, and gives up
+his days and nights to the gloom of malice, and perturbations of
+stratagem, cannot surely be said to consult his ease. Resentment is an
+union of sorrow with malignity, a combination of a passion which all
+endeavour to avoid, with a passion which all concur to detest. The man
+who retires to meditate mischief, and to exasperate his own rage; whose
+thoughts are employed only on means of distress and contrivances of
+ruin; whose mind never pauses from the remembrance of his own
+sufferings, but to indulge some hope of enjoying the calamities of
+another, may justly be numbered among the most miserable of human
+beings, among those who are guilty without reward, who have neither the
+gladness of prosperity, nor the calm of innocence.
+
+Whoever considers the weakness both of himself and others, will not long
+want persuasives to forgiveness. We know not to what degree of malignity
+any injury is to be imputed; or how much its guilt, if we were to
+inspect the mind of him that committed it, would be extenuated by
+mistake, precipitance, or negligence; we cannot be certain how much more
+we feel than was intended to be inflicted, or how much we increase the
+mischief to ourselves by voluntary aggravations. We may charge to design
+the effects of accident; we may think the blow violent only because we
+have made ourselves delicate and tender; we are on every side in danger
+of errour and of guilt; which we are certain to avoid only by speedy
+forgiveness.
+
+From this pacifick and harmless temper, thus propitious to others and
+ourselves, to domestick tranquillity and to social happiness, no man is
+withheld but by pride, by the fear of being insulted by his adversary,
+or despised by the world.
+
+It may be laid down as an unfailing and universal axiom, that "all pride
+is abject and mean." It is always an ignorant, lazy, or cowardly
+acquiescence in a false appearance of excellence, and proceeds not from
+consciousness of our attainments, but insensibility of our wants.
+
+Nothing can be great which is not right. Nothing which reason condemns
+can be suitable to the dignity of the human mind. To be driven by
+external motives from the path which our own heart approves, to give way
+to any thing but conviction, to suffer the opinion of others to rule our
+choice, or overpower our resolves, is to submit tamely to the lowest and
+most ignominious slavery, and to resign the right of directing our own
+lives.
+
+The utmost excellence at which humanity can arrive, is a constant and
+determinate pursuit of virtue, without regard to present dangers or
+advantage; a continual reference of every action to the divine will; an
+habitual appeal to everlasting justice; and an unvaried elevation of the
+intellectual eye to the reward which perseverance only can obtain. But
+that pride which many, who presume to boast of generous sentiments,
+allow to regulate their measures, has nothing nobler in view than the
+approbation of men, of beings whose superiority we are under no
+obligation to acknowledge, and who, when we have courted them with the
+utmost assiduity, can confer no valuable or permanent reward; of beings
+who ignorantly judge of what they do not understand, or partially
+determine what they never have examined; and whose sentence is therefore
+of no weight till it has received the ratification of our own
+conscience.
+
+He that can descend to bribe suffrages like these, at the price of his
+innocence; he that can suffer the delight of such acclamations to
+withhold his attention from the commands of the universal Sovereign, has
+little reason to congratulate himself upon the greatness of his mind;
+whenever he awakes to seriousness and reflection, he must become
+despicable in his own eyes, and shrink with shame from the remembrance
+of his cowardice and folly.
+
+Of him that hopes to be forgiven, it is indispensably required that he
+forgive. It is therefore superfluous to urge any other motive. On this
+great duty eternity is suspended, and to him that refuses to practise
+it, the Throne of mercy is inaccessible, and the Saviour of the world
+has been born in vain.
+
+
+
+No. 186. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1751.
+
+ _Pone me, pigris ubi nulla campis
+ Arbor æstica recreatur aurâ--
+ Dulce ridentem Lalagen amabo,
+ Dulce loquentem_. HOR. Lib. i. Ode xxii. 17.
+
+ Place me where never summer breeze
+ Unbinds the glebe, or warms the trees;
+ Where ever lowering clouds appear,
+ And angry Jove deforms th' inclement year:
+ Love and the nymph shall charm my toils,
+ The nymph, who sweetly speaks and sweetly smiles. FRANCIS.
+
+Of the happiness and misery of our present state, part arises from our
+sensations, and part from our opinions; part is distributed by nature,
+and part is in a great measure apportioned by ourselves. Positive
+pleasure we cannot always obtain, and positive pain we often cannot
+remove. No man can give to his own plantations the fragrance of the
+Indian groves; nor will any precepts of philosophy enable him to
+withdraw his attention from wounds or diseases. But the negative
+infelicity which proceeds, not from the pressure of sufferings, but the
+absence of enjoyments, will always yield to the remedies of reason.
+
+One of the great arts of escaping superfluous uneasiness, is to free our
+minds from the habit of comparing our condition with that of others on
+whom the blessings of life are more bountifully bestowed, or with
+imaginary states of delight and security, perhaps unattainable by
+mortals. Few are placed in a situation so gloomy and distressful, as not
+to see every day beings yet more forlorn and miserable, from whom they
+may learn to rejoice in their own lot.
+
+No inconvenience is less superable by art or diligence than the
+inclemency of climates, and therefore none affords more proper exercise
+for this philosophical abstraction. A native of England, pinched with
+the frosts of December, may lessen his affection for his own country by
+suffering his imagination to wander in the vales of Asia, and sport
+among the woods that are always green, and streams that always murmur;
+but if he turns his thought towards the polar regions, and considers the
+nations to whom a great portion of the year is darkness, and who are
+condemned to pass weeks and months amidst mountains of snow, he will
+soon recover his tranquillity, and, while he stirs his fire, or throws
+his cloak about him, reflect how much he owes to Providence, that he is
+not placed in Greenland or Siberia.
+
+The barrenness of the earth and the severity of the skies in these
+dreary countries, are such as might be expected to confine the mind
+wholly to the contemplation of necessity and distress, so that the care
+of escaping death from cold and hunger, should leave no room for those
+passions which, in lands of plenty, influence conduct, or diversify
+characters; the summer should be spent only in providing for the winter,
+and the winter in longing for the summer.
+
+Yet learned curiosity is known to have found its way into these abodes
+of poverty and gloom: Lapland and Iceland have their historians, their
+criticks, and their poets; and love, that extends his dominion wherever
+humanity can be found, perhaps exerts the same power in the
+Greenlander's hut as in the palaces of eastern monarchs.
+
+In one of the large caves to which the families of Greenland retire
+together, to pass the cold months, and which may be termed their
+villages or cities, a youth and maid, who came from different parts of
+the country, were so much distinguished for their beauty, that they were
+called by the rest of the inhabitants Anningait and Ajut, from a
+supposed resemblance to their ancestors of the same names, who had been
+transformed of old into the sun and moon.
+
+Anningait for some time heard the praises of Ajut with little emotion,
+but at last, by frequent interviews, became sensible of her charms, and
+first made a discovery of his affection, by inviting her with her
+parents to a feast, where he placed before Ajut the tail of a whale.
+Ajut seemed not much delighted by this gallantry; yet, however, from
+that time was observed rarely to appear, but in a vest made of the skin
+of a white deer; she used frequently to renew the black dye upon her
+hands and forehead, to adorn her sleeves with coral and shells, and to
+braid her hair with great exactness.
+
+The elegance of her dress, and the judicious disposition of her
+ornaments, had such an effect upon Anningait, that he could no longer be
+restrained from a declaration of his love. He therefore composed a poem
+in her praise, in which, among other heroick and tender sentiments, he
+protested, that "she was beautiful as the vernal willow, and fragrant as
+the thyme upon the mountains; that her fingers were white as the teeth
+of the morse, and her smile grateful as the dissolution of the ice; that
+he would pursue her, though she should pass the snows of the midland
+cliffs, or seek shelter in the caves of the eastern cannibals: that he
+would tear her from the embraces of the genius of the rocks, snatch her
+from the paws of Amarock, and rescue her from the ravine of Hafgufa." He
+concluded with a wish, that "whoever shall attempt to hinder his union
+with Ajut, might be buried without his bow, and that, in the land of
+souls, his skull might serve for no other use than to catch the
+droppings of the starry lamps."
+
+This ode being universally applauded, it was expected that Ajut would
+soon yield to such fervour and accomplishments; but Ajut, with the
+natural haughtiness of beauty, expected all the forms of courtship; and
+before she would confess herself conquered, the sun returned, the ice
+broke, and the season of labour called all to their employments.
+
+Anningait and Ajut for a time always went out in the same boat, and
+divided whatever was caught. Anningait, in the sight of his mistress,
+lost no opportunity of signalizing his courage: he attacked the
+sea-horses on the ice; pursued the seals into the water, and leaped upon
+the back of the whale, while he was yet struggling with the remains of
+life. Nor was his diligence less to accumulate all that could be
+necessary to make winter comfortable: he dried the roe of fishes and the
+flesh of seals; he entrapped deer and foxes, and dressed their skins to
+adorn his bride; he feasted her with eggs from the rocks, and strewed her
+tent with flowers.
+
+It happened that a tempest drove the fish to a distant part of the
+coast, before Anningait had completed his store; he therefore entreated
+Ajut, that she would at last grant him her hand, and accompany him to
+that part of the country whither he was now summoned by necessity. Ajut
+thought him not yet entitled to such condescension, but proposed, as a
+trial of his constancy, that he should return at the end of summer to
+the cavern where their acquaintance commenced, and there expect the
+reward of his assiduities. "O virgin, beautiful as the sun shining on
+the water, consider," said Anningait, "what thou hast required. How
+easily may my return be precluded by a sudden frost or unexpected fogs!
+then must the night be passed without my Ajut. We live not, my fair, in
+those fabled countries, which lying strangers so wantonly describe;
+where the whole year is divided into short days and nights; where the
+same habitation serves for summer and winter; where they raise houses in
+rows above the ground, dwell together from year to year, with flocks of
+tame animals grazing in the fields about them; can travel at any time
+from one place to another, through ways inclosed with trees, or over
+walls raised upon the inland waters; and direct their course through
+wide countries by the sight of green hills or scattered buildings. Even
+in summer we have no means of crossing the mountains, whose snows are
+never dissolved; nor can remove to any distant residence, but in our
+boats coasting the bays. Consider, Ajut, a few summer-days, and a few
+winter-nights, and the life of man is at an end. Night is the time of
+ease and festivity, of revels and gaiety; but what will be the flaming
+lamp, the delicious seal, or the soft oil, without the smile of Ajut?"
+
+The eloquence of Anningait was vain; the maid continued inexorable, and
+they parted with ardent promises to meet again before the night of
+winter.
+
+
+
+No. 187. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1751.
+
+ _Non illum nostri possunt mutare labores;
+ Non si frigoribus mediis Hebrunique bibamus,
+ Sithoniasque nives hyemis subeamus aquosae:--
+ Ominia vincit amor. Vinc. Ec. x. 64_.
+
+ Love alters not for us his hard decrees,
+ Not though beneath the Thracian clime we freeze,
+ Or the mild bliss of temperate skies forego,
+ And in raid winter tread Sithonian snow:--
+ Love conquers all.--DRYDEN.
+
+Anningait, however discomposed by the dilatory coyness of Ajut, was yet
+resolved to omit no tokens of amorous respect; and therefore presented
+her at his departure with the skins of seven white fawns, of five swans
+and eleven seals, with three marble lamps, ten vessels of seal oil, and
+a large kettle of brass, which he had purchased from a ship, at the
+price of half a whale, and two horns of sea-unicorns.
+
+Ajut was so much affected by the fondness of her lover, or so much
+overpowered by his magnificence, that she followed him to the sea-side;
+and, when she saw him enter the boat, wished aloud, that he might return
+with plenty of skins and oil; that neither the mermaids might snatch him
+into the deeps, nor the spirits of the rocks confine him in their
+caverns.
+
+She stood a while to gaze upon the departing vessel, and then returning
+to her hut, silent and dejected, laid aside, from that hour, her white
+deer skin, suffered her hair to spread unbraided on her shoulders, and
+forbore to mix in the dances of the maidens. She endeavoured to divert
+her thoughts, by continual application to feminine employments, gathered
+moss for the winter lamps, and dried grass to line the boots of
+Anningait. Of the skins which he had bestowed upon her, she made a
+fishing-coat, a small boat, and tent, all of exquisite manufacture; and
+while she was thus busied, solaced her labours with a song, in which she
+prayed, "that her lover might have hands stronger than the paws of the
+bear, and feet swifter than the feet of the reindeer; that his dart
+might never err, and that his boat might never leak; that he might never
+stumble on the ice, nor faint in the water; that the seal might rush on
+his harpoon, and the wounded whale might dash the waves in vain."
+
+The large boats in which the Greenlanders transport their families, are
+always rowed by women; for a man will not debase himself by work, which
+requires neither skill nor courage. Anningait was therefore exposed by
+idleness to the ravages of passion. He went thrice to the stern of the
+boat, with an intent to leap into the water, and swim back to his
+mistress; but, recollecting the misery which they must endure in the
+winter, without oil for the lamp, or skins for the bed, he resolved to
+employ the weeks of absence in provision for a night of plenty and
+felicity. He then composed his emotions as he could, and expressed, in
+wild numbers and uncouth images, his hopes, his sorrows, and his fears.
+"O life!" says he, "frail and uncertain! where shall wretched man find
+thy resemblance, but in ice floating on the ocean? It towers on high, it
+sparkles from afar, while the storms drive and the waters beat it, the
+sun melts it above, and the rocks shatter it below. What art thou,
+deceitful pleasure! but a sudden blaze streaming from the north, which
+plays a moment on the eye, mocks the traveller with the hopes of light,
+and then vanishes for ever? What, love, art thou but a whirlpool, which
+we approach without knowledge of our danger, drawn on by imperceptible
+degrees, till we have lost all power of resistance and escape? Till I
+fixed my eyes on the graces of Ajut, while I had not yet called her to
+the banquet, I was careless as the sleeping morse, was merry as the
+singers in the stars. Why, Ajut, did I gaze upon thy graces? why, my
+fair, did I call thee to the banquet? Yet, be faithful, my love,
+remember Anningait, and meet my return with the smile of virginity. I
+will chase the deer, I will subdue the whale, resistless as the frost of
+darkness, and unwearied as the summer sun. In a few weeks I shall return
+prosperous and wealthy; then shall the roe-fish and the porpoise feast
+thy kindred; the fox and hare shall cover thy couch; the tough hide of
+the seal shall shelter thee from cold; and the fat of the whale
+illuminate thy dwelling."
+
+Anningait having with these sentiments consoled his grief, and animated
+his industry, found that they had now coasted the headland, and saw the
+whales spouting at a distance. He therefore placed himself in his
+fishing-boat, called his associates to their several employments, plied
+his oar and harpoon with incredible courage and dexterity; and, by
+dividing his time between the chace and fishery, suspended the miseries
+of absence and suspicion.
+
+Ajut, in the mean time, notwithstanding her neglected dress, happened,
+as she was drying some skins in the sun, to catch the eye of Norngsuk,
+on his return from hunting. Norngsuk was of birth truly illustrious. His
+mother had died in child-birth, and his father, the most expert fisher
+of Greenland, had perished by too close pursuit of the whale. His
+dignity was equalled by his riches; he was master of four men's and two
+women's boats, had ninety tubs of oil in his winter habitation, and
+five-and-twenty seals buried in the snow against the season of darkness.
+When he saw the beauty of Ajut, he immediately threw over her the skin
+of a deer that he had taken, and soon after presented her with a branch
+of coral. Ajut refused his gifts, and determined to admit no lover in
+the place of Anningait.
+
+Norngsuk, thus rejected, had recourse to stratagem. He knew that Ajut
+would consult an Angekkok, or diviner, concerning the fate of her lover,
+and the felicity of her future life. He therefore applied himself to the
+most celebrated Angekkok of that part of the country, and, by a present
+of two seals and a marble kettle, obtained a promise, that when Ajut
+should consult him, he would declare that her lover was in the land of
+souls. Ajut, in a short time, brought him a coat made by herself, and
+inquired what events were to befall her, with assurances of a much
+larger reward at the return of Anningait, if the prediction should
+flatter her desires. The Angekkok knew the way to riches, and foretold
+that Anningait, having already caught two whales, would soon return home
+with a large boat laden with provisions.
+
+This prognostication she was ordered to keep secret; and Norngsuk
+depending upon his artifice, renewed his addresses with greater
+confidence; but finding his suit still unsuccessful, applied himself to
+her parents with gifts and promises. The wealth of Greenland is too
+powerful for the virtue of a Greenlander; they forgot the merit and the
+presents of Anningait, and decreed Ajut to the embraces of Norngsuk. She
+entreated; she remonstrated; she wept, and raved; but finding riches
+irresistible, fled away into the uplands, and lived in a cave upon such
+berries as she could gather, and the birds or hares which she had the
+fortune to ensnare, taking care, at an hour when she was not likely to
+be found, to view the sea every day, that her lover might not miss her
+at his return.
+
+At last she saw the great boat in which Anningait had departed, stealing
+slow and heavy laden along the coast. She ran with all the impatience of
+affection to catch her lover in her arms, and relate her constancy and
+sufferings. When the company reached the land, they informed her that
+Anningait, after the fishery was ended, being unable to support the slow
+passage of the vessel of carriage, had set out before them in his
+fishing-boat, and they expected at their arrival to have found him on
+shore.
+
+Ajut, distracted at this intelligence, was about to fly into the hills,
+without knowing why, though she was now in the hands of her parents, who
+forced her back to their own hut, and endeavoured to comfort her; but
+when at last they retired to rest, Ajut went down to the beach; where,
+finding a fishing-boat, she entered it without hesitation, and telling
+those who wondered at her rashness, that she was going in search of
+Anningait, rowed away with great swiftness, and was seen no more.
+
+The fate of these lovers gave occasion to various fictions and
+conjectures. Some are of opinion, that they were changed into stars;
+others imagine, that Anningait was seized in his passage by the genius
+of the rocks, and that Ajut was transformed into a mermaid, and still
+continues to seek her lover in the deserts of the sea. But the general
+persuasion is, that they are both in that part of the land of souls
+where the sun never sets, where oil is always fresh, and provisions
+always warm. The virgins sometimes throw a thimble and a needle into the
+bay, from which the hapless maid departed; and when a Greenlander would
+praise any couple for virtuous affection, he declares that they love
+like Anningait and Ajut.
+
+
+
+No. 188. SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 1751.
+
+ --_Si te colo, Sexte, non amabo_. MART. Lib. ii. Ep. lv. 33.
+
+ The more I honour thee, the less I love.
+
+None of the desires dictated by vanity is more general, or less
+blamable, than that of being distinguished for the arts of conversation.
+Other accomplishments may be possessed without opportunity of exerting
+them, or wanted without danger that the defect can often be remarked;
+but as no man can live, otherwise than in an hermitage, without hourly
+pleasure or vexation, from the fondness or neglect of those about him,
+the faculty of giving pleasure is of continual use. Few are more
+frequently envied than those who have the power of forcing attention
+wherever they come, whose entrance is considered as a promise of
+felicity, and whose departure is lamented, like the recess of the sun
+from northern climates, as a privation of all that enlivens fancy, or
+inspirits gaiety.
+
+It is apparent, that to excellence in this valuable art, some peculiar
+qualifications are necessary; for every one's experience will inform
+him, that the pleasure which men are able to give in conversation, holds
+no stated proportion to their knowledge or their virtue. Many find their
+way to the tables and the parties of those who never consider them as of
+the least importance in any other place; we have all, at one time or
+other, been content to love those whom we could not esteem, and been
+persuaded to try the dangerous experiment of admitting him for a
+companion, whom we knew to be too ignorant for a counsellor, and too
+treacherous for a friend.
+
+I question whether some abatement of character is not necessary to
+general acceptance. Few spend their time with much satisfaction under
+the eye of uncontestable superiority; and therefore, among those whose
+presence is courted at assemblies of jollity, there are seldom found men
+eminently distinguished for powers or acquisitions. The wit whose
+vivacity condemns slower tongues to silence, the scholar whose knowledge
+allows no man to fancy that he instructs him, the critick who suffers no
+fallacy to pass undetected, and the reasoner who condemns the idle to
+thought, and the negligent to attention, are generally praised and
+feared, reverenced and avoided.
+
+He that would please must rarely aim at such excellence as depresses his
+hearers in their own opinion, or debars them from the hope of
+contributing reciprocally to the entertainment of the company.
+Merriment, extorted by sallies of imagination, sprightliness of remark,
+or quickness of reply, is too often what the Latins call, the Sardinian
+laughter, a distortion of the face without gladness of heart.
+
+For this reason, no style of conversation is more extensively acceptable
+than the narrative. He who has stored his memory with slight anecdotes,
+private incidents, and personal peculiarities, seldom fails to find his
+audience favourable. Almost every man listens with eagerness to
+contemporary history; for almost every man has some real or imaginary
+connexion with a celebrated character, some desire to advance or oppose
+a rising name. Vanity often co-operates with curiosity. He that is a
+hearer in one place, qualifies himself to become a speaker in another;
+for though he cannot comprehend a series of argument, or transport the
+volatile spirit of wit without evaporation, he yet thinks himself able
+to treasure up the various incidents of a story, and please his hopes
+with the information which he shall give to some inferior society.
+
+Narratives are for the most part heard without envy, because they are
+not supposed to imply any intellectual qualities above the common rate.
+To be acquainted with facts not yet echoed by plebeian mouths, may
+happen to one man as well as to another; and to relate them when they
+are known, has in appearance so little difficulty, that every one
+concludes himself equal to the task.
+
+But it is not easy, and in some situations of life not possible, to
+accumulate such a stock of materials as may support the expense of
+continual narration; and it frequently happens, that they who attempt
+this method of ingratiating themselves, please only at the first
+interview; and, for want of new supplies of intelligence, wear out their
+stories by continual repetition.
+
+There would be, therefore, little hope of obtaining the praise of a good
+companion, were it not to be gained by more compendious methods; but
+such is the kindness of mankind to all, except those who aspire to real
+merit and rational dignity, that every understanding may find some way
+to excite benevolence; and whoever is not envied may learn the art of
+procuring love. We are willing to be pleased, but are not willing to
+admire: we favour the mirth or officiousness that solicits our regard,
+but oppose the worth or spirit that enforces it.
+
+The first place among those that please, because they desire only to
+please, is due to the _merry fellow_, whose laugh is loud, and whose
+voice is strong; who is ready to echo every jest with obstreperous
+approbation, and countenance every frolick with vociferations of
+applause. It is not necessary to a merry fellow to have in himself any
+fund of jocularity, or force of conception; it is sufficient that he
+always appears in the highest exaltation of gladness, for the greater
+part of mankind are gay or serious by infection, and follow without
+resistance the attraction of example.
+
+Next to the merry fellow is the _good-natured man_, a being generally
+without benevolence, or any other virtue, than such as indolence and
+insensibility confer. The characteristick of a good-natured man is to
+bear a joke; to sit unmoved and unaffected amidst noise and turbulence,
+profaneness and obscenity; to hear every tale without contradiction; to
+endure insult without reply; and to follow the stream of folly, whatever
+course it shall happen to take. The good-natured man is commonly the
+darling of the petty wits, with whom they exercise themselves in the
+rudiments of raillery; for he never takes advantage of failings, nor
+disconcerts a puny satirist with unexpected sarcasms; but while the
+glass continues to circulate, contentedly bears the expense of an
+uninterrupted laughter, and retires rejoicing at his own importance.
+
+The _modest man_ is a companion of a yet lower rank, whose only power of
+giving pleasure is not to interrupt it. The modest man satisfies himself
+with peaceful silence, which all his companions are candid enough to
+consider as proceeding not from inability to speak, but willingness to
+hear.
+
+Many, without being able to attain any general character of excellence,
+have some single art of entertainment which serves them as a passport
+through the world. One I have known for fifteen years the darling of a
+weekly club, because every night, precisely at eleven, he begins his
+favourite song, and during the vocal performance, by corresponding
+motions of his hand, chalks out a giant upon the wall. Another has
+endeared himself to a long succession of acquaintances by sitting among
+them with his wig reversed; another by contriving to smut the nose of
+any stranger who was to be initiated in the club; another by purring
+like a cat, and then pretending to be frighted; and another by yelping
+like a hound, and calling to the drawers to drive out the dog[k].
+
+Such are the arts by which cheerfulness is promoted, and sometimes
+friendship established; arts, which those who despise them should not
+rigorously blame, except when they are practised at the expense of
+innocence; for it is always necessary to be loved, but not always
+necessary to be reverenced.
+
+
+
+No. 189. TUESDAY, JANUARY 7, 1752.
+
+ _Quod tam grande Sophos clamat tibi turba togata;
+ Non tu, Pomponi; caena diserta tua est_. MART. Lib. vi. Ep. xlviii.
+
+ Resounding plaudits though the crowd have rung;
+ Thy treat is eloquent, and not thy tongue. F. LEWIS.
+
+The world scarcely affords opportunities of making any
+observation more frequently, than on false claims to commendation.
+Almost every man wastes part of his life in attempts to display
+qualities which he does not possess, and to gain applause which he
+cannot keep; so that scarcely can two persons casually meet, but one is
+offended or diverted by the ostentation of the other.
+
+Of these pretenders it is fit to distinguish those who endeavour to
+deceive from them who are deceived; those who by designed impostures
+promote their interest, or gratify their pride, from them who mean only
+to force into regard their latent excellencies and neglected virtues;
+who believe themselves qualified to instruct or please, and therefore
+invite the notice of mankind.
+
+The artful and fraudulent usurpers of distinction deserve greater
+severities than ridicule and contempt, since they are seldom content
+with empty praise, but are instigated by passions more pernicious than
+vanity. They consider the reputation which they endeavour to establish
+as necessary to the accomplishment of some subsequent design, and value
+praise only as it may conduce to the success of avarice or ambition.
+
+The commercial world is very frequently put into confusion by the
+bankruptcy of merchants, that assumed the splendour of wealth only to
+obtain the privilege of trading with the stock of other men, and of
+contracting debts which nothing but lucky casualties could enable them
+to pay; till after having supported their appearance a while by
+tumultuous magnificence of boundless traffick, they sink at once, and
+drag down into poverty those whom their equipages had induced to trust
+them.
+
+Among wretches that place their happiness in the favour of the great, of
+beings whom only high titles or large estates set above themselves,
+nothing is more common than to boast of confidence which they do not
+enjoy; to sell promises which they know their interest unable to
+perform; and to reimburse the tribute which they pay to an imperious
+master, from the contributions of meaner dependants, whom they can amuse
+with tales of their influence, and hopes of their solicitation.
+
+Even among some, too thoughtless and volatile for avarice or ambition,
+may be found a species of falsehood more detestable than the levee or
+exchange can shew. There are men that boast of debaucheries, of which
+they never had address to be guilty; ruin, by lewd tales, the characters
+of women to whom they are scarcely known, or by whom they have been
+rejected; destroy in a drunken frolick the happiness of families; blast
+the bloom of beauty, and intercept the reward of virtue.
+
+Other artifices of falsehood, though utterly unworthy of an ingenuous
+mind, are not yet to be ranked with flagitious enormities, nor is it
+necessary to incite sanguinary justice against them, since they may be
+adequately punished by detection and laughter. The traveller who
+describes cities which he has never seen; the squire, who, at his return
+from London, tells of his intimacy with nobles to whom he has only bowed
+in the park or coffee-house; the author who entertains his admirers with
+stories of the assistance which he gives to wits of a higher rank; the
+city dame who talks of her visits at great houses, where she happens to
+know the cook-maid, are surely such harmless animals as truth herself
+may be content to despise without desiring to hurt them.
+
+But of the multitudes who struggle in vain for distinction, and display
+their own merits only to feel more acutely the sting of neglect, a great
+part are wholly innocent of deceit, and are betrayed, by infatuation and
+credulity, to that scorn with which the universal love of praise incites
+us all to drive feeble competitors out of our way.
+
+Few men survey themselves with so much severity, as not to admit
+prejudices in their own favour, which an artful flatterer may gradually
+strengthen, till wishes for a particular qualification are improved to
+hopes of attainment, and hopes of attainment to belief of possession.
+Such flatterers every one will find, who has power to reward their
+assiduities. Wherever there is wealth there will be dependance and
+expectation, and wherever there is dependance, there will be an
+emulation of servility.
+
+Many of the follies which provoke general censure, are the effects of
+such vanity as, however it might have wantoned in the imagination, would
+scarcely have dared the publick eye, had it not been animated and
+emboldened by flattery. Whatever difficulty there may be in the
+knowledge of ourselves, scarcely any one fails to suspect his own
+imperfections, till he is elevated by others to confidence. We are
+almost all naturally modest and timorous; but fear and shame are uneasy
+sensations, and whosoever helps to remove them is received with
+kindness.
+
+Turpicula was the heiress of a large estate, and having lost her mother
+in her infancy, was committed to a governess, whom misfortunes had
+reduced to suppleness and humility. The fondness of Turpicula's father
+would not suffer him to trust her at a publick school, but he hired
+domestick teachers, and bestowed on her all the accomplishments that
+wealth could purchase. But how many things are necessary to happiness
+which money cannot obtain! Thus secluded from all with whom she might
+converse on terms of equality, she heard none of those intimations of
+her defects, which envy, petulance, or anger, produce among children,
+where they are not afraid of telling what they think.
+
+Turpicula saw nothing but obsequiousness, and heard nothing but
+commendations. None are so little acquainted with the heart, as not to
+know that woman's first wish is to be handsome, and that consequently
+the readiest method of obtaining her kindness is to praise her beauty.
+Turpicula had a distorted shape and a dark complexion; yet, when the
+impudence of adulation had ventured to tell her of the commanding
+dignity of her motion, and the soft enchantment of her smile, she was
+easily convinced, that she was the delight or torment of every eye, and
+that all who gazed upon her felt the fire of envy or love. She therefore
+neglected the culture of an understanding which might have supplied the
+defects of her form, and applied all her care to the decoration of her
+person; for she considered that more could judge of beauty than of wit,
+and was, like the rest of human beings, in haste to be admired. The
+desire of conquest naturally led her to the lists in which beauty
+signalizes her power. She glittered at court, fluttered in the park, and
+talked aloud in the front box; but after a thousand experiments of her
+charms, was at last convinced that she had been flattered, and that her
+glass was honester than her maid.
+
+[Footnote k: Mrs. Piozzi, in her Anecdotes, informs us, that the man who
+sung, and, by corresponding motions of his arm, chalked out a giant on
+the wall, was one Richardson, an attorney: the ingenious imitator of a
+cat, was one Busby, a proctor in the Commons: and the father of Dr.
+Salter, of the Charter-House, a friend of Johnson's, and a member of the
+Ivy-Lane Club, was the person who yelped like a hound, and perplexed the
+distracted waiters.--Mr. Chalmers, in his preface to the Rambler,
+observes, that the above-quoted lively writer was the only authority for
+these assignments. She is certainly far too hasty and negligent to be
+relied on, when unsupported by other testimony.--See Preface.]
+
+
+
+No. 190. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1752.
+
+ _Ploravere suis non respondere favorem
+ Speratum meritis_.--HOR. Lib. ii. Ep. i. 9.
+
+ Henry and Alfred--
+ Clos'd their long glories with a sigh, to find
+ Th' unwilling gratitude of base mankind. POPE.
+
+Among the emirs and visiers, the sons of valour and of wisdom, that
+stand at the corners of the Indian throne, to assist the counsels or
+conduct the wars of the posterity of Timur, the first place was long
+held by Morad the son of Hanuth. Morad, having signalized himself in
+many battles and sieges, was rewarded with the government of a province,
+from which the fame of his wisdom and moderation was wafted to the
+pinnacles of Agra, by the prayers of those whom his administration made
+happy. The emperour called him into his presence, and gave into his hand
+the keys of riches, and the sabre of command. The voice of Morad was
+heard from the cliffs of Taurus to the Indian ocean, every tongue
+faultered in his presence, and every eye was cast down before him.
+
+Morad lived many years in prosperity; every day increased his wealth,
+and extended his influence. The sages repeated his maxims, the captains
+of thousands waited his commands. Competition withdrew into the cavern
+of envy, and discontent trembled at his own murmurs. But human greatness
+is short and transitory, as the odour of incense in the fire. The sun
+grew weary of gilding the palaces of Morad, the clouds of sorrow
+gathered round his head, and the tempest of hatred roared about his
+dwelling.
+
+Morad saw ruin hastily approaching. The first that forsook him were his
+poets; their example was followed by all those whom he had rewarded for
+contributing to his pleasures, and only a few, whose virtue had entitled
+them to favour, were now to be seen in his hall or chambers. He felt his
+danger, and prostrated himself at the foot of the throne. His accusers
+were confident and loud, his friends stood contented with frigid
+neutrality, and the voice of truth was overborne by clamour. He was
+divested of his power, deprived of his acquisitions, and condemned to
+pass the rest of his life on his hereditary estate.
+
+Morad had been so long-accustomed to crowds and business, supplicants
+and flattery, that he knew not how to fill up his hours in solitude; he
+saw with regret the sun rise to force on his eye a new day for which he
+had no use; and envied the savage that wanders in the desert, because he
+has no time vacant from the calls of nature, but is always chasing his
+prey, or sleeping in his den.
+
+His discontent in time vitiated his constitution, and a slow disease
+seized upon him. He refused physick, neglected exercise, and lay down on
+his couch peevish and restless, rather afraid to die than desirous to
+live. His domesticks, for a time, redoubled their assiduities; but
+finding that no officiousness could soothe, nor exactness satisfy, they
+soon gave way to negligence and sloth; and he that once commanded
+nations, often languished in his chamber without an attendant.
+
+In this melancholy state, he commanded messengers to recall his eldest
+son Abouzaid from the army. Abouzaid was alarmed at the account of his
+father's sickness, and hasted by long journeys to his place of
+residence. Morad was yet living, and felt his strength return at the
+embraces of his son; then commanding him to sit down at his bedside,
+"Abouzaid," says he, "thy father has no more to hope or fear from the
+inhabitants of the earth; the cold hand of the angel of death is now
+upon him, and the voracious grave is howling for his prey. Hear,
+therefore, the precepts of ancient experience, let not my last
+instructions issue forth in vain. Thou hast seen me happy and
+calamitous, thou hast beheld my exaltation and my fall. My power is in
+the hands of my enemies, my treasures have rewarded my accusers; but my
+inheritance, the clemency of the emperour has spared, and my wisdom his
+anger could not take away. Cast thine eyes around thee; whatever thou
+beholdest will, in a few hours, be thine: apply thine ear to my
+dictates, and these possessions will promote thy happiness. Aspire not
+to public honours, enter not the palaces of kings; thy wealth will set
+thee above insult, let thy moderation keep thee below envy. Content
+thyself with private dignity, diffuse thy riches among thy friends, let
+every day extend thy beneficence, and suffer not thy heart to be at rest
+till thou art loved by all to whom thou art known. In the height of my
+power, I said to defamation, Who will hear thee? and to artifice, What
+canst thou perform? But, my son, despise not thou the malice of the
+weakest, remember that venom supplies the want of strength, and that the
+lion may perish by the puncture of an asp."
+
+Morad expired in a few hours. Abouzaid, after the months of mourning,
+determined to regulate his conduct by his father's precepts, and
+cultivate the love of mankind by every art of kindness and endearment.
+He wisely considered, that domestick happiness was first to be secured,
+and that none have so much power of doing good or hurt, as those who are
+present in the hour of negligence, hear the bursts of thoughtless
+merriment, and observe the starts of unguarded passion. He therefore
+augmented the pay of all his attendants, and requited every exertion of
+uncommon diligence by supernumerary gratuities. While he congratulated
+himself upon the fidelity and affection of his family, he was in the
+night alarmed with robbers, who, being pursued and taken, declared that
+they had been admitted by one of his servants; the servant immediately
+confessed, that he unbarred the door, because another not more worthy of
+confidence was entrusted with the keys.
+
+Abouzaid was thus convinced that a dependant could not easily be made a
+friend; and that while many were soliciting for the first rank of
+favour, all those would be alienated whom he disappointed. He therefore
+resolved to associate with a few equal companions selected from among
+the chief men of the province. With these he lived happily for a time,
+till familiarity set them free from restraint, and every man thought
+himself at liberty to indulge his own caprice, and advance his own
+opinions. They then disturbed each other with contrariety of
+inclinations, and difference of sentiments, and Abouzaid was
+necessitated to offend one party by concurrence, or both by
+indifference.
+
+He afterwards determined to avoid a close union with beings so
+discordant in their nature, and to diffuse himself in a larger circle.
+He practised the smile of universal courtesy, and invited all to his
+table, but admitted none to his retirements. Many who had been rejected
+in his choice of friendship, now refused to accept his acquaintance; and
+of those whom plenty and magnificence drew to his table, every one
+pressed forward toward intimacy, thought himself overlooked in the
+crowd, and murmured because he was not distinguished above the rest. By
+degrees all made advances, and all resented repulse. The table was then
+covered with delicacies in vain; the musick sounded in empty rooms; and
+Abouzaid was left to form in solitude some new scheme of pleasure or
+security.
+
+Resolving now to try the force of gratitude, he inquired for men of
+science, whose merit was obscured by poverty. His house was soon crowded
+with poets, sculptors, painters, and designers, who wantoned in
+unexperienced plenty, and employed their powers in celebration of their
+patron. But in a short time they forgot the distress from which they had
+been rescued, and began to consider their deliverer as a wretch of
+narrow capacity, who was growing great by works which he could not
+perform, and whom they overpaid by condescending to accept his bounties.
+Abouzaid heard their murmurs and dismissed them, and from that hour
+continued blind to colours, and deaf to panegyrick.
+
+As the sons of art departed, muttering threats of perpetual infamy,
+Abouzaid, who stood at the gate, called to him Hamet the poet. "Hamet,"
+said he, "thy ingratitude has put an end to my hopes and experiments: I
+have now learned the vanity of those labours that wish to be rewarded by
+human benevolence; I shall henceforth do good, and avoid evil, without
+respect to the opinion of men; and resolve to solicit only the
+approbation of that Being whom alone we are sure to please by
+endeavouring to please him."
+
+
+
+No. 191. TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1752.
+
+ _Cereus in vitium flecli, monitoribus asper_. HOR. Art. Poet. 163.
+
+ The youth--
+ Yielding like wax, th' impressive folly bears;
+ Rough to reproof, and slow to future cares. FRANCIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+DEAR MR. RAMBLER,
+
+I have been four days confined to my chamber by a cold, which has
+already kept me from three plays, nine sales, five shows, and six
+card-tables, and put me seventeen visits behind-hand; and the doctor
+tells my mamma, that, if I fret and cry, it will settle in my head,
+and I shall not be fit to be seen these six weeks. But, dear Mr. Rambler,
+how can I help it? At this very time Melissa is dancing with the
+prettiest gentleman;--she will breakfast with him to-morrow, and then run
+to two auctions, and hear compliments, and have presents; then she will
+be drest, and visit, and get a ticket to the play; then go to cards and
+win, and come home with two flambeaux before her chair. Dear Mr.
+Rambler, who can bear it?
+
+My aunt has just brought me a bundle of your papers for my amusement.
+She says you are a philosopher, and will teach me to moderate my
+desires, and look upon the world with indifference. But, dear sir, I do
+not wish nor intend to moderate my desires, nor can I think it proper to
+look upon the world with indifference, till the world looks with
+indifference on me. I have been forced, however, to sit this morning a
+whole quarter of an hour with your paper before my face; but just as my
+aunt came in, Phyllida had brought me a letter from Mr. Trip, which I
+put within the leaves; and read about _absence_ and _inconsolableness_,
+and _ardour_, and _irresistible passion_, and _eternal constancy_, while
+my aunt imagined that I was puzzling myself with your philosophy, and
+often cried out when she saw me look confused, "If there is any word
+that you do not understand, child, I will explain it."
+
+Dear soul! how old people that think themselves wise may be imposed
+upon! But it is fit that they should take their turn, for I am sure,
+while they can keep poor girls close in the nursery, they tyrannize over
+us in a very shameful manner, and fill our imaginations with tales of
+terrour, only to make us live in quiet subjection, and fancy that we can
+never be safe but by their protection.
+
+I have a mamma and two aunts, who have all been formerly celebrated for
+wit and beauty, and are still generally admired by those that value
+themselves upon their understanding, and love to talk of vice and
+virtue, nature and simplicity, and beauty and propriety; but if there
+was not some hope of meeting me, scarcely a creature would come near
+them that wears a fashionable coat. These ladies, Mr. Rambler, have had
+me under their government fifteen years and a half, and have all that
+time been endeavouring to deceive me by such representations of life as
+I now find not to be true; but I know not whether I ought to impute them
+to ignorance or malice, as it is possible the world may be much changed
+since they mingled in general conversation.
+
+Being desirous that I should love books, they told me, that nothing but
+knowledge could make me an agreeable companion to men of sense, or
+qualify me to distinguish the superficial glitter of vanity from the
+solid merit of understanding; and that a habit of reading would enable
+me to fill up the vacuities of life without the help of silly or
+dangerous amusements, and preserve me from the snares of idleness and
+the inroads of temptation.
+
+But their principal intention was to make me afraid of men; in which
+they succeeded so well for a time, that I durst not look in their faces,
+or be left alone with them in a parlour; for they made me fancy, that no
+man ever spoke but to deceive, or looked but to allure; that the girl
+who suffered him that had once squeezed her hand, to approach her a
+second time, was on the brink of ruin; and that she who answered a
+billet, without consulting her relations, gave love such power over her,
+that she would certainly become either poor or infamous.
+
+From the time that my leading-strings were taken off, I scarce heard any
+mention of my beauty but from the milliner, the mantua-maker, and my own
+maid; for my mamma never said more, when she heard me commended, but
+"the girl is very well," and then endeavoured to divert my attention by
+some inquiry after my needle, or my book.
+
+It is now three months since I have been suffered to pay and receive
+visits, to dance at publick assemblies, to have a place kept for me in
+the boxes, and to play at lady Racket's rout; and you may easily imagine
+what I think of those who have so long cheated me with false
+expectations, disturbed me with fictitious terrours, and concealed from
+me all that I have found to make the happiness of woman.
+
+I am so far from perceiving the usefulness or necessity of books, that
+if I had not dropped all pretensions to learning, I should have lost Mr.
+Trip, whom I once frighted into another box, by retailing some of
+Dryden's remarks upon a tragedy; for Mr. Trip declares, that he hates
+nothing like hard words, and I am sure, there is not a better partner to
+be found; his very walk is a dance. I have talked once or twice among
+ladies about principles and ideas, but they put their fans before their
+faces, and told me I was too wise for them, who for their part never
+pretended to read any thing but the play-bill, and then asked me the
+price of my best head.
+
+Those vacancies of time which are to be filled up with books I have
+never vet obtained; for, consider, Mr. Rambler, I go to bed late, and
+therefore cannot rise early; as soon as I am up, I dress for the
+gardens; then walk in the park; then always go to some sale or show, or
+entertainment at the little theatre; then must be dressed for dinner;
+then must pay my visits; then walk in the park; then hurry to the play;
+and from thence to the card-table. This is the general course of the
+day, when there happens nothing extraordinary; but sometimes I ramble
+into the country, and come back again to a ball; sometimes I am engaged
+for a whole day and part of the night. If, at any time, I can gain an
+hour by not being at home, I have so many things to do, so many orders
+to give to the milliner, so many alterations to make in my clothes, so
+many visitants' names to read over, so many invitations to accept or
+refuse, so many cards to write, and so many fashions to consider, that I
+am lost in confusion, forced at last to let in company or step into my
+chair, and leave half my affairs to the direction of my maid.
+
+This is the round of my day; and when shall I either stop my course, or
+so change it as to want a book? I suppose it cannot be imagined, that
+any of these diversions will soon be at an end. There will always be
+gardens, and a park, and auctions, and shows, and playhouses, and cards;
+visits will always be paid, and clothes always be worn; and how can I
+have time unemployed upon my hands?
+
+But I am most at a loss to guess for what purpose they related such
+tragick stories of the cruelty, perfidy, and artifices of men, who, if
+they ever were so malicious and destructive, have certainly now reformed
+their manners. I have not, since my entrance into the world, found one
+who does not profess himself devoted to my service, and ready to live or
+die as I shall command him. They are so far from intending to hurt me,
+that their only contention is, who shall be allowed most closely to
+attend, and most frequently to treat me; when different places of
+entertainment, or schemes of pleasure are mentioned, I can see the eye
+sparkle and the cheeks glow of him whose proposals obtain my
+approbation; he then leads me off in triumph, adores my condescension,
+and congratulates himself that he has lived to the hour of felicity. Are
+these, Mr. Rambler, creatures to be feared? Is it likely that an injury
+will be done me by those who can enjoy life only while I favour them
+with my presence?
+
+As little reason can I yet find to suspect them of stratagems and fraud.
+When I play at cards, they never take advantage of my mistakes, nor
+exact from me a rigorous observation of the game. Even Mr. Shuffle, a
+grave gentleman, who has daughters older than myself, plays with me so
+negligently, that I am sometimes inclined to believe he loses his money
+by design, and yet he is so fond of play, that he says, he will one day
+take me to his house in the country, that we may try by ourselves who
+can conquer. I have not yet promised him; but when the town grows a
+little empty, I shall think upon it, for I want some trinkets, like
+Letitia's, to my watch. I do not doubt my luck, but must study some
+means of amusing my relations.
+
+For all these distinctions I find myself indebted to that beauty which I
+was never suffered to hear praised, and of which, therefore, I did not
+before know the full value. The concealment was certainly an intentional
+fraud, for my aunts have eyes like other people, and I am every day
+told, that nothing but blindness can escape the influence of my charms.
+Their whole account of that world which they pretend to know so well,
+has been only one fiction entangled with another; and though the modes
+of life oblige me to continue some appearances of respect, I cannot
+think that they, who have been so clearly detected in ignorance or
+imposture, have any right to the esteem, veneration, or obedience of,
+
+Sir, Yours,
+BELLARIA.
+
+
+
+No. 192. SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1752.
+
+ [Greek:
+ Genos ouden eis Erota;
+ Sophiae, tropos pateitai;
+ Monon arguron blepousin.
+ Apoloito protos autos
+ Ho ton arguron philaesas.
+ Dia touton ou tokaees,
+ Dai touton ou tokaees;
+ Polemoi, phonoi di auton.
+ To de cheiron, ollymestha
+ Dia touton oi philountes.] ANACREON. [Greek: ODLI Ms.] 5.
+
+ Vain the noblest birth would prove,
+ Nor worth or wit avail in love;
+ 'Tis gold alone succeeds--by gold
+ The venal sex is bought and sold.
+ Accurs'd be he who first of yore
+ Discover'd the pernicious ore!
+ This sets a brother's heart on fire,
+ And arms the son against the sire;
+ And what, alas! is worse than all,
+ To this the lover owes his fall. F. LEWIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I am the son of a gentleman, whose ancestors, for many ages, held the
+first rank in the country; till at last one of them, too desirous of
+popularity, set his house open, kept a table covered with continual
+profusion, and distributed his beef and ale to such as chose rather to
+live upon the folly of others, than their own labour, with such
+thoughtless liberality, that he left a third part of his estate
+mortgaged. His successor, a man of spirit, scorned to impair his dignity
+by parsimonious retrenchments, or to admit, by a sale of his lands, any
+participation of the rights of his manour; he therefore made another
+mortgage to pay the interest of the former, and pleased himself with the
+reflection, that his son would have the hereditary estate without the
+diminution of an acre.
+
+Nearly resembling this was the practice of my wise progenitors for many
+ages. Every man boasted the antiquity of her family, resolved to support
+the dignity of his birth, and lived in splendour and plenty at the
+expense of his heir, who, sometimes by a wealthy marriage, and sometimes
+by lucky legacies, discharged part of the incumbrances, and thought
+himself entitled to contract new debts, and to leave to his children the
+same inheritance of embarrassment and distress.
+
+Thus the estate perpetually decayed; the woods were felled by one, the
+park ploughed by another, the fishery let to farmers by a third; at last
+the old hall was pulled down to spare the cost of reparation, and part
+of the materials sold to build a small house with the rest. We were now
+openly degraded from our original rank, and my father's brother was
+allowed with less reluctance to serve an apprenticeship, though we never
+reconciled ourselves heartily to the sound of haberdasher, but always
+talked of warehouses and a merchant, and when the wind happened to blow
+loud, affected to pity the hazards of commerce, and to sympathize with
+the solicitude of my poor uncle, who had the true retailer's terrour of
+adventure, and never exposed himself or his property to any wider water
+than the Thames.
+
+In time, however, by continual profit and small expenses, he grew rich,
+and began to turn his thoughts towards rank. He hung the arms of the
+family over his parlour-chimney; pointed at a chariot decorated only
+with a cypher; became of opinion that money could not make a gentleman;
+resented the petulance of upstarts; told stories of alderman Puff's
+grandfather the porter; wondered that there was no better method for
+regulating precedence; wished for some dress peculiar to men of fashion;
+and when his servant presented a letter, always inquired whether it came
+from his brother the esquire.
+
+My father was careful to send him game by every carrier, which, though
+the conveyance often cost more than the value, was well received,
+because it gave him an opportunity of calling his friends together,
+describing the beauty of his brother's seat, and lamenting his own
+folly, whom no remonstrances could withhold from polluting his fingers
+with a shop-book.
+
+The little presents which we sent were always returned with great
+munificence. He was desirous of being the second founder of his family,
+and could not bear that we should be any longer outshone by those whom
+we considered as climbers upon our ruins, and usurpers of our fortune.
+He furnished our house with all the elegance of fashionable expense, and
+was careful to conceal his bounties, lest the poverty of his family
+should be suspected.
+
+At length it happened that, by misconduct like our own, a large estate,
+which had been purchased from us, was again exposed to the best bidder.
+My uncle, delighted with an opportunity of reinstating the family in
+their possessions, came down with treasures scarcely to be imagined in a
+place where commerce has not made large sums familiar, and at once drove
+all the competitors away, expedited the writings, and took possession.
+He now considered himself as superior to trade, disposed of his stock,
+and as soon as he had settled his economy, began to shew his rural
+sovereignty, by breaking the hedges of his tenants in hunting, and
+seizing the guns or nets of those whose fortunes did not qualify them
+for sportsmen. He soon afterwards solicited the office of sheriff, from
+which all his neighbours were glad to be reprieved, but which he
+regarded as a resumption of ancestral claims, and a kind of restoration
+to blood after the attainder of a trade.
+
+My uncle, whose mind was so filled with this change of his condition,
+that he found no want of domestick entertainment, declared himself too
+old to marry, and resolved to let the newly-purchased estate fall into
+the regular channel of inheritance. I was therefore considered as heir
+apparent, and courted with officiousness and caresses, by the gentlemen
+who had hitherto coldly allowed me that rank which they could not
+refuse, depressed me with studied neglect, and irritated me with
+ambiguous insults.
+
+I felt not much pleasure from the civilities for which I knew myself
+indebted to my uncle's industry, till, by one of the invitations which
+every day now brought me, I was induced to spend a week with Lucius,
+whose daughter Flavilla I had often seen and admired like others,
+without any thought of nearer approaches. The inequality which had
+hitherto kept me at a distance being now levelled, I was received with
+every evidence of respect: Lucius told me the fortune which he intended
+for his favourite daughter; many odd accidents obliged us to be often
+together without company, and I soon began to find that they were
+spreading for me the nets of matrimony.
+
+Flavilla was all softness and complaisance. I, who had been excluded by
+a narrow fortune from much acquaintance with the world, and never been
+honoured before with the notice of so fine a lady, was easily enamoured.
+Lucius either perceived my passion, or Flavilla betrayed it; care was
+taken, that our private meetings should be less frequent, and my charmer
+confessed by her eyes how much pain she suffered from our restraint. I
+renewed my visit upon every pretence, but was not allowed one interview
+without witness; at last I declared my passion to Lucius, who received
+me as a lover worthy of his daughter, and told me that nothing was
+wanting to his consent, but that my uncle should settle his estate upon
+me. I objected the indecency of encroaching on his life, and the danger
+of provoking him by such an unseasonable demand. Lucius seemed not to
+think decency of much importance, but admitted the danger of
+displeasing, and concluded that as he was now old and sickly, we might,
+without any inconvenience, wait for his death.
+
+With this resolution I was better contented, as it procured me the
+company of Flavilla, in which the days passed away amidst continual
+rapture; but in time I began to be ashamed of sitting idle, in
+expectation of growing rich by the death of my benefactor, and proposed
+to Lucius many schemes of raising my own fortune by such assistance as I
+knew my uncle willing to give me. Lucius, afraid lest I should change my
+affection in absence, diverted me from my design by dissuasives to which
+my passion easily listened. At last my uncle died, and considering
+himself as neglected by me, from the time that Flavilla took possession
+of my heart, left his estate to my younger brother, who was always
+hovering about his bed, and relating stories of my pranks and
+extravagance, my contempt of the commercial dialect, and my impatience
+to be selling stock.
+
+My condition was soon known, and I was no longer admitted by the father
+of Flavilla. I repeated the protestations of regard, which had been
+formerly returned with so much ardour, in a letter which she received
+privately, but returned by her father's footman. Contempt has driven out
+my love, and I am content to have purchased, by the loss of fortune, an
+escape from a harpy, who has joined the artifices of age to the
+allurements of youth. I am now going to pursue my former projects with a
+legacy which my uncle bequeathed me, and if I succeed, shall expect to
+hear of the repentance of Flavilla.
+
+I am, Sir, Yours, &c.
+
+CONSTANTIUS.
+
+
+
+No. 193. TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1752.
+
+ _Laudis amore tumes? sunt certa piacula, quoe te
+ Ter pure lecto poterunt recreare libello_. HOR. Lib. i. Ep. i. 36.
+
+ Or art thou vain? books yield a certain spell
+ To stop thy tumour; you shall cease to swell
+ When you have read them thrice, and studied well. CREECH.
+
+Whatever is universally desired, will be sought by industry and
+artifice, by merit and crimes, by means good and bad, rational and
+absurd, according to the prevalence of virtue or vice, of wisdom or
+folly. Some will always mistake the degree of their own desert, and some
+will desire that others may mistake it. The cunning will have recourse
+to stratagem, and the powerful to violence, for the attainment of their
+wishes; some will stoop to theft, and others venture upon plunder.
+
+Praise is so pleasing to the mind of man, that it is the original motive
+of almost all our actions. The desire of commendation, as of every thing
+else, is varied indeed by innumerable differences of temper, capacity,
+and knowledge; some have no higher wish than for the applause of a club;
+some expect the acclamations of a county; and some have hoped to fill
+the mouths of all ages and nations with their names. Every man pants for
+the highest eminence within his view; none, however mean, ever sinks
+below the hope of being distinguished by his fellow-beings, and very few
+have by magnanimity or piety been so raised above it, as to act wholly
+without regard to censure or opinion.
+
+To be praised, therefore, every man resolves; but resolutions will not
+execute themselves. That which all think too parsimoniously distributed
+to their own claims, they will not gratuitously squander upon others,
+and some expedient must be tried, by which praise may be gained before
+it can be enjoyed.
+
+Among the innumerable bidders for praise, some are willing to purchase
+at the highest rate, and offer ease and health, fortune and life. Yet
+even of these only a small part have gained what they so earnestly
+desired; the student wastes away in meditation, and the soldier perishes
+on the ramparts, but unless some accidental advantage cooperates with
+merit, neither perseverance nor adventure attracts attention, and
+learning and bravery sink into the grave, without honour or remembrance.
+
+But ambition and vanity generally expect to be gratified on easier
+terms. It has been long observed, that what is procured by skill or
+labour to the first possessor, may be afterwards transferred for money;
+and that the man of wealth may partake all the acquisitions of courage
+without hazard, and all the products of industry without fatigue. It was
+easily discovered, that riches would obtain praise among other
+conveniencies, and that he whose pride was unluckily associated with
+laziness, ignorance, or cowardice, needed only to pay the hire of a
+panegyrist, and he might be regaled with periodical eulogies; might
+determine, at leisure, what virtue or science he would be pleased to
+appropriate, and be lulled in the evening with soothing serenades, or
+waked in the morning by sprightly gratulations.
+
+The happiness which mortals receive from the celebration of beneficence
+which never relieved, eloquence which never persuaded, or elegance which
+never pleased, ought not to be envied or disturbed, when they are known
+honestly to pay for their entertainment. But there are unmerciful
+exactors of adulation, who withhold the wages of venality; retain their
+encomiast from year to year by general promises and ambiguous
+blandishments; and when he has run through the whole compass of
+flattery, dismiss him with contempt, because his vein of fiction is
+exhausted.
+
+A continual feast of commendation is only to be obtained by merit or by
+wealth; many are therefore obliged to content themselves with single
+morsels, and recompense the infrequency of their enjoyment by excess and
+riot, whenever fortune sets the banquet before them. Hunger is never
+delicate; they who are seldom gorged to the full with praise, may be
+safely fed with gross compliments; for the appetite must be satisfied
+before it is disgusted.
+
+It is easy to find the moment at which vanity is eager for sustenance,
+and all that impudence or servility can offer will be well received.
+When any one complains of the want of what he is known to possess in an
+uncommon degree, he certainly waits with impatience to be contradicted.
+When the trader pretends anxiety about the payment of his bills, or the
+beauty remarks how frightfully she looks, then is the lucky moment to
+talk of riches or of charms, of the death of lovers, or the honour of a
+merchant.
+
+Others there are yet more open and artless, who, instead of suborning a
+flatterer, are content to supply his place, and, as some animals
+impregnate themselves, swell with the praises which they hear from their
+own tongues. _Recte is dicitur laudare sese, cui nemo alius contigit
+laudator_. "It is right," says Erasmus, "that he, whom no one else will
+commend, should bestow commendations on himself." Of all the sons of
+vanity, these are surely the happiest and greatest; for what is
+greatness or happiness but independence on external influences,
+exemption from hope or fear, and the power of supplying every want from
+the common stores of nature, which can neither be exhausted nor
+prohibited? Such is the wise man of the stoicks; such is the divinity of
+the epicureans; and such is the flatterer of himself. Every other
+enjoyment malice may destroy; every other panegyrick envy may withhold;
+but no human power can deprive the boaster of his own encomiums. Infamy
+may hiss, or contempt may growl, the hirelings of the great may follow
+fortune, and the votaries of truth may attend on virtue; but his
+pleasures still remain the same; he can always listen with rapture to
+himself, and leave those who dare not repose upon their own attestation,
+to be elated or depressed by chance, and toil on in the hopeless task of
+fixing caprice, and propitiating malice.
+
+This art of happiness has been long practised by periodical writers,
+with little apparent violation of decency. When we think our
+excellencies overlooked by the world, or desire to recall the attention
+of the publick to some particular performance, we sit down with great
+composure and write a letter to ourselves. The correspondent, whose
+character we assume, always addresses us with the deference due to a
+superior intelligence; proposes his doubts with a proper sense of his
+own inability; offers an objection with trembling diffidence; and at
+last has no other pretensions to our notice than his profundity of
+respect, and sincerity of admiration, his submission to our dictates,
+and zeal for our success. To such a reader, it is impossible to refuse
+regard, nor can it easily be imagined with how much alacrity we snatch
+up the pen which indignation or despair had condemned to inactivity,
+when we find such candour and judgment yet remaining in the world.
+
+A letter of this kind I had lately the honour of perusing, in which,
+though some of the periods were negligently closed, and some expressions
+of familiarity were used, which I thought might teach others to address
+me with too little reverence, I was so much delighted with the passages
+in which mention was made of universal learning--unbounded genius--soul
+of Homer, Pythagoras, and Plato--solidity of thought--accuracy of
+distinction--elegance of combination--vigour of fancy--strength of
+reason--and regularity of composition--that I had once determined to lay
+it before the publick. Three times I sent it to the printer, and three
+times I fetched it back. My modesty was on the point of yielding, when
+reflecting that I was about to waste panegyricks on myself, which might
+be more profitably reserved for my patron, I locked it up for a better
+hour, in compliance with the farmer's principle, who never eats at home
+what he can carry to the market.
+
+
+
+No. 194. SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1752.
+
+ _Si damnosa senem juvat alea, ludit et heres
+ Bullatus, parvoque eadem movet arma fritillo_. JUV. Sat. xiv. 4.
+
+ If gaming does an aged sire entice,
+ Then my young master swiftly learns the vice,
+ And shakes in hanging sleeves the little box and dice. J. DRYDEN, jun.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+That vanity which keeps every man important in his own eyes, inclines me
+to believe that neither you nor your readers have yet forgotten the name
+of Eumathes, who sent you a few months ago an account of his arrival at
+London, with a young nobleman his pupil. I shall therefore continue my
+narrative without preface or recapitulation.
+
+My pupil, in a very short time, by his mother's countenance and
+direction, accomplished himself with all those qualifications which
+constitute puerile politeness. He became in a few days a perfect master
+of his hat, which with a careless nicety he could put off or on, without
+any need to adjust it by a second motion. This was not attained but by
+frequent consultations with his dancing-master, and constant practice
+before the glass, for he had some rustick habits to overcome; but, what
+will not time and industry perform? A fortnight more furnished him with
+all the airs and forms of familiar and respectful salutation, from the
+clap on the shoulder to the humble bow; he practises the stare of
+strangeness, and the smile of condescension, the solemnity of promise,
+and the graciousness of encouragement, as if he had been nursed at a
+levee; and pronounces, with no less propriety than his father, the
+monosyllables of coldness, and sonorous periods of respectful
+profession.
+
+He immediately lost the reserve and timidity which solitude and study
+are apt to impress upon the most courtly genius; was able to enter a
+crowded room with airy civility; to meet the glances of a hundred eyes
+without perturbation; and address those whom he never saw before with
+ease and confidence. In less than a month his mother declared her
+satisfaction at his proficiency by a triumphant observation, that she
+believed _nothing would make him blush_.
+
+The silence with which I was contented to hear my pupil's praises, gave
+the lady reason to suspect me not much delighted with his acquisitions;
+but she attributed my discontent to the diminution of my influence, and
+my fears of losing the patronage of the family; and though she thinks
+favourably of my learning and morals, she considers me as wholly
+unacquainted with the customs of the polite part of mankind; and
+therefore not qualified to form the manners of a young nobleman, or
+communicate the knowledge of the world. This knowledge she comprises in
+the rules of visiting, the history of the present hour, an early
+intelligence of the change of fashions, an extensive acquaintance with
+the names and faces of persons of rank, and a frequent appearance in
+places of resort.
+
+All this my pupil pursues with great application. He is twice a day in
+the Mall, where he studies the dress of every man splendid enough to
+attract his notice, and never comes home without some observation upon
+sleeves, button-holes, and embroidery. At his return from the theatre,
+he can give an account of the gallantries, glances, whispers, smiles,
+sighs, flirts, and blushes of every box, so much to his mother's
+satisfaction, that when I attempted to resume my character, by inquiring
+his opinion of the sentiments and diction of the tragedy, she at once
+repressed my criticism, by telling me, "that she hoped he did not go to
+lose his time in attending to the creatures on the stage."
+
+But his acuteness was most eminently signalized at the masquerade, where
+he discovered his acquaintance through their disguises, with such
+wonderful facility, as has afforded the family an inexhaustible topick
+of conversation. Every new visitor is informed how one was detected by
+his gait, and another by the swinging of his arms, a third by the toss
+of his head, and another by his favourite phrase; nor can you doubt but
+these performances receive their just applause, and a genius thus
+hastening to maturity is promoted by every art of cultivation.
+
+Such have been his endeavours, and such his assistances, that every
+trace of literature was soon obliterated. He has changed his language
+with his dress, and instead of endeavouring at purity or propriety, has
+no other care than to catch the reigning phrase and current exclamation,
+till, by copying whatever is peculiar in the talk of all those whose
+birth or fortune entitles them to imitation, he has collected every
+fashionable barbarism of the present winter, and speaks a dialect not to
+be understood among those who form their style by poring upon authors.
+
+To this copiousness of ideas, and felicity of language, he has joined
+such eagerness to lead the conversation, that he is celebrated among the
+ladies as the prettiest gentleman that the age can boast of, except that
+some who love to talk themselves, think him too forward, and others
+lament that, with so much wit and knowledge, he is not taller.
+
+His mother listens to his observations with her eyes sparkling and her
+heart beating, and can scarcely contain, in the most numerous
+assemblies, the expectations which she has formed for his future
+eminence. Women, by whatever fate, always judge absurdly of the
+intellects of boys. The vivacity and confidence which attract female
+admiration, are seldom produced in the early part of life, but by
+ignorance at least, if not by stupidity; for they proceed not from
+confidence of right, but fearlessness of wrong. Whoever has a clear
+apprehension, must have quick sensibility, and where he has no
+sufficient reason to trust his own judgment, will proceed with doubt and
+caution, because he perpetually dreads the disgrace of errour. The pain
+of miscarriage is naturally proportionate to the desire of excellence;
+and, therefore, till men are hardened by long familiarity with reproach,
+or have attained, by frequent struggles, the art of suppressing their
+emotions, diffidence is found the inseparable associate of
+understanding.
+
+But so little distrust has my pupil of his own abilities, that he has
+for some time professed himself a wit, and tortures his imagination on
+all occasions for burlesque and jocularity. How he supports a character
+which, perhaps, no man ever assumed without repentance, may be easily
+conjectured. Wit, you know, is the unexpected copulation of ideas, the
+discovery of some occult relation between images in appearance remote
+from each other; an effusion of wit, therefore, presupposes an
+accumulation of knowledge; a memory stored with notions, which the
+imagination may cull out to compose, new assemblages. Whatever may be
+the native vigour of the mind, she can never form many combinations from
+few ideas, as many changes can never be rung upon a few bells. Accident
+may indeed sometimes produce a lucky parallel or a striking contrast;
+but these gifts of chance are not frequent, and he that has nothing of
+his own, and yet condemns himself to needless expenses, must live upon
+loans or theft.
+
+The indulgence which his youth has hitherto obtained, and the respect
+which his rank secures, have hitherto supplied the want of intellectual
+qualifications; and he imagines that all admire who applaud, and that
+all who laugh are pleased. He therefore returns every day to the charge
+with increase of courage, though not of strength, and practises all the
+tricks by which wit is counterfeited. He lays trains for a quibble; he
+contrives blunders for his footman; he adapts old stories to present
+characters; he mistakes the question, that he may return a smart answer;
+he anticipates the argument, that he may plausibly object; when he has
+nothing to reply, he repeats the last words of his antagonist, then
+says, "your humble servant," and concludes with a laugh of triumph.
+
+These mistakes I have honestly attempted to correct; but what can be
+expected from reason unsupported by fashion, splendour, or authority? He
+hears me, indeed, or appears to hear me, but is soon rescued from the
+lecture by more pleasing avocations; and shows, diversions, and
+caresses, drive my precepts from his remembrance.
+
+He at last imagines himself qualified to enter the world, and has met
+with adventures in his first sally, which I shall, by your paper,
+communicate to the publick.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+EUMATHES.
+
+
+
+No. 195. TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1752.
+
+ --_Nescit equo rudis
+ Haerere ingenuus puer,
+ Venarique timet; ludere doctior,
+ Seu Graeco jubeas trocho,
+ Seu malis vetitâ legibus aleâ_. HOR. Lib. iii. Ode xxiv. 54.
+
+ Nor knows our youth, of noblest race,
+ To mount the manag'd steed, or urge the chace;
+ More skill'd in the mean arts of vice,
+ The whirling troque, or law-forbidden dice. FRANCIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Favours of every kind are doubled when they are speedily conferred. This
+is particularly true of the gratification of curiosity. He that long
+delays a story, and suffers his auditor to torment himself with
+expectation, will seldom be able to recompense the uneasiness, or equal
+the hope which he suffers to be raised.
+
+For this reason, I have already sent you the continuation of my pupil's
+history, which, though it contains no events very uncommon, may be of
+use to young men who are in too much haste to trust their own prudence,
+and quit the wing of protection before they are able to shift for
+themselves.
+
+When he first settled in London, he was so much bewildered in the
+enormous extent of the town, so confounded by incessant noise, and
+crowds, and hurry, and so terrified by rural narratives of the arts of
+sharpers, the rudeness of the populace, malignity of porters, and
+treachery of coachmen, that he was afraid to go beyond the door without
+an attendant, and imagined his life in danger if he was obliged to pass
+the streets at night in any vehicle but his mother's chair.
+
+He was therefore contented, for a time, that I should accompany him in
+all his excursions. But his fear abated as he grew more familiar with
+its objects; and the contempt to which his rusticity exposed him from
+such of his companions as had accidentally known the town longer,
+obliged him to dissemble his remaining terrours.
+
+His desire of liberty made him now willing to spare me the trouble of
+observing his motions; but knowing how much his ignorance exposed him to
+mischief, I thought it cruel to abandon him to the fortune of the town.
+We went together every day to a coffee-house, where he met wits, heirs,
+and fops, airy, ignorant, and thoughtless as himself, with whom he had
+become acquainted at card-tables, and whom he considered as the only
+beings to be envied or admired. What were their topicks of conversation,
+I could never discover; for, so much was their vivacity repressed by my
+intrusive seriousness, that they seldom proceeded beyond the exchange of
+nods and shrugs, an arch grin, or a broken hint, except when they could
+retire, while I was looking on the papers, to a corner of the room,
+where they seemed to disburden their imaginations, and commonly vented
+the superfluity of their sprightliness in a peal of laughter. When they
+had tittered themselves into negligence, I could sometimes overhear a
+few syllables, such as--solemn rascal--academical airs--smoke the tutor--
+company for gentlemen!--and other broken phrases, by which I did not
+suffer my quiet to be disturbed, for they never proceeded to avowed
+indignities, but contented themselves to murmur in secret, and, whenever
+I turned my eye upon them, shrunk into stillness.
+
+He was, however, desirous of withdrawing from the subjection which he
+could not venture to break, and made a secret appointment to assist his
+companions in the persecution of a play. His footman privately procured
+him a catcall, on which he practised in a back-garret for two hours in
+the afternoon. At the proper time a chair was called; he pretended an
+engagement at lady Flutter's, and hastened to the place where his
+critical associates had assembled. They hurried away to the theatre,
+full of malignity and denunciations against a man whose name they had
+never heard, and a performance which they could not understand; for they
+were resolved to judge for themselves, and would not suffer the town to
+be imposed upon by scribblers. In the pit, they exerted themselves with
+great spirit and vivacity; called out for the tunes of obscene songs,
+talked loudly at intervals of Shakespeare and Jonson, played on their
+catcalls a short prelude of terrour, clamoured vehemently for a
+prologue, and clapped with great dexterity at the first entrance of the
+players.
+
+Two scenes they heard without attempting interruption; but, being no
+longer able to restrain their impatience, they then began to exert
+themselves in groans and hisses, and plied their catcalls with incessant
+diligence; so that they were soon considered by the audience as
+disturbers of the house; and some who sat near them, either provoked at
+the obstruction of their entertainment, or desirous to preserve the
+author from the mortification of seeing his hopes destroyed by children,
+snatched away their instruments of criticism, and, by the seasonable
+vibration of a stick, subdued them instantaneously to decency and
+silence.
+
+To exhilarate themselves after this vexatious defeat, they posted to a
+tavern, where they recovered their alacrity, and, after two hours of
+obstreperous jollity, burst out big with enterprize, and panting for
+some occasion to signalize their prowess. They proceeded vigorously
+through two streets, and with very little opposition dispersed a rabble
+of drunkards less daring than themselves, then rolled two watchmen in
+the kennel, and broke the windows of a tavern in which the fugitives
+took shelter. At last it was determined to march up to a row of chairs,
+and demolish them for standing on the pavement; the chairmen formed a
+line of battle, and blows were exchanged for a time with equal courage
+on both sides. At last the assailants were overpowered, and the
+chairmen, when they knew then-captives, brought them home by force.
+
+The young gentleman, next morning, hung his head, and was so much
+ashamed of his outrages and defeat, that perhaps he might have been
+checked in his first follies, had not his mother, partly in pity of his
+dejection, and partly in approbation of his spirit, relieved him from
+his perplexity by paying the damages privately, and discouraging all
+animadversion and reproof.
+
+This indulgence could not wholly preserve him from the remembrance of
+his disgrace, nor at once restore his confidence and elation. He was for
+three days silent, modest, and compliant, and thought himself neither
+too wise for instruction, nor too manly for restraint. But his levity
+overcame this salutary sorrow; he began to talk with his former raptures
+of masquerades, taverns, and frolicks; blustered when his wig was not
+combed with exactness; and threatened destruction to a tailor who had
+mistaken his directions about the pocket.
+
+I knew that he was now rising again above control, and that his
+inflation of spirits would burst out into some mischievous absurdity. I
+therefore watched him with great attention; but one evening, having
+attended his mother at a visit, he withdrew himself, unsuspected, while
+the company was engaged at cards. His vivacity and officiousness were
+soon missed, and his return impatiently expected; supper was delayed,
+and conversation suspended; every coach that rattled through the street
+was expected to bring him, and every servant that entered the room was
+examined concerning his departure. At last the lady returned home, and
+was with great difficulty preserved from fits by spirits and cordials.
+The family was despatched a thousand ways without success, and the house
+was filled with distraction, till, as we were deliberating what further
+measures to take, he returned from a petty gaming-table, with his coat
+torn and his head broken; without his sword, snuff-box, sleeve-buttons,
+and watch.
+
+Of this loss or robbery, he gave little account; but, instead of sinking
+into his former shame, endeavoured to support himself by surliness and
+asperity. "He was not the first that had played away a few trifles, and
+of what use were birth and fortune if they would not admit some sallies
+and expenses?" His mamma was so much provoked by the cost of this prank,
+that she would neither palliate nor conceal it; and his father, after
+some threats of rustication which his fondness would not suffer him to
+execute, reduced the allowance of his pocket, that he might not be
+tempted by plenty to profusion. This method would have succeeded in a
+place where there are no panders to folly and extravagance, but was now
+likely to have produced pernicious consequences; for we have discovered
+a treaty with a broker, whose daughter he seems disposed to marry, on
+condition that he shall be supplied with present money, for which he is
+to repay thrice the value at the death of his father.
+
+There was now no time to be lost. A domestick consultation was
+immediately held, and he was doomed to pass two years in the country;
+but his mother, touched with his tears, declared, that she thought him
+too much of a man to be any longer confined to his book, and he
+therefore begins his travels to-morrow under a French governour.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+EUMATHES.
+
+
+
+No. 196. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1752.
+
+ _Multa ferunt anni venientes commoda secum,
+ Multa recedentes adimunt.--_ HOR. De Ar. Poet. 175.
+
+ The blessings flowing in with life's full tide,
+ Down with our ebb of life decreasing glide. FRANCIS.
+
+Baxter, in the narrative of his own life, has enumerated several
+opinions, which, though he thought them evident and incontestable at his
+first entrance into the world, time and experience disposed him to
+change.
+
+Whoever reviews the state of his own mind from the dawn of manhood to
+its decline, and considers what he pursued or dreaded, slighted or
+esteemed, at different periods of his age, will have no reason to
+imagine such changes of sentiment peculiar to any station or character.
+Every man, however careless and inattentive, has conviction forced upon
+him; the lectures of time obtrude themselves upon the most unwilling or
+dissipated auditor; and, by comparing our past with our present
+thoughts, we perceive that we have changed our minds, though perhaps we
+cannot discover when the alteration happened, or by what causes it was
+produced.
+
+This revolution of sentiments occasions a perpetual contest between the
+old and young. They who imagine themselves entitled to veneration by the
+prerogative of longer life, are inclined to treat the notions of those
+whose conduct they superintend with superciliousness and contempt, for
+want of considering that the future and the past have different
+appearances; that the disproportion will always be great between
+expectation and enjoyment, between new possession and satiety; that the
+truth of many maxims of age gives too little pleasure to be allowed till
+it is felt; and that the miseries of life would be increased beyond all
+human power of endurance, if we were to enter the world with the same
+opinions as we carry from it.
+
+We naturally indulge those ideas that please us. Hope will predominate
+in every mind, till it has been suppressed by frequent disappointments.
+The youth has not yet discovered how many evils are continually hovering
+about us, and when he is set free from the shackles of discipline, looks
+abroad into the world with rapture; he sees an elysian region open
+before him, so variegated with beauty, and so stored with pleasure, that
+his care is rather to accumulate good, than to shun evil; he stands
+distracted by different forms of delight, and has no other doubt, than
+which path to follow of those which all lead equally to the bowers of
+happiness.
+
+He who has seen only the superficies of life believes every thing to be
+what it appears, and rarely suspects that external splendour conceals
+any latent sorrow or vexation. He never imagines that there may be
+greatness without safety, affluence without content, jollity without
+friendship, and solitude without peace. He fancies himself permitted to
+cull the blessings of every condition, and to leave its inconveniencies
+to the idle and the ignorant. He is inclined to believe no man miserable
+but by his own fault, and seldom looks with much pity upon failings or
+miscarriages, because he thinks them willingly admitted, or negligently
+incurred.
+
+It is impossible, without pity and contempt, to hear a youth of generous
+sentiments and warm imagination, declaring, in the moment of openness
+and confidence, his designs and expectations; because long life is
+possible, he considers it as certain, and therefore promises himself all
+the changes of happiness, and provides gratifications for every desire.
+He is, for a time, to give himself wholly to frolick and diversion, to
+range the world in search of pleasure, to delight every eye, to gain
+every heart, and to be celebrated equally for his pleasing levities and
+solid attainments, his deep reflections and his sparkling repartees. He
+then elevates his views to nobler enjoyments, and finds all the
+scattered excellencies of the female world united in a woman, who
+prefers his addresses to wealth and titles; he is afterwards to engage
+in business, to dissipate difficulty, and overpower opposition: to
+climb, by the mere force of merit, to fame and greatness; and reward all
+those who countenanced his rise, or paid due regard to his early
+excellence. At last he will retire in peace and honour; contract his
+views to domestick pleasures; form the manners of children like himself;
+observe how every year expands the beauty of his daughters, and how his
+sons catch ardour from their father's history; he will give laws to the
+neighbourhood; dictate axioms to posterity; and leave the world an
+example of wisdom and of happiness.
+
+With hopes like these, he sallies jocund into life; to little purpose is
+he told, that the condition of humanity admits no pure and unmingled
+happiness; that the exuberant gaiety of youth ends in poverty or
+disease; that uncommon qualifications and contrarieties of excellence,
+produce envy equally with applause; that whatever admiration and
+fondness may promise him, he must marry a wife like the wives of others,
+with some virtues and some faults, and be as often disgusted by her
+vices, as delighted by her elegance; that if he adventures into the
+circle of action, he must expect to encounter men as artful, as daring,
+as resolute as himself; that of his children, some may be deformed, and
+others vicious; some may disgrace him by their follies, some offend him
+by their insolence, and some exhaust him by their profusion. He hears
+all this with obstinate incredulity, and wonders by what malignity old
+age is influenced, that it cannot forbear to fill his ears with
+predictions of misery.
+
+Among other pleasing errours of young minds, is the opinion of their own
+importance. He that has not yet remarked, how little attention his
+contemporaries can spare from their own affairs, conceives all eyes
+turned upon himself, and imagines every one that approaches him to be an
+enemy or a follower, an admirer or a spy. He therefore considers his
+fame as involved in the event of every action. Many of the virtues and
+vices of youth proceed from this quick sense of reputation. This it is
+that gives firmness and constancy, fidelity, and disinterestedness, and
+it is this that kindles resentment for slight injuries, and dictates all
+the principles of sanguinary honour.
+
+But as time brings him forward into the world, he soon discovers that he
+only shares fame or reproach with innumerable partners; that he is left
+unmarked in the obscurity of the crowd; and that what he does, whether
+good or bad, soon gives way to new objects of regard. He then easily
+sets himself free from the anxieties of reputation, and considers praise
+or censure as a transient breath, which, while he hears it, is passing
+away, without any lasting mischief or advantage.
+
+In youth, it is common to measure right and wrong by the opinion of the
+world, and, in age, to act without any measure but interest, and to lose
+shame without substituting virtue.
+
+Such is the condition of life, that something is always wanting to
+happiness. In youth, we have warm hopes, which are soon blasted by
+rashness and negligence, and great designs, which are defeated by
+inexperience. In age, we have knowledge and prudence without spirit to
+exert, or motives to prompt them; we are able to plan schemes and
+regulate measures, but have not time remaining to bring them to
+completion.
+
+
+
+No. 197. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1752.
+
+ _Cujus vulturis hoc erit cadaver_? MART. Lib. vi. Ep. lxii. 4.
+
+ Say, to what vulture's share this carcase falls? F. LEWIS
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I belong to an order of mankind, considerable at least for their number,
+to which your notice has never been formally extended, though equally
+entitled to regard with those triflers, who have hitherto supplied you
+with topicks of amusement or instruction. I am, Mr. Rambler, a
+legacy-hunter; and, as every man is willing to think well of the tribe
+in which his name is registered, you will forgive my vanity, if I remind
+you that the legacy-hunter, however degraded by an ill-compounded
+appellation in our barbarous language, was known, as I am told, in
+ancient Rome, by the sonorous titles of Captator and Hæredipeta.
+
+My father was an attorney in the country, who married his master's
+daughter in hopes of a fortune which he did not obtain, having been, as
+he afterwards discovered, chosen by her only because she had no better
+offer, and was afraid of service. I was the first offspring of a
+marriage, thus reciprocally fraudulent, and therefore could not be
+expected to inherit much dignity or generosity, and if I had them not
+from nature, was not likely ever to attain them; for, in the years which
+I spent at home, I never heard any reason for action or forbearance, but
+that we should gain money or lose it; nor was taught any other style of
+commendation, than that Mr. Sneaker is a warm man, Mr. Gripe has done
+his business, and needs care for nobody.
+
+My parents, though otherwise not great philosophers, knew the force of
+early education, and took care that the blank of my understanding should
+be filled with impressions of the value of money. My mother used, upon
+all occasions, to inculcate some salutary axioms, such as might incite
+me _to keep what I had, and get what I could_; she informed me that we
+were in a world, where _all must catch that catch can_; and as I grew
+up, stored my memory with deeper observations; restrained me from the
+usual puerile expenses, by remarking that _many a little made a mickle_;
+and, when I envied the finery of my neighbours, told me that _brag was a
+good dog, but hold-fast was a better_.
+
+I was soon sagacious enough to discover that I was not born to great
+wealth; and having heard no other name for happiness, was sometimes
+inclined to repine at my condition. But my mother always relieved me, by
+saying, that there was money enough in the family, that _it was good to
+be of kin to means_, that I had nothing to do but to please my friends,
+and I might come to hold up my head with the best squire in the country.
+
+These splendid expectations arose from our alliance to three persons of
+considerable fortune. My mother's aunt had attended on a lady, who, when
+she died, rewarded her officiousness and fidelity with a large legacy.
+My father had two relations, of whom one had broken his indentures and
+run to sea, from whence, after an absence of thirty years, he returned
+with ten thousand pounds; and the other had lured an heiress out of a
+window, who, dying of her first child, had left him her estate, on which
+he lived, without any other care than to collect his rents, and preserve
+from poachers that game which he could not kill himself.
+
+These hoarders of money were visited and courted by all who had any
+pretence to approach them, and received presents and compliments from
+cousins who could scarcely tell the degree of their relation. But we had
+peculiar advantages, which encouraged us to hope, that we should by
+degrees supplant our competitors. My father, by his profession, made
+himself necessary in their affairs; for the sailor and the chambermaid,
+he inquired out mortgages and securities, and wrote bonds and contracts;
+and had endeared himself to the old woman, who once rashly lent an
+hundred pounds without consulting him, by informing her, that her
+debtor, was on the point of bankruptcy, and posting so expeditiously
+with an execution, that all the other creditors were defrauded.
+
+To the squire he was a kind of steward, and had distinguished himself in
+his office by his address in raising the rents, his inflexibility in
+distressing the tardy tenants, and his acuteness in setting the parish
+free from burdensome inhabitants, by shifting them off to some other
+settlement.
+
+Business made frequent attendance necessary; trust soon produced
+intimacy; and success gave a claim to kindness; so that we had
+opportunity to practise all the arts of flattery and endearment. My
+mother, who could not support the thoughts of losing any thing,
+determined, that all their fortunes should centre in me; and, in the
+prosecution of her schemes, took care to inform me that _nothing cost
+less than good words_, and that it is comfortable to leap into an estate
+which another has got.
+
+She trained me by these precepts to the utmost ductility of obedience,
+and the closest attention to profit. At an age when other boys are
+sporting in the fields or murmuring in the school, I was contriving some
+new method of paying my court; inquiring the age of my future
+benefactors; or considering how I should employ their legacies.
+
+If our eagerness of money could have been satisfied with the possessions
+of any one of my relations, they might perhaps have been obtained; but
+as it was impossible to be always present with all three, our
+competitors were busy to efface any trace of affection which we might
+have left behind; and since there was not, on any part, such superiority
+of merit as could enforce a constant and unshaken preference, whoever
+was the last that flattered or obliged, had, for a time, the ascendant.
+
+My relations maintained a regular exchange of courtesy, took care to
+miss no occasion of condolence or congratulation, and sent presents at
+stated times, but had in their hearts not much esteem for one another.
+The seaman looked with contempt upon the squire as a milksop and a
+landman, who had lived without knowing the points of the compass, or
+seeing any part of the world beyond the county-town; and whenever they
+met, would talk of longitude and latitude, and circles and tropicks,
+would scarcely tell him the hour without some mention of the horizon and
+meridian, nor shew him the news without detecting his ignorance of the
+situation of other countries.
+
+The squire considered the sailor as a rude uncultivated savage, with
+little more of human than his form, and diverted himself with his
+ignorance of all common objects and affairs; when he could persuade him
+to go into the field, he always exposed him to the sportsmen, by sending
+him to look for game in improper places; and once prevailed upon him to
+be present at the races, only that he might shew the gentlemen how a
+sailor sat upon a horse.
+
+The old gentlewoman thought herself wiser than both, for she lived with
+no servant but a maid, and saved her money. The others were indeed
+sufficiently frugal; but the squire could not live without dogs and
+horses, and the sailor never suffered the day to pass but over a bowl of
+punch, to which, as he was not critical in the choice of his company,
+every man was welcome that could roar out a catch, or tell a story.
+
+All these, however, I was to please; an arduous task; but what will not
+youth and avarice undertake? I had an unresisting suppleness of temper,
+and an insatiable wish for riches; I was perpetually instigated by the
+ambition of my parents, and assisted occasionally by their instructions.
+What these advantages enabled me to perform, shall be told in the next
+letter of,
+
+Yours, &c.
+
+CAPTATOR.
+
+
+
+No. 198. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1752.
+
+ _Nil mihi das vivus: dicis, post fata daturum.
+ Si non es stultus, scis, Maro, quid cupiam_. MART. Lib. xi. 67.
+
+ You've told me, Maro, whilst you live,
+ You'd not a single penny give,
+ But that whene'er you chance to die,
+ You'd leave a handsome legacy:
+ You must be mad beyond redress,
+ If my next wish you cannot guess. F. LEWIS.
+
+MR. RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+You, who must have observed the inclination which almost every man,
+however unactive or insignificant, discovers of representing his life as
+distinguished by extraordinary events, will not wonder that Captator
+thinks his narrative important enough to be continued. Nothing is more
+common than for those to tease their companions with their history, who
+have neither done nor suffered any thing that can excite curiosity, or
+afford instruction.
+
+As I was taught to flatter with the first essays of speech, and had very
+early lost every other passion in the desire of money, I began my
+pursuit with omens of success; for I divided my officiousness so
+judiciously among my relations, that I was equally the favourite of all.
+When any of them entered the door, I went to welcome him with raptures;
+when he went away, I hung down my head, and sometimes entreated to go
+with him with so much importunity, that I very narrowly escaped a
+consent which I dreaded in my heart. When at an annual entertainment
+they were altogether, I had a harder task; but plied them so impartially
+with caresses, that none could charge me with neglect; and when they
+were wearied with my fondness and civilities, I was always dismissed
+with money to buy playthings.
+
+Life cannot be kept at a stand: the years of innocence and prattle were
+soon at an end, and other qualifications were necessary to recommend me
+to continuance of kindness. It luckily happened that none of my friends
+had high notions of book-learning. The sailor hated to see tall boys
+shut up in a school, when they might more properly be seeing the world,
+and making their fortunes; and was of opinion, that when the first rules
+of arithmetick were known, all that was necessary to make a man complete
+might be learned on ship-board. The squire only insisted, that so much
+scholarship was indispensably necessary, as might confer ability to draw
+a lease and read the court hands; and the old chambermaid declared
+loudly her contempt of books, and her opinion that they only took the
+head off the main chance.
+
+To unite, as well as we could, all their systems, I was bred at home.
+Each was taught to believe, that I followed his directions, and I gained
+likewise, as my mother observed, this advantage, that I was always in
+the way; for she had known many favourite children sent to schools or
+academies, and forgotten.
+
+As I grew fitter to be trusted to my own discretion, I was often
+despatched upon various pretences to visit my relations, with directions
+from my parents how to ingratiate myself, and drive away competitors.
+
+I was, from my infancy, considered by the sailor as a promising genius,
+because I liked punch better than wine; and I took care to improve this
+prepossession by continual inquiries about the art of navigation, the
+degree of heat and cold in different climates, the profits of trade, and
+the dangers of shipwreck. I admired the courage of the seamen, and
+gained his heart by importuning him for a recital of his adventures, and
+a sight of his foreign curiosities. I listened with an appearance of
+close attention to stories which I could already repeat, and at the
+close never failed to express my resolution to visit distant countries,
+and my contempt of the cowards and drones that spend all their lives in
+their native parish; though I had in reality no desire of any thing but
+money, nor ever felt the stimulations of curiosity or ardour of
+adventure, but would contentedly have passed the years of Nestor in
+receiving rents, and lending upon mortgages.
+
+The squire I was able to please with less hypocrisy, for I really
+thought it pleasant enough to kill the game and eat it. Some arts of
+falsehood, however, the hunger of gold persuaded me to practise, by
+which, though no other mischief was produced, the purity of my thoughts
+was vitiated, and the reverence for truth gradually destroyed. I
+sometimes purchased fish, and pretended to have caught them; I hired the
+countrymen to shew me partridges, and then gave my uncle intelligence of
+their haunt; I learned the seats of hares at night, and discovered them
+in the morning with a sagacity that raised the wonder and envy of old
+sportsmen. One only obstruction to the advancement of my reputation I
+could never fully surmount; I was naturally a coward, and was therefore
+always left shamefully behind, when there was a necessity to leap a
+hedge, to swim a river, or force the horses to the utmost speed; but as
+these exigencies did not frequently happen, I maintained my honour with
+sufficient success, and was never left out of a hunting party.
+
+The old chambermaid was not so certainly, nor so easily pleased, for she
+had no predominant passion but avarice, and was therefore cold and
+inaccessible. She had no conception of any virtue in a young man but
+that of saving his money. When she heard of my exploits in the field,
+she would shake her head, inquire how much I should be the richer for
+all my performances, and lament that such sums should be spent upon dogs
+and horses. If the sailor told her of my inclination to travel, she was
+sure there was no place like England, and could not imagine why any man
+that can live in his own country should leave it. This sullen and frigid
+being I found means, however, to propitiate by frequent commendations of
+frugality, and perpetual care to avoid expense.
+
+From the sailor was our first and most considerable expectation; for he
+was richer than the chambermaid, and older than the squire. He was so
+awkward and bashful among women, that we concluded him secure from
+matrimony; and the noisy fondness with which he used to welcome me to
+his house, made us imagine that he would look out for no other heir, and
+that we had nothing to do but wait patiently for his death. But in the
+midst of our triumph, my uncle saluted us one morning with a cry of
+transport, and, clapping his hand hard on my shoulder, told me, I was a
+happy fellow to have a friend like him in the world, for he came to fit
+me out for a voyage with one of his old acquaintances. I turned pale,
+and trembled; my father told him, that he believed my constitution not
+fitted to the sea; and my mother, bursting into tears, cried out, that
+her heart would break if she lost me. All this had no effect; the sailor
+was wholly insusceptive of the softer passions, and, without regard to
+tears or arguments, persisted in his resolution to make me a man. We
+were obliged to comply in appearance, and preparations were accordingly
+made. I took leave of my friends with great alacrity, proclaimed the
+beneficence of my uncle with the highest strains of gratitude, and
+rejoiced at the opportunity now put into my hands of gratifying my
+thirst of knowledge. But, a week before the day appointed for my
+departure, I fell sick by my mother's direction, and refused all food
+but what she privately brought me; whenever my uncle visited me I was
+lethargick or delirious, but took care in my raving fits to talk
+incessantly of travel and merchandize. The room was kept dark; the table
+was filled with vials and gallipots; my mother was with difficulty
+persuaded not to endanger her life with nocturnal attendance; my father
+lamented the loss of the profits of the voyage; and such superfluity of
+artifices was employed, as perhaps might have discovered the cheat to a
+man of penetration. But the sailor, unacquainted with subtilties and
+stratagems, was easily deluded; and as the ship could not stay for my
+recovery, sold the cargo, and left me to re-establish my health at
+leisure.
+
+I was sent to regain my flesh in a purer air, lest it should appear
+never to have been wasted, and in two months returned to deplore my
+disappointment. My uncle pitied my dejection, and bid me prepare myself
+against next year, for no land-lubber should touch his money.
+
+A reprieve however was obtained, and perhaps some new stratagem might
+have succeeded another spring; but my uncle unhappily made amorous
+advances to my mother's maid, who, to promote so advantageous a match,
+discovered the secret with which only she had been entrusted. He
+stormed, and raved, and declaring that he would have heirs of his own,
+and not give his substance to cheats and cowards, married the girl in
+two days, and has now four children.
+
+Cowardice is always scorned, and deceit universally detested. I found my
+friends, if not wholly alienated, at least cooled in their affection;
+the squire, though he did not wholly discard me, was less fond, and
+often inquired when I would go to sea. I was obliged to bear his
+insults, and endeavoured to rekindle his kindness by assiduity and
+respect; but all my care was vain; he died without a will, and the
+estate devolved to the legal heir.
+
+Thus has the folly of my parents condemned me to spend in flattery and
+attendance those years in which I might have been qualified to place
+myself above hope or fear. I am arrived at manhood without any useful
+art, or generous sentiment; and, if the old woman should likewise at
+last deceive me, am in danger at once of beggary and ignorance.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+CAPTATOR.
+
+
+
+No. 199. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1752.
+
+ _Decolor, obscurus, cilis. Non ille repexam
+ Cæsariem Regum, nec Candida virginis ornat
+ Colla, nec insigni splendet per cingula morsu:
+ Sed nova si nigri videas miracula suai,
+ Tum pulcros superat cultus, et quldquid Evis
+ Indus litoribus rubra scrutatur in alga_. CLAUDIANUS, xlviii. 10.
+
+ Obscure, unpris'd, and dark, the magnet lies,
+ Nor lures the search of avaricious eyes,
+ Nor binds the neck, nor sparkles in the hair,
+ Nor dignifies the great, nor decks the fair.
+ But search the wonders of the dusky stone,
+ And own all glories of the mine outdone,
+ Each grace of form, each ornament of state,
+ That decks the fair, or dignifies the great.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Though you have seldom digressed from moral subjects, I suppose you are
+not so rigorous or cynical as to deny the value or usefulness of natural
+philosophy; or to have lived in this age of inquiry and experiment,
+without any attention to the wonders every day produced by the pokers of
+magnetism and the wheels of electricity. At least, I may be allowed to
+hope that, since nothing is more contrary to moral excellence than envy,
+you will not refuse to promote the happiness of others, merely because
+you cannot partake of their enjoyments.
+
+In confidence, therefore, that your ignorance has not made you an enemy
+to knowledge, I offer you the honour of introducing to the notice of the
+publick, an adept, who, having long laboured for the benefit of mankind,
+is not willing, like too many of his predecessors, to conceal his
+secrets in the grave.
+
+Many have signalized themselves by melting their estates in crucibles. I
+was born to no fortune, and therefore had only my mind and body to
+devote to knowledge, and the gratitude of posterity will attest, that
+neither mind nor body have been spared. I have sat whole weeks without
+sleep by the side of an athanor, to watch the moment of projection; I
+have made the first experiment in nineteen diving engines of new
+construction; I have fallen eleven times speechless under the shock of
+electricity; I have twice dislocated my limbs, and once fractured my
+skull, in essaying to fly[l]; and four times endangered my life by
+submitting to the transfusion of blood.
+
+In the first period of my studies, I exerted the powers of my body more
+than those of my mind, and was not without hopes that fame might be
+purchased by a few broken bones without the toil of thinking; but having
+been shattered by some violent experiments, and constrained to confine
+myself to my books, I passed six-and-thirty years in searching the
+treasures of ancient wisdom, but am at last amply recompensed for all my
+perseverance.
+
+The curiosity of the present race of philosophers, having been long
+exercised upon electricity, has been lately transferred to magnetism;
+the qualities of the loadstone have been investigated, if not with much
+advantage, yet with great applause; and as the highest praise of art is
+to imitate nature, I hope no man will think the makers of artificial
+magnets celebrated or reverenced above their deserts.
+
+I have, for some time, employed myself in the same practice, but with
+deeper knowledge and more extensive views. While my contemporaries were
+touching needles and raising weights, or busying themselves with
+inclination and variation, I have been examining those qualities of
+magnetism which may be applied to the accommodation and happiness of
+common life. I have left to inferior understandings the care of
+conducting the sailor through the hazards of the ocean, and reserved to
+myself the more difficult and illustrious province of preserving the
+connubial compact from violation, and setting mankind free for ever from
+the danger of supposititious children, and the torments of fruitless
+vigilance and anxious suspicion.
+
+To defraud any man of his due praise is unworthy of a philosopher; I
+shall, therefore, openly confess that I owe the first hint of this
+inestimable secret to the rabbi Abraham Ben Hannase, who, in his
+treatise of precious stones, has left this account of the magnet:
+[Hebrew: chkalamta],&c. "The calamita, or loadstone that attracts iron,
+produces many bad fantasies in man. Women fly from this stone. If,
+therefore, any husband be disturbed with jealousy, and fear lest his
+wife converses with other men, let him lay this stone upon her while she
+is asleep. If she be pure, she will, when she wakes, clasp her husband
+fondly in her arms; but if she be guilty, she will fall out of bed, and
+run away."
+
+When I first read this wonderful passage, I could not easily conceive
+why it had remained hitherto unregarded in such a zealous competition
+for magnetical fame. It would surely be unjust to suspect that any of
+the candidates are strangers to the name or works of rabbi Abraham, or
+to conclude, from a late edict of the Royal Society in favour of the
+English language, that philosophy and literature are no longer to act in
+concert. Yet, how should a quality so useful escape promulgation, but by
+the obscurity of the language in which it was delivered? Why are footmen
+and chambermaids paid on every side for keeping secrets, which no
+caution nor expense could secure from the all-penetrating magnet? Or,
+why are so many witnesses summoned, and so many artifices practised, to
+discover what so easy an experiment would infallibly reveal?
+
+Full of this perplexity, I read the lines of Abraham to a friend, who
+advised me not to expose my life by a mad indulgence of the love of
+fame: he warned me by the fate of Orpheus, that knowledge or genius
+could give no protection to the invader of female prerogatives; assured
+me that neither the armour of Achilles, nor the antidote of Mithridates,
+would be able to preserve me; and counselled me, if I could not live
+without renown, to attempt the acquisition of universal empire, in which
+the honour would perhaps be equal, and the danger certainly be less.
+
+I, a solitary student, pretend not to much knowledge of the world, but
+am unwilling to think it so generally corrupt, as that a scheme for the
+detection of incontinence should bring any danger upon its inventor. My
+friend has indeed told me that all the women will be my enemies, and
+that, however I flatter myself with hopes of defence from the men, I
+shall certainly find myself deserted in the hour of danger. Of the young
+men, said he, some will be afraid of sharing the disgrace of their
+mothers, and some the danger of their mistresses; of those who are
+married, part are already convinced of the falsehood of their wives, and
+part shut their eyes to avoid conviction; few ever sought for virtue in
+marriage, and therefore few will try whether they have found it. Almost
+every man is careless or timorous, and to trust is easier and safer than
+to examine.
+
+These observations discouraged me, till I began to consider what
+reception I was likely to find among the ladies, whom I have reviewed
+under the three classes of maids, wives, and widows, and cannot but hope
+that I may obtain some countenance among them. The single ladies I
+suppose universally ready to patronise my method, by which connubial
+wickedness may be detected, since no woman marries with a previous
+design to be unfaithful to her husband. And to keep them steady in my
+cause, I promise never to sell one of my magnets to a man who steals a
+girl from school; marries a woman of forty years younger than himself;
+or employs the authority of parents to obtain a wife without her own
+consent.
+
+Among the married ladies, notwithstanding the insinuations of slander,
+yet I resolve to believe, that the greater part are my friends, and am
+at least convinced, that they who demand the test, and appear on my
+side, will supply, by their spirit, the deficiency of their numbers, and
+that their enemies will shrink and quake at the sight of a magnet, as
+the slaves of Scythia fled from the scourge.
+
+The widows will be confederated in my favour by their curiosity, if not
+by their virtue; for it may be observed, that women who have outlived
+their husbands, always think themselves entitled to superintend the
+conduct of young wives; and as they are themselves in no danger from
+this magnetick trial, I shall expect them to be eminently and
+unanimously zealous in recommending it.
+
+With these hopes I shall, in a short time, offer to sale magnets armed
+with a particular metallick composition, which concentrates their
+virtue, and determines their agency. It is known that the efficacy of
+the magnet, in common operations, depends much upon its armature, and it
+cannot be imagined, that a stone, naked, or cased only in a common
+manner, will discover the virtues ascribed to it by Rabbi Abraham. The
+secret of this metal I shall carefully conceal, and, therefore, am not
+afraid of imitators, nor shall trouble the offices with solicitations
+for a patent.
+
+I shall sell them of different sizes, and various degrees of strength. I
+have some of a bulk proper to be hung at the bed's head, as scare-crows,
+and some so small that they may be easily concealed. Some I have ground
+into oval forms to be hung at watches; and some, for the curious, I have
+set in wedding rings, that ladies may never want an attestation of their
+innocence. Some I can produce so sluggish and inert, that they will not
+act before the third failure; and others so vigorous and animated, that
+they exert their influence against unlawful wishes, if they have been
+willingly and deliberately indulged. As it is my practice honestly to
+tell my customers the properties of my magnets, I can judge, by their
+choice, of the delicacy of their sentiments. Many have been content to
+spare cost by purchasing only the lowest degree of efficacy, and all
+have started with terrour from those which operate upon the thoughts.
+One young lady only fitted on a ring of the strongest energy, and
+declared that she scorned to separate her wishes from her acts, or allow
+herself to think what she was forbidden to practise.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+HERMETICUS.
+
+[Footnote l: In the sixth chapter of Rasselas we have an excellent story
+of an experimentalist in the art of flying. Dr. Johnson sketched perhaps
+from life, for we are informed that he once lodged in the same house
+with a man who broke his legs in the daring attempt.]
+
+
+
+No. 200. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1752.
+
+ _Nemo petit, modicis quae mittebantur amicis
+ A Seneca, quae Piso bonus, quae Cotta solebut
+ Largiri; namque et titulis, et fascibus olim
+ Major habebatur donandi gloria: solum
+ Poscimus, ut caenes civiliter. Hoc face, el esto,
+ Esto, ut nunc multi, dives tibi, pauper amicis_. JUV. Sat. v. 108.
+
+ No man expects (for who so much a sot
+ Who has the times he lives in so forgot?)
+ What Seneca, what Piso us'd to send,
+ To raise or to support a sinking friend.
+ Those godlike men, to wanting virtue kind,
+ Bounty well plac'd, preferr'd, and well design'd,
+ To all their titles, all that height of pow'r,
+ Which turns the brains of fools, and fools alone adore.
+ When your poor client is condemn'd t' attend,
+ 'Tis all we ask, receive him as a friend:
+ Descend to this, and then we ask no more;
+ Rich to yourself, to all beside be poor. BOWLES.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+MR. RAMBLER,
+
+Such is the tenderness or infirmity of many minds, that when any
+affliction oppresses them, they have immediate recourse to lamentation
+and complaint, which, though it can only be allowed reasonable when
+evils admit of remedy, and then only when addressed to those from whom
+the remedy is expected, yet seems even in hopeless and incurable
+distresses to be natural, since those by whom it is not indulged,
+imagine that they give a proof of extraordinary fortitude by suppressing
+it.
+
+I am one of those who, with the Sancho of Cervantes, leave to higher
+characters the merit of suffering in silence, and give vent without
+scruple to any sorrow that swells in my heart. It is therefore to me a
+severe aggravation of a calamity, when it is such as in the common
+opinion will not justify the acerbity of exclamation, or support the
+solemnity of vocal grief. Yet many pains are incident to a man of
+delicacy, which the unfeeling world cannot be persuaded to pity, and
+which, when they are separated from their peculiar and personal
+circumstances, will never be considered as important enough to claim
+attention, or deserve redress.
+
+Of this kind will appear to gross and vulgar apprehensions, the miseries
+which I endured in a morning visit to Prospero, a man lately raised to
+wealth by a lucky project, and too much intoxicated by sudden elevation,
+or too little polished by thought and conversation, to enjoy his present
+fortune with elegance and decency.
+
+We set out in the world together; and for a long time mutually assisted
+each other in our exigencies, as either happened to have money or
+influence beyond his immediate necessities. You know that nothing
+generally endears men so much as participation of dangers and
+misfortunes; I therefore always considered Prospero as united with me in
+the strongest league of kindness, and imagined that our friendship was
+only to be broken by the hand of death. I felt at his sudden shoot of
+success an honest and disinterested joy; but as I want no part of his
+superfluities, am not willing to descend from that equality in which we
+hitherto have lived.
+
+Our intimacy was regarded by me as a dispensation from ceremonial
+visits; and it was so long before I saw him at his new house, that he
+gently complained of my neglect, and obliged me to come on a day
+appointed. I kept my promise, but found that the impatience of my friend
+arose not from any desire to communicate his happiness, but to enjoy his
+superiority.
+
+When I told my name at the door, the footman went to see if his master
+was at home, and, by the tardiness of his return, gave me reason to
+suspect that time was taken to deliberate. He then informed me, that
+Prospero desired my company, and shewed the staircase carefully secured
+by mats from the pollution of my feet. The best apartments were
+ostentatiously set open, that I might have a distant view of the
+magnificence which I was not permitted to approach; and my old friend
+receiving me with all the insolence of condescension at the top of the
+stairs, conducted me to a back room, where he told me he always
+breakfasted when he had not great company.
+
+On the floor where we sat lay a carpet covered with a cloth, of which
+Prospero ordered his servant to lift up a corner, that I might
+contemplate the brightness of the colours, and the elegance of the
+texture, and asked me whether I had ever seen any thing so fine before?
+I did not gratify his folly with any outcries of admiration, but coldly
+bade the footman let down the cloth.
+
+We then sat down, and I began to hope that pride was glutted with
+persecution, when Prospero desired that I would give the servant leave
+to adjust the cover of my chair, which was slipt a little aside, to shew
+the damask; he informed me that he had bespoke ordinary chairs for
+common use, but had been disappointed by his tradesman. I put the chair
+aside with my foot, and drew another so hastily, that I was entreated
+not to rumple the carpet.
+
+Breakfast was at last set, and as I was not willing to indulge the
+peevishness that began to seize me, I commended the tea: Prospero then
+told me, that another time I should taste his finest sort, but that he
+had only a very small quantity remaining, and reserved it for those whom
+he thought himself obliged to treat with particular respect.
+
+While we were conversing upon such subjects as imagination happened to
+suggest, he frequently digressed into directions to the servant that
+waited, or made a slight inquiry after the jeweller or silversmith; and
+once, as I was pursuing an argument with some degree of earnestness, he
+started from his posture of attention, and ordered, that if lord Lofty
+called on him that morning, he should be shown into the best parlour.
+
+My patience was yet not wholly subdued. I was willing to promote his
+satisfaction, and therefore observed that the figures on the china were
+eminently pretty. Prospero had now an opportunity of calling for his
+Dresden china, which, says he, I always associate with my chased
+teakettle. The cups were brought; I once resolved not to have looked
+upon them, but my curiosity prevailed. When I had examined them a
+little, Prospero desired me to set them down, for they who were
+accustomed only to common dishes, seldom handled china with much care.
+You will, I hope, commend my philosophy, when I tell you that I did not
+dash his baubles to the ground.
+
+He was now so much elevated with his own greatness, that he thought some
+humility necessary to avert the glance of envy, and therefore told me,
+with an air of soft composure, that I was not to estimate life by
+external appearance, that all these shining acquisitions had added
+little to his happiness, that he still remembered with pleasure the days
+in which he and I were upon the level, and had often, in the moment of
+reflection, been doubtful, whether he should lose much by changing his
+condition for mine.
+
+I began now to be afraid lest his pride should, by silence and
+submission be emboldened to insults that could not easily be borne, and
+therefore coolly considered, how I should repress it without such
+bitterness of reproof as I was yet unwilling to use. But he interrupted
+my meditation, by asking leave to be dressed, and told me, that he had
+promised to attend some ladies in the park, and, if I was going the same
+way, would take me in his chariot. I had no inclination to any other
+favours, and therefore left him without any intention of seeing him
+again, unless some misfortune should restore his understanding.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+ASPER.
+
+Though I am not wholly insensible of the provocations which my
+correspondent has received, I cannot altogether commend the keenness of
+his resentment, nor encourage him to persist in his resolution of
+breaking off all commerce with his old acquaintance. One of the golden
+precepts of Pythagoras directs, that _a friend should not be hated for
+little faults_; and surely he, upon whom nothing worse can be charged,
+than that he mats his stairs, and covers his carpet, and sets out his
+finery to show before those whom he does not admit to use it, has yet
+committed nothing that should exclude him from common degrees of
+kindness. Such improprieties often proceed rather from stupidity than
+malice. Those who thus shine only to dazzle, are influenced merely by
+custom and example, and neither examine, nor are qualified to examine,
+the motives of their own practice, or to state the nice limits between
+elegance and ostentation. They are often innocent of the pain which
+their vanity produces, and insult others when they have no worse purpose
+than to please themselves.
+
+He that too much refines his delicacy will always endanger his quiet. Of
+those with whom nature and virtue oblige us to converse, some are
+ignorant of the art of pleasing, and offend when they design to caress;
+some are negligent, and gratify themselves without regard to the quiet
+of another; some, perhaps, are malicious, and feel no greater
+satisfaction in prosperity, than that of raising envy and trampling
+inferiority. But, whatever be the motive of insult, it is always best to
+overlook it, for folly scarcely can deserve resentment, and malice is
+punished by neglect[m].
+
+[Footnote m: Garrick's little vanities are recognized by all in the
+character of Prospero. Mr. Boswell informs us, that he never forgave its
+pointed satire. On the same authority we are assured, that though
+Johnson so dearly loved to ridicule his pupil, yet he so habitually
+considered him as his own property, that he would permit no one beside
+to hold up his weaknesses to derision.]
+
+
+
+No. 201. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1752.
+
+ --_Sanctus haberi
+ Justitiæque tenat factis dictisque mereris,
+ Adnosco procerem_. JUV. Sat. Lib. viii. 24.
+
+ Convince the world that you're devout and true;
+ Be just in all you say, and all you do;
+ Whatever be your birth, you're sure to be
+ A peer of the first magnitude to me. STEPNEY.
+
+Boyle has observed, that the excellency of manufactures, and the
+facility of labour, would be much promoted, if the various expedients
+and contrivances which lie concealed in private hands, were by
+reciprocal communications made generally known; for there are few
+operations that are not performed by one or other with some peculiar
+advantages, which, though singly of little importance, would, by
+conjunction and concurrence, open new inlets to knowledge, and give new
+powers to diligence.
+
+There are, in like manner, several moral excellencies distributed among
+the different classes of a community. It was said by Cujacius, that he
+never read more than one book by which he was not instructed; and he
+that shall inquire after virtue with ardour and attention, will seldom
+find a man by whose example or sentiments he may not be improved.
+
+Every profession has some essential and appropriate virtue, without
+which there can be no hope of honour or success, and which, as it is
+more or less cultivated, confers within its sphere of activity different
+degrees of merit and reputation. As the astrologers range the
+subdivisions of mankind under the planets which they suppose to
+influence their lives, the moralist may distribute them according to the
+virtues which they necessarily practise, and consider them as
+distinguished by prudence or fortitude, diligence or patience.
+
+So much are the modes of excellence settled by time and place, that men
+may be heard boasting in one street of that which they would anxiously
+conceal in another. The grounds of scorn and esteem, the topicks of
+praise and satire, are varied according to the several virtues or vices
+which the course of life has disposed men to admire or abhor; but he who
+is solicitous for his own improvement, must not be limited by local
+reputation, but select from every tribe of mortals their
+characteristical virtues, and constellate in himself the scattered
+graces which shine single in other men.
+
+The chief praise to which a trader aspires is that of punctuality, or an
+exact and rigorous observance of commercial engagements; nor is there
+any vice of which he so much dreads the imputation, as of negligence and
+instability. This is a quality which the interest of mankind requires to
+be diffused through all the ranks of life, but which many seem to
+consider as a vulgar and ignoble virtue, below the ambition of greatness
+or attention of wit, scarcely requisite among men of gaiety and spirit,
+and sold at its highest rate when it is sacrificed to a frolick or a
+jest.
+
+Every man has daily occasion to remark what vexations arise from this
+privilege of deceiving one another. The active and vivacious have so
+long disdained the restraints of truth, that promises and appointments
+have lost their cogency, and both parties neglect their stipulations,
+because each concludes that they will be broken by the other.
+
+Negligence is first admitted in small affairs, and strengthened by petty
+indulgences. He that is not yet hardened by custom, ventures not on the
+violation of important engagements, but thinks himself bound by his word
+in cases of property or danger, though he allows himself to forget at
+what time he is to meet ladies in the park, or at what tavern his
+friends are expecting him.
+
+This laxity of honour would be more tolerable, if it could be restrained
+to the play-house, the ball-room, or the card-table; yet even there it
+is sufficiently troublesome, and darkens those moments with expectation,
+suspense, and resentment, which are set aside for pleasure, and from
+which we naturally hope for unmingled enjoyment, and total relaxation.
+But he that suffers the slightest breach in his morality, can seldom
+tell what shall enter it, or how wide it shall be made; when a passage
+is open, the influx of corruption is every moment wearing down
+opposition, and by slow degrees deluges the heart.
+
+Aliger entered the world a youth of lively imagination, extensive views,
+and untainted principles. His curiosity incited him to range from place
+to place, and try all the varieties of conversation; his elegance of
+address and fertility of ideas gained him friends wherever he appeared;
+or at least he found the general kindness of reception always shown to a
+young man whose birth and fortune give him a claim to notice, and who
+has neither by vice nor folly destroyed his privileges. Aliger was
+pleased with this general smile of mankind, and was industrious to
+preserve it by compliance and officiousness, but did not suffer his
+desire of pleasing to vitiate his integrity. It was his established
+maxim, that a promise is never to be broken; nor was it without long
+reluctance that he once suffered himself to be drawn away from a festal
+engagement by the importunity of another company.
+
+He spent the evening, as is usual in the rudiments of vice, in
+perturbation and imperfect enjoyment, and met his disappointed friends
+in the morning with confusion and excuses. His companions, not
+accustomed to such scrupulous anxiety, laughed at his uneasiness,
+compounded the offence for a bottle, gave him courage to break his word
+again, and again levied the penalty. He ventured the same experiment
+upon another society, and found them equally ready to consider it as a
+venial fault, always incident to a man of quickness and gaiety; till, by
+degrees, he began to think himself at liberty to follow the last
+invitation, and was no longer shocked at the turpitude of falsehood. He
+made no difficulty to promise his presence at distant places, and if
+listlessness happened to creep upon him, would sit at home with great
+tranquillity, and has often sunk to sleep in a chair, while he held ten
+tables in continual expectations of his entrance.
+
+It was so pleasant to live in perpetual vacancy, that he soon dismissed
+his attention as an useless incumbrance, and resigned himself to
+carelessness and dissipation, without any regard to the future or the
+past, or any other motive of action than the impulse of a sudden desire,
+or the attraction of immediate pleasure. The absent were immediately
+forgotten, and the hopes or fears felt by others, had no influence upon
+his conduct. He was in speculation completely just, but never kept his
+promise to a creditor; he was benevolent, but always deceived those
+friends whom he undertook to patronise or assist; he was prudent, but
+suffered his affairs to be embarrassed for want of regulating his
+accounts at stated times. He courted a young lady, and when the
+settlements were drawn, took a ramble into the country on the day
+appointed to sign them. He resolved to travel, and sent his chests on
+shipboard, but delayed to follow them till he lost his passage. He was
+summoned as an evidence in a cause of great importance, and loitered on
+the way till the trial was past. It is said that when he had, with great
+expense, formed an interest in a borough, his opponent contrived, by
+some agents who knew his temper, to lure him away on the day of
+election.
+
+His benevolence draws him into the commission of a thousand crimes,
+which others less kind or civil would escape. His courtesy invites
+application; his promises produce dependence; he has his pockets filled
+with petitions, which he intends some time to deliver and enforce, and
+his table covered with letters of request, with which he purposes to
+comply; but time slips imperceptibly away, while he is either idle or
+busy; his friends lose their opportunities, and charge upon him their
+miscarriages and calamities.
+
+This character, however contemptible, is not peculiar to Aliger. They
+whose activity of imagination is often shifting the scenes of
+expectation, are frequently subject to such sallies of caprice as make
+all their actions fortuitous, destroy the value of their friendship,
+obstruct the efficacy of their virtues, and set them below the meanest
+of those that persist in their resolutions, execute what they design,
+and perform what they have promised.
+
+
+
+No. 202. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1752.
+
+ [Greek: Pros apanta deilos estin o penaes pragmata,
+ Kai pantas autou kataphronein upolambanei
+ O de metrios pratton periskegesteron
+ Apanta t aniara, dampria, phepei.] CALLIMACHUS.
+
+ From no affliction is the poor exempt,
+ He thinks each eye surveys him with contempt;
+ Unmanly poverty subdues the heart,
+ Cankers each wound, and sharpen's[1] ev'ry dart. F. LEWIS.
+[1] Transcriber's note: sic.
+
+Among those who have endeavoured to promote learning, and rectify
+judgment, it has been long customary to complain of the abuse of words,
+which are often admitted to signify things so different, that, instead
+of assisting the understanding as vehicles of knowledge, they produce
+errour, dissention, and perplexity, because what is affirmed in one
+sense, is received in another.
+
+If this ambiguity sometimes embarrasses the most solemn controversies,
+and obscures the demonstrations of science, it may well be expected to
+infest the pompous periods of declaimers, whose purpose is often only to
+amuse with fallacies, and change the colours of truth and falsehood; or
+the musical compositions of poets, whose style is professedly
+figurative, and whose art is imagined to consist in distorting words
+from their original meaning.
+
+There are few words of which the reader believes himself better to know
+the import, than of _poverty_; yet, whoever studies either the poets or
+philosophers, will find such an account of the condition expressed by
+that term as his experience or observation will not easily discover to
+be true. Instead of the meanness, distress, complaint, anxiety, and
+dependance, which have hitherto been combined in his ideas of poverty,
+he will read of content, innocence, and cheerfulness, of health and
+safety, tranquillity and freedom; of pleasures not known but to men
+unencumbered with possessions; and of sleep that sheds his balsamick
+anodynes only on the cottage. Such are the blessings to be obtained by
+the resignation of riches, that kings might descend from their thrones,
+and generals retire from a triumph, only to slumber undisturbed in the
+elysium of poverty.
+
+If these authors do not deceive us, nothing can be more absurd than that
+perpetual contest for wealth which keeps the world in commotion; nor any
+complaints more justly censured than those which proceed from want of
+the gifts of fortune, which we are taught by the great masters of moral
+wisdom to consider as golden shackles, by which the wearer is at once
+disabled and adorned; as luscious poisons which may for a time please
+the palate, but soon betray their malignity by languor and by pain. It
+is the great privilege of poverty to be happy unenvied, to be healthful
+without physick, and secure without a guard; to obtain from the bounty
+of nature, what the great and wealthy are compelled to procure by the
+help of artists and attendants, of flatterers and spies.
+
+But it will be found upon a nearer view, that they who extol the
+happiness of poverty, do not mean the same state with those who deplore
+its miseries. Poets have their imaginations filled with ideas of
+magnificence; and being accustomed to contemplate the downfall of
+empires, or to contrive forms of lamentations, for monarchs in distress,
+rank all the classes of mankind in a state of poverty, who make no
+approaches to the dignity of crowns. To be poor, in the epick language,
+is only not to command the wealth of nations, nor to have fleets and
+armies in pay.
+
+Vanity has perhaps contributed to this impropriety of style. He that
+wishes to become a philosopher at a cheap rate, easily gratifies his
+ambition by submitting to poverty when he does not feel it, and by
+boasting his contempt of riches when he has already more than he enjoys.
+He who would shew the extent of his views, and grandeur of his
+conceptions, or discover his acquaintance with splendour and
+magnificence, may talk like Cowley, of an humble station and quiet
+obscurity, of the paucity of nature's wants, and the inconveniencies of
+superfluity, and at last, like him, limit his desires to five hundred
+pounds a year; a fortune, indeed, not exuberant, when we compare it with
+the expenses of pride and luxury, but to which it little becomes a
+philosopher to affix the name of poverty, since no man can, with any
+propriety, be termed poor, who does not see the greater part of mankind
+richer than himself.
+
+As little is the general condition of human life understood by the
+panegyrists and historians, who amuse us with accounts of the poverty of
+heroes and sages. Riches are of no value in themselves, their use is
+discovered only in that which they procure. They are not coveted, unless
+by narrow understandings, which confound the means with the end, but for
+the sake of power, influence, and esteem; or, by some of less elevated
+and refined sentiments, as necessary to sensual enjoyment.
+
+The pleasures of luxury, many have, without uncommon virtue, been able
+to despise, even when affluence and idleness have concurred to tempt
+them; and therefore he who feels nothing from indigence but the want of
+gratifications which he could not in any other condition make consistent
+with innocence, has given no proof of eminent patience. Esteem and
+influence every man desires, but they are equally pleasing, and equally
+valuable, by whatever means they are obtained; and whoever has found the
+art of securing them without the help of money, ought, in reality, to be
+accounted rich, since he has all that riches can purchase to a wise man.
+Cincinnatus, though he lived upon a few acres cultivated by his own
+hand, was sufficiently removed from all the evils generally comprehended
+under the name of poverty, when his reputation was such, that the voice
+of his country called him from his farm to take absolute command into
+his hand; nor was Diogenes much mortified by his residence in a tub,
+where he was honoured with the visit of Alexander the Great.
+
+The same fallacy has conciliated veneration to the religious orders.
+When we behold a man abdicating the hope of terrestrial possessions, and
+precluding himself, by an irrevocable vow, from the pursuit and
+acquisition of all that his fellow-beings consider as worthy of wishes
+and endeavours, we are immediately struck with the purity, abstraction,
+and firmness of his mind, and regard him as wholly employed in securing
+the interests of futurity, and devoid of any other care than to gain, at
+whatever price, the surest passage to eternal rest.
+
+Yet, what can the votary be justly said to have lost of his present
+happiness? If he resides in a convent, he converses only with men whose
+condition is the same with his own; he has, from the munificence of the
+founder, all the necessaries of life, and is safe from that destitution,
+which Hooker declares to be "such an impediment to virtue, as, till it
+be removed, suffereth not the mind of man to admit any other care." All
+temptations to envy and competition are shut out from his retreat; he is
+not pained with the sight of unattainable dignity, nor insulted with the
+bluster of insolence, or the smile of forced familiarity. If he wanders
+abroad, the sanctity of his character amply compensates all other
+distinctions; he is seldom seen but with reverence, nor heard but with
+submission.
+
+It has been remarked, that death, though often defied in the field,
+seldom fails to terrify when it approaches the bed of sickness in its
+natural horrour; so poverty may easily be endured, while associated with
+dignity and reputation, but will always be shunned and dreaded, when it
+is accompanied with ignominy and contempt.
+
+
+
+No. 203. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1752.
+
+ _Cum volet illa dies, quae nil nisi corporis hujus
+ Jus habet, incerti spatium mihi finiat avi_. OVID. Met. xv. 873.
+
+ Come, soon or late, death's undetermin'd day,
+ This mortal being only can decay. WELSTED.
+
+It seems to be the fate of man to seek all his consolations in futurity.
+The time present is seldom able to fill desire or imagination with
+immediate enjoyment, and we are forced to supply its deficiencies by
+recollection or anticipation.
+
+Every one has so often detected the fallaciousness of hope, and the
+inconvenience of teaching himself to expect what a thousand accidents
+may preclude, that, when time has abated the confidence with which youth
+rushes out to take possession of the world, we endeavour, or wish, to
+find entertainment in the review of life, and to repose upon real facts,
+and certain experience. This is perhaps one reason, among many, why age
+delights in narratives.
+
+But so full is the world of calamity, that every source of pleasure is
+polluted, and every retirement of tranquillity disturbed. When time has
+supplied us with events sufficient to employ our thoughts, it has
+mingled them with so many disasters, that we shrink from their
+remembrance, dread their intrusion upon our minds, and fly from them as
+from enemies that pursue us with torture.
+
+No man past the middle point of life can sit down to feast upon the
+pleasures of youth without finding the banquet embittered by the cup of
+sorrow; he may revive lucky accidents, and pleasing extravagancies; many
+days of harmless frolick, or nights of honest festivity, will perhaps
+recur; or, if he has been engaged in scenes of action, and acquainted
+with affairs of difficulty and vicissitudes of fortune, he may enjoy the
+nobler pleasure of looking back upon distress firmly supported, dangers
+resolutely encountered, and opposition artfully defeated. Aeneas
+properly comforts his companions, when, after the horrours of a storm,
+they have landed on an unknown and desolate country, with the hope that
+their miseries will be at some distant time recounted with delight.
+There are few higher gratifications, than that of reflection on
+surmounted evils, when they are not incurred nor protracted by our
+fault, and neither reproach us with cowardice nor guilt.
+
+But this felicity is almost always abated by the reflection that they
+with whom we should be most pleased to share it are now in the grave. A
+few years make such havock in human generations, that we soon see
+ourselves deprived of those with whom we entered the world, and whom the
+participation of pleasures or fatigues had endeared to our remembrance.
+The man of enterprise recounts his adventures and expedients, but is
+forced, at the close of the relation, to pay a sigh to the names of
+those that contributed to his success; he that passes his life among the
+gayer part of mankind, has his remembrance stored with remarks and
+repartees of wits, whose sprightliness and merriment are now lost in
+perpetual silence; the trader, whose industry has supplied the want of
+inheritance, repines in solitary plenty at the absence of companions,
+with whom he had planned out amusements for his latter years; and the
+scholar, whose merit, after a long series of efforts, raises him from
+obscurity, looks round in vain from his exaltation for his old friends
+or enemies, whose applause or mortification would heighten his triumph.
+
+Among Martial's requisites to happiness is, _Res non parta labore, sed
+relicta_, "an estate not gained by industry, but left by inheritance."
+It is necessary to the completion of every good, that it be timely
+obtained; for whatever comes at the close of life will come too late to
+give much delight; yet all human happiness has its defects. Of what we
+do not gain for ourselves we have only a faint and imperfect fruition,
+because we cannot compare the difference between want and possession, or
+at least can derive from it no conviction of our own abilities, nor any
+increase of self-esteem; what we acquire by bravery or science, by
+mental or corporeal diligence, comes at last when we cannot communicate,
+and, therefore, cannot enjoy it.
+
+Thus every period of life is obliged to borrow its happiness from the
+time to come. In youth we have nothing past to entertain us, and in age,
+we derive little from retrospect but hopeless sorrow. Yet the future
+likewise has its limits, which the imagination dreads to approach, but
+which we see to be not far distant. The loss of our friends and
+companions impresses hourly upon us the necessity of our own departure;
+we know that the schemes of man are quickly at an end, that we must soon
+lie down in the grave with the forgotten multitudes of former ages, and
+yield our place to others, who, like us, shall be driven awhile by hope
+or fear about the surface of the earth, and then like us be lost in the
+shades of death.
+
+Beyond this termination of our material existence, we are therefore
+obliged to extend our hopes; and almost every man indulges his
+imagination with something, which is not to happen till he has changed
+his manner of being: some amuse themselves with entails and settlements,
+provide for the perpetuation of families and honours, or contrive to
+obviate the dissipation of the fortunes, which it has been their
+business to accumulate; others, more refined or exalted, congratulate
+their own hearts upon the future extent of their reputation, the
+reverence of distant nations, and the gratitude of unprejudiced
+posterity.
+
+They whose souls are so chained down to coffers and tenements, that they
+cannot conceive a state in which they shall look upon them with less
+solicitude, are seldom attentive or flexible to arguments; but the
+votaries of fame are capable of reflection, and therefore may be called
+to reconsider the probability of their expectations.
+
+Whether to be remembered in remote times be worthy of a wise man's wish,
+has not yet been satisfactorily decided; and, indeed, to be long
+remembered, can happen to so small a number, that the bulk of mankind
+has very little interest in the question. There is never room in the
+world for more than a certain quantity or measure of renown. The
+necessary business of life, the immediate pleasures or pains of every
+condition, leave us not leisure beyond a fixed proportion for
+contemplations which do not forcibly influence our present welfare. When
+this vacuity is filled, no characters can be admitted into the
+circulation of fame, but by occupying the place of some that must be
+thrust into oblivion. The eye of the mind, like that of the body, can
+only extend its view to new objects, by losing sight of those which are
+now before it.
+
+Reputation is therefore a meteor, which blazes a while and disappears
+for ever; and, if we except a few transcendent and invincible names,
+which no revolutions of opinion or length of time is able to suppress;
+all those that engage our thoughts, or diversify our conversation, are
+every moment hasting to obscurity, as new favourites are adopted by
+fashion.
+
+It is not therefore from this world, that any ray of comfort can
+proceed, to cheer the gloom of the last hour. But futurity has still its
+prospects; there is yet happiness in reserve, which, if we transfer our
+attention to it, will support us in the pains of disease, and the
+languor of decay. This happiness we may expect with confidence, because
+it is out of the power of chance, and may be attained by all that
+sincerely desire and earnestly pursue it. On this therefore every mind
+ought finally to rest. Hope is the chief blessing of man, and that hope
+only is rational, of which we are certain that it cannot deceive us.
+
+
+
+No. 204. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1752
+
+ _Nemo tam divos habuit faventes,
+ Crastinum ut possit sibi polliceit_. SENECA.
+
+ Of heaven's protection who can be
+ So confident to utter this?--
+ To-morrow I will spend in bliss. F. LEWIS.
+
+Seged, lord of Ethiopia, to the inhabitants of the world: To the sons of
+_Presumption_, humility and fear; and to the daughters of _Sorrow_,
+content and acquiescence.
+
+Thus, in the twenty-seventh year of his reign, spoke Seged, the monarch
+of forty nations, the distributor of the waters of the Nile: "At length,
+Seged, thy toils are at an end; thou hast reconciled disaffection, thou
+hast suppressed rebellion, thou hast pacified the jealousies of thy
+courtiers, thou hast chased war from thy confines, and erected
+fortresses in the lands of thine enemies. All who have offended thee
+tremble in thy presence, and wherever thy voice is heard, it is obeyed.
+Thy throne is surrounded by armies, numerous as the locusts of the
+summer, and resistless as the blasts of pestilence. Thy magazines are
+stored with ammunition, thy treasures overflow with the tribute of
+conquered kingdoms. Plenty waves upon thy fields, and opulence glitters
+in thy cities. Thy nod is as the earthquake that shakes the mountains,
+and thy smile as the dawn of the vernal day. In thy hand is the strength
+of thousands, and thy health is the health of millions. Thy palace is
+gladdened by the song of praise, and thy path perfumed by the breath of
+benediction. Thy subjects gaze upon thy greatness, and think of danger
+or misery no more. Why, Seged, wilt not thou partake the blessings thou
+bestowest? Why shouldst thou only forbear to rejoice in this general
+felicity? Why should thy face be clouded with anxiety, when the meanest
+of those who call thee sovereign, gives the day to festivity, and the
+night to peace? At length, Seged, reflect and be wise. What is the gift
+of conquest but safety? Why are riches collected but to purchase
+happiness?"
+
+Seged then ordered the house of pleasure, built in an island of the lake
+of Dambea, to be prepared for his reception. "I will retire," says he,
+"for ten days from tumult and care, from counsels and decrees. Long
+quiet is not the lot of the governours of nations, but a cessation of
+ten days cannot be denied me. This short interval of happiness may
+surely be secured from the interruption of fear or perplexity, sorrow or
+disappointment. I will exclude all trouble from my abode, and remove
+from my thoughts whatever may confuse the harmony of the concert, or
+abate the sweetness of the banquet. I will fill the whole capacity of my
+soul with enjoyment, and try what it is to live without a wish
+unsatisfied."
+
+In a few days the orders were performed, and Seged hasted to the palace
+of Dambea, which stood in an island cultivated only for pleasure,
+planted with every flower that spreads its colours to the sun, and every
+shrub that sheds fragrance in the air. In one part of this extensive
+garden, were open walks for excursions in the morning; in another, thick
+groves, and silent arbours, and bubbling fountains for repose at noon.
+All that could solace the sense, or flatter the fancy, all that industry
+could extort from nature, or wealth furnish to art, all that conquest
+could seize, or beneficence attract, was collected together, and every
+perception of delight was excited and gratified.
+
+Into this delicious region Seged summoned all the persons of his court,
+who seemed eminently qualified to receive or communicate pleasure. His
+call was readily obeyed; the young, the fair, the vivacious, and the
+witty, were all in haste to be sated with felicity. They sailed jocund
+over the lake, which seemed to smooth its surface before them: their
+passage was cheered with musick, and their hearts dilated with
+expectation.
+
+Seged, landing here with his band of pleasure, determined from that hour
+to break off all acquaintance with discontent, to give his heart for ten
+days to ease and jollity, and then fall back to the common state of man,
+and suffer his life to be diversified, as before, with joy and sorrow.
+
+He immediately entered his chamber, to consider where he should begin
+his circle of happiness. He had all the artists of delight before him,
+but knew not whom to call, since he could not enjoy one, but by delaying
+the performance of another. He chose and rejected, he resolved and
+changed his resolution, till his faculties were harassed, and his
+thoughts confused; then returned to the apartment where his presence was
+expected, with languid eyes and clouded countenance, and spread the
+infection of uneasiness over the whole assembly. He observed their
+depression, and was offended, for he found his vexation increased by
+those whom he expected to dissipate and relieve it. He retired again to
+his private chamber, and sought for consolation in his own mind; one
+thought flowed in upon another; a long succession of images seized his
+attention; the moments crept imperceptibly away through the gloom of
+pensiveness, till, having recovered his tranquillity, he lifted his
+head, and saw the lake brightened by the setting sun. "Such," said
+Seged, sighing, "is the longest day of human existence: before we have
+learned to use it, we find it at, an end."
+
+The regret which he felt for the loss of so great a part of his first
+day, took from him all disposition to enjoy the evening; and, after
+having endeavoured, for the sake of his attendants, to force an air of
+gaiety, and excite that mirth which he could not share, he resolved to
+refer his hopes to the next morning, and lay down to partake with the
+slaves of labour and poverty the blessing of sleep.
+
+He rose early the second morning, and resolved now to be happy. He
+therefore fixed upon the gate of the palace an edict, importing, that
+whoever, during nine days, should appear in the presence of the king
+with a dejected countenance, or utter any expression of discontent or
+sorrow, should be driven for ever from the palace of Dambea.
+
+This edict was immediately made known in every chamber of the court, and
+bower of the gardens. Mirth was frighted away, and they who were before
+dancing in the lawns, or singing in the shades, were at once engaged in
+the care of regulating their looks, that Seged might find his will
+punctually obeyed, and see none among them liable to banishment.
+
+Seged now met every face settled in a smile; but a smile that betrayed
+solicitude, timidity, and constraint. He accosted his favourites with
+familiarity and softness; but they durst not speak without
+premeditation, lest they should be convicted of discontent or sorrow. He
+proposed diversions, to which no objection was made, because objection
+would have implied uneasiness; but they were regarded with indifference
+by the courtiers, who had no other desire than to signalize themselves
+by clamorous exultation. He offered various topicks of conversation, but
+obtained only forced jests, and laborious laughter; and after many
+attempts to animate his train to confidence and alacrity, was obliged to
+confess to himself the impotence of command, and resign another day to
+grief and disappointment.
+
+He at last relieved his companions from their terrours, and shut himself
+up in his chamber to ascertain, by different measures, the felicity of
+the succeeding days. At length he threw himself on the bed, and closed
+his eyes, but imagined, in his sleep, that his palace and gardens were
+overwhelmed by an inundation, and waked with all the terrours of a man
+struggling in the water. He composed himself again to rest, but was
+affrighted by an imaginary irruption into his kingdom; and striving, as
+is usual in dreams, without ability to move, fancied himself betrayed to
+his enemies, and again started up with horrour and indignation.
+
+It was now day, and fear was so strongly impressed on his mind, that he
+could sleep no more. He rose, but his thoughts were filled with the
+deluge and invasion, nor was he able to disengage his attention, or
+mingle with vacancy and ease in any amusement. At length his
+perturbation gave way to reason, and he resolved no longer to be
+harassed by visionary miseries; but, before this resolution could be
+completed, half the day had elapsed: he felt a new conviction of the
+uncertainty of human schemes, and could not forbear to bewail the
+weakness of that being whose quiet was to be interrupted by vapours of
+the fancy. Having been first disturbed by a dream, he afterwards grieved
+that a dream could disturb him. He at last discovered, that his terrours
+and grief were equally vain, and that to lose the present in lamenting
+the past, was voluntarily to protract a melancholy vision. The third day
+was now declining, and Seged again resolved to be happy on the morrow.
+
+
+
+No. 205. TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1752.
+
+ _Volat ambiguis
+ Mobilis alis hora, nec ulli
+ Præstat velox Fortuna fidem_. SENECA. Hippol. 1141.
+
+ On fickle wings the minutes haste,
+ And fortune's favours never last. F. LEWIS.
+
+On the fourth morning Seged rose early, refreshed with sleep, vigorous
+with health, and eager with expectation. He entered the garden, attended
+by the princes and ladies of his court, and seeing nothing about him but
+airy cheerfulness, began to say to his heart, "This day shall be a day
+of pleasure." The sun played upon the water, the birds warbled in the
+groves, and the gales quivered among the branches. He roved from walk to
+walk as chance directed him, and sometimes listened to the songs,
+sometimes mingled with the dancers, sometimes let loose his imagination
+in flights of merriment; and sometimes uttered grave reflections, and
+sententious maxims, and feasted on the admiration with which they were
+received.
+
+Thus the day rolled on, without any accident of vexation, or intrusion
+of melancholy thoughts. All that beheld him caught gladness from his
+looks, and the sight of happiness conferred by himself filled his heart
+with satisfaction: but having passed three hours in this harmless
+luxury, he was alarmed on a sudden by an universal scream among the
+women, and turning back saw the whole assembly flying in confusion. A
+young crocodile had risen out of the lake, and was ranging the garden in
+wantonness or hunger. Seged beheld him with indignation, as a disturber
+of his felicity, and chased him back into the lake, but could not
+persuade his retinue to stay, or free their hearts from the terrour
+which had seized upon them. The princesses inclosed themselves in the
+palace, and could yet scarcely believe themselves in safety. Every
+attention was fixed upon the late danger and escape, and no mind was any
+longer at leisure for gay sallies or careless prattle.
+
+Seged had now no other employment than to contemplate the innumerable
+casualties which lie in ambush on every side to intercept the happiness
+of man, and break in upon the hour of delight and tranquillity. He had,
+however, the consolation of thinking, that he had not been now
+disappointed by his own fault, and that the accident which had blasted
+the hopes of the day, might easily be prevented by future caution.
+
+That he might provide for the pleasure of the next morning, he resolved
+to repeal his penal edict, since he had already found that discontent
+and melancholy were not to be frighted away by the threats of authority,
+and that pleasure would only reside where she was exempted from control.
+He therefore invited all the companions of his retreat to unbounded
+pleasantry, by proposing prizes for those who should, on the following
+day, distinguish themselves by any festive performances; the tables of
+the antechamber were covered with gold and pearls, and robes and
+garlands decreed the rewards of those who could refine elegance or
+heighten pleasure.
+
+At this display of riches every eye immediately sparkled, and every
+tongue was busied in celebrating the bounty and magnificence of the
+emperour. But when Seged entered, in hopes of uncommon entertainment
+from universal emulation, he found that any passion too strongly
+agitated, puts an end to that tranquillity which is necessary to mirth,
+and that the mind, that is to be moved by the gentle ventilations of
+gaiety, must be first smoothed by a total calm. Whatever we ardently
+wish to gain, we must in the same degree be afraid to lose, and fear and
+pleasure cannot dwell together.
+
+All was now care and solicitude. Nothing was done or spoken, but with so
+visible an endeavour at perfection, as always failed to delight, though
+it sometimes forced admiration: and Seged could not but observe with
+sorrow, that his prizes had more influence than himself. As the evening
+approached, the contest grew more earnest, and those who were forced to
+allow themselves excelled, began to discover the malignity of defeat,
+first by angry glances, and at last by contemptuous murmurs. Seged
+likewise shared the anxiety of the day, for considering himself as
+obliged to distribute with exact justice the prizes which had been so
+zealously sought, he durst never remit his attention, but passed his
+time upon the rack of doubt, in balancing different kinds of merit, and
+adjusting the claims of all the competitors.
+
+At last, knowing that no exactness could satisfy those whose hopes he
+should disappoint, and thinking that on a day set apart for happiness,
+it would be cruel to oppress any heart with sorrow, he declared that all
+had pleased him alike, and dismissed all with presents of equal value.
+
+Seged soon saw that his caution had not been able to avoid offence. They
+who had believed themselves secure of the highest prizes, were not
+pleased to be levelled with the crowd: and though, by the liberality of
+the king, they received more than his promise had entitled them to
+expect, they departed unsatisfied, because they were honoured with no
+distinction, and wanted an opportunity to triumph in the mortification
+of their opponents. "Behold here," said Seged, "the condition of him who
+places his happiness in the happiness of others." He then retired to
+meditate, and, while the courtiers were repining at his distributions,
+saw the fifth sun go down in discontent.
+
+The next dawn renewed his resolution to be happy. But having learned how
+little he could effect by settled schemes or preparatory measures, he
+thought it best to give up one day entirely to chance, and left every
+one to please and be pleased his own way.
+
+This relaxation of regularity diffused a general complacence through the
+whole court, and the emperour imagined that he had at last found the
+secret of obtaining an interval of felicity. But as he was roving in
+this careless assembly with equal carelessness, he overheard one of his
+courtiers in a close arbour murmuring alone: "What merit has Seged above
+us, that we should thus fear and obey him, a man, whom, whatever he may
+have formerly performed, his luxury now shows to have the same weakness
+with ourselves." This charge affected him the more, as it was uttered by
+one whom he had always observed among the most abject of his flatterers.
+At first his indignation prompted him to severity; but reflecting, that
+what was spoken without intention to be heard, was to be considered as
+only thought, and was perhaps but the sudden burst of casual and
+temporary vexation, he invented some decent pretence to send him away,
+that his retreat might not be tainted with the breath of envy, and,
+after the struggle of deliberation was past, and all desire of revenge
+utterly suppressed, passed the evening not only with tranquillity, but
+triumph, though none but himself was conscious of the victory.
+
+The remembrance of his clemency cheered the beginning of the seventh
+day, and nothing happened to disturb the pleasure of Seged, till,
+looking on the tree that shaded him, he recollected, that, under a tree
+of the same kind he had passed the night after his defeat in the kingdom
+of Goiama. The reflection on his loss, his dishonour, and the miseries
+which his subjects suffered from the invader, filled him with sadness.
+At last he shook off the weight of sorrow, and began to solace himself
+with his usual pleasures, when his tranquillity was again disturbed by
+jealousies which the late contest for the prizes had produced, and
+which, having in vain tried to pacify them by persuasion, he was forced
+to silence by command.
+
+On the eighth morning Seged was awakened early by an unusual hurry in
+the apartments, and inquiring the cause, was told that the princess
+Balkis was seized with sickness. He rose, and calling the physicians,
+found that they had little hope of her recovery. Here was an end of
+jollity: all his thoughts were now upon his daughter, whose eyes he
+closed on the tenth day.
+
+Such were the days which Seged of Ethiopia had appropriated to a short
+respiration from the fatigues of war and the cares of government. This
+narrative he has bequeathed to future generations, that no man hereafter
+may presume to say, "This day shall be a day of happiness."
+
+
+
+No. 206. SATURDAY, MARCH 7, 1752.
+
+ _--Propositi nondum pudet, atque eadem est mens,
+ Ut bona summa putes, alienâ vivere quadrâ_. JUV. Sat. v. 1.
+
+ But harden'd by affronts, and still the same,
+ Lost to all sense of honour and of fame,
+ Thou yet canst love to haunt the great man's board,
+ And think no supper good but with a lord. BOWLES.
+
+When Diogenes was once asked, what kind of wine he liked best? he
+answered, "That which is drunk at the cost of others."
+
+Though the character of Diogenes has never excited any general zeal of
+imitation, there are many who resemble him in his taste of wine; many
+who are frugal, though not abstemious; whose appetites, though too
+powerful for reason, are kept under restraint by avarice; and to whom
+all delicacies lose their flavour, when they cannot be obtained but at
+their own expense.
+
+Nothing produces more singularity of manners and inconstancy of life,
+than the conflict of opposite vices in the same mind. He that uniformly
+pursues any purpose, whether good or bad, has a settled principle of
+action; and as he may always find associates who are travelling the same
+way, is countenanced by example, and sheltered in the multitude; but a
+man, actuated at once by different desires, must move in a direction
+peculiar to himself, and suffer that reproach which we are naturally
+inclined to bestow on those who deviate from the rest of the world, even
+without inquiring whether they are worse or better.
+
+Yet this conflict of desires sometimes produces wonderful efforts. To
+riot in far-fetched dishes, or surfeit with unexhausted variety, and yet
+practise the most rigid economy, is surely an art which may justly draw
+the eyes of mankind upon them whose industry or judgment has enabled
+them to attain it. To him, indeed, who is content to break open the
+chests, or mortgage the manours, of his ancestors, that he may hire the
+ministers of excess at the highest price, gluttony is an easy science;
+yet we often hear the votaries of luxury boasting of the elegance which
+they owe to the taste of others, relating with rapture the succession of
+dishes with which their cooks and caterers supply them; and expecting
+their share of praise with the discoverers of arts and the civilizers of
+nations. But to shorten the way to convivial happiness, by eating
+without cost, is a secret hitherto in few hands, but which certainly
+deserves the curiosity of those whose principal enjoyment is their
+dinner, and who see the sun rise with no other hope than that they shall
+fill their bellies before it sets.
+
+Of them that have within my knowledge attempted this scheme of
+happiness, the greater part have been immediately obliged to desist; and
+some, whom their first attempts flattered with success, were reduced by
+degrees to a few tables, from which they were at last chased to make way
+for others; and having long habituated themselves to superfluous plenty,
+growled away their latter years in discontented competence.
+
+None enter the regions of luxury with higher expectations than men of
+wit, who imagine, that they shall never want a welcome to that company
+whose ideas they can enlarge, or whose imaginations they can elevate,
+and believe themselves able to pay for their wine with the mirth which
+it qualifies them to produce. Full of this opinion, they crowd with
+little invitation, wherever the smell of a feast allures them, but are
+seldom encouraged to repeat their visits, being dreaded by the pert as
+rivals, and hated by the dull as disturbers of the company.
+
+No man has been so happy in gaining and keeping the privilege of living
+at luxurious houses as Gulosulus, who, after thirty years of continual
+revelry, has now established, by uncontroverted prescription, his claim
+to partake of every entertainment, and whose presence they who aspire to
+the praise of a sumptuous table are careful to procure on a day of
+importance, by sending the invitation a fortnight before.
+
+Gulosulus entered the world without any eminent degree of merit; but was
+careful to frequent houses where persons of rank resorted. By being
+often seen, he became in time known; and, from sitting in the same room,
+was suffered to mix in idle conversation, or assisted to fill up a
+vacant hour, when better amusement was not readily to be had. From the
+coffee-house he was sometimes taken away to dinner; and as no man
+refuses the acquaintance of him whom he sees admitted to familiarity by
+others of equal dignity, when he had been met at a few tables, he with
+less difficulty found the way to more, till at last he was regularly
+expected to appear wherever preparations are made for a feast, within
+the circuit of his acquaintance.
+
+When he was thus by accident initiated in luxury, he felt in himself no
+inclination to retire from a life of so much pleasure, and therefore
+very seriously considered how he might continue it. Great qualities, or
+uncommon accomplishments, he did not find necessary; for he had already
+seen that merit rather enforces respect than attracts fondness; and as
+he thought no folly greater than that of losing a dinner for any other
+gratification, he often congratulated himself, that he had none of that
+disgusting excellence which impresses awe upon greatness, and condemns
+its possessors to the society of those who are wise or brave, and
+indigent as themselves.
+
+Gulosulus, having never allotted much of his time to books or
+meditation, had no opinion in philosophy or politicks, and was not in
+danger of injuring his interest by dogmatical positions or violent
+contradiction. If a dispute arose, he took care to listen with earnest
+attention; and, when either speaker grew vehement and loud, turned
+towards him with eager quickness, and uttered a short phrase of
+admiration, as if surprised by such cogency of argument as he had never
+known before. By this silent concession, he generally preserved in
+either controvertist such a conviction of his own superiority, as
+inclined him rather to pity than irritate his adversary, and prevented
+those outrages which are sometimes produced by the rage of defeat, or
+petulance of triumph.
+
+Gulosulus was never embarrassed but when he was required to declare his
+sentiments before he had been able to discover to which side the master
+of the house inclined, for it was his invariable rule to adopt the
+notions of those that invited him.
+
+It will sometimes happen that the insolence of wealth breaks into
+contemptuousness, or the turbulence of wine requires a vent; and
+Gulosulus seldom fails of being singled out on such emergencies, as one
+on whom any experiment of ribaldry may be safely tried. Sometimes his
+lordship finds himself inclined to exhibit a specimen of raillery for
+the diversion of his guests, and Gulosulus always supplies him with a
+subject of merriment. But he has learned to consider rudeness and
+indignities as familiarities that entitle him to greater freedom: he
+comforts himself, that those who treat and insult him pay for their
+laughter, and that he keeps his money while they enjoy their jest.
+
+His chief policy consists in selecting some dish from every course, and
+recommending it to the company, with an air so decisive, that no one
+ventures to contradict him. By this practice he acquires at a feast a
+kind of dictatorial authority; his taste becomes the standard of pickles
+and seasoning, and he is venerated by the professors of epicurism, as
+the only man who understands the niceties of cookery.
+
+Whenever a new sauce is imported, or any innovation made in the culinary
+system, he procures the earliest intelligence, and the most authentick
+receipt; and, by communicating his knowledge under proper injunctions of
+secrecy, gains a right of tasting his own dish whenever it is prepared,
+that he may tell whether his directions have been fully understood.
+
+By this method of life Gulosulus has so impressed on his imagination the
+dignity of feasting, that he has no other topick of talk, or subject of
+meditation. His calendar is a bill of fare; he measures the year by
+successive dainties. The only common-places of his memory are his meals;
+and if you ask him at what time an event happened, he considers whether
+he heard it after a dinner of turbot or venison. He knows, indeed, that
+those who value themselves upon sense, learning, or piety, speak of him
+with contempt; but he considers them as wretches, envious or ignorant,
+who do not know his happiness, or wish to supplant him; and declares to
+his friends, that he is fully satisfied with his own conduct, since he
+has fed every day on twenty dishes, and yet doubled his estate.
+
+
+
+No. 207. TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1752.
+
+ _Solve senescentem mature sanus equum, ne
+ Peccet ad extremum ridendus.--_ HOR. Lib. i. Ep. i. 8.
+
+ The voice of reason cries with winning force,
+ Loose from the rapid car your aged horse,
+ Lest, in the race derided, left behind,
+ He drag his jaded limbs, and burst his wind. FRANCIS.
+
+Such is the emptiness of human enjoyment, that we are always impatient
+of the present. Attainment is followed by neglect, and possession by
+disgust; and the malicious remark of the Greek epigrammatist on marriage
+may be applied to every other course of life, that its two days of
+happiness are the first and the last.
+
+Few moments are more pleasing than those in which the mind is concerting
+measures for a new undertaking. From the first hint that wakens the
+fancy, till the hour of actual execution, all is improvement and
+progress, triumph and felicity. Every hour brings additions to the
+original scheme, suggests some new expedient to secure success, or
+discovers consequential advantages not hitherto foreseen. While
+preparations are made, and materials accumulated, day glides after day
+through elysian prospects, and the heart dances to the song of hope.
+
+Such is the pleasure of projecting, that many content themselves with a
+succession of visionary schemes, and wear out their allotted time in the
+calm amusement of contriving what they never attempt or hope to execute.
+
+Others, not able to feast their imagination with pure ideas, advance
+somewhat nearer to the grossness of action, with great diligence collect
+whatever is requisite to their design, and, after a thousand researches
+and consultations, are snatched away by death, as they stand _in
+procinctu_, waiting for a proper opportunity to begin.
+
+If there were no other end of life, than to find some adequate solace
+for every day, I know not whether any condition could be preferred to
+that of the man who involves himself in his own thoughts, and never
+suffers experience to show him the vanity of speculation; for no sooner
+are notions reduced to practice, than tranquillity and confidence
+forsake the breast; every day brings its task, and often without
+bringing abilities to perform it: difficulties embarrass, uncertainty
+perplexes, opposition retards, censure exasperates, or neglect
+depresses. We proceed because we have begun; we complete our design,
+that the labour already spent may not be vain; but as expectation
+gradually dies away, the gay smile of alacrity disappears, we are
+compelled to implore severer powers, and trust the event to patience and
+constancy.
+
+When once our labour has begun, the comfort that enables us to endure it
+is the prospect of its end; for though in every long work there are some
+joyous intervals of self-applause, when the attention is recreated by
+unexpected facility, and the imagination soothed by incidental
+excellencies; yet the toil with which performance struggles after idea,
+is so irksome and disgusting, and so frequent is the necessity of
+resting below that perfection which we imagined within our reach, that
+seldom any man obtains more from his endeavours than a painful
+conviction of his defects, and a continual resuscitation of desires
+which he feels himself unable to gratify.
+
+So certainly is weariness the concomitant of our undertakings, that
+every man, in whatever he is engaged, consoles himself with the hope of
+change; if he has made his way by assiduity to publick employment, he
+talks among his friends of the delight of retreat; if by the necessity
+of solitary application he is secluded from the world, he listens with a
+beating heart to distant noises, longs to mingle with living beings, and
+resolves to take hereafter his fill of diversions, or display his
+abilities on the universal theatre, and enjoy the pleasure of
+distinction and applause.
+
+Every desire, however innocent, grows dangerous, as by long indulgence
+it becomes ascendant in the mind. When we have been much accustomed to
+consider any thing as capable of giving happiness, it is not easy to
+restrain our ardour, or to forbear some precipitation in our advances,
+and irregularity in our pursuits. He that has cultivated the tree,
+watched the swelling bud and opening blossom, and pleased himself with
+computing how much every sun and shower add to its growth, scarcely
+stays till the fruit has obtained its maturity, but defeats his own
+cares by eagerness to reward them. When we have diligently laboured for
+any purpose, we are willing to believe that we have attained it, and,
+because we have already done much, too suddenly conclude that no more is
+to be done.
+
+All attraction is increased by the approach of the attracting body. We
+never find ourselves so desirous to finish as in the latter part of our
+work, or so impatient of delay, as when we know that delay cannot be
+long. This unseasonable importunity of discontent may be partly imputed
+to languor and weariness, which must always oppress those more whose
+toil has been longer continued; but the greater part usually proceeds
+from frequent contemplation of that ease which is now considered as
+within reach, and which, when it has once flattered our hopes, we cannot
+suffer to be withheld.
+
+In some of the noblest compositions of wit, the conclusion falls below
+the vigour and spirit of the first books; and as a genius is not to be
+degraded by the imputation of human failings, the cause of this
+declension is commonly sought in the structure of the work, and
+plausible reasons are given why, in the defective part, less ornament
+was necessary, or less could be admitted. But, perhaps, the author would
+have confessed, that his fancy was tired, and his perseverance broken;
+that he knew his design to be unfinished, but that, when he saw the end
+so near, he could no longer refuse to be at rest.
+
+Against the instillations of this frigid opiate, the heart should be
+secured by all the considerations which once concurred to kindle the
+ardour of enterprise. Whatever motive first incited action, has still
+greater force to stimulate perseverance; since he that might have lain
+still at first in blameless obscurity, cannot afterwards desist but with
+infamy and reproach. He, whom a doubtful promise of distant good could
+encourage to set difficulties at defiance, ought not to remit his
+vigour, when he has almost obtained his recompense. To faint or loiter,
+when only the last efforts are required, is to steer the ship through
+tempests, and abandon it to the winds in sight of land; it is to break
+the ground and scatter the seed, and at last to neglect the harvest.
+
+The masters of rhetorick direct, that the most forcible arguments be
+produced in the latter part of an oration, lest they should be effaced
+or perplexed by supervenient images. This precept may be justly extended
+to the series of life: nothing is ended with honour, which does not
+conclude better than it began. It is not sufficient to maintain the
+first vigour; for excellence loses its effect upon the mind by custom,
+as light after a time ceases to dazzle. Admiration must be continued by
+that novelty which first produced it, and how much soever is given,
+there must always be reason to imagine that more remains.
+
+We not only are most sensible of the last impressions, but such is the
+unwillingness of mankind to admit transcendant merit, that, though it be
+difficult to obliterate the reproach of miscarriages by any subsequent
+achievement, however illustrious, yet the reputation raised by a long
+train of success may be finally ruined by a single failure; for weakness
+or errour will be always remembered by that malice and envy which it
+gratifies.
+
+For the prevention of that disgrace, which lassitude and negligence may
+bring at last upon the greatest performances, it is necessary to
+proportion carefully our labour to our strength. If the design comprises
+many parts, equally essential, and, therefore, not to be separated, the
+only time for caution is before we engage; the powers of the mind must
+be then impartially estimated, and it must be remembered that, not to
+complete the plan, is not to have begun it; and that nothing is done
+while any thing is omitted.
+
+But, if the task consists in the repetition of single acts, no one of
+which derives its efficacy from the rest, it may be attempted with less
+scruple, because there is always opportunity to retreat with honour. The
+danger is only, lest we expect from the world the indulgence with which
+most are disposed to treat themselves; and in the hour of listlessness
+imagine, that the diligence of one day will atone for the idleness of
+another, and that applause begun by approbation will be continued by
+habit.
+
+He that is himself weary will soon weary the publick. Let him therefore
+lay down his employment, whatever it be, who can no longer exert his
+former activity or attention; let him not endeavour to struggle with
+censure, or obstinately infest the stage till a general hiss commands
+him to depart.
+
+
+
+No. 208. SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1752.
+
+ [Greek: Aerakleitos ego ti me o kato helket amousoi,
+ Ouch hymin eponoun, tois de m' episgamenoi;
+ Eis emoi anthropos trismurioi; oi d' anarithmoi
+ Oudeis; taut audo kai para Persephonae] DIOG. LAERT.
+
+ Begone, ye blockheads, Heraclitus cries,
+ And leave my labours to the learn'd and wise;
+ By wit, by knowledge, studious to be read,
+ I scorn the multitude, alive and dead.
+
+ Time, which puts an end to all human pleasures and sorrows, has
+likewise concluded the labours of the Rambler. Having supported, for two
+years, the anxious employment of a periodical writer, and multiplied my
+essays to upwards of two hundred, I have now determined to desist.
+
+The reasons of this resolution it is of little importance to declare,
+since justification is unnecessary when no objection is made. I am far
+from supposing, that the cessation of my performances will raise any
+inquiry, for I have never been much a favourite of the publick, nor can
+boast that, in the progress of my undertaking, I have been animated by
+the rewards of the liberal, the caresses of the great, or the praises of
+the eminent.
+
+But I have no design to gratify pride by submission, or malice by
+lamentation; nor think it reasonable to complain of neglect from those
+whose regard I never solicited. If I have not been distinguished by the
+distributors of literary honours, I have seldom descended to the arts by
+which favour is obtained. I have seen the meteors of fashions rise and
+fall, without any attempt to add a moment to their duration. I have
+never complied with temporary curiosity, nor enabled my readers to
+discuss the topick of the day; I have rarely exemplified my assertions
+by living characters; in my papers, no man could look for censures of
+his enemies, or praises of himself; and they only were expected to
+peruse them, whose passions left them leisure for abstracted truth, and
+whom virtue could please by its naked dignity.
+
+To some, however, I am indebted for encouragement, and to others for
+assistance. The number of my friends was never great, but they have been
+such as would not suffer me to think that I was writing in vain, and I
+did not feel much dejection from the want of popularity.
+
+My obligations having not been frequent, my acknowledgments may be soon
+despatched. I can restore to all my correspondents their productions,
+with little diminution of the bulk of my volumes, though not without the
+loss of some pieces to which particular honours have been paid.
+
+The parts from which I claim no other praise than that of having given
+them an opportunity of appearing, are the four billets in the tenth
+paper, the second letter in the fifteenth, the thirtieth, the
+forty-fourth, the ninety-seventh, and the hundredth papers, and the
+second letter in the hundred and seventh.
+
+Having thus deprived myself of many excuses which candour might have
+admitted for the inequality of my compositions, being no longer able to
+allege the necessity of gratifying correspondents, the importunity with
+which publication was solicited, or obstinacy with which correction was
+rejected, I must remain accountable for all my faults, and submit,
+without subterfuge, to the censures of criticism, which, however, I
+shall not endeavour to soften by a formal deprecation, or to overbear by
+the influence of a patron. The supplications of an author never yet
+reprieved him a moment from oblivion; and, though greatness has
+sometimes sheltered guilt, it can afford no protection to ignorance or
+dulness. Having hitherto attempted only the propagation of truth, I will
+not at last violate it by the confession of terrours which I do not
+feel; having laboured to maintain the dignity of virtue, I will not now
+degrade it by the meanness of dedication.
+
+The seeming vanity with which I have sometimes spoken of myself, would
+perhaps require an apology, were it not extenuated by the example of
+those who have published essays before me, and by the privilege which
+every nameless writer has been hitherto allowed. "A mask," says
+Castiglione, "confers a right of acting and speaking with less
+restraint, even when the wearer happens to be known." He that is
+discovered without his own consent, may claim some indulgence, and
+cannot be rigorously called to justify those sallies or frolicks which
+his disguise must prove him desirous to conceal.
+
+But I have been cautious lest this offence should be frequently or
+grossly committed; for, as one of the philosophers directs us to live
+with a friend, as with one that is some time to become an enemy, I have
+always thought it the duty of an anonymous author to write, as if he
+expected to be hereafter known.
+
+I am willing to flatter myself with hopes, that, by collecting these
+papers, I am not preparing, for my future life, either shame or
+repentance. That all are happily imagined, or accurately polished, that
+the same sentiments have not sometimes recurred, or the same expressions
+been too frequently repeated, I have not confidence in my abilities
+sufficient to warrant. He that condemns himself to compose on a stated
+day, will often bring to his task an attention dissipated, a memory
+embarrassed, an imagination overwhelmed, a mind distracted with
+anxieties, a body languishing with disease: he will labour on a barren
+topick, till it is too late to change it; or, in the ardour of
+invention, diffuse his thoughts into wild exuberance, which the pressing
+hour of publication cannot suffer judgment to examine or reduce.
+
+Whatever shall be the final sentence of mankind, I have at least
+endeavoured to deserve their kindness. I have laboured to refine our
+language to grammatical purity, and to clear it from colloquial
+barbarisms, licentious idioms, and irregular combinations. Something,
+perhaps, I have added to the elegance of its construction, and something
+to the harmony of its cadence. When common words were less pleasing to
+the ear, or less distinct in their signification, I have familiarized
+the terms of philosophy, by applying them to popular ideas, but have
+rarely admitted any words not authorized by former writers; for I
+believe that whoever knows the English tongue in its present extent,
+will be able to express his thoughts without further help from other
+nations.
+
+As it has been my principal design to inculcate wisdom or piety, I have
+allotted few papers to the idle sports of imagination. Some, perhaps,
+may be found, of which the highest excellence is harmless merriment; but
+scarcely any man is so steadily serious as not to complain, that the
+severity of dictatorial instruction has been too seldom relieved, and
+that he is driven by the sternness of the Rambler's philosophy to more
+cheerful and airy companions.
+
+Next to the excursions of fancy are the disquisitions of criticism,
+which, in my opinion, is only to be ranked among the subordinate and
+instrumental arts. Arbitrary decision and general exclamation I have
+carefully avoided, by asserting nothing without a reason, and
+establishing all my principles of judgment on unalterable and evident
+truth.
+
+In the pictures of life I have never been so studious of novelty or
+surprise, as to depart wholly from all resemblance; a fault which
+writers deservedly celebrated frequently commit, that they may raise, as
+the occasion requires, either mirth or abhorrence. Some enlargement may
+be allowed to declamation, and some exaggeration to burlesque; but as
+they deviate farther from reality, they become less useful, because
+their lessons will fail of application. The mind of the reader is
+carried away from the contemplation of his own manners; he finds in
+himself no likeness to the phantom before him; and though he laughs or
+rages, is not reformed.
+
+The essays professedly serious, if I have been able to execute my own
+intentions, will be found exactly conformable to the precepts of
+Christianity, without any accommodation to the licentiousness and levity
+of the present age. I therefore look back on this part of my work with
+pleasure, which no blame or praise of man shall diminish or augment. I
+shall never envy the honours which wit and learning obtain in any other
+cause, if I can be numbered among the writers who have given ardour to
+virtue, and confidence to truth.
+
+ [Greek: Auton ek makaron autaxios eiae amoibae.]
+
+ Celestial pow'rs! that piety regard,
+ From you my labours wait their last reward.
+
+END OF VOL. III.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Works of Samuel Johnson, LL.D, In
+Nine Volumes, by Samuel Johnson
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WORKS OF JOHNSON, VOL. 3 ***
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Works of Samuel Johnson, LL.D, In Nine
+Volumes, by Samuel Johnson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Works of Samuel Johnson, LL.D, In Nine Volumes
+ Volume the Third: The Rambler, Vol. II
+
+Author: Samuel Johnson
+
+Release Date: March 2, 2004 [EBook #11397]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WORKS OF JOHNSON, VOL. 3 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Carol David and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+JOHNSON'S WORKS.
+
+
+THE RAMBLER.
+
+VOL. II.
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+WORKS
+
+OF
+
+SAMUEL JOHNSON, LL.D,
+
+IN NINE VOLUMES.
+
+
+
+VOLUME THE THIRD.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+MDCCCXXV.
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+OF
+
+THE SECOND VOLUME.
+
+
+NUMB.
+
+106. The vanity of an author's expectations.--Reasons why good authors
+ are sometimes neglected
+107. Properantia's hopes of a year of confusion. The misery of
+ prostitutes
+108. Life sufficient to all purposes if well employed
+109. The education of a fop
+110. Repentance stated and explained. Retirement and abstinence useful
+ to repentance
+111. Youth made unfortunate by its haste and eagerness
+112. Too much nicety not to be indulged. The character of Eriphile
+113. The history of Hymenaeus's courtship
+114. The necessity of proportioning punishments to crimes
+115. The sequel of Hymenaeus's courtship
+116. The young trader's attempt at politeness
+117. The advantages of living in a garret
+118. The narrowness of fame
+119. Tranquilla's account of her lovers, opposed to Hymenaeus
+120. The history of Almamoulin the son of Nouradin
+121. The dangers of imitation. The impropriety of imitating Spenser
+122. A criticism on the English historians
+123. The young trader turned gentleman
+124. The lady's misery in a summer retirement
+125. The difficulty of defining comedy. Tragick and comick sentiments
+ confounded
+126. The universality of cowardice. The impropriety of extorting praise.
+ The impertinence of an astronomer
+127. Diligence too soon relaxed. Necessity of perseverance
+128. Anxiety universal. The unhappiness of a wit and a fine lady
+129. The folly of cowardice and inactivity
+130. The history of a beauty
+131. Desire of gain the general passion
+132. The difficulty of educating a young nobleman
+133. The miseries of a beauty defaced
+134. Idleness an anxious and miserable state
+135. The folly of annual retreats into the country
+136. The meanness and mischief of indiscriminate dedication
+137. The necessity of literary courage
+138. Original characters to be found in the country. The character of
+ Mrs. Busy
+139. A critical examination of Samson Agonistes
+140. The criticism continued
+141. The danger of attempting wit in conversation. The character of
+ Papilius
+142. An account of squire Bluster
+143. The criterions of plagiarism
+144. The difficulty of raising reputation. The various species of
+ detractors
+145. Petty writers not to be despised
+146. An account of an author travelling in quest of his own character.
+ The uncertainty of fame
+147. The courtier's esteem of assurance
+148. The cruelty of parental tyranny
+149. Benefits not always entitled to gratitude
+150. Adversity useful to the acquisition of knowledge
+151. The climactericks of the mind
+152. Criticism on epistolary writings
+153. The treatment incurred by loss of fortune
+154. The inefficacy of genius without learning
+155. The usefulness of advice. The danger of habits. The necessity of
+ reviewing life
+156. The laws of writing not always indisputable. Reflections on
+ tragi-comedy
+157. The scholar's complaint of his own bashfulness
+158. Rules of writing drawn from examples. Those examples often mistaken
+159. The nature and remedies of bashfulness
+160. Rules for the choice of associates
+161. The revolutions of a garret
+162. Old men in danger of falling into pupilage. The conduct of
+ Thrasybulus
+163. The mischiefs of following a patron
+164. Praise universally desired. The failings of eminent men often
+ imitated
+165. The impotence of wealth. The visit of Scrotinus to the place of his
+ nativity
+166. Favour not easily gained by the poor
+167. The marriage of Hymenaeus and Tranquilla
+168. Poetry debased by mean expressions. An example from Shakespeare
+169. Labour necessary to excellence
+170. The history of Misella debauched by her relation
+171. Misella's description of the life of a prostitute
+172. The effect of sudden riches upon the manners
+173. Unreasonable fears of pedantry
+174. The mischiefs of unbounded raillery. History of Dicaculus
+175. The majority are wicked
+176. Directions to authors attacked by criticks. The various degrees of
+ critical perspicacity
+177. An account of a club of antiquaries
+178. Many advantages not to be enjoyed together
+179. The awkward merriment of a student
+180. The study of life not to be neglected for the sake of books
+181. The history of an adventurer in lotteries
+182. The history of Leviculus, the fortune-hunter
+183. The influence of envy and interest compared
+184. The subject of essays often suggested by chance. Chance equally
+ prevalent in other affairs
+185. The prohibition of revenge justifiable by reason. The meanness of
+ regulating our conduct by the opinions of men
+186. Anningait and Ajut; a Greenland history
+187. The history of Anningait and Ajut concluded
+188. Favour often gained with little assistance from understanding
+189. The mischiefs of falsehood. The character of Turpicula
+190. The history of Abouzaid, the son of Morad
+191. The busy life of a young lady
+192. Love unsuccessful without riches
+193. The author's art of praising himself
+194. A young nobleman's progress in politeness
+195. A young nobleman's introduction to the knowledge of the town
+196. Human opinions mutable. The hopes of youth fallacious
+197. The history of a legacy-hunter
+198. The legacy-hunter's history concluded
+199. The virtues of Rabbi Abraham's magnet
+200. Asper's complaint of the insolence of Prospero. Unpoliteness not
+ always the effect of pride
+201. The importance of punctuality
+202. The different acceptations of poverty. Cynicks and Monks not
+ poor
+203. The pleasures of life to be sought in prospects of futurity. Future
+ fame uncertain
+204. The history of ten days of Seged, emperour of Ethiopia
+205. The history of Seged concluded
+206. The art of living at the cost of others
+207. The folly of continuing too long upon the stage
+208. The Rambler's reception. His design
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+RAMBLER.
+
+
+
+No. 106. SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 1751.
+
+ _Opinionum commenta delet dies, naturae judicia Confirmat_.
+ CICERO, vi. Att. 1.
+
+ Time obliterates the fictions of opinion, and confirms the decisions
+ of nature.
+
+It is necessary to the success of flattery, that it be accommodated to
+particular circumstances or characters, and enter the heart on that side
+where the passions stand ready to receive it. A lady seldom listens with
+attention to any praise but that of her beauty; a merchant always
+expects to hear of his influence at the bank, his importance on the
+exchange, the height of his credit, and the extent of his traffick: and
+the author will scarcely be pleased without lamentations of the neglect
+of learning, the conspiracies against genius, and the slow progress of
+merit, or some praises of the magnanimity of those who encounter poverty
+and contempt in the cause of knowledge, and trust for the reward of
+their labours to the judgment and gratitude of posterity.
+
+An assurance of unfading laurels, and immortal reputation, is the
+settled reciprocation of civility between amicable writers. To raise
+_monuments more durable than brass, and more conspicuous than
+pyramids_, has been long the common boast of literature; but, among
+the innumerable architects that erect columns to themselves, far the
+greater part, either for want of durable materials, or of art to dispose
+them, see their edifices perish as they are towering to completion, and
+those few that for a while attract the eye of mankind, are generally
+weak in the foundation, and soon sink by the saps of time.
+
+No place affords a more striking conviction of the vanity of human
+hopes, than a publick library; for who can see the wall crowded on every
+side by mighty volumes, the works of laborious meditation, and accurate
+inquiry, now scarcely known but by the catalogue, and preserved only to
+increase the pomp of learning, without considering how many hours have
+been wasted in vain endeavours, how often imagination has anticipated
+the praises of futurity, how many statues have risen to the eye of
+vanity, how many ideal converts have elevated zeal, how often wit has
+exulted in the eternal infamy of his antagonists, and dogmatism has
+delighted in the gradual advances of his authority, the immutability of
+his decrees, and the perpetuity of his power?
+
+ _--Non unquam dedit
+ Documenta fors majora, quam frugili loco
+ Starent superbi_.
+
+ Insulting chance ne'er call'd with louder voice,
+ On swelling mortals to be proud no more.
+
+Of the innumerable authors whose performances are thus treasured up in
+magnificent obscurity, most are forgotten, because they never deserved
+to be remembered, and owed the honours which they once obtained, not to
+judgment or to genius, to labour or to art, but to the prejudice of
+faction, the stratagem of intrigue, or the servility of adulation.
+
+Nothing is more common than to find men whose works are now totally
+neglected, mentioned with praises by their contemporaries, as the
+oracles of their age, and the legislators of science. Curiosity is
+naturally excited, their volumes after long inquiry are found, but
+seldom reward the labour of the search. Every period of time has
+produced these bubbles of artificial fame, which are kept up a while by
+the breath of fashion, and then break at once, and are annihilated. The
+learned often bewail the loss of ancient writers whose characters have
+survived their works; but, perhaps, if we could now retrieve them, we
+should find them only the Granvilles, Montagues, Stepneys, and
+Sheffields of their time, and wonder by what infatuation or caprice they
+could be raised to notice.
+
+It cannot, however, be denied, that many have sunk into oblivion, whom
+it were unjust to number with this despicable class. Various kinds of
+literary fame seem destined to various measures of duration. Some spread
+into exuberance with a very speedy growth, but soon wither and decay;
+some rise more slowly, but last long. Parnassus has its flowers of
+transient fragrance, as well as its oaks of towering height, and its
+laurels of eternal verdure.
+
+Among those whose reputation is exhausted in a short time by its own
+luxuriance, are the writers who take advantage of present incidents or
+characters which strongly interest the passions, and engage universal
+attention. It is not difficult to obtain readers, when we discuss a
+question which every one is desirous to understand, which is debated in
+every assembly, and has divided the nation into parties; or when we
+display the faults or virtues of him whose publick conduct has made
+almost every man his enemy or his friend. To the quick circulation of
+such productions all the motives of interest and vanity concur; the
+disputant enlarges his knowledge, the zealot animates his passion, and
+every man is desirous to inform himself concerning affairs so vehemently
+agitated and variously represented.
+
+It is scarcely to be imagined, through how many subordinations of
+interest the ardour of party is diffused; and what multitudes fancy
+themselves affected by every satire or panegyrick on a man of eminence.
+Whoever has, at any time, taken occasion to mention him with praise or
+blame, whoever happens to love or hate any of his adherents, as he
+wishes to confirm his opinion, and to strengthen his party, will
+diligently peruse every paper from which he can hope for sentiments like
+his own. An object, however small in itself, if placed near to the eye,
+will engross all the rays of light; and a transaction, however trivial,
+swells into importance when it presses immediately on our attention. He
+that shall peruse the political pamphlets of any past reign, will wonder
+why they were so eagerly read, or so loudly praised. Many of the
+performances which had power to inflame factions, and fill a kingdom
+with confusion, have now very little effect upon a frigid critick; and
+the time is coming, when the compositions of later hirelings shall lie
+equally despised. In proportion as those who write on temporary
+subjects, are exalted above their merit at first, they are afterwards
+depressed below it; nor can the brightest elegance of diction, or most
+artful subtilty of reasoning, hope for so much esteem from those whose
+regard is no longer quickened by curiosity or pride.
+
+It is, indeed, the fate of controvertists, even when they contend for
+philosophical or theological truth, to be soon laid aside and slighted.
+Either the question is decided, and there is no more place for doubt and
+opposition; or mankind despair of understanding it, and grow weary of
+disturbance, content themselves with quiet ignorance, and refuse to be
+harassed with labours which they have no hopes of recompensing with
+knowledge.
+
+The authors of new discoveries may surely expect to be reckoned among
+those whose writings are secure of veneration: yet it often happens that
+the general reception of a doctrine obscures the books in which it was
+delivered. When any tenet is generally received and adopted as an
+incontrovertible principle, we seldom look back to the arguments upon
+which it was first established, or can bear that tediousness of
+deduction, and multiplicity of evidence, by which its author was forced
+to reconcile it to prejudice, and fortify it in the weakness of novelty
+against obstinacy and envy.
+
+It is well known how much of our philosophy is derived from Boyle's
+discovery of the qualities of the air; yet of those who now adopt or
+enlarge his theory, very few have read the detail of his experiments.
+His name is, indeed, reverenced; but his works are neglected; we are
+contented to know, that he conquered his opponents, without inquiring
+what cavils were produced against him, or by what proofs they were
+confuted.
+
+Some writers apply themselves to studies boundless and inexhaustible, as
+experiments in natural philosophy. These are always lost in successive
+compilations, as new advances are made, and former observations become
+more familiar. Others spend their lives in remarks on language, or
+explanations of antiquities, and only afford materials for
+lexicographers and commentators, who are themselves overwhelmed by
+subsequent collectors, that equally destroy the memory of their
+predecessors by amplification, transposition, or contraction. Every new
+system of nature gives birth to a swarm of expositors, whose business is
+to explain and illustrate it, and who can hope to exist no longer than
+the founder of their sect preserves his reputation.
+
+There are, indeed, few kinds of composition from which an author,
+however learned or ingenious, can hope a long continuance of fame. He
+who has carefully studied human nature, and can well describe it, may
+with most reason flatter his ambition. Bacon, among all his pretensions
+to the regard of posterity, seems to have pleased himself chiefly with
+his Essays, _which come home to men's business and bosoms_, and of
+which, therefore, he declares his expectation, that they _will live as
+long as books last_. It may, however, satisfy an honest and benevolent
+mind to have been useful, though less conspicuous; nor will he that
+extends his hope to higher rewards, be so much anxious to obtain praise,
+as to discharge the duty which Providence assigns him.
+
+
+
+No. 107. TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1751.
+
+ _Alternis igitur contendere versibns ambo
+ Coepere: alternos Musoe meminisse volebant_. VIRG. Ec. vii. 18
+
+ On themes alternate now the swains recite;
+ The muses in alternate themes delight. ELPHINSTON.
+
+Among the various censures, which the unavoidable comparison of my
+performances with those of my predecessors has produced, there is none
+more general than that of uniformity. Many of my readers remark the want
+of those changes of colours, which formerly fed the attention with
+unexhausted novelty, and of that intermixture of subjects, or
+alternation of manner, by which other writers relieved weariness, and
+awakened expectation.
+
+I have, indeed, hitherto avoided the practice of uniting gay and solemn
+subjects in the same paper, because it seems absurd for an author to
+counteract himself, to press at once with equal force upon both parts of
+the intellectual balance, or give medicines, which, like the double
+poison of Dryden, destroy the force of one another. I have endeavoured
+sometimes to divert, and sometimes to elevate; but have imagined it an
+useless attempt to disturb merriment by solemnity, or interrupt
+seriousness by drollery. Yet I shall this day publish two letters of
+very different tendency, which I hope, like tragi-comedy, may chance to
+please even when they are not critically approved.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+DEAR SIR,
+
+Though, as my mamma tells me, I am too young to talk at the table, I
+have great pleasure in listening to the conversation of learned men,
+especially when they discourse of things which I do not understand; and
+have, therefore, been of late particularly delighted with many disputes
+about the _alteration of the stile_, which, they say, is to be made by
+act of parliament.
+
+One day when my mamma was gone out of the room, I asked a very great
+scholar what the style was. He told me he was afraid I should hardly
+understand him when he informed me, that it was the stated and
+established method of computing time. It was not, indeed, likely that I
+should understand him; for I never yet knew time computed in my life,
+nor can imagine why we should be at so much trouble to count what we
+cannot keep. He did not tell me whether we are to count the time past,
+or the time to come; but I have considered them both by myself, and
+think it as foolish to count time that is gone, as money that is spent;
+and as for the time which is to come, it only seems further off by
+counting; and therefore, when any pleasure is promised me, I always
+think of the time as little as I can.
+
+I have since listened very attentively to every one that talked upon
+this subject, of whom the greater part seem not to understand it better
+than myself; for though they often hint how much the nation has been
+mistaken, and rejoice that we are at last growing wiser than our
+ancestors, I have never been able to discover from them, that any body
+has died sooner, or been married later, for counting time wrong; and,
+therefore, I began to fancy that there was a great bustle with little
+consequence.
+
+At last, two friends of my papa, Mr. Cycle, and Mr. Starlight, being, it
+seems, both of high learning, and able to make an almanack, began to
+talk about the new style. Sweet Mr. Starlight--I am sure I shall love
+his name as long as I live; for he told Cycle roundly, with a fierce
+look, that we should never be right without a _year of confusion_. Dear
+Mr. Rambler, did you ever hear any thing so charming? a whole year of
+confusion! When there has been a rout at mamma's, I have thought one
+night of confusion worth a thousand nights of rest; and if I can but see
+a year of confusion, a whole year, of cards in one room, and dancings in
+another, here a feast, and there a masquerade, and plays, and coaches,
+and hurries, and messages, and milliners, and raps at the door, and
+visits, and frolicks, and new fashions, I shall not care what they do
+with the rest of the time, nor whether they count it by the old style or
+the new; for I am resolved to break loose from the nursery in the
+tumult, and play my part among the rest; and it will be strange if I
+cannot get a husband and a chariot in the year of confusion.
+
+Cycle, who is neither so young nor so handsome as Starlight, very
+gravely maintained, that all the perplexity may he avoided by leaping
+over eleven days in the reckoning; and, indeed, if it should come only
+to this, I think the new style is a delightful thing; for my mamma says
+I shall go to court when I am sixteen, and if they can but contrive
+often to leap over eleven days together, the months of restraint will
+soon be at an end. It is strange, that with all the plots that have been
+laid against time, they could never kill it by act of parliament before.
+Dear sir, if you have any vote or interest, get them but for once to
+destroy eleven months, and then I shall be as old as some married
+ladies. But this is desired only if you think they will not comply with
+Mr. Starlight's scheme; for nothing surely could please me like a year
+of confusion, when I shall no longer be fixed this hour to my pen, and
+the next to my needle, or wait at home for the dancing-master one day,
+and the next for the musick-master; but run from ball to ball, and from
+drum to drum; and spend all my time without tasks, and without account,
+and go out without telling whither, and come home without regard to
+prescribed hours, or family rules.
+
+I am, sir,
+
+Your humble servant,
+
+PROPERANTIA.
+
+MR. RAMBLER,
+
+I was seized this morning with an unusual pensiveness, and, finding that
+books only served to heighten it, took a ramble into the fields, in
+hopes of relief and invigoration from the keenness of the air and
+brightness of the sun.
+
+As I wandered wrapped up in thought, my eyes were struck with the
+hospital for the reception of deserted infants, which I surveyed with
+pleasure, till, by a natural train of sentiment, I began to reflect on
+the fate of the mothers. For to what shelter can they fly? Only to the
+arms of their betrayer, which, perhaps, are now no longer open to
+receive them; and then how quick must be the transition from deluded
+virtue to shameless guilt, and from shameless guilt to hopeless
+wretchedness?
+
+The anguish that I felt, left me no rest till I had, by your means,
+addressed myself to the publick on behalf of those forlorn creatures,
+the women of the town; whose misery here might satisfy the most rigorous
+censor, and whose participation of our common nature might surely induce
+us to endeavour, at least, their preservation from eternal punishment.
+
+These were all once, if not virtuous, at least innocent; and might still
+have continued blameless and easy, but for the arts and insinuations of
+those whose rank, fortune, or education, furnished them with means to
+corrupt or to delude them. Let the libertine reflect a moment on the
+situation of that woman, who, being forsaken by her betrayer, is reduced
+to the necessity of turning prostitute for bread, and judge of the
+enormity of his guilt by the evils which it produces.
+
+It cannot be doubted but that numbers follow this dreadful course of
+life, with shame, horrour, and regret; but where can they hope for
+refuge: "_The world is not their friend, nor the world's law_." Their
+sighs, and tears, and groans, are criminal in the eye of their tyrants,
+the bully and the bawd, who fatten on their misery, and threaten them
+with want or a gaol, if they show the least design of escaping from
+their bondage.
+
+"To wipe all tears from off all faces," is a task too hard for mortals;
+but to alleviate misfortunes is often within the most limited power: yet
+the opportunities which every day affords of relieving the most wretched
+of human beings are overlooked and neglected, with equal disregard of
+policy and goodness.
+
+There are places, indeed, set apart, to which these unhappy creatures
+may resort, when the diseases of incontinence seize upon them; but if
+they obtain a cure, to what are they reduced? Either to return with the
+small remains of beauty to their former guilt, or perish in the streets
+with nakedness and hunger.
+
+How frequently have the gay and thoughtless, in their evening frolicks,
+seen a band of those miserable females, covered with rags, shivering
+with cold, and pining with hunger; and, without either pitying their
+calamities, or reflecting upon the cruelty of those who, perhaps, first
+seduced them by caresses of fondness, or magnificence of promises, go on
+to reduce others to the same wretchedness by the same means!
+
+To stop the increase of this deplorable multitude, is undoubtedly the
+first and most pressing consideration. To prevent evil is the great end
+of government, the end for which vigilance and severity are properly
+employed. But surely those whom passion or interest has already
+depraved, have some claim to compassion, from beings equally frail and
+fallible with themselves. Nor will they long groan in their present
+afflictions, if none were to refuse them relief, but those that owe
+their exemption from the same distress only to their wisdom and their
+virtue.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+AMICUS[a].
+
+[Footnote a: The letter from Amicus was from an unknown correspondent.
+It breathes a tenderness of spirit worthy of Johnson himself. But he
+practised the lesson which it inculcates;--a harder task! Sterne could
+_write_ sentiment.]
+
+
+
+No. 108. SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 1751.
+
+ _--Sapere aude:
+ Incipe. Vivendi recte qui prorogat horam,
+ Rusticus expectat dum defluat amnis; at ille
+ Labitur et labetur in omne volubilis aevum_. HOR. Lib. i. Ep. ii. 39.
+
+ Begin, be bold, and venture to be wise;
+ He who defers this work from day to day,
+ Does on a river's bank expecting stay,
+ Till the whole stream, which stopp'd him, should be gone,
+ That runs, and as it runs, for ever will run on. COWLEY.
+
+An ancient poet, unreasonably discontented at the present state of
+things, which his system of opinions obliged him to represent in its
+worst form, has observed of the earth, "that its greater part is covered
+by the uninhabitable ocean; that of the rest some is encumbered with
+naked mountains, and some lost under barren sands; some scorched with
+unintermitted heat, and some petrified with perpetual frost; so that
+only a few regions remain for the production of fruits, the pasture of
+cattle, and the accommodation of man."
+
+The same observation may be transferred to the time allotted us in our
+present state. When we have deducted all that is absorbed in sleep, all
+that is inevitably appropriated to the demands of nature, or
+irresistibly engrossed by the tyranny of custom; all that passes in
+regulating the superficial decorations of life, or is given up in the
+reciprocations of civility to the disposal of others; all that is torn
+from us by the violence of disease, or stolen imperceptibly away by
+lassitude and languor; we shall find that part of our duration very
+small of which we can truly call ourselves masters, or which we can
+spend wholly at our own choice. Many of our hours are lost in a rotation
+of petty cares, in a constant recurrence of the same employments; many
+of our provisions for ease or happiness are always exhausted by the
+present day; and a great part of our existence serves no other purpose,
+than that of enabling us to enjoy the rest.
+
+Of the few moments which are left in our disposal, it may reasonably be
+expected, that we should be so frugal, as to let none of them slip from
+us without some equivalent; and perhaps it might be found, that as the
+earth, however straitened by rocks and waters, is capable of producing
+more than all its inhabitants are able to consume, our lives, though
+much contracted by incidental distraction, would yet afford us a large
+space vacant to the exercise of reason and virtue; that we want not
+time, but diligence, for great performances; and that we squander much
+of our allowance, even while we think it sparing and insufficient.
+
+This natural and necessary comminution of our lives, perhaps, often
+makes us insensible of the negligence with which we suffer them to slide
+away. We never consider ourselves as possessed at once of time
+sufficient for any great design, and therefore indulge ourselves, in
+fortuitous amusements. We think it unnecessary to take an account of a
+few supernumerary moments, which, however employed, could have produced
+little advantage, and which were exposed to a thousand chances of
+disturbance and interruption.
+
+It is observable, that, either by nature or by habit, our faculties are
+fitted to images of a certain extent, to which we adjust great things by
+division, and little things by accumulation. Of extensive surfaces we
+can only take a survey, as the parts succeed one another; and atoms we
+cannot perceive till they are united into masses. Thus we break the vast
+periods of time into centuries and years; and thus, if we would know the
+amount of moments, we must agglomerate them into days and weeks.
+
+The proverbial oracles of our parsimonious ancestors have informed us,
+that the fatal waste of fortune is by small expenses, by the profusion
+of sums too little singly to alarm our caution, and which we never
+suffer ourselves to consider together. Of the same kind is the
+prodigality of life; he that hopes to look back hereafter with
+satisfaction upon past years, must learn to know the present value of
+single minutes, and endeavour to let no particle of time fall useless to
+the ground.
+
+It is usual for those who are advised to the attainment of any new
+qualification, to look upon themselves as required to change the general
+course of their conduct, to dismiss business, and exclude pleasure, and
+to devote their days and nights to a particular attention. But all
+common degrees of excellence are attainable at a lower price; he that
+should steadily and resolutely assign to any science or language those
+interstitial vacancies which intervene in the most crowded variety of
+diversion or employment, would find every day new irradiations of
+knowledge, and discover how much more is to be hoped from frequency and
+perseverance, than from violent efforts and sudden desires; efforts
+which are soon remitted when they encounter difficulty, and desires,
+which, if they are indulged too often, will shake off the authority of
+reason, and range capriciously from one object to another.
+
+The disposition to defer every important design to a time of leisure,
+and a state of settled uniformity, proceeds generally from a false
+estimate of the human powers. If we except those gigantic and stupendous
+intelligences who are said to grasp a system by intuition, and bound
+forward from one series of conclusions to another, without regular steps
+through intermediate propositions, the most successful students make
+their advances in knowledge by short flights, between each of which the
+mind may lie at rest. For every single act of progression a short time
+is sufficient; and it is only necessary, that whenever that time is
+afforded, it be well employed.
+
+Few minds will be long confined to severe and laborious meditation; and
+when a successful attack on knowledge has been made, the student
+recreates himself with the contemplation of his conquest, and forbears
+another incursion, till the new-acquired truth has become familiar, and
+his curiosity calls upon him for fresh gratifications. Whether the time
+of intermission is spent in company, or in solitude, in necessary
+business, or in voluntary levities, the understanding is equally
+abstracted from the object of inquiry; but, perhaps, if it be detained
+by occupations less pleasing, it returns again to study with greater
+alacrity than when it is glutted with ideal pleasures, and surfeited
+with intemperance of application. He that will not suffer himself to be
+discouraged by fancied impossibilities, may sometimes find his abilities
+invigorated by the necessity of exerting them in short intervals, as the
+force of a current is increased by the contraction of its channel.
+
+From some cause like this, it has probably proceeded, that, among those
+who have contributed to the advancement of learning, many have risen to
+eminence in opposition to all the obstacles which external circumstances
+could place in their way, amidst the tumult of business, the distresses
+of poverty, or the dissipations of a wandering and unsettled state. A
+great part of the life of Erasmus was one continual peregrination; ill
+supplied with the gifts of fortune, and led from city to city, and from
+kingdom to kingdom, by the hopes of patrons and preferment, hopes which
+always flattered and always deceived him; he yet found means, by
+unshaken constancy, and a vigilant improvement of those hours, which, in
+the midst of the most restless activity, will remain unengaged, to write
+more than another in the same condition would have hoped to read.
+Compelled by want to attendance and solicitation, and so much versed in
+common life, that he has transmitted to us the most perfect delineation
+of the manners of his age, he joined to his knowledge of the world such
+application to books, that he will stand for ever in the first rank of
+literary heroes. How this proficiency was obtained he sufficiently
+discovers, by informing us, that the "Praise of Folly," one of his most
+celebrated performances, was composed by him on the road to Italy; _ne
+totum illud tempus quo equo fuit insidendum, illiteratis fabulis
+terreretur_: "lest the hours which he was obliged to spend on horseback
+should be tattled away without regard to literature."
+
+An Italian philosopher expressed in his motto, that _time was his
+estate_; an estate, indeed, which will produce nothing without
+cultivation, but will always abundantly repay the labours of industry,
+and satisfy the most extensive desires, if no part of it be suffered to
+lie waste by negligence, to be over-run with noxious plants, or laid out
+for shew, rather than for use.
+
+
+
+No. 109. TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1751.
+
+ _Gratum est, quod patriae civem populoque dedisti,
+ Si facis, ut patriae sit idoneus, utilis agris,
+ Utilis et bellorum et pacis rebus agendis.
+ Plurimum enim intererit, quibus artibus, et quibus hunc tu
+ Moribus instituas_ Juv. SAT, xiv. 70.
+
+ Grateful the gift! a member to the state,
+ If you that member useful shall create;
+ Train'd both to war, and, when the war shall cease,
+ As fond, as fit t'improve the arts of peace.
+ For much it boots which way you train your boy,
+ The hopeful object of your future joy. ELPHINSTON.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Though you seem to have taken a view sufficiently extensive of the
+miseries of life, and have employed much of your speculation on mournful
+subjects, you have not yet exhausted the whole stock of human
+infelicity. There is still a species of wretchedness which escapes your
+observation, though it might supply you with many sage remarks, and
+salutary cautions.
+
+I cannot but imagine the start of attention awakened by this welcome
+hint; and at this instant see the Rambler snuffing his candle, rubbing
+his spectacles, stirring his fire, locking out interruption, and
+settling himself in his easy chair, that he may enjoy a new calamity
+without disturbance. For, whether it be that continued sickness or
+misfortune has acquainted you only with the bitterness of being; or that
+you imagine none but yourself able to discover what I suppose has been
+seen and felt by all the inhabitants of the world; whether you intend
+your writings as antidotal to the levity and merriment with which your
+rivals endeavour to attract the favour of the publick; or fancy that you
+have some particular powers of dolorous declamation, and _warble out
+your groans_ with uncommon elegance or energy; it is certain, that
+whatever be your subject, melancholy for the most part bursts in upon
+your speculation, your gaiety is quickly overcast, and though your
+readers may be flattered with hopes of pleasantry, they are seldom
+dismissed but with heavy hearts.
+
+That I may therefore gratify you with an imitation of your own syllables
+of sadness, I will inform you that I was condemned by some disastrous
+influence to be an only son, born to the apparent prospect of a large
+fortune, and allotted to my parents at that time of life when satiety of
+common diversions allows the mind to indulge parental affection with
+greater intenseness. My birth was celebrated by the tenants with feasts,
+and dances, and bag-pipes: congratulations were sent from every family
+within ten miles round; and my parents discovered in my first cries such
+tokens of future virtue and understanding, that they declared themselves
+determined to devote the remaining part of life to my happiness and the
+increase of their estate.
+
+The abilities of my father and mother were not perceptibly unequal, and
+education had given neither much advantage over the other. They had both
+kept good company, rattled in chariots, glittered in playhouses, and
+danced at court, and were both expert in the games that were in their
+time called in as auxiliaries against the intrusion of thought.
+
+When there is such a parity between two persons associated for life, the
+dejection which the husband, if he be not completely stupid, must always
+suffer for want of superiority, sinks him to submissiveness. My mamma
+therefore governed the family without controul; and except that my
+father still retained some authority in the stables, and, now and then,
+after a supernumerary bottle, broke a looking-glass or china dish to
+prove his sovereignty, the whole course of the year was regulated by her
+direction, the servants received from her all their orders, and the
+tenants were continued or dismissed at her discretion.
+
+She, therefore, thought herself entitled to the superintendence of her
+son's education; and when my father, at the instigation of the parson,
+faintly proposed that I should be sent to school, very positively told
+him, that she should not suffer so fine a child to be ruined; that she
+never knew any boys at a grammar-school that could come into a room
+without blushing, or sit at table without some awkward uneasiness; that
+they were always putting themselves into danger by boisterous plays, or
+vitiating their behaviour with mean company, and that, for her part, she
+would rather follow me to the grave, than see me tear my clothes, and
+hang down my head, and sneak about with dirty shoes, and blotted
+fingers, my hair unpowdered, and my hat uncocked.
+
+My father, who had no other end in his proposal than to appear wise and
+manly, soon acquiesced, since I was not to live by my learning; for,
+indeed, he had known very few students that had not some stiffness in
+their manner. They, therefore, agreed, that a domestick tutor should be
+procured, and hired an honest gentleman of mean conversation and narrow
+sentiments, but whom, having passed the common forms of literary
+education, they implicitly concluded qualified to teach all that was to
+be learned from a scholar. He thought himself sufficiently exalted by
+being placed at the same table with his pupil, and had no other view
+than to perpetuate his felicity by the utmost flexibility of submission
+to all my mother's opinions and caprices. He frequently took away my
+book, lest I should mope with too much application, charged me never to
+write without turning up my ruffles, and generally brushed my coat
+before he dismissed me into the parlour. He had no occasion to complain
+of too burdensome an employment: for my mother very judiciously
+considered, that I was not likely to grow politer in his company, and
+suffered me not to pass any more time in his apartment than my lesson
+required. When I was summoned to my task, she enjoined me not to get any
+of my tutor's ways, who was seldom mentioned before me but for practices
+to be avoided. I was every moment admonished not to lean on my chair,
+cross my legs, or swing my hands like my tutor; and once my mother very
+seriously deliberated upon his total dismission, because I began, she
+said, to learn his manner of sticking on my hat, and had his bend in my
+shoulders, and his totter in my gait.
+
+Such, however, was her care, that I escaped all these depravities; and
+when I was only twelve years old, had rid myself of every appearance of
+childish diffidence. I was celebrated round the country for the
+petulance of my remarks, and the quickness of my replies; and many a
+scholar, five years older than myself, have I dashed into confusion by
+the steadiness of my countenance, silenced by my readiness of repartee,
+and tortured with envy by the address with which I picked up a fan,
+presented a snuff-box, or received an empty tea-cup.
+
+At fourteen I was completely skilled in all the niceties of dress, and I
+could not only enumerate all the variety of silks, and distinguish the
+product of a French loom, but dart my eye through a numerous company,
+and observe every deviation from the reigning mode. I was universally
+skilful in all the changes of expensive finery; but as every one, they
+say, has something to which he is particularly born, was eminently
+knowing in Brussels' lace.
+
+The next year saw me advanced to the trust and power of adjusting the
+ceremonial of an assembly. All received their partners from my hand, and
+to me every stranger applied for introduction. My heart now disdained
+the instructions of a tutor, who was rewarded with a small annuity for
+life, and left me qualified, in my own opinion, to govern myself.
+
+In a short time I came to London, and as my father was well known among
+the higher classes of life, soon obtained admission to the most splendid
+assemblies and most crowded card-tables. Here I found myself universally
+caressed and applauded; the ladies praised the fancy of my clothes, the
+beauty of my form, and the softness of my voice; endeavoured in every
+place to force themselves to my notice; and invited, by a thousand
+oblique solicitations, my attendance to the playhouse, and my
+salutations in the park. I was now happy to the utmost extent of my
+conception; I passed every morning in dress, every afternoon in visits,
+and every night in some select assemblies, where neither care nor
+knowledge were suffered to molest us.
+
+After a few years, however, these delights became familiar, and I had
+leisure to look round me with more attention. I then found that my
+flatterers had very little power to relieve the languor of satiety, or
+recreate weariness, by varied amusement; and therefore endeavoured to
+enlarge the sphere of my pleasures, and to try what satisfaction might
+be found in the society of men. I will not deny the mortification with
+which I perceived, that every man whose name I had heard mentioned with
+respect, received me with a kind of tenderness, nearly bordering on
+compassion; and that those whose reputation was not well established,
+thought it necessary to justify their understandings, by treating me
+with contempt. One of these witlings elevated his crest, by asking me in
+a full coffee-house the price of patches; and another whispered that he
+wondered why Miss Frisk did not keep me that afternoon to watch her
+squirrel.
+
+When I found myself thus hunted from all masculine conversation by those
+who were themselves barely admitted, I returned to the ladies, and
+resolved to dedicate my life to their service and their pleasure. But I
+find that I have now lost my charms. Of those with whom I entered the
+gay world, some are married, some have retired, and some have so much
+changed their opinion, that they scarcely pay any regard to my
+civilities, if there is any other man in the place. The new flight of
+beauties to whom I have made my addresses, suffer me to pay the treat,
+and then titter with boys. So that I now find myself welcome only to a
+few grave ladies, who, unacquainted with all that gives either use or
+dignity to life, are content to pass their hours between their bed and
+their cards, without esteem from the old, or reverence from the young.
+
+I cannot but think, Mr. Rambler, that I have reason to complain; for
+surely the females ought to pay some regard to the age of him whose
+youth was passed in endeavours to please them. They that encourage folly
+in the boy, have no right to punish it in the man. Yet I find that,
+though they lavish their first fondness upon pertness and gaiety, they
+soon transfer their regard to other qualities, and ungratefully abandon
+their adorers to dream out their last years in stupidity and contempt.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+FLORENTULUS.
+
+
+
+No. 110. SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 1751
+
+ At nobis vitae dominum quaerentibus unum
+ Lux iter est, et clara dies, et gratia simplex.
+ Spem sequimur, gradimurque fide, fruimurque futuris,
+ Ad quae non veniunt praesentis gaudia vitae,
+ Nec currunt pariter capta, et capienda voluptus.
+ PRUDENTIUS, Cont. Sym. ii. 904.
+
+ We through this maze of life one Lord obey;
+ Whose light and grace unerring lead the way.
+ By hope and faith secure of future bliss,
+ Gladly the joys of present life we miss:
+ For baffled mortals still attempt in vain,
+ Present and future bliss at once to gain. F. LEWIS.
+
+That to please the Lord and Father of the universe, is the supreme
+interest of created and dependent beings, as it is easily proved, has
+been universally confessed; and since all rational agents are conscious
+of having neglected or violated the duties prescribed to them, the fear
+of being rejected, or punished by God, has always burdened the human
+mind. The expiation of crimes, and renovation of the forfeited hopes of
+divine favour, therefore constitute a large part of every religion.
+
+The various methods of propitiation and atonement which fear and folly
+have dictated, or artifice and interest tolerated in the different parts
+of the world, however they may sometimes reproach or degrade humanity,
+at least shew the general consent of all ages and nations in their
+opinion of the placability of the divine nature. That God will forgive,
+may, indeed, be established as the first and fundamental truth of
+religion; for, though the knowledge of his existence is the origin of
+philosophy, yet, without the belief of his mercy, it would have little
+influence upon our moral conduct. There could be no prospect of enjoying
+the protection or regard of him, whom the least deviation from rectitude
+made inexorable for ever; and every man would naturally withdraw his
+thoughts from the contemplation of a Creator, whom he must consider as a
+governor too pure to be pleased, and too severe to be pacified; as an
+enemy infinitely wise, and infinitely powerful, whom he could neither
+deceive, escape, nor resist.
+
+Where there is no hope, there can be no endeavour. A constant and
+unfailing obedience is above the reach of terrestrial diligence; and
+therefore the progress of life could only have been the natural descent
+of negligent despair from crime to crime, had not the universal
+persuasion of forgiveness, to be obtained by proper means of
+reconciliation, recalled those to the paths of virtue, whom their
+passions had solicited aside; and animated to new attempts, and firmer
+perseverance, those whom difficulty had discouraged, or negligence
+surprised.
+
+In times and regions so disjoined from each other, that there can
+scarcely be imagined any communication of sentiments either by commerce
+or tradition, has prevailed a general and uniform expectation of
+propitiating God by corporal austerities, of anticipating his vengeance
+by voluntary inflictions, and appeasing his justice by a speedy and
+cheerful submission to a less penalty, when a greater is incurred.
+
+Incorporated minds will always feel some inclination towards exterior
+acts and ritual observances. Ideas not represented by sensible objects
+are fleeting, variable, and evanescent. We are not able to judge of the
+degree of conviction which operated at any particular time upon our own
+thoughts, but as it is recorded by some certain and definite effect. He
+that reviews his life in order to determine the probability of his
+acceptance with God, if he could once establish the necessary proportion
+between crimes and sufferings, might securely rest upon his performance
+of the expiation; but while safety remains the reward only of mental
+purity, he is always afraid lest he should decide too soon in his own
+favour; lest he should not have felt the pangs of true contrition; lest
+he should mistake satiety for detestation, or imagine that his passions
+are subdued when they are only sleeping.
+
+From this natural and reasonable diffidence arose, in humble and
+timorous piety, a disposition to confound penance with repentance, to
+repose on human determinations, and to receive from some judicial
+sentence the stated and regular assignment of reconciliatory pain. We
+are never willing to be without resource: we seek in the knowledge of
+others a succour for our own ignorance, and are ready to trust any that
+will undertake to direct us when we have no confidence in ourselves.
+
+This desire to ascertain by some outward marks the state of the soul,
+and this willingness to calm the conscience by some settled method, have
+produced, as they are diversified in their effects by various tempers
+and principles, most of the disquisitions and rules, the doubts and
+solutions, that have embarrassed the doctrine of repentance, and
+perplexed tender and flexible minds with innumerable scruples concerning
+the necessary measures of sorrow, and adequate degrees of
+self-abhorrence; and these rules, corrupted by fraud, or debased by
+credulity, have, by the common resiliency of the mind from one extreme
+to another, incited others to an open contempt of all subsidiary
+ordinances, all prudential caution, and the whole discipline of
+regulated piety.
+
+Repentance, however difficult to be practised, is, if it be explained
+without superstition, easily understood. _Repentance is the
+relinquishment of any practice, from the conviction that it has offended
+God_. Sorrow, and fear, and anxiety, are properly not parts, but
+adjuncts of repentance; yet they are too closely connected with it to be
+easily separated; for they not only mark its sincerity, but promote its
+efficacy.
+
+No man commits any act of negligence or obstinacy, by which his safety
+or happiness in this world is endangered, without feeling the pungency
+of remorse. He who is fully convinced, that he suffers by his own
+failure, can never forbear to trace back his miscarriage to its first
+cause, to image to himself a contrary behaviour, and to form involuntary
+resolutions against the like fault, even when he knows that he shall
+never again have the power of committing it. Danger, considered as
+imminent, naturally produces such trepidations of impatience as leave
+all human means of safety behind them; he that has once caught an alarm
+of terrour, is every moment seized with useless anxieties, adding one
+security to another, trembling with sudden doubts, and distracted by the
+perpetual occurrence of new expedients. If, therefore, he whose crimes
+have deprived him of the favour of God, can reflect upon his conduct
+without disturbance, or can at will banish the reflection; if he who
+considers himself as suspended over the abyss of eternal perdition only
+by the thread of life, which must soon part by its own weakness, and
+which the wing of every minute may divide, can cast his eyes round him
+without shuddering with horrour, or panting with security; what can he
+judge of himself, but that he is not yet awakened to sufficient
+conviction, since every loss is more lamented than the loss of the
+divine favour, and every danger more dreadful than the danger of final
+condemnation?
+
+Retirement from the cares and pleasures of the world has been often
+recommended as useful to repentance. This at least is evident, that
+every one retires, whenever ratiocination and recollection are required
+on other occasions; and surely the retrospect of life, the
+disentanglement of actions complicated with innumerable circumstances,
+and diffused in various relations, the discovery of the primary
+movements of the heart, and the extirpation of lusts and appetites
+deeply rooted and widely spread, may be allowed to demand some secession
+from sport and noise, business and folly. Some suspension of common
+affairs, some pause of temporal pain and pleasure, is doubtless
+necessary to him that deliberates for eternity, who is forming the only
+plan in which miscarriage cannot be repaired, and examining the only
+question in which mistake cannot be rectified.
+
+Austerities and mortifications are means by which the mind is
+invigorated and roused, by which the attractions of pleasure are
+interrupted, and the chains of sensuality are broken. It is observed by
+one of the fathers, that _he who restrains himself in the use of things
+lawful, will never encroach upon things forbidden_. Abstinence, if
+nothing more, is, at least, a cautious retreat from the utmost verge of
+permission, and confers that security which cannot be reasonably hoped
+by him that dares always to hover over the precipice of destruction, or
+delights to approach the pleasures which he knows it fatal to partake.
+Austerity is the proper antidote to indulgence; the diseases of mind as
+well as body are cured by contraries, and to contraries we should
+readily have recourse, if we dreaded guilt as we dread pain.
+
+The completion and sum of repentance is a change of life. That sorrow
+which dictates no caution, that fear which does not quicken our escape,
+that austerity which fails to rectify our affections, are vain and
+unavailing. But sorrow and terrour must naturally precede reformation;
+for what other cause can produce it? He, therefore, that feels himself
+alarmed by his conscience, anxious for the attainment of a better state,
+and afflicted by the memory of his past faults, may justly conclude,
+that the great work of repentance is begun, and hope by retirement and
+prayer, the natural and religious means of strengthening his conviction,
+to impress upon his mind such a sense of the divine presence, as may
+overpower the blandishments of secular delights, and enable him to
+advance from one degree of holiness to another, till death shall set him
+free from doubt and contest, misery and temptation[b].
+
+ What better can we do than prostrate fall
+ Before him reverent; and there confess
+ Humbly our faults, and pardon beg; with tears
+ Wat'ring the ground, and with our sighs the air
+ Frequenting, sent from hearts contrite, in sign
+ Of sorrow unfeign'd, and humiliation meek? Par. Lost. B. x. 1087.
+
+
+
+No. 111. TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: phronein gar hoi tacheis, ouk asphaleis.] SOPHOC.
+
+ Disaster always waits on early wit.
+
+It has been observed, by long experience, that late springs produce the
+greatest plenty. The delay of blooms and fragrance, of verdure and
+breezes, is for the most part liberally recompensed by the exuberance
+and fecundity of the ensuing seasons; the blossoms which lie concealed
+till the year is advanced, and the sun is high, escape those chilling
+blasts, and nocturnal frosts, which are often fatal to early luxuriance,
+prey upon the first smiles of vernal beauty, destroy the feeble
+principles of vegetable life, intercept the fruit in the gem, and beat
+down the flowers unopened to the ground.
+
+I am afraid there is little hope of persuading the young and sprightly
+part of my readers, upon whom the spring naturally forces my attention,
+to learn, from the great process of nature, the difference between
+diligence and hurry, between speed and precipitation; to prosecute their
+designs with calmness, to watch the concurrence of opportunity, and
+endeavour to find the lucky moment which they cannot make. Youth is the
+time of enterprize and hope: having yet no occasion of comparing our
+force with any opposing power, we naturally form presumptions in our own
+favour, and imagine that obstruction and impediment will give way before
+us. The first repulses rather inflame vehemence than teach prudence; a
+brave and generous mind is long before it suspects its own weakness, or
+submits to sap the difficulties which it expected to subdue by storm.
+Before disappointments have enforced the dictates of philosophy, we
+believe it in our power to shorten the interval between the first cause
+and the last effect; we laugh at the timorous delays of plodding
+industry, and fancy that, by increasing the fire, we can at pleasure
+accelerate the projection.
+
+At our entrance into the world, when health and vigour give us fair
+promises of time sufficient for the regular maturation of our schemes,
+and a long enjoyment of our acquisitions, we are eager to seize the
+present moment; we pluck every gratification within our reach, without
+suffering it to ripen into perfection, and crowd all the varieties of
+delight into a narrow compass; but age seldom fails to change our
+conduct; we grow negligent of time in proportion as we have less
+remaining, and suffer the last part of life to steal from us in languid
+preparations for future undertakings, or slow approaches to remote
+advantages, in weak hopes of some fortuitous occurrence, or drowsy
+equilibrations of undetermined counsel: whether it be that the aged,
+having tasted the pleasures of man's condition, and found them delusive,
+become less anxious for their attainment; or that frequent miscarriages
+have depressed them to despair, and frozen them to inactivity; or that
+death shocks them more as it advances upon them, and they are afraid to
+remind themselves of their decay, or to discover to their own hearts
+that the time of trifling is past. A perpetual conflict with natural
+desires seems to be the lot of our present state. In youth we require
+something of the tardiness and frigidity of age; and in age we must
+labour to recal the fire and impetuosity of youth; in youth we must
+learn to expect, and in age to enjoy.
+
+The torment of expectation is, indeed, not easily to be borne at a time
+when every idea of gratification fires the blood, and flashes on the
+fancy; when the heart is vacant to every fresh form of delight, and has
+no rival engagements to withdraw it from the importunities of a new
+desire. Yet, since the fear of missing what we seek must always be
+proportionable to the happiness expected from possessing it, the
+passions, even in this tempestuous state, might be somewhat moderated by
+frequent inculcation of the mischief of temerity, and the hazard of
+losing that which we endeavour to seize before our time.
+
+He that too early aspires to honours, must resolve to encounter not only
+the opposition of interest, but the malignity of envy. He that is too
+eager to be rich, generally endangers his fortune in wild adventures,
+and uncertain projects; and he that hastens too speedily to reputation,
+often raises his character by artifices and fallacies, decks himself in
+colours which quickly fade, or in plumes which accident may shake off,
+or competition pluck away.
+
+The danger of early eminence has been extended by some, even to the
+gifts of nature; and an opinion has been long conceived, that quickness
+of invention, accuracy of judgment, or extent of knowledge, appearing
+before the usual time, presage a short life. Even those who are less
+inclined to form general conclusions, from instances which by their own
+nature must be rare, have yet been inclined to prognosticate no suitable
+progress from the first sallies of rapid wits; but have observed, that
+after a short effort they either loiter or faint, and suffer themselves
+to be surpassed by the even and regular perseverance of slower
+understandings.
+
+It frequently happens, that applause abates diligence. Whoever finds
+himself to have performed more than was demanded, will be contented to
+spare the labour of unnecessary performances, and sit down to enjoy at
+ease his superfluities of honour. He whom success has made confident of
+his abilities, quickly claims the privilege of negligence, and looks
+contemptuously on the gradual advances of a rival, whom he imagines
+himself able to leave behind whenever he shall again summon his force to
+the contest. But long intervals of pleasure dissipate attention, and
+weaken constancy; nor is it easy for him that has sunk from diligence
+into sloth, to rouse out of his lethargy, to recollect his notions,
+rekindle his curiosity, and engage with his former ardour in the toils
+of study.
+
+Even that friendship which intends the reward of genius, too often tends
+to obstruct it. The pleasure of being caressed, distinguished, and
+admired, easily seduces the student from literary solitude. He is ready
+to follow the call which summons him to hear his own praise, and which,
+perhaps, at once flatters his appetite with certainty of pleasures, and
+his ambition with hopes of patronage; pleasures which he conceives
+inexhaustible, and hopes which he has not yet learned to distrust.
+
+These evils, indeed, are by no means to be imputed to nature, or
+considered as inseparable from an early display of uncommon abilities.
+They may be certainly escaped by prudence and resolution, and must
+therefore be recounted rather as consolations to those who are less
+liberally endowed, than as discouragements to such as are born with
+uncommon qualities. Beauty is well known to draw after it the
+persecutions of impertinence, to incite the artifices of envy, and to
+raise the flames of unlawful love; yet, among the ladies whom prudence
+or modesty have made most eminent, who has ever complained of the
+inconveniences of an amiable form? or would have purchased safety by the
+loss of charms?
+
+Neither grace of person, nor vigour of understanding, are to be regarded
+otherwise than as blessings, as means of happiness indulged by the
+Supreme Benefactor; but the advantages of either may be lost by too much
+eagerness to obtain them. A thousand beauties in their first blossom, by
+an imprudent exposure to the open world, have suddenly withered at the
+blast of infamy; and men who might have subjected new regions to the
+empire of learning, have been lured by the praise of their first
+productions from academical retirement, and wasted their days in vice
+and dependance. The virgin who too soon aspires to celebrity and
+conquest, perishes by childish vanity, ignorant credulity, or guiltless
+indiscretion. The genius who catches at laurels and preferment before
+his time, mocks the hopes that he had excited, and loses those years
+which might have been most usefully employed, the years of youth, of
+spirit, and vivacity.
+
+It is one of the innumerable absurdities of pride, that we are never
+more impatient of direction, than in that part of life when we need it
+most; we are in haste to meet enemies whom we have not strength to
+overcome, and to undertake tasks which we cannot perform: and as he that
+once miscarries does not easily persuade mankind to favour another
+attempt, an ineffectual struggle for fame is often followed by perpetual
+obscurity.
+
+[Footnote b: The perusal of these profound remarks on penance and
+repentance had so powerful an effect on one of the English Benedictine
+monks (The Rev. James Compton) at Paris, as to lead him from the errours
+of Popery! For an account of Dr. Johnson's true benevolence through the
+whole of this interesting occasion, see Malone's note to Boswell's Life
+of Johnson, vol. iv. p. 210--edit. 1822.]
+
+
+
+No. 112. SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 1751.
+
+ _In mea vesanas habui dispendia vires,
+ Et valui paenam fortis in ipse meain_. OVID, Am. Lib. i. vii. 25.
+
+ Of strength pernicious to myself I boast;
+ The pow'rs I have were given me to my cost. F. LEWIS.
+
+We are taught by Celsus, that health is best preserved by avoiding
+settled habits of life, and deviating sometimes into slight aberrations
+from the laws of medicine; by varying the proportions of food and
+exercise, interrupting the successions of rest and labour, and mingling
+hardships with indulgence. The body, long accustomed to stated
+quantities and uniform periods, is disordered by the smallest
+irregularity; and since we cannot adjust every day by the balance or
+barometer, it is fit sometimes to depart from rigid accuracy, that we
+may be able to comply with necessary affairs, or strong inclinations. He
+that too long observes nice punctualities, condemns himself to voluntary
+imbecility, and will not long escape the miseries of disease.
+
+The same laxity of regimen is equally necessary to intellectual health,
+and to a perpetual susceptibility of occasional pleasure. Long
+confinement to the same company which perhaps similitude of taste
+brought first together, quickly contracts the faculties, and makes a
+thousand things offensive that are in themselves indifferent; a man
+accustomed to hear only the echo of his own sentiments, soon bars all
+the common avenues of delight, and has no part in the general
+gratifications of mankind.
+
+In things which are not immediately subject to religious or moral
+consideration, it is dangerous to be too rigidly in the right.
+Sensibility may, by an incessant attention to elegance and propriety, be
+quickened to a tenderness inconsistent with the condition of humanity,
+irritable by the smallest asperity, and vulnerable by the gentlest
+touch. He that pleases himself too much with minute exactness, and
+submits to endure nothing in accommodations, attendance, or address,
+below the point of perfection, will, whenever he enters the crowd of
+life, be harassed with innumerable distresses, from which those who have
+not in the same manner increased their sensations find no disturbance.
+His exotick softness will shrink at the coarseness of vulgar felicity,
+like a plant transplanted to northern nurseries, from the dews and
+sunshine of the tropical regions.
+
+There will always be a wide interval between practical and ideal
+excellence; and, therefore, if we allow not ourselves to be satisfied
+while we can perceive any errour or defect, we must refer our hopes of
+ease to some other period of existence. It is well known, that, exposed
+to a microscope, the smoothest polish of the most solid bodies discovers
+cavities and prominences; and that the softest bloom of roseate
+virginity repels the eye with excrescences and discolorations. The
+perceptions as well as the senses may be improved to our own disquiet,
+and we may, by diligent cultivation of the powers of dislike, raise in
+time an artificial fastidiousness, which shall fill the imagination with
+phantoms of turpitude, shew us the naked skeleton of every delight, and
+present us only with the pains of pleasure, and the deformities of
+beauty.
+
+Peevishness, indeed, would perhaps very little disturb the peace of
+mankind, were it always the consequence of superfluous delicacy; for it
+is the privilege only of deep reflection, or lively fancy, to destroy
+happiness by art and refinement. But by continual indulgence of a
+particular humour, or by long enjoyment of undisputed superiority, the
+dull and thoughtless may likewise acquire the power of tormenting
+themselves and others, and become sufficiently ridiculous or hateful to
+those who are within sight of their conduct, or reach of their
+influence.
+
+They that have grown old in a single state are generally found to be
+morose, fretful, and captious; tenacious of their own practices and
+maxims; soon offended by contradiction or negligence; and impatient of
+any association, but with those that will watch their nod, and submit
+themselves to unlimited authority. Such is the effect of having lived
+without the necessity of consulting any inclination but their own.
+
+The irascibility of this class of tyrants is generally exerted upon
+petty provocations, such as are incident to understandings not far
+extended beyond the instincts of animal life; but, unhappily, he that
+fixes his attention on things always before him, will never have long
+cessations of anger. There are many veterans of luxury upon whom every
+noon brings a paroxysm of violence, fury, and execration; they never sit
+down to their dinner without finding the meat so injudiciously bought,
+or so unskilfully dressed, such blunders in the seasoning, or such
+improprieties in the sauce, as can scarcely be expiated without blood;
+and, in the transports of resentment, make very little distinction
+between guilt and innocence, but let fly their menaces, or growl out
+their discontent, upon all whom fortune exposes to the storm.
+
+It is not easy to imagine a more unhappy condition than that of
+dependance on a peevish man. In every other state of inferiority the
+certainty of pleasing is perpetually increased by a fuller knowledge of
+our duty; and kindness and confidence are strengthened by every new act
+of trust, and proof of fidelity. But peevishness sacrifices to a
+momentory offence the obsequiousness or usefulness of half a life, and,
+as more is performed, increases her exactions.
+
+Chrysalus gained a fortune by trade, and retired into the country; and,
+having a brother burthened by the number of his children, adopted one of
+his sons. The boy was dismissed with many prudent admonitions; informed
+of his father's inability to maintain him in his native rank; cautioned
+against all opposition to the opinions or precepts of his uncle; and
+animated to perseverance by the hopes of supporting the honour of the
+family, and overtopping his elder brother. He had a natural ductility of
+mind, without much warmth of affection, or elevation of sentiment; and
+therefore readily complied with every variety of caprice; patiently
+endured contradictory reproofs; heard false accusations without pain,
+and opprobrious reproaches without reply; laughed obstreperously at the
+ninetieth repetition of a joke; asked questions about the universal
+decay of trade; admired the strength of those heads by which the price
+of stocks is changed and adjusted; and behaved with such prudence and
+circumspection, that after six years the will was made, and Juvenculus
+was declared heir. But unhappily, a month afterwards, retiring at night
+from his uncle's chamber, he left the door open behind him: the old man
+tore his will, and being then perceptibly declining, for want of time to
+deliberate, left his money to a trading company.
+
+When female minds are embittered by age or solitude, their malignity is
+generally exerted in a rigorous and spiteful superintendance of domestic
+trifles. Eriphile has employed her eloquence for twenty years upon the
+degeneracy of servants, the nastiness of her house, the ruin of her
+furniture, the difficulty of preserving tapestry from the moths, and the
+carelessness of the sluts whom she employs in brushing it. It is her
+business every morning to visit all the rooms, in hopes of finding a
+chair without its cover, a window shut or open contrary to her orders, a
+spot on the hearth, or a feather on the floor, that the rest of the day
+may be justifiably spent in taunts of contempt, and vociferations of
+anger. She lives for no other purpose but to preserve the neatness of a
+house and gardens, and feels neither inclination to pleasure, nor
+aspiration after virtue, while she is engrossed by the great employment
+of keeping gravel from grass, and wainscot from dust. Of three amiable
+nieces she has declared herself an irreconcileable enemy; to one,
+because she broke off a tulip with her hoop; to another, because she
+spilt her coffee on a Turkey carpet; and to the third, because she let a
+wet dog run into the parlour. She has broken off her intercourse of
+visits, because company makes a house dirty; and resolves to confine
+herself more to her own affairs, and to live no longer in mire by
+foolish lenity.
+
+Peevishness is generally the vice of narrow minds, and, except when it
+is the effect of anguish and disease, by which the resolution is broken,
+and the mind made too feeble to bear the lightest addition to its
+miseries, proceeds from an unreasonable persuasion of the importance of
+trifles. The proper remedy against it is, to consider the dignity of
+human nature, and the folly of suffering perturbation and uneasiness
+from causes unworthy of our notice.
+
+He that resigns his peace to little casualties, and suffers the course
+of his life to be interrupted by fortuitous inadvertencies, or offences,
+delivers up himself to the direction of the wind, and loses all that
+constancy and equanimity which constitute the chief praise of a wise
+man.
+
+The province of prudence lies between the greatest things and the least;
+some surpass our power by their magnitude, and some escape our notice by
+their number and their frequency. But the indispensable business of life
+will afford sufficient exercise to every understanding; and such is the
+limitation of the human powers, that by attention to trifles we must let
+things of importance pass unobserved: when we examine a mite with a
+glass, we see nothing but a mite.
+
+That it is every man's interest to be pleased, will need little proof:
+that it is his interest to please others, experience will inform him. It
+is therefore not less necessary to happiness than to virtue, that he rid
+his mind of passions which make him uneasy to himself, and hateful to
+the world, which enchain his intellects, and obstruct his improvement.
+
+
+
+No. 113. TUESDAY, APRIL 16, 1751.
+
+ --_Uxorem, Postume, ducis?
+ Die, qua Tisiphone, quibus exagitere colubris?_ JUV. Sat. vi. 28.
+
+ A sober man like thee to change his life!
+ What fury would possess thee with a wife? DRYDEN.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I know not whether it is always a proof of innocence to treat censure
+with contempt. We owe so much reverence to the wisdom of mankind, as
+justly to wish, that our own opinion of our merit may be ratified by the
+concurrence of other suffrages; and since guilt and infamy must have the
+same effect upon intelligences unable to pierce beyond external
+appearance, and influenced often rather by example than precept, we are
+obliged to refute a false charge, lest we should countenance the crime
+which we have never committed. To turn away from an accusation with
+supercilious silence, is equally in the power of him that is hardened by
+villany, and inspirited by innocence. The wall of brass which Horace
+erects upon a clear conscience, may be sometimes raised by impudence or
+power; and we should always wish to preserve the dignity of virtue by
+adorning her with graces which wickedness cannot assume.
+
+For this reason I have determined no longer to endure, with either
+patient or sullen resignation, a reproach, which is, at least in my
+opinion, unjust; but will lay my case honestly before you, that you or
+your readers may at length decide it.
+
+Whether you will be able to preserve your boasted impartiality, when you
+hear that I am considered as an adversary by half the female world, you
+may surely pardon me for doubting, notwithstanding the veneration to
+which you may imagine yourself entitled by your age, your learning, your
+abstraction, or your virtue. Beauty, Mr. Rambler, has often overpowered
+the resolutions of the firm, and the reasonings of the wise, roused the
+old to sensibility, and subdued the rigorous to softness.
+
+I am one of those unhappy beings, who have been marked out as husbands
+for many different women, and deliberated a hundred times on the brink
+of matrimony. I have discussed all the nuptial preliminaries so often,
+that I can repeat the forms in which jointures are settled, pin-money
+secured, and provisions for younger children ascertained; but am at last
+doomed by general consent to everlasting solitude, and excluded by an
+irreversible decree from all hopes of connubial felicity. I am pointed
+out by every mother, as a man whose visits cannot be admitted without
+reproach; who raises hopes only to embitter disappointment, and makes
+offers only to seduce girls into a waste of that part of life, in which
+they might gain advantageous matches, and become mistresses and mothers.
+
+I hope you will think, that some part of this penal severity may justly
+be remitted, when I inform you, that I never yet professed love to a
+woman without sincere intentions of marriage; that I have never
+continued an appearance of intimacy from the hour that my inclination
+changed, but to preserve her whom I was leaving from the shock of
+abruptness, or the ignominy of contempt; that I always endeavoured to
+give the ladies an opportunity of seeming to discard me; and that I
+never forsook a mistress for larger fortune, or brighter beauty, but
+because I discovered some irregularity in her conduct, or some depravity
+in her mind; not because I was charmed by another, but because I was
+offended by herself.
+
+I was very early tired of that succession of amusements by which the
+thoughts of most young men are dissipated, and had not long glittered in
+the splendour of an ample patrimomy [Transcriber's note: sic] before I
+wished for the calm of domestick happiness. Youth is naturally delighted
+with sprightliness and ardour, and therefore I breathed out the sighs of
+my first affection at the feet of the gay, the sparkling, the vivacious
+Ferocula. I fancied to myself a perpetual source of happiness in wit
+never exhausted, and spirit never depressed; looked with veneration on
+her readiness of expedients, contempt of difficulty, assurance of
+address, and promptitude of reply; considered her as exempt by some
+prerogative of nature from the weakness and timidity of female minds;
+and congratulated myself upon a companion superior to all common
+troubles and embarrassments. I was, indeed, somewhat disturbed by the
+unshaken perseverance with which she enforced her demands of an
+unreasonable settlement; yet I should have consented to pass my life in
+union with her, had not my curiosity led me to a crowd gathered in the
+street, where I found Ferocula, in the presence of hundreds, disputing
+for six-pence with a chairman. I saw her in so little need of
+assistance, that it was no breach of the laws of chivalry to forbear
+interposition, and I spared myself the shame of owning her acquaintance.
+I forgot some point of ceremony at our next interview, and soon provoked
+her to forbid me her presence.
+
+My next attempt was upon a lady of great eminence for learning and
+philosophy. I had frequently observed the barrenness and uniformity of
+connubial conversation, and therefore thought highly of my own prudence
+and discernment, when I selected from a multitude of wealthy beauties,
+the deep-read Misothea, who declared herself the inexorable enemy of
+ignorant pertness, and puerile levity; and scarcely condescended to make
+tea, but for the linguist, the geometrician, the astronomer, or the
+poet. The queen of the Amazons was only to be gained by the hero who
+could conquer her in single combat; and Misothea's heart was only to
+bless the scholar who could overpower her by disputation. Amidst the
+fondest transports of courtship she could call for a definition of
+terms, and treated every argument with contempt that could not be
+reduced to regular syllogism. You may easily imagine, that I wished this
+courtship at an end; but when I desired her to shorten my torments, and
+fix the day of my felicity, we were led into a long conversation, in
+which Misothea endeavoured to demonstrate the folly of attributing
+choice and self-direction to any human being. It was not difficult to
+discover the danger of committing myself for ever to the arms of one who
+might at any time mistake the dictates of passion, or the calls of
+appetite, for the decree of fate; or consider cuckoldom as necessary to
+the general system, as a link in the everlasting chain of successive
+causes. I therefore told her, that destiny had ordained us to part, and
+that nothing should have torn me from her but the talons of necessity.
+
+I then solicited the regard of the calm, the prudent, the economical
+Sophronia, a lady who considered wit as dangerous, and learning as
+superfluous, and thought that the woman who kept her house clean, and
+her accounts exact, took receipts for every payment, and could find them
+at a sudden call, inquired nicely after the condition of the tenants,
+read the price of stocks once a-week, and purchased every thing at the
+best market, could want no accomplishments necessary to the happiness of
+a wise man. She discoursed with great solemnity on the care and
+vigilance which the superintendance of a family demands; observed how
+many were ruined by confidence in servants; and told me, that she never
+expected honesty but from a strong chest, and that the best storekeeper
+was the mistress's eye. Many such oracles of generosity she uttered, and
+made every day new improvements in her schemes for the regulations of
+her servants, and the distribution of her time. I was convinced that,
+whatever I might suffer from Sophronia, I should escape poverty; and we
+therefore proceeded to adjust the settlements according to her own rule,
+fair and softly. But one morning her maid came to me in tears to intreat
+my interest for a reconciliation with her mistress, who had turned her
+out at night for breaking six teeth in a tortoise-shell comb; she had
+attended her lady from a distant province, and having not lived long
+enough to save much money, was destitute among strangers, and, though of
+a good family, in danger of perishing in the streets, or of being
+compelled by hunger to prostitution. I made no scruple of promising to
+restore her; but upon my first application to Sophronia, was answered
+with an air which called for approbation, that if she neglected her own
+affairs, I might suspect her of neglecting mine; that the comb stood her
+in three half crowns; that no servant should wrong her twice; and that
+indeed she took the first opportunity of parting with Phillida, because,
+though she was honest, her constitution was bad, and she thought her
+very likely to fall sick. Of our conferrence I need not tell you the
+effect; it surely may be forgiven me, if on this occasion I forgot the
+decency of common forms.
+
+From two more ladies I was disengaged by finding, that they entertained
+my rivals at the same time, and determined their choice by the
+liberality of our settlements. Another, I thought myself justified in
+forsaking, because she gave my attorney a bribe to favour her in the
+bargain; another because I could never soften her to tenderness, till
+she heard that most of my family had died young; and another, because,
+to increase her fortune by expectations, she represented her sister as
+languishing and consumptive.
+
+I shall in another letter give the remaining part of my history of
+courtship. I presume that I should hitherto have injured the majesty of
+female virtue, had I not hoped to transfer my affection to higher merit.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+HYMENAEUS.
+
+
+
+No. 114. SATURDAY, APRIL 20, 1751.
+
+ --_Audi,
+ Nulla umquum de morte hominis cunctatio longa est._ JUV. Sat. vi. 220.
+
+ --When man's life is in debate,
+ The judge can ne'er too long deliberate. DRYDEN.
+
+Power and superiority are so flattering and delightful, that, fraught
+with temptation, and exposed to danger, as they are, scarcely any virtue
+is so cautious, or any prudence so timorous, as to decline them. Even
+those that have most reverence for the laws of right, are pleased with
+shewing that not fear, but choice, regulates their behaviour; and would
+be thought to comply, rather than obey. We love to overlook the
+boundaries which we do not wish to pass; and, as the Roman satirist
+remarks, he that has no design to take the life of another, is yet glad
+to have it in his hands.
+
+From the same principle, tending yet more to degeneracy and corruption,
+proceeds the desire of investing lawful authority with terrour, and
+governing by force rather than persuasion. Pride is unwilling to believe
+the necessity of assigning any other reason than her own will; and would
+rather maintain the most equitable claims by violence and penalties,
+than descend from the dignity of command to dispute and expostulation.
+
+It may, I think, be suspected, that this political arrogance has
+sometimes found its way into legislative assemblies, and mingled with
+deliberations upon property and life. A slight perusal of the laws by
+which the measures of vindictive and coercive justice are established,
+will discover so many disproportions between crimes and punishments,
+such capricious distinctions of guilt, and such confusion of remissness
+and severity, as can scarcely be believed to have been produced by
+publick wisdom, sincerely and calmly studious of publick happiness.
+
+The learned, the judicious, the pious Boerhaave relates, that he never
+saw a criminal dragged to execution without asking himself, "Who knows
+whether this man is not less culpable than me?" On the days when the
+prisons of this city are emptied into the grave, let every spectator of
+the dreadful procession put the same question to his own heart. Few
+among those that crowd in thousands to the legal massacre, and look with
+carelessness, perhaps with triumph, on the utmost exacerbations of human
+misery, would then be able to return without horrour and dejection. For,
+who can congratulate himself upon a life passed without some act more
+mischievous to the peace or prosperity of others, than the theft of a
+piece of money?
+
+It has been always the practice, when any particular species of robbery
+becomes prevalent and common, to endeavour its suppression by capital
+denunciations. Thus one generation of malefactors is commonly cut off,
+and their successors are frighted into new expedients; the art of
+thievery is augmented with greater variety of fraud, and subtilized to
+higher degrees of dexterity, and more occult methods of conveyance. The
+law then renews the pursuit in the heat of anger, and overtakes the
+offender again with death. By this practice capital inflictions are
+multiplied, and crimes, very different in their degrees of enormity, are
+equally subjected to the severest punishment that man has the power of
+exercising upon man.
+
+The lawgiver is undoubtedly allowed to estimate the malignity of an
+offence, not merely by the loss or pain which single acts may produce,
+but by the general alarm and anxiety arising from the fear of mischief,
+and insecurity of possession: he therefore exercises the right which
+societies are supposed to have over the lives of those that compose
+them, not simply to punish a transgression, but to maintain order, and
+preserve quiet; he enforces those laws with severity, that are most in
+danger of violation, as the commander of a garrison doubles the guard on
+that side which is threatened by the enemy.
+
+This method has been long tried, but tried with so little success, that
+rapine and violence are hourly increasing, yet few seem willing to
+despair of its efficacy; and of those who employ their speculations upon
+the present corruption of the people, some propose the introduction of
+more horrid, lingering, and terrifick punishments; some are inclined to
+accelerate the executions; some to discourage pardons; and all seem to
+think that lenity has given confidence to wickedness, and that we can
+only be rescued from the talons of robbery by inflexible rigour, and
+sanguinary justice.
+
+Yet, since the right of setting an uncertain and arbitrary value upon
+life has been disputed, and since experience of past times gives us
+little reason to hope that any reformation will be effected by a
+periodical havock of our fellow-beings, perhaps it will not be useless
+to consider what consequences might arise from relaxations of the law,
+and a more rational and equitable adaptation of penalties to offences.
+
+Death is, as one of the ancients observes, [Greek: to ton phoberon
+phoberotaton], _of dreadful things the most dreadful_: an evil, beyond
+which nothing can be threatened by sublunary power, or feared from human
+enmity or vengeance. This terrour should, therefore, be reserved as the
+last resort of authority, as the strongest and most operative of
+prohibitory sanctions, and placed before the treasure of life, to guard
+from invasion what cannot be restored. To equal robbery with murder is
+to reduce murder to robbery; to confound in common minds the gradations
+of iniquity, and incite the commission of a greater crime to prevent the
+detection of a less. If only murder were punished with death, very few
+robbers would stain their hands in blood; but when, by the last act of
+cruelty, no new danger is incurred, and greater security may be
+obtained, upon what principle shall we bid them forbear?
+
+It may be urged, that the sentence is often mitigated to simple robbery;
+but surely this is to confess that our laws are unreasonable in our own
+opinion; and, indeed, it may be observed, that all but murderers have,
+at their last hour, the common sensations of mankind pleading in their
+favour.
+
+From this conviction of the inequality of the punishment to the offence,
+proceeds the frequent solicitation of pardons. They who would rejoice at
+the correction of a thief, are yet shocked at the thought of destroying
+him. His crime shrinks to nothing, compared with his misery; and
+severity defeats itself by exciting pity.
+
+The gibbet, indeed, certainly disables those who die upon it from
+infesting the community; but their death seems not to contribute more to
+the reformation of their associates, than any other method of
+separation. A thief seldom passes much of his time in recollection or
+anticipation, but from robbery hastens to riot, and from riot to
+robbery; nor, when the grave closes on his companion, has any other care
+than to find another.
+
+The frequency of capital punishments, therefore, rarely hinders the
+commission of a crime, but naturally and commonly prevents its
+detection, and is, if we proceed only upon prudential principles,
+chiefly for that reason to be avoided. Whatever may be urged by casuists
+or politicians, the greater part of mankind, as they can never think
+that to pick the pocket and to pierce the heart is equally criminal,
+will scarcely believe that two malefactors so different in guilt can be
+justly doomed to the same punishment: nor is the necessity of submitting
+the conscience to human laws so plainly evinced, so clearly stated, or
+so generally allowed, but that the pious, the tender, and the just, will
+always scruple to concur with the community in an act which their
+private judgment cannot approve.
+
+He who knows not how often rigorous laws produce total impunity, and how
+many crimes are concealed and forgotten for fear of hurrying the
+offender to that state in which there is no repentance, has conversed
+very little with mankind. And whatever epithets of reproach or contempt
+this compassion may incur from those who confound cruelty with firmness,
+I know not whether any wise man would wish it less powerful, or less
+extensive.
+
+If those whom the wisdom of our laws has condemned to die, had been
+detected in their rudiments of robbery, they might, by proper discipline
+and useful labour, have been disentangled from their habits, they might
+have escaped all the temptation to subsequent crimes, and passed their
+days in reparation and penitence; and detected they might all have been,
+had the prosecutors been certain that their lives would have been
+spared. I believe, every thief will confess, that he has been more than
+once seized and dismissed; and that he has sometimes ventured upon
+capital crimes, because he knew, that those whom he injured would rather
+connive at his escape, than cloud their minds with the horrours of his
+death.
+
+All laws against wickedness are ineffectual, unless some will inform,
+and some will prosecute; but till we mitigate the penalties for mere
+violations of property, information will always be hated, and
+prosecution dreaded. The heart of a good man cannot but recoil at the
+thought of punishing a slight injury with death; especially when he
+remembers that the thief might have procured safety by another crime,
+from which he was restrained only by his remaining virtue.
+
+The obligations to assist the exercise of publick justice are indeed
+strong; but they will certainly be overpowered by tenderness for life.
+What is punished with severity contrary to our ideas of adequate
+retribution, will be seldom discovered; and multitudes will be suffered
+to advance from crime to crime, till they deserve death, because, if
+they had been sooner prosecuted, they would have suffered death before
+they deserved it.
+
+This scheme of invigorating the laws by relaxation, and extirpating
+wickedness by lenity, is so remote from common practice, that I might
+reasonably fear to expose it to the publick, could it be supported only
+by my own observations: I shall, therefore, by ascribing it to its
+author, Sir Thomas More, endeavour to procure it that attention, which I
+wish always paid to prudence, to justice, and to mercy.[c]
+
+
+
+No. 115. TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 1751.
+
+ _Quaedam parvu quidem; sed non toleranda maritis_. JUV. Sat vi. 184.
+
+ Some faults, though small, intolerable grow. DRYDEN.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I sit down, in pursuance of my late engagement, to recount the remaining
+part of the adventures that befel me in my long quest of conjugal
+felicity, which, though I have not yet been so happy as to obtain it, I
+have at least endeavoured to deserve by unwearied diligence, without
+suffering from repeated disappointments any abatement of my hope, or
+repression of my activity.
+
+You must have observed in the world a species of mortals who employ
+themselves in promoting matrimony, and without any visible motive of
+interest or vanity, without any discoverable impulse of malice or
+benevolence, without any reason, but that they want objects of attention
+and topicks of conversation, are incessantly busy in procuring wives and
+husbands. They fill the ears of every single man and woman with some
+convenient match; and when they are informed of your age and fortune,
+offer a partner for life with the same readiness, and the same
+indifference, as a salesman, when he has taken measure by his eye, fits
+his customer with a coat.
+
+It might be expected that they should soon be discouraged from this
+officious interposition by resentment or contempt; and that every man
+should determine the choice on which so much of his happiness must
+depend, by his own judgment and observation: yet it happens, that as
+these proposals are generally made with a shew of kindness, they seldom
+provoke anger, but are at worst heard with patience, and forgotten. They
+influence weak minds to approbation; for many are sure to find in a new
+acquaintance, whatever qualities report has taught them to expect; and
+in more powerful and active understandings they excite curiosity, and
+sometimes, by a lucky chance, bring persons of similar tempers within
+the attraction of each other.
+
+I was known to possess a fortune, and to want a wife; and therefore was
+frequently attended by these hymeneal solicitors, with whose importunity
+I was sometimes diverted, and sometimes perplexed; for they contended
+for me as vultures for a carcase; each employing all his eloquence, and
+all his artifices, to enforce and promote his own scheme, from the
+success of which he was to receive no other advantage than the pleasure
+of defeating others equally eager, and equally industrious.
+
+An invitation to sup with one of those busy friends, made me, by a
+concerted chance, acquainted with Camilla, by whom it was expected that
+I should be suddenly and irresistibly enslaved. The lady, whom the same
+kindness had brought without her own concurrence into the lists of love,
+seemed to think me at least worthy of the honour of captivity; and
+exerted the power, both of her eyes and wit, with so much art and
+spirit, that though I had been too often deceived by appearances to
+devote myself irrevocably at the first interview, yet I could not
+suppress some raptures of admiration, and flutters of desire. I was
+easily persuaded to make nearer approaches; but soon discovered, that an
+union with Camilla was not much to be wished. Camilla professed a
+boundless contempt for the folly, levity, ignorance, and impertinence of
+her own sex; and very frequently expressed her wonder that men of
+learning or experience could submit to trifle away life with beings
+incapable of solid thought. In mixed companies, she always associated
+with the men, and declared her satisfaction when the ladies retired. If
+any short excursion into the country was proposed, she commonly insisted
+upon the exclusion of women from the party; because, where they were
+admitted, the time was wasted in frothy compliments, weak indulgences,
+and idle ceremonies. To shew the greatness of her mind, she avoided all
+compliance with the fashion; and to boast the profundity of her
+knowledge, mistook the various textures of silk, confounded tabbies with
+damasks, and sent for ribands by wrong names. She despised the commerce
+of stated visits, a farce of empty form without instruction; and
+congratulated herself, that she never learned to write message cards.
+She often applauded the noble sentiment of Plato, who rejoiced that he
+was born a man rather than a woman; proclaimed her approbation of
+Swift's opinion, that women are only a higher species of monkeys; and
+confessed, that when she considered the behaviour, or heard the
+conversation, of her sex, she could not but forgive the Turks for
+suspecting them to want souls.
+
+It was the joy and pride of Camilla to have provoked, by this insolence,
+all the rage of hatred, and all the persecutions of calumny; nor was she
+ever more elevated with her own superiority, than when she talked of
+female anger, and female cunning. Well, says she, has nature provided
+that such virulence should be disabled by folly, and such cruelty be
+restrained by impotence.
+
+Camilla doubtless expected, that what she lost on one side, she should
+gain on the other; and imagined that every male heart would be open to a
+lady, who made such generous advances to the borders of virility. But
+man, ungrateful man, instead of springing forward to meet her, shrunk
+back at her approach. She was persecuted by the ladies as a deserter,
+and at best received by the men only as a fugitive. I, for my part,
+amused myself awhile with her fopperies, but novelty soon gave way to
+detestation, for nothing out of the common order of nature can be long
+borne. I had no inclination to a wife who had the ruggedness of a man
+without his force, and the ignorance of a woman without her softness;
+nor could I think my quiet and honour to be entrusted to such audacious
+virtue as was hourly courting danger, and soliciting assault.
+
+My next mistress was Nitella, a lady of gentle mien, and soft voice,
+always speaking to approve, and ready to receive direction from those
+with whom chance had brought her into company. In Nitella I promised
+myself an easy friend, with whom I might loiter away the day without
+disturbance or altercation. I therefore soon resolved to address her,
+but was discouraged from prosecuting my courtship, by observing, that
+her apartments were superstitiously regular; and that, unless she had
+notice of my visit, she was never to be seen. There is a kind of anxious
+cleanliness which I have always noted as the characteristick of a
+slattern; it is the superfluous scrupulosity of guilt, dreading
+discovery, and shunning suspicion: it is the violence of an effort
+against habit, which, being impelled by external motives, cannot stop at
+the middle point.
+
+Nitella was always tricked out rather with nicety than elegance; and
+seldom could forbear to discover, by her uneasiness and constraint, that
+her attention was burdened, and her imagination engrossed: I therefore
+concluded, that being only occasionally and ambitiously dressed, she was
+not familiarized to her own ornaments. There are so many competitors for
+the fame of cleanliness, that it is not hard to gain information of
+those that fail, from those that desire to excel: I quickly found that
+Nitella passed her time between finery and dirt; and was always in a
+wrapper, night-cap, and slippers, when she was not decorated for
+immediate show.
+
+I was then led by my evil destiny to Charybdis, who never neglected an
+opportunity of seizing a new prey when it came within her reach. I
+thought myself quickly made happy by permission to attend her to publick
+places; and pleased my own vanity with imagining the envy which I should
+raise in a thousand hearts, by appearing as the acknowledged favourite
+of Charybdis. She soon after hinted her intention to take a ramble for a
+fortnight, into a part of the kingdom which she had never seen. I
+solicited the happiness of accompanying her, which, after a short
+reluctance, was indulged me. She had no other curiosity on her journey,
+than after all possible means of expense; and was every moment taking
+occasion to mention some delicacy, which I knew it my duty upon such
+notices to procure.
+
+After our return, being now more familiar, she told me, whenever we met,
+of some new diversion; at night she had notice of a charming company
+that would breakfast in the gardens; and in the morning had been
+informed of some new song in the opera, some new dress at the playhouse,
+or some performer at a concert whom she longed to hear. Her intelligence
+was such, that there never was a show, to which she did not summon me on
+the second day; and as she hated a crowd, and could not go alone, I was
+obliged to attend at some intermediate hour, and pay the price of a
+whole company. When we passed the streets, she was often charmed with
+some trinket in the toy-shops; and from moderate desires of seals and
+snuff-boxes, rose, by degrees, to gold and diamonds. I now began to find
+the smile of Charybdis too costly for a private purse, and added one
+more to six and forty lovers, whose fortune and patience her rapacity
+had exhausted.
+
+Imperia then took possession of my affections; but kept them only for a
+short time. She had newly inherited a large fortune, and having spent
+the early part of her life in the perusal of romances, brought with her
+into the gay world all the pride of Cleopatra; expected nothing less
+than vows, altars, and sacrifices; and thought her charms dishonoured,
+and her power infringed, by the softest opposition to her sentiments, or
+the smallest transgression of her commands. Time might indeed cure this
+species of pride in a mind not naturally undiscerning, and vitiated only
+by false representations; but the operations of time are slow; and I
+therefore left her to grow wise at leisure, or to continue in errour at
+her own expense.
+
+Thus I have hitherto, in spite of myself, passed my life in frozen
+celibacy. My friends, indeed, often tell me, that I flatter my
+imagination with higher hopes than human nature can gratify; that I
+dress up an ideal charmer in all the radiance of perfection, and then
+enter the world to look for the same excellence in corporeal beauty. But
+surely, Mr. Rambler, it is not madness to hope for some terrestrial lady
+unstained by the spots which I have been describing; at least I am
+resolved to pursue my search; for I am so far from thinking meanly of
+marriage, that I believe it able to afford the highest happiness decreed
+to our present state; and if, after all these miscarriages, I find a
+woman that fills up my expectation, you shall hear once more from,
+
+Yours, &c.
+
+HYMENAEUS.
+
+[Footnote c: The arguments of the revered Sir Samuel Romilly on Criminal
+Law, have almost been anticipated in this luminous paper, which would
+have gained praise even for a legislator. On the correction of our
+English Criminal Code, see Mr. Buxton's speech in the House of Commons,
+1820. It is a fund of practical information, and, apart from its own
+merits, will repay perusal by the valuable collection of opinions which
+it contains on this momentous and interesting subject. ED.]
+
+
+
+No. 116. SATURDAY, APRIL 27, 1751.
+
+ _Optat ephippia bos piger: optat arare caballus_.
+ HOR. Lib. i. Ep. xiv. 43.
+
+ Thus the slow ox would gaudy trappings claim;
+ The sprightly horse would plough.--FRANCIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I was the second son of a country gentleman by the daughter of a wealthy
+citizen of London. My father having by his marriage freed the estate
+from a heavy mortgage, and paid his sisters their portions, thought
+himself discharged from all obligation to further thought, and entitled
+to spend the rest of his life in rural pleasures. He therefore spared
+nothing that might contribute to the completion of his felicity; he
+procured the best guns and horses that the kingdom could supply, paid
+large salaries to his groom and huntsman, and became the envy of the
+country for the discipline of his hounds. But, above all his other
+attainments, he was eminent for a breed of pointers and setting-dogs,
+which by long and vigilant cultivation he had so much improved, that not
+a partridge or heathcock could rest in security, and game of whatever
+species that dared to light upon his manor, was beaten down by his shot,
+or covered with his nets.
+
+My elder brother was very early initiated in the chace, and, at an age
+when other boys are _creeping like snails unwillingly to school_, he
+could wind the horn, beat the bushes, bound over hedges, and swim
+rivers. When the huntsman one day broke his leg, he supplied his place
+with equal abilities, and came home with the scut in his hat, amidst the
+acclamations of the whole village. I being either delicate or timorous,
+less desirous of honour, or less capable of sylvan heroism, was always
+the favourite of my mother; because I kept my coat clean, and my
+complexion free from freckles, and did not come home, like my brother,
+mired and tanned, nor carry corn in my hat to the horse, nor bring dirty
+curs into the parlour.
+
+My mother had not been taught to amuse herself with books, and being
+much inclined to despise the ignorance and barbarity of the country
+ladies, disdained to learn their sentiments or conversation, and had
+made no addition to the notions which she had brought from the precincts
+of Cornhill. She was, therefore, always recounting the glories of the
+city; enumerating the succession of mayors; celebrating the magnificence
+of the banquets at Guildhall; and relating the civilities paid her at
+the companies' feasts by men of whom some are now made aldermen, some
+have fined for sheriffs, and none are worth less than forty thousand
+pounds. She frequently displayed her father's greatness; told of the
+large bills which he had paid at sight; of the sums for which his word
+would pass upon the Exchange; the heaps of gold which he used on
+Saturday night to toss about with a shovel; the extent of his warehouse,
+and the strength of his doors; and when she relaxed her imagination with
+lower subjects, described the furniture of their country-house, or
+repeated the wit of the clerks and porters.
+
+By these narratives I was fired with the splendour and dignity of
+London, and of trade. I therefore devoted myself to a shop, and warmed
+my imagination from year to year with inquiries about the privileges of
+a freeman, the power of the common council, the dignity of a wholesale
+dealer, and the grandeur of mayoralty, to which my mother assured me
+that many had arrived who began the world with less than myself.
+
+I was very impatient to enter into a path, which led to such honour and
+felicity; but was forced for a time to endure some repression of my
+eagerness, for it was my grandfather's maxim, that a _young man seldom
+makes much money, who is out of his time before two-and-twenty_. They
+thought it necessary, therefore, to keep me at home till the proper age,
+without any other employment than that of learning merchants' accounts,
+and the art of regulating books; but at length the tedious days elapsed,
+I was transplanted to town, and, with great satisfaction to myself,
+bound to a haberdasher.
+
+My master, who had no conception of any virtue, merit, or dignity, but
+that of being rich, had all the good qualities which naturally arise
+from a close and unwearied attention to the main chance; his desire to
+gain wealth was so well tempered by the vanity of shewing it, that
+without any other principle of action, he lived in the esteem of the
+whole commercial world; and was always treated with respect by the only
+men whose good opinion he valued or solicited, those who were
+universally allowed to be richer than himself.
+
+By his instructions I learned in a few weeks to handle a yard with great
+dexterity, to wind tape neatly upon the ends of my fingers, and to make
+up parcels with exact frugality of paper and packthread; and soon caught
+from my fellow-apprentices the true grace of a counter-bow, the careless
+air with which a small pair of scales is to be held between the fingers,
+and the vigour and sprightliness with which the box, after the riband
+has been cut, is returned into its place. Having no desire of any higher
+employment, and therefore applying all my powers to the knowledge of my
+trade, I was quickly master of all that could be known, became a critick
+in small wares, contrived new variations of figures, and new mixtures of
+colours, and was sometimes consulted by the weavers when they projected
+fashions for the ensuing spring.
+
+With all these accomplishments, in the fourth year of my apprenticeship,
+I paid a visit to my friends in the country, where I expected to be
+received as a new ornament of the family, and consulted by the
+neighbouring gentlemen as a master of pecuniary knowledge, and by the
+ladies as an oracle of the mode. But, unhappily, at the first publick
+table to which I was invited, appeared a student of the Temple, and an
+officer of the guards, who looked upon me with a smile of contempt,
+which destroyed at once all my hopes of distinction, so that I durst
+hardly raise my eyes for fear of encountering their superiority of mien.
+Nor was my courage revived by any opportunities of displaying my
+knowledge; for the templar entertained the company for part of the day
+with historical narratives and political observations; and the colonel
+afterwards detailed the adventures of a birth-night, told the claims and
+expectations of the courtiers, and gave an account of assemblies,
+gardens, and diversions. I, indeed, essayed to fill up a pause in a
+parliamentary debate with a faint mention of trade and Spaniards; and
+once attempted, with some warmth, to correct a gross mistake about a
+silver breast-knot; but neither of my antagonists seemed to think a
+reply necessary; they resumed their discourse without emotion, and again
+engrossed the attention of the company; nor did one of the ladies appear
+desirous to know my opinion of her dress, or to hear how long the
+carnation shot with white, that was then new amongst them, had been
+antiquated in town.
+
+As I knew that neither of these gentlemen had more money than myself, I
+could not discover what had depressed me in their presence; nor why they
+were considered by others as more worthy of attention and respect; and
+therefore resolved, when we met again, to rouse my spirit, and force
+myself into notice. I went very early to the next weekly meeting, and
+was entertaining a small circle very successfully with a minute
+representation of my lord mayor's show, when the colonel entered
+careless and gay, sat down with a kind of unceremonious civility, and
+without appearing to intend any interruption, drew my audience away to
+the other part of the room, to which I had not the courage to follow
+them. Soon after came in the lawyer, not indeed with the same attraction
+of mien, but with greater powers of language: and by one or other the
+company was so happily amused, that I was neither heard nor seen, nor
+was able to give any other proof of my existence than that I put round
+the glass, and was in my turn permitted to name the toast.
+
+My mother, indeed, endeavoured to comfort me in my vexation, by telling
+me, that perhaps these showy talkers were hardly able to pay every one
+his own; that he who has money in his pocket need not care what any man
+says of him; that, if I minded my trade, the time will come when lawyers
+and soldiers would be glad to borrow out of my purse; and that it is
+fine, when a man can set his hands to his sides, and say he is worth
+forty thousand pounds every day of the year. These and many more such
+consolations and encouragements, I received from my good mother, which,
+however, did not much allay my uneasiness; for having by some accident
+heard, that the country ladies despised her as a cit, I had therefore no
+longer much reverence for her opinions, but considered her as one whose
+ignorance and prejudice had hurried me, though without ill intentions,
+into a state of meanness and ignominy, from which I could not find any
+possibility of rising to the rank which my ancestors had always held.
+
+I returned, however, to my master, and busied myself among thread, and
+silks, and laces, but without my former cheerfulness and alacrity. I had
+now no longer any felicity in contemplating the exact disposition of my
+powdered curls, the equal plaits of my ruffles, or the glossy blackness
+of my shoes; nor heard with my former elevation those compliments which
+ladies sometimes condescended to pay me upon my readiness in twisting a
+paper, or counting out the change. The term of Young Man, with which I
+was sometimes honoured, as I carried a parcel to the door of a coach,
+tortured my imagination; I grew negligent of my person, and sullen in my
+temper; often mistook the demands of the customers, treated their
+caprices and objections with contempt, and received and dismissed them
+with surly silence.
+
+My master was afraid lest the shop should suffer by this change of my
+behaviour; and, therefore, after some expostulations, posted me in the
+warehouse, and preserved me from the danger and reproach of desertion,
+to which my discontent would certainly have urged me, had I continued
+any longer behind the counter.
+
+In the sixth year of my servitude my brother died of drunken joy, for
+having run down a fox that had baffled all the packs in the province. I
+was now heir, and with the hearty consent of my master commenced
+gentleman. The adventures in which my new character engaged me shall be
+communicated in another letter, by, Sir,
+
+Yours, &c.
+
+MISOCAPELUS.
+
+
+
+No. 117. TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Hossan ep Oulumpo memasan Themen autar ep Ossae
+ Paelion einosiphullon, in ouranos ambatos eiae.] HOMER, Od.
+ [Greek: L] 314.
+
+ The gods they challenge, and affect the skies:
+ Heav'd on Olympus tott'ring Ossa stood;
+ On Ossa, Pelion nods with all his wood. POPE.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Nothing has more retarded the advancement of learning than the
+disposition of vulgar minds to ridicule and vilify what they cannot
+comprehend. All industry must be excited by hope; and as the student
+often proposes no other reward to himself than praise, he is easily
+discouraged by contempt and insult. He who brings with him into a
+clamorous multitude the timidity of recluse speculation, and has never
+hardened his front in publick life, or accustomed his passions to the
+vicissitudes and accidents, the triumphs and defeats of mixed
+conversation, will blush at the stare of petulant incredulity, and
+suffer himself to be driven by a burst of laughter, from the fortresses
+of demonstration. The mechanist will be afraid to assert before hardy
+contradiction, the possibility of tearing down bulwarks with a
+silk-worm's thread; and the astronomer of relating the rapidity of
+light, the distance of the fixed stars, and the height of the lunar
+mountains.
+
+If I could by any efforts have shaken off this cowardice, I had not
+sheltered myself under a borrowed name, nor applied to you for the means
+of communicating to the publick the theory of a garret; a subject which,
+except some slight and transient strictures, has been hitherto neglected
+by those who were best qualified to adorn it, either for want of leisure
+to prosecute the various researches in which a nice discussion must
+engage them, or because it requires such diversity of knowledge, and
+such extent of curiosity, as is scarcely to be found in any single
+intellect: or perhaps others foresaw the tumults which would be raised
+against them, and confined their knowledge to their own breasts, and
+abandoned prejudice and folly to the direction of chance.
+
+That the professors of literature generally reside in the highest
+stories, has been immemorially observed. The wisdom of the ancients was
+well acquainted with the intellectual advantages of an elevated
+situation: why else were the Muses stationed on Olympus or Parnassus, by
+those who could with equal right have raised them bowers in the vale of
+Tempe, or erected their altars among the flexures of Meander? Why was
+Jove himself nursed upon a mountain? or why did the goddesses, when the
+prize of beauty was contested, try the cause upon the top of Ida? Such
+were the fictions by which the great masters of the earlier ages
+endeavoured to inculcate to posterity the importance of a garret, which,
+though they had been long obscured by the negligence and ignorance of
+succeeding times, were well enforced by the celebrated symbol of
+Pythagoras, [Greek: anemon pneonton taen aecho proskunei]; "when the
+wind blows, worship its echo." This could not but be understood by his
+disciples as an inviolable injunction to live in a garret, which I have
+found frequently visited by the echo and the wind. Nor was the tradition
+wholly obliterated in the age of Augustus, for Tibullus evidently
+congratulates himself upon his garret, not without some allusion to the
+Pythagorean precept:
+
+ _Quam juvat immites ventos audire cubantem--
+ Aut, gelidas hibernus aquas quum fuderit Auster,
+ Securum somnos imbre juvante sequi_! Lib. i. El. i. 45.
+
+ How sweet in sleep to pass the careless hours,
+ Lull'd by the beating winds and dashing show'rs!
+
+And it is impossible not to discover the fondness of Lucretius, an
+earlier writer, for a garret, in his description of the lofty towers of
+serene learning, and of the pleasure with which a wise man looks down
+upon the confused and erratick state of the world moving below him:
+
+ _Sed nil dulcius est, bene quam munita tenere
+ Edita doctrina Sapientum templa serena;
+ Despicere unde queas alios, passimque videre
+ Errare, atque viam palanteis quaerere vitae_. Lib. ii. 7.
+
+ --'Tis sweet thy lab'ring steps to guide
+ To virtue's heights, with wisdom well supplied,
+ And all the magazines of learning fortified:
+ From thence to look below on human kind,
+ Bewilder'd in the maze of life, and blind. DRYDEN.
+
+The institution has, indeed, continued to our own time; the garret is
+still the usual receptacle of the philosopher and poet; but this, like
+many ancient customs, is perpetuated only by an accidental imitation,
+without knowledge of the original reason for which it was established.
+
+ _Causa latet; res est notissima_.
+
+ The cause is secret, but th' effect is known. ADDISON.
+
+Conjectures have, indeed, been advanced concerning these habitations of
+literature, but without much satisfaction to the judicious inquirer.
+Some have imagined, that the garret is generally chosen by the wits as
+most easily rented; and concluded that no man rejoices in his aerial
+abode, but on the days of payment. Others suspect, that a garret is
+chiefly convenient, as it is remoter than any other part of the house
+from the outer door, which is often observed to be infested by
+visitants, who talk incessantly of beer, or linen, or a coat, and repeat
+the same sounds every morning, and sometimes again in the afternoon,
+without any variation, except that they grow daily more importunate and
+clamorous, and raise their voices in time from mournful murmurs to
+raging vociferations. This eternal monotony is always detestable to a
+man whose chief pleasure is to enlarge his knowledge, and vary his
+ideas. Others talk of freedom from noise, and abstraction from common
+business or amusements; and some, yet more visionary, tell us, that the
+faculties are enlarged by open prospects, and that the fancy is at more
+liberty, when the eye ranges without confinement.
+
+These conveniences may perhaps all be found in a well-chosen garret; but
+surely they cannot be supposed sufficiently important to have operated
+unvariably upon different climates, distant ages, and separate nations.
+Of an universal practice, there must still be presumed an universal
+cause, which, however recondite and abstruse, may be perhaps reserved to
+make me illustrious by its discovery, and you by its promulgation.
+
+It is universally known that the faculties of the mind are invigorated
+or weakened by the state of the body, and that the body is in a great
+measure regulated by the various compressions of the ambient element.
+The effects of the air in the production or cure of corporeal maladies
+have been acknowledged from the time of Hippocrates; but no man has yet
+sufficiently considered how far it may influence the operations of the
+genius, though every day affords instances of local understanding, of
+wits and reasoners, whose faculties are adapted to some single spot, and
+who, when they are removed to any other place, sink at once into silence
+and stupidity. I have discovered, by a long series of observations, that
+invention and elocution suffer great impediments from dense and impure
+vapours, and that the tenuity of a defecated air at a proper distance
+from the surface of the earth, accelerates the fancy, and sets at
+liberty those intellectual powers which were before shackled by too
+strong attraction, and unable to expand themselves under the pressure of
+a gross atmosphere. I have found dulness to quicken into sentiment in a
+thin ether, as water, though not very hot, boils in a receiver partly
+exhausted; and heads, in appearance empty, have teemed with notions upon
+rising ground, as the flaccid sides of a football would have swelled out
+into stiffness and extension.
+
+For this reason I never think myself qualified to judge decisively of
+any man's faculties, whom I have only known in one degree of elevation;
+but take some opportunity of attending him from the cellar to the
+garret, and try upon him all the various degrees of rarefaction and
+condensation, tension and laxity. If he is neither vivacious aloft, nor
+serious below, I then consider him as hopeless; but as it seldom
+happens, that I do not find the temper to which the texture of his brain
+is fitted, I accommodate him in time with a tube of mercury, first
+marking the points most favourable to his intellects, according to rules
+which I have long studied, and which I may, perhaps, reveal to mankind
+in a complete treatise of barometrical pneumatology.
+
+Another cause of the gaiety and sprightliness of the dwellers in garrets
+is probably the increase of that vertiginous motion, with which we are
+carried round by the diurnal revolution of the earth. The power of
+agitation upon the spirits is well known; every man has felt his heart
+lightened in a rapid vehicle, or on a galloping horse; and nothing is
+plainer, than that he who towers to the fifth story, is whirled through
+more space by every circumrotation, than another that grovels upon the
+ground-floor. The nations between the topicks are known to be fiery,
+inconstant, inventive, and fanciful; because, living at the utmost
+length of the earth's diameter, they are carried about with more
+swiftness than those whom nature has placed nearer to the poles; and
+therefore, as it becomes a wise man to struggle with the inconveniencies
+of his country, whenever celerity and acuteness are requisite, we must
+actuate our languor by taking a few turns round the centre in a garret.
+
+If you imagine that I ascribe to air and motion effects which they
+cannot produce, I desire you to consult your own memory, and consider
+whether you have never known a man acquire reputation in his garret,
+which, when fortune or a patron had placed him upon the first floor, he
+was unable to maintain; and who never recovered his former vigour of
+understanding, till he was restored to his original situation. That a
+garret will make every man a wit, I am very far from supposing; I know
+there are some who would continue blockheads even on the summit of the
+Andes, or on the peak of Teneriffe. But let not any man be considered as
+unimprovable till this potent remedy has been tried; for perhaps he was
+formed to be great only in a garret, as the joiner of Aretaeus was
+rational in no other place but his own shop.
+
+I think a frequent removal to various distances from the centre, so
+necessary to a just estimate of intellectual abilities, and consequently
+of so great use in education, that if I hoped that the publick could be
+persuaded to so expensive an experiment, I would propose, that there
+should be a cavern dug, and a tower erected, like those which Bacon
+describes in Solomon's house, for the expansion and concentration of
+understanding, according to the exigence of different employments, or
+constitutions. Perhaps some that fume away in meditations upon time and
+space in the tower, might compose tables of interest at a certain depth;
+and he that upon level ground stagnates in silence, or creeps in
+narrative, might at the height of half a mile, ferment into merriment,
+sparkle with repartee, and froth with declamation.
+
+Addison observes, that we may find the heat of Virgil's climate, in some
+lines of his Georgick: so, when I read a composition, I immediately
+determine the height of the author's habitation. As an elaborate
+performance is commonly said to smell of the lamp, my commendation of a
+noble thought, a sprightly sally, or a bold figure, is to pronounce it
+fresh from the garret; an expression which would break from me upon the
+perusal of most of your papers, did I not believe, that you sometimes
+quit the garret, and ascend into the cock-loft.
+
+HYPERTATUS.
+
+
+
+No. 118. SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1751.
+
+ --Omnes illacrymabiles
+ Urgentur, ignotique longa
+ Nocte. Hon. Lib. iv. Ode ix. 26.
+
+ In endless night they sleep, unwept, unknown. FRANCIS.
+
+Cicero has, with his usual elegance and magnificence of language,
+attempted, in his relation of the dream of Scipio, to depreciate those
+honours for which he himself appears to have panted with restless
+solicitude, by shewing within what narrow limits all that fame and
+celebrity which man can hope for from men is circumscribed.
+
+"You see," says Africanus, pointing at the earth, from the celestial
+regions, "that the globe assigned to the residence and habitation of
+human beings is of small dimensions: how then can you obtain from the
+praise of men, any glory worthy of a wish? Of this little world the
+inhabited parts are neither numerous nor wide; even the spots where men
+are to be found are broken by intervening deserts, and the nations are
+so separated as that nothing can be transmitted from one to another.
+With the people of the south, by whom the opposite part of the earth is
+possessed, you have no intercourse; and by how small a tract do you
+communicate with the countries of the north? The territory which you
+inhabit is no more than a scanty island, inclosed by a small body of
+water, to which you give the name of the great sea and the Atlantick
+ocean. And even in this known and frequented continent, what hope can
+you entertain, that your renown will pass the stream of Ganges, or the
+cliffs of Caucasus? or by whom will your name be uttered in the
+extremities of the north or south, towards the rising or the setting
+sun? So narrow is the space to which your fame can be propagated; and
+even there how long will it remain?"
+
+He then proceeds to assign natural causes why fame is not only narrow in
+its extent, but short in its duration; he observes the difference
+between the computation of time in earth and heaven, and declares, that
+according to the celestial chronology, no human honours can last a
+single year.
+
+Such are the objections by which Tully has made a shew of discouraging
+the pursuit of fame; objections which sufficiently discover his
+tenderness and regard for his darling phantom. Homer, when the plan of
+his poem made the death of Patroclus necessary, resolved, at least, that
+he should die with honour; and therefore brought down against him the
+patron god of Troy, and left to Hector only the mean task of giving the
+last blow to an enemy whom a divine hand had disabled from resistance.
+Thus Tully ennobles fame, which he professes to degrade, by opposing it
+to celestial happiness; he confines not its extent but by the boundaries
+of nature, nor contracts its duration but by representing it small in
+the estimation of superior beings. He still admits it the highest and
+noblest of terrestrial objects, and alleges little more against it, than
+that it is neither without end, nor without limits.
+
+What might be the effect of these observations conveyed in Ciceronian
+eloquence to Roman understandings, cannot be determined; but few of
+those who shall in the present age read my humble version will find
+themselves much depressed in their hopes, or retarded in their designs;
+for I am not inclined to believe, that they who among us pass their
+lives in the cultivation of knowledge, or acquisition of power, have
+very anxiously inquired what opinions prevail on the further banks of
+the Ganges, or invigorated any effort by the desire of spreading their
+renown among the clans of Caucasus. The hopes and fears of modern minds
+are content to range in a narrower compass; a single nation, and a few
+years, have generally sufficient amplitude to fill our imaginations.
+
+A little consideration will indeed teach us, that fame has other limits
+than mountains and oceans; and that he who places happiness in the
+frequent repetition of his name, may spend his life in propagating it,
+without any danger of weeping for new worlds, or necessity of passing
+the Atlantick sea.
+
+The numbers to whom any real and perceptible good or evil can be derived
+by the greatest power, or most active diligence, are inconsiderable; and
+where neither benefit nor mischief operate, the only motive to the
+mention or remembrance of others is curiosity; a passion, which, though
+in some degree universally associated to reason, is easily confined,
+overborne, or diverted from any particular object.
+
+Among the lower classes of mankind, there will be found very little
+desire of any other knowledge, than what may contribute immediately to
+the relief of some pressing uneasiness, or the attainment of some near
+advantage. The Turks are said to hear with wonder a proposal to walk
+out, only that they may walk back; and inquire why any man should labour
+for nothing: so those whose condition has always restrained them to the
+contemplation of their own necessities, and who have been accustomed to
+look forward only to a small distance, will scarcely understand, why
+nights and days should be spent in studies, which end in new studies,
+and which, according to Malherbe's observation, do not tend to lessen
+the price of bread; nor will the trader or manufacturer easily be
+persuaded, that much pleasure can arise from the mere knowledge of
+actions, performed in remote regions, or in distant times; or that any
+thing can deserve their inquiry, of which, [Greek: kleos oion akouomen,
+oide ti idmen], we can only hear the report, but which cannot influence
+our lives by any consequences.
+
+The truth is, that very few have leisure from indispensable business, to
+employ their thoughts upon narrative or characters; and among those to
+whom fortune has given the liberty of living more by their own choice,
+many create to themselves engagements, by the indulgence of some petty
+ambition, the admission of some insatiable desire, or the toleration of
+some predominant passion. The man whose whole wish is to accumulate
+money, has no other care than to collect interest, to estimate
+securities, and to engage for mortgages: the lover disdains to turn his
+ear to any other name than that of Corinna; and the courtier thinks the
+hour lost which is not spent in promoting his interest, and facilitating
+his advancement. The adventures of valour, and the discoveries of
+science, will find a cold reception, when they are obtruded upon an
+attention thus busy with its favourite amusement, and impatient of
+interruption or disturbance.
+
+But not only such employments as seduce attention by appearances of
+dignity, or promises of happiness, may restrain the mind from excursion
+and inquiry; curiosity may be equally destroyed by less formidable
+enemies; it may be dissipated in trifles, or congealed by indolence. The
+sportsman and the man of dress have their heads filled with a fox or a
+horse-race, a feather or a ball; and live in ignorance of every thing
+beside, with as much content as he that heaps up gold, or solicits
+preferment, digs the field, or beats the anvil; and some yet lower in
+the ranks of intellect, dream out their days without pleasure or
+business, without joy or sorrow, nor ever rouse from their lethargy to
+hear or think.
+
+Even of those who have dedicated themselves to knowledge, the far
+greater part have confined their curiosity to a few objects, and have
+very little inclination to promote any fame, but that which their own
+studies entitle them to partake. The naturalist has no desire to know
+the opinions or conjectures of the philologer: the botanist looks upon
+the astronomer as a being unworthy of his regard: the lawyer scarcely
+hears the name of a physician without contempt; and he that is growing
+great and happy by electrifying a bottle, wonders how the world can be
+engaged by trifling prattle about war or peace.
+
+If, therefore, he that imagines the world filled with his actions and
+praises, shall subduct from the number of his encomiasts, all those who
+are placed below the flight of fame, and who hear in the valleys of life
+no voice but that of necessity; all those who imagine themselves too
+important to regard him, and consider the mention of his name as an
+usurpation of their time; all who are too much or too little pleased
+with themselves, to attend to any thing external; all who are attracted
+by pleasure, or chained down by pain, to unvaried ideas; all who are
+withheld from attending his triumph by different pursuits; and all who
+slumber in universal negligence; he will find his renown straitened by
+nearer bounds than the rocks of Caucasus, and perceive that no man can
+be venerable or formidable, but to a small part of his fellow-creatures.
+
+That we may not languish in our endeavours after excellence, it is
+necessary, that, as Africanus counsels his descendant, "we raise our
+eyes to higher prospects, and contemplate our future and eternal state,
+without giving up our hearts to the praise of crowds, or fixing our
+hopes on such rewards as human power can bestow."
+
+
+
+No. 119. TUESDAY, MAY 7, 1751.
+
+ _Iliacos intra muros peccatur, et extra_. HOR. Lib. i. Ep. ii, 16.
+
+ Faults lay on either side the Trojan tow'rs. ELPHINSTON.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+As, notwithstanding all that wit, or malice, or pride, or prudence will
+be able to suggest, men and women must at last pass their lives
+together, I have never therefore thought those writers friends to human
+happiness, who endeavour to excite in either sex a general contempt or
+suspicion of the other. To persuade them who are entering the world, and
+looking abroad for a suitable associate, that all are equally vicious,
+or equally ridiculous; that they who trust are certainly betrayed, and
+they who esteem are always disappointed; is not to awaken judgment, but
+to inflame temerity. Without hope there can be no caution. Those who are
+convinced, that no reason for preference can be found, will never harass
+their thoughts with doubt and deliberation; they will resolve, since
+they are doomed to misery, that no needless anxiety shall disturb their
+quiet; they will plunge at hazard into the crowd, and snatch the first
+hand that shall be held toward them.
+
+That the world is over-run with vice, cannot be denied; but vice,
+however predominant, has not yet gained an unlimited dominion. Simple
+and unmingled good is not in our power, but we may generally escape a
+greater evil by suffering a less; and therefore, those who undertake to
+initiate the young and ignorant in the knowledge of life, should be
+careful to inculcate the possibility of virtue and happiness, and to
+encourage endeavours by prospects of success.
+
+You, perhaps, do not suspect, that these are the sentiments of one who
+has been subject for many years to all the hardships of antiquated
+virginity; has been long accustomed to the coldness of neglect, and the
+petulance of insult; has been mortified in full assemblies by inquiries
+after forgotten fashions, games long disused, and wits and beauties of
+ancient renown; has been invited, with malicious importunity, to the
+second wedding of many acquaintances; has been ridiculed by two
+generations of coquets in whispers intended to be heard; and been long
+considered by the airy and gay, as too venerable for familiarity, and
+too wise for pleasure. It is indeed natural for injury to provoke anger,
+and by continual repetition to produce an habitual asperity; yet I have
+hitherto struggled with so much vigilance against my pride and my
+resentment, that I have preserved my temper uncorrupted. I have not yet
+made it any part of my employment to collect sentences against marriage;
+nor am inclined to lessen the number of the few friends whom time has
+left me, by obstructing that happiness which I cannot partake, and
+venting my vexation in censures of the forwardness and indiscretion of
+girls, or the inconstancy, tastelessness, and perfidy of men.
+
+It is, indeed, not very difficult to bear that condition to which we are
+not condemned by necessity, but induced by observation and choice; and
+therefore I, perhaps, have never yet felt all the malignity with which a
+reproach, edged with the appellation of old maid, swells some of those
+hearts in which it is infixed. I was not condemned in my youth to
+solitude, either by indigence or deformity, nor passed the earlier part
+of life without the flattery of courtship, and the joys of triumph. I
+have danced the round of gaiety amidst the murmurs of envy, and
+gratulations of applause; been attended from pleasure to pleasure by the
+great, the sprightly, and the vain; and seen my regard solicited by the
+obsequiousness of gallantry, the gaiety of wit, and the timidity of
+love. If, therefore, I am yet a stranger to nuptial happiness, I suffer
+only the consequences of my own resolves, and can look back upon the
+succession of lovers, whose addresses I have rejected, without grief,
+and without malice.
+
+When my name first began to be inscribed upon glasses, I was honoured
+with the amorous professions of the gay Venustulus, a gentleman, who,
+being the only son of a wealthy family, had been educated in all the
+wantonness of expense, and softness of effeminacy. He was beautiful in
+his person, and easy in his address, and, therefore, soon gained upon my
+eye at an age when the sight is very little over-ruled by the
+understanding. He had not any power in himself of gladdening or amusing;
+but supplied his want of conversation by treats and diversions; and his
+chief art of courtship was to fill the mind of his mistress with
+parties, rambles, musick, and shows. We were often engaged in short
+excursions to gardens and seats, and I was for a while pleased with the
+care which Venustulus discovered in securing me from any appearance of
+danger, or possibility of mischance. He never failed to recommend
+caution to his coachman, or to promise the waterman a reward if he
+landed us safe; and always contrived to return by daylight, for fear of
+robbers. This extraordinary solicitude was represented for a time as the
+effect of his tenderness for me; but fear is too strong for continued
+hypocrisy. I soon discovered that Venustulus had the cowardice as well
+as elegance of a female. His imagination was perpetually clouded with
+terrours, and he could scarcely refrain from screams and outcries at any
+accidental surprise. He durst not enter a room if a rat was heard behind
+the wainscot, nor cross a field where the cattle were frisking in the
+sunshine; the least breeze that waved upon the river was a storm, and
+every clamour in the street was a cry of fire. I have seen him lose his
+colour when my squirrel had broke his chain; and was forced to throw
+water in his face on the sudden entrance of a black cat. Compassion once
+obliged me to drive away with my fan, a beetle that kept him in
+distress, and chide off a dog that yelped at his heels, to which he
+would gladly have given up me to facilitate his own escape. Women
+naturally expect defence and protection from a lover or a husband, and,
+therefore, you will not think me culpable in refusing a wretch, who
+would have burdened life with unnecessary fears, and flown to me for
+that succour which it was his duty to have given.
+
+My next lover was Fungoso, the son of a stockjobber, whose visits my
+friends, by the importunity of persuasion, prevailed upon me to allow.
+Fungoso was no very suitable companion; for having been bred in a
+counting-house, he spoke a language unintelligible in any other place.
+He had no desire of any reputation but that of an acute prognosticator
+of the changes in the funds; nor had any means of raising merriment, but
+by telling how somebody was overreached in a bargain by his father. He
+was, however, a youth of great sobriety and prudence, and frequently
+informed us how carefully he would improve my fortune. I was not in
+haste to conclude the match, but was so much awed by my parents, that I
+durst not dismiss him, and might, perhaps, have been doomed for ever to
+the grossness of pedlary, and the jargon of usury, had not a fraud been
+discovered in the settlement, which set me free from the persecution of
+grovelling pride, and pecuniary impudence. I was afterwards six months
+without any particular notice but at last became the idol of the
+glittering Flosculus, who prescribed the mode of embroidery to all the
+fops of his time, and varied at pleasure the cock of every hat, and the
+sleeve of every coat that appeared in fashionable assemblies. Flosculus
+made some impression upon my heart by a compliment which few ladies can
+hear without emotion; he commended my skill in dress, my judgment in
+suiting colours, and my art in disposing ornaments. But Flosculus was
+too much engaged by his own elegance, to be sufficiently attentive to
+the duties of a lover, or to please with varied praise an ear made
+delicate by riot of adulation. He expected to be repaid part of his
+tribute, and staid away three days, because I neglected to take notice
+of a new coat. I quickly found, that Flosculus was rather a rival than
+an admirer; and that we should probably live in a perpetual struggle of
+emulous finery, and spend our lives in stratagems to be first in the
+fashion.
+
+I had soon after the honour at a feast of attracting the eyes of
+Dentatus, one of those human beings whose only happiness is to dine.
+Dentatus regaled me with foreign varieties, told me of measures that he
+had laid for procuring the best cook in France, and entertained me with
+bills of fare, prescribed the arrangement of dishes, and taught me two
+sauces invented by himself. At length, such is the uncertainty of human
+happiness, I declared my opinion too hastily upon a pie made under his
+own direction; after which he grew so cold and negligent, that he was
+easily dismissed.
+
+Many other lovers, or pretended lovers, I have had the honour to lead
+awhile in triumph. But two of them I drove from me, by discovering that
+they had no taste or knowledge in musick; three I dismissed, because
+they were drunkards; two, because they paid their addresses at the same
+time to other ladies; and six, because they attempted to influence my
+choice by bribing my maid. Two more I discarded at the second visit for
+obscene allusions; and five for drollery on religion. In the latter part
+of my reign, I sentenced two to perpetual exile, for offering me
+settlements, by which the children of a former marriage would have been
+injured; four, for representing falsely the value of their estates;
+three for concealing their debts; and one, for raising the rent of a
+decrepit tenant.
+
+I have now sent you a narrative, which the ladies may oppose, to the
+tale of Hymenaeus. I mean not to depreciate the sex which has produced
+poets and philosophers, heroes and martyrs; but will not suffer the
+rising generation of beauties to be dejected by partial satire; or to
+imagine that those who censured them have not likewise their follies,
+and their vices. I do not yet believe happiness unattainable in
+marriage, though I have never yet been able to find a man, with whom I
+could prudently venture an inseparable union. It is necessary to expose
+faults, that their deformity may be seen; but the reproach ought not to
+be extended beyond the crime, nor either sex to be contemned, because
+some women, or men, are indelicate or dishonest.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+TRANQUILLA.
+
+
+
+No. 120. SATURDAY, MAY 11, 1751.
+
+ Redditum Cyri solio Phraaten.
+ Dissidens plebi, numero beatorum
+ Eiimit virtus, populumque falsis
+ Dedocet uti
+ Vocibus.--HOR. Lib. ii. Od. ii. 17.
+
+ True virtue can the crowd unteach
+ Their false mistaken forms of speech;
+ Virtue, to crowds a foe profest,
+ Disdains to number with the blest
+ Phraates, by his slaves ador'd,
+ And to the Parthian crown restor'd. FRANCIS.
+
+In the reign of Jenghiz Can, conqueror of the east, in the city of
+Samarcand, lived Nouradin the merchant, renowned throughout all the
+regions of India, for the extent of his commerce, and the integrity of
+his dealings. His warehouses were filled with all the commodities of the
+remotest nations; every rarity of nature, every curiosity of art,
+whatever was valuable, whatever was useful, hasted to his hand. The
+streets were crowded with his carriages; the sea was covered with his
+ships; the streams of Oxus were wearied with conveyance, and every
+breeze of the sky wafted wealth to Nouradin.
+
+At length Nouradin felt himself seized with a slow malady, which he
+first endeavoured to divert by application, and afterwards to relieve by
+luxury and indulgence; but finding his strength every day less, he was
+at last terrified, and called for help upon the sages of physick; they
+filled his apartments with alexipharmicks, restoratives, and essential
+virtues; the pearls of the ocean were dissolved, the spices of Arabia
+were distilled, and all the powers of nature were employed to give new
+spirits to his nerves, and new balsam to his blood. Nouradin was for
+some time amused with promises, invigorated with cordials, or soothed
+with anodynes; but the disease preyed upon his vitals, and he soon
+discovered with indignation, that health was not to be bought. He was
+confined to his chamber, deserted by his physicians, and rarely visited
+by his friends; but his unwillingness to die flattered him long with
+hopes of life.
+
+At length, having passed the night in tedious languor, he called to him
+Almamoulin, his only son, and dismissing his attendants, "My son," says
+he, "behold here the weakness and fragility of man; look backward a few
+days, thy father was great and happy, fresh as the vernal rose, and
+strong as the cedar of the mountain; the nations of Asia drank his dews,
+and art and commerce delighted in his shade. Malevolence beheld me, and
+sighed: 'His root,' she cried, 'is fixed in the depths; it is watered by
+the fountains of Oxus; it sends out branches afar, and bids defiance to
+the blast; prudence reclines against his trunk, and prosperity dances on
+his top.' Now, Almamoulin, look upon me withering and prostrate; look
+upon me, and attend. I have trafficked, I have prospered, I have rioted
+in gain; my house is splendid, my servants are numerous; yet I displayed
+only a small part of my riches; the rest, which I was hindered from
+enjoying by the fear of raising envy, or tempting rapacity, I have piled
+in towers, I have buried in caverns, I have hidden in secret
+repositories, which this scroll will discover. My purpose was, after ten
+months more spent in commerce, to have withdrawn my wealth to a safer
+country; to have given seven years to delight and festivity, and the
+remaining part of my days to solitude and repentance; but the hand of
+death is upon me; a frigorifick torpor encroaches upon my veins; I am
+now leaving the produce of my toil, which it must be thy business to
+enjoy with wisdom." The thought of leaving his wealth filled Nouradin
+with such grief, that he fell into convulsions, became delirious, and
+expired.
+
+Almamoulin, who loved his father, was touched a while with honest
+sorrow, and sat two hours in profound meditation, without perusing the
+paper which he held in his hand. He then retired to his own chamber, as
+overborne with affliction, and there read the inventory of his new
+possessions, which swelled his heart with such transports, that he no
+longer lamented his father's death. He was now sufficiently composed to
+order a funeral of modest magnificence, suitable at once to the rank of
+Nouradin's profession, and the reputation of his wealth. The two next
+nights he spent in visiting the tower and the caverns, and found the
+treasures greater to his eye than to his imagination.
+
+Almamoulin had been bred to the practice of exact frugality, and had
+often looked with envy on the finery and expenses of other young men: he
+therefore believed, that happiness was now in his power, since he could
+obtain all of which he had hitherto been accustomed to regret the want.
+He resolved to give a loose to his desires, to revel in enjoyment, and
+feel pain or uneasiness no more.
+
+He immediately procured a splendid equipage, dressed his servants in
+rich embroidery, and covered his horses with golden caparisons. He
+showered down silver on the populace, and suffered their acclamations to
+swell him with insolence. The nobles saw him with anger, the wise men of
+the state combined against him, the leaders of armies threatened his
+destruction. Almamoulin was informed of his danger: he put on the robe
+of mourning in the presence of his enemies, and appeased them with gold,
+and gems, and supplication.
+
+He then sought to strengthen himself by an alliance with the princes of
+Tartary, and offered the price of kingdoms for a wife of noble birth.
+His suit was generally rejected, and his presents refused; but the
+princess of Astracan once condescended to admit him to her presence. She
+received him, sitting on a throne, attired in the robe of royalty, and
+shining with the jewels of Golconda; command sparkled in her eyes, and
+dignity towered on her forehead. Almamoulin approached and trembled. She
+saw his confusion and disdained him: "How," says she, "dares the wretch
+hope my obedience, who thus shrinks at my glance? Retire, and enjoy thy
+riches in sordid ostentation; thou wast born to be wealthy, but never
+canst be great."
+
+He then contracted his desires to more private and domestick pleasures.
+He built palaces, he laid out gardens[d], he changed the face of the
+land, he transplanted forests, he levelled mountains, opened prospects
+into distant regions, poured fountains from the tops of turrets, and
+rolled rivers through new channels.
+
+These amusements pleased him for a time; but languor and weariness soon
+invaded him. His bowers lost their fragrance, and the waters murmured
+without notice. He purchased large tracts of land in distant provinces,
+adorned them with houses of pleasure, and diversified them with
+accommodations for different seasons. Change of place at first relieved
+his satiety, but all the novelties of situation were soon exhausted; he
+found his heart vacant, and his desires, for want of external objects,
+ravaging himself.
+
+He therefore returned to Samarcand, and set open his doors to those whom
+idleness sends out in search of pleasure. His tables were always covered
+with delicacies; wines of every vintage sparkled in his bowls, and his
+lamps scattered perfumes. The sound of the lute, and the voice of the
+singer, chased away sadness; every hour was crowded with pleasure; and
+the day ended and began with feasts and dances, and revelry and
+merriment. Almamoulin cried out, "I have at last found the use of
+riches; I am surrounded by companions, who view my greatness without
+envy; and I enjoy at once the raptures of popularity, and the safety of
+an obscure station. What trouble can he feel, whom all are studious to
+please, that they may be repaid with pleasure? What danger can he dread,
+to whom every man is a friend?"
+
+Such were the thoughts of Almamoulin, as he looked down from a gallery
+upon the gay assembly regaling at his expense; but, in the midst of this
+soliloquy, an officer of justice entered the house, and in the form of
+legal citation, summoned Almamoulin to appear before the emperor. The
+guests stood awhile aghast, then stole imperceptibly away, and he was
+led off without a single voice to witness his integrity. He now found
+one of his most frequent visitants accusing him of treason, in hopes of
+sharing his confiscation; yet, unpatronized and unsupported, he cleared
+himself by the openness of innocence, and the consistence of truth; he
+was dismissed with honour, and his accuser perished in prison.
+
+Almamoulin now perceived with how little reason he had hoped for justice
+or fidelity from those who live only to gratify their senses; and, being
+now weary with vain experiments upon life and fruitless researches after
+felicity, he had recourse to a sage, who, after spending his youth in
+travel and observation, had retired from all human cares, to a small
+habitation on the banks of Oxus, where he conversed only with such as
+solicited his counsel. "Brother," said the philosopher, "thou hast
+suffered thy reason to be deluded by idle hopes, and fallacious
+appearances. Having long looked with desire upon riches, thou hadst
+taught thyself to think them more valuable than nature designed them,
+and to expect from them, what experience has now taught thee, that they
+cannot give. That they do not confer wisdom, thou mayest be convinced,
+by considering at how dear a price they tempted thee, upon thy first
+entrance into the world, to purchase the empty sound of vulgar
+acclamation. That they cannot bestow fortitude or magnanimity, that man
+may be certain, who stood trembling at Astracan, before a being not
+naturally superior to himself. That they will not supply unexhausted
+pleasure, the recollection of forsaken palaces, and neglected gardens,
+will easily inform thee. That they rarely purchase friends, thou didst
+soon discover, when thou wert left to stand thy trial uncountenanced and
+alone. Yet think not riches useless; there are purposes to which a wise
+man may be delighted to apply them; they may, by a rational distribution
+to those who want them, ease the pains of helpless disease, still the
+throbs of restless anxiety, relieve innocence from oppression, and raise
+imbecility to cheerfulness and vigour. This they will enable thee to
+perform, and this will afford the only happiness ordained for our
+present state, the confidence of Divine favour, and the hope of future
+rewards."
+
+[Footnote d: See Vathek.]
+
+
+
+No. 121. TUESDAY, MAY 14, 1751.
+
+ O imitatores, servum pecus! Hor. Lib. i. Ep. xix. 19.
+
+ Away, ye imitators, servile herd! ELPHINSTON.
+
+I have been informed by a letter from one of the universities, that
+among the youth from whom the next swarm of reasoners is to learn
+philosophy, and the next flight of beauties to hear elegies and sonnets,
+there are many, who, instead of endeavouring by books and meditation to
+form their own opinions, content themselves with the secondary
+knowledge, which a convenient bench in a coffee-house can supply; and
+without any examination or distinction, adopt the criticisms and
+remarks, which happen to drop from those who have risen, by merit or
+fortune, to reputation and authority.
+
+These humble retailers of knowledge my correspondent stigmatises with
+the name of Echoes; and seems desirous that they should be made ashamed
+of lazy submission, and animated to attempts after new discoveries and
+original sentiments.
+
+It is very natural for young men to be vehement, acrimonious, and
+severe. For, as they seldom comprehend at once all the consequences of a
+position, or perceive the difficulties by which cooler and more
+experienced reasoners are restrained from confidence, they form their
+conclusions with great precipitance. Seeing nothing that can darken or
+embarrass the question, they expect to find their own opinion
+universally prevalent, and are inclined to impute uncertainty and
+hesitation to want of honesty, rather than of knowledge. I may, perhaps,
+therefore, be reproached by my lively correspondent, when it shall be
+found, that I have no inclination to persecute these collectors of
+fortuitous knowledge with the severity required; yet, as I am now too
+old to be much pained by hasty censure, I shall not be afraid of taking
+into protection those whom I think condemned without a sufficient
+knowledge of their cause.
+
+He that adopts the sentiments of another, whom he has reason to believe
+wiser than himself, is only to be blamed when he claims the honours
+which are not due but to the author, and endeavours to deceive the world
+into praise and veneration; for, to learn, is the proper business of
+youth; and whether we increase our knowledge by books or by
+conversation, we are equally indebted to foreign assistance.
+
+The greater part of students are not born with abilities to construct
+systems, or advance knowledge; nor can have any hope beyond that of
+becoming intelligent hearers in the schools of art, of being able to
+comprehend what others discover, and to remember what others teach. Even
+those to whom Providence hath allotted greater strength of
+understanding, can expect only to improve a single science. In every
+other part of learning, they must be content to follow opinions, which
+they are not able to examine; and, even in that which they claim as
+peculiarly their own, can seldom add more than some small particle of
+knowledge, to the hereditary stock devolved to them from ancient times,
+the collective labour of a thousand intellects.
+
+In science, which, being fixed and limited, admits of no other variety
+than such as arises from new methods of distribution, or new arts of
+illustration, the necessity of following the traces of our predecessors
+is indisputably evident; but there appears no reason, why imagination
+should be subject to the same restraint. It might be conceived, that of
+those who profess to forsake the narrow paths of truth, every one may
+deviate towards a different point, since, though rectitude is uniform
+and fixed, obliquity may be infinitely diversified. The roads of science
+are narrow, so that they who travel them, must either follow or meet one
+another; but in the boundless regions of possibility, which fiction
+claims for her dominion, there are surely a thousand recesses
+unexplored, a thousand flowers unplucked, a thousand fountains
+unexhausted, combinations of imagery yet unobserved, and races of ideal
+inhabitants not hitherto described.
+
+Yet, whatever hope may persuade, or reason evince, experience can boast
+of very few additions to ancient fable. The wars of Troy, and the
+travels of Ulysses, have furnished almost all succeeding poets with
+incidents, characters, and sentiments. The Romans are confessed to have
+attempted little more than to display in their own tongue the inventions
+of the Greeks. There is, in all their writings, such a perpetual
+recurrence of allusions to the tales of the fabulous age, that they must
+be confessed often to want that power of giving pleasure which novelty
+supplies; nor can we wonder that they excelled so much in the graces of
+diction, when we consider how rarely they were employed in search of new
+thoughts.
+
+The warmest admirers of the great Mantuan poet can extol him for little
+more than the skill with which he has, by making his hero both a
+traveller and a warrior, united the beauties of the Iliad and the
+Odyssey in one composition: yet his judgment was perhaps sometimes
+overborne by his avarice of the Homeric treasures; and, for fear of
+suffering a sparkling ornament to be lost, he has inserted it where it
+cannot shine with its original splendour.
+
+When Ulysses visited the infernal regions, he found among the heroes
+that perished at Troy, his competitor, Ajax, who, when the arms of
+Achilles were adjudged to Ulysses, died by his own hand in the madness
+of disappointment. He still appeared to resent, as on earth, his loss
+and disgrace, Ulysses endeavoured to pacify him with praises and
+submission; but Ajax walked away without reply. This passage has always
+been considered as eminently beautiful; because Ajax, the haughty chief,
+the unlettered soldier, of unshaken courage, of immovable constancy, but
+without the power of recommending his own virtues by eloquence, or
+enforcing his assertions by any other argument than the sword, had no
+way of making his anger known, but by gloomy sullenness and dumb
+ferocity. His hatred of a man whom he conceived to have defeated him
+only by volubility of tongue, was therefore naturally shewn by silence
+more contemptuous and piercing than any words that so rude an orator
+could have found, and by which he gave his enemy no opportunity of
+exerting the only power in which he was superior.
+
+When AEneas is sent by Virgil to the shades, he meets Dido the queen of
+Carthage, whom his perfidy had hurried to the grave; he accosts her with
+tenderness and excuses; but the lady turns away like Ajax in mute
+disdain. She turns away like Ajax; but she resembles him in none of
+those qualities which give either dignity or propriety to silence. She
+might, without any departure from the tenour of her conduct, have burst
+out like other injured women into clamour, reproach, and denunciation;
+but Virgil had his imagination full of Ajax, and therefore could not
+prevail on himself to teach Dido any other mode of resentment.
+
+If Virgil could be thus seduced by imitation, there will be little hope,
+that common wits should escape; and accordingly we find, that besides
+the universal and acknowledged practice of copying the ancients, there
+has prevailed in every age a particular species of fiction. At one time
+all truth was conveyed in allegory; at another, nothing was seen but in
+a vision; at one period all the poets followed sheep, and every event
+produced a pastoral; at another they busied themselves wholly in giving
+directions to a painter.
+
+It is indeed easy to conceive why any fashion should become popular, by
+which idleness is favoured, and imbecility assisted; but surely no man
+of genius can much applaud himself for repeating a tale with which the
+audience is already tired, and which could bring no honour to any but
+its inventor.
+
+There are, I think, two schemes of writing, on which the laborious wits
+of the present time employ their faculties. One is the adaptation of
+sense to all the rhymes which our language can supply to some word, that
+makes the burden of the stanza; but this, as it has been only used in a
+kind of amorous burlesque, can scarcely be censured with much acrimony.
+The other is the imitation of Spenser, which, by the influence of some
+men of learning and genius, seems likely to gain upon the age, and
+therefore deserves to be more attentively considered.
+
+To imitate the fictions and sentiments of Spenser can incur no reproach,
+for allegory is perhaps one of the most pleasing vehicles of
+instruction. But I am very far from extending the same respect to his
+diction or his stanza. His style was in his own time allowed to be
+vicious, so darkened with old words and peculiarities of phrase, and so
+remote from common use, that Jonson boldly pronounces him _to have
+written no language_. His stanza is at once difficult and unpleasing;
+tiresome to the ear by its uniformity, and to the attention by its
+length. It was at first formed in imitation of the Italian poets,
+without due regard to the genius of our language. The Italians have
+little variety of termination, and were forced to contrive such a stanza
+as might admit the greatest number of similar rhymes; but our words end
+with so much diversity, that it is seldom convenient for us to bring
+more than two of the same sound together. If it be justly observed by
+Milton, that rhyme obliges poets to express their thoughts in improper
+terms, these improprieties must always be multiplied, as the difficulty
+of rhyme is increased by long concatenations.
+
+The imitators of Spenser are indeed not very rigid censors of
+themselves, for they seem to conclude, that when they have disfigured
+their lines with a few obsolete syllables, they have accomplished their
+design, without considering that they ought not only to admit old words,
+but to avoid new. The laws of imitation are broken by every word
+introduced since the time of Spenser, as the character of Hector is
+violated by quoting Aristotle in the play. It would, indeed, be
+difficult to exclude from a long poem all modern phrases, though it is
+easy to sprinkle it with gleanings of antiquity. Perhaps, however, the
+style of Spenser might by long labour be justly copied; but life is
+surely given us for higher purposes than to gather what our ancestors
+have wisely thrown away, and to learn what is of no value, but because
+it has been forgotten.
+
+
+
+No. 122. SATURDAY, MAY 18, 1751.
+
+ Nescio qua natale solum dulcedine captos
+ Ducit. OVID, Ex Pon. Lib. i. Ep. iii. 35.
+
+ By secret charms our native land attracts.
+
+Nothing is more subject to mistake and disappointment than anticipated
+judgment concerning the easiness or difficulty of any undertaking,
+whether we form our opinion from the performances of others, or from
+abstracted contemplation of the thing to be attempted.
+
+Whatever is done skilfully appears to be done with ease; and art, when
+it is once matured to habit, vanishes from observation. We are therefore
+more powerfully excited to emulation, by those who have attained the
+highest degree of excellence, and whom we can therefore with least
+reason hope to equal.
+
+In adjusting the probability of success by a previous consideration of
+the undertaking, we are equally in danger of deceiving ourselves. It is
+never easy, nor often possible, to comprise the series of any process
+with all its circumstances, incidents, and variations, in a speculative
+scheme. Experience soon shows us the tortuosities of imaginary
+rectitude, the complications of simplicity, and the asperities of
+smoothness. Sudden difficulties often start up from the ambushes of art,
+stop the career of activity, repress the gaiety of confidence, and when
+we imagine ourselves almost at the end of our labours, drive us back to
+new plans and different measures.
+
+There are many things which we every day see others unable to perform,
+and perhaps have even ourselves miscarried in attempting; and yet can
+hardly allow to be difficult; nor can we forbear to wonder afresh at
+every new failure, or to promise certainty of success to our next essay;
+but when we try, the same hindrances recur, the same inability is
+perceived, and the vexation of disappointment must again be suffered.
+
+Of the various kinds of speaking or writing, which serve necessity, or
+promote pleasure, none appears so artless or easy as simple narration;
+for what should make him that knows the whole order and progress of an
+affair unable to relate it? Yet we hourly find such as endeavour to
+entertain or instruct us by recitals, clouding the facts which they
+intend to illustrate, and losing themselves and their auditors in wilds
+and mazes, in digression and confusion. When we have congratulated
+ourselves upon a new opportunity of inquiry, and new means of
+information, it often happens, that without designing either deceit or
+concealment, without ignorance of the fact, or unwillingness to disclose
+it, the relator fills the ear with empty sounds, harasses the attention
+with fruitless impatience, and disturbs the imagination by a tumult of
+events, without order of time, or train of consequence.
+
+It is natural to believe, upon the same principle, that no writer has a
+more easy task than the historian. The philosopher has the works of
+omniscience to examine; and is therefore engaged in disquisitions, to
+which finite intellects are utterly unequal. The poet trusts to his
+invention, and is not only in danger of those inconsistencies, to which
+every one is exposed by departure from truth; but may be censured as
+well for deficiencies of matter, as for irregularity of disposition, or
+impropriety of ornament. But the happy historian has no other labour
+than of gathering what tradition pours down before him, or records
+treasure for his use. He has only the actions and designs of men like
+himself to conceive and to relate; he is not to form, but copy
+characters, and therefore is not blamed for the inconsistency of
+statesmen, the injustice of tyrants, or the cowardice of commanders. The
+difficulty of making variety consistent, or uniting probability with
+surprise, needs not to disturb him; the manners and actions of his
+personages are already fixed; his materials are provided and put into
+his hands, and he is at leisure to employ all his powers in arranging
+and displaying them.
+
+Yet, even with these advantages, very few in any age have been able to
+raise themselves to reputation by writing histories; and among the
+innumerable authors, who fill every nation with accounts of their
+ancestors, or undertake to transmit to futurity the events of their own
+time, the greater part, when fashion and novelty have ceased to
+recommend them, are of no other use than chronological memorials, which
+necessity may sometimes require to be consulted, but which fright away
+curiosity, and disgust delicacy.
+
+It is observed, that our nation, which has produced so many authors
+eminent for almost every other species of literary excellence, has been
+hitherto remarkably barren of historical genius; and so far has this
+defect raised prejudices against us, that some have doubted whether an
+Englishman can stop at that mediocrity of style, or confine his mind to
+that even tenour of imagination, which narrative requires.
+
+They who can believe that nature has so capriciously distributed
+understanding, have surely no claim to the honour of serious
+confutation. The inhabitants of the same country have opposite
+characters in different ages; the prevalence or neglect of any
+particular study can proceed only from the accidental influence of some
+temporary cause; and if we have failed in history, we can have failed
+only because history has not hitherto been diligently cultivated.
+
+But how is it evident, that we have not historians among us, whom we may
+venture to place in comparison with any that the neighbouring nations
+can produce? The attempt of Raleigh is deservedly celebrated for the
+labour of his researches, and the elegance of his style; but he has
+endeavoured to exert his judgment more than his genius, to select facts,
+rather than adorn them; and has produced an historical dissertation, but
+seldom risen to the majesty of history.
+
+The works of Clarendon deserve more regard. His diction is indeed
+neither exact in itself, nor suited to the purpose of history. It is the
+effusion of a mind crowded with ideas, and desirous of imparting them;
+and therefore always accumulating words, and involving one clause and
+sentence in another. But there is in his negligence a rude inartificial
+majesty, which, without the nicety of laboured elegance, swells the mind
+by its plenitude and diffusion. His narration is not perhaps
+sufficiently rapid, being stopped too frequently by particularities,
+which, though they might strike the author who was present at the
+transactions, will not equally detain the attention of posterity. But
+his ignorance or carelessness of the art of writing is amply compensated
+by his knowledge of nature and of policy; the wisdom of his maxims, the
+justness of his reasonings, and the variety, distinctness, and strength
+of his characters.
+
+But none of our writers can, in my opinion, justly contest the
+superiority of Knolles, who, in his history of the Turks, has displayed
+all the excellencies that narration can admit. His style, though
+somewhat obscured by time, and sometimes vitiated by false wit, is pure,
+nervous, elevated, and clear. A wonderful multiplicity of events is so
+artfully arranged, and so distinctly explained, that each facilitates
+the knowledge of the next. Whenever a new personage is introduced, the
+reader is prepared by his character for his actions; when a nation is
+first attacked, or city besieged, he is made acquainted with its
+history, or situation; so that a great part of the world is brought into
+view. The descriptions of this author are without minuteness, and the
+digressions without ostentation. Collateral events are so artfully woven
+into the contexture of his principal story, that they cannot be
+disjoined without leaving it lacerated and broken. There is nothing
+turgid in his dignity, nor superfluous in his copiousness. His orations
+only, which he feigns, like the ancient historians, to have been
+pronounced on remarkable occasions, are tedious and languid; and since
+they are merely the voluntary sports of imagination, prove how much the
+most judicious and skilful may be mistaken in the estimate of their own
+powers.
+
+Nothing could have sunk this author in obscurity, but the remoteness and
+barbarity of the people, whose story he relates. It seldom happens, that
+all circumstances concur to happiness or fame. The nation which produced
+this great historian, has the grief of seeing his genius employed upon a
+foreign and uninteresting subject; and that writer who might have
+secured perpetuity to his name, by a history of his own country, has
+exposed himself to the danger of oblivion, by recounting enterprises and
+revolutions, of which none desire to be informed.
+
+
+No. 123. TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1751.
+
+ _Quo semet est imbuta recens, servabit odorem
+ Testa din_.--HOR. Lib. i. Ep. ii. 69.
+
+ What season'd first the vessel, keeps the taste. CREECH.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Though I have so long found myself deluded by projects of honour and
+distinction, that I often resolve to admit them no more into my heart;
+yet how determinately soever excluded, they always recover their
+dominion by force or stratagem; and whenever, after the shortest
+relaxation of vigilance, reason and caution return to their charge, they
+find hope again in possession, with all her train of pleasures dancing
+about her.
+
+Even while I am preparing to write a history of disappointed
+expectations, I cannot forbear to flatter myself, that you and your
+readers are impatient for my performance; and that the sons of learning
+have laid down several of your late papers with discontent, when they
+found that Misocapelus had delayed to continue his narrative.
+
+But the desire of gratifying the expectations that I have raised, is not
+the only motive of this relation, which, having once promised it, I
+think myself no longer at liberty to forbear. For, however I may have
+wished to clear myself from every other adhesion of trade, I hope I
+shall be always wise enough to retain my punctuality, and amidst all my
+new arts of politeness, continue to despise negligence, and detest
+falsehood.
+
+When the death of my brother had dismissed me from the duties of a shop,
+I considered myself as restored to the rights of my birth, and entitled
+to the rank and reception which my ancestors obtained. I was, however,
+embarrassed with many difficulties at my first re-entrance into the
+world; for my haste to be a gentleman inclined me to precipitate
+measures; and every accident that forced me back towards my old station,
+was considered by me as an obstruction of my happiness.
+
+It was with no common grief and indignation, that I found my former
+companions still daring to claim my notice, and the journeymen and
+apprentices sometimes pulling me by the sleeve as I was walking in the
+street, and without any terrour of my new sword, which was,
+notwithstanding, of an uncommon size, inviting me to partake of a bottle
+at the old house, and entertaining me with histories of the girls in the
+neighbourhood. I had always, in my officinal state, been kept in awe by
+lace and embroidery; and imagined that, to fright away these unwelcome
+familiarities, nothing was necessary, but that I should, by splendour of
+dress, proclaim my re-union with a higher rank. I, therefore, sent for
+my tailor; ordered a suit with twice the usual quantity of lace; and
+that I might not let my persecutors increase their confidence, by the
+habit of accosting me, staid at home till it was made.
+
+This week of confinement I passed in practising a forbidding frown, a
+smile of condescension, a slight salutation, and an abrupt departure;
+and in four mornings was able to turn upon my heel, with so much levity
+and sprightliness, that I made no doubt of discouraging all publick
+attempts upon my dignity. I therefore issued forth in my new coat, with
+a resolution of dazzling intimacy to a fitter distance; and pleased
+myself with the timidity and reverence, which I should impress upon all
+who had hitherto presumed to harass me with their freedoms. But,
+whatever was the cause, I did not find myself received with any new
+degree of respect; those whom I intended to drive from me, ventured to
+advance with their usual phrases of benevolence; and those whose
+acquaintance I solicited, grew more supercilious and reserved. I began
+soon to repent the expense, by which I had procured no advantage, and to
+suspect that a shining dress, like a weighty weapon, has no force in
+itself, but owes all its efficacy to him that wears it.
+
+Many were the mortifications and calamities which I was condemned to
+suffer in my initiation to politeness. I was so much tortured by the
+incessant civilities of my companions, that I never passed through that
+region of the city but in a chair with the curtains drawn; and at last
+left my lodgings, and fixed myself in the verge of the court. Here I
+endeavoured to be thought a gentleman just returned from his travels,
+and was pleased to have my landlord believe that I was in some danger
+from importunate creditors; but this scheme was quickly defeated by a
+formal deputation sent to offer me, though I had now retired from
+business, the freedom of my company.
+
+I was now detected in trade, and therefore resolved to stay no longer. I
+hired another apartment, and changed my servants. Here I lived very
+happily for three months, and, with secret satisfaction, often overheard
+the family celebrating the greatness and felicity of the esquire; though
+the conversation seldom ended without some complaint of my covetousness,
+or some remark upon my language, or my gait. I now began to venture in
+the publick walks, and to know the faces of nobles and beauties; but
+could not observe, without wonder, as I passed by them, how frequently
+they were talking of a tailor. I longed, however, to be admitted to
+conversation, and was somewhat weary of walking in crowds without a
+companion, yet continued to come and go with the rest, till a lady whom
+I endeavoured to protect in a crowded passage, as she was about to step
+into her chariot, thanked me for my civility, and told me, that, as she
+had often distinguished me for my modest and respectful behaviour,
+whenever I set up for myself, I might expect to see her among my first
+customers.
+
+Here was an end of all my ambulatory projects. I indeed sometimes
+entered the walks again, but was always blasted by this destructive
+lady, whose mischievous generosity recommended me to her acquaintance.
+Being therefore forced to practise my adscititious character upon
+another stage, I betook myself to a coffee-house frequented by wits,
+among whom I learned in a short time the cant of criticism, and talked
+so loudly and volubly of nature, and manners, and sentiment, and
+diction, and similies, and contrasts, and action, and pronunciation,
+that I was often desired to lead the hiss and clap, and was feared and
+hated by the players and the poets. Many a sentence have I hissed, which
+I did not understand, and many a groan have I uttered, when the ladies
+were weeping in the boxes. At last a malignant author, whose performance
+I had persecuted through the nine nights, wrote an epigram upon Tape the
+critick, which drove me from the pit for ever.
+
+My desire to be a fine gentleman still continued: I therefore, after a
+short suspense, chose a new set of friends at the gaming-table, and was
+for some time pleased with the civility and openness with which I found
+myself treated. I was indeed obliged to play; but being naturally
+timorous and vigilant, was never surprised into large sums. What might
+have been the consequence of long familiarity with these plunderers, I
+had not an opportunity of knowing; for one night the constables entered
+and seized us, and I was once more compelled to sink into my former
+condition, by sending for my old master to attest my character.
+
+When I was deliberating to what new qualifications I should aspire, I
+was summoned into the country, by an account of my father's death. Here
+I had hopes of being able to distinguish myself, and to support the
+honour of my family. I therefore bought guns and horses, and, contrary
+to the expectation of the tenants, increased the salary of the huntsman.
+But when I entered the field, it was soon discovered, that I was not
+destined to the glories of the chase. I was afraid of thorns in the
+thicket, and of dirt in the marsh; I shivered on the brink of a river
+while the sportsmen crossed it, and trembled at the sight of a five-bar
+gate. When the sport and danger were over, I was still equally
+disconcerted; for I was effeminate, though not delicate, and could only
+join a feeble whispering voice in the clamours of their triumph.
+
+A fall, by which my ribs were broken, soon recalled me to domestick
+pleasures, and I exerted all my art to obtain the favour of the
+neighbouring ladies; but wherever I came, there was always some unlucky
+conversation upon ribands, fillets, pins, or thread, which drove all my
+stock of compliments out of my memory, and overwhelmed me with shame and
+dejection.
+
+Thus I passed the ten first years after the death of my brother, in
+which I have learned at last to repress that ambition, which I could
+never gratify; and, instead of wasting more of my life in vain
+endeavours after accomplishments, which, if not early acquired, no
+endeavours can obtain, I shall confine my care to those higher
+excellencies which are in every man's power, and though I cannot enchant
+affection by elegance and ease, hope to secure esteem by honesty and
+truth.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+MISOCAPELUS.
+
+
+
+No. 124. SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1751.
+
+ --Taciturn sylvas inter reptare salubres,
+ Curantem quicquid dignim sapiente bonoque est?
+ HOR. Lib. i. Ep. iv. 4.
+
+ To range in silence through each healthful wood,
+ And muse what's worthy of the wise and good. ELPHINSTON.
+
+The season of the year is now come, in which the theatres are shut, and
+the card-tables forsaken; the regions of luxury are for a while
+unpeopled, and pleasure leads out her votaries to groves and gardens, to
+still scenes and erratick gratifications. Those who have passed many
+months in a continual tumult of diversion; who have never opened their
+eyes in the morning, but upon some new appointment; nor slept at night
+without a dream of dances, musick, and good hands, or of soft sighs and
+humble supplications; must now retire to distant provinces, where the
+syrens of flattery are scarcely to be heard, where beauty sparkles
+without praise or envy, and wit is repeated only by the echo.
+
+As I think it one of the most important duties of social benevolence to
+give warning of the approach of calamity, when by timely prevention it
+may be turned aside, or by preparatory measures be more easily endured,
+I cannot feel the increasing warmth, or observe the lengthening days,
+without considering the condition of my fair readers, who are now
+preparing to leave all that has so long filled up their hours, all from
+which they have been accustomed to hope for delight; and who, till
+fashion proclaims the liberty of returning to the seats of mirth and
+elegance, must endure the rugged 'squire, the sober housewife, the loud
+huntsman, or the formal parson, the roar of obstreperous jollity, or the
+dulness of prudential instruction; without any retreat, but to the gloom
+of solitude, where they will yet find greater inconveniencies, and must
+learn, however unwillingly, to endure themselves.
+
+In winter, the life of the polite and gay may be said to roll on with a
+strong and rapid current; they float along from pleasure to pleasure,
+without the trouble of regulating their own motions, and pursue the
+course of the stream in all the felicity of inattention; content that
+they find themselves in progression, and careless whither they are
+going. But the months of summer are a kind of sleeping stagnation
+without wind or tide, where they are left to force themselves forward by
+their own labour, and to direct their passage by their own skill; and
+where, if they have not some internal principle of activity, they must
+be stranded upon shallows, or lie torpid in a perpetual calm.
+
+There are, indeed, some to whom this universal dissolution of gay
+societies affords a welcome opportunity of quitting, without disgrace,
+the post which they have found themselves unable to maintain; and of
+seeming to retreat only at the call of nature, from assemblies where,
+after a short triumph of uncontested superiority, they are overpowered
+by some new intruder of softer elegance or sprightlier vivacity. By
+these, hopeless of victory, and yet ashamed to confess a conquest, the
+summer is regarded as a release from the fatiguing service of celebrity,
+a dismission to more certain joys and a safer empire. They now solace
+themselves with the influence which they shall obtain, where they have
+no rival to fear; and with the lustre which they shall effuse, when
+nothing can be seen of brighter splendour. They imagine, while they are
+preparing for their journey, the admiration with which the rusticks will
+crowd about them; plan the laws of a new assembly; or contrive to delude
+provincial ignorance with a fictitious mode. A thousand pleasing
+expectations swarm in the fancy; and all the approaching weeks are
+filled with distinctions, honours, and authority.
+
+But others, who have lately entered the world, or have yet had no proofs
+of its inconstancy and desertion, are cut off, by this cruel
+interruption, from the enjoyment of their prerogatives, and doomed to
+lose four months in inactive obscurity. Many complaints do vexation and
+desire extort from those exiled tyrants of the town, against the
+inexorable sun, who pursues his course without any regard to love or
+beauty; and visits either tropick at the stated time, whether shunned or
+courted, deprecated or implored.
+
+To them who leave the places of publick resort in the full bloom of
+reputation, and withdraw from admiration, courtship, submission, and
+applause, a rural triumph can give nothing equivalent. The praise of
+ignorance, and the subjection of weakness, are little regarded by
+beauties who have been accustomed to more important conquests, and more
+valuable panegyricks. Nor indeed should the powers which have made
+havock in the theatres, or borne down rivalry in courts, be degraded to
+a mean attack upon the untravelled heir, or ignoble contest with the
+ruddy milkmaid.
+
+How then must four long months be worn away? Four months, in which there
+will be no routes, no shows, no ridottos; in which visits must be
+regulated by the weather, and assemblies will depend upon the moon! The
+Platonists imagine, that the future punishment of those who have in this
+life debased their reason by subjection to their senses, and have
+preferred the gross gratifications of lewdness and luxury, to the pure
+and sublime felicity of virtue and contemplation, will arise from the
+predominance and solicitations of the same appetites, in a state which
+can furnish no means of appeasing them. I cannot but suspect that this
+month, bright with sunshine, and fragrant with perfumes; this month,
+which covers the meadow with verdure, and decks the gardens with all the
+mixtures of colorifick radiance; this month, from which the man of fancy
+expects new infusions of imagery, and the naturalist new scenes of
+observation; this month will chain down multitudes to the Platonick
+penance of desire without enjoyment, and hurry them from the highest
+satisfactions, which they have yet learned to conceive, into a state of
+hopeless wishes and pining recollection, where the eye of vanity will
+look round for admiration to no purpose, and the hand of avarice shuffle
+cards in a bower with ineffectual dexterity.
+
+From the tediousness of this melancholy suspension of life, I would
+willingly preserve those who are exposed to it, only by inexperience;
+who want not inclination to wisdom or virtue, though they have been
+dissipated by negligence, or misled by example; and who would gladly
+find the way to rational happiness, though it should be necessary to
+struggle with habit, and abandon fashion. To these many arts of spending
+time might be recommended, which would neither sadden the present hour
+with weariness, nor the future with repentance.
+
+It would seem impossible to a solitary speculatist, that a human being
+can want employment. To be born in ignorance with a capacity of
+knowledge, and to be placed in the midst of a world filled with variety,
+perpetually pressing upon the senses and irritating curiosity, is surely
+a sufficient security against the languishment of inattention. Novelty
+is indeed necessary to preserve eagerness and alacrity; but art and
+nature have stores inexhaustible by human intellects; and every moment
+produces something new to him, who has quickened his faculties by
+diligent observation.
+
+Some studies, for which the country and the summer afford peculiar
+opportunities, I shall perhaps endeavour to recommend in a future essay;
+but if there be any apprehension not apt to admit unaccustomed ideas, or
+any attention so stubborn and inflexible, as not easily to comply with
+new directions, even these obstructions cannot exclude the pleasure of
+application; for there is a higher and nobler employment, to which all
+faculties are adapted by Him who gave them. The duties of religion,
+sincerely and regularly performed, will always be sufficient to exalt
+the meanest, and to exercise the highest understanding. That mind will
+never be vacant, which is frequently recalled by stated duties to
+meditations on eternal interests; nor can any hour be long, which is
+spent in obtaining some new qualification for celestial happiness.
+
+
+
+No. 125. TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1751.
+
+ _Descriptas servare vices, operumque colores,
+ Cur ego, si nequeo ignoroque, poeta salutor?_ HOR. De Ar. Poet. 86.
+
+ But if, through weakness, or my want of art,
+ I can't to every different style impart
+ The proper strokes and colours it may claim,
+ Why am I honour'd with a poet's name? FRANCIS.
+
+It is one of the maxims of the civil law, that _definitions are
+hazardous_. Things modified by human understandings, subject to
+varieties of complication, and changeable as experience advances
+knowledge, or accident influences caprice, are scarcely to be included
+in any standing form of expression, because they are always suffering
+some alteration of their state. Definition is, indeed, not the province
+of man; every thing is set above or below our faculties. The works and
+operations of nature are too great in their extent, or too much diffused
+in their relations, and the performances of art too inconstant and
+uncertain, to be reduced to any determinate idea. It is impossible to
+impress upon our minds an adequate and just representation of an object
+so great that we can never take it into our view, or so mutable that it
+is always changing under our eye, and has already lost its form while we
+are labouring to conceive it.
+
+Definitions have been no less difficult or uncertain in criticisms than
+in law. Imagination, a licentious and vagrant faculty, unsusceptible of
+limitations, and impatient of restraint, has always endeavoured to
+baffle the logician, to perplex the confines of distinction, and burst
+the inclosures of regularity. There is therefore scarcely any species of
+writing, of which we can tell what is its essence, and what are its
+constituents; every new genius produces some innovation, which, when
+invented and approved, subverts the rules which the practice of
+foregoing authors had established.
+
+Comedy has been particularly unpropitious to definers; for though
+perhaps they might properly have contented themselves, with declaring it
+to be _such a dramatick representation of human life, as may excite
+mirth_, they have embarrassed their definition with the means by which
+the comick writers attain their end, without considering that the
+various methods of exhilarating their audience, not being limited by
+nature, cannot be comprised in precept. Thus, some make comedy a
+representation of mean and others of bad men; some think that its
+essence consists in the unimportance, others in the fictitiousness of
+the transaction. But any man's reflections will inform him, that every
+dramatick composition which raises mirth, is comick; and that, to raise
+mirth, it is by no means universally necessary, that the personages
+should be either mean or corrupt, nor always requisite, that the action
+should be trivial, nor ever, that it should be fictitious.
+
+If the two kinds of dramatick poetry had been defined only by their
+effects upon the mind, some absurdities might have been prevented, with
+which the compositions of our greatest poets are disgraced, who, for
+want of some settled ideas and accurate distinctions, have unhappily
+confounded tragick with comick sentiments. They seem to have thought,
+that as the meanest of personages constituted comedy, their greatness
+was sufficient to form a tragedy; and that nothing was necessary but
+that they should crowd the scene with monarchs, and generals, and
+guards; and make them talk, at certain intervals, of the downfall of
+kingdoms, and the rout of armies. They have not considered, that
+thoughts or incidents, in themselves ridiculous, grow still more
+grotesque by the solemnity of such characters; that reason and nature
+are uniform and inflexible: and that what is despicable and absurd, will
+not, by any association with splendid titles, become rational or great;
+that the most important affairs, by an intermixture of an unseasonable
+levity, may be made contemptible; and that the robes of royalty can give
+no dignity to nonsense or to folly.
+
+"Comedy," says Horace, "sometimes raises her voice;" and Tragedy may
+likewise on proper occasions abate her dignity; but as the comick
+personages can only depart from their familiarity of style, when the
+more violent passions are put in motion, the heroes and queens of
+tragedy should never descend to trifle, but in the hours of ease, and
+intermissions of danger. Yet in the tragedy of Don Sebastian, when the
+king of Portugal is in the hands of his enemy, and having just drawn the
+lot, by which he is condemned to die, breaks out into a wild boast that
+his dust shall take possession of Africk, the dialogue proceeds thus
+between the captive and his conqueror:
+
+ _Muley Moluch_. What shall I do to conquer thee?
+
+ _Seb_. Impossible!
+ Souls know no conquerors.
+
+ _M. Mol_. I'll shew thee for a monster thro' my Afric.
+
+ _Seb_. No, thou canst only shew me for a man:
+ Afric is stored with monsters; man's a prodigy
+ Thy subjects have not seen.
+
+ _M. Mol_. Thou talk'st as if
+ Still at the head of battle.
+
+ _Seb_. Thou mistak'st,
+ For there I would not talk.
+
+ _Benducar, the Minister_. Sure he would sleep.
+ This conversation, with the sly remark of the minister, can only be
+found not to be comick, because it wants the probability necessary to
+representations of common life, and degenerates too much towards
+buffoonery and farce.
+
+The same play affords a smart return of the general to to the emperor,
+who, enforcing his orders for the death of Sebastian, vents his
+impatience in this abrupt threat:
+
+ --No more replies,
+ But see thou dost it: Or--
+
+To which Dorax answers,
+
+ Choak in that threat: I can say Or as loud.
+
+A thousand instances of such impropriety might be produced, were not one
+scene in Aureng-Zebe sufficient to exemplify it. Indamora, a captive
+queen, having Aureng-Zebe for her lover, employs Arimant, to whose
+charge she had been entrusted, and whom she had made sensible of her
+charms, to carry her message to his rival.
+
+ ARIMANT, _with a letter in his hand_: INDAMORA.
+
+ _Arim_. And I the messenger to him from you?
+ Your empire you to tyranny pursue:
+ You lay commands both cruel and unjust,
+ To serve my rival, and betray my trust.
+
+ _Ind_. You first betray'd your trust in loving me:
+ And should not I my own advantage see?
+ Serving my love, you may my friendship gain;
+ You know the rest of your pretences vain.
+ You must, my Arimant, you must be kind:
+ 'Tis in your nature, and your noble mind.
+
+ _Arim_. I'll to the king, and straight my trust resign.
+
+ _Ind_. His trust you may, but you shall never mine.
+ Heaven made you love me for no other end,
+ But to become my confidant and friend:
+ As such, I keep no secret from your sight,
+ And therefore make you judge how ill I write:
+ Read it, and tell me freely then your mind,
+ If 'tis indited, as I meant it, kind.
+
+ Arim. _I ask not heaven my freedom to restore_--[Reading.
+ _But only for your sake_--I'll read no more.
+ And yet I must--
+ _Less for my own, than for your sorrow sad_--[Reading.
+ Another line like this, would make me mad--
+ Heav'n! she goes on--yet more--and yet more kind!
+ [--_As reading_.
+ Each sentence is a dagger to my mind.
+ _See me this night_--[Reading.
+ _Thank fortune who did such a friend provide;
+ For faithful Arimant shall be your guide_.
+ Not only to be made an instrument,
+ But pre-engaged without my own consent!
+
+ _Ind_. Unknown to engage you still augments my score,
+ And gives you scope of meriting the more.
+
+ _Arim_. The best of men
+ Some int'rest in their actions must confess;
+ None merit, but in hope they may possess:
+ The fatal paper rather let me tear,
+ Than, like Bellerophon, my own sentence hear.
+
+ _Ind_. You may; but 'twill not be your best advice:
+ 'Twill only give me pains of writing twice.
+ You know you must obey me, soon or late:
+ Why should you vainly struggle with your fate?
+
+ _Arim_. I thank thee, heav'n! thou hast been wondrous kind!
+ Why am I thus to slavery design'd,
+ And yet am cheated with a free-born mind!
+ Or make thy orders with my reason suit,
+ Or let me live by sense, a glorious brute--[_She frowns_.
+ You frown, and I obey with speed, before
+ That dreadful sentence comes, _See me no more_.
+
+In this scene, every circumstance concurs to turn tragedy to farce. The
+wild absurdity of the expedient; the contemptible subjection of the
+lover; the folly of obliging him to read the letter, only because it
+ought to have been concealed from him; the frequent interruptions of
+amorous impatience; the faint expostulations of a voluntary slave; the
+imperious haughtiness of a tyrant without power; the deep reflection of
+the yielding rebel upon fate and free-will; and his wise wish to lose
+his reason as soon as he finds himself about to do what he cannot
+persuade his reason to approve, are sufficient to awaken the most torpid
+risibility.
+
+There is scarce a tragedy of the last century which has not debased its
+most important incidents, and polluted its most serious interlocutions,
+with buffoonery and meanness; but though, perhaps, it cannot be
+pretended that the present age has added much to the force and efficacy
+of the drama, it has at least been able to escape many faults, which
+either ignorance had overlooked, or indulgence had licensed. The later
+tragedies, indeed, have faults of another kind, perhaps more destructive
+to delight, though less open to censure. That perpetual tumour of phrase
+with which every thought is now expressed by every personage, the
+paucity of adventures which regularity admits, and the unvaried equality
+of flowing dialogue, has taken away from our present writers almost all
+that dominion over the passions which was the boast of their
+predecessors. Yet they may at least claim this commendation, that they
+avoid gross faults, and that if they cannot often move terrour or pity,
+they are always careful not to provoke laughter.
+
+
+
+No. 126. SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1751.
+
+ _--Nihil est aliud magnum quam multa minuta_. VET. AUCT.
+
+ Sands form the mountain, moments make the year. YOUNG.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Among other topicks of conversation which your papers supply, I was
+lately engaged in a discussion of the character given by Tranquilla of
+her lover Venustulus, whom, notwithstanding the severity of his
+mistress, the greater number seemed inclined to acquit of unmanly or
+culpable timidity.
+
+One of the company remarked that prudence ought to be distinguished from
+fear; and that if Venustulus was afraid of nocturnal adventures, no man
+who considered how much every avenue of the town was infested with
+robbers could think him blameable; for why should life be hazarded
+without prospect of honour or advantage? Another was of opinion, that a
+brave man might be afraid of crossing the river in the calmest weather,
+and declared, that, for his part, while there were coaches and a bridge,
+he would never be seen tottering in a wooden case, out of which he might
+be thrown by any irregular agitation, or which might be overset by
+accident, or negligence, or by the force of a sudden gust, or the rush
+of a larger vessel. It was his custom, he said, to keep the security of
+daylight, and dry ground; for it was a maxim with him, that no wise man
+ever perished by water, or was lost in the dark.
+
+The next was humbly of opinion, that if Tranquilla had seen, like him,
+the cattle run roaring about the meadows in the hot months, she would
+not have thought meanly of her lover for not venturing his safety among
+them. His neighbour then told us, that for his part he was not ashamed
+to confess, that he could not see a rat, though it was dead, without
+palpitation; that he had been driven six times out of his lodgings
+either by rats or mice; and that he always had a bed in the closet for
+his servant, whom he called up whenever the enemy was in motion. Another
+wondered that any man should think himself disgraced by a precipitate
+retreat from a dog; for there was always a possibility that a dog might
+be mad; and that surely, though there was no danger but of being bit by
+a fierce animal, there was more wisdom in flight than contest. By all
+these declarations another was encouraged to confess, that if he had
+been admitted to the honour of paying his addresses to Tranquilla, he
+should have been likely to incur the same censure; for, among all the
+animals upon which nature has impressed deformity and horrour, there is
+none whom he durst not encounter rather than a beetle.
+
+Thus, Sir, though cowardice is universally defined too close and anxious
+an attention to personal safety, there will be found scarcely any fear,
+however excessive in its degree, or unreasonable in its object, which
+will be allowed to characterise a coward. Fear is a passion which every
+man feels so frequently predominant in his own breast, that he is
+unwilling to hear it censured with great asperity; and, perhaps, if we
+confess the truth, the same restraint which would hinder a man from
+declaiming against the frauds of any employment among those who profess
+it, should withhold him from treating fear with contempt among human
+beings.
+
+Yet, since fortitude is one of those virtues which the condition of our
+nature makes hourly necessary, I think you cannot better direct your
+admonitions than against superfluous and panick terrours. Fear is
+implanted in us as a preservative from evil; but its duty, like that of
+other passions, is not to overbear reason, but to assist it; nor should
+it be suffered to tyrannize in the imagination, to raise phantoms of
+horrour, or beset life with supernumerary distresses.
+
+To be always afraid of losing life is, indeed, scarcely to enjoy a life
+that can deserve the care of preservation. He that once indulges idle
+fears will never be at rest. Our present state admits only of a kind of
+negative security; we must conclude ourselves safe when we see no
+danger, or none inadequate to our powers of opposition. Death, indeed,
+continually hovers about us, but hovers commonly unseen, unless we
+sharpen our sight by useless curiosity.
+
+There is always a point at which caution, however solicitous, must limit
+its preservatives, because one terrour often counteracts another. I once
+knew one of the speculatists of cowardice, whose reigning disturbance
+was the dread of housebreakers. His inquiries were for nine years
+employed upon the best method of barring a window, or a door; and many
+an hour has he spent in establishing the preference of a bolt to a lock.
+He had at last, by the daily superaddition of new expedients, contrived
+a door which could never be forced; for one bar was secured by another
+with such intricacy of subordination, that he was himself not always
+able to disengage them in the proper method. He was happy in this
+fortification, till being asked how he would escape if he was threatened
+by fire, he discovered, that with all his care and expense, he had only
+been assisting his own destruction. He then immediately tore off his
+bolts, and now leaves at night his outer door half-locked, that he may
+not by his own folly perish in the flames.
+
+There is one species of terrour which those who are unwilling to suffer
+the reproach of cowardice have wisely dignified with the name of
+_antipathy_. A man who talks with intrepidity of the monsters of the
+wilderness while they are out of sight, will readily confess his
+antipathy to a mole, a weasel, or a frog. He has indeed no dread of harm
+from an insect or a worm, but his antipathy turns him pale whenever they
+approach him. He believes that a boat will transport him with as much
+safety as his neighbours, but he cannot conquer his antipathy to the
+water. Thus he goes on without any reproach from his own reflections,
+and every day multiplies antipathies, till he becomes contemptible to
+others, and burdensome to himself. It is indeed certain, that
+impressions of dread may sometimes be unluckily made by objects not in
+themselves justly formidable; but when fear is discovered to be
+groundless, it is to be eradicated like other false opinions, and
+antipathies are generally superable by a single effort. He that has been
+taught to shudder at a mouse, if he can persuade himself to risk one
+encounter, will find his own superiority, and exchange his terrours for
+the pride of conquest.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+THRASO.
+
+SIR, As you profess to extend your regard to the minuteness of decency,
+as well as to the dignity of science, I cannot forbear to lay before you
+a mode of persecution by which I have been exiled to taverns and
+coffee-houses, and deterred from entering the doors of my friends. Among
+the ladies who please themselves with splendid furniture, or elegant
+entertainment, it is a practice very common, to ask every guest how he
+likes the carved work of the cornice, or the figures of the tapestry;
+the china at the table, or the plate on the side-board: and on all
+occasions to inquire his opinion of their judgment and their choice.
+Melania has laid her new watch in the window nineteen times, that she
+may desire me to look upon it. Calista has an art of dropping her
+snuff-box by drawing out her handkerchief, that when I pick it up I may
+admire it; and Fulgentia has conducted me, by mistake, into the wrong
+room, at every visit I have paid since her picture was put into a new
+frame.
+
+I hope, Mr. Rambler, you will inform them, that no man should be denied
+the privilege of silence, or tortured to false declarations; and that
+though ladies may justly claim to be exempt from rudeness, they have no
+right to force unwilling civilities. To please is a laudable and elegant
+ambition, and is properly rewarded with honest praise; but to seize
+applause by violence, and call out for commendation, without knowing, or
+caring to know, whether it be given from conviction, is a species of
+tyranny by which modesty is oppressed, and sincerity corrupted. The
+tribute of admiration, thus exacted by impudence and importunity,
+differs from the respect paid to silent merit, as the plunder of a
+pirate from the merchant's profit.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+MISOCOLAX
+
+
+
+SIR,
+
+Your great predecessor, the Spectator, endeavoured to diffuse among his
+female readers a desire of knowledge; nor can I charge you, though you
+do not seem equally attentive to the ladies, with endeavouring to
+discourage them from any laudable pursuit. But however either he or you
+may excite our curiosity, you have not yet informed us how it may be
+gratified. The world seems to have formed an universal conspiracy
+against our understandings; our questions are supposed not to expect
+answers, our arguments are confuted with a jest, and we are treated like
+beings who transgress the limits of our nature whenever we aspire to
+seriousness or improvement.
+
+I inquired yesterday of a gentleman eminent for astronomical skill, what
+made the day long in summer, and short in winter; and was told that
+nature protracted the days in summer, lest ladies should want time to
+walk in the park; and the nights in winter, lest they should not have
+hours sufficient to spend at the card-table.
+
+I hope you do not doubt but I heard such information with just contempt,
+and I desire you to discover to this great master of ridicule, that I
+was far from wanting any intelligence which he could have given me. I
+asked the question with no other intention than to set him free from the
+necessity of silence, and give him an opportunity of mingling on equal
+terms with a polite assembly, from which, however uneasy, he could not
+then escape, by a kind introduction of the only subject on which I
+believed him able to speak with propriety.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+GENEROSA.
+
+
+
+No. 127. TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 1751.
+
+ _Capisti meliust, quam desinis. Ultima primis
+ Cedunt: dissimiles hic vir et ille puer_. Ovid. Ep. ix. 24.
+
+ Succeeding years thy early fame destroy;
+ Thou, who began'st a man, wilt end a boy.
+
+Politian, a name eminent among the restorers of polite literature, when
+he published a collection of epigrams, prefixed to many of them the year
+of his age at which they were composed. He might design, by this
+information, either to boast the early maturity of his genius, or to
+conciliate indulgence to the puerility of his performances. But whatever
+was his intent, it is remarked by Scaliger, that he very little promoted
+his own reputation, because he fell below the promise which his first
+productions had given, and, in the latter part of his life, seldom
+equalled the sallies of his youth.
+
+It is not uncommon for those who, at their first entrance into the
+world, were distinguished for attainments or abilities, to disappoint
+the hopes which they had raised, and to end in neglect and obscurity
+that life which they began in celebrity and honour. To the long
+catalogue of the inconveniencies of old age, which moral and satirical
+writers have so copiously displayed, may be often added the loss of
+fame.
+
+The advance of the human mind towards any object of laudable pursuit,
+may be compared to the progress of a body driven by a blow. It moves,
+for a time, with great velocity and vigour, but the force of the first
+impulse is perpetually decreasing, and though it should encounter no
+obstacle capable of quelling it by a sudden stop, the resistance of the
+medium through which it passes, and the latent inequalities of the
+smoothest surface, will, in a short time, by continued retardation,
+wholly overpower it. Some hindrances will be found in every road of
+life, but he that fixes his eyes upon any thing at a distance,
+necessarily loses sight of all that fills up the intermediate space, and
+therefore sets forward with alacrity and confidence, nor suspects a
+thousand obstacles, by which he afterwards finds his passage embarrassed
+and obstructed. Some are indeed stopt at once in their career by a
+sudden shock of calamity, or diverted to a different direction by the
+cross impulse of some violent passion; but far the greater part languish
+by slow degrees, deviate at first into slight obliquities, and
+themselves scarcely perceive at what time their ardour forsook them, or
+when they lost sight of their original design.
+
+Weariness and negligence are perpetually prevailing by silent
+encroachments, assisted by different causes, and not observed till they
+cannot, without great difficulty, be opposed. Labour necessarily
+requires pauses of ease and relaxation, and the deliciousness of ease
+commonly makes us unwilling to return to labour. We, perhaps, prevail
+upon ourselves to renew our attempts, but eagerly listen to every
+argument for frequent interpositions of amusement; for, when indolence
+has once entered upon the mind, it can scarcely be dispossessed but by
+such efforts as very few are willing to exert.
+
+It is the fate of industry to be equally endangered by miscarriage and
+success, by confidence and despondency. He that engages in a great
+undertaking, with a false opinion of its facility, or too high
+conceptions of his own strength, is easily discouraged by the first
+hindrance of his advances, because he had promised himself an equal and
+perpetual progression without impediment or disturbance; when unexpected
+interruptions break in upon him, he is in the state of a man surprised
+by a tempest, where he purposed only to bask in the calm, or sport in
+the shallows.
+
+It is not only common to find the difficulty of an enterprize greater,
+but the profit less, than hope had pictured it. Youth enters the world
+with very happy prejudices in her own favour. She imagines herself not
+only certain of accomplishing every adventure, but of obtaining those
+rewards which the accomplishment may deserve. She is not easily
+persuaded to believe that the force of merit can be resisted by
+obstinacy and avarice, or its lustre darkened by envy and malignity. She
+has not yet learned that the most evident claims to praise or preferment
+may be rejected by malice against conviction, or by indolence without
+examination; that they may be sometimes defeated by artifices, and
+sometimes overborne by clamour; that, in the mingled numbers of mankind,
+many need no other provocation to enmity than that they find themselves
+excelled; that others have ceased their curiosity, and consider every
+man who fills the mouth of report with a new name, as an intruder upon
+their retreat, and disturber of their repose; that some are engaged in
+complications of interest which they imagine endangered by every
+innovation; that many yield themselves up implicitly to every report
+which hatred disseminates or folly scatters; and that whoever aspires to
+the notice of the publick, has in almost every man an enemy and a rival;
+and must struggle with the opposition of the daring, and elude the
+stratagems of the timorous, must quicken the frigid and soften the
+obdurate, must reclaim perverseness and inform stupidity.
+
+It is no wonder that when the prospect of reward has vanished, the zeal
+of enterprize should cease; for who would persevere to cultivate the
+soil which he has, after long labour, discovered to be barren? He who
+hath pleased himself with anticipated praises, and expected that he
+should meet in every place with patronage or friendship, will soon remit
+his vigour, when he finds that, from those who desire to be considered
+as his admirers, nothing can be hoped but cold civility, and that many
+refuse to own his excellence, lest they should be too justly expected to
+reward it.
+
+A man, thus cut off from the prospect of that port to which his address
+and fortitude had been employed to steer him, often abandons himself to
+chance and to the wind, and glides careless and idle down the current of
+life, without resolution to make another effort, till he is swallowed up
+by the gulph of mortality.
+
+Others are betrayed to the same desertion of themselves by a contrary
+fallacy. It was said of Hannibal, that he wanted nothing to the
+completion of his martial virtues, but that when he had gained a victory
+he should know how to use it. The folly of desisting too soon from
+successful labours, and the haste of enjoying advantages before they are
+secured, are often fatal to men of impetuous desire, to men whose
+consciousness of uncommon powers fills them with presumption, and who,
+having borne opposition down before them, and left emulation panting
+behind, are early persuaded to imagine that they have reached the
+heights of perfection, and that now, being no longer in danger from
+competitors, they may pass the rest of their days in the enjoyment of
+their acquisitions, in contemplation of their own superiority, and in
+attention to their own praises, and look unconcerned from their eminence
+upon the toils and contentions of meaner beings.
+
+It is not sufficiently considered in the hour of exultation, that all
+human excellence is comparative; that no man performs much but in
+proportion to what others accomplish, or to the time and opportunities
+which have been allowed him; and that he who stops at any point of
+excellence is every day sinking in estimation, because his improvement
+grows continually more incommensurate to his life. Yet, as no man
+willingly quits opinions favourable to himself, they who have once been
+justly celebrated, imagine that they still have the same pretensions to
+regard, and seldom perceive the diminution of their character while
+there is time to recover it. Nothing then remains but murmurs and
+remorse; for if the spendthrift's poverty be embittered by the
+reflection that he once was rich, how must the idler's obscurity be
+clouded by remembering that he once had lustre!
+
+These errours all arise from an original mistake of the true motives of
+action. He that never extends his view beyond the praises or rewards of
+men will be dejected by neglect and envy, or infatuated by honours and
+applause. But the consideration that life is only deposited in his hands
+to be employed in obedience to a Master who will regard his endeavours,
+not his success, would have preserved him from trivial elations and
+discouragements, and enabled him to proceed with constancy and
+cheerfulness, neither enervated by commendation, nor intimidated by
+censure.
+
+
+
+No. 128. SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1751.
+
+ [Greek:
+ Aion d asphalaes
+ Ouk egent, out Aiakida para Paelei,
+ Oute par antitheo
+ Kadmo legontai man broton
+ Olbon hupertaton hoi
+ Schein.] PIND. Py. iii. 153.
+
+ For not the brave, or wise, or great,
+ E'er yet had happiness complete:
+ Nor Peleus, grandson of the sky,
+ Nor Cadmus, scap'd the shafts of pain,
+ Though favour'd by the Pow'rs on high,
+ With every bliss that man can gain.
+
+The writers who have undertaken the task of reconciling mankind to their
+present state, and relieving the discontent produced by the various
+distribution of terrestrial advantages, frequently remind us that we
+judge too hastily of good and evil, that we view only the superfices of
+life, and determine of the whole by a very small part; and that in the
+condition of men it frequently happens, that grief and anxiety lie hid
+under the golden robes of prosperity, and the gloom of calamity is
+cheered by secret radiations of hope and comfort; as in the works of
+nature the bog is sometimes covered with flowers, and the mine concealed
+in the barren crags.
+
+None but those who have learned the art of subjecting their senses as
+well as reason to hypothetical systems, can be persuaded by the most
+specious rhetorician that the lots of life are equal; yet it cannot be
+denied that every one has his peculiar pleasures and vexations, that
+external accidents operate variously upon different minds, and that no
+man can exactly judge from his own sensations, what another would feel
+in the same circumstances.
+
+If the general disposition of things be estimated by the representation
+which every one makes of his own estate, the world must be considered as
+the abode of sorrow and misery; for how few can forbear to relate their
+troubles and distresses? If we judge by the account which may be
+obtained of every man's fortune from others, it may be concluded, that
+we all are placed in an elysian region, overspread with the luxuriance
+of plenty, and fanned by the breezes of felicity; since scarcely any
+complaint is uttered without censure from those that hear it, and almost
+all are allowed to have obtained a provision at least adequate to their
+virtue or their understanding, to possess either more than they deserve,
+or more than they enjoy.
+
+We are either born with such dissimilitude of temper and inclination, or
+receive so many of our ideas and opinions from the state of life in
+which we are engaged, that the griefs and cares of one part of mankind
+seem to the other hypocrisy, folly, and affectation. Every class of
+society has its cant of lamentation, which is understood or regarded by
+none but themselves; and every part of life has its uneasiness, which
+those who do not feel them will not commiserate. An event which spreads
+distraction over half the commercial world, assembles the trading
+companies in councils and committees, and shakes the nerves of a
+thousand stockjobbers, is read by the landlord and the farmer with
+frigid indifference. An affair of love, which fills the young breast
+with incessant alternations of hope and fear, and steals away the night
+and day from every other pleasure or employment, is regarded by them
+whose passions time has extinguished, as an amusement, which can
+properly raise neither joy nor sorrow, and, though it may be suffered to
+fill the vacuity of an idle moment, should always give way to prudence
+or interest.
+
+He that never had any other desire than to fill a chest with money, or
+to add another manor to his estate, who never grieved but at a bad
+mortgage, or entered a company but to make a bargain, would be
+astonished to hear of beings known among the polite and gay by the
+denomination of wits. How would he gape with curiosity, or grin with
+contempt, at the mention of beings who have no wish but to speak what
+was never spoken before; who, if they happen to inherit wealth, often
+exhaust their patrimonies in treating those who will hear them talk; and
+if they are poor, neglect opportunities of improving their fortunes, for
+the pleasure of making others laugh? How slowly would he believe that
+there are men who would rather lose a legacy than the reputation of a
+distich; who think it less disgrace to want money than repartee; whom
+the vexation of having been foiled in a contest of raillery is sometimes
+sufficient to deprive of sleep; and who would esteem it a lighter evil
+to miss a profitable bargain by some accidental delay, than not to have
+thought of a smart reply till the time of producing it was past? How
+little would he suspect that this child of idleness and frolick enters
+every assembly with a beating bosom, like a litigant on the day of
+decision, and revolves the probability of applause with the anxiety of a
+conspirator, whose fate depends upon the next night; that at the hour of
+retirement he carries home, under a show of airy negligence, a heart
+lacerated with envy, or depressed with disappointment; and immures
+himself in his closet, that he may disencumber his memory at leisure,
+review the progress of the day, state with accuracy his loss or gain of
+reputation, and examine the causes of his failure or success?
+
+Yet more remote from common conceptions are the numerous and restless
+anxieties, by which female happiness is particularly disturbed. A
+solitary philosopher would imagine ladies born with an exemption from
+care and sorrow, lulled in perpetual quiet, and feasted with unmingled
+pleasure; for what can interrupt the content of those, upon whom one age
+has laboured after another to confer honours, and accumulate immunities;
+those to whom rudeness is infamy, and insult is cowardice; whose eye
+commands the brave, and whose smiles soften the severe; whom the sailor
+travels to adorn, the soldier bleeds to defend, and the poet wears out
+life to celebrate; who claim tribute from every art and science, and for
+whom all who approach them endeavour to multiply delights, without
+requiring from them any returns but willingness to be pleased?
+
+Surely, among these favourites of nature, thus unacquainted with toil
+and danger, felicity must have fixed her residence; they must know only
+the changes of more vivid or more gentle joys: their life must always
+move either to the slow or sprightly melody of the lyre of gladness;
+they can never assemble but to pleasure, or retire but to peace.
+
+Such would be the thoughts of every man who should hover at a distance
+round the world, and know it only by conjecture and speculation. But
+experience will soon discover how easily those are disgusted who have
+been made nice by plenty and tender by indulgence. He will soon see to
+how many dangers power is exposed which has no other guard than youth
+and beauty, and how easily that tranquillity is molested which can only
+be soothed with the songs of flattery. It is impossible to supply wants
+as fast as an idle imagination may be able to form them, or to remove
+all inconveniencies by which elegance refined into impatience may be
+offended. None are so hard to please, as those whom satiety of pleasure
+makes weary of themselves; nor any so readily provoked as those who have
+been always courted with an emulation of civility.
+
+There are, indeed, some strokes which the envy of fate aims immediately
+at the fair. The mistress of Catullus wept for her sparrow many
+centuries ago, and lapdogs will be sometimes sick in the present age.
+The most fashionable brocade is subject to stains; a pinner, the pride
+of Brussels, may be torn by a careless washer; a picture may drop from a
+watch; or the triumph of a new suit may be interrupted on the first day
+of its enjoyment, and all distinctions of dress unexpectedly obliterated
+by a general mourning.
+
+Such is the state of every age, every sex, and every condition: all have
+their cares, either from nature or from folly: and whoever therefore
+finds himself inclined to envy another, should remember that he knows
+not the real condition which he desires to obtain, but is certain that
+by indulging a vicious passion, he must lessen that happiness which he
+thinks already too sparingly bestowed.
+
+
+
+No. 129. TUESDAY, JUNE 11. 1751.
+
+ _--Nunc, O nunc, Daedale, dixit,
+ Materiam, qua sis ingeniosus, habes.
+ Possidet en terras, et possidet aequara, Minos:
+ Nec tellus nostrae, nec patet undo fugae.
+ Restat iter coelo: tentabimus ire.
+ Da veniam caepto, Jupiter alte, meo. OVID. Ar. Am. Lib. ii. 33_.
+
+ Now, Daedalus, behold, by fate assign'd,
+ A task proportion'd to thy mighty mind!
+ Unconquer'd bars on earth and sea withstand;
+ Thine, Minos, is the main, and thine the land.
+ The skies are open--let us try the skies:
+ Forgive, great Jove, the daring enterprize.
+
+Moralists, like other writers, instead of casting their eyes abroad in
+the living world, and endeavouring to form maxims of practice and new
+hints of theory, content their curiosity with that secondary knowledge
+which books afford, and think themselves entitled to reverence by a new
+arrangement of an ancient system, or new illustration of established
+principles[e]. The sage precepts of the first instructors of the world
+are transmitted from age to age with little variation, and echoed from
+one author to another, not perhaps without some loss of their original
+force at every repercussion.
+
+I know not whether any other reason than this idleness of imitation can
+be assigned for that uniform and constant partiality, by which some
+vices have hitherto escaped censure, and some virtues wanted
+recommendation; nor can I discover why else we have been warned only
+against part of our enemies, while the rest have been suffered to steal
+upon us without notice; why the heart has on one side been doubly
+fortified, and laid open on the other to the incursions of errour, and
+the ravages of vice.
+
+Among the favourite topicks of moral declamation, may be numbered the
+miscarriages of imprudent boldness, and the folly of attempts beyond our
+power. Every page of every philosopher is crowded with examples of
+temerity that sunk under burdens which she laid upon herself, and called
+out enemies to battle by whom she was destroyed.
+
+Their remarks are too just to be disputed, and too salutary to be
+rejected; but there is likewise some danger lest timorous prudence
+should be inculcated, till courage and enterprise are wholly repressed,
+and the mind congealed in perpetual inactivity by the fatal influence of
+frigorifick wisdom.
+
+Every man should, indeed, carefully compare his force with his
+undertaking; for though we ought not to live only for our own sakes, and
+though therefore danger or difficulty should not be avoided merely
+because we may expose ourselves to misery or disgrace; yet it may be
+justly required of us, not to throw away our lives upon inadequate and
+hopeless designs, since we might, by a just estimate of our abilities,
+become more useful to mankind.
+
+There is an irrational contempt of danger, which approaches nearly to
+the folly, if not the guilt of suicide; there is a ridiculous
+perseverance in impracticable schemes, which is justly punished with
+ignominy and reproach. But in the wide regions of probability, which are
+the proper province of prudence and election, there is always room to
+deviate on either side of rectitude without rushing against apparent
+absurdity; and according to the inclinations of nature, or the
+impressions of precept, the daring and the cautious may move in
+different directions without touching upon rashness or cowardice.
+
+That there is a middle path which it is every man's duty to find, and to
+keep, is unanimously confessed: but it is likewise acknowledged that
+this middle path is so narrow, that it cannot easily be discovered, and
+so little beaten, that there are no certain marks by which it can be
+followed: the care, therefore, of all those who conduct others has been,
+that whenever they decline into obliquities, they should tend towards
+the side of safety.
+
+It can, indeed, raise no wonder that temerity has been generally
+censured; for it is one of the vices with which few can be charged, and
+which therefore, great numbers are ready to condemn. It is the vice of
+noble and generous minds, the exuberance of magnanimity, and the
+ebullition of genius; and is therefore not regarded with much
+tenderness, because it never flatters us by that appearance of softness
+and imbecility which is commonly necessary to conciliate compassion. But
+if the same attention had been applied to the search of arguments
+against the folly of pre-supposing impossibilities, and anticipating
+frustration, I know not whether many would not have been roused to
+usefulness, who, having been taught to confound prudence with timidity,
+never ventured to excel, lest they should unfortunately fail.
+
+It is necessary to distinguish our own interest from that of others, and
+that distinction will perhaps assist us in fixing the just limits of
+caution and adventurousness. In an undertaking that involves the
+happiness or the safety of many, we have certainly no right to hazard
+more than is allowed by those who partake the danger; but where only
+ourselves can suffer by miscarriage, we are not confined within such
+narrow limits; and still less is the reproach of temerity, when numbers
+will receive advantage by success, and only one be incommoded by
+failure.
+
+Men are generally willing to hear precepts by which ease is favoured;
+and as no resentment is raised by general representations of human
+folly, even in those who are most eminently jealous of comparative
+reputation, we confess, without reluctance, that vain man is ignorant of
+his own weakness, and therefore frequently presumes to attempt what he
+can never accomplish; but it ought likewise to be remembered, that man
+is no less ignorant of his own powers, and might perhaps have
+accomplished a thousand designs, which the prejudices of cowardice
+restrained him from attempting.
+
+It is observed in the golden verses of Pythagoras, that "Power is never
+far from necessity." The vigour of the human mind quickly appears, when
+there is no longer any place for doubt and hesitation, when diffidence
+is absorbed in the sense of danger, or overwhelmed by some resistless
+passion. We then soon discover, that difficulty is, for the most part,
+the daughter of idleness, that the obstacles with which our way seemed
+to be obstructed were only phantoms, which we believed real, because we
+durst not advance to a close examination; and we learn that it is
+impossible to determine without experience how much constancy may
+endure, or perseverance perform.
+
+But whatever pleasure may be found in the review of distresses when art
+or courage has surmounted them, few will be persuaded to wish that they
+may be awakened by want, or terrour, to the conviction of their own
+abilities. Every one should therefore endeavour to invigorate himself by
+reason and reflection, and determine to exert the latent force that
+nature may have reposed in him, before the hour of exigence comes upon
+him, and compulsion shall torture him to diligence. It is below the
+dignity of a reasonable being to owe that strength to necessity which
+ought always to act at the call of choice, or to need any other motive
+to industry than the desire of performing his duty.
+
+Reflections that may drive away despair, cannot be wanting to him who
+considers how much life is now advanced beyond the state of naked,
+undisciplined, uninstructed nature. Whatever has been effected for
+convenience or elegance, while it was yet unknown, was believed
+impossible; and therefore would never have been attempted, had not some,
+more daring than the rest, adventured to bid defiance to prejudice and
+censure. Nor is there yet any reason to doubt that the same labour would
+be rewarded with the same success. There are qualities in the products
+of nature yet undiscovered, and combinations in the powers of art yet
+untried. It is the duty of every man to endeavour that something may be
+added by his industry to the hereditary aggregate of knowledge and
+happiness. To add much can indeed be the lot of few, but to add
+something, however little, every one may hope; and of every honest
+endeavour, it is certain, that, however unsuccessful, it will be at last
+rewarded.
+
+[Footnote e: Johnson gained _his_ knowledge from actual experience. He
+told Boswell that before he wrote the Rambler he had been running about
+the world more than almost any body. Boswell's Life of Johnson, vol. i.
+p. 196.; and vol. iii. pp. 20, 21.]
+
+
+
+No. 130. SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1751.
+
+ Non sic prata novo vere decentia
+ AEstatis calidtae dispoliat vapor:
+ Saevit solstitio cum medius dies;--
+ Ut fulgor teneris qui radiat genis
+ Momento rapitur! nullaque non dies
+ Formosi spolium corporis abstulit.
+ Res est forma fugax: quis sapiens bono
+ Confidat fragili? SENECA, Hippol. act. ii. 764.
+
+ Not faster in the summer's ray
+ The spring's frail beauty fades away,
+ Than anguish and decay consume
+ The smiling virgin's rosy bloom.
+ Some beauty's snatch'd each day, each hour;
+ For beauty is a fleeting flow'r:
+ Then how can wisdom e'er confide
+ In beauty's momentary pride? ELPHINSTON
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+You have very lately observed that in the numerous subdivisions of the
+world, every class and order of mankind have joys and sorrows of their
+own; we all feel hourly pain and pleasure from events which pass
+unheeded before other eyes, but can scarcely communicate our perceptions
+to minds pre-occupied by different objects, any more than the delight of
+well-disposed colours or harmonious sounds can be imparted to such as
+want the senses of hearing or of sight.
+
+I am so strongly convinced of the justness of this remark, and have on
+so many occasions discovered with how little attention pride looks upon
+calamity of which she thinks herself not in danger, and indolence
+listens to complaint when it is not echoed by her own remembrance, that
+though I am about to lay the occurrences of my life before you, I
+question whether you will condescend to peruse my narrative, or, without
+the help of some female speculatists, to be able to understand it.
+
+I was born a beauty. From the dawn of reason I had my regard turned
+wholly upon myself, nor can recollect any thing earlier than praise and
+admiration. My mother, whose face had luckily advanced her to a
+condition above her birth, thought no evil so great as deformity. She
+had not the power of imagining any other defect than a cloudy
+complexion, or disproportionate features; and therefore contemplated me
+as an assemblage of all that could raise envy or desire, and predicted
+with triumphant fondness the extent of my conquests, and the number of
+my slaves.
+
+She never mentioned any of my young acquaintance before me, but to
+remark how much they fell below my perfection; how one would have had a
+fine face, but that her eyes were without lustre; how another struck the
+sight at a distance, but wanted my hair and teeth at a nearer view;
+another disgraced an elegant shape with a brown skin; some had short
+fingers, and others dimples in a wrong place.
+
+As she expected no happiness nor advantage but from beauty, she thought
+nothing but beauty worthy of her care; and her maternal kindness was
+chiefly exercised in contrivances to protect me from any accident that
+might deface me with a scar, or stain me with a freckle: she never
+thought me sufficiently shaded from the sun, or screened from the fire.
+She was severe or indulgent with no other intention than the
+preservation of my form; she excused me from work, lest I should learn
+to hang down my head, or harden my finger with a needle; she snatched
+away my book, because a young lady in the neighbourhood had made her
+eyes red with reading by a candle; but she would scarcely suffer me to
+eat, lest I should spoil my shape, nor to walk lest I should swell my
+ancle with a sprain. At night I was accurately surveyed from head to
+foot, lest I should have suffered any diminution of my charms in the
+adventures of the day; and was never permitted to sleep, till I had
+passed through the cosmetick discipline, part of which was a regular
+lustration performed with bean-flower water and May-dews; my hair was
+perfumed with variety of unguents, by some of which it was to be
+thickened, and by others to be curled. The softness of my hands was
+secured by medicated gloves, and my bosom rubbed with a pomade prepared
+by my mother, of virtue to discuss pimples, and clear discolorations.
+
+I was always called up early, because the morning air gives a freshness
+to the cheeks; but I was placed behind a curtain in my mother's chamber,
+because the neck is easily tanned by the rising sun. I was then dressed
+with a thousand precautions, and again heard my own praises, and
+triumphed in the compliments and prognostications of all that approached
+me.
+
+My mother was not so much prepossessed with an opinion of my natural
+excellencies as not to think some cultivation necessary to their
+completion. She took care that I should want none of the accomplishments
+included in female education, or considered necessary in fashionable
+life. I was looked upon in my ninth year as the chief ornament of the
+dancing-master's ball; and Mr. Ariet used to reproach his other scholars
+with my performances on the harpsichord. At twelve I was remarkable for
+playing my cards with great elegance of manner, and accuracy of
+judgment.
+
+At last the time came when my mother thought me perfect in my exercises,
+and qualified to display in the open world those accomplishments which
+had yet only been discovered in select parties, or domestick assemblies.
+Preparations were therefore made for my appearance on a publick night,
+which she considered as the most important and critical moment of my
+life. She cannot be charged with neglecting any means of recommendation,
+or leaving any thing to chance which prudence could ascertain. Every
+ornament was tried in every position, every friend was consulted about
+the colour of my dress, and the mantua-makers were harassed with
+directions and alterations.
+
+At last the night arrived from which my future life was to be reckoned.
+I was dressed and sent out to conquer, with a heart beating like that of
+an old knight-errant at his first sally. Scholars have told me of a
+Spartan matron, who, when she armed her son for battle, bade him bring
+back his shield, or be brought upon it. My venerable parent dismissed me
+to a field, in her opinion of equal glory, with a command to shew that I
+was her daughter, and not to return without a lover.
+
+I went, and was received like other pleasing novelties with a tumult of
+applause. Every man who valued himself upon the graces of his person, or
+the elegance of his address, crowded about me, and wit and splendour
+contended for my notice. I was delightfully fatigued with incessant
+civilities, which were made more pleasing by the apparent envy of those
+whom my presence exposed to neglect, and returned with an attendant
+equal in rank and wealth to my utmost wishes, and from this time stood
+in the first rank of beauty, was followed by gazers in the Mall,
+celebrated in the papers of the day, imitated by all who endeavoured to
+rise into fashion, and censured by those whom age or disappointment
+forced to retire.
+
+My mother, who pleased herself with the hopes of seeing my exaltation,
+dressed me with all the exuberance of finery; and when I represented to
+her that a fortune might be expected proportionate to my appearance,
+told me that she should scorn the reptile who could inquire after the
+fortune of a girl like me. She advised me to prosecute my victories, and
+time would certainly bring me a captive who might deserve the honour of
+being enchained for ever.
+
+My lovers were indeed so numerous, that I had no other care than that of
+determining to whom I should seem to give the preference. But having
+been steadily and industriously instructed to preserve my heart from any
+impressions which might hinder me from consulting my interest, I acted
+with less embarrassment, because my choice was regulated by principles
+more clear and certain than the caprice of approbation. When I had
+singled out one from the rest as more worthy of encouragement, I
+proceeded in my measures by the rules of art; and yet when the ardour of
+the first visits was spent, generally found a sudden declension of my
+influence; I felt in myself the want of some power to diversify
+amusement, and enliven conversation, and could not but suspect that my
+mind failed in performing the promises of my face. This opinion was soon
+confirmed by one of my lovers, who married Lavinia with less beauty and
+fortune than mine, because he thought a wife ought to have qualities
+which might make her amiable when her bloom was past.
+
+The vanity of my mother would not suffer her to discover any defect in
+one that had been formed by her instructions, and had all the excellence
+which she herself could boast. She told me that nothing so much hindered
+the advancement of women as literature and wit, which generally
+frightened away those that could make the best settlements, and drew
+about them a needy tribe of poets and philosophers, that filled their
+heads with wild notions of content, and contemplation, and virtuous
+obscurity. She therefore enjoined me to improve my minuet-step with a
+new French dancing-master, and wait the event of the next birth-night.
+
+I had now almost completed my nineteenth year: if my charms had lost any
+of their softness, it was more than compensated by additional dignity;
+and if the attractions of innocence were impaired, their place was
+supplied by the arts of allurement. I was therefore preparing for a new
+attack, without any abatement of my confidence, when, in the midst of my
+hopes and schemes, I was seized by that dreadful malady which has so
+often put a sudden end to the tyranny of beauty. I recovered my health
+after a long confinement; but when I looked again on that face which had
+been often flushed with transport at its own reflection, and saw all
+that I had learned to value, all that I had endeavoured to improve, all
+that had procured me honours or praises, irrecoverably destroyed, I sunk
+at once into melancholy and despondence. My pain was not much consoled
+or alleviated by my mother, who grieved that I had not lost my life
+together with my beauty; and declared, that she thought a young woman
+divested of her charms had nothing for which those who loved her could
+desire to save her from the grave.
+
+Having thus continued my relation to the period from which my life took
+a new course, I shall conclude it in another letter, if, by publishing
+this, you shew any regard for the correspondence of,
+
+Sir, &c.
+
+VICTORIA.
+
+
+
+No. 131. TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 1751.
+
+ _--Fatis accede, Deisque,
+ Et cole felices, miseros fuge. sidera terrae
+ Ut distant, ut flamma mari, sic utile recto_. LUCAN. Lib. viii. 486.
+[Transcriber's note: punctuation in original.]
+
+ Still follow where auspicious fates invite;
+ Caress the happy, and the wretched slight.
+ Sooner shall jarring elements unite,
+ Than truth with gain, than interest with right. F. LEWIS.
+
+There is scarcely any sentiment in which, amidst the innumerable
+varieties of inclination that nature or accident have scattered in the
+world, we find greater numbers concurring, than in the wish for riches;
+a wish, indeed, so prevalent that it may be considered as universal and
+transcendental, as the desire in which all other desires are included,
+and of which the various purposes which actuate mankind are only
+subordinate species and different modifications.
+
+Wealth is the general centre of inclination, the point to which all
+minds preserve an invariable tendency, and from which they afterwards
+diverge in numberless directions. Whatever is the remote or ultimate
+design, the immediate care is to be rich; and in whatever enjoyment we
+intend finally to acquiesce, we seldom consider it as attainable but by
+the means of money. Of wealth therefore all unanimously confess the
+value, nor is there any disagreement but about the use.
+
+No desire can be formed which riches do not assist to gratify. He that
+places his happiness in splendid equipage or numerous dependants, in
+refined praise or popular acclamations, in the accumulation of
+curiosities or the revels of luxury, in splendid edifices or wide
+plantations, must still, either by birth or acquisition, possess riches.
+They may be considered as the elemental principles of pleasure, which
+may be combined with endless diversity; as the essential and necessary
+substance, of which only the form is left to be adjusted by choice.
+
+The necessity of riches being thus apparent, it is not wonderful that
+almost every mind has been employed in endeavours to acquire them; that
+multitudes have vied in arts by which life is furnished with
+accommodations, and which therefore mankind may reasonably be expected
+to reward.
+
+It had, indeed, been happy, if this predominant appetite had operated
+only in concurrence with virtue, by influencing none but those who were
+zealous to deserve what they were eager to possess, and had abilities to
+improve their own fortunes by contributing to the ease or happiness of
+others. To have riches and to have merit would then have been the same,
+and success might reasonably have been considered as a proof of
+excellence.
+
+But we do not find that any of the wishes of men keep a stated
+proportion to their powers of attainment. Many envy and desire wealth,
+who can never procure it by honest industry or useful knowledge. They
+therefore turn their eyes about to examine what other methods can be
+found of gaining that which none, however impotent or worthless, will be
+content to want.
+
+A little inquiry will discover that there are nearer ways to profit than
+through the intricacies of art, or up the steeps of labour; what wisdom
+and virtue scarcely receive at the close of life, as the recompense of
+long toil and repeated efforts, is brought within the reach of subtilty
+and dishonesty by more expeditious and compendious measures: the wealth
+of credulity is an open prey to falsehood; and the possessions of
+ignorance and imbecility are easily stolen away by the conveyances of
+secret artifice, or seized by the gripe of unresisted violence.
+
+It is likewise not hard to discover that riches always procure
+protection for themselves, that they dazzle the eyes of inquiry, divert
+the celerity of pursuit, or appease the ferocity of vengeance. When any
+man is incontestably known to have large possessions, very few think it
+requisite to inquire by what practices they were obtained; the
+resentment of mankind rages only against the struggles of feeble and
+timorous corruption, but when it has surmounted the first opposition, it
+is afterwards supported by favour, and animated by applause.
+
+The prospect of gaining speedily what is ardently desired, and the
+certainty of obtaining by every accession of advantage an addition of
+security, have so far prevailed upon the passions of mankind, that the
+peace of life is destroyed by a general and incessant struggle for
+riches. It is observed of gold, by an old epigrammatist, that "To have
+it is to be in fear, and to want it is to be in sorrow." There is no
+condition which is not disquieted either with the care of gaining or of
+keeping money; and the race of man may be divided in a political
+estimate between those who are practising fraud, and those who are
+repelling it.
+
+If we consider the present state of the world, it will be found, that
+all confidence is lost among mankind, that no man ventures to act, where
+money can be endangered upon the faith of another. It is impossible to
+see the long scrolls in which every contract is included, with all their
+appendages of seals and attestation, without wondering at the depravity
+of those beings, who must be restrained from violation of promise by
+such formal and publick evidences, and precluded from equivocation and
+subterfuge by such punctilious minuteness. Among all the satires to
+which folly and wickedness have given occasion, none is equally severe
+with a bond or a settlement.
+
+Of the various arts by which riches may be obtained, the greater part
+are at the first view irreconcileable with the laws of virtue; some are
+openly flagitious, and practised not only in neglect, but in defiance of
+faith and justice; and the rest are on every side so entangled with
+dubious tendencies, and so beset with perpetual temptations, that very
+few, even of those who are not yet abandoned, are able to preserve their
+innocence, or can produce any other claim to pardon than that they
+deviated from the right less than others, and have sooner and more
+diligently endeavoured to return.
+
+One of the chief characteristicks of the golden age, of the age in which
+neither care nor danger had intruded on mankind, is the community of
+possessions: strife and fraud were totally excluded, and every turbulent
+passion was stilled by plenty and equality. Such were indeed happy
+times, but such times can return no more. Community of possession must
+include spontaneity of production; for what is obtained by labour will
+be of right the property of him by whose labour it is gained. And while
+a rightful claim to pleasure or to affluence must be procured either by
+slow industry or uncertain hazard, there will always be multitudes whom
+cowardice or impatience incite to more safe and more speedy methods, who
+strive to pluck the fruit without cultivating the tree, and to share the
+advantages of victory without partaking the danger of the battle. In
+later ages, the conviction of the danger to which virtue is exposed
+while the mind continues open to the influence of riches, has determined
+many to vows of perpetual poverty; they have suppressed desire by
+cutting off the possibility of gratification, and secured their peace by
+destroying the enemy whom they had no hope of reducing to quiet
+subjection. But, by debarring themselves from evil, they have rescinded
+many opportunities of good; they have too often sunk into inactivity and
+uselessness; and, though they have forborne to injure society, have not
+fully paid their contributions to its happiness.
+
+While riches are so necessary to present convenience, and so much more
+easily obtained by crimes than virtues, the mind can only be secured
+from yielding to the continual impulse of covetousness by the
+preponderation of unchangeable and eternal motives. Gold will turn the
+intellectual balance, when weighed only against reputation; but will be
+light and ineffectual when the opposite scale is charged with justice,
+veracity, and piety[f].
+
+
+
+No. 132. SATURDAY, JUNE 22, 1751.
+
+ --_Dociles imitandis
+ Turpibus ac pravis omnes sumus_.--JUV. Sat. xiv. 40.
+
+ The mind of mortals, in perverseness strong,
+ Imbibes with dire docility the wrong.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+MR. RAMBLER,
+
+I was bred a scholar, and after the usual course of education, found it
+necessary to employ for the support of life that learning which I had
+almost exhausted my little fortune in acquiring. The lucrative
+professions drew my regard with equal attraction; each presented ideas
+which excited my curiosity, and each imposed duties which terrified my
+apprehension.
+
+There is no temper more unpropitious to interest than desultory
+application and unlimited inquiry, by which the desires are held in a
+perpetual equipoise, and the mind fluctuates between different purposes
+without determination. I had books of every kind round me, among which I
+divided my time as caprice or accident directed. I often spent the first
+hours of the day, in considering to what study I should devote the rest,
+and at last snatched up any author that lay upon the table, or perhaps
+fled to a coffee-house for deliverance from the anxiety of irresolution,
+and the gloominess of solitude.
+
+Thus my little patrimony grew imperceptibly less, till I was roused from
+my literary slumber by a creditor, whose importunity obliged me to
+pacify him with so large a sum, that what remained was not sufficient to
+support me more than eight months. I hope you will not reproach me with
+avarice or cowardice, if I acknowledge that I now thought myself in
+danger of distress, and obliged to endeavour after some certain
+competence.
+
+There have been heroes of negligence, who have laid the price of their
+last acre in a drawer, and, without the least interruption of their
+tranquillity, or abatement of their expenses, taken out one piece after
+another, till there was no more remaining. But I was not born to such
+dignity of imprudence, or such exaltation above the cares and
+necessities of life; I therefore immediately engaged my friends to
+procure me a little employment, which might set me free from the dread
+of poverty, and afford me time to plan out some final scheme of lasting
+advantage.
+
+My friends were struck with honest solicitude, and immediately promised
+their endeavours for my extrication. They did not suffer their kindness
+to languish by delay, but prosecuted their inquiries with such success,
+that in less than a month I was perplexed with variety of offers and
+contrariety of prospects.
+
+I had however no time for long pauses of consideration; and therefore
+soon resolved to accept the office of instructing a young nobleman in
+the house of his father: I went to the seat at which the family then
+happened to reside, was received with great politeness, and invited to
+enter immediately on my charge. The terms offered were such as I should
+willingly have accepted, though my fortune had allowed me greater
+liberty of choice: the respect with which I was treated, flattered my
+vanity; and perhaps the splendour of the apartments, and the luxury of
+the table, were not wholly without their influence. I immediately
+complied with the proposals, and received the young lord into my care.
+
+Having no desire to gain more than I should truly deserve, I very
+diligently prosecuted my undertaking, and had the satisfaction of
+discovering in my pupil a flexible temper, a quick apprehension, and a
+retentive memory. I did not much doubt that my care would, in time,
+produce a wise and useful counsellor to the state, though my labours
+were somewhat obstructed by want of authority, and the necessity of
+complying with the freaks of negligence, and of waiting patiently for
+the lucky moment of voluntary attention. To a man whose imagination was
+filled with the dignity of knowledge, and to whom a studious life had
+made all the common amusements insipid and contemptible, it was not very
+easy to suppress his indignation, when he saw himself forsaken in the
+midst of his lecture, for an opportunity to catch an insect, and found
+his instructions debarred from access to the intellectual faculties, by
+the memory of a childish frolick, or the desire of a new play-thing.
+
+Those vexations would have recurred less frequently, had not his mamma,
+by entreating at one time that he should be excused from a task as a
+reward for some petty compliance, and withholding him from his book at
+another, to gratify herself or her visitants with his vivacity, shewn
+him that every thing was more pleasing and more important than
+knowledge, and that study was to be endured rather than chosen, and was
+only the business of those hours which pleasure left vacant, or
+discipline usurped.
+
+I thought it my duty to complain, in tender terms, of these frequent
+avocations; but was answered, that rank and fortune might reasonably
+hope for some indulgence; that the retardation of my pupil's progress
+would not be imputed to any negligence or inability of mine; and that
+with the success which satisfied every body else, I might surely satisfy
+myself. I had now done my duty, and without more remonstrances continued
+to inculcate my precepts whenever they could be heard, gained every day
+new influence, and found that by degrees my scholar began to feel the
+quick impulses of curiosity, and the honest ardour of studious ambition.
+
+At length it was resolved to pass a winter in London. The lady had too
+much fondness for her son to live five months without him, and too high
+an opinion of his wit and learning to refuse her vanity the
+gratification of exhibiting him to the publick. I remonstrated against
+too early an acquaintance with cards and company; but, with a soft
+contempt of my ignorance and pedantry, she said, that he had been
+already confined too long to solitary study, and it was now time to shew
+him the world; nothing was more a brand of meanness than bashful
+timidity; gay freedom and elegant assurance were only to be gained by
+mixed conversation, a frequent intercourse with strangers, and a timely
+introduction to splendid assemblies; and she had more than once
+observed, that his forwardness and complaisance began to desert him,
+that he was silent when he had not something of consequence to say,
+blushed whenever he happened to find himself mistaken, and hung down his
+head in the presence of the ladies, without the readiness of reply, and
+activity of officiousness, remarkable in young gentlemen that are bred
+in London.
+
+Again I found resistance hopeless, and again thought it proper to
+comply. We entered the coach, and in four days were placed in the gayest
+and most magnificent region of the town. My pupil, who had for several
+years lived at a remote seat, was immediately dazzled with a thousand
+beams of novelty and shew. His imagination was filled with the perpetual
+tumult of pleasure that passed before him, and it was impossible to
+allure him from the window, or to overpower by any charm of eloquence
+the rattle of coaches, and the sounds which echoed from the doors in the
+neighbourhood. In three days his attention, which he began to regain,
+was disturbed by a rich suit, in which he was equipped for the reception
+of company, and which, having been long accustomed to a plain dress, he
+could not at first survey without ecstacy.
+
+The arrival of the family was now formally notified; every hour of every
+day brought more intimate or more distant acquaintances to the door; and
+my pupil was indiscriminately introduced to all, that he might accustom
+himself to change of faces, and be rid with speed of his rustick
+diffidence. He soon endeared himself to his mother by the speedy
+acquisition or recovery of her darling qualities; his eyes sparkle at a
+numerous assembly, and his heart dances at the mention of a ball. He has
+at once caught the infection of high life, and has no other test of
+principles or actions than the quality of those to whom they are
+ascribed. He begins already to look down on me with superiority, and
+submits to one short lesson in a week, as an act of condescension rather
+than obedience; for he is of opinion, that no tutor is properly
+qualified who cannot speak French; and having formerly learned a few
+familiar phrases from his sister's governess, he is every day soliciting
+his mamma to procure him a foreign footman, that he may grow polite by
+his conversation. I am not yet insulted, but find myself likely to
+become soon a superfluous incumbrance, for my scholar has now no time
+for science, or for virtue; and the lady yesterday declared him so much
+the favourite of every company, that she was afraid he would not have an
+hour in the day to dance and fence.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+EUMATHES.
+
+[Footnote f: Johnson often conversed, as well as wrote, on riches. In
+his conversations on the subject, amidst his often indulged laxity of
+talk, there was ever a deep insight into the human heart. "All the
+arguments," he once with keen satire remarked, "which are brought to
+represent poverty as no evil, shew it to be evidently a great evil. You
+never find people _labouring_ to convince you that you may live happily
+upon a plentiful fortune. So you hear people talking how miserable a
+king must be, and yet they all wish to be in his place." _Boswell_ vol.
+i. p. 422.
+
+When Simonides was asked whether it were better to be wise or rich, he
+gave an answer in favour of wealth. "For," said he, "I always behold the
+wise lingering at the gates of the wealthy." Aristot. Rhet. ii. 18.]
+
+
+
+No. 133. TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 1751.
+
+ _Magna quidem, sacris quae dat praecepta libellis
+ Victrix fortune sapientia. Dicimus autem
+ Hos quoque felices, qui ferre incommoda vitae,
+ Nec jactare jugum, vita didicere magistra._ Juv. Sat. xiii. 19.
+
+ Let Stoicks ethicks' haughty rules advance
+ To combat fortune, and to conquer chance:
+ Yet happy those, though not so learn'd are thought,
+ Whom life instructs, who by experience taught,
+ For new to come from past misfortunes look,
+ Nor shake the yoke, which galls the more 'tis shook. CREECH.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+You have shewn, by the publication of my letter, that you think the
+life of Victoria not wholly unworthy of the notice of a philosopher: I
+shall therefore continue my narrative, without any apology for
+unimportance which you have dignified, or for inaccuracies which you are
+to correct.
+
+When my life appeared to be no longer in danger, and as much of my
+strength was recovered as enabled me to bear the agitation of a coach, I
+was placed at a lodging in a neighbouring village, to which my mother
+dismissed me with a faint embrace, having repeated her command not to
+expose my face too soon to the sun or wind, and told me that with care I
+might perhaps become tolerable again. The prospect of being tolerable
+had very little power to elevate the imagination of one who had so long
+been accustomed to praise and ecstacy; but it was some satisfaction to
+be separated from my mother, who was incessantly ringing the knell of
+departed beauty, and never entered my room without the whine of
+condolence, or the growl of anger. She often wandered over my face, as
+travellers over the ruins of a celebrated city, to note every place
+which had once been remarkable for a happy feature. She condescended to
+visit my retirement, but always left me more melancholy; for after a
+thousand trifling inquiries about my diet, and a minute examination of
+my looks, she generally concluded with a sigh, that I should never more
+be fit to be seen.
+
+At last I was permitted to return home, but found no great improvement
+of my condition; for I was imprisoned in my chamber as a criminal, whose
+appearance would disgrace my friends, and condemn me to be tortured into
+new beauty. Every experiment which the officiousness of folly could
+communicate, or the credulity of ignorance admit, was tried upon me.
+Sometimes I was covered with emollients, by which it was expected that
+all the scars would be filled, and my cheeks plumped up to their former
+smoothness; and sometimes I was punished with artificial excoriations,
+in hopes of gaining new graces with a new skin. The cosmetick science
+was exhausted upon me; but who can repair the ruins of nature? My mother
+was forced to give me rest at last, and abandon me to the fate of a
+fallen toast, whose fortune she considered as a hopeless game, no longer
+worthy of solicitude or attention.
+
+The condition of a young woman who has never thought or heard of any
+other excellence than beauty, and whom the sudden blast of disease
+wrinkles in her bloom, is indeed sufficiently calamitous. She is at once
+deprived of all that gave her eminence or power; of all that elated her
+pride, or animated her activity; all that filled her days with pleasure,
+and her nights with hope; all that gave gladness to the present hour, or
+brightened her prospects of futurity. It is perhaps not in the power of
+a man whose attention has been divided by diversity of pursuits, and who
+has not been accustomed to derive from others much of his happiness, to
+image to himself such helpless destitution, such dismal inanity. Every
+object of pleasing contemplation is at once snatched away, and the soul
+finds every receptacle of ideas empty, or filled only with the memory of
+joys that can return no more. All is gloomy privation, or impotent
+desire; the faculties of anticipation slumber in despondency, or the
+powers of pleasure mutiny for employment.
+
+I was so little able to find entertainment for myself, that I was forced
+in a short time to venture abroad as the solitary savage is driven by
+hunger from his cavern. I entered with all the humility of disgrace into
+assemblies, where I had lately sparkled with gaiety, and towered with
+triumph. I was not wholly without hope, that dejection had
+misrepresented me to myself, and that the remains of my former face
+might yet have some attraction and influence; but the first circle of
+visits convinced me, that my reign was at an end; that life and death
+were no longer in my hands; that I was no more to practise the glance of
+command, or the frown of prohibition; to receive the tribute of sighs
+and praises, or be soothed with the gentle murmurs of amorous timidity.
+My opinion was now unheard, and my proposals were unregarded; the
+narrowness of my knowledge, and the meanness of my sentiments, were
+easily discovered, when the eyes were no longer engaged against the
+judgment; and it was observed, by those who had formerly been charmed
+with my vivacious loquacity, that my understanding was impaired as well
+as my face, and that I was no longer qualified to fill a place in any
+company but a party at cards.
+
+It is scarcely to be imagined how soon the mind sinks to a level with
+the condition. I, who had long considered all who approached me as
+vassals condemned to regulate their pleasures by my eyes, and harass
+their inventions for my entertainment, was in less than three weeks
+reduced to receive a ticket with professions of obligation; to catch
+with eagerness at a compliment; and to watch with all the anxiousness of
+dependance, lest any little civility that was paid me should pass
+unacknowledged.
+
+Though the negligence of the men was not very pleasing when compared
+with vows and adoration, yet it was far more supportable than the
+insolence of my own sex. For the first ten months after my return into
+the world, I never entered a single house in which the memory of my
+downfall was not revived. At one place I was congratulated on my escape
+with life; at another I heard of the benefits of early inoculation; by
+some I have been told in express terms, that I am not yet without my
+charms; others have whispered at my entrance, This is the celebrated
+beauty. One told me of a wash that would smooth the skin; and another
+offered me her chair that I might not front the light. Some soothed me
+with the observation that none can tell how soon my case may be her own;
+and some thought it proper to receive me with mournful tenderness,
+formal condolence, and consolatory blandishments.
+
+Thus was I every day harassed with all the stratagems of well-bred
+malignity; yet insolence was more tolerable than solitude, and I
+therefore persisted to keep my time at the doors of my acquaintance,
+without gratifying them with any appearance of resentment or depression.
+I expected that their exultation would in time vapour away; that the joy
+of their superiority would end with its novelty; and that I should be
+suffered to glide along in my present form among the nameless multitude,
+whom nature never intended to excite envy or admiration, nor enabled to
+delight the eye or inflame the heart.
+
+This was naturally to be expected, and this I began to experience. But
+when I was no longer agitated by the perpetual ardour of resistance, and
+effort of perseverance, I found more sensibly the want of those
+entertainments which had formerly delighted me; the day rose upon me
+without an engagement; and the evening closed in its natural gloom,
+without summoning me to a concert or a ball. None had any care to find
+amusements for me, and I had no power of amusing myself. Idleness
+exposed me to melancholy, and life began to languish in motionless
+indifference.
+
+Misery and shame are nearly allied. It was not without many struggles
+that I prevailed on myself to confess my uneasiness to Euphemia, the
+only friend who had never pained me with comfort or with pity. I at last
+laid my calamities before her, rather to ease my heart, than receive
+assistance. "We must distinguish," said she, "my Victoria, those evils
+which are imposed by Providence, from those to which we ourselves give
+the power of hurting us. Of your calamity, a small part is the
+infliction of Heaven, the rest is little more than the corrosion of idle
+discontent. You have lost that which may indeed sometimes contribute to
+happiness, but to which happiness is by no means inseparably annexed.
+You have lost what the greater number of the human race never have
+possessed; what those on whom it is bestowed for the most part possess
+in vain; and what you, while it was yours, knew not how to use: you have
+only lost early what the laws of nature forbid you to keep long, and
+have lost it while your mind is yet flexible, and while you have time to
+substitute more valuable and more durable excellencies. Consider
+yourself, my Victoria, as a being born to know, to reason, and to act;
+rise at once from your dream of melancholy to wisdom and to piety; you
+will find that there are other charms than those of beauty, and other
+joys than the praise of fools."
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+VICTORIA.
+
+
+
+No. 134. SATURDAY, JUNE 29, 1751.
+
+ _Quis scit an adjiciant hodiernae crastina summae
+ Tempora Dii superi?_ HOR. Lib. iv. Ode vii. 16.
+
+ Who knows if Heav'n, with ever-bounteous pow'r,
+ Shall add to-morrow to the present hour? FRANCIS.
+
+I sat yesterday morning employed in deliberating on which, among the
+various subjects that occurred to my imagination, I should bestow the
+paper of to-day. After a short effort of meditation by which nothing was
+determined, I grew every moment more irresolute, my ideas wandered from
+the first intention, and I rather wished to think, than thought upon any
+settled subject; till at last I was awakened from this dream of study by
+a summons from the press; the time was now come for which I had been
+thus negligently purposing to provide, and, however dubious or sluggish,
+I was now necessitated to write.
+
+Though to a writer whose design is so comprehensive and miscellaneous,
+that he may accommodate himself with a topick from every scene of life,
+or view of nature, it is no great aggravation of his task to be obliged
+to a sudden composition; yet I could not forbear to reproach myself for
+having so long neglected what was unavoidably to be done, and of which
+every moment's idleness increased the difficulty. There was however some
+pleasure in reflecting that I, who had only trifled till diligence was
+necessary, might still congratulate myself upon my superiority to
+multitudes, who have trifled till diligence is vain; who can by no
+degree of activity or resolution recover the opportunities which have
+slipped away; and who are condemned by their own carelessness to
+hopeless calamity and barren sorrow.
+
+The folly of allowing ourselves to delay what we know cannot be finally
+escaped, is one of the general weaknesses, which, in spite of the
+instruction of moralists, and the remonstrances of reason, prevail to a
+greater or less degree in every mind; even they who most steadily
+withstand it, find it, if not the most violent, the most pertinacious of
+their passions, always renewing its attacks, and though often
+vanquished, never destroyed.
+
+It is indeed natural to have particular regard to the time present, and
+to be most solicitous for that which is by its nearness enabled to make
+the strongest impressions. When therefore any sharp pain is to be
+suffered, or any formidable danger to be incurred, we can scarcely
+exempt ourselves wholly from the seducements of imagination; we readily
+believe that another day will bring some support or advantage which we
+now want; and are easily persuaded, that the moment of necessity which
+we desire never to arrive, is at a great distance from us.
+
+Thus life is languished away in the gloom of anxiety, and consumed in
+collecting resolutions which the next morning dissipates; in forming
+purposes which we scarcely hope to keep, and reconciling ourselves to
+our own cowardice by excuses, which, while we admit them, we know to be
+absurd. Our firmness is by the continual contemplation of misery, hourly
+impaired; every submission to our fear enlarges its dominion; we not
+only waste that time in which the evil we dread might have been suffered
+and surmounted, but even where procrastination produces no absolute
+increase of our difficulties, make them less superable to ourselves by
+habitual terrours. When evils cannot be avoided, it is wise to contract
+the interval of expectation; to meet the mischiefs which will overtake
+us if we fly; and suffer only their real malignity, without the
+conflicts of doubt, and anguish of anticipation.
+
+To act is far easier than to suffer; yet we every day see the progress
+of life retarded by the _vis inertiae_, the mere repugnance to motion,
+and find multitudes repining at the want of that which nothing but
+idleness hinders them from enjoying. The case of Tantalus, in the region
+of poetick punishment, was somewhat to be pitied, because the fruits
+that hung about him retired from his hand; but what tenderness can be
+claimed by those who, though perhaps they suffer the pains of Tantalus,
+will never lift their hands for their own relief?
+
+There is nothing more common among this torpid generation than murmurs
+and complaints; murmurs at uneasiness which only vacancy and suspicion
+expose them to feel, and complaints of distresses which it is in their
+own power to remove. Laziness is commonly associated with timidity.
+Either fear originally prohibits endeavours by infusing despair of
+success; or the frequent failure of irresolute struggles, and the
+constant desire of avoiding labour, impress by degrees false terrours on
+the mind. But fear, whether natural or acquired, when once it has full
+possession of the fancy, never fails to employ it upon visions of
+calamity, such as, if they are not dissipated by useful employment, will
+soon overcast it with horrours, and embitter life not only with those
+miseries by which all earthly beings are really more or less tormented,
+but with those which do not yet exist, and which can only be discerned
+by the perspicacity of cowardice.
+
+Among all who sacrifice future advantage to present inclination,
+scarcely any gain so little as those that suffer themselves to freeze in
+idleness. Others are corrupted by some enjoyment of more or less power
+to gratify the passions; but to neglect our duties, merely to avoid the
+labour of performing them, a labour which is always punctually rewarded,
+is surely to sink under weak temptations. Idleness never can secure
+tranquillity; the call of reason and of conscience will pierce the
+closest pavilion of the sluggard, and though it may not have force to
+drive him from his down, will be loud enough to hinder him from sleep.
+Those moments which he cannot resolve to make useful, by devoting them
+to the great business of his being, will still be usurped by powers that
+will not leave them to his disposal; remorse and vexation will seize
+upon them, and forbid him to enjoy what he is so desirous to
+appropriate.
+
+There are other causes of inactivity incident to more active faculties
+and more acute discernment. He to whom many objects of pursuit arise at
+the same time, will frequently hesitate between different desires, till
+a rival has precluded him, or change his course as new attractions
+prevail, and harass himself without advancing. He who sees different
+ways to the same end, will, unless he watches carefully over his own
+conduct, lay out too much of his attention upon the comparison of
+probabilities, and the adjustment of expedients, and pause in the choice
+of his road till some accident intercepts his journey. He whose
+penetration extends to remote consequences, and who, whenever he applies
+his attention to any design, discovers new prospects of advantage, and
+possibilities of improvement, will not easily be persuaded that his
+project is ripe for execution; but will superadd one contrivance to
+another, endeavour to unite various purposes in one operation, multiply
+complications, and refine niceties, till he is entangled in his own
+scheme, and bewildered in the perplexity of various intentions. He that
+resolves to unite all the beauties of situation in a new purchase, must
+waste his life in roving to no purpose from province to province. He
+that hopes in the same house to obtain every convenience, may draw plans
+and study Palladio, but will never lay a stone. He will attempt a
+treatise on some important subject, and amass materials, consult
+authors, and study all the dependant and collateral parts of learning,
+but never conclude himself qualified to write. He that has abilities to
+conceive perfection, will not easily be content without it; and since
+perfection cannot be reached, will lose the opportunity of doing well in
+the vain hope of unattainable excellence.
+
+The certainty that life cannot be long, and the probability that it will
+be much shorter than nature allows, ought to awaken every man to the
+active prosecution of whatever he is desirous to perform. It is true,
+that no diligence can ascertain success; death may intercept the
+swiftest career; but he who is cut off in the execution of an honest
+undertaking, has at least the honour of falling in his rank, and has
+fought the battle though he missed the victory.
+
+
+
+No. 135. TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1751.
+
+ Coelum, non animum, mutant. HOR. Lib. i. Ep. xi. 27.
+
+ Place may be chang'd; but who can change his mind?
+
+It is impossible to take a view on any side, or observe any of the
+various classes that form the great community of the world, without
+discovering the influence of example; and admitting with new conviction
+the observation of Aristotle, that _man is an imitative being_. The
+greater, far the greater number, follow the track which others have
+beaten, without any curiosity after new discoveries, or ambition of
+trusting themselves to their own conduct. And, of those who break the
+ranks and disorder the uniformity of the march, most return in a short
+time from their deviation, and prefer the equal and steady satisfaction
+of security before the frolicks of caprice and the honours of adventure.
+
+In questions difficult or dangerous it is indeed natural to repose upon
+authority, and, when fear happens to predominate, upon the authority of
+those whom we do not in general think wiser than ourselves. Very few
+have abilities requisite for the discovery of abstruse truth; and of
+those few some want leisure, and some resolution. But it is not so easy
+to find the reason of the universal submission to precedent where every
+man might safely judge for himself; where no irreparable loss can be
+hazarded, nor any mischief of long continuance incurred. Vanity might be
+expected to operate where the more powerful passions are not awakened;
+the mere pleasure of acknowledging no superior might produce slight
+singularities, or the hope of gaining some new degree of happiness
+awaken the mind to invention or experiment.
+
+If in any case the shackles of prescription could be wholly shaken off,
+and the imagination left to act without control, on what occasion should
+it be expected, but in the selection of lawful pleasure? Pleasure, of
+which the essence is choice; which compulsion dissociates from every
+thing to which nature has united it; and which owes not only its vigour
+but its being to the smiles of liberty. Yet we see that the senses, as
+well as the reason, are regulated by credulity; and that most will feel,
+or say that they feel, the gratifications which others have taught them
+to expect.
+
+At this time of universal migration, when almost every one, considerable
+enough to attract regard, has retired, or is preparing with all the
+earnestness of distress to retire, into the country; when nothing is to
+be heard but the hopes of speedy departure, or the complaints of
+involuntary delay; I have often been tempted to inquire what happiness
+is to be gained, or what inconvenience to be avoided, by this stated
+recession? Of the birds of passage, some follow the summer and some the
+winter, because they live upon sustenance which only summer or winter
+can supply; but of the annual flight of human rovers it is much harder
+to assign the reason, because they do not appear either to find or seek
+any thing which is not equally afforded by the town and country.
+
+I believe that many of these fugitives may have heard of men whose
+continual wish was for the quiet of retirement, who watched every
+opportunity to steal away from observation, to forsake the crowd, and
+delight themselves with _the society of solitude_. There is indeed
+scarcely any writer who has not celebrated the happiness of rural
+privacy, and delighted himself and his reader with the melody of birds,
+the whisper of groves, and the murmur of rivulets; nor any man eminent
+for extent of capacity, or greatness of exploits, that has not left
+behind him some memorials of lonely wisdom, and silent dignity.
+
+But almost all absurdity of conduct arises from the imitation of those
+whom we cannot resemble. Those who thus testified their weariness of
+tumult and hurry, and hasted with so much eagerness to the leisure of
+retreat, were either men overwhelmed with the pressure of difficult
+employments, harassed with importunities, and distracted with
+multiplicity; or men wholly engrossed by speculative sciences, who
+having no other end of life but to learn and teach, found their searches
+interrupted by the common commerce of civility, and their reasonings
+disjointed by frequent interruptions. Such men might reasonably fly to
+that ease and convenience which their condition allowed them to find
+only in the country. The statesman who devoted the greater part of his
+time to the publick, was desirous of keeping the remainder in his own
+power. The general, ruffled with dangers, wearied with labours, and
+stunned with acclamations, gladly snatched an interval of silence and
+relaxation. The naturalist was unhappy where the works of Providence
+were not always before him. The reasoner could adjust his systems only
+where his mind was free from the intrusion of outward objects.
+
+Such examples of solitude very few of those who are now hastening from
+the town, have any pretensions to plead in their own justification,
+since they cannot pretend either weariness of labour, or desire of
+knowledge. They purpose nothing more than to quit one scene of idleness
+for another, and after having trifled in publick, to sleep in secrecy.
+The utmost that they can hope to gain is the change of ridiculousness to
+obscurity, and the privilege of having fewer witnesses to a life of
+folly. He who is not sufficiently important to be disturbed in his
+pursuits, but spends all his hours according to his own inclination, and
+has more hours than his mental faculties enable him to fill either with
+enjoyment or desires, can have nothing to demand of shades and valleys.
+As bravery is said to be a panoply, insignificancy is always a shelter.
+
+There are, however, pleasures and advantages in a rural situation, which
+are not confined to philosophers and heroes. The freshness of the air,
+the verdure of the woods, the paint of the meadows, and the unexhausted
+variety which summer scatters upon the earth, may easily give delight to
+an unlearned spectator. It is not necessary that he who looks with
+pleasure on the colours of a flower should study the principles of
+vegetation, or that the Ptolemaick and Copernican system should be
+compared before the light of the sun can gladden, or its warmth
+invigorate. Novelty is itself a source of gratification; and Milton
+justly observes, that to him who has been long pent up in cities, no
+rural object can be presented, which will not delight or refresh some of
+his senses.
+
+Yet even these easy pleasures are missed by the greater part of those
+who waste their summer in the country. Should any man pursue his
+acquaintances to their retreats, he would find few of them listening to
+Philomel, loitering in woods, or plucking daisies, catching the healthy
+gale of the morning, or watching the gentle coruscations of declining
+day. Some will be discovered at a window by the road side, rejoicing
+when a new cloud of dust gathers towards them, as at the approach of a
+momentary supply of conversation, and a short relief from the
+tediousness of unideal vacancy. Others are placed in the adjacent
+villages, where they look only upon houses as in the rest of the year,
+with no change of objects but what a remove to any new street in London
+might have given them. The same set of acquaintances still settle
+together, and the form of life is not otherwise diversified than by
+doing the same things in a different place. They pay and receive visits
+in the usual form, they frequent the walks in the morning, they deal
+cards at night, they attend to the same tattle, and dance with the same
+partners; nor can they, at their return to their former habitation,
+congratulate themselves on any other advantage, than that they have
+passed their time like others of the same rank; and have the same right
+to talk of the happiness and beauty of the country, of happiness which
+they never felt, and beauty which they never regarded.
+
+To be able to procure its own entertainments, and to subsist upon its
+own stock, is not the prerogative of every mind. There are indeed
+understandings so fertile and comprehensive, that they can always feed
+reflection with new supplies, and suffer nothing from the preclusion of
+adventitious amusements; as some cities have within their own walls
+enclosed ground enough to feed their inhabitants in a siege. But others
+live only from day to day, and must be constantly enabled, by foreign
+supplies, to keep out the encroachments of languor and stupidity. Such
+could not indeed be blamed for hovering within reach of their usual
+pleasure, more than any other animal for not quitting its native
+element, were not their faculties contracted by their own fault. But let
+not those who go into the country, merely because they dare not be left
+alone at home, boast their love of nature, or their qualifications for
+solitude; nor pretend that they receive instantaneous infusions of
+wisdom from the Dryads, and are able, when they leave smoke and noise
+behind, to act, or think, or reason for themselves.
+
+
+
+No. 136. SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Echthrus gar moi keimos, omos aidao pulusin,
+ Os ch eteron men keuthei eni phresin, allo de bazei.]
+ HOMER, [Greek: I'.] 313.
+
+ Who dares think one thing, and another tell,
+ My heart detests him as the gates of Hell. POPE.
+
+The regard which they whose abilities are employed in the works of
+imagination claim from the rest of mankind, arises in a great measure
+from their influence on futurity. Rank may be conferred by princes, and
+wealth bequeathed by misers or by robbers; but the honours of a lasting
+name, and the veneration of distant ages, only the sons of learning have
+the power of bestowing. While therefore it continues one of the
+characteristicks of rational nature to decline oblivion, authors never
+can be wholly overlooked in the search after happiness, nor become
+contemptible but by their own fault.
+
+The man who considers himself as constituted the ultimate judge of
+disputable characters, and entrusted with the distribution of the last
+terrestrial rewards of merit, ought to summon all his fortitude to the
+support of his integrity, and resolve to discharge an office of such
+dignity with the most vigilant caution and scrupulous justice. To
+deliver examples to posterity, and to regulate the opinion of future
+times, is no slight or trivial undertaking; nor is it easy to commit
+more atrocious treason against the great republick of humanity, than by
+falsifying its records and misguiding its decrees.
+
+To scatter praise or blame without regard to justice, is to destroy the
+distinction of good and evil. Many have no other test of actions than
+general opinion; and all are so far influenced by a sense of reputation,
+that they are often restrained by fear of reproach, and excited by hope
+of honour, when other principles have lost their power; nor can any
+species of prostitution promote general depravity more than that which
+destroys the force of praise, by shewing that it may be acquired without
+deserving it, and which, by setting free the active and ambitious from
+the dread of infamy, lets loose the rapacity of power, and weakens the
+only authority by which greatness is controlled.
+
+Praise, like gold and diamonds, owes its value only to its scarcity. It
+becomes cheap as it becomes vulgar, and will no longer raise
+expectation, or animate enterprise. It is therefore not only necessary,
+that wickedness, even when it is not safe to censure it, be denied
+applause, but that goodness be commended only in proportion to its
+degree; and that the garlands, due to the great benefactors of mankind,
+be not suffered to fade upon the brow of him who can boast only petty
+services and easy virtues.
+
+Had these maxims been universally received, how much would have been
+added to the task of dedication, the work on which all the power of
+modern wit has been exhausted. How few of these initial panegyricks had
+appeared, if the author had been obliged first to find a man of virtue,
+then to distinguish the distinct species and degree of his desert, and
+at last to pay him only the honours which he might justly claim. It is
+much easier to learn the name of the last man whom chance has exalted to
+wealth and power, to obtain by the intervention of some of his
+domesticks the privilege of addressing him, or, in confidence of the
+general acceptance of flattery, to venture on an address without any
+previous solicitation; and after having heaped upon him all the virtues
+to which philosophy had assigned a name, inform him how much more might
+be truly said, did not the fear of giving pain to his modesty repress
+the raptures of wonder and the zeal of veneration.
+
+Nothing has so much degraded literature from its natural rank, as the
+practice of indecent and promiscuous dedication; for what credit can he
+expect who professes himself the hireling of vanity, however profligate,
+and without shame or scruple, celebrates the worthless, dignifies the
+mean, and gives to the corrupt, licentious, and oppressive, the
+ornaments which ought only to add grace to truth, and loveliness to
+innocence? Every other kind of adulation, however shameful, however
+mischievous, is less detestable than the crime of counterfeiting
+characters, and fixing the stamp of literary sanction upon the dross and
+refuse of the world.
+
+Yet I would not overwhelm the authors with the whole load of infamy, of
+which part, perhaps the greater part, ought to fall upon their patrons.
+If he that hires a bravo, partakes the guilt of murder, why should he
+who bribes a flatterer, hope to be exempted from the shame of falsehood?
+The unhappy dedicator is seldom without some motives which obstruct,
+though not destroy, the liberty of choice; he is oppressed by miseries
+which he hopes to relieve, or inflamed by ambition which he expects to
+gratify. But the patron has no incitements equally violent; he can
+receive only a short gratification, with which nothing but stupidity
+could dispose him to be pleased. The real satisfaction which praise can
+afford is by repeating aloud the whispers of conscience, and by shewing
+us that we have not endeavoured to deserve well in vain. Every other
+encomium is, to an intelligent mind, satire and reproach; the
+celebration of those virtues which we feel ourselves to want, can only
+impress a quicker sense of our own defects, and shew that we have not
+yet satisfied the expectations of the world, by forcing us to observe
+how much fiction must contribute to the completion of our character.
+
+Yet sometimes the patron may claim indulgence; for it does not always
+happen, that the encomiast has been much encouraged to his attempt. Many
+a hapless author, when his book, and perhaps his dedication, was ready
+for the press, has waited long before any one would pay the price of
+prostitution, or consent to hear the praises destined to insure his name
+against the casualties of time; and many a complaint has been vented
+against the decline of learning, and neglect of genius, when either
+parsimonious prudence has declined expense, or honest indignation
+rejected falsehood. But if at last, after long inquiry and innumerable
+disappointments, he find a lord willing to hear of his own eloquence and
+taste, a statesman desirous of knowing how a friendly historian will
+represent his conduct, or a lady delighted to leave to the world some
+memorial of her wit and beauty, such weakness cannot be censured as an
+instance of enormous depravity. The wisest man may, by a diligent
+solicitor, be surprised in the hour of weakness, and persuaded to solace
+vexation, or invigorate hope, with the musick of flattery.
+
+To censure all dedications as adulatory and servile, would discover
+rather envy than justice. Praise is the tribute of merit, and he that
+has incontestably distinguished himself by any publick performance, has
+a right to all the honours which the publick can bestow. To men thus
+raised above the rest of the community, there is no need that the book
+or its author should have any particular relation; that the patron is
+known to deserve respect, is sufficient to vindicate him that pays it.
+To the same regard from particular persons, private virtue and less
+conspicuous excellence may be sometimes entitled. An author may with
+great propriety inscribe his work to him by whose encouragement it was
+undertaken, or by whose liberality he has been enabled to prosecute it,
+and he may justly rejoice in his own fortitude that dares to rescue
+merit from obscurity.
+
+ _Acribus exemplis videor te claudere: misce
+ Ergo aliquid nostris de moribus.--_
+
+ Thus much I will indulge thee for thy ease,
+ And mingle something of our times to please. Dryden, jun.
+
+I know not whether greater relaxation may not he indulged, and whether
+hope as well as gratitude may not unblamably produce a dedication; but
+let the writer who pours out his praises only to propitiate power, or
+attract the attention of greatness, be cautious lest his desire betray
+him to exuberant eulogies. We are naturally more apt to please ourselves
+with the future than the past, and while we luxuriate in expectation,
+may be easily persuaded to purchase what we yet rate, only by
+imagination, at a higher price than experience will warrant.
+
+But no private views of personal regard can discharge any man from his
+general obligations to virtue and to truth. It may happen in the various
+combinations of life, that a good man may receive favours from one, who,
+notwithstanding his accidental beneficence, cannot be justly proposed to
+the imitation of others, and whom therefore he must find some other way
+of rewarding than by public celebrations. Self-love has indeed many
+powers of seducement; but it surely ought not to exalt any individual to
+equality with the collective body of mankind, or persuade him that a
+benefit conferred on him is equivalent to every other virtue. Yet many,
+upon false principles of gratitude, have ventured to extol wretches,
+whom all but their dependents numbered among the reproaches of the
+species, and whom they would likewise have beheld with the same scorn,
+had they not been hired to dishonest approbation.
+
+To encourage merit with praise is the great business of literature; but
+praise must lose its influence, by unjust or negligent distribution; and
+he that impairs its value may be charged with misapplication of the
+power that genius puts into his hands, and with squandering on guilt the
+recompense of virtue.
+
+
+
+No. 137. TUESDAY, JULY 9, 1751.
+
+ _Dum vitant stulti vitia, in contraria currunt_.
+ Hor. Lib. i. Sat. ii. 24.
+
+ --Whilst fools one vice condemn,
+ They run into the opposite extreme. CREECH.
+
+That wonder is the effect of ignorance, has been often observed. The
+awful stillness of attention, with which the mind is overspread at the
+first view of an unexpected effect, ceases when we have leisure to
+disentangle complications and investigate causes. Wonder is a pause of
+reason, a sudden cessation of the mental progress, which lasts only
+while the understanding is fixed upon some single idea, and is at an end
+when it recovers force enough to divide the object into its parts, or
+mark the intermediate gradations from the first agent to the last
+consequence.
+
+It may be remarked with equal truth, that ignorance is often the effect
+of wonder. It is common for those who have never accustomed themselves
+to the labour of inquiry, nor invigorated their confidence by conquests
+over difficulty, to sleep in the gloomy quiescence of astonishment,
+without any effort to animate inquiry, or dispel obscurity. What they
+cannot immediately conceive, they consider as too high to be reached, or
+too extensive to be comprehended; they therefore content themselves with
+the gaze of folly, forbear to attempt what they have no hopes of
+performing, and resign the pleasure of rational contemplation to more
+pertinacious study, or more active faculties.
+
+Among the productions of mechanick art, many are of a form so different
+from that of their first materials, and many consist of parts so
+numerous and so nicely adapted to each other, that it is not possible to
+view them without amazement. But when we enter the shops of artificers,
+observe the various tools by which every operation is facilitated, and
+trace the progress of a manufacture through the different hands, that,
+in succession to each other, contribute to its perfection, we soon
+discover that every single man has an easy task, and that the extremes,
+however remote, of natural rudeness and artificial elegance, are joined
+by a regular concatenation of effects, of which every one is introduced
+by that which precedes it, and equally introduces that which is to
+follow.
+
+The same is the state of intellectual and manual performances. Long
+calculations or complex diagrams affright the timorous and unexperienced
+from a second view; but if we have skill sufficient to analyze them into
+simple principles, it will be discovered that our fear was groundless.
+_Divide and conquer_, is a principle equally just in science as in
+policy. Complication is a species of confederacy, which, while it
+continues united, bids defiance to the most active and vigorous
+intellect; but of which every member is separately weak, and which may
+therefore be quickly subdued, if it can once be broken.
+
+The chief art of learning, as Locke has observed, is to attempt but
+little at a time. The widest excursions of the mind are made by short
+flights frequently repeated; the most lofty fabricks of science are
+formed by the continued accumulation of single propositions.
+
+It often happens, whatever be the cause, that impatience of labour, or
+dread of miscarriage, seizes those who are most distinguished for
+quickness of apprehension; and that they who might with greatest reason
+promise themselves victory, are least willing to hazard the encounter.
+This diffidence, where the attention is not laid asleep by laziness, or
+dissipated by pleasures, can arise only from confused and general views,
+such as negligence snatches in haste, or from the disappointment of the
+first hopes formed by arrogance without reflection. To expect that the
+intricacies of science will be pierced by a careless glance, or the
+eminences of fame ascended without labour, is to expect a particular
+privilege, a power denied to the rest of mankind; but to suppose that
+the maze is inscrutable to diligence, or the heights inaccessible to
+perseverance, is to submit tamely to the tyranny of fancy, and enchain
+the mind in voluntary shackles.
+
+It is the proper ambition of the heroes in literature to enlarge the
+boundaries of knowledge by discovering and conquering new regions of the
+intellectual world. To the success of such undertakings perhaps some
+degree of fortuitous happiness is necessary, which no man can promise or
+procure to himself; and therefore doubt and irresolution may be forgiven
+in him that ventures into the unexplored abysses of truth, and attempts
+to find his way through the fluctuations of uncertainty, and the
+conflicts of contradiction. But when nothing more is required, than to
+pursue a path already beaten, and to trample obstacles which others have
+demolished, why should any man so much distrust his own intellect as to
+imagine himself unequal to the attempt?
+
+It were to be wished that they who devote their lives to study would at
+once believe nothing too great for their attainment, and consider
+nothing as too little for their regard; that they would extend their
+notice alike to science and to life, and unite some knowledge of the
+present world to their acquaintance with past ages and remote events.
+
+Nothing has so much exposed men of learning to contempt and ridicule, as
+their ignorance of things which are known to all but themselves. Those
+who have been taught to consider the institutions of the schools, as
+giving the last perfection to human abilities, are surprised to see men
+wrinkled with study, yet wanting to be instructed in the minute
+circumstances of propriety, or the necessary forms of daily transaction;
+and quickly shake off their reverence for modes of education, which they
+find to produce no ability above the rest of mankind.
+
+"Books," says Bacon, "can never teach the use of books." The student
+must learn by commerce with mankind to reduce his speculations to
+practice, and accommodate his knowledge to the purposes of life.
+
+It is too common for those who have been bred to scholastick
+professions, and passed much of their time in academies where nothing
+but learning confers honours, to disregard every other qualification,
+and to imagine that they shall find mankind ready to pay homage to their
+knowledge, and to crowd about them for instruction. They therefore step
+out from their cells into the open world with all the confidence of
+authority and dignity of importance; they look round about them at once
+with ignorance and scorn on a race of beings to whom they are equally
+unknown and equally contemptible, but whose manners they must imitate,
+and with whose opinions they must comply, if they desire to pass their
+time happily among them.
+
+To lessen that disdain with which scholars are inclined to look on the
+common business of the world, and the unwillingness with which they
+condescend to learn what is not to be found in any system of philosophy,
+it may be necessary to consider that though admiration is excited by
+abstruse researches and remote discoveries, yet pleasure is not given,
+nor affection conciliated, but by softer accomplishments, and qualities
+more easily communicable to those about us. He that can only converse
+upon questions, about which only a small part of mankind has knowledge
+sufficient to make them curious, must lose his days in unsocial silence,
+and live in the crowd of life without a companion. He that can only be
+useful on great occasions, may die without exerting his abilities, and
+stand a helpless spectator of a thousand vexations which fret away
+happiness, and which nothing is required to remove but a little
+dexterity of conduct and readiness of expedients.
+
+No degree of knowledge attainable by man is able to set him above the
+want of hourly assistance, or to extinguish the desire of fond
+endearments, and tender officiousness; and therefore, no one should
+think it unnecessary to learn those arts by which friendship may be
+gained. Kindness is preserved by a constant reciprocation of benefits or
+interchange of pleasures; but such benefits only can be bestowed, as
+others are capable to receive, and such pleasures only imparted, as
+others are qualified to enjoy.
+
+By this descent from the pinnacles of art no honour will be lost; for
+the condescensions of learning are always overpaid by gratitude. An
+elevated genius employed in little things, appears, to use the simile of
+Longinus, like the sun in his evening declination: he remits his
+splendour but retains his magnitude, and pleases more though he dazzles
+less.
+
+
+
+No. 138. SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1751.
+
+ _O tantum libeat mecum tibi sordida rura,
+ Atque humiles habitare casas, et figere cervos_. VIRG. EC. ii 28.
+
+ With me retire, and leave the pomp of courts
+ For humble cottages and rural sports.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Though the contempt with which you have treated the annual migrations of
+the gay and busy part of mankind is justified by daily observation;
+since most of those who leave the town, neither vary their
+entertainments nor enlarge their notions; yet I suppose you do not
+intend to represent the practice itself as ridiculous, or to declare
+that he whose condition puts the distribution of his time into his own
+power may not properly divide it between the town and country.
+
+That the country, and only the country, displays the inexhaustible
+varieties of nature, and supplies the philosophical mind with matter for
+admiration and inquiry, never was denied; but my curiosity is very
+little attracted by the colour of a flower, the anatomy of an insect, or
+the structure of a nest; I am generally employed upon human manners, and
+therefore fill up the months of rural leisure with remarks on those who
+live within the circle of my notice. If writers would more frequently
+visit those regions of negligence and liberty, they might diversify
+their representations, and multiply their images, for in the country are
+original characters chiefly to be found. In cities, and yet more in
+courts, the minute discriminations which distinguish one from another
+are for the most part effaced, the peculiarities of temper and opinion
+are gradually worn away by promiscuous converse, as angular bodies and
+uneven surfaces lose their points and asperities by frequent attrition
+against one another, and approach by degrees to uniform rotundity. The
+prevalence of fashion, the influence of example, the desire of applause,
+and the dread of censure, obstruct the natural tendencies of the mind,
+and check the fancy in its first efforts to break forth into experiments
+of caprice.
+
+Few inclinations are so strong as to grow up into habits, when they must
+struggle with the constant opposition of settled forms and established
+customs. But in the country every man is a separate and independent
+being: solitude flatters irregularity with hopes of secrecy; and wealth,
+removed from the mortification of comparison, and the awe of equality,
+swells into contemptuous confidence, and sets blame and laughter at
+defiance; the impulses of nature act unrestrained, and the disposition
+dares to shew itself in its true form, without any disguise of
+hypocrisy, or decorations of elegance. Every one indulges the full
+enjoyment of his own choice, and talks and lives with no other view than
+to please himself, without inquiring how far he deviates from the
+general practice, or considering others as entitled to any account of
+his sentiments or actions. If he builds or demolishes, opens or
+encloses, deluges or drains, it is not his care what may be the opinion
+of those who are skilled in perspective or architecture, it is
+sufficient that he has no landlord to controul him, and that none has
+any right to examine in what projects the lord of the manour spends his
+own money on his own grounds.
+
+For this reason it is not very common to want subjects for rural
+conversation. Almost every man is daily doing something which produces
+merriment, wonder, or resentment, among his neighbours. This utter
+exemption from restraint leaves every anomalous quality to operate in
+its full extent, and suffers the natural character to diffuse itself to
+every part of life. The pride which, under the check of publick
+observation, would have been only vented among servants and domesticks,
+becomes in a country baronet the torment of a province, and instead of
+terminating in the destruction of China-ware and glasses, ruins tenants,
+dispossesses cottagers, and harasses villages with actions of trespass
+and bills of indictment.
+
+It frequently happens that, even without violent passions, or enormous
+corruption, the freedom and laxity of a rustick life produces remarkable
+particularities of conduct or manner. In the province where I now
+reside, we have one lady eminent for wearing a gown always of the same
+cut and colour; another for shaking hands with those that visit her; and
+a third for unshaken resolution never to let tea or coffee enter her
+house.
+
+But of all the female characters which this place affords, I have found
+none so worthy of attention as that of Mrs. Busy, a widow, who lost her
+husband in her thirtieth year, and has since passed her time at the
+manour-house in the government of her children, and the management of
+the estate.
+
+Mrs. Busy was married at eighteen from a boarding-school, where she had
+passed her time like other young ladies, in needle-work, with a few
+intervals of dancing and reading. When she became a bride she spent one
+winter with her husband in town, where, having no idea of any
+conversation beyond the formalities of a visit, she found nothing to
+engage her passions: and when she had been one night at court, and two
+at an opera, and seen the Monument, the Tombs, and the Tower, she
+concluded that London had nothing more to shew, and wondered that when
+women had once seen the world, they could not be content to stay at
+home. She therefore went willingly to the ancient seat, and for some
+years studied housewifery under Mr. Busy's mother, with so much
+assiduity, that the old lady, when she died, bequeathed her a
+caudle-cup, a soup-dish, two beakers, and a chest of table-linen spun
+by herself.
+
+Mr. Busy, finding the economical qualities of his lady, resigned his
+affairs wholly into her hands, and devoted his life to his pointers and
+his hounds. He never visited his estates but to destroy the partridges
+or foxes; and often committed such devastations in the rage of pleasure,
+that some of his tenants refused to hold their lands at the usual rent.
+Their landlady persuaded them to be satisfied, and entreated her husband
+to dismiss his dogs, with many exact calculations of the ale drunk by
+his companions, and corn consumed by the horses, and remonstrances
+against the insolence of the huntsman, and the frauds of the groom. The
+huntsman was too necessary to his happiness to be discarded; and he had
+still continued to ravage his own estate, had he not caught a cold and a
+fever by shooting mallards in the fens. His fever was followed by a
+consumption, which in a few months brought him to the grave.
+
+Mrs. Busy was too much an economist to feel either joy or sorrow at his
+death. She received the compliments and consolations of her neighbours
+in a dark room, out of which she stole privately every night and morning
+to see the cows milked; and after a few days declared that she thought a
+widow might employ herself better than in nursing grief; and that, for
+her part, she was resolved that the fortunes of her children should not
+be impaired by her neglect.
+
+She therefore immediately applied herself to the reformation of abuses.
+She gave away the dogs, discharged the servants of the kennel and
+stable, and sent the horses to the next fair, but rated at so high a
+price that they returned unsold. She was resolved to have nothing idle
+about her, and ordered them to be employed in common drudgery. They lost
+their sleekness and grace, and were soon purchased at half the value.
+
+She soon disencumbered herself from her weeds, and put on a riding-hood,
+a coarse apron, and short petticoats, and has turned a large manour into
+a farm, of which she takes the management wholly upon herself. She rises
+before the sun to order the horses to their gears, and sees them well
+rubbed down at their return from work; she attends the dairy morning and
+evening, and watches when a calf falls that it may be carefully nursed;
+she walks out among the sheep at noon, counts the lambs, and observes
+the fences, and, where she finds a gap, stops it with a bush till it can
+be better mended. In harvest she rides a-field in the waggon, and is
+very liberal of her ale from a wooden bottle. At her leisure hours she
+looks goose eggs, airs the wool-room, and turns the cheese.
+
+When respect or curiosity brings visitants to her house, she entertains
+them with prognosticks of a scarcity of wheat, or a rot among the sheep,
+and always thinks herself privileged to dismiss them, when she is to see
+the hogs fed, or to count her poultry on the roost.
+
+The only things neglected about her are her children, whom she has
+taught nothing but the lowest household duties. In my last visit I met
+Miss Busy carrying grains to a sick cow, and was entertained with the
+accomplishments of her eldest son, a youth of such early maturity, that
+though he is only sixteen, she can trust him to sell corn in the market.
+Her younger daughter, who is eminent for her beauty, though somewhat
+tanned in making hay, was busy in pouring out ale to the ploughmen, that
+every one might have an equal share.
+
+I could not but look with pity on this young family, doomed by the
+absurd prudence of their mother to ignorance and meanness: but when I
+recommended a more elegant education, was answered, that she never saw
+bookish or finical people grow rich, and that she was good for nothing
+herself till she had forgotten the nicety of the boarding-school.
+
+I am, Yours, &c.
+
+BUCOLUS.
+
+
+
+No. 139. TUESDAY, JULY 16, 1751
+
+ --_Sit quod vis simplex duntanat et unum_. Hor. Art. Poet. 23.
+
+ Let ev'ry piece be simple and be one.
+
+It is required by Aristotle to the perfection of a tragedy, and is
+equally necessary to every other species of regular composition, that it
+should have a beginning, a middle, and an end. "The beginning," says he,
+"is that which hath nothing necessarily previous, but to which that
+which follows is naturally consequent; the end, on the contrary, is that
+which by necessity, or, at least, according to the common course of
+things, succeeds something else, but which implies nothing consequent to
+itself; the middle is connected on one side to something that naturally
+goes before, and on the other to something that naturally follows it."
+
+Such is the rule laid down by this great critick, for the disposition of
+the different parts of a well-constituted fable. It must begin where it
+may be made intelligible without introduction; and end where the mind is
+left in repose, without expectation of any further event. The
+intermediate passages must join the last effect to the first cause, by a
+regular and unbroken concatenation; nothing must be, therefore,
+inserted, which does not apparently arise from something foregoing, and
+properly make way for something that succeeds it.
+
+This precept is to be understood in its rigour only with respect to
+great and essential events, and cannot be extended in the same force to
+minuter circumstances and arbitrary decorations, which yet are more
+happy, as they contribute more to the main design; for it is always a
+proof of extensive thought and accurate circumspection, to promote
+various purposes by the same act; and the idea of an ornament admits
+use, though it seems to exclude necessity.
+
+Whoever purposes, as it is expressed by Milton, _to build the lofty
+rhyme_, must acquaint himself with this law of poetical architecture,
+and take care that his edifice be solid as well as beautiful; that
+nothing stand single or independent, so as that it may be taken away
+without injuring the rest; but that, from the foundation to the
+pinnacles, one part rest firm upon another.
+
+The regular and consequential distribution is among common authors
+frequently neglected; but the failures of those, whose example can have
+no influence, may be safely overlooked, nor is it of much use to recall
+obscure and unguarded names to memory for the sake of sporting with
+their infamy. But if there is any writer whose genius can embellish
+impropriety, and whose authority can make errour venerable, his works
+are the proper objects of critical inquisition. To expunge faults where
+there are no excellencies is a task equally useless with that of the
+chymist, who employs the arts of separation and refinement upon ore in
+which no precious metal is contained to reward his operations.
+
+The tragedy of Samson Agonistes has been celebrated as the second work
+of the great author of Paradise Lost, and opposed, with all the
+confidence of triumph, to the dramatick performances of other nations.
+It contains, indeed, just sentiments, maxims of wisdom, and oracles of
+piety, and many passages written with the ancient spirit of choral
+poetry, in which there is a just and pleasing mixture of Seneca's moral
+declamation, with the wild enthusiasm of the Greek writers. It is,
+therefore, worthy of examination, whether a performance thus illuminated
+with genius, and enriched with learning, is composed according to the
+indispensable laws of Aristotelian criticism: and, omitting, at present,
+all other considerations, whether it exhibits a beginning, a middle, and
+an end.
+
+The beginning is undoubtedly beautiful and proper, opening with a
+graceful abruptness, and proceeding naturally to a mournful recital of
+facts necessary to be known:
+
+ _Samson_. A little onward lend thy guiding hand
+ To these dark steps, a little further on;
+ For yonder bank hath choice of sun and shade:
+ There I am wont to sit, when any chance
+ Relieves me from my task of servile toil,
+ Daily in the common prison else enjoin'd me.--
+ O, wherefore was my birth from Heav'n foretold
+ Twice by an Angel?--
+ Why was my breeding order'd and prescrib'd,
+ As of a person separate to God,
+ Design'd for great exploits; if I must die
+ Betray'd, captiv'd, and both my eyes put out?--
+ Whom have I to complain of but myself?
+ Who this high gift of strength committed to me,
+ In what part lodg'd, how easily bereft me,
+ Under the seal of silence could not keep:
+ But weakly to a woman must reveal it.
+
+His soliloquy is interrupted by a chorus or company of men of his own
+tribe, who condole his miseries, extenuate his fault, and conclude with
+a solemn vindication of divine justice. So that at the conclusion of the
+first act there is no design laid, no discovery made, nor any
+disposition formed towards the consequent event.
+
+In the second act, Manoah, the father of Samson, comes to seek his son,
+and, being shewn him by the chorus, breaks out into lamentations of his
+misery, and comparisons of his present with his former state,
+representing to him the ignominy which his religion suffers, by the
+festival this day celebrated in honour of Dagon, to whom the idolaters
+ascribed his overthrow.
+
+ --Thou bear'st
+ Enough, and more, the burthen of that fault;
+ Bitterly hast thou paid, and still art paying
+ That rigid score. A worse thing yet remains,
+ This day the Philistines a popular feast
+ Here celebrate in Gaza; and proclaim
+ Great pomp, and sacrifice, and praises loud
+ To Dagon, as their God who hath deliver'd
+ Thee, Samson, bound and blind, into their hands,
+ Them out of thine, who slew'st them many a slain.
+
+Samson, touched with this reproach, makes a reply equally penitential
+and pious, which his father considers as the effusion of prophetick
+confidence:
+
+ _Samson_.--He, be sure,
+ Will not connive, or linger, thus provok'd,
+ But will arise and his great name assert:
+ Dagon must stoop, and shall ere long receive
+ Such a discomfit, as shall quite despoil him
+ Of all these boasted trophies won on me.
+
+ _Manoah_. With cause this hope relieves thee, and these words
+ I as a prophecy receive; for God,
+ Nothing more certain, will not long defer
+ To vindicate the glory of his name.
+
+This part of the dialogue, as it might tend to animate or exasperate
+Samson, cannot, I think, be censured as wholly superfluous; but the
+succeeding dispute, in which Samson contends to die, and which his
+father breaks off, that he may go to solicit his release, is only
+valuable for its own beauties, and has no tendency to introduce any
+thing that follows it.
+
+The next event of the drama is the arrival of Dalila, with all her
+graces, artifices, and allurements. This produces a dialogue, in a very
+high degree elegant and instructive, from which she retires, after she
+has exhausted her persuasions, and is no more seen nor heard of; nor has
+her visit any effect but that of raising the character of Samson.
+
+In the fourth act enters Harapha, the giant of Gath, whose name had
+never been mentioned before, and who has now no other motive of coming,
+than to see the man whose strength and actions are so loudly celebrated:
+
+ _Haraph_.--Much I have heard
+ Of thy prodigious might and feats perform'd,
+ Incredible to me, in this displeas'd,
+ That I was never present in the place
+ Of those encounters, where we might have tried
+ Each other's force in camp or listed fields;
+ And now am come to see of whom such noise
+ Hath walk'd about, and each limb to survey,
+ If thy appearance answer loud report.
+
+Samson challenges him to the combat; and, after an interchange of
+reproaches, elevated by repeated defiance on one side, and imbittered by
+contemptuous insults on the other, Harapha retires; we then hear it
+determined by Samson, and the chorus, that no consequence good or bad
+will proceed from their interview:
+
+ _Chorus_. He will directly to the lords, I fear,
+ And with malicious counsel stir them up
+ Some way or other yet farther to afflict thee.
+
+ _Sams_. He must allege some cause, and offer'd fight
+ Will not dare mention, lest a question rise
+ Whether he durst accept the offer or not;
+ And, that he durst not, plain enough appear'd.
+
+At last, in the fifth act, appears a messenger from the lords assembled
+at the festival of Dagon, with a summons by which Samson is required to
+come and entertain them with some proof of his strength. Samson, after a
+short expostulation, dismisses him with a firm and resolute refusal;
+but, during the absence of the messenger, having a while defended the
+propriety of his conduct, he at last declares himself moved by a secret
+impulse to comply, and utters some dark presages of a great event to be
+brought to pass by his agency, under the direction of Providence:
+
+ _Sams_. Be of good courage, I begin to feel
+ Some rousing motions in me, which dispose
+ To something extraordinary my thoughts.
+ I with this messenger will go along,
+ Nothing to do, be sure, that may dishonour
+ Our Law, or stain my vow of Nazarite.
+ If there be aught of presage in the mind,
+ This day will be remarkable in my life
+ By some great act, or of my days the last.
+
+While Samson is conducted off by the messenger, his father returns with
+hopes of success in his solicitation, upon which he confers with the
+chorus till their dialogue is interrupted, first by a shout of triumph,
+and afterwards by screams of horrour and agony. As they stand
+deliberating where they shall be secure, a man who had been present at
+the show enters, and relates how Samson, having prevailed on his guide
+to suffer him to lean against the main pillars of the theatrical
+edifice, tore down the roof upon the spectators and himself:
+
+ --Those two massy pillars,
+ With horrible convulsion, to and fro
+ He tugg'd, he shook, till down they came, and drew
+ The whole roof after them, with burst of thunder
+ Upon the heads of all who sat beneath--
+ Samson, with these immixt, inevitably
+ Pull'd down the same destruction on himself.
+
+This is undoubtedly a just and regular catastrophe, and the poem,
+therefore, has a beginning and an end which Aristotle himself could not
+have disapproved; but it must be allowed to want a middle, since nothing
+passes between the first act and the last, that either hastens or delays
+the death of Samson. The whole drama, if its superfluities were cut off,
+would scarcely fill a single act; yet this is the tragedy which
+ignorance has admired, and bigotry applauded.
+
+
+
+No. 140. SATURDAY, JULY 20, 1751.
+
+ --_Quis tam Lucili fautor inepte est,
+ Ut non hoc fateatur?_ HOR. Lib. i. Sat. x. 2.
+
+ What doating bigot, to his faults so blind,
+ As not to grant me this, can Milton find?
+
+It is common, says Bacon, to desire the end without enduring the means.
+Every member of society feels and acknowledges the necessity of
+detecting crimes, yet scarce any degree of virtue or reputation is able
+to secure an informer from publick hatred. The learned world has always
+admitted the usefulness of critical disquisitions, yet he that attempts
+to show, however modestly, the failures of a celebrated writer, shall
+surely irritate his admirers, and incur the imputation of envy,
+captiousness, and malignity.
+
+With this danger full in my view, I shall proceed to examine the
+sentiments of Milton's tragedy, which, though much less liable to
+censure than the disposition of his plan, are, like those of other
+writers, sometimes exposed to just exceptions for want of care, or want
+of discernment.
+
+Sentiments are proper and improper as they consist more or less with the
+character and circumstances of the person to whom they are attributed,
+with the rules of the composition in which they are found, or with the
+settled and unalterable nature of things.
+
+It is common among the tragick poets to introduce their persons alluding
+to events or opinions, of which they could not possibly have any
+knowledge. The barbarians of remote or newly discovered regions often
+display their skill in European learning. The god of love is mentioned
+in Tamerlane with all the familiarity of a Roman epigrammatist; and a
+late writer has put Harvey's doctrine of the circulation of the blood
+into the mouth of a Turkish statesman, who lived near two centuries
+before it was known even to philosophers or anatomists.
+
+Milton's learning, which acquainted him with the manners of the ancient
+eastern nations, and his invention, which required no assistance from
+the common cant of poetry, have preserved him from frequent outrages of
+local or chronological propriety. Yet he has mentioned Chalybean steel,
+of which it is not very likely that his chorus should have heard, and
+has made Alp the general name of a mountain, in a region where the Alps
+could scarcely be known:
+
+ No medicinal liquor can assuage,
+ Nor breath of cooling air from snowy Alp.
+
+He has taught Samson the tales of Circe, and the Syrens, at which he
+apparently hints in his colloquy with Dalila:
+
+ --I know thy trains,
+ Though dearly to my cost, thy gins, and toils;
+ Thy fair _enchanted cup_, and _warbling charms_
+ No more on me have pow'r.
+
+But the grossest errour of this kind is the solemn introduction of the
+Phoenix in the last scene; which is faulty, not only as it is
+incongruous to the personage to whom it is ascribed, but as it is so
+evidently contrary to reason and nature, that it ought never to be
+mentioned but as a fable in any serious poem:
+
+ --Virtue giv'n for lost,
+ Deprest, and overthrown, as seem'd,
+ Like that self-begotten bird
+ In the Arabian woods embost,
+ That no second knows nor third,
+ And lay ere while a holocaust,
+ From out her ashy womb now teem'd,
+ Revives, reflourishes, then vigorous most
+ When most unactive deem'd,
+ And though her body die, her fame survives
+ A secular bird, ages of lives.
+
+Another species of impropriety is the unsuitableness of thoughts to the
+general character of the poem. The seriousness and solemnity of tragedy
+necessarily reject all pointed or epigrammatical expressions, all remote
+conceits and opposition of ideas. Samson's complaint is therefore too
+elaborate to be natural:
+
+ As in the land of darkness, yet in light,
+ To live a life half dead, a living death,
+ And bury'd; but, O yet more miserable!
+ Myself, my sepulchre, a moving grave,
+ Buried, yet not exempt,
+ By privilege of death and burial,
+ From worst of other evils, pains and wrongs.
+
+All allusions to low and trivial objects, with which contempt is usually
+associated, are doubtless unsuitable to a species of composition which
+ought to be always awful, though not always magnificent. The remark
+therefore of the chorus on good or bad news seems to want elevation:
+
+ _Manoah_. A little stay will bring some notice hither.
+ _Chor_. Of good _or_ bad so great, of bad the sooner;
+ For evil news _rides post_, while good news _baits_.
+
+But of all meanness that has least to plead which is produced by mere
+verbal conceits, which, depending only upon sounds, lose their existence
+by the change of a syllable. Of this kind is the following dialogue:
+
+ _Chor_. But had we best retire? I see a _storm_.
+
+ _Sams_. Fair days have oft contracted wind and rain.
+
+ _Chor_. But this another kind of tempest brings.
+
+ _Sams_. Be less abstruse, my riddling days are past.
+
+ _Chor_. Look now for no enchanting voice, nor fear
+ The bait of honied words; a rougher tongue
+ Draws hitherward; I know him by his stride,
+ The giant _Harapha_.--
+
+And yet more despicable are the lines in which Manoah's paternal
+kindness is commended by the chorus:
+
+ Fathers are wont to _lay up_ for their sons,
+ Thou for thy son art bent to _lay out_ all.
+
+Samson's complaint of the inconveniencies of imprisonment is not wholly
+without verbal quaintness:
+
+ --I, a prisoner chain'd, scarce freely draw
+ The air, imprison'd also, close and damp.
+
+From the sentiments we may properly descend to the consideration of the
+language, which, in imitation of the ancients, is through the whole
+dialogue remarkably simple and unadorned, seldom heightened by epithets,
+or varied by figures; yet sometimes metaphors find admission, even where
+their consistency is not accurately preserved. Thus Samson confounds
+loquacity with a shipwreck:
+
+ How could I once look up, or heave the head,
+ Who, like a foolish _pilot_, have _shipwreck'd_
+ My _vessel_ trusted to me from above,
+ Gloriously _rigg'd_; and for a word, a tear,
+ Fool! have _divulg'd_ the _secret gift_ of God
+ To a deceitful woman?--
+
+And the chorus talks of adding fuel to flame in a report:
+
+ He's gone, and who knows how he may _report_
+ Thy _words_, by _adding fuel to the flame_?
+
+The versification is in the dialogue much more smooth and harmonious,
+than in the parts allotted to the chorus, which are often so harsh and
+dissonant, as scarce to preserve, whether the lines end with or without
+rhymes, any appearance of metrical regularity:
+
+ Or do my eyes misrepresent? Can this be he,
+ That heroic, that renown'd,
+ Irresistible Samson? whom unarm'd
+ No strength of man, or fiercest wild beast, could withstand;
+ Who tore the lion, as the lion tears the kid.
+
+Since I have thus pointed out the faults of Milton, critical integrity
+requires that I should endeavour to display his excellencies, though
+they will not easily be discovered in short quotations, because they
+consist in the justness of diffuse reasonings, or in the contexture and
+method of continued dialogues; this play having none of those
+descriptions, similies, or splendid sentences, with which other
+tragedies are so lavishly adorned. Yet some passages may be selected
+which seem to deserve particular notice, either as containing sentiments
+of passion, representations of life, precepts of conduct, or sallies of
+imagination. It is not easy to give a stronger representation of the
+weariness of despondency, than in the words of Samson to his father:
+
+ --I feel my genial spirits droop,
+ My hopes all flat, Nature within me seems
+ In all her functions weary of herself,
+ My race of glory run, and race of shame,
+ And I shall shortly be with them that rest.
+
+The reply of Samson to the flattering Dalila affords a just and striking
+description of the stratagems and allurements of feminine hypocrisy:
+
+ --These are thy wonted arts,
+ And arts of every woman false like thee,
+ To break all faith, all vows, deceive, betray,
+ Then as repentant to submit, beseech,
+ And reconcilement move with feign'd remorse,
+ Confess and promise wonders in her change;
+ Not truly penitent, but chief to try
+ Her husband, how far urg'd his patience bears,
+ His virtue or weakness which way to assail:
+ Then with more cautious and instructed skill
+ Again transgresses, and again submits.
+
+When Samson has refused to make himself a spectacle at the feast of
+Dagon, he first justifies his behaviour to the chorus, who charge him
+with having served the Philistines, by a very just distinction: and then
+destroys the common excuse of cowardice and servility, which always
+confound temptation with compulsion:
+
+ _Chor_. Yet with thy strength thou serv'st the Philistines.
+
+ _Sams_. Not in their idol worship, but by labour
+ Honest and lawful to deserve my food
+ Of those, who have me in their civil power.
+
+ _Chor_. Where the heart joins not, outward acts defile not.
+
+ _Sams_. Where outward force constrains, the sentence holds.
+ But who constrains me to the temple of Dagon,
+ Not dragging? The Philistine lords command.
+ Commands are no constraints. If I obey them,
+ I do it freely, venturing to displease
+ God for the fear of Man, and Man prefer,
+ Set God behind.
+
+The complaint of blindness which Samson pours out at the beginning of
+the tragedy is equally addressed to the passions and the fancy. The
+enumeration of his miseries is succeeded by a very pleasing train of
+poetical images, and concluded by such expostulation and wishes, as
+reason too often submits to learn from despair:
+
+ O first created Beam, and thou great Word
+ "Let there be light, and light was over all;"
+ Why am I thus bereav'd thy prime decree?
+ The sun to me is dark
+ And silent as the moon,
+ When she deserts the night
+ Hid in her vacant interlunar cave.
+ Since light so necessary is to life,
+ And almost life itself, if it be true
+ That light is in the soul,
+ She all in every part; why was the sight
+ To such a tender hall as the eye confin'd,
+ So obvious and so easy to be quench'd?
+ And not, as feeling, through all parts diffus'd,
+ That she may look at will through every pore?
+
+Such are the faults and such the beauties of Samson Agonistes, which I
+have shown with no other purpose than to promote the knowledge of true
+criticism. The everlasting verdure of Milton's laurels has nothing to
+fear from the blasts of malignity; nor can my attempt produce any other
+effect, than to strengthen their shoots by lopping their luxuriance[g].
+[Footnote g: This is not the language of an accomplice in Lauder's
+imposition.--ED.]
+
+
+
+No. 141. TUESDAY, JULY 23, 1751.
+
+ _Hilarisque, tamen cum pondere, virtus_. STAT.
+
+ Greatness with ease, and gay severity.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Politicians have long observed, that the greatest events may be
+often traced back to slender causes. Petty competition or casual
+friendship, the prudence of a slave, or the garrulity of a woman, have
+hindered or promoted the most important schemes, and hastened or
+retarded the revolutions of empire.
+
+Whoever shall review his life will generally find, that the whole tenour
+of his conduct has been determined by some accident of no apparent
+moment, or by a combination of inconsiderable circumstances, acting when
+his imagination was unoccupied, and his judgment unsettled; and that his
+principles and actions have taken their colour from some secret
+infusion, mingled without design in the current of his ideas. The
+desires that predominate in our hearts, are instilled by imperceptible
+communications at the time when we look upon the various scenes of the
+world, and the different employments of men, with the neutrality of
+inexperience; and we come forth from the nursery or the school,
+invariably destined to the pursuit of great acquisitions, or petty
+accomplishments.
+
+Such was the impulse by which I have been kept in motion from my
+earliest years. I was born to an inheritance which gave my childhood a
+claim to distinction and caresses, and was accustomed to hear applauses,
+before they had much influence on my thoughts. The first praise of which
+I remember myself sensible was that of good-humour, which, whether I
+deserved it or not when it was bestowed, I have since made it my whole
+business to propagate and maintain.
+
+When I was sent to school, the gaiety of my look, and the liveliness of
+my loquacity, soon gained me admission to hearts not yet fortified
+against affection by artifice or interest. I was entrusted with every
+stratagem, and associated in every sport; my company gave alacrity to a
+frolick, and gladness to a holiday. I was indeed so much employed in
+adjusting or executing schemes of diversion, that I had no leisure for
+my tasks, but was furnished with exercises, and instructed in my
+lessons, by some kind patron of the higher classes. My master, not
+suspecting my deficiency, or unwilling to detect what his kindness would
+not punish nor his impartiality excuse, allowed me to escape with a
+slight examination, laughed at the pertness of my ignorance, and the
+sprightliness of my absurdities, and could not forbear to show that he
+regarded me with such tenderness, as genius and learning can seldom
+excite.
+
+From school I was dismissed to the university, where I soon drew upon me
+the notice of the younger students, and was the constant partner of
+their morning walks, and evening compotations. I was not indeed much
+celebrated for literature, but was looked on with indulgence as a man of
+parts, who wanted nothing but the dulness of a scholar, and might become
+eminent whenever he should condescend to labour and attention. My tutor
+a while reproached me with negligence, and repressed my sallies with
+supercilious gravity; yet, having natural good-humour lurking in his
+heart, he could not long hold out against the power of hilarity, but
+after a few months began to relax the muscles of disciplinarian
+moroseness, received me with smiles after an elopement, and, that he
+might not betray his trust to his fondness, was content to spare my
+diligence by increasing his own.
+
+Thus I continued to dissipate the gloom of collegiate austerity, to
+waste my own life in idleness, and lure others from their studies, till
+the happy hour arrived, when I was sent to London. I soon discovered the
+town to be the proper element of youth and gaiety, and was quickly
+distinguished as a wit by the ladies, a species of beings only heard of
+at the university, whom I had no sooner the happiness of approaching
+than I devoted all my faculties to the ambition of pleasing them.
+
+A wit, Mr. Rambler, in the dialect of ladies, is not always a man who,
+by the action of a vigorous fancy upon comprehensive knowledge, brings
+distant ideas unexpectedly together, who, by some peculiar acuteness,
+discovers resemblance in objects dissimilar to common eyes, or, by
+mixing heterogeneous notions, dazzles the attention with sudden
+scintillations of conceit. A lady's wit is a man who can make ladies
+laugh, to which, however easy it may seem, many gifts of nature, and
+attainments of art, must commonly concur. He that hopes to be received
+as a wit in female assemblies, should have a form neither so amiable as
+to strike with admiration, nor so coarse as to raise disgust, with an
+understanding too feeble to be dreaded, and too forcible to be despised.
+The other parts of the character are more subject to variation; it was
+formerly essential to a wit, that half his back should be covered with a
+snowy fleece, and, at a time yet more remote, no man was a wit without
+his boots. In the days of the _Spectator_ a snuff-box seems to have been
+indispensable; but in my time an embroidered coat was sufficient,
+without any precise regulation of the rest of his dress.
+
+But wigs and boots and snuff-boxes are vain, without a perpetual
+resolution to be merry, and who can always find supplies of mirth?
+Juvenal indeed, in his comparison of the two opposite philosophers,
+wonders only whence an unexhausted fountain of tears could be
+discharged: but had Juvenal, with all his spirit, undertaken my
+province, he would have found constant gaiety equally difficult to be
+supported. Consider, Mr. Rambler, and compassionate the condition of a
+man, who has taught every company to expect from him a continual feast
+of laughter, an unintermitted stream of jocularity. The task of every
+other slave has an end. The rower in time reaches the port; the
+lexicographer at last finds the conclusion of his alphabet; only the
+hapless wit has his labour always to begin, the call for novelty is
+never satisfied, and one jest only raises expectation of another.
+
+I know that among men of learning and asperity the retainers to the
+female world are not much regarded: yet I cannot but hope that if you
+knew at how dear a rate our honours are purchased, you would look with
+some gratulation on our success, and with some pity on our miscarriages.
+Think on the misery of him who is condemned to cultivate barrenness and
+ransack vacuity; who is obliged to continue his talk when his meaning is
+spent, to raise merriment without images, to harass his imagination in
+quest of thoughts which he cannot start, and his memory in pursuit of
+narratives which he cannot overtake; observe the effort with which he
+strains to conceal despondency by a smile, and the distress in which he
+sits while the eyes of the company are fixed upon him as the last refuge
+from silence and dejection.
+
+It were endless to recount the shifts to which I have been reduced, or
+to enumerate the different species of artificial wit. I regularly
+frequented coffee-houses, and have often lived a week upon an
+expression, of which he who dropped it did not know the value. When
+fortune did not favour my erratick industry, I gleaned jests at home
+from obsolete farces. To collect wit was indeed safe, for I consorted
+with none that looked much into books, but to disperse it was the
+difficulty. A seeming negligence was often useful, and I have very
+successfully made a reply not to what the lady had said, but to what it
+was convenient for me to hear; for very few were so perverse as to
+rectify a mistake which had given occasion to a burst of merriment.
+Sometimes I drew the conversation up by degrees to a proper point, and
+produced a conceit which I had treasured up, like sportsmen who boast of
+killing the foxes which they lodge in the covert. Eminence is, however,
+in some happy moments, gained at less expense; I have delighted a whole
+circle at one time with a series of quibbles, and made myself good
+company at another, by scalding my fingers, or mistaking a lady's lap
+for my own chair.
+
+These are artful deceits and useful expedients; but expedients are at
+length exhausted, and deceits detected. Time itself, among other
+injuries, diminishes the power of pleasing, and I now find, in my
+forty-fifth year, many pranks and pleasantries very coldly received,
+which had formerly filled a whole room with jollity and acclamation.
+I am under the melancholy necessity of supporting that character by study,
+which I gained by levity, having learned too late that gaiety must be
+recommended by higher qualities, and that mirth can never please long
+but as the efflorescence of a mind loved for its luxuriance, but
+esteemed for its usefulness.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+PAPILIUS.
+
+
+
+No. 142. SATURDAY, JULY 27, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Entha d aner eniaue pelorios--
+ --oude, met allous
+ Poleit, all apaneuthen eon athemistia ede.
+ Kai gar Oaum etetukto pelorion oude epskei
+ Andri ge sitophagps.] HOMER. Od. [Greek: I'.] 187.
+
+ A giant shepherd here his flock maintains
+ Far from the rest, and solitary reigns,
+ In shelter thick of horrid shade reclin'd;
+ And gloomy mischiefs labour in the mind.
+ A form enormous! far unlike the race
+ Of human birth, in stature or in face. POPE.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Having been accustomed to retire annually from the town, I lately
+accepted the invitation of Eugenio, who has an estate and seat in a
+distant county. As we were unwilling to travel without improvement, we
+turned often from the direct road to please ourselves with the view of
+nature or of art; we examined every wild mountain and medicinal spring,
+criticised every edifice, contemplated every ruin, and compared every
+scene of action with the narratives of historians. By this succession of
+amusements we enjoyed the exercise of a journey without suffering the
+fatigue, and had nothing to regret but that, by a progress so leisurely
+and gentle, we missed the adventures of a post-chaise, and the pleasure
+of alarming villages with the tumult of our passage, and of disguising
+our insignificancy by the dignity of hurry.
+
+The first week after our arrival at Eugenio's house was passed in
+receiving visits from his neighbours, who crowded about him with all the
+eagerness of benevolence; some impatient to learn the news of the court
+and town, that they might be qualified by authentick information to
+dictate to the rural politicians on the next bowling day; others
+desirous of his interest to accommodate disputes, or his advice in the
+settlement of their fortunes and the marriage of their children.
+
+The civilities which he had received were soon to be returned; and I
+passed sometime with great satisfaction in roving through the country,
+and viewing the seats, gardens, and plantations, which are scattered
+over it. My pleasure would indeed have been greater had I been sometimes
+allowed to wander in a park or wilderness alone; but to appear as a
+friend of Eugenio was an honour not to be enjoyed without some
+inconveniencies: so much was every one solicitous for my regard, that I
+could seldom escape to solitude, or steal a moment from the emulation of
+complaisance, and the vigilance of officiousness.
+
+In these rambles of good neighbourhood, we frequently passed by a house
+of unusual magnificence. While I had my curiosity yet distracted among
+many novelties, it did not much attract my observation; but in a short
+time I could not forbear surveying it with particular notice; for the
+length of the wall which inclosed the gardens, the disposition of the
+shades that waved over it, and the canals of which I could obtain some
+glimpses through the trees from our own windows, gave me reason to
+expect more grandeur and beauty than I had yet seen in that province. I
+therefore inquired, as we rode by it, why we never, amongst our
+excursions, spent an hour where there was such an appearance of
+splendour and affluence? Eugenio told me that the seat which I so much
+admired, was commonly called in the country the _haunted house_, and
+that no visits were paid there by any of the gentlemen whom I had yet
+seen. As the haunts of incorporeal beings are generally ruinous,
+neglected, and desolate, I easily conceived that there was something to
+be explained, and told him that I supposed it only fairy ground, on
+which we might venture by day-light without danger. The danger, says he,
+is indeed only that of appearing to solicit the acquaintance of a man,
+with whom it is not possible to converse without infamy, and who has
+driven from him, by his insolence or malignity, every human being who
+can live without him.
+
+Our conversation was then accidentally interrupted; but my inquisitive
+humour being now in motion, could not rest without a full account of
+this newly discovered prodigy. I was soon informed that the fine house
+and spacious gardens were haunted by squire Bluster, of whom it was very
+easy to learn the character, since nobody had regard for him sufficient
+to hinder them from telling whatever they could discover.
+
+Squire Bluster is descended of an ancient family. The estate which his
+ancestors had immemorially possessed was much augmented by captain
+Bluster, who served under Drake in the reign of Elizabeth; and the
+Blusters, who were before only petty gentlemen, have from that time
+frequently represented the shire in parliament, been chosen to present
+addresses, and given laws at hunting-matches and races. They were
+eminently hospitable and popular, till the father of this gentleman died
+of an election. His lady went to the grave soon after him, and left the
+heir, then only ten years old, to the care of his grandmother, who would
+not suffer him to be controlled, because she could not bear to hear him
+cry; and never sent him to school, because she was not able to live
+without his company. She taught him however very early to inspect the
+steward's accounts, to dog the butler from the cellar, and to catch the
+servants at a junket; so that he was at the age of eighteen a complete
+master of all the lower arts of domestick policy, had often on the road
+detected combinations between the coachman and the ostler, and procured
+the discharge of nineteen maids for illicit correspondence with
+cottagers and charwomen.
+
+By the opportunities of parsimony which minority affords, and which the
+probity of his guardians had diligently improved, a very large sum of
+money was accumulated, and he found himself, when he took his affairs
+into his own hands, the richest man in the county. It has been long the
+custom of this family to celebrate the heir's completion of his
+twenty-first year, by an entertainment, at which the house is thrown
+open to all that are inclined to enter it, and the whole province flocks
+together as to a general festivity. On this occasion young Bluster
+exhibited the first tokens of his future eminence, by shaking his purse
+at an old gentleman who had been the intimate friend of his father, and
+offering to wager a greater sum than he could afford to venture; a
+practice with which he has, at one time or other, insulted every
+freeholder within ten miles round him.
+
+His next acts of offence were committed in a contentious and spiteful
+vindication of the privileges of his manours, and a rigorous and
+relentless prosecution of every man that presumed to violate his game.
+As he happens to have no estate adjoining equal to his own, his
+oppressions are often borne without resistance, for fear of a long suit,
+of which he delights to count the expenses without the least solicitude
+about the event; for he knows, that where nothing but an honorary right
+is contested, the poorer antagonist must always suffer, whatever shall
+be the last decision of the law.
+
+By the success of some of these disputes, he has so elated his
+insolence, and, by reflection upon the general hatred which they have
+brought upon him, so irritated his virulence, that his whole life is
+spent in meditating or executing mischief. It is his common practice to
+procure his hedges to be broken in the night, and then to demand
+satisfaction for damages which his grounds have suffered from his
+neighbour's cattle. An old widow was yesterday soliciting Eugenio to
+enable her to replevin her only cow, then in the pound by squire
+Bluster's order, who had sent one of his agents to take advantage of her
+calamity, and persuade her to sell the cow at an under rate. He has
+driven a day-labourer from his cottage, for gathering blackberries in a
+hedge for his children, and has now an old woman in the county-gaol for
+a trespass which she committed, by coming into his ground to pick up
+acorns for her hog.
+
+Money, in whatever hands, will confer power. Distress will fly to
+immediate refuge, without much consideration of remote consequences.
+Bluster has therefore a despotick authority in many families, whom he
+has assisted, on pressing occasions, with larger sums than they can
+easily repay. The only visits that he makes are to these houses of
+misfortune, where he enters with the insolence of absolute command,
+enjoys the terrours of the family, exacts their obedience, riots at
+their charge, and in the height of his joy insults the father with
+menaces, and the daughters with obscenity.
+
+He is of late somewhat less offensive; for one of his debtors, after
+gentle expostulations, by which he was only irritated to grosser
+outrage, seized him by the sleeve, led him trembling into the
+court-yard, and closed the door upon him in a stormy night. He took his
+usual revenge next morning by a writ; but the debt was discharged by the
+assistance of Eugenio.
+
+It is his rule to suffer his tenants to owe him rent, because by this
+indulgence he secures to himself the power of seizure whenever he has an
+inclination to amuse himself with calamity, and feast his ears with
+entreaties and lamentations. Yet as he is sometimes capriciously liberal
+to those whom he happens to adopt as favourites, and lets his lands at a
+cheap rate, his farms are never long unoccupied; and when one is ruined
+by oppression, the possibility of better fortune quickly lures another
+to supply his place.
+
+Such is the life of squire Bluster; a man in whose power fortune has
+liberally placed the means of happiness, but who has defeated all her
+gifts of their end by the depravity of his mind. He is wealthy without
+followers; he is magnificent without witnesses; he has birth without
+alliance, and influence without dignity. His neighbours scorn him as a
+brute; his dependants dread him as an oppressor; and he has only the
+gloomy comfort of reflecting, that if he is hated, he is likewise
+feared.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+VAGULUS.
+
+
+
+No. 143. TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1751.
+
+ _--Moveat cornicula risum
+ Furtivis nudata coloribus.--_ HOR. Lib. i. Ep. i. 19.
+
+ Lest when the birds their various colours claim,
+ Stripp'd of his stolen pride, the crow forlorn
+ Should stand the laughter of the publick scorn. FRANCIS.
+
+Among the innumerable practices by which interest or envy have taught
+those who live upon literary fame to disturb each other at their airy
+banquets, one of the most common is the charge of plagiarism. When the
+excellence of a new composition can no longer be contested, and malice
+is compelled to give way to the unanimity of applause, there is yet this
+one expedient to be tried, by which the author may be degraded, though
+his work be reverenced; and the excellence which we cannot obscure, may
+be set at such a distance as not to overpower our fainter lustre.
+
+This accusation is dangerous, because, even when it is false, it may be
+sometimes urged with probability. Bruyere declares, that we are come
+into the world too late to produce any thing new, that nature and life
+are preoccupied, and that description and sentiment have been long
+exhausted. It is indeed certain, that whoever attempts any common
+topick, will find unexpected coincidences of his thoughts with those of
+other writers; nor can the nicest judgment always distinguish accidental
+similitude from artful imitation. There is likewise a common stock of
+images, a settled mode of arrangement, and a beaten track of transition,
+which all authors suppose themselves at liberty to use, and which
+produce the resemblance generally observable among contemporaries. So
+that in books which best deserve the name of originals, there is little
+new beyond the disposition of materials already provided; the same ideas
+and combinations of ideas have been long in the possession of other
+hands; and, by restoring to every man his own, as the Romans must have
+returned to their cots from the possession of the world, so the most
+inventive and fertile genius would reduce his folios to a few pages. Yet
+the author who imitates his predecessors only by furnishing himself with
+thoughts and elegancies out of the same general magazine of literature,
+can with little more propriety be reproached as a plagiary, than the
+architect can be censured as a mean copier of Angelo or Wren, because he
+digs his marble from the same quarry, squares his stones by the same
+art, and unites them in the columns of the same orders.
+
+Many subjects fall under the consideration of an author, which, being
+limited by nature, can admit only of slight and accidental diversities.
+All definitions of the same thing must be nearly the same; and
+descriptions, which are definitions of a more lax and fanciful kind,
+must always have in some degree that resemblance to each other which
+they all have to their object. Different poets describing the spring or
+the sea would mention the zephyrs and the flowers, the billows and the
+rocks; reflecting on human life, they would, without any communication
+of opinions, lament the deceitfulness of hope, the fugacity of pleasure,
+the fragility of beauty, and the frequency of calamity; and for
+palliatives of these incurable miseries, they would concur in
+recommending kindness, temperance, caution, and fortitude.
+
+When therefore there are found in Virgil and Horace two similar
+passages--
+
+ _Hae tibi erunt artes--
+ Parcere subjectis, et debellare superbos_. VIRG.
+
+ To tame the proud, the fetter'd slave to free:
+ These are imperial arts, and worthy thee. DRYDEN.
+
+ _Imperet bellante prior, jacentem
+ Lenis in hostem_. HOR.
+
+ Let Caesar spread his conquests far,
+ Less pleas'd to triumph than to spare--
+
+it is surely not necessary to suppose with a late critick, that one is
+copied from the other, since neither Virgil nor Horace can be supposed
+ignorant of the common duties of humanity, and the virtue of moderation
+in success.
+
+Cicero and Ovid have on very different occasions remarked how little of
+the honour of a victory belongs to the general, when his soldiers and
+his fortune have made their deductions; yet why should Ovid be suspected
+to have owed to Tully an observation which perhaps occurs to every man
+that sees or hears of military glories?
+
+Tully observes of Achilles, that had not Homer written, his valour had
+been without praise:
+
+ _Nisi Ilias illa extitisset, idem tumulus qui corpus ejus contexerat,
+ nomen ejus obruisset_.
+
+ Unless the Iliad had been published, his name had been lost in the
+ tomb that covered his body.
+
+Horace tells us with more energy that there were brave men before the
+wars of Troy, but they were lost in oblivion for want of a poet:
+
+ _Vixere fortes ante Agamemnona
+ Multi; sed omnes illachrymabiles
+ Urgentur, ignotique longa
+ Nocte, carent quia vate sacro_.
+
+ Before great Agamemnon reign'd,
+ Reign'd kings as great as he, and brave,
+ Whose huge ambition's now contain'd
+ In the small compass of a grave:
+ In endless night they sleep, unwept, unknown:
+ No bard had they to make all time their own. FRANCIS.
+
+Tully inquires, in the same oration, why, but for fame, we disturb a
+short life with so many fatigues?
+
+ _Quid est quod in hoc tam exiguo vitae curriculo et tam brevi, tantis
+ nos in laboribus exerceamus?_
+
+ Why in so small a circuit of life should we employ ourselves in so
+ many fatigues?
+
+Horace inquires in the same manner,
+
+ _Quid brevi fortes jaculamur aevo
+ Multa?_
+
+ Why do we aim, with eager strife,
+ At things beyond the mark of life? FRANCIS.
+
+when our life is of so short duration, why we form such numerous
+designs? But Horace, as well as Tully, might discover that records are
+needful to preserve the memory of actions, and that no records were so
+durable as poems; either of them might find out that life is short, and
+that we consume it in unnecessary labour.
+
+There are other flowers of fiction so widely scattered and so easily
+cropped, that it is scarcely just to tax the use of them as an act by
+which any particular writer is despoiled of his garland; for they may be
+said to have been planted by the ancients in the open road of poetry for
+the accommodation of their successors, and to be the right of every one
+that has art to pluck them without injuring their colours or their
+fragrance. The passage of Orpheus to hell, with the recovery and second
+loss of Eurydice, have been described after Boetius by Pope, in such a
+manner as might justly leave him suspected of imitation, were not the
+images such as they might both have derived from more ancient writers.
+
+ _Quae sontes agitant metu,
+ Ultrices scelerum deae
+ Jam masta: lacrymis madent,
+ Non Ixionium caput
+ Velox praecipitat rota_.
+
+ The pow'rs of vengeance, while they hear,
+ Touch'd with compassion, drop a tear:
+ Ixion's rapid wheel is bound,
+ Fix'd in attention to the sound. F. LEWIS.
+
+ Thy stone, O Sysiphus, stands still,
+ Ixion rests upon the wheel,
+ And the pale spectres dance!
+ The furies sink upon their iron beds. POPE
+
+ _Tandem, vincimur, arbiter
+ Umbrarum, miserans, ait--
+ Donemus, comitem viro,
+ Emtam carmine, conjugem_.
+
+ Subdu'd at length, Hell's pitying monarch cry'd,
+ The song rewarding, let us yield the bride. F. LEWIS.
+
+ He sung; and hell consented
+ To hear the poet's prayer;
+ Stern Proserpine relented,
+ And gave him back the fair. POPE
+
+ _Heu, noctis prope terminos
+ Orpheus Eurydicen suam
+ Vidit, perdidit, occidit_.
+
+ Nor yet the golden verge of day begun,
+ When Orpheus, her unhappy lord,
+ Eurydice to life restor'd,
+ At once beheld, and lost, and was undone. F. LEWIS.
+
+ But soon, too soon, the lover turns his eyes:
+ Again she falls, again she dies, she dies! POPE.
+
+No writer can be fully convicted of imitation, except there is a
+concurrence of more resemblance than can be imagined to have happened by
+chance; as where the same ideas are conjoined without any natural series
+or necessary coherence, or where not only the thought but the words are
+copied. Thus it can scarcely be doubted, that in the first of the
+following passages Pope remembered Ovid, and that in the second he
+copied Crashaw:
+
+ _Saepe pater dixit, studium quid inutile tentas?
+ Maeonides nullas ipse reliquit opes--
+ Sponte sua carmen numeros veniebat ad aptos,
+ Et quod conabar scribere, versus erat_. OVID.
+
+ Quit, quit this barren trade, my father cry'd:
+ Ev'n Homer left no riches when he dy'd--
+ In verse spontaneous flow'd my native strain,
+ Forc'd by no sweat or labour of the brain. F. LEWIS.
+
+ I left no calling for this idle trade;
+ No duty broke, no father disobey'd;
+ While yet a child, ere yet a fool to fame,
+ I lisp'd in numbers, for the numbers came. POPE.
+
+ --This plain floor,
+ Believe me, reader, can say more
+ Than many a braver marble can,
+ Here lies a truly honest man. CRASHAW.
+
+ This modest stone, what few vain marbles can,
+ May truly say, Here lies an honest man. POPE.
+
+Conceits, or thoughts not immediately impressed by sensible objects, or
+necessarily arising from the coalition or comparison of common
+sentiments, may be with great justice suspected whenever they are found
+a second time. Thus Wallar probably owed to Grotius an elegant
+compliment:
+
+ Here lies the learned Savil's heir,
+ So early wise, and lasting fair,
+ That none, except her years they told,
+ Thought her a child, or thought her old. WALLER.
+
+[Transcriber's note: Inconsistency in spelling Waller/Wallar in
+original]
+
+ _Unica lux saecli, genitoris gloria, nemo
+ Quem puerum, nemo credidit esse senem_. GROT.
+
+ The age's miracle, his father's joy!
+ Nor old you would pronounce him, nor a boy. F. LEWIS.
+
+And Prior was indebted for a pretty illustration to Alleyne's poetical
+history of Henry the Seventh:
+
+ For nought but light itself, itself can shew,
+ And only kings can write, what kings can do. ALLEYNE.
+
+ Your musick's pow'r, your musick must disclose,
+ For what light is, 'tis only light that shews. PRIOR.
+
+And with yet more certainty may the same writer be censured, for
+endeavouring the clandestine appropriation of a thought which he
+borrowed, surely without thinking himself disgraced, from an epigram of
+Plato:
+
+ [Greek: Tae Paphiae to katoptron, epei toiae men orasthai
+ Ouk ethelo, oiae d' aen paros, ou dunamai.]
+
+ Venus, take my votive glass,
+ Since I am not what I was;
+ What from this day I shall be,
+ Venus, let me never see.
+
+As not every instance of similitude can be considered as a proof of
+imitation, so not every imitation ought to be stigmatized as plagiarism.
+The adoption of a noble sentiment, or the insertion of a borrowed
+ornament, may sometimes display so much judgment as will almost
+compensate for invention: and an inferior genius may, without any
+imputation of servility, pursue the path of the ancients, provided he
+declines to tread in their footsteps.
+
+
+
+No. 144. SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1751.
+
+ --_Daphnidis arcum
+ Fregisti et calamos: quae tu, perverse Menalea,
+ Et quum vidisti puero donata, dolebas;
+ Et si non aliqua nocuisses, mortuus esses._ VIRG. EC. iii. 12.
+
+ The bow of Daphnis and the shafts you broke;
+ When the fair boy receiv'd the gift of right;
+ And but for mischief, you had dy'd for spite. DRYDEN.
+
+It is impossible to mingle in conversation without observing the
+difficulty with which a new name makes its way into the world. The first
+appearance of excellence unites multitudes against it; unexpected
+opposition rises up on every side; the celebrated and the obscure join
+in the confederacy; subtlety furnishes arms to impudence, and invention
+leads on credulity.
+
+The strength and unanimity of this alliance is not easily conceived. It
+might be expected that no man should suffer his heart to be inflamed
+with malice, but by injuries; that none should busy himself in
+contesting the pretensions of another, but when some right of his own
+was involved in the question; that at least hostilities, commenced
+without cause, should quickly cease; that the armies of malignity should
+soon disperse, when no common interest could be found to hold them
+together; and that the attack upon a rising character should be left to
+those who had something to hope or fear from the event.
+
+The hazards of those that aspire to eminence, would be much diminished
+if they had none but acknowledged rivals to encounter. Their enemies
+would then be few, and, what is yet of greater importance, would be
+known. But what caution is sufficient to ward off the blows of invisible
+assailants, or what force can stand against uninterrupted attacks, and a
+continual succession of enemies? Yet such is the state of the world,
+that no sooner can any man emerge from the crowd, and fix the eyes of
+the publick upon him, than he stands as a mark to the arrows of lurking
+calumny, and receives in the tumult of hostility, from distant and from
+nameless hands, wounds not always easy to be cured.
+
+It is probable that the onset against the candidates for renown, is
+originally incited by those who imagine themselves in danger of
+suffering by their success; but, when war is once declared, volunteers
+flock to the standard, multitudes follow the camp only for want of
+employment, and flying squadrons are dispersed to every part, so pleased
+with an opportunity of mischief, that they toil without prospect of
+praise, and pillage without hope of profit.
+
+When any man has endeavoured to deserve distinction, he will be
+surprised to hear himself censured where he could not expect to have
+been named; he will find the utmost acrimony of malice among those whom
+he never could have offended.
+
+As there are to be found in the service of envy men of every diversity
+of temper and degree of understanding, calumny is diffused by all arts
+and methods of propagation. Nothing is too gross or too refined, too
+cruel or too trifling, to be practised; very little regard is had to the
+rules of honourable hostility, but every weapon is accounted lawful, and
+those that cannot make a thrust at life are content to keep themselves
+in play with petty malevolence, to tease with feeble blows and impotent
+disturbance.
+
+But as the industry of observation has divided the most miscellaneous
+and confused assemblages into proper classes, and ranged the insects of
+the summer, that torment us with their drones or stings, by their
+several tribes; the persecutors of merit, notwithstanding their numbers,
+may be likewise commodiously distinguished into Roarers, Whisperers, and
+Moderators.
+
+The Roarer is an enemy rather terrible than dangerous. He has no other
+qualification for a champion of controversy than a hardened front and
+strong voice. Having seldom so much desire to confute as to silence, he
+depends rather upon vociferation than argument, and has very little care
+to adjust one part of his accusation to another, to preserve decency in
+his language, or probability in his narratives.
+
+He has always a store of reproachful epithets and contemptuous
+appellations, ready to be produced as occasion may require, which by
+constant use he pours out with resistless volubility. If the wealth of a
+trader is mentioned, he without hesitation devotes him to bankruptcy; if
+the beauty and elegance of a lady be commended, he wonders how the town
+can fall in love with rustick deformity; if a new performance of genius
+happens to be celebrated, he pronounces the writer a hopeless idiot,
+without knowledge of books or life, and without the understanding by
+which it must be acquired. His exaggerations are generally without
+effect upon those whom he compels to hear them; and though it will
+sometimes happen that the timorous are awed by his violence, and the
+credulous mistake his confidence for knowledge, yet the opinions which
+he endeavours to suppress soon recover their former strength, as the
+trees that bend to the tempest erect themselves again when its force is
+past.
+
+The Whisperer is more dangerous. He easily gains attention by a soft
+address, and excites curiosity by an air of importance. As secrets are
+not to be made cheap by promiscuous publication, he calls a select
+audience about him, and gratifies their vanity with an appearance of
+trust by communicating his intelligence in a low voice. Of the trader he
+can tell that, though he seems to manage an extensive commerce, and
+talks in high terms of the funds, yet his wealth is not equal to his
+reputation; he has lately suffered much by an expensive project, and had
+a greater share than is acknowledged in the rich ship that perished by
+the storm. Of the beauty he has little to say, but that they who see her
+in a morning do not discover all those graces which are admired in the
+Park. Of the writer he affirms with great certainty, that though the
+excellence of the work be incontestible, he can claim but a small part
+of the reputation; that he owed most of the images and sentiments to a
+secret friend; and that the accuracy and equality of the style was
+produced by the successive correction of the chief criticks of the age.
+
+As every one is pleased with imagining that he knows something not yet
+commonly divulged, secret history easily gains credit; but it is for the
+most part believed only while it circulates in whispers; and when once
+it is openly told, is openly confuted.
+
+The most pernicious enemy is the man of Moderation. Without interest in
+the question, or any motive but honest curiosity, this impartial and
+zealous inquirer after truth is ready to hear either side, and always
+disposed to kind interpretations and favourable opinions. He hath heard
+the trader's affairs reported with great variation, and, after a
+diligent comparison of the evidence, concludes it probable that the
+splendid superstructure of business being originally built upon a narrow
+basis, has lately been found to totter; but between dilatory payment and
+bankruptcy there is a great distance; many merchants have supported
+themselves by expedients for a time, without any final injury to their
+creditors; and what is lost by one adventure may be recovered by
+another. He believes that a young lady pleased with admiration, and
+desirous to make perfect what is already excellent, may heighten her
+charms by artificial improvements, but surely most of her beauties must
+be genuine, and who can say that he is wholly what he endeavours to
+appear? The author he knows to be a man of diligence, who perhaps does
+not sparkle with the fire of Homer, but has the judgment to discover his
+own deficiencies, and to supply them by the help of others; and, in his
+opinion, modesty is a quality so amiable and rare, that it ought to find
+a patron wherever it appears, and may justly be preferred by the publick
+suffrage to petulant wit and ostentatious literature.
+
+He who thus discovers failings with unwillingness, and extenuates the
+faults which cannot be denied, puts an end at once to doubt or
+vindication; his hearers repose upon his candour and veracity, and admit
+the charge without allowing the excuse.
+
+Such are the arts by which the envious, the idle, the peevish, and the
+thoughtless, obstruct that worth which they cannot equal, and, by
+artifices thus easy, sordid, and detestable, is industry defeated,
+beauty blasted, and genius depressed.
+
+
+
+No. 145. TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1751.
+
+ _Non, si priores Maeonius tenet
+ Sedes Homerus, Pindaricae latent,
+ Ceaeque, et Alcaei minaces,
+ Stesichorique graves Camoenae_. HOR. Lib. iv. Od. ix. 5.
+
+ What though the muse her Homer thrones
+ High above all the immortal quire;
+ Nor Pindar's raptures she disowns,
+ Nor hides the plaintive Caean lyre;
+ Alcaeus strikes the tyrant soul with dread,
+ Nor yet is grave Stesichorus unread. FRANCIS.
+
+It is allowed that vocations and employments of least dignity are of the
+most apparent use; that the meanest artizan or manufacturer contributes
+more to the accommodation of life, than the profound scholar and
+argumentative theorist; and that the publick would suffer less present
+inconvenience from the banishment of philosophers than from the
+extinction of any common trade.
+
+Some have been so forcibly struck with this observation, that they have,
+in the first warmth of their discovery, thought it reasonable to alter
+the common distribution of dignity, and ventured to condemn mankind of
+universal ingratitude. For justice exacts, that those by whom we are
+most benefited should be most honoured. And what labour can be more
+useful than that which procures to families and communities those
+necessaries which supply the wants of nature, or those conveniencies by
+which ease, security, and elegance, are conferred?
+
+This is one of the innumerable theories which the first attempt to
+reduce them into practice certainly destroys. If we estimate dignity by
+immediate usefulness, agriculture is undoubtedly the first and noblest
+science; yet we see the plough driven, the clod broken, the manure
+spread, the seeds scattered, and the harvest reaped, by men whom those
+that feed upon their industry will never be persuaded to admit into the
+same rank with heroes, or with sages; and who, after all the confessions
+which truth may extort in favour of their occupation, must be content to
+fill up the lowest class of the commonwealth, to form the base of the
+pyramid of subordination, and lie buried in obscurity themselves, while
+they support all that is splendid, conspicuous, or exalted.
+
+It will be found upon a closer inspection, that this part of the conduct
+of mankind is by no means contrary to reason or equity. Remuneratory
+honours are proportioned at once to the usefulness and difficulty of
+performances, and are properly adjusted by comparison of the mental and
+corporeal abilities, which they appear to employ. That work, however
+necessary, which is carried on only by muscular strength and manual
+dexterity, is not of equal esteem, in the consideration of rational
+beings, with the tasks that exercise the intellectual powers, and
+require the active vigour of imagination or the gradual and laborious
+investigations of reason.
+
+The merit of all manual occupations seems to terminate in the inventor;
+and surely the first ages cannot be charged with ingratitude; since
+those who civilized barbarians, and taught them how to secure themselves
+from cold and hunger, were numbered amongst their deities. But these
+arts once discovered by philosophy, and facilitated by experience, are
+afterwards practised with very little assistance from the faculties of
+the soul; nor is any thing necessary to the regular discharge of these
+inferior duties, beyond that rude observation which the most sluggish
+intellect may practise, and that industry which the stimulations of
+necessity naturally enforce.
+
+Yet though the refusal of statues and panegyrick to those who employ
+only their hands and feet in the service of mankind may be easily
+justified, I am far from intending to incite the petulance of pride, to
+justify the superciliousness of grandeur, or to intercept any part of
+that tenderness and benevolence which, by the privilege of their common
+nature, one may claim from another.
+
+That it would be neither wise nor equitable to discourage the
+husbandman, the labourer, the miner, or the smith, is generally granted;
+but there is another race of beings equally obscure and equally
+indigent, who, because their usefulness is less obvious to vulgar
+apprehensions, live unrewarded and die unpitied, and who have been long
+exposed to insult without a defender, and to censure without an
+apologist.
+
+The authors of London were formerly computed by Swift at several
+thousands, and there is not any reason for suspecting that their number
+has decreased. Of these only a very few can be said to produce, or
+endeavour to produce, new ideas, to extend any principle of science, or
+gratify the imagination with any uncommon train of images or contexture
+of events; the rest, however laborious, however arrogant, can only be
+considered as the drudges of the pen, the manufacturers of literature,
+who have set up for authors, either with or without a regular
+initiation, and, like other artificers, have no other care than to
+deliver their tale of wares at the stated time.
+
+It has been formerly imagined, that he who intends the entertainment or
+instruction of others, must feel in himself some peculiar impulse of
+genius; that he must watch the happy minute in which his natural fire is
+excited, in which his mind is elevated with nobler sentiments,
+enlightened with clearer views, and invigorated with stronger
+comprehension; that he must carefully select his thoughts and polish his
+expressions; and animate his efforts with the hope of raising a monument
+of learning, which neither time nor envy shall be able to destroy.
+
+But the authors whom I am now endeavouring to recommend have been too
+long _hackneyed in the ways of men_ to indulge the chimerical ambition
+of immortality; they have seldom any claim to the trade of writing, but
+that they have tried some other without success; they perceive no
+particular summons to composition, except the sound of the clock; they
+have no other rule than the law or the fashion for admitting their
+thoughts or rejecting them; and about the opinion of posterity they have
+little solicitude, for their productions are seldom intended to remain
+in the world longer than a week.
+
+That such authors are not to be rewarded with praise is evident, since
+nothing can be admired when it ceases to exist; but surely, though they
+cannot aspire to honour, they may be exempted from ignominy, and adopted
+in that order of men which deserves our kindness, though not our
+reverence. These papers of the day, the _Ephemerae_ of learning, have
+uses more adequate to the purposes of common life than more pompous and
+durable volumes. If it is necessary for every man to be more acquainted
+with his contemporaries than with past generations, and to rather know
+the events which may immediately affect his fortune or quiet, than the
+revolutions of ancient kingdoms, in which he has neither possessions nor
+expectations; if it be pleasing to hear of the preferment and dismission
+of statesmen, the birth of heirs, and the marriage of beauties, the
+humble author of journals and gazettes must be considered as a liberal
+dispenser of beneficial knowledge.
+
+Even the abridger, compiler, and translator, though their labours cannot
+be ranked with those of the diurnal historiographer, yet must not be
+rashly doomed to annihilation. Every size of readers requires a genius
+of correspondent capacity; some delight in abstracts and epitomes,
+because they want room in their memory for long details, and content
+themselves with effects, without inquiry after causes; some minds are
+overpowered by splendour of sentiment, as some eyes are offended by a
+glaring light; such will gladly contemplate an author in an humble
+imitation, as we look without pain upon the sun in the water.
+
+As every writer has his use, every writer ought to have his patrons; and
+since no man, however high he may now stand, can be certain that he
+shall not be soon thrown down from his elevation by criticism or
+caprice, the common interest of learning requires that her sons should
+cease from intestine hostilities, and, instead of sacrificing each other
+to malice and contempt, endeavour to avert persecution from the meanest
+of their fraternity.
+
+
+
+No. 146. SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1751.
+
+ _Sunt illic duo, tresve, qui revolvant
+ Nostrarum tineas ineptiarum;
+ Sed cum sponsio, fabultaeque lassae
+ De scarpo fuerint incitato_. MART.
+
+ 'Tis possible that one or two
+ These fooleries of mine may view;
+ But then the bettings must be o'er,
+ Nor Crab or Childers talk'd of more. F. LEWIS.
+
+None of the projects or designs which exercise the mind of man are
+equally subject to obstructions and disappointments with the pursuit of
+fame. Riches cannot easily be denied to them who have something of
+greater value to offer in exchange; he whose fortune is endangered by
+litigation, will not refuse to augment the wealth of the lawyer; he
+whose days are darkened by langour, or whose nerves are excruciated by
+pain, is compelled to pay tribute to the science of healing. But praise
+may be always omitted without inconvenience. When once a man has made
+celebrity necessary to his happiness, he has put it in the power of the
+weakest and most timorous malignity, if not to take away his
+satisfaction, at least to withhold it. His enemies may indulge their
+pride by airy negligence, and gratify their malice by quiet neutrality.
+They that could never have injured a character by invectives, may
+combine to annihilate it by silence; as the women of Rome threatened to
+put an end to conquest and dominion, by supplying no children to the
+commonwealth.
+
+When a writer has with long toil produced a work intended to burst upon
+mankind with unexpected lustre, and withdraw the attention of the
+learned world from every other controversy or inquiry, he is seldom
+contented to wait long without the enjoyment of his new praises. With an
+imagination full of his own importance, he walks out like a monarch in
+disguise to learn the various opinions of his readers. Prepared to feast
+upon admiration; composed to encounter censures without emotion; and
+determined not to suffer his quiet to be injured by a sensibility too
+exquisite of praise or blame, but to laugh with equal contempt at vain
+objections and injudicious commendations, he enters the places of
+mingled conversation, sits down to his tea in an obscure corner, and,
+while he appears to examine a file of antiquated journals, catches the
+conversation of the whole room. He listens, but hears no mention of his
+book, and therefore supposes that he has disappointed his curiosity by
+delay; and that as men of learning would naturally begin their
+conversation with such a wonderful novelty, they had digressed to other
+subjects before his arrival. The company disperses, and their places are
+supplied by others equally ignorant, or equally careless. The same
+expectation hurries him to another place, from which the same
+disappointment drives him soon away. His impatience then grows violent
+and tumultuous; he ranges over the town with restless curiosity, and
+hears in one quarter of a cricket-match, in another of a pick-pocket; is
+told by some of an unexpected bankruptcy; by others of a turtle feast;
+is sometimes provoked by importunate inquiries after the white bear, and
+sometimes with praises of the dancing dog; he is afterwards entreated to
+give his judgment upon a wager about the height of the Monument; invited
+to see a foot-race in the adjacent villages; desired to read a ludicrous
+advertisement; or consulted about the most effectual method of making
+inquiry after a favourite cat. The whole world is busied in affairs
+which he thinks below the notice of reasonable creatures, and which are
+nevertheless sufficient to withdraw all regard from his labours and his
+merits.
+
+He resolves at last to violate his own modesty, and to recall the
+talkers from their folly by an inquiry after himself. He finds every one
+provided with an answer; one has seen the work advertised, but never met
+with any that had read it; another has been so often imposed upon by
+specious titles, that he never buys a book till its character is
+established; a third wonders what any man can hope to produce after so
+many writers of greater eminence; the next has inquired after the
+author, but can hear no account of him, and therefore suspects the name
+to be fictitious; and another knows him to be a man condemned by
+indigence to write too frequently what he does not understand.
+
+Many are the consolations with which the unhappy author endeavours to
+allay his vexation, and fortify his patience. He has written with too
+little indulgence to the understanding of common readers; he has fallen
+upon an age in which solid knowledge, and delicate refinement, have
+given way to a low merriment, and idle buffoonery, and therefore no
+writer can hope for distinction, who has any higher purpose than to
+raise laughter. He finds that his enemies, such as superiority will
+always raise, have been industrious, while his performance was in the
+press, to vilify and blast it; and that the bookseller, whom he had
+resolved to enrich, has rivals that obstruct the circulation of the
+copies. He at last reposes upon the consideration, that the noblest
+works of learning and genius have always made their way slowly against
+ignorance and prejudice; and that reputation, which is never to be lost,
+must be gradually obtained, as animals of longest life are observed not
+soon to attain their full stature and strength.
+
+By such arts of voluntary delusion does every man endeavour to conceal
+his own unimportance from himself. It is long before we are convinced of
+the small proportion which every individual bears to the collective body
+of mankind; or learn how few can be interested in the fortune of any
+single man; how little vacancy is left in the world for any new object
+of attention; to how small extent the brightest blaze of merit can be
+spread amidst the mists of business and of folly; and how soon it is
+clouded by the intervention of other novelties. Not only the writer of
+books, but the commander of armies, and the deliverer of nations, will
+easily outlive all noisy and popular reputation; he may be celebrated
+for a time by the publick voice, but his actions and his name will soon
+be considered as remote and unaffecting, and be rarely mentioned but by
+those whose alliance gives them some vanity to gratify by frequent
+commemoration.
+
+It seems not to be sufficiently considered how little renown can be
+admitted in the world. Mankind are kept perpetually busy by their fears
+or desires, and have not more leisure from their own affairs, than to
+acquaint themselves with the accidents of the current day. Engaged in
+contriving some refuge from calamity, or in shortening the way to some
+new possession, they seldom suffer their thoughts to wander to the past
+or future; none but a few solitary students have leisure to inquire into
+the claims of ancient heroes or sages; and names which hoped to range
+over kingdoms and continents, shrink at last into cloisters or colleges.
+
+Nor is it certain, that even of these dark and narrow habitations, these
+last retreats of fame, the possession will be long kept. Of men devoted
+to literature, very few extend their views beyond some particular
+science, and the greater part seldom inquire, even in their own
+profession, for any authors but those whom the present mode of study
+happens to force upon their notice; they desire not to fill their minds
+with unfashionable knowledge, but contentedly resign to oblivion those
+books which they now find censured or neglected.
+
+The hope of fame is necessarily connected with such considerations as
+must abate the ardour of confidence, and repress the vigour of pursuit.
+Whoever claims renown from any kind of excellence, expects to fill the
+place which is now possessed by another; for there are already names of
+every class sufficient to employ all that will desire to remember them;
+and surely he that is pushing his predecessors into the gulph of
+obscurity, cannot but sometimes suspect, that he must himself sink in
+like manner, and, as he stands upon the same precipice, be swept away
+with the same violence.
+
+It sometimes happens, that fame begins when life is at an end; but far
+the greater number of candidates for applause have owed their reception
+in the world to some favourable casualties, and have therefore
+immediately sunk into neglect, when death stripped them of their casual
+influence, and neither fortune nor patronage operated in their favour.
+Among those who have better claims to regard, the honour paid to their
+memory is commonly proportionate to the reputation which they enjoyed in
+their lives, though still growing fainter, as it is at a greater
+distance from the first emission; and since it is so difficult to obtain
+the notice of contemporaries, how little is to be hoped from future
+times? What can merit effect by its own force, when the help of art or
+friendship can scarcely support it?
+
+
+
+No. 147. TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1751.
+
+ Tu nihil invita dices faciesve Minerva. Hon. Ar. Poet. 385.
+
+ --You are of too quick a sight,
+ Not to discern which way your talent lies. ROSCOMMON.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+As little things grow great by continual accumulation, I hope you will
+not think the dignity of your character impaired by an account of a
+ludicrous persecution, which, though it produced no scenes of horrour or
+of ruin, yet, by incessant importunity of vexation, wears away my
+happiness, and consumes those years which nature seems particularly to
+have assigned to cheerfulness, in silent anxiety and helpless
+resentment.
+
+I am the eldest son of a gentleman, who having inherited a large estate
+from his ancestors, and feeling no desire either to increase or lessen
+it, has from the time of his marriage generally resided at his own seat;
+where, by dividing his time among the duties of a father, a master, and
+a magistrate, the study of literature, and the offices of civility, he
+finds means to rid himself of the day, without any of those amusements,
+which all those with whom my residence in this place has made me
+acquainted, think necessary to lighten the burthen of existence.
+
+When my age made me capable of instruction, my father prevailed upon a
+gentleman, long known at Oxford for the extent of his learning and the
+purity of his manners, to undertake my education. The regard with which
+I saw him treated, disposed me to consider his instructions as
+important, and I therefore soon formed a habit of attention, by which I
+made very quick advances in different kinds of learning, and heard,
+perhaps too often, very flattering comparisons of my own proficiency
+with that of others, either less docile by nature, or less happily
+forwarded by instruction. I was caressed by all that exchanged visits
+with my father; and as young men are with little difficulty taught to
+judge favourably of themselves, began to think that close application
+was no longer necessary, and that the time was now come when I was at
+liberty to read only for amusement, and was to receive the reward of my
+fatigues in praise and admiration.
+
+While I was thus banqueting upon my own perfections, and longing in
+secret to escape from tutorage, my father's brother came from London to
+pass a summer at his native place. A lucrative employment which he
+possessed, and a fondness for the conversation and diversions of the gay
+part of mankind, had so long kept him from rural excursions, that I had
+never seen him since my infancy. My curiosity was therefore strongly
+excited by the hope of observing a character more nearly, which I had
+hitherto reverenced only at a distance.
+
+From all private and intimate conversation, I was long withheld by the
+perpetual confluence of visitants with whom the first news of my uncle's
+arrival crowded the house; but was amply recompensed by seeing an exact
+and punctilious practice of the arts of a courtier, in all the
+stratagems of endearment, the gradations of respect, and variations of
+courtesy. I remarked with what justice of distribution he divided his
+talk to a wide circle; with what address he offered to every man an
+occasion of indulging some favourite topick, or displaying some
+particular attainment; the judgment with which he regulated his
+inquiries after the absent; and the care with which he shewed all the
+companions of his early years how strongly they were infixed in his
+memory, by the mention of past incidents and the recital of puerile
+kindnesses, dangers, and frolicks. I soon discovered that he possessed
+some science of graciousness and attraction which books had not taught,
+and of which neither I nor my father had any knowledge; that he had the
+power of obliging those whom he did not benefit; that he diffused, upon
+his cursory behaviour and most trifling actions, a gloss of softness and
+delicacy by which every one was dazzled; and that, by some occult method
+of captivation, he animated the timorous, softened the supercilious, and
+opened the reserved. I could not but repine at the inelegance of my own
+manners, which left me no hopes but not to offend, and at the inefficacy
+of rustick benevolence, which gained no friends but by real service.
+
+My uncle saw the veneration with which I caught every accent of his
+voice, and watched every motion of his hand; and the awkward diligence
+with which I endeavoured to imitate his embrace of fondness, and his bow
+of respect. He was, like others, easily flattered by an imitator by whom
+he could not fear ever to be rivalled, and repaid my assiduities with
+compliments and professions. Our fondness was so increased by a mutual
+endeavour to please each other, that when he returned to London, he
+declared himself unable to leave a nephew so amiable and so accomplished
+behind him; and obtained my father's permission to enjoy my company for
+a few months, by a promise to initiate me in the arts of politeness, and
+introduce me into publick life.
+
+The courtier had little inclination to fatigue, and therefore, by
+travelling very slowly, afforded me time for more loose and familiar
+conversation; but I soon found, that by a few inquiries which he was not
+well prepared to satisfy, I had made him weary of his young companion.
+His element was a mixed assembly, where ceremony and healths,
+compliments and common topicks, kept the tongue employed with very
+little assistance from memory or reflection; but in the chariot, where
+he was necessitated to support a regular tenour of conversation, without
+any relief from a new comer, or any power of starting into gay
+digressions, or destroying argument by a jest, he soon discovered that
+poverty of ideas which had been hitherto concealed under the tinsel of
+politeness. The first day he entertained me with the novelties and
+wonders with which I should be astonished at my entrance into London,
+and cautioned me with apparent admiration of his own wisdom against the
+arts by which rusticity is frequently deluded. The same detail and the
+same advice he would have repeated on the second day; but as I every
+moment diverted the discourse to the history of the towns by which we
+passed, or some other subject of learning or of reason, he soon lost his
+vivacity, grew peevish and silent, wrapped his cloak about him, composed
+himself to slumber, and reserved his gaiety for fitter auditors.
+
+At length I entered London, and my uncle was reinstated in his
+superiority. He awaked at once to loquacity as soon as our wheels
+rattled on the pavement, and told me the name of every street as we
+crossed it, and owner of every house as we passed by. He presented me to
+my aunt, a lady of great eminence for the number of her acquaintances,
+and splendour of her assemblies, and either in kindness or revenge
+consulted with her, in my presence, how I might be most advantageously
+dressed for my first appearance, and most expeditiously disencumbered
+from my villatick bashfulness. My indignation at familiarity thus
+contemptuous flushed in my face; they mistook anger for shame, and
+alternately exerted their eloquence upon the benefits of publick
+education, and the happiness of an assurance early acquired.
+
+Assurance is, indeed, the only qualification to which they seem to have
+annexed merit, and assurance, therefore, is perpetually recommended to
+me as the supply of every defect, and the ornament of every excellence.
+I never sit silent in company when secret history is circulating, but I
+am reproached for want of assurance. If I fail to return the stated
+answer to a compliment; if I am disconcerted by unexpected raillery; if
+I blush when I am discovered gazing on a beauty, or hesitate when I find
+myself embarrassed in an argument; if I am unwilling to talk of what I
+do not understand, or timorous in undertaking offices which I cannot
+gracefully perform; if I suffer a more lively tatler to recount the
+casualties of a game, or a nimbler fop to pick up a fan, I am censured
+between pity and contempt, as a wretch doomed to grovel in obscurity for
+want of assurance.
+
+I have found many young persons harassed in the same manner, by those to
+whom age has given nothing but the assurance which they recommend; and
+therefore cannot but think it useful to inform them, that cowardice and
+delicacy are not to be confounded; and that he whose stupidity has armed
+him against the shafts of ridicule, will always act and speak with
+greater audacity, than they whose sensibility represses their ardour,
+and who dare never let their confidence outgrow their abilities.
+
+
+
+No. 148. SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1751.
+
+ _Me pater saevis oneret catenis,
+ Quod viro clemens misero peperci:
+ Me vel extremis Numidarum in agros
+ Classe releget._ HOR. Lib. iii. Od. xi. 45.
+
+ Me let my father load with chains,
+ Or banish to Numidia's farthest plains!
+ My crime, that I, a loyal wife,
+ In kind compassion sav'd my husband's life. FRANCIS.
+
+Politicians remark, that no oppression is so heavy or lasting as that
+which is inflicted by the perversion and exorbitance of legal authority.
+The robber may be seized, and the invader repelled, whenever they are
+found; they who pretend no right but that of force, may by force be
+punished or suppressed. But when plunder bears the name of impost, and
+murder is perpetrated by a judicial sentence, fortitude is intimidated,
+and wisdom confounded: resistance shrinks from an alliance with
+rebellion, and the villain remains secure in the robes of the
+magistrate.
+
+Equally dangerous and equally detestable are the cruelties often
+exercised in private families, under the venerable sanction of parental
+authority; the power which we are taught to honour from the first
+moments of reason; which is guarded from insult and violation by all
+that can impress awe upon the mind of man; and which therefore may
+wanton in cruelty without control, and trample the bounds of right with
+innumerable transgressions, before duty and piety will dare to seek
+redress, or think themselves at liberty to recur to any other means of
+deliverance than supplications by which insolence is elated, and tears
+by which cruelty is gratified.
+
+It was for a long time imagined by the Romans, that no son could be the
+murderer of his father; and they had therefore no punishment
+appropriated to parricide. They seem likewise to have believed with
+equal confidence, that no father could be cruel to his child; and
+therefore they allowed every man the supreme judicature in his own
+house, and put the lives of his offspring into his hands. But experience
+informed them by degrees, that they determined too hastily in favour of
+human nature; they found that instinct and habit were not able to
+contend with avarice or malice; that the nearest relation might be
+violated; and that power, to whomsoever intrusted, might be ill
+employed. They were therefore obliged to supply and to change their
+institutions; to deter the parricide by a new law, and to transfer
+capital punishments from the parent to the magistrate.
+
+There are indeed many houses which it is impossible to enter familiarly,
+without discovering that parents are by no means exempt from the
+intoxications of dominion; and that he who is in no danger of hearing
+remonstrances but from his own conscience, will seldom be long without
+the art of controling his convictions, and modifying justice by his own
+will.
+
+If in any situation the heart were inaccessible to malignity, it might
+be supposed to be sufficiently secured by parental relation. To have
+voluntarily become to any being the occasion of its existence, produces
+an obligation to make that existence happy. To see helpless infancy
+stretching out her hands, and pouring out her cries in testimony of
+dependence, without any powers to alarm jealousy, or any guilt to
+alienate affection, must surely awaken tenderness in every human mind;
+and tenderness once excited will be hourly increased by the natural
+contagion of felicity, by the repercussion of communicated pleasure, by
+the consciousness of the dignity of benefaction. I believe no generous
+or benevolent man can see the vilest animal courting his regard, and
+shrinking at his anger, playing his gambols of delight before him,
+calling on him in distress, and flying to him in danger, without more
+kindness than he can persuade himself to feel for the wild and unsocial
+inhabitants of the air and water. We naturally endear to ourselves those
+to whom we impart any kind of pleasure, because we imagine their
+affection and esteem secured to us by the benefits which they receive.
+
+There is, indeed, another method by which the pride of superiority may
+be likewise gratified. He that has extinguished all the sensations of
+humanity, and has no longer any satisfaction in the reflection that he
+is loved as the distributor of happiness, may please himself with
+exciting terrour as the inflictor of pain: he may delight his solitude
+with contemplating the extent of his power and the force of his
+commands; in imagining the desires that flutter on the tongue which is
+forbidden to utter them, or the discontent which preys on the heart in
+which fear confines it: he may amuse himself with new contrivances of
+detection, multiplications of prohibition, and varieties of punishment;
+and swell with exultation when he considers how little of the homage
+that he receives he owes to choice.
+
+That princes of this character have been known, the history of all
+absolute kingdoms will inform us; and since, as Aristotle observes,
+_[Greek: hae oikonomikae monarchia], the government of a family is
+naturally monarchical_, it is, like other monarchies, too often
+arbitrarily administered. The regal and parental tyrant differ only in
+the extent of their dominions, and the number of their slaves. The same
+passions cause the same miseries; except that seldom any prince, however
+despotick, has so far shaken off all awe of the publick eye, as to
+venture upon those freaks of injustice, which are sometimes indulged
+under the secrecy of a private dwelling. Capricious injunctions, partial
+decisions, unequal allotments, distributions of reward, not by merit,
+but by fancy, and punishments, regulated not by the degree of the
+offence, but by the humour of the judge, are too frequent where no power
+is known but that of a father.
+
+That he delights in the misery of others, no man will confess, and yet
+what other motive can make a father cruel? The king may be instigated by
+one man to the destruction of another; he may sometimes think himself
+endangered by the virtues of a subject; he may dread the successful
+general or the popular orator; his avarice may point out golden
+confiscations; and his guilt may whisper that he can only be secure by
+cutting off all power of revenge.
+
+But what can a parent hope from the oppression of those who were born to
+his protection, of those who can disturb him with no competition, who
+can enrich him with no spoils? Why cowards are cruel may be easily
+discovered; but for what reason, not more infamous than cowardice, can
+that man delight in oppression who has nothing to fear?
+
+The unjustifiable severity of a parent is loaded with this aggravation,
+that those whom he injures are always in his sight. The injustice of a
+prince is often exercised upon those of whom he never had any personal
+or particular knowledge; and the sentence which he pronounces, whether
+of banishment, imprisonment, or death, removes from his view the man
+whom he condemns. But the domestick oppressor dooms himself to gaze upon
+those faces which he clouds with terrour and with sorrow; and beholds
+every moment the effects of his own barbarities. He that can bear to
+give continual pain to those who surround him, and can walk with
+satisfaction in the gloom of his own presence; he that can see
+submissive misery without relenting, and meet without emotion the eye
+that implores mercy, or demands justice, will scarcely be amended by
+remonstrance or admonition; he has found means of stopping the avenues
+of tenderness, and arming his heart against the force of reason.
+
+Even though no consideration should be paid to the great law of social
+beings, by which every individual is commanded to consult the happiness
+of others, yet the harsh parent is less to be vindicated than any other
+criminal, because he less provides for the happiness of himself. Every
+man, however little he loves others, would willingly be loved; every man
+hopes to live long, and therefore hopes for that time at which he shall
+sink back to imbecility, and must depend for ease and cheerfulness upon
+the officiousness of others. But how has he obviated the inconveniencies
+of old age, who alienates from him the assistance of his children, and
+whose bed must be surrounded in the last hours, in the hours of languor
+and dejection, of impatience and of pain, by strangers to whom his life
+is indifferent, or by enemies to whom his death is desirable?
+
+Piety will, indeed, in good minds overcome provocation, and those who
+have been harassed by brutality will forget the injuries which they have
+suffered, so far as to perform the last duties with alacrity and zeal.
+But surely no resentment can be equally painful with kindness thus
+undeserved, nor can severer punishment be imprecated upon a man not
+wholly lost in meanness and stupidity, than, through the tediousness of
+decrepitude, to be reproached by the kindness of his own children, to
+receive not the tribute but the alms of attendance, and to owe every
+relief of his miseries, not to gratitude but to mercy.
+
+
+
+No. 149. TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1751.
+
+ _Quod non sit Pylades hoc tempore, non sit Orestes,
+ Miraris? Pylades, Marce, bibebat idem.
+ Nec melior panis, turdusve dabatur Oresti:
+ Sed par, atque eadem coena duobus erat.--
+ Te Cadmea Tyrus, me pinguis Gallia vestit:
+ Vis te purpureum, Marce, sagatus amem?
+ Ut praestem Pyladen, aliquis mihi praestet Orestem.
+ Hoc non fit verbis, Marce: ut ameris, ama_. MART. Lib. vi. Ep. xi.
+
+ You wonder now that no man sees
+ Such friends as those of ancient Greece.
+ Here lay the point--Orestes' meat
+ Was just the same his friend did eat;
+ Nor can it yet be found, his wine
+ Was better, Pylades, than thine.
+ In home-spun russet, I am drest,
+ Your cloth is always of the best;
+ But, honest Marcus, if you please
+ To chuse me for your Pylades,
+ Remember, words alone are vain;
+ Love--if you would be lov'd again. F. LEWIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+No depravity of the mind has been more frequently or justly censured
+than ingratitude. There is indeed sufficient reason for looking on those
+that can return evil for good, and repay kindness and assistance with
+hatred or neglect, as corrupted beyond the common degrees of wickedness;
+nor will he, who has once been clearly detected in acts of injury to his
+benefactor, deserve to be numbered among social beings; he has
+endeavoured to destroy confidence, to intercept sympathy, and to turn
+every man's attention wholly on himself.
+
+There is always danger lest the honest abhorrence of a crime should
+raise the passions with too much violence against the man to whom it is
+imputed. In proportion as guilt is more enormous, it ought to be
+ascertained by stronger evidence. The charge against ingratitude is very
+general; almost every man can tell what favours he has conferred upon
+insensibility, and how much happiness he has bestowed without return;
+but perhaps, if these patrons and protectors were confronted with any
+whom they boast of having befriended, it would often appear that they
+consulted only their pleasure or vanity, and repaid themselves their
+petty donatives by gratifications of insolence and indulgence of
+contempt.
+
+It has happened that much of my time has been passed in a dependent
+state, and consequently I have received many favours in the opinion of
+those at whose expense I have been maintained; yet I do not feel in my
+heart any burning gratitude or tumultuous affection; and, as I would not
+willingly suppose myself less susceptible of virtuous passions than the
+rest of mankind, I shall lay the history of my life before you, that you
+may, by your judgment of my conduct, either reform, or confirm, my
+present sentiments. My father was the second son of a very ancient and
+wealthy family. He married a lady of equal birth, whose fortune, joined
+to his own, might have supported his posterity in honour; but being gay
+and ambitious, he prevailed on his friends to procure him a post, which
+gave him an opportunity of displaying his elegance and politeness. My
+mother was equally pleased with splendour, and equally careless of
+expense; they both justified their profusion to themselves, by
+endeavouring to believe it necessary to the extension of their
+acquaintance, and improvement of their interest; and whenever any place
+became vacant, they expected to be repaid. In the midst of these hopes
+my father was snatched away by an apoplexy; and my mother, who had no
+pleasure but in dress, equipage, assemblies, and compliments, finding
+that she could live no longer in her accustomed rank, sunk into
+dejection, and in two years wore out her life with envy and discontent.
+
+I was sent with a sister, one year younger than myself, to the elder
+brother of my father. We were not yet capable of observing how much
+fortune influences affection, but flattered ourselves on the road with
+the tenderness and regard with which we should be treated by our uncle.
+Our reception was rather frigid than malignant; we were introduced to
+our young cousins, and for the first month more frequently consoled than
+upbraided; but in a short time we found our prattle repressed, our dress
+neglected, our endearments unregarded, and our requests referred to the
+housekeeper.
+
+The forms of decency were now violated, and every day produced new
+insults. We were soon brought to the necessity of receding from our
+imagined equality with our cousins, to whom we sunk into humble
+companions without choice or influence, expected only to echo their
+opinions, facilitate their desires, and accompany their rambles. It was
+unfortunate that our early introduction into polite company, and
+habitual knowledge of the arts of civility, had given us such an
+appearance of superiority to the awkward bashfulness of our relations,
+as naturally drew respect and preference from every stranger; and my
+aunt was forced to assert the dignity of her own children, while they
+were sculking in corners for fear of notice, and hanging down their
+heads in silent confusion, by relating the indiscretion of our father,
+displaying her own kindness, lamenting the misery of birth without
+estate, and declaring her anxiety for our future provision, and the
+expedients which she had formed to secure us from those follies or
+crimes, to which the conjunction of pride and want often gives occasion.
+In a short time care was taken to prevent such vexatious mistakes; we
+were told, that fine clothes would only fill our heads with false
+expectations, and our dress was therefore accommodated to our fortune.
+
+Childhood is not easily dejected or mortified. We felt no lasting pain
+from insolence or neglect; but finding that we were favoured and
+commended by all whose interest did not prompt them to discountenance
+us, preserved our vivacity and spirit to years of greater sensibility.
+It then became irksome and disgusting to live without any principle of
+action but the will of another, and we often met privately in the garden
+to lament our condition, and to ease our hearts with mutual narratives
+of caprice, peevishness, and affront.
+
+There are innumerable modes of insult and tokens of contempt, for which
+it is not easy to find a name, which vanish to nothing in an attempt to
+describe them, and yet may, by continual repetition, make day pass after
+day in sorrow and in terrour. Phrases of cursory compliment and
+established salutation may, by a different modulation of the voice, or
+cast of the countenance, convey contrary meanings, and be changed from
+indications of respect to expressions of scorn. The dependant who
+cultivates delicacy in himself, very little consults his own
+tranquillity. My unhappy vigilance is every moment discovering some
+petulance of accent, or arrogance of mien, some vehemence of
+interrogation, or quickness of reply, that recals my poverty to my mind,
+and which I feel more acutely, as I know not how to resent it.
+
+You are not, however, to imagine, that I think myself discharged from
+the duties of gratitude, only because my relations do not adjust their
+looks, or tune their voices to my expectation. The insolence of
+benefaction terminates not in negative rudeness or obliquities of
+insult. I am often told in express terms of the miseries from which
+charity has snatched me, while multitudes are suffered by relations
+equally near to devolve upon the parish; and have more than once heard
+it numbered among other favours, that I am admitted to the same table
+with my cousins.
+
+That I sit at the first table I must acknowledge, but I sit there only
+that I may feel the stings of inferiority. My inquiries are neglected,
+my opinion is overborne, my assertions are controverted, and, as
+insolence always propagates itself, the servants overlook me, in
+imitation of their master; if I call modestly, I am not heard; if
+loudly, my usurpation of authority is checked by a general frown. I am
+often obliged to look uninvited upon delicacies, and sometimes desired
+to rise upon very slight pretences.
+
+The incivilities to which I am exposed would give me less pain, were
+they not aggravated by the tears of my sister, whom the young ladies are
+hourly tormenting with every art of feminine persecution. As it is said
+of the supreme magistrate of Venice, that he is a prince in one place
+and a slave in another, my sister is a servant to her cousins in their
+apartments, and a companion only at the table. Her wit and beauty drew
+so much regard away from them, that they never suffer her to appear with
+them in any place where they solicit notice, or expect admiration; and
+when they are visited by neighbouring ladies and pass their hours in
+domestick amusements, she is sometimes called to fill a vacancy,
+insulted with contemptuous freedoms, and dismissed to her needle, when
+her place is supplied. The heir has of late, by the instigation of his
+sisters, begun to harass her with clownish jocularity; he seems inclined
+to make his first rude essays of waggery upon her; and by the
+connivance, if not encouragement, of his father, treats her with such
+licentious brutality, as I cannot bear, though I cannot punish it.
+
+I beg to be informed, Mr. Rambler, how much we can be supposed to owe to
+beneficence, exerted on terms like these? to beneficence which pollutes
+its gifts with contumely, and may be truly said to pander to pride? I
+would willingly be told, whether insolence does not reward its own
+liberalities, and whether he that exacts servility can, with justice, at
+the same time, expect affection?
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+HYPERDULUS.
+
+
+
+No. 150. SATURDAY, AUGUST 24, 1751.
+
+ --_O munera nondum
+ Intellecta Deum!_ LUCAN.
+
+ --Thou chiefest good!
+ Bestow'd by Heav'n, but seldom understood. ROWE.
+
+As daily experience makes it evident that misfortunes are unavoidably
+incident to human life, that calamity will neither be repelled by
+fortitude, nor escaped by flight; neither awed by greatness, nor eluded
+by obscurity; philosophers have endeavoured to reconcile us to that
+condition which they cannot teach us to mend, by persuading us that most
+of our evils are made afflictive only by ignorance or perverseness, and
+that nature has annexed to every vicissitude of external circumstances
+some advantage sufficient to over-balance all its inconveniencies.
+
+This attempt may, perhaps, be justly suspected of resemblance to the
+practice of physicians, who, when they cannot mitigate pain, destroy
+sensibility, and endeavour to conceal, by opiates, the inefficacy of
+their other medicines. The panegyrists of calamity have more frequently
+gained applause to their wit, than acquiescence to their arguments; nor
+has it appeared that the most musical oratory, or subtle ratiocination,
+has been able long to overpower the anguish of oppression, the
+tediousness of languor, or the longings of want.
+
+Yet, it may be generally remarked, that, where much has been attempted,
+something has been performed; though the discoveries or acquisitions of
+man are not always adequate to the expectations of his pride, they are
+at least sufficient to animate his industry. The antidotes with which
+philosophy has medicated the cup of life, though they cannot give it
+salubrity and sweetness, have at least allayed its bitterness, and
+contempered its malignity; the balm which she drops upon the wounds of
+the mind abates their pain, though it cannot heal them.
+
+By suffering willingly what we cannot avoid, we secure ourselves from
+vain and immoderate disquiet; we preserve for better purposes that
+strength which would be unprofitably wasted in wild efforts of
+desperation, and maintain that circumspection which may enable us to
+seize every support, and improve every alleviation. This calmness will
+be more easily obtained, as the attention is more powerfully withdrawn
+from the contemplation of unmingled unabated evil, and diverted to those
+accidental benefits which prudence may confer on every state.
+
+Seneca has attempted, not only to pacify us in misfortune, but almost to
+allure us to it, by representing it as necessary to the pleasures of the
+mind. _He that never was acquainted with adversity_, says he, _has seen
+the world but on one side, and is ignorant of half the scenes of
+nature_. He invites his pupil to calamity, as the Syrens allured the
+passenger to their coasts, by promising that he shall return [Greek:
+pleiona eidos], with increase of knowledge, with enlarged views, and
+multiplied ideas.
+
+Curiosity is, in great and generous minds, the first passion and the
+last; and perhaps always predominates in proportion to the strength of
+the contemplative faculties. He who easily comprehends all that is
+before him, and soon exhausts any single subject, is always eager for
+new inquiries; and, in proportion as the intellectual eye takes in a
+wider prospect, it must be gratified with variety by more rapid flights,
+and bolder excursions; nor perhaps can there be proposed to those who
+have been accustomed to the pleasures of thought, a more powerful
+incitement to any undertaking, than the hope of filling their fancy with
+new images, of clearing their doubts, and enlightening their reason.
+
+When Jason, in Valerius Flaccus, would incline the young prince Acastus
+to accompany him in the first essay of navigation, he disperses his
+apprehensions of danger by representations of the new tracts of earth
+and heaven, which the expedition would spread before their eyes; and
+tells him with what grief he will hear, at their return, of the
+countries which they shall have seen, and the toils which they have
+surmounted:
+
+ _O quantum terrae, quantum cognoscere coeli
+ Permissum est! pelagus quantos aperimus in usus!
+ Nunc forsan grave reris opus: sed laeta recurret
+ Cum ratis, et caram cum jam mihi reddet Iolcon;
+ Quis pudor heu nostros tibi tunc audire labores!
+ Quam referam visas tua per suspiria gentes!_ ARG. Lib. i. 168.
+
+ Led by our stars, what tracts immense we trace!
+ From seas remote, what funds of science raise!
+ A pain to thought! but when the heroick band
+ Returns applauded to their native land,
+ A life domestick you will then deplore,
+ And sigh while I describe the various, shore. EDW. CAVE.
+
+Acastus was soon prevailed upon by his curiosity to set rocks and
+hardships at defiance, and commit his life to the winds; and the same
+motives have in all ages had the same effect upon those whom the desire
+of fame or wisdom has distinguished from the lower orders of mankind.
+
+If, therefore, it can be proved that distress is necessary to the
+attainment of knowledge, and that a happy situation hides from us so
+large a part of the field of meditation, the envy of many who repine at
+the sight of affluence and splendour will be much diminished; for such
+is the delight of mental superiority, that none on whom nature or study
+have conferred it, would purchase the gifts of fortune by its loss.
+
+It is certain, that however the rhetorick of Seneca may have dressed
+adversity with extrinsick ornaments, he has justly represented it as
+affording some opportunities of observation, which cannot be found in
+continual success; he has truly asserted, that to escape misfortune is
+to want instruction, and that to live at ease is to live in ignorance.
+
+As no man can enjoy happiness without thinking that he enjoys it, the
+experience of calamity is necessary to a just sense of better fortune:
+for the good of our present state is merely comparative, and the evil
+which every man feels will be sufficient to disturb and harass him, if
+he does not know how much he escapes. The lustre of diamonds is
+invigorated by the interposition of darker bodies; the lights of a
+picture are created by the shades. The highest pleasure which nature has
+indulged to sensitive perception, is that of rest after fatigue; yet,
+that state which labour heightens into delight, is of itself only ease,
+and is incapable of satisfying the mind without the superaddition of
+diversified amusements.
+
+Prosperity, as is truly asserted by Seneca, very much obstructs the
+knowledge of ourselves. No man can form a just estimate of his own
+powers by unactive speculation. That fortitude which has encountered no
+dangers, that prudence which has surmounted no difficulties, that
+integrity which has been attacked by no temptations, can at best be
+considered but as gold not yet brought to the test, of which therefore
+the true value cannot be assigned. _He that traverses the lists without
+an adversary, may receive_, says the philosopher, _the reward of
+victory, but he has no pretensions to the honour_. If it be the highest
+happiness of man to contemplate himself with satisfaction, and to
+receive the gratulations of his own conscience; he whose courage has
+made way amidst the turbulence of opposition, and whose vigour has
+broken through the snares of distress, has many advantages over those
+that have slept in the shades of indolence, and whose retrospect of time
+can entertain them with nothing but day rising upon day, and year
+gliding after year.
+
+Equally necessary is some variety of fortune to a nearer inspection of
+the manners, principles, and affections of mankind. Princes, when they
+would know the opinions or grievances of their subjects, find it
+necessary to steal away from guards and attendants, and mingle on equal
+terms among the people. To him who is known to have the power of doing
+good or harm, nothing is shewn in its natural form. The behaviour of all
+that approach him is regulated by his humour, their narratives are
+adapted to his inclination, and their reasonings determined by his
+opinions; whatever can alarm suspicion, or excite resentment, is
+carefully suppressed, and nothing appears but uniformity of sentiments,
+and ardour of affection. It may be observed, that the unvaried
+complaisance which ladies have the right of exacting, keeps them
+generally unskilled in human nature; prosperity will always enjoy the
+female prerogatives, and therefore must be always in danger of female
+ignorance. Truth is scarcely to be heard, but by those from whom it can
+serve no interest to conceal it.
+
+
+
+No. 151. TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1751.
+
+ [Greek:--Amphi d anthro-
+ pon phresin amplakiai
+ Anarithmatoi kremantai
+ Touto d amachanon eurein,
+ O ti nun, kai en teleu-
+ ta, phertaton andri tuchein.] PINDAR, Ol. vii. 43.
+[Transcriber's note: line breaks and hyphenation in original.]
+
+ But wrapt in error is the human mind,
+ And human bliss is ever insecure:
+ Know we what fortune yet remains behind?
+ Know we how long the present shall endure? WEST.
+
+The writers of medicine and physiology have traced, with great
+appearance of accuracy, the effects of time upon the human body, by
+marking the various periods of the constitution, and the several stages
+by which animal life makes its progress from infancy to decrepitude.
+Though their observations have not enabled them to discover how manhood
+may be accelerated, or old age retarded, yet surely, if they be
+considered only as the amusements of curiosity, they are of equal
+importance with conjectures on things more remote, with catalogues of
+the fixed stars, and calculations of the bulk of planets.
+
+It had been a task worthy of the moral philosophers to have considered
+with equal care the climactericks of the mind; to have pointed out the
+time at which every passion begins and ceases to predominate, and noted
+the regular variations of desire, and the succession of one appetite to
+another.
+
+The periods of mental change are not to be stated with equal certainty;
+our bodies grow up under the care of nature, and depend so little on our
+own management, that something more than negligence is necessary to
+discompose their structure, or impede their vigour. But our minds are
+committed in a great measure first to the direction of others, and
+afterwards of ourselves. It would be difficult to protract the weakness
+of infancy beyond the usual time, but the mind may be very easily
+hindered from its share of improvement, and the bulk and strength of
+manhood must, without the assistance of education and instruction, be
+informed only with the understanding of a child.
+
+Yet, amidst all the disorder and inequality which variety of discipline,
+example, conversation, and employment, produce in the intellectual
+advances of different men, there is still discovered, by a vigilant
+spectator, such a general and remote similitude, as may be expected in
+the same common nature affected by external circumstances indefinitely
+varied. We all enter the world in equal ignorance, gaze round about us
+on the same objects, and have our first pains and pleasures, our first
+hopes and fears, our first aversions and desires, from the same causes;
+and though, as we proceed farther, life opens wider prospects to our
+view, and accidental impulses determine us to different paths, yet as
+every mind, however vigorous or abstracted, is necessitated, in its
+present state of union, to receive its informations, and execute its
+purposes, by the intervention of the body, the uniformity of our
+corporeal nature communicates itself to our intellectual operations; and
+those whose abilities or knowledge incline them most to deviate from the
+general round of life, are recalled from eccentricity by the laws of
+their existence.
+
+If we consider the exercises of the mind, it will be found that in each
+part of life some particular faculty is more eminently employed. When
+the treasures of knowledge are first opened before us, while novelty
+blooms alike on either hand, and every thing equally unknown and
+unexamined seems of equal value, the power of the soul is principally
+exerted in a vivacious and desultory curiosity. She applies by turns to
+every object, enjoys it for a short time, and flies with equal ardour to
+another. She delights to catch up loose and unconnected ideas, but
+starts away from systems and complications, which would obstruct the
+rapidity of her transitions, and detain her long in the same pursuit.
+
+When a number of distinct images are collected by these erratick and
+hasty surveys, the fancy is busied in arranging them; and combines them
+into pleasing pictures with more resemblance to the realities of life as
+experience advances, and new observations rectify the former. While the
+judgment is yet uninformed, and unable to compare the draughts of
+fiction with their originals, we are delighted with improbable
+adventures, impracticable virtues, and inimitable characters: but, in
+proportion as we have more opportunities of acquainting ourselves with
+living nature, we are sooner disgusted with copies in which there
+appears no resemblance. We first discard absurdity and impossibility,
+then exact greater and greater degrees of probability, but at last
+become cold and insensible to the charms of falsehood, however specious,
+and, from the imitations of truth, which are never perfect, transfer our
+affection to truth itself.
+
+Now commences the reign of judgment or reason; we begin to find little
+pleasure but in comparing arguments, stating propositions, disentangling
+perplexities, clearing ambiguities, and deducing consequences. The
+painted vales of imagination are deserted, and our intellectual activity
+is exercised in winding through the labyrinths of fallacy, and toiling
+with firm and cautious steps up the narrow tracks of demonstration.
+Whatever may lull vigilance, or mislead attention, is contemptuously
+rejected, and every disguise in which errour may be concealed, is
+carefully observed, till, by degrees, a certain number of incontestable
+or unsuspected propositions are established, and at last concatenated
+into arguments, or compacted into systems.
+
+At length weariness succeeds to labour, and the mind lies at ease in the
+contemplation of her own attainments, without any desire of new
+conquests or excursions. This is the age of recollection and narrative;
+the opinions are settled, and the avenues of apprehension shut against
+any new intelligence; the days that are to follow must pass in the
+inculcation of precepts already collected, and assertion of tenets
+already received; nothing is henceforward so odious as opposition, so
+insolent as doubt, or so dangerous as novelty.
+
+In like manner the passions usurp the separate command of the successive
+periods of life. To the happiness of our first years nothing more seems
+necessary than freedom from restraint: every man may remember that if he
+was left to himself, and indulged in the disposal of his own time, he
+was once content without the superaddition of any actual pleasure. The
+new world is itself a banquet; and, till we have exhausted the freshness
+of life, we have always about us sufficient gratifications: the sunshine
+quickens us to play, and the shade invites us to sleep.
+
+But we soon become unsatisfied with negative felicity, and are solicited
+by our senses and appetites to more powerful delights, as the taste of
+him who has satisfied his hunger must be excited by artificial
+stimulations. The simplicity of natural amusement is now past, and art
+and contrivance must improve our pleasures; but, in time, art, like
+nature, is exhausted, and the senses can no longer supply the cravings
+of the intellect.
+
+The attention is then transferred from pleasure to interest, in which
+pleasure is perhaps included, though diffused to a wider extent, and
+protracted through new gradations. Nothing now dances before the eyes
+but wealth and power, nor rings in the ear, but the voice of fame;
+wealth, to which, however variously denominated, every man at some time
+or other aspires; power, which all wish to obtain within their circle of
+action; and fame, which no man, however high or mean, however wise or
+ignorant, was yet able to despise. Now prudence and foresight exert
+their influence: no hour is devoted wholly to any present enjoyment, no
+act or purpose terminates in itself, but every motion is referred to
+some distant end; the accomplishment of one design begins another, and
+the ultimate wish is always pushed off to its former distance.
+
+At length fame is observed to be uncertain, and power to be dangerous;
+the man whose vigour and alacrity begin to forsake him, by degrees
+contracts his designs, remits his former multiplicity of pursuits, and
+extends no longer his regard to any other honour than the reputation of
+wealth, or any other influence than his power. Avarice is generally the
+last passion of those lives of which the first part has been squandered
+in pleasure, and the second devoted to ambition. He that sinks under the
+fatigue of getting wealth, lulls his age with the milder business of
+saving it.
+
+I have in this view of life considered man as actuated only by natural
+desires, and yielding to their own inclinations, without regard to
+superior principles, by which the force of external agents may be
+counteracted, and the temporary prevalence of passions restrained.
+Nature will indeed always operate, human desires will be always ranging;
+but these motions, though very powerful, are not resistless; nature may
+be regulated, and desires governed; and, to contend with the
+predominance of successive passions, to be endangered first by one
+affection, and then by another, is the condition upon which we are to
+pass our time, the time of our preparation for that state which shall
+put an end to experiment, to disappointment, and to change.
+
+
+
+No. 152. SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1751.
+
+ --Tristia maestum
+ Vullum verba decent, iratum plena minarum. HOR. De Ar. Poet. 105.
+
+ Disastrous words can best disaster shew;
+ In angry phrase the angry passions glow. ELPHINSTON.
+
+"It was the wisdom," says Seneca, "of ancient times, to consider what is
+most useful as most illustrious." If this rule be applied to works of
+genius, scarcely any species of composition deserves more to be
+cultivated than the epistolary style, since none is of more various or
+frequent use through the whole subordination of human life.
+
+It has yet happened that, among the numerous writers which our nation
+has produced, equal, perhaps, always in force and genius, and of late in
+elegance and accuracy, to those of any other country, very few have
+endeavoured to distinguish themselves by the publication of letters,
+except such as were written in the discharge of publick trusts, and
+during the transaction of great affairs; which, though they afford
+precedents to the minister, and memorials to the historian, are of no
+use as examples of the familiar style, or models of private
+correspondence.
+
+If it be inquired by foreigners, how this deficiency has happened in the
+literature of a country, where all indulge themselves with so little
+danger in speaking and writing, may we not without either bigotry or
+arrogance inform them, that it must be imputed to our contempt of
+trifles, and our due sense of the dignity of the publick? We do not
+think it reasonable to fill the world with volumes from which nothing
+can be learned, nor expect that the employments of the busy, or the
+amusements of the gay, should give way to narratives of our private
+affairs, complaints of absence, expressions of fondness, or declarations
+of fidelity.
+
+A slight perusal of the innumerable letters by which the wits of France
+have signalized their names, will prove that other nations need not be
+discouraged from the like attempts by the consciousness of inability;
+for surely it is not very difficult to aggravate trifling misfortunes,
+to magnify familiar incidents, repeat adulatory professions, accumulate
+servile hyperboles, and produce all that can be found in the despicable
+remains of Voiture and Scarron.
+
+Yet, as much of life must be passed in affairs considerable only by
+their frequent occurrence, and much of the pleasure which our condition
+allows, must be produced by giving elegance to trifles, it is necessary
+to learn how to become little without becoming mean, to maintain the
+necessary intercourse of civility, and fill up the vacuities of actions
+by agreeable appearances. It had therefore been of advantage, if such of
+our writers as have excelled in the art of decorating insignificance,
+had supplied us with a few sallies of innocent gaiety, effusions of
+honest tenderness, or exclamations of unimportant hurry.
+
+Precept has generally been posterior to performance. The art of
+composing works of genius has never been taught but by the example of
+those who performed it by natural vigour of imagination, and rectitude
+of judgment. As we have few letters, we have likewise few criticisms
+upon the epistolary style. The observations with which Walsh has
+introduced his pages of inanity, are such as give him little claim to
+the rank assigned him by Dryden among the criticks. _Letters_, says he,
+_are intended as resemblances of conversation, and the chief
+excellencies of conversation are good humour and good breeding_. This
+remark, equally valuable for its novelty and propriety, he dilates and
+enforces with an appearance of complete acquiescence in his own
+discovery.
+
+No man was ever in doubt about the moral qualities of a letter. It has
+been always known that he who endeavours to please must appear pleased,
+and he who would not provoke rudeness must not practise it. But the
+question among those who establish rules for an epistolary performance
+is how gaiety or civility may be properly expressed; as among the
+criticks in history it is not contested whether truth ought to be
+preserved, but by what mode of diction it is best adorned.
+
+As letters are written on all subjects, in all states of mind, they
+cannot be properly reduced to settled rules, or described by any single
+characteristick; and we may safely disentangle our minds from critical
+embarrassments, by determining that a letter has no peculiarity but its
+form, and that nothing is to be refused admission, which would be proper
+in any other method of treating the same subject. The qualities of the
+epistolary style most frequently required, are ease and simplicity, an
+even flow of unlaboured diction, and an artless arrangement of obvious
+sentiments. But these directions are no sooner applied to use, than
+their scantiness and imperfection become evident. Letters are written to
+the great and to the mean, to the learned and the ignorant, at rest and
+in distress, in sport and in passion. Nothing can be more improper than
+ease and laxity of expression, when the importance of the subject
+impresses solicitude, or the dignity of the person exacts reverence.
+
+That letters should be written with strict conformity to nature is true,
+because nothing but conformity to nature can make any composition
+beautiful or just. But it is natural to depart from familiarity of
+language upon occasions not familiar. Whatever elevates the sentiments
+will consequently raise the expression; whatever fills us with hope or
+terrour, will produce some perturbation of images and some figurative
+distortions of phrase. Wherever we are studious to please, we are afraid
+of trusting our first thoughts, and endeavour to recommend our opinion
+by studied ornaments, accuracy of method, and elegance of style.
+
+If the personages of the comick scene be allowed by Horace to raise
+their language in the transports of anger to the turgid vehemence of
+tragedy, the epistolary writer may likewise without censure comply with
+the varieties of his matter. If great events are to be related, he may
+with all the solemnity of an historian deduce them from their causes,
+connect them with their concomitants, and trace them to their
+consequences. If a disputed position is to be established, or a remote
+principle to be investigated, he may detail his reasonings with all the
+nicety of syllogistick method. If a menace is to be averted, or a
+benefit implored, he may, without any violation of the edicts of
+criticism, call every power of rhetorick to his assistance, and try
+every inlet at which love or pity enters the heart.
+
+Letters that have no other end than the entertainment of the
+correspondents are more properly regulated by critical precepts, because
+the matter and style are equally arbitrary, and rules are more
+necessary, as there is a larger power of choice. In letters of this
+kind, some conceive art graceful, and others think negligence amiable;
+some model them by the sonnet, and will allow them no means of
+delighting but the soft lapse of calm mellifluence; others adjust them
+by the epigram, and expect pointed sentences and forcible periods. The
+one party considers exemption from faults as the height of excellence,
+the other looks upon neglect of excellence as the most disgusting fault;
+one avoids censure, the other aspires to praise; one is always in danger
+of insipidity, the other continually on the brink of affectation.
+
+When the subject has no intrinsick dignity, it must necessarily owe its
+attractions to artificial embellishments, and may catch at all
+advantages which the art of writing can supply. He that, like Pliny,
+sends his friend a portion for his daughter, will, without Pliny's
+eloquence or address, find means of exciting gratitude, and securing
+acceptance; but he that has no present to make but a garland, a riband,
+or some petty curiosity, must endeavour to recommend it by his manner of
+giving it.
+
+The purpose for which letters are written when no intelligence is
+communicated, or business transacted, is to preserve in the minds of the
+absent either love or esteem: to excite love we must impart pleasure,
+and to raise esteem we must discover abilities. Pleasure will generally
+be given, as abilities are displayed by scenes of imagery, points of
+conceit, unexpected sallies, and artful compliments. Trifles always
+require exuberance of ornament; the building which has no strength can
+be valued only for the grace of its decorations. The pebble must be
+polished with care, which hopes to be valued as a diamond; and words
+ought surely to be laboured, when they are intended to stand for things.
+
+
+
+No. 153. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1751
+
+ _Turba Remi? Sequitur Fortunam, ut semper, et odit
+ Damnatos_. JUV. Sat. x. 73.
+
+ The fickle crowd with fortune comes and goes;
+ Wealth still finds followers, and misfortune foes.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+There are occasions on which all apology is rudeness. He that has an
+unwelcome message to deliver, may give some proof of tenderness and
+delicacy, by a ceremonial introduction and gradual discovery, because
+the mind, upon which the weight of sorrow is to fall, gains time for the
+collection of its powers; but nothing is more absurd than to delay the
+communication of pleasure, to torment curiosity by impatience, and to
+delude hope by anticipation.
+
+I shall therefore forbear the arts by which correspondents generally
+secure admission, for I have too long remarked the power of vanity, to
+doubt that I shall be read by you with a disposition to approve, when I
+declare that my narrative has no other tendency than to illustrate and
+corroborate your own observations.
+
+I was the second son of a gentleman, whose patrimony had been wasted by
+a long succession of squanderers, till he was unable to support any of
+his children, except his heir, in the hereditary dignity of idleness.
+Being therefore obliged to employ that part of life in study which my
+progenitors had devoted to the hawk and hound, I was in my eighteenth
+year despatched to the university, without any rural honours. I had
+never killed a single woodcock, nor partaken one triumph over a
+conquered fox.
+
+At the university I continued to enlarge my acquisitions with little
+envy of the noisy happiness which my elder brother had the fortune to
+enjoy; and, having obtained my degree, retired to consider at leisure to
+what profession I should confine that application which had hitherto
+been dissipated in general knowledge. To deliberate upon a choice which
+custom and honour forbid to be retracted, is certainly reasonable; yet
+to let loose the attention equally to the advantages and inconveniencies
+of every employment is not without danger; new motives are every moment
+operating on every side; and mechanicks have long ago discovered, that
+contrariety of equal attractions is equivalent to rest.
+
+While I was thus trifling in uncertainty, an old adventurer, who had
+been once the intimate friend of my father, arrived from the Indies with
+a large fortune; which he had so much harassed himself in obtaining,
+that sickness and infirmity left him no other desire than to die in his
+native country. His wealth easily procured him an invitation to pass his
+life with us; and, being incapable of any amusement but conversation, he
+necessarily became familiarized to me, whom he found studious and
+domestick. Pleased with an opportunity of imparting my knowledge, and
+eager of any intelligence that might increase it, I delighted his
+curiosity with historical narratives and explications of nature, and
+gratified his vanity by inquiries after the products of distant
+countries, and the customs of their inhabitants.
+
+My brother saw how much I advanced in the favour of our guest, who,
+being without heirs, was naturally expected to enrich the family of his
+friend, but never attempted to alienate me, nor to ingratiate himself.
+He was, indeed, little qualified to solicit the affection of a
+traveller, for the remissness of his education had left him without any
+rule of action but his present humour. He often forsook the old
+gentleman in the midst of an adventure, because the horn sounded in the
+court-yard, and would have lost an opportunity, not only of knowing the
+history, but sharing the wealth of the mogul, for the trial of a new
+pointer, or the sight of a horse-race.
+
+It was therefore not long before our new friend declared his intention
+of bequeathing to me the profits of his commerce, as the only man in the
+family by whom he could expect them to be rationally enjoyed. This
+distinction drew upon me the envy not only of my brother but my father.
+
+As no man is willing to believe that he suffers by his own fault, they
+imputed the preference which I had obtained to adulatory compliances, or
+malignant calumnies. To no purpose did I call upon my patron to attest
+my innocence, for who will believe what he wishes to be false? In the
+heat of disappointment they forced their inmate by repeated insults to
+depart from the house, and I was soon, by the same treatment, obliged to
+follow him.
+
+He chose his residence in the confines of London, where rest,
+tranquillity, and medicine, restored him to part of the health which he
+had lost. I pleased myself with perceiving that I was not likely to
+obtain the immediate possession of wealth which no labour of mine had
+contributed to acquire; and that he, who had thus distinguished me,
+might hope to end his life without a total frustration of those
+blessings, which, whatever be their real value, he had sought with so
+much diligence, and purchased with so many vicissitudes of danger and
+fatigue.
+
+He, indeed, left me no reason to repine at his recovery, for he was
+willing to accustom me early to the use of money, and set apart for my
+expenses such a revenue as I had scarcely dared to image. I can yet
+congratulate myself that fortune has seen her golden cup once tasted
+without inebriation. Neither my modesty nor prudence was overwhelmed by
+affluence; my elevation was without insolence, and my expense without
+profusion. Employing the influence which money always confers, to the
+improvement of my understanding, I mingled in parties of gaiety, and in
+conferences of learning, appeared in every place where instruction was
+to be found, and imagined that, by ranging through all the diversities
+of life, I had acquainted myself fully with human nature, and learned
+all that was to be known of the ways of men.
+
+It happened, however, that I soon discovered how much was wanted to the
+completion of my knowledge, and found that, according to Seneca's
+remark, I had hitherto seen the world but on one side. My patron's
+confidence in his increase of strength tempted him to carelessness and
+irregularity; he caught a fever by riding in the rain, of which he died
+delirious on the third day. I buried him without any of the heir's
+affected grief or secret exultation; then preparing to take a legal
+possession of his fortune, I opened his closet, where I found a will,
+made at his first arrival, by which my father was appointed the chief
+inheritor, and nothing was left me but a legacy sufficient to support me
+in the prosecution of my studies.
+
+I had not yet found such charms in prosperity as to continue it by any
+acts of forgery or injustice, and made haste to inform my father of the
+riches which had been given him, not by the preference of kindness, but
+by the delays of indolence and cowardice of age. The hungry family flew
+like vultures on their prey, and soon made my disappointment publick, by
+the tumult of their claims, and the splendour of their sorrow.
+
+It was now my part to consider how I should repair the disappointment. I
+could not but triumph in my long list of friends, which comprised almost
+every name that power or knowledge entitled to eminence; and, in the
+prospect of the innumerable roads to honour and preferment, which I had
+laid open to myself by the wise use of temporary riches, I believed
+nothing necessary but that I should continue that acquaintance to which
+I had been so readily admitted, and which had hitherto been cultivated
+on both sides with equal ardour.
+
+Full of these expectations, I one morning ordered a chair, with an
+intention to make my usual circle of morning visits. Where I first
+stopped I saw two footmen lolling at the door, who told me without any
+change of posture, or collection of countenance, that their master was
+at home, and suffered me to open the inner door without assistance. I
+found my friend standing, and, as I was tattling with my former freedom,
+was formally entreated to sit down; but did not stay to be favoured with
+any further condescensions.
+
+My next experiment was made at the levee of a statesman, who received me
+with an embrace of tenderness, that he might with more decency publish
+my change of fortune to the sycophants about him. After he had enjoyed
+the triumph of condolence, he turned to a wealthy stockjobber, and left
+me exposed to the scorn of those who had lately courted my notice, and
+solicited my interest.
+
+I was then set down at the door of another, who, upon my entrance,
+advised me, with great solemnity, to think of some settled provision for
+life. I left him, and hurried away to an old friend, who professed
+himself unsusceptible of any impressions from prosperity or misfortune,
+and begged that he might see me when he was more at leisure.
+
+Of sixty-seven doors, at which I knocked in the first week after my
+appearance in a mourning dress, I was denied admission at forty-six; was
+suffered at fourteen to wait in the outer room till business was
+despatched; at four, was entertained with a few questions about the
+weather; at one, heard the footman rated for bringing my name; and at
+two was informed, in the flow of casual conversation, how much a man of
+rank degrades himself by mean company.
+
+My curiosity now led me to try what reception I should find among the
+ladies; but I found that my patron had carried all my powers of pleasing
+to the grave. I had formerly been celebrated as a wit, and not
+perceiving any languor in my imagination, I essayed to revive that
+gaiety which had hitherto broken out involuntarily before my sentences
+were finished. My remarks were now heard with a steady countenance, and
+if a girl happened to give way to habitual merriment, her forwardness
+was repressed with a frown by her mother or her aunt.
+
+Wherever I come I scatter infirmity and disease; every lady whom I meet
+in the Mall is too weary to walk; all whom I entreat to sing are
+troubled with colds: if I propose cards, they are afflicted with the
+head-ach; [Transcriber's note: sic] if I invite them to the gardens,
+they cannot bear a crowd.
+
+All this might be endured; but there is a class of mortals who think my
+understanding impaired with my fortune, exalt themselves to the dignity
+of advice, and, whenever we happen to meet, presume to prescribe my
+conduct, regulate my economy, and direct my pursuits. Another race,
+equally impertinent and equally despicable, are every moment
+recommending to me an attention to my interest, and think themselves
+entitled, by their superior prudence, to reproach me if I speak or move
+without regard to profit.
+
+Such, Mr. Rambler, is the power of wealth, that it commands the ear of
+greatness and the eye of beauty, gives spirit to the dull, and authority
+to the timorous, and leaves him from whom it departs, without virtue and
+without understanding, the sport of caprice, the scoff of insolence, the
+slave of meanness, and the pupil of ignorance.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+
+
+No. 154. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1751.
+
+ _--Tibi res antiquae laudis et artis
+ Ingredior, sanctos ausus recludere fontes_. VIR. Geo. ii. 174.
+
+ For thee my tuneful accents will I raise,
+ And treat of arts disclos'd in ancient days;
+ Once more unlock for thee the sacred spring. DRYDEN.
+
+The direction of Aristotle to those that study politicks, is first to
+examine and understand what has been written by the ancients upon
+government; then to cast their eyes round upon the world, and consider
+by what causes the prosperity of communities is visibly influenced, and
+why some are worse, and others better administered.
+
+The same method must be pursued by him who hopes to become eminent in
+any other part of knowledge. The first task is to search books, the next
+to contemplate nature. He must first possess himself of the intellectual
+treasures which the diligence of former ages has accumulated, and then
+endeavour to increase them by his own collections.
+
+The mental disease of the present generation, is impatience of study,
+contempt of the great masters of ancient wisdom, and a disposition to
+rely wholly upon unassisted genius and natural sagacity. The wits of
+these happy days have discovered a way to fame, which the dull caution
+of our laborious ancestors durst never attempt; they cut the knots of
+sophistry which it was formerly the business of years to untie, solve
+difficulties by sudden irradiations of intelligence, and comprehend long
+processes of argument by immediate intuition.
+
+Men who have flattered themselves into this opinion of their own
+abilities, look down on all who waste their lives over books, as a race
+of inferior beings, condemned by nature to perpetual pupilage, and
+fruitlessly endeavouring to remedy their barrenness by incessant
+cultivation, or succour their feebleness by subsidiary strength. They
+presume that none would be more industrious than they, if they were not
+more sensible of deficiencies; and readily conclude, that he who places
+no confidence in his own powers, owes his modesty only to his weakness.
+
+It is however certain, that no estimate is more in danger of erroneous
+calculations than those by which a man computes the force of his own
+genius. It generally happens at our entrance into the world, that, by
+the natural attraction of similitude, we associate with men like
+ourselves, young, sprightly, and ignorant, and rate our accomplishments
+by comparison with theirs; when we have once obtained an acknowledged
+superiority over our acquaintances, imagination and desire easily extend
+it over the rest of mankind, and if no accident forces us into new
+emulations, we grow old, and die in admiration of ourselves.
+
+Vanity, thus confirmed in her dominion, readily listens to the voice of
+idleness, and sooths the slumber of life with continual dreams of
+excellence and greatness. A man, elated by confidence in his natural
+vigour of fancy and sagacity of conjecture, soon concludes that he
+already possesses whatever toil and inquiry can confer. He then listens
+with eagerness to the wild objections which folly has raised against the
+common means of improvement; talks of the dark chaos of indigested
+knowledge; describes the mischievous effects of heterogeneous sciences
+fermenting in the mind; relates the blunders of lettered ignorance;
+expatiates on the heroick merit of those who deviate from prescription,
+or shake off authority; and gives vent to the inflations of his heart by
+declaring that he owes nothing to pedants and universities.
+
+All these pretensions, however confident, are very often vain. The
+laurels which superficial acuteness gains in triumphs over ignorance
+unsupported by vivacity, are observed by Locke to be lost, whenever real
+learning and rational diligence appear against her; the sallies of
+gaiety are soon repressed by calm confidence; and the artifices of
+subtilty are readily detected by those, who, having carefully studied
+the question, are not easily confounded or surprised.
+
+But, though the contemner of books had neither been deceived by others
+nor himself, and was really born with a genius surpassing the ordinary
+abilities of mankind; yet surely such gifts of Providence may be more
+properly urged as incitements to labour, than encouragements to
+negligence. He that neglects the culture of ground naturally fertile, is
+more shamefully culpable, than he whose field would scarcely recompense
+his husbandry.
+
+Cicero remarks, that not to know what has been transacted in former
+times, is to continue always a child. If no use is made of the labours
+of past ages, the world must remain always in the infancy of knowledge.
+The discoveries of every man must terminate in his own advantage, and
+the studies of every age be employed on questions which the past
+generation had discussed and determined. We may with as little reproach
+borrow science as manufactures from our ancestors; and it is as rational
+to live in caves till our own hands have erected a palace, as to reject
+all knowledge of architecture which our understandings will not supply.
+
+To the strongest and quickest mind it is far easier to learn than to
+invent. The principles of arithmetick and geometry may be comprehended
+by a close attention in a few days; yet who can flatter himself that the
+study of a long life would have enabled him to discover them, when he
+sees them yet unknown to so many nations, whom he cannot suppose less
+liberally endowed with natural reason, than the Grecians or Egyptians?
+
+Every science was thus far advanced towards perfection, by the emulous
+diligence of contemporary students, and the gradual discoveries of one
+age improving on another. Sometimes unexpected flashes of instruction
+were struck out by the fortuitous collision of happy incidents, or an
+involuntary concurrence of ideas, in which the philosopher to whom they
+happened had no other merit than that of knowing their value, and
+transmitting, unclouded, to posterity, that light which had been kindled
+by causes out of his power. The happiness of these casual illuminations
+no man can promise to himself, because no endeavours can procure them;
+and therefore whatever be our abilities or application, we must submit
+to learn from others what perhaps would have lain hid for ever from
+human penetration, had not some remote inquiry brought it to view; as
+treasures are thrown up by the ploughman and the digger in the rude
+exercise of their common occupations. The man whose genius qualifies him
+for great undertakings, must at least be content to learn from books the
+present state of human knowledge; that he may not ascribe to himself the
+invention of arts generally known; weary his attention with experiments
+of which the event has been long registered; and waste, in attempts
+which have already succeeded or miscarried, that time which might have
+been spent with usefulness and honour upon new undertakings.
+
+But, though the study of books is necessary, it is not sufficient to
+constitute literary eminence. He that wishes to be counted among the
+benefactors of posterity, must add by his own toil to the acquisitions
+of his ancestors, and secure his memory from neglect by some valuable
+improvement. This can only be effected by looking out upon the wastes of
+the intellectual world, and extending the power of learning over regions
+yet undisciplined and barbarous; or by surveying more exactly our
+ancient dominions, and driving ignorance from the fortresses and
+retreats where she skulks undetected and undisturbed. Every science has
+its difficulties, which yet call for solution before we attempt new
+systems of knowledge; as every country has its forests and marshes,
+which it would be wise to cultivate and drain, before distant colonies
+are projected as a necessary discharge of the exuberance of inhabitants.
+
+No man ever yet became great by imitation. Whatever hopes for the
+veneration of mankind must have invention in the design or the
+execution; either the effect must itself be new, or the means by which
+it is produced. Either truths hitherto unknown must be discovered, or
+those which are already known enforced by stronger evidence, facilitated
+by clearer method, or elucidated by brighter illustrations.
+
+Fame cannot spread wide or endure long that is not rooted in nature, and
+matured by art. That which hopes to resist the blast of malignity, and
+stand firm against the attacks of time, must contain in itself some
+original principle of growth. The reputation which arises from the
+detail or transposition of borrowed sentiments, may spread for awhile,
+like ivy on the rind of antiquity, but will be torn away by accident or
+contempt, and suffered to rot unheeded on the ground.
+
+
+
+No. 155. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1751.
+
+ _--Steriles transmisimus annos,
+ Haec aevi mihi prima dies, haec limina vitae_. STAT. i. 362.
+
+ --Our barren years are past;
+ Be this of life the first, of sloth the last. ELPHINSTON.
+
+No weakness of the human mind has more frequently incurred
+animadversion, than the negligence with which men overlook their own
+faults, however flagrant, and the easiness with which they pardon them,
+however frequently repeated.
+
+It seems generally believed, that as the eye cannot see itself, the mind
+has no faculties by which it can contemplate its own state, and that
+therefore we have not means of becoming acquainted with our real
+characters; an opinion which, like innumerable other postulates, an
+inquirer finds himself inclined to admit upon very little evidence,
+because it affords a ready solution of many difficulties. It will
+explain why the greatest abilities frequently fail to promote the
+happiness of those who possess them; why those who can distinguish with
+the utmost nicety the boundaries of vice and virtue, suffer them to be
+confounded in their own conduct; why the active and vigilant resign
+their affairs implicitly to the management of others; and why the
+cautious and fearful make hourly approaches towards ruin, without one
+sigh of solicitude or struggle for escape.
+
+When a position teems thus with commodious consequences, who can without
+regret confess it to be false? Yet it is certain that declaimers have
+indulged a disposition to describe the dominion of the passions as
+extended beyond the limits that nature assigned. Self-love is often
+rather arrogant than blind; it does not hide our faults from ourselves,
+but persuades us that they escape the notice of others, and disposes us
+to resent censures lest we should confess them to be just. We are
+secretly conscious of defects and vices, which we hope to conceal from
+the publick eye, and please ourselves with innumerable impostures, by
+which, in reality, nobody is deceived.
+
+In proof of the dimness of our internal sight, or the general inability
+of man to determine rightly concerning his own character, it is common
+to urge the success of the most absurd and incredible flattery, and the
+resentment always raised by advice, however soft, benevolent, and
+reasonable. But flattery, if its operation be nearly examined, will be
+found to owe its acceptance, not to our ignorance, but knowledge of our
+failures, and to delight us rather as it consoles our wants than
+displays our possessions. He that shall solicit the favour of his patron
+by praising him for qualities which he can find in himself, will be
+defeated by the more daring panegyrist who enriches him with
+adscititious excellence. Just praise is only a debt, but flattery is a
+present. The acknowledgment of those virtues on which conscience
+congratulates us, is a tribute that we can at any time exact with
+confidence; but the celebration of those which we only feign, or desire
+without any vigorous endeavours to attain them, is received as a
+confession of sovereignty over regions never conquered, as a favourable
+decision of disputable claims, and is more welcome as it is more
+gratuitous.
+
+Advice is offensive, not because it lays us open to unexpected regret,
+or convicts us of any fault which had escaped our notice, but because it
+shews us that we are known to others as well as to ourselves; and the
+officious monitor is persecuted with hatred, not because his accusation
+is false, but because he assumes that superiority which we are not
+willing to grant him, and has dared to detect what we desired to
+conceal.
+
+For this reason advice is commonly ineffectual. If those who follow the
+call of their desires, without inquiry whither they are going, had
+deviated ignorantly from the paths of wisdom, and were rushing upon
+dangers unforeseen, they would readily listen to information that recals
+them from their errours, and catch the first alarm by which destruction
+or infamy is denounced. Few that wander in the wrong way mistake it for
+the right, they only find it more smooth and flowery, and indulge their
+own choice rather than approve it: therefore few are persuaded to quit
+it by admonition or reproof, since it impresses no new conviction, nor
+confers any powers of action or resistance. He that is gravely informed
+how soon profusion will annihilate his fortune, hears with little
+advantage what he knew before, and catches at the next occasion of
+expense, because advice has no force to suppress his vanity. He that is
+told how certainly intemperance will hurry him to the grave, runs with
+his usual speed to a new course of luxury, because his reason is not
+invigorated, nor his appetite weakened.
+
+The mischief of flattery is, not that it persuades any man that he is
+what he is not, but that it suppresses the influence of honest ambition,
+by raising an opinion that honour may be gained without the toil of
+merit; and the benefit of advice arises commonly not from any new light
+imparted to the mind, but from the discovery which it affords of the
+publick suffrages. He that could withstand conscience is frighted at
+infamy, and shame prevails when reason is defeated.
+
+As we all know our own faults, and know them commonly with many
+aggravations which human perspicacity cannot discover, there is,
+perhaps, no man, however hardened by impudence or dissipated by levity,
+sheltered by hypocrisy or blasted by disgrace, who does not intend some
+time to review his conduct, and to regulate the remainder of his life by
+the laws of virtue. New temptations indeed attack him, new invitations
+are offered by pleasure and interest, and the hour of reformation is
+always delayed; every delay gives vice another opportunity of fortifying
+itself by habit; and the change of manners, though sincerely intended
+and rationally planned, is referred to the time when some craving
+passion shall be fully gratified, or some powerful allurement cease its
+importunity.
+
+Thus procrastination is accumulated on procrastination, and one
+impediment succeeds another, till age shatters our resolution, or death
+intercepts the project of amendment. Such is often the end of salutary
+purposes, after they have long delighted the imagination, and appeased
+that disquiet which every mind feels from known misconduct, when the
+attention is not diverted by business or by pleasure.
+
+Nothing surely can be more unworthy of a reasonable nature, than to
+continue in a state so opposite to real happiness, as that all the peace
+of solitude, and felicity of meditation, must arise from resolutions of
+forsaking it. Yet the world will often afford examples of men, who pass
+months and years in a continual war with their own convictions, and are
+daily dragged by habit, or betrayed by passion, into practices which
+they closed and opened their eyes with purposes to avoid; purposes
+which, though settled on conviction, the first impulse of momentary
+desire totally overthrows.
+
+The influence of custom is indeed such, that to conquer it will require
+the utmost efforts of fortitude and virtue; nor can I think any man more
+worthy of veneration and renown, than those who have burst the shackles
+of habitual vice. This victory, however, has different degrees of glory
+as of difficulty; it is more, heroick as the objects of guilty
+gratification are more familiar, and the recurrence of solicitation more
+frequent. He that, from experience of the folly of ambition, resigns his
+offices, may set himself free at once from temptation to squander his
+life in courts, because he cannot regain his former station. He who is
+enslaved by an amorous passion, may quit his tyrant in disgust, and
+absence will, without the help of reason, overcome by degrees the desire
+of returning. But those appetites to which every place affords their
+proper object, and which require no preparatory measures or gradual
+advances, are more tenaciously adhesive; the wish is so near the
+enjoyment, that compliance often precedes consideration, and, before the
+powers of reason can be summoned, the time for employing them is past.
+
+Indolence is therefore one of the vices from which those whom it once
+infects are seldom reformed. Every other species of luxury operates upon
+some appetite that is quickly satiated, and requires some concurrence of
+art or accident which every place will not supply; but the desire of
+ease acts equally at all hours, and the longer it is indulged is the
+more increased. To do nothing is in every man's power; we can never want
+an opportunity of omitting duties. The lapse to indolence is soft and
+imperceptible, because it is only a mere cessation of activity; but the
+return to diligence is difficult, because it implies a change from rest
+to motion, from privation to reality:
+
+ --_Facilis descensus Averni:
+ Noctes atque dies patet atri junua ditis;
+ Sed revocare gradum, saperasque evadere ad auras,
+ Hoc opus, hic labor est_.--VIR. Aen. Lib. vi. 126.
+
+ The gates of Hell are open night and day;
+ Smooth the descent, and easy is the way;
+ But to return, and view the cheerful skies,
+ In this the task and mighty labour lies. DRYDEN.
+
+Of this vice, as of all others, every man who indulges it is conscious:
+we all know our own state, if we could be induced to consider it, and it
+might perhaps be useful to the conquest of all these ensnarers of the
+mind, if, at certain stated days, life was reviewed. Many things
+necessary are omitted, because we vainly imagine that they may be always
+performed; and what cannot be done without pain will for ever be
+delayed, if the time of doing it be left unsettled. No corruption is
+great but by long negligence, which can scarcely prevail in a mind
+regularly and frequently awakened by periodical remorse. He that thus
+breaks his life into parts, will find in himself a desire to distinguish
+every stage of his existence by some improvement, and delight himself
+with the approach of the day of recollection, as of the time which is to
+begin a new series of virtue and felicity.
+
+
+
+No. 156. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1751.
+
+ _Nunquam aliud Natura, aliud Sapientia dicit_. Juv. Sat. xiv. 321.
+
+ For Wisdom ever echoes Nature's voice.
+
+Every government, say the politicians, is perpetually degenerating
+towards corruption, from which it must be rescued at certain periods by
+the resuscitation of its first principles, and the re-establishment of
+its original constitution. Every animal body, according to the methodick
+physicians, is, by the predominance of some exuberant quality,
+continually declining towards disease and death, which must be obviated
+by a seasonable reduction of the peccant humour to the just equipoise
+which health requires.
+
+In the same manner the studies of mankind, all at least which, not being
+subject to rigorous demonstration, admit the influence of fancy and
+caprice, are perpetually tending to errour and confusion. Of the great
+principles of truth which the first speculatists discovered, the
+simplicity is embarrassed by ambitious additions, or the evidence
+obscured by inaccurate argumentation; and as they descend from one
+succession of writers to another, like light transmitted from room to
+room, they lose their strength and splendour, and fade at last in total
+evanescence.
+
+The systems of learning therefore must be sometimes reviewed,
+complications analyzed into principles, and knowledge disentangled from
+opinion. It is not always possible, without a close inspection, to
+separate the genuine shoots of consequential reasoning, which grow out
+of some radical postulate, from the branches which art has ingrafted on
+it. The accidental prescriptions of authority, when time has procured
+them veneration, are often confounded with the laws of nature, and those
+rules are supposed coeval with reason, of which the first rise cannot be
+discovered.
+
+Criticism has sometimes permitted fancy to dictate the laws by which
+fancy ought to be restrained, and fallacy to perplex the principles by
+which fallacy is to be detected; her superintendence of others has
+betrayed her to negligence of herself; and, like the ancient Scythians,
+by extending her conquests over distant regions, she has left her throne
+vacant to her slaves.
+
+Among the laws of which the desire of extending authority, or ardour of
+promoting knowledge, has prompted the prescription, all which writers
+have received, had not the same original right to our regard. Some are
+to be considered as fundamental and indispensable, others only as useful
+and convenient; some as dictated by reason and necessity, others as
+enacted by despotick antiquity; some as invincibly supported by their
+conformity to the order of nature and operations of the intellect;
+others as formed by accident, or instituted by example, and therefore
+always liable to dispute and alteration.
+
+That many rules have been advanced without consulting nature or reason,
+we cannot but suspect, when we find it peremptorily decreed by the
+ancient masters, that only three speaking personages should appear at
+once upon the stage; a law, which, as the variety and intricacy of
+modern plays has made it impossible to be observed, we now violate
+without scruple, and, as experience proves, without inconvenience.
+
+The original of this precept was merely accidental. Tragedy was a
+monody, or solitary song in honour of Bacchus, improved afterwards into
+a dialogue by the addition of another speaker; but the ancients,
+remembering that the tragedy was at first pronounced only by one, durst
+not for some time venture beyond two; at last, when custom and impunity
+had made them daring, they extended their liberty to the admission of
+three, but restrained themselves by a critical edict from further
+exorbitance.
+
+By what accident the number of acts was limited to five, I know not that
+any author has informed us; but certainly it is not determined by any
+necessity arising either from the nature of action, or propriety of
+exhibition. An act is only the representation of such a part of the
+business of the play as proceeds in an unbroken tenour, or without any
+intermediate pause. Nothing is more evident than that of every real, and
+by consequence of every dramatick action, the intervals may be more or
+fewer than five; and indeed the rule is upon the English stage every day
+broken in effect, without any other mischief than that which arises from
+an absurd endeavour to observe it in appearance. Whenever the scene is
+shifted the act ceases, since some time is necessarily supposed to
+elapse while the personages of the drama change their place.
+
+With no greater right to our obedience have the criticks confined the
+dramatick action to a certain number of hours. Probability requires that
+the time of action should approach somewhat nearly to that of
+exhibition, and those plays will always be thought most happily
+conducted which crowd the greatest, variety into the least space. But
+since it will frequently happen that some delusion must be admitted, I
+know not where the limits of imagination can be fixed. It is rarely
+observed that minds, not prepossessed by mechanical criticism, feel any
+offence from the extension of the intervals between the acts; nor can I
+conceive it absurd or impossible, that he who can multiply three hours
+into twelve or twenty-four, might imagine with equal ease a greater
+number.
+
+I know not whether he that professes to regard no other laws than those
+of nature, will not be inclined to receive tragi-comedy to his
+protection, whom, however generally condemned, her own laurels have
+hitherto shaded from the fulminations of criticism. For what is there in
+the mingled drama which impartial reason can condemn? The connexion of
+important with trivial incidents, since it is not only common but
+perpetual in the world, may surely be allowed upon the stage, which
+pretends only to be the mirror of life. The impropriety of suppressing
+passions before we have raised them to the intended agitation, and of
+diverting the expectation from an event which we keep suspended only to
+raise it, may be speciously urged. But will not experience shew this
+objection to be rather subtle than just? Is it not certain that the
+tragick and comick affections have been moved alternately with equal
+force, and that no plays have oftener filled the eye with tears, and the
+breast with palpitation, than those which are variegated with interludes
+of mirth?
+
+I do not however think it safe to judge of works of genius merely by the
+event. The resistless vicissitudes of the heart, this alternate
+prevalence of merriment and solemnity, may sometimes be more properly
+ascribed to the vigour of the writer than the justness of the design:
+and, instead of vindicating tragi-comedy by the success of Shakspeare,
+we ought, perhaps, to pay new honours to that transcendent and unbounded
+genius that could preside over the passions in sport; who, to actuate
+the affections, needed not the slow gradation of common means, but could
+fill the heart with instantaneous jollity or sorrow, and vary our
+disposition as he changed his scenes. Perhaps the effects even of
+Shakspeare's poetry might have been yet greater, had he not counteracted
+himself; and we might have been more interested in the distresses of his
+heroes, had we not been so frequently diverted by the jokes of his
+buffoons.
+
+There are other rules more fixed and obligatory. It is necessary that of
+every play the chief action should be single; for since a play
+represents some transaction, through its regular maturation to its final
+event, two actions equally important must evidently constitute two
+plays.
+
+As the design of tragedy is to instruct by moving the passions, it must
+always have a hero, a personage apparently and incontestably superior to
+the rest, upon whom the attention may be fixed, and the anxiety
+suspended. For though, of two persons opposing each other with equal
+abilities and equal virtue, the auditor will inevitably, in time, choose
+his favourite, yet as that choice must be without any cogency of
+conviction, the hopes or fears which it raises will be faint and
+languid. Of two heroes acting in confederacy against a common enemy, the
+virtues or dangers will give little emotion, because each claims our
+concern with the same right, and the heart lies at rest between equal
+motives.
+
+It ought to be the first endeavour of a writer to distinguish nature
+from custom; or that which is established because it is right, from that
+which is right only because it is established; that he may neither
+violate essential principles by a desire of novelty, nor debar himself
+from the attainment of beauties within his view, by a needless fear of
+breaking rules which no literary dictator had authority to enact.
+
+
+
+No. 157. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1751.
+
+ [Greek:--Oi aidos
+ Ginetai ae t' andras mega sinetai aed' oninaesi.]
+ HOM. Il. [Greek: O.] 44.
+
+ Shame greatly hurts or greatly helps mankind. ELPHINSTON.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Though one of your correspondents has presumed to mention with some
+contempt that presence of attention and easiness of address, which the
+polite have long agreed to celebrate and esteem, yet I cannot be
+persuaded to think them unworthy of regard or cultivation; but am
+inclined to believe that, as we seldom value rightly what we have never
+known the misery of wanting, his judgment has been vitiated by his
+happiness; and that a natural exuberance of assurance has hindered him
+from discovering its excellence and use.
+
+This felicity, whether bestowed by constitution, or obtained by early
+habitudes, I can scarcely contemplate without envy. I was bred under a
+man of learning in the country, who inculcated nothing but the dignity
+of knowledge, and the happiness of virtue. By frequency of admonition,
+and confidence of assertion, he prevailed upon me to believe, that the
+splendour of literature would always attract reverence, if not darkened
+by corruption. I therefore pursued my studies with incessant industry,
+and avoided every thing which I had been taught to consider either as
+vicious or tending to vice, because I regarded guilt and reproach as
+inseparably united, and thought a tainted reputation the greatest
+calamity.
+
+At the university, I found no reason for changing my opinion; for though
+many among my fellow-students took the opportunity of a more remiss
+discipline to gratify their passions; yet virtue preserved her natural
+superiority, and those who ventured to neglect, were not suffered to
+insult her. The ambition of petty accomplishments found its way into the
+receptacles of learning, but was observed to seize commonly on those who
+either neglected the sciences or could not attain them; and I was
+therefore confirmed in the doctrines of my old master, and thought
+nothing worthy of my care but the means of gaining or imparting
+knowledge.
+
+This purity of manners, and intenseness of application, soon extended my
+renown, and I was applauded by those, whose opinion I then thought
+unlikely to deceive me, as a young man that gave uncommon hopes of
+future eminence. My performances in time reached my native province, and
+my relations congratulated themselves upon the new honours that were
+added to their family.
+
+I returned home covered with academical laurels, and fraught with
+criticism and philosophy. The wit and the scholar excited curiosity, and
+my acquaintance was solicited by innumerable invitations. To please will
+always be the wish of benevolence, to be admired must be the constant
+aim of ambition; and I therefore considered myself as about to receive
+the reward of my honest labours, and to find the efficacy of learning
+and of virtue.
+
+The third day after my arrival I dined at the house of a gentleman who
+had summoned a multitude of his friends to the annual celebration of his
+wedding-day. I set forward with great exultation, and thought myself
+happy that I had an opportunity of displaying my knowledge to so
+numerous an assembly. I felt no sense of my own insufficiency, till,
+going up stairs to the dining-room, I heard the mingled roar of
+obstreperous merriment. I was, however, disgusted rather than terrified,
+and went forward without dejection. The whole company rose at my
+entrance; but when I saw so many eyes fixed at once upon me, I was
+blasted with a sudden imbecility, I was quelled by some nameless power
+which I found impossible to be resisted. My sight was dazzled, my cheeks
+glowed, my perceptions were confounded; I was harassed by the multitude
+of eager salutations, and returned the common civilities with hesitation
+and impropriety; the sense of my own blunders increased my confusion,
+and, before the exchange of ceremonies allowed me to sit down, I was
+ready to sink under the oppression of surprise; my voice grew weak, and
+my knees trembled.
+
+The assembly then resumed their places, and I sat with my eyes fixed
+upon the ground. To the questions of curiosity, or the appeals of
+complaisance, I could seldom answer but with negative monosyllables, or
+professions of ignorance; for the subjects on which they conversed, were
+such as are seldom discussed in books, and were therefore out of my
+range of knowledge. At length an old clergyman, who rightly conjectured
+the reason of my conciseness, relieved me by some questions about the
+present state of natural knowledge, and engaged me, by an appearance of
+doubt and opposition, in the explication and defence of the Newtonian
+philosophy.
+
+The consciousness of my own abilities roused me from depression, and
+long familiarity with my subject enabled me to discourse with ease and
+volubility; but, however I might please myself, I found very little
+added by my demonstrations to the satisfaction of the company; and my
+antagonist, who knew the laws of conversation too well to detain their
+attention long upon an unpleasing topick, after he had commended my
+acuteness and comprehension, dismissed the controversy, and resigned me
+to my former insignificance and perplexity.
+
+After dinner, I received from the ladies, who had heard that I was a
+wit, an invitation to the tea-table. I congratulated myself upon an
+opportunity to escape from the company, whose gaiety began to be
+tumultuous, and among whom several hints had been dropped of the
+uselessness of universities, the folly of book-learning, and the
+awkwardness of scholars. To the ladies, therefore, I flew, as to a
+refuge from clamour, insult, and rusticity; but found my heart sink as I
+approached their apartment, and was again disconcerted by the ceremonies
+of entrance, and confounded by the necessity of encountering so many
+eyes at once.
+
+When I sat down I considered that, something pretty was always said to
+ladies, and resolved to recover my credit by some elegant observation or
+graceful compliment. I applied myself to the recollection of all that I
+had read or heard in praise of beauty, and endeavoured to accommodate
+some classical compliment to the present occasion. I sunk into profound
+meditation, revolved the characters of the heroines of old, considered
+whatever the poets have sung in their praise, and, after having borrowed
+and invented, chosen and rejected a thousand sentiments, which, if I had
+uttered them, would not have been understood, I was awakened from my
+dream of learned gallantry, by the servant who distributed the tea.
+
+There are not many situations more incessantly uneasy than that in which
+the man is placed who is watching an opportunity to speak, without
+courage to take it when it is offered, and who, though he resolves to
+give a specimen of his abilities, always finds some reason or other for
+delaying it to the next minute. I was ashamed of silence, yet could find
+nothing to say of elegance or importance equal to my wishes. The ladies,
+afraid of my learning, thought themselves not qualified to propose any
+subject of prattle to a man so famous for dispute, and there was nothing
+on either side but impatience and vexation.
+
+In this conflict of shame, as I was re-assembling my scattered
+sentiments, and, resolving to force my imagination to some sprightly
+sally, had just found a very happy compliment, by too much attention to
+my own meditations, I suffered the saucer to drop from my hand. The cup
+was broken, the lap-dog was scalded, a brocaded petticoat was stained,
+and the whole assembly was thrown into disorder. I now considered all
+hopes of reputation at an end, and while they were consoling and
+assisting one another, stole away in silence.
+
+The misadventures of this unhappy day are not yet at an end; I am afraid
+of meeting the meanest of them that triumphed over me in this state of
+stupidity and contempt, and feel the same terrours encroaching upon my
+heart at the sight of those who have once impressed them. Shame, above
+any other passion, propagates itself. Before those who have seen me
+confused, I can never appear without new confusion, and the remembrance
+of the weakness which I formerly discovered, hinders me from acting or
+speaking with my natural force.
+
+But is this misery, Mr. Rambler, never to cease; have I spent my life in
+study only to become the sport of the ignorant, and debarred myself from
+all the common enjoyments of youth to collect ideas which must sleep in
+silence, and form opinions which I must not divulge? Inform me, dear
+Sir, by what means I may rescue my faculties from these shackles of
+cowardice, how I may rise to a level with my fellow-beings, recall
+myself from this langour of involuntary subjection to the free exertion
+of my intellects, and add to the power of reasoning the liberty of
+speech.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+VERECUNDULUS.
+
+
+
+No. 158. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1751.
+
+ Grammatici certunt, et adhuc sub judice lis est. HOR. Ar. Poet. 78.
+
+ --Criticks yet contend,
+ And of their vain disputings find no end. FRANCIS.
+
+Criticism, though dignified from the earliest ages by the labours of men
+eminent for knowledge and sagacity, and, since the revival of polite
+literature, the favourite study of European scholars, has not yet
+attained the certainty and stability of science. The rules hitherto
+received are seldom drawn from any settled principle or self-evident
+postulate, or adapted to the natural and invariable constitution of
+things; but will be found, upon examination, the arbitrary edicts of
+legislators, authorised only by themselves, who, out of various means by
+which the same end may be attained, selected such as happened to occur
+to their own reflection, and then, by a law which idleness and timidity
+were too willing to obey, prohibited new experiments of wit, restrained
+fancy from the indulgence of her innate inclination to hazard and
+adventure, and condemned all future flights of genius to pursue the path
+of the Meonian eagle.
+
+This authority may be more justly opposed, as it is apparently derived
+from them whom they endeavour to control; for we owe few of the rules of
+writing to the acuteness of criticks, who have generally no other merit
+than that, having read the works of great authors with attention, they
+have observed the arrangement of their matter, or the graces of their
+expression, and then expected honour and reverence for precepts which
+they never could have invented; so that practice has introduced rules,
+rather than rules have directed practice.
+
+For this reason the laws of every species of writing have been settled
+by the ideas of him who first raised it to reputation, without inquiry
+whether his performances were not yet susceptible of improvement. The
+excellencies and faults of celebrated writers have been equally
+recommended to posterity; and, so far has blind reverence prevailed,
+that even the number of their books has been thought worthy of
+imitation.
+
+The imagination of the first authors of lyrick poetry was vehement and
+rapid, and their knowledge various and extensive. Living in an age when
+science had been little cultivated, and when the minds of their
+auditors, not being accustomed to accurate inspection, were easily
+dazzled by glaring ideas, they applied themselves to instruct, rather by
+short sentences and striking thoughts, than by regular argumentation;
+and, finding attention more successfully excited by sudden sallies and
+unexpected exclamations, than by the more artful and placid beauties of
+methodical deduction, they loosed their genius to its own course, passed
+from one sentiment to another without expressing the intermediate ideas,
+and roved at large over the ideal world with such lightness and agility,
+that their footsteps are scarcely to be traced.
+
+From this accidental peculiarity of the ancient writers the criticks
+deduce the rules of lyrick poetry, which they have set free from all the
+laws by which other compositions are confined, and allow to neglect the
+niceties of transition, to start into remote digressions, and to wander
+without restraint from one scene of imagery to another.
+
+A writer of later times has, by the vivacity of his essays, reconciled
+mankind to the same licentiousness in short dissertations; and he
+therefore who wants skill to form a plan, or diligence to pursue it,
+needs only entitle his performance an essay, to acquire the right of
+heaping together the collections of half his life without order,
+coherence, or propriety.
+
+In writing, as in life, faults are endured without disgust when they are
+associated with transcendent merit, and may be sometimes recommended to
+weak judgments by the lustre which they obtain from their union with
+excellence; but it is the business of those who presume to superintend
+the taste or morals of mankind, to separate delusive combinations and
+distinguish that which may be praised from that which can only be
+excused. As vices never promote happiness, though, when overpowered by
+more active and more numerous virtues, they cannot totally destroy it;
+so confusion and irregularity produce no beauty, though they cannot
+always obstruct the brightness of genius and learning. To proceed from
+one truth to another, and connect distant propositions by regular
+consequences, is the great prerogative of man. Independent and
+unconnected sentiments flashing upon the mind in quick succession, may,
+for a time, delight by their novelty, but they differ from systematical
+reasoning, as single notes from harmony, as glances of lightning from
+the radiance of the sun.
+
+When rules are thus drawn, rather from precedents than reason, there is
+danger not only from the faults of an author, but from the errours of
+those who criticise his works; since they may often mislead their pupils
+by false representations, as the Ciceronians of the sixteenth century
+were betrayed into barbarisms by corrupt copies of their darling writer.
+
+It is established at present, that the proemial lines of a poem, in
+which the general subject is proposed, must be void of glitter and
+embellishment. "The first lines of Paradise Lost," says Addison, "are
+perhaps as plain, simple, and unadorned, as any of the whole poem, in
+which particular the author has conformed himself to the example of
+Homer, and the precept of Horace."
+
+This observation seems to have been made by an implicit adoption of the
+common opinion, without consideration either of the precept or example.
+Had Horace been consulted, he would have been found to direct only what
+should be comprised in the proposition, not how it should be expressed;
+and to have commended Homer in opposition to a meaner poet, not for the
+gradual elevation of his diction, but the judicious expansion of his
+plan; for displaying unpromised events, not for producing unexpected
+elegancies.
+
+ --Specivsa dehinc miracula prouiat;
+ Antiphaten, Scyllamque, et cum Cyclope Charybdim. Hon. Ar. Poet. 146.
+
+ But from a cloud of smoke he breaks to light,
+ And pours his specious miracles to sight;
+ Antiphates his hideous feast devours,
+ Charybdis barks, and Polyphemus roars. FRANCIS.
+
+If the exordial verses of Homer be compared with the rest of the poem,
+they will not appear remarkable for plainness or simplicity, but rather
+eminently adorned and illuminated:
+
+ [Greek:
+ Andra moi ennepe, Mousa, polutropon, os mala polla
+ Plagchthae, epei Troiaes ieron ptoliethron eperse;
+ Pollon d anthropon iden astea, kai noon egno;
+ Polla d og en pontps pathen algea on kata thumon,
+ Arnumenos aen te psuchaen kai noston etairon;
+ All oud os etarous errusato, iemenos per;
+ Auton gar spheteraesin atasthaliaesin olonto.
+ Naepioi, oi kata bous uperionos Aeelioio
+ Aesthion; autar o toisin apheileto vostimon aemao;
+ Ton amothen ge, thea, thugater Dios, eipe kai eamin.]
+
+ The man, for wisdom's various arts renown'd,
+ Long exercised in woes, O muse! resound.
+ Who, when his arms had wrought the destin'd fall
+ Of sacred Troy, and raz'd her heav'n-built wall,
+ Wandering from clime to clime, observant stray'd,
+ The manners noted, and their states survey'd.
+ On stormy seas unnumber'd toils he bore,
+ Safe with his friends to gain his natal shore:
+ Vain toils! their impious folly dar'd to prey
+ On herds devoted to the god of day;
+ The god vindictive doom'd them never more
+ (Ah! men unbless'd) to touch that natal shore.
+ O snatch some portion of these acts from fate,
+ Celestial muse! and to our world relate. POPE.
+
+The first verses of the Iliad are in like manner particularly splendid,
+and the proposition of the Aeneid closes with dignity and magnificence
+not often to be found even in the poetry of Virgil.
+
+The intent of the introduction is to raise expectation, and suspend it;
+something therefore must be discovered, and something concealed; and the
+poet, while the fertility of his invention is yet unknown, may properly
+recommend himself by the grace of his language.
+
+He that reveals too much, or promises too little; he that never
+irritates the intellectual appetite, or that immediately satiates it,
+equally defeats his own purpose. It is necessary to the pleasure of the
+reader, that the events should not be anticipated, and how then can his
+attention be invited, but by grandeur of expression?
+
+
+
+No. 159. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1751.
+
+ _Sunt verba et voces, quibus hunc lenire dolorem
+ Possis, et magnuum morbi deponere partem_. HOR. Ep. Lib. i. 34.
+
+ The power of words, and soothing sounds, appease
+ The raging pain, and lessen the disease. FRANCIS.
+
+The imbecility with which Verecundulus complains that the presence of a
+numerous assembly freezes his faculties, is particularly incident to the
+studious part of mankind, whose education necessarily secludes them in
+their earlier years from mingled converse, till, at their dismission
+from schools and academies, they plunge at once into the tumult of the
+world, and, coming forth from the gloom of solitude, are overpowered by
+the blaze of publick life.
+
+It is, perhaps, kindly provided by nature, that as the feathers and
+strength of a bird grow together, and her wings are not completed till
+she is able to fly, so some proportion should be preserved in the human
+kind between judgment and courage; the precipitation of inexperience is
+therefore restrained by shame, and we remain shackled by timidity, till
+we have learned to speak and act with propriety. I believe few can
+review the days of their youth without recollecting temptations, which
+shame, rather than virtue, enabled them to resist; and opinions which,
+however erroneous in their principles, and dangerous in their
+consequences, they have panted to advance at the hazard of contempt and
+hatred, when they found themselves irresistibly depressed by a languid
+anxiety, which seized them at the moment of utterance, and still
+gathered strength from their endeavours to resist it.
+
+It generally happens that assurance keeps an even pace with ability, and
+the fear of miscarriage, which hinders Our first attempts, is gradually
+dissipated as our skill advances towards certainty of success. That
+bashfulness, therefore, which prevents disgrace, that short and
+temporary shame which secures us from the danger of lasting reproach,
+cannot be properly counted among our misfortunes.
+
+Bashfulness, however it may incommode for a moment, scarcely ever
+produces evils of long continuance; it may flush the cheek, flutter in
+the heart, deject the eyes, and enchain the tongue, but its mischiefs
+soon pass off without remembrance. It may sometimes exclude pleasure,
+but seldom opens any avenue to sorrow or remorse. It is observed
+somewhere that _few have repented of having forborne to speak_.
+
+To excite opposition, and inflame malevolence, is the unhappy privilege
+of courage made arrogant by consciousness of strength. No man finds in
+himself any inclination to attack or oppose him who confesses his
+superiority by blushing in his presence. Qualities exerted with apparent
+fearfulness, receive applause from every voice, and support from every
+hand. Diffidence may check resolution and obstruct performance, but
+compensates its embarrassments by more important advantages; it
+conciliates the proud, and softens the severe, averts envy from
+excellence, and censure from miscarriage.
+
+It may indeed happen that knowledge and virtue remain too long congealed
+by this frigorifick power, as the principles of vegetation are sometimes
+obstructed by lingering frosts. He that enters late into a public
+station, though with all the abilities requisite to the discharge of his
+duty, will find his powers at first impeded by a timidity which he
+himself knows to be vicious, and must struggle long against dejection
+and reluctance, before he obtains the full command of his own attention,
+and adds the gracefulness of ease to the dignity of merit.
+
+For this disease of the mind I know not whether any remedies of much
+efficacy can be found. To advise a man unaccustomed to the eyes of
+multitudes to mount a tribunal without perturbation, to tell him whose
+life was passed in the shades of contemplation, that he must not be
+disconcerted or perplexed in receiving and returning the compliments of
+a splendid assembly, is to advise an inhabitant of Brasil or Sumatra not
+to shiver at an English winter, or him who has always lived upon a plain
+to look from a precipice without emotion. It is to suppose custom
+instantaneously controllable by reason, and to endeavour to communicate,
+by precept, that which only time and habit can bestow.
+
+He that hopes by philosophy and contemplation alone to fortify himself
+against that awe which all, at their first appearance on the stage of
+life, must feel from the spectators, will, at the hour of need, be
+mocked by his resolution; and I doubt whether the preservatives which
+Plato relates Alcibiades to have received from Socrates, when he was
+about to speak in publick, proved sufficient to secure him from the
+powerful fascination.
+
+Yet, as the effects of time may by art and industry be accelerated or
+retarded, it cannot be improper to consider how this troublesome
+instinct may be opposed when it exceeds its just proportion, and instead
+of repressing petulance and temerity, silences eloquence, and
+debilitates force; since, though it cannot be hoped that anxiety should
+be immediately dissipated, it may be at least somewhat abated; and the
+passions will operate with less violence, when reason rises against
+them, than while she either slumbers in neutrality, or, mistaking her
+interest, lends them her assistance.
+
+No cause more frequently produces bashfulness than too high an opinion
+of our own importance. He that imagines an assembly filled with his
+merit, panting with expectation, and hushed with attention, easily
+terrifies himself with the dread of disappointing them, and strains his
+imagination in pursuit of something that may vindicate the veracity of
+fame, and shew that his reputation was not gained by chance. He
+considers that what he shall say or do will never be forgotten; that
+renown or infamy is suspended upon every syllable, and that nothing
+ought to fall from him which will not bear the test of time. Under such
+solicitude, who can wonder that the mind is overwhelmed, and, by
+struggling with attempts above her strength, quickly sinks into
+languishment and despondency?
+
+The most useful medicines are often unpleasing to the taste. Those who
+are oppressed by their own reputation, will, perhaps, not be comforted
+by hearing that their cares are unnecessary. But the truth is, that no
+man is much regarded by the rest of the world. He that considers how
+little he dwells upon the condition of others, will learn how little the
+attention of others is attracted by himself. While we see multitudes
+passing before us, of whom, perhaps, not one appears to deserve our
+notice, or excite our sympathy, we should remember, that we likewise are
+lost in the same throng; that the eye which happens to glance upon us is
+turned in a moment on him that follows us, and that the utmost which we
+can reasonably hope or fear is, to fill a vacant hour with prattle, and
+be forgotten.
+
+
+
+No. 160. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1751
+
+ --Inter se convenit ursis. JUV. Sat. xv. 164.
+
+ Beasts of each kind their fellows spare;
+ Bear lives in amity with bear.
+
+"The world," says Locke, "has people of all sorts." As in the general
+hurry produced by the superfluities of some, and necessities of others,
+no man needs to stand still for want of employment, so in the
+innumerable gradations of ability, and endless varieties of study and
+inclination, no employment can be vacant for want of a man qualified to
+discharge it.
+
+Such is probably the natural state of the universe; but it is so much
+deformed by interest and passion, that the benefit of this adaptation of
+men to things is not always perceived. The folly or indigence of those
+who set their services to sale, inclines them to boast of qualifications
+which they do not possess, and attempt business which they do not
+understand; and they who have the power of assigning to others the task
+of life, are seldom honest or seldom happy in their nomination. Patrons
+are corrupted by avarice, cheated by credulity, or overpowered by
+resistless solicitation. They are sometimes too strongly influenced by
+honest prejudices of friendship, or the prevalence of virtuous
+compassion. For, whatever cool reason may direct, it is not easy for a
+man of tender and scrupulous goodness to overlook the immediate effect
+of his own actions, by turning his eyes upon remoter consequences, and
+to do that which must give present pain, for the sake of obviating evil
+yet unfelt, or securing advantage in time to come. What is distant is in
+itself obscure, and, when we have no wish to see it, easily escapes our
+notice, or takes such a form as desire or imagination bestows upon it.
+
+Every man might, for the same reason, in the multitudes that swarm about
+him, find some kindred mind with which he could unite in confidence and
+friendship; yet we see many straggling single about the world, unhappy
+for want of an associate, and pining with the necessity of confining
+their sentiments to their own bosoms.
+
+This inconvenience arises, in like manner, from struggles of the will
+against the understanding. It is not often difficult to find a suitable
+companion, if every man would be content with such as he is qualified to
+please. But if vanity tempts him to forsake his rank, and post himself
+among those with whom no common interest or mutual pleasure can ever
+unite him, he must always live in a state of unsocial separation,
+without tenderness and without trust.
+
+There are many natures which can never approach within a certain
+distance, and which, when any irregular motive impels them towards
+contact, seem to start back from each other by some invincible
+repulsion. There are others which immediately cohere whenever they come
+into the reach of mutual attraction, and with very little formality of
+preparation mingle intimately as soon as they meet. Every man, whom
+either business or curiosity has thrown at large into the world, will
+recollect many instances of fondness and dislike, which have forced
+themselves upon him without the intervention of his judgment; of
+dispositions to court some and avoid others, when he could assign no
+reason for the preference, or none adequate to the violence of his
+passions; of influence that acted instantaneously upon his mind, and
+which no arguments or persuasions could ever overcome.
+
+Among those with whom time and intercourse have made us familiar, we
+feel our affections divided in different proportions without much regard
+to moral or intellectual merit. Every man knows some whom he cannot
+induce himself to trust, though he has no reason to suspect that they
+would betray him; those to whom he cannot complain, though he never
+observed them to want compassion; those in whose presence he never can
+be gay, though excited by invitations to mirth and freedom; and those
+from whom he cannot be content to receive instruction, though they never
+insulted his ignorance by contempt or ostentation.
+
+That much regard is to be had to those instincts of kindness and
+dislike, or that reason should blindly follow them, I am far from
+intending to inculcate: it is very certain, that by indulgence we may
+give them strength which they have not from nature, and almost every
+example of ingratitude and treachery proves, that by obeying them we may
+commit our happiness to those who are very unworthy of so great a trust.
+But it may deserve to be remarked, that since few contend much with
+their inclinations, it is generally vain to solicit the good-will of
+those whom we perceive thus involuntarily alienated from us; neither
+knowledge nor virtue will reconcile antipathy, and though officiousness
+may be for a time admitted, and diligence applauded, they will at last
+be dismissed with coldness, or discouraged by neglect.
+
+Some have indeed an occult power of stealing upon the affections, of
+exciting universal benevolence, and disposing every heart to fondness
+and friendship. But this is a felicity granted only to the favourites of
+nature. The greater part of mankind find a different reception from
+different dispositions; they sometimes obtain unexpected caresses from
+those whom they never flattered with uncommon regard, and sometimes
+exhaust all their arts of pleasing without effect. To these it is
+necessary to look round, and attempt every breast in which they find
+virtue sufficient for the foundation of friendship; to enter into the
+crowd, and try whom chance will offer to their notice, till they fix on
+some temper congenial to their own, as the magnet rolled in the dust
+collects the fragments of its kindred metal from a thousand particles of
+other substances.
+
+Every man must have remarked the facility with which the kindness of
+others is sometimes gained by those to whom he never could have imparted
+his own. We are by our occupations, education, and habits of life,
+divided almost into different species, which regard one another, for the
+most part, with scorn and malignity. Each of these classes of the human
+race has desires, fears, and conversation, vexations and merriment
+peculiar to itself; cares which another cannot feel; pleasures which he
+cannot partake; and modes of expressing every sensation which he cannot
+understand. That frolick which shakes one man with laughter, will
+convulse another with indignation; the strain of jocularity which in one
+place obtains treats and patronage, would in another be heard with
+indifference, and in a third with abhorrence.
+
+To raise esteem we must benefit others, to procure love we must please
+them. Aristotle observes, that old men do not readily form friendships,
+because they are not easily susceptible of pleasure. He that can
+contribute to the hilarity of the vacant hour, or partake with equal
+gust the favourite amusement; he whose mind is employed on the same
+objects, and who therefore never harasses the understanding with
+unaccustomed ideas, will be welcomed with ardour, and left with regret,
+unless he destroys those recommendations by faults with which peace and
+security cannot consist.
+
+It were happy, if, in forming friendships, virtue could concur with
+pleasure; but the greatest part of human gratifications approach so
+nearly to vice, that few who make the delight of others their rule of
+conduct, can avoid disingenuous compliances; yet certainly he that
+suffers himself to be driven or allured from virtue, mistakes his own
+interest, since he gains succour by means, for which his friend, if ever
+he becomes wise, must scorn him, and for which at last he must scorn
+himself.
+
+
+
+No. 161. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Oiae gar phullon geneae, toiaede kai Andron.]
+ HOM. Il. [Greek: T.]
+
+ Frail as the leaves that quiver on the sprays,
+ Like them man flourishes, like them decays.
+
+MR. RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+You have formerly observed that curiosity often terminates in barren
+knowledge, and that the mind is prompted to study and inquiry rather by
+the uneasiness of ignorance, than the hope of profit. Nothing can be of
+less importance to any present interest, than the fortune of those who
+have been long lost in the grave, and from whom nothing now can be hoped
+or feared. Yet, to rouse the zeal of a true antiquary, little more is
+necessary than to mention a name which mankind have conspired to forget;
+he will make his way to remote scenes of action through obscurity and
+contradiction, as Tully sought amidst bushes and brambles the tomb of
+Archimedes.
+
+It is not easy to discover how it concerns him that gathers the produce,
+or receives the rent of an estate, to know through what families the
+land has passed, who is registered in the Conqueror's survey as its
+possessor, how often it has been forfeited by treason, or how often sold
+by prodigality. The power or wealth of the present inhabitants of a
+country cannot be much increased by an inquiry after the names of those
+barbarians, who destroyed one another twenty centuries ago, in contests
+for the shelter of woods, or convenience of pasturage. Yet we see that
+no man can be at rest in the enjoyment of a new purchase till he has
+learned the history of his grounds from the ancient inhabitants of the
+parish, and that no nation omits to record the actions of their
+ancestors, however bloody, savage, and rapacious.
+
+The same disposition, as different opportunities call it forth,
+discovers itself in great or little things. I have always thought it
+unworthy of a wise man to slumber in total inactivity, only because he
+happens to have no employment equal to his ambition or genius; it is
+therefore my custom to apply my attention to the objects before me, and
+as I cannot think any place wholly unworthy of notice that affords a
+habitation to a man of letters, I have collected the history and
+antiquities of the several garrets in which I have resided.
+
+ Quantulacunque estis, vos ego magna voco.
+
+ How small to others, but how great to me!
+
+Many of these narratives my industry has been able to extend to a
+considerable length; but the woman with whom I now lodge has lived only
+eighteen months in the house, and can give no account of its ancient
+revolutions; the plaisterer having, at her entrance, obliterated, by his
+white-wash, all the smoky memorials which former tenants had left upon
+the ceiling, and perhaps drawn the veil of oblivion over politicians,
+philosophers, and poets.
+
+When I first, cheapened my lodgings, the landlady told me, that she
+hoped I was not an author, for the lodgers on the first floor had
+stipulated that the upper rooms should not be occupied by a noisy trade.
+I very readily promised to give no disturbance to her family, and soon
+despatched a bargain on the usual terms.
+
+I had not slept many nights in my new apartment before I began to
+inquire after my predecessors, and found my landlady, whose imagination
+is filled chiefly with her own affairs, very ready to give me
+information.
+
+Curiosity, like all other desires, produces pain as wel as pleasure.
+Before she began her narrative, I had heated my head with expectations
+of adventures and discoveries, of elegance in disguise, and learning in
+distress; and was somewhat mortified when I heard that the first tenant
+was a tailor, of whom nothing was remembered but that he complained of
+his room for want of light; and, after having lodged in it a month, and
+paid only a week's rent, pawned a piece of cloth which he was trusted,
+to cut out, and was forced to make a precipitate retreat from this
+quarter of the town.
+
+The next was a young woman newly arrived from the country, who lived for
+five weeks with great regularity, and became by frequent treats very
+much the favourite of the family, but at last received visits so
+frequently from a cousin in Cheapside, that she brought the reputation
+of the house into danger, and was therefore dismissed with good advice.
+
+The room then stood empty for a fortnight; my landlady began to think
+that she had judged hardly, and often wished for such another lodger. At
+last, an elderly man of a grave aspect read the bill, and bargained for
+the room at the very first price that was asked. He lived in close
+retirement, seldom went out till evening, and then returned early,
+sometimes cheerful, and at other times dejected. It was remarkable, that
+whatever he purchased, he never had small money in his pocket; and,
+though cool and temperate on other occasions, was always vehement and
+stormy, till he received his change. He paid his rent with great
+exactness, and seldom failed once a week to requite my landlady's
+civility with a supper. At last, such is the fate of human felicity, the
+house was alarmed at midnight by the constable, who demanded to search
+the garrets. My landlady assuring him that he had mistaken the door,
+conducted him up stairs, where he found the tools of a coiner; but the
+tenant had crawled along the roof to an empty house, and escaped; much
+to the joy of my landlady, who declares him a very honest man, and
+wonders why any body should be hanged for making money when such numbers
+are in want of it. She however confesses that she shall, for the future,
+always question the character of those who take her garret without
+beating down the price.
+
+The bill was then placed again in the window, and the poor woman was
+teased for seven weeks by innumerable passengers, who obliged her to
+climb with them every hour up five stories, and then disliked the
+prospect, hated the noise of a publick street, thought the stairs
+narrow, objected to a low ceiling, required the walls to be hung with
+fresher paper, asked questions about the neighbourhood, could not think
+of living so far from their acquaintance, wished the windows had looked
+to the south rather than the west, told how the door and chimney might
+have been better disposed, bid her half the price that she asked, or
+promised to give her earnest the next day, and came no more.
+
+At last, a short meagre man, in a tarnished waistcoat, desired to see
+the garret, and when he had stipulated for two long shelves, and a
+larger table, hired it at a low rate. When the affair was completed, he
+looked round him with great satisfaction, and repeated some words which
+the woman did not understand. In two days he brought a great box of
+books, took possession of his room, and lived very inoffensively, except
+that he frequently disturbed the inhabitants of the next floor by
+unseasonable noises. He was generally in bed at noon, but from evening
+to midnight he sometimes talked aloud with great vehemence, sometimes
+stamped as in rage, sometimes threw down his poker, then clattered his
+chairs, then sat down in deep thought, and again burst out into loud
+vociferations; sometimes he would sigh as oppressed with misery, and
+sometimes shaked with convulsive laughter. When he encountered any of
+the family, he gave way or bowed, but rarely spoke, except that as he
+went up stairs he often repeated,
+
+ [Greek:--Hos hupertata domata naiei].
+
+ This habitant th' aerial regions boast;
+
+hard words, to which his neighbours listened so often, that they learned
+them without understanding them. What was his employment she did not
+venture to ask him, but at last heard a printer's boy inquire for the
+author.
+
+My landlady was very often advised to beware of this strange man, who,
+though he was quiet for the present, might perhaps become outrageous in
+the hot months; but, as she was punctually paid, she could not find any
+sufficient reason for dismissing him, till one night he convinced her,
+by setting fire to his curtains, that it was not safe to have an author
+for her inmate.
+
+She had then for six weeks a succession of tenants, who left the house
+on Saturday, and, instead of paying their rent, stormed at their
+landlady. At last she took in two sisters, one of whom had spent her
+little fortune in procuring remedies for a lingering disease, and was
+now supported and attended by the other: she climbed with difficulty to
+the apartment, where she languished eight weeks without impatience, or
+lamentation, except for the expense and fatigue which her sister
+suffered, and then calmly and contentedly expired. The sister followed
+her to the grave, paid the few debts which they had contracted, wiped
+away the tears of useless sorrow, and, returning to the business of
+common life, resigned to me the vacant habitation.
+
+Such, Mr. Rambler, are the changes which have happened in the narrow
+space where my present fortune has fixed my residence. So true it is
+that amusement and instruction are always at hand for those who have
+skill and willingness to find them; and, so just is the observation of
+Juvenal, that a single house will shew whatever is done or suffered in
+the world.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+
+
+No. 162. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1751.
+
+ Orbus es, et locuples, et Bruto consule natus,
+ Esse tibi veras credis amicitias?
+ Sunt verae: sed quas juvenis, quas pauper habebas:
+ Qui novus est, mortem diligit ille tuam. MART. Lib. xi. Ep. 44.
+
+ What! old, and rich, and childless too,
+ And yet believe your friends are true?
+ Truth might perhaps to those belong,
+ To those who lov'd you poor and young;
+ But, trust me, for the new you have,
+ They'll love you dearly--in your grave. F. LEWIS.
+
+One of the complaints uttered by Milton's Samson, in the anguish of
+blindness, is, that he shall pass his life under the direction of
+others; that he cannot regulate his conduct by his own knowledge, but
+must lie at the mercy of those who undertake to guide him.
+
+There is no state more contrary to the dignity of wisdom than perpetual
+and unlimited dependance, in which the understanding lies useless, and
+every motion is received from external impulse. Reason is the great
+distinction of human nature, the faculty by which we approach to some
+degree of association with celestial intelligences; but as the
+excellence of every power appears only in its operations, not to have
+reason, and to have it useless and unemployed, is nearly the same.
+
+Such is the weakness of man, that the essence of things is seldom so
+much regarded as external and accidental appendages. A small variation
+of trifling circumstances, a slight change of form by an artificial
+dress, or a casual difference of appearance, by a new light and
+situation, will conciliate affection or excite abhorrence, and determine
+us to pursue or to avoid. Every man considers a necessity of compliance
+with any will but his own, as the lowest state of ignominy and meanness;
+few are so far lost in cowardice or negligence, as not to rouse at the
+first insult of tyranny, and exert all their force against him who
+usurps their property, or invades any privilege of speech or action. Yet
+we see often those who never wanted spirit to repel encroachment or
+oppose violence, at last, by a gradual relaxation of vigilance,
+delivering up, without capitulation, the fortress which they defended
+against assault, and laying down unbidden the weapons which they grasp
+the harder for every attempt to wrest them from their hands. Men eminent
+for spirit and wisdom often resign themselves to voluntary pupilage, and
+suffer their lives to be modelled by officious ignorance, and their
+choice to be regulated by presumptuous stupidity.
+
+This unresisting acquiescence in the determination of others, may be the
+consequence of application to some study remote from the beaten track of
+life, some employment which does not allow leisure for sufficient
+inspection of those petty affairs, by which nature has decreed a great
+part of our duration to be filled. To a mind thus withdrawn from common
+objects, it is more eligible to repose on the prudence of another, than
+to be exposed every moment to slight interruptions. The submission which
+such confidence requires, is paid without pain, because it implies no
+confession of inferiority. The business from which we withdraw our
+cognizance, is not above our abilities, but below our notice. We please
+our pride with the effects of our influence thus weakly exerted, and
+fancy ourselves placed in a higher orb, for which we regulate
+subordinate agents by a slight and distant superintendance. But,
+whatever vanity or abstraction may suggest, no man can safely do that by
+others which might be done by himself; he that indulges negligence will
+quickly become ignorant of his own affairs; and he that trusts without
+reserve will at last be deceived.
+
+It is, however, impossible but that, as the attention tends strongly
+towards one thing, it must retire from another; and he that omits the
+care of domestick business, because he is engrossed by inquiries of more
+importance to mankind, has, at least, the merit of suffering in a good
+cause. But there are many who can plead no such extenuation of their
+folly; who shake off the burden of their situation, not that they may
+soar with less incumbrance to the heights of knowledge or virtue, but
+that they may loiter at ease and sleep in quiet; and who select for
+friendship and confidence not the faithful and the virtuous, but the
+soft, the civil, and compliant.
+
+This openness to flattery is the common disgrace of declining life. When
+men feel weakness increasing on them, they naturally desire to rest from
+the struggles of contradiction, the fatigue of reasoning, the anxiety of
+circumspection; when they are hourly tormented with pains and diseases,
+they are unable to bear any new disturbance, and consider all opposition
+as an addition to misery, of which they feel already more than they can
+patiently endure. Thus desirous of peace, and thus fearful of pain, the
+old man seldom inquires after any other qualities in those whom he
+caresses, than quickness in conjecturing his desires, activity in
+supplying his wants, dexterity in intercepting complaints before they
+approach near enough to disturb him, flexibility to his present humour,
+submission to hasty petulance, and attention to wearisome narrations. By
+these arts alone many have been able to defeat the claims of kindred and
+of merit, and to enrich themselves with presents and legacies.
+
+Thrasybulus inherited a large fortune, and augmented it by the revenues
+of several lucrative employments, which he discharged with honour and
+dexterity. He was at last wise enough to consider, that life should not
+be devoted wholly to accumulation, and therefore retiring to his estate,
+applied himself to the education of his children, and the cultivation of
+domestick happiness.
+
+He passed several years in this pleasing amusement, and saw his care
+amply recompensed; his daughters were celebrated for modesty and
+elegance, and his sons for learning, prudence, and spirit. In time the
+eagerness with which the neighbouring gentlemen courted his alliance,
+obliged him to resign his daughters to other families; the vivacity and
+curiosity of his sons hurried them out of rural privacy into the open
+world, from whence they had not soon an inclination to return. This,
+however, he had always hoped; he pleased himself with the success of his
+schemes, and felt no inconvenience from solitude till an apoplexy
+deprived him of his wife.
+
+Thrasybulus had now no companion; and the maladies of increasing years
+having taken from him much of the power of procuring amusement for
+himself, he thought it necessary to procure some inferior friend, who
+might ease him of his economical solicitudes, and divert him by cheerful
+conversation. All these qualities he soon recollected in Vafer, a clerk
+in one of the offices over which he had formerly presided. Vafer was
+invited to visit his old patron, and being by his station acquainted
+with the present modes of life, and by constant practice dexterous in
+business, entertained him with so many novelties, and so readily
+disentangled his affairs, that he was desired to resign his clerkship,
+and accept a liberal salary in the house of Thrasybulus.
+
+Vafer, having always lived in a state of dependance, was well versed in
+the arts by which favour is obtained, and could, without repugnance or
+hesitation, accommodate himself to every caprice, and echo every
+opinion. He never doubted but to be convinced, nor attempted opposition
+but to flatter Thrasybulus with the pleasure of a victory. By this
+practice he found his way into his patron's heart, and, having first
+made himself agreeable, soon became important. His insidious diligence,
+by which the laziness of age was gratified, engrossed the management of
+affairs; and his petty offices of civility, and occasional
+intercessions, persuaded the tenants to consider him as their friend and
+benefactor, and to entreat his enforcement of their representations of
+hard years, and his countenance to petitions for abatement of rent.
+
+Thrasybulus had now banqueted on flattery, till he could no longer bear
+the harshness of remonstrance or the insipidity of truth. All
+contrariety to his own opinion shocked him like a violation of some
+natural right, and all recommendation of his affairs to his own
+inspection was dreaded by him as a summons to torture. His children were
+alarmed by the sudden riches of Vafer, but their complaints were heard
+by their father with impatience, as the result of a conspiracy against
+his quiet, and a design to condemn him, for their own advantage, to
+groan out his last hours in perplexity and drudgery. The daughters
+retired with tears in their eyes, but the son continued his
+importunities till he found his inheritance hazarded by his obstinacy.
+
+Vafer triumphed over all their efforts, and, continuing to confirm
+himself in authority, at the death of his master, purchased an estate,
+and bade defiance to inquiry and justice.
+
+
+
+No. 163. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1751.
+
+ Mitte superba pati fastidia, spemque caducam
+ Despice; vive tibi, nam moriere tibi. SENECA.
+
+ Bow to no patron's insolence; rely
+ On no frail hopes, in freedom live and die. F. LEWIS.
+
+None of the cruelties exercised by wealth and power upon indigence and
+dependance is more mischievous in its consequences, or more frequently
+practised with wanton negligence, than the encouragement of expectations
+which are never to be gratified, and the elation and depression of the
+heart by needless vicissitudes of hope and disappointment.
+
+Every man is rich or poor, according to the proportion between his
+desires and enjoyments; any enlargement of wishes is therefore equally
+destructive to happiness with the diminution of possession; and he that
+teaches another to long for what he never shall obtain, is no less an
+enemy to his quiet, than if he had robbed him of part of his patrimony.
+
+But representations thus refined exhibit no adequate idea of the guilt
+of pretended friendship; of artifices by which followers are attracted
+only to decorate the retinue of pomp, and swell the shout of popularity,
+and to be dismissed with contempt and ignominy, when their leader has
+succeeded or miscarried, when he is sick of show, and weary of noise.
+While a man infatuated with the promises of greatness, wastes his hours
+and days in attendance and solicitation, the honest opportunities of
+improving his condition pass by without his notice; he neglects to
+cultivate his own barren soil, because he expects every moment to be
+placed in regions of spontaneous fertility, and is seldom roused from
+his delusion, but by the gripe of distress which he cannot resist, and
+the sense of evils which cannot be remedied.
+
+The punishment of Tantalus in the infernal regions affords a just image
+of hungry servility, flattered with the approach of advantage, doomed to
+lose it before it comes into his reach, always within a few days of
+felicity, and always sinking back to his former wants:
+
+ [Greek:
+ Kai maen Tantalon eiseidon, chalep alge echonta,
+ Estaot en limnae hae de proseplaze geneio.
+ Steuto de dipsaon, pieein d ouk eichen elesthai.
+ Ossaki gar kupsei ho geron pieein meneainon,
+ Tossach hudor apolesket anabrochen. amphi de possi
+ Gaia melaina phaneske katazaenaske de daimon,
+ Dendrea d hupsipeteala katakoeathen chee kaopon
+ Onchnai, kai roiai, kai maeleai aglaokarpoi,
+ Sukai te glukeoai, kai elaiai taelethoosai.
+ Ton opot ithusei o geoon epi cheosi masasthai,
+ Tasd anemos riptaske poti nephea skioenta.]
+ HOM. Od. [Greek: A'.] 581.
+
+"I saw," says Homer's Ulysses, "the severe punishment of Tantalus. In a
+lake, whose waters approached to his lips, he stood burning with thirst,
+without the power to drink. Whenever he inclined his head to the stream,
+some deity commanded it to be dry, and the dark earth appeared at his
+feet. Around him lofty trees spread their fruits to view; the pear, the
+pomegranate and the apple, the green olive and the luscious fig quivered
+before him, which, whenever he extended his hand to seize them, were
+snatched by the winds into clouds and obscurity."
+
+This image of misery was perhaps originally suggested to some poet by
+the conduct of his patron, by the daily contemplation of splendour which
+he never must partake, by fruitless attempts to catch at interdicted
+happiness, and by the sudden evanescence of his reward, when he thought
+his labours almost at an end. To groan with poverty, when all about him
+was opulence, riot, and superfluity, and to find the favours which he
+had long been encouraged to hope, and had long endeavoured to deserve,
+squandered at last on nameless ignorance, was to thirst with water
+flowing before him, and to see the fruits, to which his hunger was
+hastening, scattered by the wind. Nor can my correspondent, whatever he
+may have suffered, express with more justness or force the vexations of
+dependance.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I am one of those mortals who have been courted and envied as the
+favourites of the great. Having often gained the prize of composition at
+the university, I began to hope that I should obtain the same
+distinction in every other place, and determined to forsake the
+profession to which I was destined by my parents, and in which the
+interest of my family would have procured me a very advantageous
+settlement. The pride of wit fluttered in my heart, and when I prepared
+to leave the college, nothing entered my imagination but honours,
+caresses, and rewards, riches without labour, and luxury without
+expense.
+
+I however delayed my departure for a time, to finish the performance by
+which I was to draw the first notice of mankind upon me. When it was
+completed I hurried to London, and considered every moment that passed
+before its publication, as lost in a kind of neutral existence, and cut
+off from the golden hours of happiness and fame. The piece was at last
+printed and disseminated by a rapid sale; I wandered from one place of
+concourse to another, feasted from morning to night on the repetition of
+my own praises, and enjoyed the various conjectures of criticks, the
+mistaken candour of my friends, and the impotent malice of my enemies.
+Some had read the manuscript, and rectified its inaccuracies; others had
+seen it in a state so imperfect, that they could not forbear to wonder
+at its present excellence; some had conversed with the author at the
+coffeehouse; and others gave hints that they had lent him money.
+
+I knew that no performance is so favourably read as that of a writer who
+suppresses his name, and therefore resolved to remain concealed, till
+those by whom literary reputation is established had given their
+suffrages too publickly to retract them. At length my bookseller
+informed me that Aurantius, the standing patron of merit, had sent
+inquiries after me, and invited me to his acquaintance.
+
+The time which I had long expected was now arrived. I went to Aurantius
+with a beating heart, for I looked upon our interview as the critical
+moment of my destiny. I was received with civilities which my academick
+rudeness made me unable to repay; but when I had recovered from my
+confusion, I prosecuted the conversation with such liveliness and
+propriety, that I confirmed my new friend in his esteem of my abilities,
+and was dismissed with the utmost ardour of profession, and raptures of
+fondness.
+
+I was soon summoned to dine with Aurantius, who had assembled the most
+judicious of his friends to partake of the entertainment. Again I
+exerted my powers of sentiment and expression, and again found every eye
+sparkling with delight, and every tongue silent with attention. I now
+became familiar at the table of Aurantius, but could never, in his most
+private or jocund hours, obtain more from him than general declarations
+of esteem, or endearments of tenderness, which included no particular
+promise, and therefore conferred no claim. This frigid reserve somewhat
+disgusted me, and when he complained of three days absence, I took care
+to inform him with how much importunity of kindness I had been detained
+by his rival Pollio.
+
+Aurantius now considered his honour as endangered by the desertion of a
+wit, and, lest I should have an inclination to wander, told me that I
+could never find a friend more constant and zealous than himself; that
+indeed he had made no promises, because he hoped to surprise me with
+advancement, but had been silently promoting my interest, and should
+continue his good offices, unless he found the kindness of others more
+desired.
+
+If you, Mr. Rambler, have ever ventured your philosophy within the
+attraction of greatness, you know the force of such language introduced
+with a smile of gracious tenderness, and impressed at the conclusion
+with an air of solemn sincerity. From that instant I gave myself up
+wholly to Aurantius, and, as he immediately resumed his former gaiety,
+expected every morning a summons to some employment of dignity and
+profit. One month succeeded another, and, in defiance of appearances, I
+still fancied myself nearer to my wishes, and continued to dream of
+success, and wake to disappointment. At last the failure of my little
+fortune compelled me to abate the finery which I hitherto thought
+necessary to the company with whom I associated, and the rank to which I
+should be raised. Aurantius, from the moment in which he discovered my
+poverty, considered me as fully in his power, and afterwards rather
+permitted my attendance than invited it; thought himself at liberty to
+refuse my visits, whenever he had other amusements within reach, and
+often suffered me to wait, without pretending any necessary business.
+When I was admitted to his table, if any man of rank equal to his own
+was present, he took occasion to mention my writings, and commend my
+ingenuity, by which he intended to apologize for the confusion of
+distinctions, and the improper assortment of his company; and often
+called upon me to entertain his friends with my productions, as a
+sportsman delights the squires of his neighbourhood with the curvets of
+his horse, or the obedience of his spaniels.
+
+To complete my mortification, it was his practice to impose tasks upon
+me, by requiring me to write upon such subjects as he thought
+susceptible of ornament and illustration. With these extorted
+performances he was little satisfied, because he rarely found in them
+the ideas which his own imagination had suggested, and which he
+therefore thought more natural than mine.
+
+When the pale of ceremony is broken, rudeness and insult soon enter the
+breach. He now found that he might safely harass me with vexation, that
+he had fixed the shackles of patronage upon me, and that I could neither
+resist him nor escape. At last, in the eighth year of my servitude, when
+the clamour of creditors was vehement, and my necessity known to be
+extreme, he offered me a small office, but hinted his expectation, that
+I should marry a young woman with whom he had been acquainted.
+
+I was not so far depressed by my calamities as to comply with this
+proposal; but, knowing that complaints and expostulations would but
+gratify his insolence, I turned away with that contempt with which I
+shall never want spirit to treat the wretch who can outgo the guilt of a
+robber without the temptation of his profit, and who lures the credulous
+and thoughtless to maintain the show of his levee, and the mirth of his
+table, at the expense of honour, happiness, and life.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+LIBERALIS.
+
+
+
+No. 164. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1751.
+
+ _--Vitium, Gaure, Catonis habes_. MART. Lib. ii. Ep. lxxxix. 2.
+
+ Gaurus pretends to Cato's fame;
+ And proves--by Cato's vice, his claim.
+
+Distinction is so pleasing to the pride of man, that a great part of the
+pain and pleasure of life arises from the gratification or
+disappointment of an incessant wish for superiority, from the success or
+miscarriage of secret competitions, from victories and defeats, of
+which, though they appear to us of great importance, in reality none are
+conscious except ourselves.
+
+Proportionate to the prevalence of this love of praise is the variety of
+means by which its attainment is attempted. Every man however hopeless
+his pretensions may appear to all but himself, has some project by which
+he hopes to rise to reputation; some art by which he imagines that the
+notice of the world will be attracted; some quality, good or bad, which
+discriminates him from the common herd of mortals, and by which others
+maybe persuaded to love, or compelled to fear him. The ascents of
+honour, however steep, never appear inaccessible; he that despairs to
+scale the precipices by which learning and valour have conducted their
+favourites, discovers some by-bath, or easier acclivity, which, though
+it cannot bring him to the summit, will yet enable him to overlook those
+with whom he is now contending for eminence; and we seldom require more
+to the happiness of the present hour, than to surpass him that stands
+next before us.
+
+As the greater part of human kind speak and act wholly by imitation,
+most of those who aspire to honour and applause propose to themselves
+some example which serves as the model of their conduct, and the limit
+of their hopes. Almost every man, if closely examined, will be found to
+have enlisted himself under some leader whom he expects to conduct him
+to renown; to have some hero or other, living or dead, in his view,
+whose character he endeavours to assume, and whose performances he
+labours to equal.
+
+When the original is well chosen, and judiciously copied, the imitator
+often arrives at excellence, which he could never have attained without
+direction; for few are formed with abilities to discover new
+possibilities of excellence, and to distinguish themselves by means
+never tried before.
+
+But folly and idleness often contrive to gratify pride at a cheaper
+rate: not the qualities which are most illustrious, but those which are
+of easiest attainment, are selected for imitation; and the honours and
+rewards which publick gratitude has paid to the benefactors of mankind,
+are expected by wretches who can only imitate them in their vices and
+defects, or adopt some petty singularities of which those from whom they
+are borrowed were secretly ashamed.
+
+No man rises to such a height as to become conspicuous, but he is on one
+side censured by undiscerning malice, which reproaches him for his best
+actions, and slanders his apparent and incontestable excellencies; and
+idolized on the other by ignorant admiration, which exalts his faults
+and follies into virtues. It may be observed, that he by whose intimacy
+his acquaintances imagine themselves dignified, generally diffuses among
+them his mien and his habits; and indeed, without more vigilance than is
+generally applied to the regulation of the minuter parts of behaviour,
+it is not easy, when we converse much with one whose general character
+excites our veneration, to escape all contagion of his peculiarities,
+even when we do not deliberately think them worthy of our notice, and
+when they would have excited laughter or disgust, had they not been
+protected by their alliance to nobler qualities, and accidentally
+consorted with knowledge or with virtue.
+
+The faults of a man loved or honoured, sometimes steal secretly and
+imperceptibly upon the wise and virtuous, but, by injudicious fondness
+or thoughtless vanity, are adopted with design. There is scarce any
+failing of mind or body, any errour of opinion, or depravity of
+practice, which instead of producing shame and discontent, its natural
+effects, has not at one time or other gladdened vanity with the hopes of
+praise, and been displayed with ostentatious industry by those who
+sought kindred minds among the wits or heroes, and could prove their
+relation only by similitude of deformity.
+
+In consequence of this perverse ambition, every habit which reason
+condemns may be indulged and avowed. When a man is upbraided with his
+faults, he may indeed be pardoned if he endeavours to run for shelter to
+some celebrated name; but it is not to be suffered that, from the
+retreats to which he fled from infamy, he should issue again with the
+confidence of conquests, and call upon mankind for praise. Yet we see
+men that waste their patrimony in luxury, destroy their health with
+debauchery, and enervate their minds with idleness, because there have
+been some whom luxury never could sink into contempt, nor idleness
+hinder from the praise of genius.
+
+This general inclination of mankind to copy characters in the gross, and
+the force which the recommendation of illustrious examples adds to the
+allurements of vice, ought to be considered by all whose character
+excludes them from the shades of secrecy, as incitements to scrupulous
+caution and universal purity of manners. No man, however enslaved to his
+appetites, or hurried by his passions, can, while he preserves his
+intellects unimpaired, please himself with promoting the corruption of
+others. He whose merit has enlarged his influence, would surely wish to
+exert it for the benefit of mankind. Yet such will be the effect of his
+reputation, while he suffers himself to indulge in any favourite fault,
+that they who have no hope to reach his excellence will catch at his
+failings, and his virtues will be cited to justify the copiers of his
+vices.
+
+It is particularly the duty of those who consign illustrious names to
+posterity, to take care lest their readers be misled by ambiguous
+examples. That writer may be justly condemned as an enemy to goodness,
+who suffers fondness or interest to confound right with wrong, or to
+shelter the faults which even the wisest and the best have committed
+from that ignominy which guilt ought always to suffer, and with which it
+should be more deeply stigmatized when dignified by its neighbourhood to
+uncommon worth, since we shall be in danger of beholding it without
+abhorrence, unless its turpitude be laid open, and the eye secured from
+the deception of surrounding splendour.
+
+
+
+No. 165. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Aen neos, alla penaes nun gaeron, plousios eimi
+ O monos ek panton oiktros en amphoterois,
+ Os tote men chraesthai dunamaen, hopot oud' en eichon.
+ Nun d' opote chraesthai mae dunamai, tot echo.] ANTIPHILUS.
+
+ Young was I once and poor, now rich and old;
+ A harder case than mine was never told;
+ Blest with the power to use them--I had none;
+ Loaded with _riches_ now, the power is gone. F. LEWIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+The writers who have undertaken the unpromising task of moderating
+desire, exert all the power of their eloquence, to shew that happiness
+is not the lot of man, and have, by many arguments and examples, proved
+the instability of every condition by which envy or ambition are
+excited. They have set before our eyes all the calamities to which we
+are exposed from the frailty of nature, the influence of accident, or
+the stratagems of malice; they have terrified greatness with
+conspiracies, and riches with anxieties, wit with criticism, and beauty
+with disease.
+
+All the force of reason, and all the charms of language, are indeed
+necessary to support positions which every man hears with a wish to
+confute them. Truth finds an easy entrance into the mind when she is
+introduced by desire, and attended by pleasure; but when she intrudes
+uncalled, and brings only fear and sorrow in her train, the passes of
+the intellect are barred against her by prejudice and passion; if she
+sometimes forces her way by the batteries of argument, she seldom long
+keeps possession of her conquests, but is ejected by some favoured
+enemy, or at best obtains only a nominal sovereignty, without influence
+and without authority.
+
+That life is short we are all convinced, and yet suffer not that
+conviction to repress our projects or limit our expectations; that life
+is miserable we all feel, and yet we believe that the time is near when
+we shall feel it no longer. But to hope happiness and immortality is
+equally vain. Our state may indeed be more or less embittered as our
+duration may be more or less contracted; yet the utmost felicity which
+we can ever attain will be little better than alleviation of misery, and
+we shall always feel more pain from our wants than pleasure from our
+enjoyments. The incident which I am going to relate will shew, that to
+destroy the effect of all our success, it is not necessary that any
+signal calamity should fall upon us, that we should be harassed by
+implacable persecution, or excruciated by irremediable pains: the
+brightest hours of prosperity have their clouds, and the stream of life,
+if it is not ruffled by obstructions, will grow putrid by stagnation.
+
+My father, resolving not to imitate the folly of his ancestors, who had
+hitherto left the younger sons encumbrances on the eldest, destined me
+to a lucrative profession; and I, being careful to lose no opportunity
+of improvement, was, at the usual time in which young men enter the
+world, well qualified for the exercise of the business which I had
+chosen.
+
+My eagerness to distinguish myself in publick, and my impatience of the
+narrow scheme of life to which my indigence confined me, did not suffer
+me to continue long in the town where I was born. I went away as from a
+place of confinement, with a resolution to return no more, till I should
+be able to dazzle with my splendour those who now looked upon me with
+contempt, to reward those who had paid honours to my dawning merit, and
+to shew all who had suffered me to glide by them unknown and neglected,
+how much they mistook their interest in omitting to propitiate a genius
+like mine.
+
+Such were my intentions when I sallied forth into the unknown world, in
+quest of riches and honours, which I expected to procure in a very short
+time; for what could withhold them from industry and knowledge? He that
+indulges hope will always be disappointed. Reputation I very soon
+obtained; but as merit is much more cheaply acknowledged than rewarded,
+I did not find myself yet enriched in proportion to my celebrity.
+
+I had, however, in time, surmounted the obstacles by which envy and
+competition obstruct the first attempts of a new claimant, and saw my
+opponents and censurers tacitly confessing their despair of success, by
+courting my friendship and yielding to my influence. They who once
+pursued me, were now satisfied to escape from me; and they who had
+before thought me presumptuous in hoping to overtake them, had now their
+utmost wish, if they were permitted, at no great distance, quietly to
+follow me.
+
+My wants were not madly multiplied as my acquisitions increased, and the
+time came, at length, when I thought myself enabled to gratify all
+reasonable desires, and when, therefore, I resolved to enjoy that plenty
+and serenity which I had been hitherto labouring to procure, to enjoy
+them while I was yet neither crushed by age into infirmity, nor so
+habituated to a particular manner of life as to be unqualified for new
+studies or entertainments.
+
+I now quitted my profession, and, to set myself at once free from all
+importunities to resume it, changed my residence, and devoted the
+remaining part of my time to quiet and amusement. Amidst innumerable
+projects of pleasure, which restless idleness incited me to form, and of
+which most, when they came to the moment of execution, were rejected for
+others of no longer continuance, some accident revived in my imagination
+the pleasing ideas of my native place. It was now in my power to visit
+those from whom I had been so long absent, in such a manner as was
+consistent with my former resolution, and I wondered how it could happen
+that I had so long delayed my own happiness.
+
+Full of the admiration which I should excite, and the homage which I
+should receive, I dressed my servants in a more ostentatious livery,
+purchased a magnificent chariot, and resolved to dazzle the inhabitants
+of the little town with an unexpected blaze of greatness.
+
+While the preparations that vanity required were made for my departure,
+which, as workmen will not easily be hurried beyond their ordinary rate,
+I thought very tedious, I solaced my impatience with imaging the various
+censures that my appearance would produce; the hopes which some would
+feel from my bounty; the terrour which my power would strike on others;
+the awkward respect with which I should be accosted by timorous
+officiousness; and the distant reverence with which others, less
+familiar to splendour and dignity, would be contented to gaze upon me. I
+deliberated a long time, whether I should immediately descend to a level
+with my former acquaintances; or make my condescension more grateful by
+a gentle transition from haughtiness and reserve. At length I determined
+to forget some of my companions, till they discovered themselves by some
+indubitable token, and to receive the congratulations of others upon my
+good fortune with indifference, to shew that I always expected what I
+had now obtained. The acclamations of the populace I purposed to reward
+with six hogsheads of ale, and a roasted ox, and then recommend to them
+to return to their work.
+
+At last all the trappings of grandeur were fitted, and I began the
+journey of triumph, which I could have wished to have ended in the same
+moment; but my horses felt none of their master's ardour, and I was
+shaken four days upon rugged roads. I then entered the town, and, having
+graciously let fall the glasses, that my person might be seen, passed
+slowly through the street. The noise of the wheels brought the
+inhabitants to their doors, but I could not perceive that I was known by
+them. At last I alighted, and my name, I suppose, was told by my
+servants, for the barber stepped from the opposite house, and seized me
+by the hand with honest joy in his countenance, which, according to the
+rule that I had prescribed to myself, I repressed with a frigid
+graciousness. The fellow, instead of sinking into dejection, turned away
+with contempt, and left me to consider how the second salutation should
+be received. The next fellow was better treated, for I soon found that I
+must purchase by civility that regard which I had expected to enforce by
+insolence.
+
+There was yet no smoke of bonfires, no harmony of bells, no shout of
+crowds, nor riot of joy; the business of the day went forward as before;
+and, after having ordered a splendid supper, which no man came to
+partake, and which my chagrin hindered me from tasting, I went to bed,
+where the vexation of disappointment overpowered the fatigue of my
+journey, and kept me from sleep.
+
+I rose so much humbled by those mortifications, as to inquire after the
+present state of the town, and found that I had been absent too long to
+obtain the triumph which had flattered my expectation. Of the friends
+whose compliments I expected, some had long ago moved to distant
+provinces, some had lost in the maladies of age all sense of another's
+prosperity, and some had forgotten our former intimacy amidst care and
+distresses. Of three whom I had resolved to punish for their former
+offences by a longer continuance of neglect, one was, by his own
+industry, raised above my scorn, and two were sheltered from it in the
+grave. All those whom I loved, feared, or hated, all whose envy or whose
+kindness I had hopes of contemplating with pleasure, were swept away,
+and their place was filled by a new generation with other views and
+other competitions; and among many proofs of the impotence of wealth, I
+found that it conferred upon me very few distinctions in my native
+place.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+SEROTINUS.
+
+
+
+No. 166. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1751.
+
+ _Semper, eris pauper si pauper es, Aemiliane:
+ Dantur opes nullis nunc nisi divitibus_. MART. Lib. v. Ep. xxxi.
+
+ Once poor, my friend, still poor you must remain,
+ The rich alone have all the means of gain. EDW. CAVF.
+[Transcriber's note: Difficult to make out in original--possibly CAVE?]
+
+No complaint has been more frequently repeated in all ages than that of
+the neglect of merit associated with poverty, and the difficulty with
+which valuable or pleasing qualities force themselves into view, when
+they are obscured by indigence. It has been long observed, that native
+beauty has little power to charm without the ornaments which fortune
+bestows, and that to want the favour of others is often sufficient to
+hinder us from obtaining it.
+
+Every day discovers that mankind are not yet convinced of their errour,
+or that their conviction is without power to influence their conduct;
+for poverty still continues to produce contempt, and still obstructs the
+claims of kindred and of virtue. The eye of wealth is elevated towards
+higher stations, and seldom descends to examine the actions of those who
+are placed below the level of its notice, and who in distant regions and
+lower situations are struggling with distress, or toiling for bread.
+Among the multitudes overwhelmed with insuperable calamity, it is common
+to find those whom a very little assistance would enable to support
+themselves with decency, and who yet cannot obtain from near relations,
+what they see hourly lavished in ostentation, luxury, or frolick.
+
+There are natural reasons why poverty does not easily conciliate
+affection. He that has been confined from his infancy to the
+conversation of the lowest classes of mankind, must necessarily want
+those accomplishments which are the usual means of attracting favour;
+and though truth, fortitude, and probity, give an indisputable right to
+reverence and kindness, they will not be distinguished by common eyes,
+unless they are brightened by elegance of manners, but are cast aside
+like unpolished gems, of which none but the artist knows the intrinsick
+value, till their asperities are smoothed, and their incrustations
+rubbed away.
+
+The grossness of vulgar habits obstructs the efficacy of virtue, as
+impurity and harshness of style impair the force of reason, and rugged
+numbers turn off the mind from artifice of disposition, and fertility of
+invention. Few have strength of reason to over-rule the perceptions of
+sense; and yet fewer have curiosity or benevolence to struggle long
+against the first impression; he therefore who fails to please in his
+salutation and address, is at once rejected, and never obtains an
+opportunity of shewing his latent excellencies, or essential qualities.
+
+It is, indeed, not easy to prescribe a successful manner of approach to
+the distressed or necessitous, whose condition subjects every kind of
+behaviour equally to miscarriage. He whose confidence of merit incites
+him to meet, without any apparent sense of inferiority, the eyes of
+those who flattered themselves with their own dignity, is considered as
+an insolent leveller, impatient of the just prerogatives of rank and
+wealth, eager to usurp the station to which he has no right, and to
+confound the subordinations of society; and who would contribute to the
+exaltation of that spirit which even want and calamity are not able to
+restrain from rudeness and rebellion?
+
+But no better success will commonly be found to attend servility and
+dejection, which often give pride the confidence to treat them with
+contempt. A request made with diffidence and timidity is easily denied,
+because the petitioner himself seems to doubt its fitness.
+
+Kindness is generally reciprocal; we are desirous of pleasing others,
+because we receive pleasure from them; but by what means can the man
+please, whose attention is engrossed by his distresses, and who has no
+leisure to be officious; whose will is restrained by his necessities,
+and who has no power to confer benefits; whose temper is perhaps
+vitiated by misery, and whose understanding is impeded by ignorance?
+
+It is yet a more offensive discouragement, that the same actions
+performed by different hands produce different effects, and, instead of
+rating the man by his performances, we rate too frequently the
+performance by the man. It sometimes happens in the combinations of
+life, that important services are performed by inferiors; but though
+their zeal and activity may be paid by pecuniary rewards, they seldom
+excite that flow of gratitude, or obtain that accumulation of
+recompense, with which all think it their duty to acknowledge the favour
+of those who descend to their assistance from a higher elevation. To be
+obliged, is to be in some respect inferior to another[h]; and few
+willingly indulge the memory of an action which raises one whom they
+have always been accustomed to think below them, but satisfy themselves
+with faint praise and penurious payment, and then drive it from their
+own minds, and endeavour to conceal it from the knowledge of others.
+
+It may be always objected to the services of those who can be supposed
+to want a reward, that they were produced not by kindness but interest;
+they are, therefore, when they are no longer wanted, easily disregarded
+as arts of insinuation, or stratagems of selfishness. Benefits which are
+received as gifts from wealth, are exacted as debts from indigence; and
+he that in a high station is celebrated for superfluous goodness, would
+in a meaner condition have barely been confessed to have done his duty.
+
+It is scarcely possible for the utmost benevolence to oblige, when
+exerted under the disadvantages of great inferiority; for, by the
+habitual arrogance of wealth, such expectations are commonly formed as
+no zeal or industry can satisfy; and what regard can he hope, who has
+done less than was demanded from him?
+
+There are indeed kindnesses conferred which were never purchased by
+precedent favours, and there is an affection not arising from gratitude
+or gross interest, by which similar natures, are attracted to each
+other, without prospect of any other advantage than the pleasure of
+exchanging sentiments, and the hope of confirming their esteem of
+themselves by the approbation of each other. But this spontaneous
+fondness seldom rises at the sight of poverty, which every one regards
+with habitual contempt, and of which the applause is no more courted by
+vanity, than the countenance is solicited by ambition. The most generous
+and disinterested friendship must be resolved at last into the love of
+ourselves; he therefore whose reputation or dignity inclines us to
+consider his esteem as a testimonial of desert, will always find our
+hearts open to his endearments. We every day see men of eminence
+followed with all the obsequiousness of dependance, and courted with all
+the blandishments of flattery, by those who want nothing from them but
+professions of regard, and who think themselves liberally rewarded by a
+bow, a smile, or an embrace.
+
+But those prejudices which every mind feels more or less in favour of
+riches, ought, like other opinions, which only custom and example have
+impressed upon us, to be in time subjected to reason. We must learn how
+to separate the real character from extraneous adhesions and casual
+circumstances, to consider closely him whom we are about to adopt or to
+reject; to regard his inclinations as well as his actions; to trace out
+those virtues which lie torpid in the heart for want of opportunity, and
+those vices that lurk unseen by the absence of temptation; that when we
+find worth faintly shooting in the shades of obscurity, we may let in
+light and sunshine upon it, and ripen barren volition into efficacy and
+power.
+
+[Footnote h: Sir Joshua Reynolds evinced great reach of mind and
+intimate acquaintance with humanity, when he observed, on overhearing a
+person condoling with some ladies on the death of one who had conferred
+the greatest favours upon them, that at all events they were relieved
+from the burden of gratitude.]
+
+
+
+No. 167. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1751.
+
+ Candida perpetuo reside, Concordia, lecto,
+ Tamque pari semper sit Venus aequa jugo.
+ Diligat illa senem quondam: sed et ipsa marito,
+ Tum quoque cum fuerit, non videatur, anus. MART. Lib, w. xii. 7.
+
+ Their nuptial bed may smiling concord dress,
+ And Venus still the happy union bless!
+ Wrinkled with age, may mutual love and truth
+ To their dim eyes recal the bloom of youth. F. LEWIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+It is not common to envy those with whom we cannot easily be placed in
+comparison. Every man sees without malevolence the progress of another
+in the tracks of life, which he has himself no desire to tread, and
+hears, without inclination to cavils or contradiction, the renown of
+those whose distance will not suffer them to draw the attention of
+mankind from his own merit. The sailor never thinks it necessary to
+contest the lawyer's abilities; nor would the Rambler, however jealous
+of his reputation, be much disturbed by the success of rival wits at
+Agra or Ispahan.
+
+We do not therefore ascribe to you any superlative degree of virtue,
+when we believe that we may inform you of our change of condition
+without danger of malignant fascination; and that when you read of the
+marriage of your correspondents Hymenaeus and Tranquilla, you will join
+your wishes to those of their other friends for the happy event of an
+union in which caprice and selfishness had so little part.
+
+There is at least this reason why we should be less deceived in our
+connubial hopes than many who enter into the same state, that we have
+allowed our minds to form no unreasonable expectations, nor vitiated our
+fancies in the soft hours of courtship, with visions of felicity which
+human power cannot bestow, or of perfection which human virtue cannot
+attain. That impartiality with which we endeavour to inspect the manners
+of all whom we have known was never so much overpowered by our passion,
+but that we discovered some faults and weaknesses in each other; and
+joined our hands in conviction, that as there are advantages to be
+enjoyed in marriage, there are inconveniencies likewise to be endured;
+and that, together with confederate intellects and auxiliar virtues, we
+must find different opinions and opposite inclinations.
+
+We however flatter ourselves, for who is not flattered by himself as
+well as by others on the day of marriage? that we are eminently
+qualified to give mutual pleasure. Our birth is without any such
+remarkable disparity as can give either an opportunity of insulting the
+other with pompous names and splendid alliances, or of calling in, upon
+any domestick controversy, the overbearing assistance of powerful
+relations. Our fortune was equally suitable, so that we meet without any
+of those obligations, which always produce reproach or suspicion of
+reproach, which, though they may be forgotten in the gaities of the
+first month, no delicacy will always suppress, or of which the
+suppression must be considered as a new favour, to be repaid by tameness
+and submission, till gratitude takes the place of love, and the desire
+of pleasing degenerates by degrees into the fear of offending.
+
+The settlements caused no delay; for we did not trust our affairs to the
+negociation of wretches, who would have paid their court by multiplying
+stipulations. Tranquilla scorned to detain any part of her fortune from
+him into whose hands she delivered up her person; and Hymenaeus thought
+no act of baseness more criminal than his who enslaves his wife by her
+own generosity, who by marrying without a jointure, condemns her to all
+the dangers of accident and caprice, and at last boasts his liberality,
+by granting what only the indiscretion of her kindness enabled him to
+withhold. He therefore received on the common terms the portion which
+any other woman might have brought him, and reserved all the exuberance
+of acknowledgment for those excellencies which he has yet been able to
+discover only in Tranquilla.
+
+We did not pass the weeks of courtship like those who consider
+themselves as taking the last draught of pleasure, and resolve not to
+quit the bowl without a surfeit, or who know themselves about to set
+happiness to hazard, and endeavour to lose their sense of danger in the
+ebriety of perpetual amusement, and whirl round the gulph before they
+sink. Hymenaeus often repeated a medical axiom, that _the succours of
+sickness ought not to be wasted in health_. We know that however our
+eyes may yet sparkle, and our hearts bound at the presence of each
+other, the time of listlessness and satiety, of peevishness and
+discontent, must come at last, in which we shall be driven for relief to
+shows and recreations; that the uniformity of life must be sometimes
+diversified, and the vacuities of conversation sometimes supplied. We
+rejoice in the reflection that we have stores of novelty yet
+unexhausted, which may be opened when repletion shall call for change,
+and gratifications yet untasted, by which life, when it shall become
+vapid or bitter, may be restored to its former sweetness and
+sprightliness, and again irritate the appetite, and again sparkle in the
+cup.
+
+Our time will probably be less tasteless than that of those whom the
+authority and avarice of parents unite almost without their consent in
+their early years, before they have accumulated any fund of reflection,
+or collected materials for mutual entertainment. Such we have often seen
+rising in the morning to cards, and retiring in the afternoon to doze,
+whose happiness was celebrated by their neighbours, because they
+happened to grow rich by parsimony, and to be kept quiet in
+insensibility, and agreed to eat and to sleep together.
+
+We have both mingled with the world, and are therefore no strangers to
+the faults and virtues, the designs and competitions, the hopes and
+fears of our contemporaries. We have both amused our leisure with books,
+and can therefore recount the events of former times, or cite the
+dictates of ancient wisdom. Every occurrence furnishes us with some hint
+which one or the other can improve, and if it should happen that memory
+or imagination fail us, we can retire to no idle or unimproving
+solitude.
+
+Though our characters, beheld at a distance, exhibit this general
+resemblance, yet a nearer inspection discovers such a dissimilitude of
+our habitudes and sentiments, as leaves each some peculiar advantages,
+and affords that _concordia discors_, that suitable disagreement which
+is always necessary to intellectual harmony. There may be a total
+diversity of ideas which admits no participation of the same delight,
+and there may likewise be such a conformity of notions as leaves neither
+any thing to add to the decisions of the other. With such contrariety
+there can be no peace, with such similarity there can be no pleasure.
+Our reasonings, though often formed upon different views, terminate
+generally in the same conclusion. Our thoughts, like rivulets issuing
+from distant springs, are each impregnated in its course with various
+mixtures, and tinged by infusions unknown to the other, yet, at last,
+easily unite into one stream, and purify themselves by the gentle
+effervescence of contrary qualities.
+
+These benefits we receive in a greater degree as we converse without
+reserve, because we have nothing to conceal. We have no debts to be paid
+by imperceptible deductions from avowed expenses, no habits to be
+indulged by the private subserviency of a favoured servant, no private
+interviews with needy relations, no intelligence with spies placed upon
+each other. We considered marriage as the most solemn league of
+perpetual friendship, a state from which artifice and concealment are to
+be banished for ever, and in which every act of dissimulation is a
+breach of faith.
+
+The impetuous vivacity of youth, and that ardour of desire, which the
+first sight of pleasure naturally produces, have long ceased to hurry us
+into irregularity and vehemence; and experience has shewn us that few
+gratifications are too valuable to be sacrificed to complaisance.
+
+We have thought it convenient to rest from the fatigue of pleasure, and
+now only continue that course of life into which we had before entered,
+confirmed in our choice by mutual approbation, supported in our
+resolution by mutual encouragement, and assisted in our efforts by
+mutual exhortation.
+
+Such, Mr. Rambler, is our prospect of life, a prospect which, as it is
+beheld with more attention, seems to open more extensive happiness, and
+spreads, by degrees, into the boundless regions of eternity. But if all
+our prudence has been vain, and we are doomed to give one instance more
+of the uncertainty of human discernment, we shall comfort ourselves
+amidst our disappointments, that we were not betrayed but by such
+delusions as caution could not escape, since we sought happiness only in
+the arms of virtue.
+
+We are, Sir,
+Your humble Servants,
+HYMENAEUS.
+TRANQUILLA.
+
+
+
+No. 168. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1751.
+
+ _--Decipit
+ Frons prima multos: rara mens intelligit,
+ Quod interiore condidit cura angulo_. PHAEDRUS, Lib. iv. Fab. i. 5.
+
+ The tinsel glitter, and the specious mien,
+ Delude the most; few pry behind the scene.
+
+It has been observed by Boileau, that "a mean or common thought
+expressed in pompous diction, generally pleases more than a new or noble
+sentiment delivered in low and vulgar language; because the number is
+greater of those whom custom has enabled to judge of words, than whom
+study has qualified to examine things." This solution might satisfy, if
+such only were offended with meanness of expression as are unable to
+distinguish propriety of thought, and to separate propositions or images
+from the vehicles by which they are conveyed to the understanding. But
+this kind of disgust is by no means confined to the ignorant or
+superficial; it operates uniformly and universally upon readers of all
+classes; every man, however profound or abstracted, perceives himself
+irresistibly alienated by low terms; they who profess the most zealous
+adherence to truth are forced to admit that she owes part of her charms
+to her ornaments; and loses much of her power over the soul, when she
+appears disgraced by a dress uncouth or ill-adjusted.
+
+We are all offended by low terms, but are not disgusted alike by the
+same compositions, because we do not all agree to censure the same terms
+as low. No word is naturally or intrinsically meaner than another; our
+opinion therefore of words, as of other things arbitrarily and
+capriciously established, depends wholly upon accident and custom. The
+cottager thinks those apartments splendid and spacious, which an
+inhabitant of palaces will despise for their inelegance; and to him who
+has passed most of his hours with the delicate and polite, many
+expressions will seem sordid, which another, equally acute, may hear
+without offence; but a mean term never fails to displease him to whom it
+appears mean, as poverty is certainly and invariably despised, though he
+who is poor in the eyes of some, may, by others, be envied for his
+wealth.
+
+Words become low by the occasions to which they are applied, or the
+general character of them who use them; and the disgust which they
+produce, arises from the revival of those images with which they are
+commonly united. Thus if, in the most solemn discourse, a phrase happens
+to occur which has been successfully employed in some ludicrous
+narrative, the gravest auditor finds it difficult to refrain from
+laughter, when they who are not prepossessed by the same accidental
+association, are utterly unable to guess the reason of his merriment.
+Words which convey ideas of dignity in one age, are banished from
+elegant writing or conversation in another, because they are in time
+debased by vulgar mouths, and can be no longer heard without the
+involuntary recollection of unpleasing images.
+
+When Macbeth is confirming himself in the horrid purpose of stabbing his
+king, he breaks out amidst his emotions into a wish natural to a
+murderer:
+
+ --Come, thick night!
+ And pall thee in the dunnest smoke of hell,
+ That my keen knife see not the wound it makes;
+ Nor heav'n peep through the blanket of the dark,
+ To cry, Hold! hold!--
+
+In this passage is exerted all the force of poetry; that force which
+calls new powers into being, which embodies sentiment, and animates
+matter: yet, perhaps, scarce any man now peruses it without some
+disturbance of his attention from the counteraction of the words to the
+ideas. What can be more dreadful than to implore the presence of night,
+invested, not in common obscurity, but in the smoke of hell? Yet the
+efficacy of this invocation is destroyed by the insertion of an epithet
+now seldom heard but in the stable, and _dun_ night may come or go
+without any other notice than contempt.
+
+If we start into raptures when some hero of the Iliad tells us that
+[Greek: doru mainetai], his lance rages with eagerness to destroy; if we
+are alarmed at the terrour of the soldiers commanded by Caesar to hew
+down the sacred grove, who dreaded, says Lucan, lest the axe aimed at
+the oak should fly back upon the striker:
+
+ --_Si robora sacra ferirent,
+ In sua credebaut redituras membra secures_;
+
+ None dares with impious steel the grove to rend,
+ Lest on himself the destin'd stroke descend;
+
+we cannot surely but sympathise with the horrours of a wretch about to
+murder his master, his friend, his benefactor, who suspects that the
+weapon will refuse its office, and start back from the breast which he
+is preparing to violate. Yet this sentiment is weakened by the name of
+an instrument used by butchers and cooks in the meanest employments: we
+do not immediately conceive that any crime of importance is to be
+committed with a _knife_; or who does not, at last, from the long habit
+of connecting a knife with sordid offices, feel aversion rather than
+terrour?
+
+Macbeth proceeds to wish, in the madness of guilt, that the inspection
+of heaven may be intercepted, and that he may, in the involutions of
+infernal darkness, escape the eye of Providence. This is the utmost
+extravagance of determined wickedness; yet this is so debased by two
+unfortunate words, that while I endeavour to impress on my reader the
+energy of the sentiment, I can scarce check my risibility, when the
+expression forces itself upon my mind; for who, without some relaxation
+of his gravity, can hear of the avengers of guilt _peeping through a
+blanket_?
+
+These imperfections of diction are less obvious to the reader, as he is
+less acquainted with common usages; they are therefore wholly
+imperceptible to a foreigner, who learns our language from books, and
+will strike a solitary academick less forcibly than a modish lady.
+
+Among the numerous requisites that must concur to complete an author,
+few are of more importance than an early entrance into the living world.
+The seeds of knowledge may be planted in solitude, but must be
+cultivated in publick. Argumentation may be taught in colleges, and
+theories formed in retirement; but the artifice of embellishment, and
+the powers of attraction, can be gained only by general converse.
+
+An acquaintance with prevailing customs and fashionable elegance is
+necessary likewise for other purposes. The injury that grand imagery
+suffers from unsuitable language, personal merit may fear from rudeness
+and indelicacy. When the success of AEneas depended on the favour of the
+queen upon whose coasts he was driven, his celestial protectress thought
+him not sufficiently secured against rejection by his piety or bravery,
+but decorated him for the interview with preternatural beauty. Whoever
+desires, for his writings or himself, what none can reasonably contemn,
+the favour of mankind, must add grace to strength, and make his thoughts
+agreeable as well as useful. Many complain of neglect who never tried to
+attract regard. It cannot be expected that the patrons of science or
+virtue should be solicitous to discover excellencies, which they who
+possess them shade and disguise. Few have abilities so much needed by
+the rest of the world as to be caressed on their own terms; and he that
+will not condescend to recommend himself by external embellishments,
+must submit to the fate of just sentiment meanly expressed, and be
+ridiculed and forgotten before he is understood.
+
+
+
+No. 169. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1751.
+
+ _Nec pluteum caedit, nec demorsos sapit ungues_. PER. Sat. i. 106.
+
+ No blood from bitten nails those poems drew;
+ But churn'd, like spittle, from the lips they flew. DRYDEN.
+
+Natural historians assert, that whatever is formed for long duration
+arrives slowly to its maturity. Thus the firmest timber is of tardy
+growth, and animals generally exceed each other in longevity, in
+proportion to the time between their conception and their birth.
+
+The same observation may be extended to the offspring of the mind. Hasty
+compositions, however they please at first by flowery luxuriance, and
+spread in the sunshine of temporary favour, can seldom endure the change
+of seasons, but perish at the first blast of criticism, or frost of
+neglect. When Apelles was reproached with the paucity of his
+productions, and the incessant attention with which he retouched his
+pieces, he condescended to make no other answer than that _he painted
+for perpetuity_.
+
+No vanity can more justly incur contempt and indignation than that which
+boasts of negligence and hurry. For who can bear with patience the
+writer who claims such superiority to the rest of his species, as to
+imagine mankind are at leisure for attention to his extemporary sallies,
+and that posterity will reposite his casual effusions among the
+treasures of ancient wisdom?
+
+Men have sometimes appeared of such transcendent abilities, that their
+slightest and most cursory performances excel all that labour and study
+can enable meaner intellects to compose; as there are regions of which
+the spontaneous products cannot be equalled in other soils by care and
+culture. But it is no less dangerous for any man to place himself in
+this rank of understanding, and fancy that he is born to be illustrious
+without labour, than to omit the cares of husbandry, and expect from his
+ground the blossoms of Arabia.
+
+The greatest part of those who congratulate themselves upon their
+intellectual dignity, and usurp the privileges of genius, are men whom
+only themselves would ever have marked out as enriched by uncommon
+liberalities of nature, or entitled to veneration and immortality on
+easy terms. This ardour of confidence is usually found among those who,
+having not enlarged their notions by books or conversation, are
+persuaded, by the partiality which we all feel in our own favour, that
+they have reached the summit of excellence, because they discover none
+higher than themselves; and who acquiesce in the first thoughts that
+occur, because their scantiness of knowledge allows them little choice;
+and the narrowness of their views affords them no glimpse of perfection,
+of that sublime idea which human industry has from the first ages been
+vainly toiling to approach. They see a little, and believe that there is
+nothing beyond their sphere of vision, as the Patuecos of Spain, who
+inhabited a small valley, conceived the surrounding mountains to be the
+boundaries of the world. In proportion as perfection is more distinctly
+conceived, the pleasure of contemplating our own performances will be
+lessened; it may therefore be observed, that they who most deserve
+praise are often afraid to decide in favour of their own performances;
+they know how much is still wanting to their completion, and wait with
+anxiety and terrour the determination of the publick. _I please every
+one else_, says Tully, _but never satisfy myself_.
+
+It has often been inquired, why, notwithstanding the advances of later
+ages in science, and the assistance which the infusion of so many new
+ideas has given us, we fall below the ancients in the art of
+composition. Some part of their superiority may be justly ascribed to
+the graces of their language, from which the most polished of the
+present European tongues are nothing more than barbarous degenerations.
+Some advantage they might gain merely by priority, which put them in
+possession of the most natural sentiments, and left us nothing but
+servile repetition or forced conceits. But the greater part of their
+praise seems to have been the just reward of modesty and labour. Their
+sense of human weakness confined them commonly to one study, which their
+knowledge of the extent of every science engaged them to prosecute with
+indefatigable diligence.
+
+Among the writers of antiquity I remember none except Statius who
+ventures to mention the speedy production of his writings, either as an
+extenuation of his faults, or a proof of his facility. Nor did Statius,
+when he considered himself as a candidate for lasting reputation, think
+a closer attention unnecessary, but amidst all his pride and indigence,
+the two great hasteners of modern poems, employed twelve years upon the
+Thebaid, and thinks his claim to renown proportionate to his labour.
+
+ _Thebais, multa cruciata lima,
+ Tentat, audaci fide, Mantuanae
+ Gaudia famae_.
+
+ Polish'd with endless toil, my lays
+ At length aspire to Mantuan praise.
+
+Ovid indeed apologizes in his banishment for the imperfection of his
+letters, but mentions his want of leisure to polish them as an addition
+to his calamities; and was so far from imagining revisals and
+corrections unnecessary, that at his departure from Rome, he threw his
+Metamorphoses into the fire, lest he should be disgraced by a book which
+he could not hope to finish.
+
+It seems not often to have happened that the same writer aspired to
+reputation in verse and prose; and of those few that attempted such
+diversity of excellence, I know not that even one succeeded. Contrary
+characters they never imagined a single mind able to support, and
+therefore no man is recorded to have undertaken more than one kind of
+dramatick poetry.
+
+What they had written, they did not venture in their first fondness to
+thrust into the world, but, considering the impropriety of sending forth
+inconsiderately that which cannot be recalled, deferred the publication,
+if not nine years, according to the direction of Horace, yet till their
+fancy was cooled after the raptures of invention, and the glare of
+novelty had ceased to dazzle the judgment.
+
+There were in those days no weekly or diurnal writers; _multa dies et
+multa litura_, much time, and many rasures, were considered as
+indispensable requisites; and that no other method of attaining lasting
+praise has been yet discovered, may be conjectured from the blotted
+manuscripts of Milton now remaining, and from the tardy emission of
+Pope's compositions, delayed more than once till the incidents to which
+they alluded were forgotten, till his enemies were secure from his
+satire, and, what to an honest mind must be more painful, his friends
+were deaf to his encomiums.
+
+To him, whose eagerness of praise hurries his productions soon into the
+light, many imperfections are unavoidable, even where the mind furnishes
+the materials, as well as regulates their disposition, and nothing
+depends upon search or information. Delay opens new veins of thought,
+the subject dismissed for a time appears with a new train of dependent
+images, the accidents of reading or conversation supply new ornaments
+or allusions, or mere intermission of the fatigue of thinking enables
+the mind to collect new force, and make new excursions. But all those
+benefits come too late for him, who, when he was weary with labour,
+snatched at the recompense, and gave his work to his friends and his
+enemies, as soon as impatience and pride persuaded him to conclude it.
+
+One of the most pernicious effects of haste, is obscurity. He that teems
+with a quick succession of ideas, and perceives how one sentiment
+produces another, easily believes that he can clearly express what he so
+strongly comprehends; he seldom suspects his thoughts of embarrassment,
+while he preserves in his own memory the series of connection, or his
+diction of ambiguity, while only one sense is present to his mind. Yet
+if he has been employed on an abstruse, or complicated argument, he will
+find, when he has awhile withdrawn his mind, and returns as a new reader
+to his work, that he has only a conjectural glimpse of his own meaning,
+and that to explain it to those whom he desires to instruct, he must
+open his sentiments, disentangle his method, and alter his arrangement.
+
+Authors and lovers always suffer some infatuation, from which only
+absence can set them free; and every man ought to restore himself to the
+full exercise of his judgment, before he does that which he cannot do
+improperly, without injuring his honour and his quiet.
+
+
+
+No. 170. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1751.
+
+ _Confiteor; si quid prodest delicta fateri_.
+ OVID. Am. Lib. i. El. iv. 3.
+
+ I grant the charge; forgive the fault confess'd.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I am one of those beings from whom many, that melt at the sight of all
+other misery, think it meritorious to withhold relief; one whom the
+rigour of virtuous indignation dooms to suffer without complaint, and
+perish without regard; and whom I myself have formerly insulted in the
+pride of reputation and security of innocence.
+
+I am of a good family, but my father was burthened with more children
+than he could decently support. A wealthy relation, as he travelled from
+London to his country-seat, condescending to make him a visit, was
+touched with compassion of his narrow fortune, and resolved to ease him
+of part of his charge, by taking the care of a child upon himself.
+Distress on one side, and ambition on the other, were too powerful for
+parental fondness, and the little family passed in review before him,
+that he might, make his choice. I was then ten years old, and, without
+knowing for what purpose, I was called to my great cousin, endeavoured
+to recommend myself by my best courtesy, sung him my prettiest song,
+told the last story that I had read, and so much endeared myself by my
+innocence, that he declared his resolution to adopt me, and to educate
+me with his own daughters.
+
+My parents felt the common struggles at the thought of parting, and
+_some natural tears they dropp'd, but wip'd them soon_. They considered,
+not without that false estimation of the value of wealth, which poverty
+long continued always produces, that I was raised to higher rank than
+they could give me, and to hopes of more ample fortune than they could
+bequeath. My mother sold some of her ornaments to dress me in such a
+manner as might secure me from contempt at my first arrival; and when
+she dismissed me, pressed me to her bosom with an embrace that I still
+feel, gave me some precepts of piety, which, however neglected, I have
+not forgotten, and uttered prayers for my final happiness, of which I
+have not yet ceased to hope that they will at last be granted.
+
+My sisters envied my new finery, and seemed not much to regret our
+separation; my father conducted me to the stage-coach with a kind of
+cheerful tenderness; and in a very short time I was transported to
+splendid apartments, and a luxurious table, and grew familiar to shew,
+noise, and gaiety.
+
+In three years my mother died, having implored a blessing on her family
+with her last breath. I had little opportunity to indulge a sorrow which
+there was none to partake with me, and therefore soon ceased to reflect
+much upon my loss. My father turned all his care upon his other
+children, whom some fortunate adventures and unexpected legacies enabled
+him, when he died, four years after my mother, to leave in a condition
+above their expectations.
+
+I should have shared the increase of his fortune, and had once a portion
+assigned me in his will; but my cousin assuring him that all care for me
+was needless, since he had resolved to place me happily in the world,
+directed him to divide my part amongst my sisters.
+
+Thus I was thrown upon dependance without resource. Being now at an age
+in which young women are initiated into company, I was no longer to be
+supported in my former character, but at a considerable expense; so that
+partly lest I should waste money, and partly lest my appearance might
+draw too many compliments and assiduities, I was insensibly degraded
+from my equality, and enjoyed few privileges above the head servant, but
+that of receiving no wages.
+
+I felt every indignity, but knew that resentment would precipitate my
+fall. I therefore endeavoured to continue my importance by little
+services and active officiousness, and, for a time, preserved myself
+from neglect, by withdrawing all pretences to competition, and studying
+to please rather than to shine. But my interest, notwithstanding this
+expedient, hourly declined, and my cousin's favourite maid began to
+exchange repartees with me, and consult me about the alterations of a
+cast gown.
+
+I was now completely depressed; and, though I had seen mankind enough to
+know the necessity of outward cheerfulness, I often withdrew to my
+chamber to vent my grief, or turn my condition in my mind, and examine
+by what means I might escape from perpetual mortification. At last my
+schemes and sorrows were interrupted by a sudden change of my relation's
+behaviour, who one day took an occasion when we were left together in a
+room, to bid me suffer myself no longer to be insulted, but assume the
+place which he always intended me to hold in the family. He assured me
+that his wife's preference of her own daughters should never hurt me;
+and, accompanying his professions with a purse of gold, ordered me to
+bespeak a rich suit at the mercer's, and to apply privately to him for
+money when I wanted it, and insinuate that my other friends supplied me,
+which he would take care to confirm.
+
+By this stratagem, which I did not then understand, he filled me with
+tenderness and gratitude, compelled me to repose on him as my only
+support, and produced a necessity of private conversation. He often
+appointed interviews at the house of an acquaintance, and sometimes
+called on me with a coach, and carried me abroad. My sense of his
+favour, and the desire of retaining it, disposed me to unlimited
+complaisance, and, though I saw his kindness grow every day more fond, I
+did not suffer any suspicion to enter my thoughts. At last the wretch
+took advantage of the familiarity which he enjoyed as my relation, and
+the submission which he exacted as my benefactor, to complete the ruin
+of an orphan, whom his own promises had made indigent, whom his
+indulgence had melted, and his authority subdued.
+
+I know not why it should afford subject of exultation to overpower on
+any terms the resolution, or surprise the caution of a girl; but of all
+the boasters that deck themselves in the spoils of innocence and beauty,
+they surely have the least pretensions to triumph, who submit to owe
+their success to some casual influence. They neither employ the graces
+of fancy, nor the force of understanding, in their attempts; they cannot
+please their vanity with the art of their approaches, the delicacy of
+their adulations, the elegance of their address, or the efficacy of
+their eloquence; nor applaud themselves as possessed of any qualities,
+by which affection is attracted. They surmount no obstacles, they defeat
+no rivals, but attack only those who cannot resist, and are often
+content to possess the body, without any solicitude to gain the heart.
+
+Many of those despicable wretches does my present acquaintance with
+infamy and wickedness enable me to number among the heroes of
+debauchery. Reptiles whom their own servants would have despised, had
+they not been their servants, and with whom beggary would have disdained
+intercourse, had she not been allured by hopes of relief. Many of the
+beings which are now rioting in taverns, or shivering in the streets,
+have been corrupted, not by arts of gallantry which stole gradually upon
+the affections and laid prudence asleep, but by the fear of losing
+benefits which were never intended, or of incurring resentment which
+they could not escape; some have been frighted by masters, and some awed
+by guardians into ruin.
+
+Our crime had its usual consequence, and he soon perceived that I could
+not long continue in his family. I was distracted at the thought of the
+reproach which I now believed inevitable. He comforted me with hopes of
+eluding all discovery, and often upbraided me with the anxiety, which
+perhaps none but himself saw in my countenance; but at last mingled his
+assurances of protection and maintenance with menaces of total
+desertion, if, in the moments of perturbation I should suffer his secret
+to escape, or endeavour to throw on him any part of my infamy.
+
+Thus passed the dismal hours, till my retreat could no longer be
+delayed. It was pretended that my relations had sent for me to a distant
+county, and I entered upon a state which shall be described in my next
+letter.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+MISELLA.
+
+
+
+No. 171. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1751.
+
+ _Taedet coeli convexa tueri_. VIRG. AEn. iv. 451.
+
+ Dark is the sun, and loathsome is the day.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Misella now sits down to continue her narrative. I am convinced that
+nothing would more powerfully preserve youth from irregularity, or guard
+inexperience from seduction, than a just description of the condition
+into which the wanton plunges herself; and therefore hope that my letter
+may be a sufficient antidote to my example.
+
+After the distraction, hesitation, and delays which the timidity of
+guilt naturally produces, I was removed to lodgings in a distant part of
+the town, under one of the characters commonly assumed upon such
+occasions. Here being by my circumstances condemned to solitude, I
+passed most of my hours in bitterness and anguish. The conversation of
+the people with whom I was placed was not at all capable of engaging my
+attention, or dispossessing the reigning ideas. The books which I
+carried to my retreat were such as heightened my abhorrence of myself;
+for I was not so far abandoned as to sink voluntarily into corruption,
+or endeavour to conceal from my own mind the enormity of my crime.
+
+My relation remitted none of his fondness, but visited me so often, that
+I was sometimes afraid lest his assiduity should expose him to
+suspicion. Whenever he came he found me weeping, and was therefore less
+delightfully entertained than he expected. After frequent expostulations
+upon the unreasonableness of my sorrow, and innumerable protestations of
+everlasting regard, he at last found that I was more affected with the
+loss of my innocence, than the danger of my fame, and that he might not
+be disturbed by my remorse, began to lull my conscience with the opiates
+of irreligion. His arguments were such as my course of life has since
+exposed me often to the necessity of hearing, vulgar, empty, and
+fallacious; yet they at first confounded me by their novelty, filled me
+with doubt and perplexity, and interrupted that peace which I began to
+feel from the sincerity of my repentance, without substituting any other
+support. I listened a while to his impious gabble, but its influence was
+soon overpowered by natural reason and early education, and the
+convictions which this new attempt gave me of his baseness completed my
+abhorrence. I have heard of barbarians, who, when tempests drive ships
+upon their coast, decoy them to the rocks that they may plunder their
+lading, and have always thought that wretches, thus merciless in their
+depredations, ought to be destroyed by a general insurrection of all
+social beings; yet how light is this guilt to the crime of him, who, in
+the agitations of remorse, cuts away the anchor of piety, and, when he
+has drawn aside credulity from the paths of virtue, hides the light of
+heaven which would direct her to return. I had hitherto considered him
+as a man equally betrayed with myself by the concurrence of appetite and
+opportunity; but I now saw with horrour that he was contriving to
+perpetuate his gratification, and was desirous to fit me to his purpose,
+by complete and radical corruption.
+
+To escape, however, was not yet in my power. I could support the
+expenses of my condition only by the continuance of his favour. He
+provided all that was necessary, and in a few weeks congratulated me
+upon my escape from the danger which we had both expected with so much
+anxiety. I then began to remind him of his promise to restore me with my
+fame uninjured to the world. He promised me in general terms, that
+nothing should be wanting which his power could add to my happiness, but
+forbore to release me from my confinement. I knew how much my reception
+in the world depended upon my speedy return, and was therefore
+outrageously impatient of his delays, which I now perceived to be only
+artifices of lewdness. He told me at last, with an appearance of sorrow,
+that all hopes of restoration to my former state were for ever
+precluded; that chance had discovered my secret, and malice divulged it;
+and that nothing now remained, but to seek a retreat more private, where
+curiosity or hatred could never find us.
+
+The rage, anguish, and resentment, which I felt at this account are not
+to be expressed. I was in so much dread of reproach and infamy, which he
+represented as pursuing me with full cry, that I yielded myself
+implicitly to his disposal and was removed, with a thousand studied
+precautions, through by-ways and dark passages to another house, where I
+harassed him with perpetual solicitations for a small annuity that might
+enable me to live in the country in obscurity and innocence.
+
+This demand he at first evaded with ardent professions, but in time
+appeared offended at my importunity and distrust; and having one day
+endeavoured to sooth me with uncommon expressions of tenderness, when he
+found my discontent immoveable, left me with some inarticulate murmurs
+of anger. I was pleased that he was at last roused to sensibility, and
+expecting that at his next visit he would comply with my request, lived
+with great tranquillity upon the money in my hands, and was so much
+pleased with this pause of persecution, that I did not reflect how much
+his absence had exceeded the usual intervals, till I was alarmed with
+the danger of wanting subsistence. I then suddenly contracted my
+expenses, but was unwilling to supplicate for assistance. Necessity,
+however, soon overcame my modesty or my pride, and I applied to him by a
+letter, but had no answer. I writ in terms more pressing, but without
+effect. I then sent an agent to inquire after him, who informed me, that
+he had quitted his house, and was gone with his family to reside for
+some time on his estate in Ireland.
+
+However shocked at this abrupt departure, I was yet unwilling to believe
+that he could wholly abandon me, and therefore, by the sale of my
+clothes, I supported myself, expecting that every post would bring me
+relief. Thus I passed seven months between hope and dejection, in a
+gradual approach to poverty and distress, emaciated with discontent, and
+bewildered with uncertainty. At last my landlady, after many hints of
+the necessity of a new lover, took the opportunity of my absence to
+search my boxes, and missing some of my apparel, seized the remainder
+for rent, and led me to the door.
+
+To remonstrate against legal cruelty, was vain; to supplicate obdurate
+brutality, was hopeless. I went away I knew not whither, and wandered
+about without any settled purpose, unacquainted with the usual
+expedients of misery, unqualified for laborious offices, afraid to meet
+an eye that had seen me before, and hopeless of relief from those who
+were strangers to my former condition. Night came on in the midst of my
+distraction, and I still continued to wander till the menaces of the
+watch obliged me to shelter myself in a covered passage.
+
+Next day, I procured a lodging in the backward garret of a mean house,
+and employed my landlady to inquire for a service. My applications were
+generally rejected for want of a character. At length I was received at
+a draper's, but when it was known to my mistress that I had only one
+gown, and that of silk, she was of opinion that I looked like a thief,
+and without warning hurried me away. I then tried to support myself by
+my needle; and, by my landlady's recommendation obtained a little work
+from a shop, and for three weeks lived without repining; but when my
+punctuality had gained me so much reputation, that I was trusted to make
+up a head of some value, one of my fellow-lodgers stole the lace, and I
+was obliged to fly from a prosecution.
+
+Thus driven again into the streets, I lived upon the least that could
+support me, and at night accommodated myself under pent-houses as well
+as I could. At length I became absolutely pennyless, and having strolled
+all day without sustenance, was, at the close of evening, accosted by an
+elderly man, with an invitation to a tavern. I refused him with
+hesitation; he seized me by the hand, and drew me into a neighbouring
+house, where, when he saw my face pale with hunger, and my eyes swelling
+with tears, he spurned me from him, and bade me cant and whine in some
+other place; he for his part would take care of his pockets.
+
+I still continued to stand in the way, having scarcely strength to walk
+further, when another soon addressed me in the same manner. When he saw
+the same tokens of calamity, he considered that I might be obtained at a
+cheap rate, and therefore quickly made overtures, which I no longer had
+firmness to reject. By this man I was maintained four months in
+penurious wickedness, and then abandoned to my former condition, from
+which I was delivered by another keeper.
+
+In this abject state I have now passed four years, the drudge of
+extortion and the sport of drunkenness; sometimes the property of one
+man, and sometimes the common prey of accidental lewdness; at one time
+tricked up for sale by the mistress of a brothel, at another begging in
+the streets to be relieved from hunger by wickedness; without any hope
+in the day but of finding some whom folly or excess may expose to my
+allurements, and without any reflections at night, but such as guilt and
+terrour impress upon me.
+
+If those who pass their days in plenty and security, could visit for an
+hour the dismal receptacles to which the prostitute retires from her
+nocturnal excursions, and see the wretches that lie crowded together,
+mad with intemperance, ghastly with famine, nauseous with filth, and
+noisome with disease; it would not be easy for any degree of abhorrence
+to harden them against compassion, or to repress the desire which they
+must immediately feel to rescue such numbers of human beings from a
+state so dreadful.
+
+It is said, that in France they annually evacuate their streets, and
+ship their prostitutes and vagabonds to their colonies. If the women
+that infest this city had the same opportunity of escaping from their
+miseries, I believe very little force would be necessary; for who among
+them can dread any change? Many of us indeed are wholly unqualified for
+any but the most servile employments, and those perhaps would require
+the care of a magistrate to hinder them from following the same
+practices in another country; but others are only precluded by infamy
+from reformation, and would gladly be delivered on any terms from the
+necessity of guilt, and the tyranny of chance. No place but a populous
+city, can afford opportunities for open prostitution; and where the eye
+of justice can attend to individuals, those who cannot be made good may
+be restrained from mischief. For my part, I should exult at the
+privilege of banishment, and think myself happy in any region that
+should restore me once again to honesty and peace.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+MISELLA.
+
+
+
+No. 172. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1751.
+
+ _Saepe rogare soles, qualis sim, Prisce, futurus,
+ Si fiam locuples, simque repente potens.
+ Quemquam posse putas mores narrare futuros?
+ Die mihi, si fias tu leo, qualis eris?_ MART. Lib. xii. Ep. 93.
+
+ Priscus, you've often ask'd me how I'd live,
+ Should fate at once both wealth and honour give.
+ What soul his future conduct can foresee?
+ Tell me what sort of lion you would be. F. LEWIS.
+
+Nothing has been longer observed, than that a change of fortune causes a
+change of manners; and that it is difficult to conjecture from the
+conduct of him whom we see in a low condition, how he would act, if
+wealth and power were put into his hands. But it is generally agreed,
+that few men are made better by affluence or exaltation; and that the
+powers of the mind, when they are unbound and expanded by the sunshine
+of felicity, more frequently luxuriate into follies, than blossom into
+goodness.
+
+Many observations have concurred to establish this opinion, and it is
+not likely soon to become obsolete, for want of new occasions to revive
+it. The greater part of mankind are corrupt in every condition, and
+differ in high and in low stations, only as they have more or fewer
+opportunities of gratifying their desires, or as they are more or less
+restrained by human censures. Many vitiate their principles in the
+acquisition of riches; and who can wonder that what is gained by fraud
+and extortion is enjoyed with tyranny and excess?
+
+Yet I am willing to believe that the depravation of the mind by external
+advantages, though certainly not uncommon, yet approaches not so nearly
+to universality, as some have asserted in the bitterness of resentment,
+or heat of declamation.
+
+Whoever rises above those who once pleased themselves with equality,
+will have many malevolent gazers at his eminence. To gain sooner than
+others that which all pursue with the same ardour, and to which all
+imagine themselves entitled, will for ever be a crime. When those who
+started with us in the race of life, leave us so far behind, that we
+have little hope to overtake them, we revenge our disappointment by
+remarks on the arts of supplantation by which they gained the advantage,
+or on the folly and arrogance with which they possess it. Of them, whose
+rise we could not hinder, we solace ourselves by prognosticating the
+fall.
+
+It is impossible for human purity not to betray to an eye, thus
+sharpened by malignity, some stains which lay concealed and unregarded,
+while none thought it their interest to discover them; nor can the most
+circumspect attention, or steady rectitude, escape blame from censors,
+who have no inclination to approve. Riches therefore, perhaps, do not so
+often produce crimes as incite accusers.
+
+The common charge against those who rise above their original condition,
+is that of pride. It is certain that success naturally confirms us in a
+favourable opinion of our own abilities. Scarce any man is willing to
+allot to accident, friendship, and a thousand causes, which concur in
+every event without human contrivance or interposition, the part which
+they may justly claim in his advancement. We rate ourselves by our
+fortune rather than our virtues, and exorbitant claims are quickly
+produced by imaginary merit. But captiousness and jealousy are likewise
+easily offended, and to him who studiously looks for an affront, every
+mode of behaviour will supply it; freedom will be rudeness, and reserve
+sullenness; mirth will be negligence, and seriousness formality; when he
+is received with ceremony, distance and respect are inculcated; if he is
+treated with familiarity, he concludes himself insulted by
+condescensions.
+
+It must however be confessed, that as all sudden changes are dangerous,
+a quick transition from poverty to abundance can seldom be made with
+safety. He that has long lived within sight of pleasures which he could
+not reach, will need more than common moderation, not to lose his reason
+in unbounded riot, when they are first put into his power.
+
+Every possession is endeared by novelty; every gratification is
+exaggerated by desire. It is difficult not to estimate what is lately
+gained above its real value; it is impossible not to annex greater
+happiness to that condition from which we are unwillingly excluded, than
+nature has qualified us to obtain. For this reason, the remote inheritor
+of an unexpected fortune, may be generally distinguished from those who
+are enriched in the common course of lineal descent, by his greater
+haste to enjoy his wealth, by the finery of his dress, the pomp of his
+equipage, the splendour of his furniture, and the luxury of his table.
+
+A thousand things which familiarity discovers to be of little value,
+have power for a time to seize the imagination. A Virginian king, when
+the Europeans had fixed a lock on his door, was so delighted to find his
+subjects admitted or excluded with such facility, that it was from
+morning to evening his whole employment to turn the key. We, among whom
+locks and keys have been longer in use, are inclined to laugh at this
+American amusement; yet I doubt whether this paper will have a single
+reader that may not apply the story to himself, and recollect some hours
+of his life in which he has been equally overpowered by the transitory
+charms of trifling novelty.
+
+Some indulgence is due to him whom a happy gale of fortune has suddenly
+transported into new regions, where unaccustomed lustre dazzles his
+eyes, and untasted delicacies solicit his appetite. Let him not be
+considered as lost in hopeless degeneracy, though he for a while forgets
+the regard due to others, to indulge the contemplation of himself, and
+in the extravagance of his first raptures expects that his eye should
+regulate the motions of all that approach him, and his opinion be
+received as decisive and oraculous. His intoxication will give way to
+time; the madness of joy will fume imperceptibly away; the sense of his
+insufficiency will soon return; he will remember that the co-operation
+of others is necessary to his happiness, and learn to conciliate their
+regard by reciprocal beneficence.
+
+There is, at least, one consideration which ought to alleviate our
+censures of the powerful and rich. To imagine them chargeable with all
+the guilt and folly of their own actions, is to be very little
+acquainted with the world.
+
+ _De l'absolu pouvoir vous ignorez l'yvresse,
+ Et du lache flateur la voix enchanteresse_.
+
+ Thou hast not known the giddy whirls of fate,
+ Nor servile flatteries which enchant the great. Miss A. W.
+
+He that can do much good or harm, will not find many whom ambition or
+cowardice will suffer to be sincere. While we live upon the level with
+the rest of mankind, we are reminded of our duty by the admonitions of
+friends and reproaches of enemies; but men who stand in the highest
+ranks of society, seldom hear of their faults; if by any accident an
+opprobrious clamour reaches their ears, flattery is always at hand to
+pour in her opiates, to quiet conviction, and obtund remorse.
+
+Favour is seldom gained but by conformity in vice. Virtue can stand
+without assistance, and considers herself as very little obliged by
+countenance and approbation: but vice, spiritless and timorous, seeks
+the shelter of crowds, and support of confederacy. The sycophant,
+therefore, neglects the good qualities of his patron, and employs all
+his art on his weaknesses and follies, regales his reigning vanity, or
+stimulates his prevalent desires.
+
+Virtue is sufficiently difficult with any circumstances, but the
+difficulty is increased when reproof and advice are frighted away. In
+common life, reason and conscience have only the appetites and passions
+to encounter; but in higher stations, they must oppose artifice and
+adulation. He, therefore, that yields to such temptations, cannot give
+those who look upon his miscarriage much reason for exultation, since
+few can justly presume that from the same snare they should have been
+able to escape.
+
+
+
+No. 173. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1751.
+
+ _Quo virtus, quo ferat error_. HOR. De Ar. Poet. 308.
+
+ Now say, where virtue stops, and vice begins?
+
+As any action or posture, long continued, will distort and disfigure the
+limbs; so the mind likewise is crippled and contracted by perpetual
+application to the same set of ideas. It is easy to guess the trade of
+an artizan by his knees, his fingers, or his shoulders: and there are
+few among men of the more liberal professions, whose minds do not carry
+the brand of their calling, or whose conversation does not quickly
+discover to what class of the community they belong.
+
+These peculiarities have been of great use, in the general hostility
+which every part of mankind exercises against the rest, to furnish
+insults and sarcasms. Every art has its dialect, uncouth and ungrateful
+to all whom custom has not reconciled to its sound, and which therefore
+becomes ridiculous by a slight misapplication, or unnecessary
+repetition.
+
+The general reproach with which ignorance revenges the superciliousness
+of learning, is that of pedantry; a censure which every man incurs, who
+has at any time the misfortune to talk to those who cannot understand
+him, and by which the modest and timorous are sometimes frighted from
+the display of their acquisitions, and the exertion of their powers.
+
+The name of a pedant is so formidable to young men when they first sally
+from their colleges, and is so liberally scattered by those who mean to
+boast their elegance of education, easiness of manners, and knowledge of
+the world, that it seems to require particular consideration; since,
+perhaps, if it were once understood, many a heart might be freed from
+painful apprehensions, and many a tongue, delivered from restraint.
+
+Pedantry is the unseasonable ostentation of learning. It may be
+discovered either in the choice of a subject, or in the manner of
+treating it. He is undoubtedly guilty of pedantry, who, when he has made
+himself master of some abstruse and uncultivated part of knowledge,
+obtrudes his remarks and discoveries upon those whom he believes unable
+to judge of his proficiency, and from whom, as he cannot fear
+contradiction, he cannot properly expect applause.
+
+To this errour the student is sometimes betrayed by the natural
+recurrence of the mind to its common employment, by the pleasure which
+every man receives from the recollection of pleasing images, and the
+desire of dwelling upon topicks, on which he knows himself able to speak
+with justness. But because we are seldom so far prejudiced in favour of
+each other, as to search out for palliations, this failure of politeness
+is imputed always to vanity; and the harmless collegiate, who, perhaps,
+intended entertainment and instruction, or at worst only spoke without
+sufficient reflection upon the character of his hearers, is censured as
+arrogant or overbearing, and eager to extend his renown, in contempt of
+the convenience of society and the laws of conversation.
+
+All discourse of which others cannot partake, is not only an irksome
+usurpation of the time devoted to pleasure and entertainment, but what
+never fails to excite very keen resentment, an insolent assertion of
+superiority, and a triumph over less enlightened understandings. The
+pedant is, therefore, not only heard with weariness, but malignity; and
+those who conceive themselves insulted by his knowledge, never fail to
+tell with acrimony how injudiciously it was exerted.
+
+To avoid this dangerous imputation, scholars sometimes divest themselves
+with too much haste of their academical formality, and in their
+endeavours to accommodate their notions and their style to common
+conceptions, talk rather of any thing than of that which they
+understand, and sink into insipidity of sentiment and meanness of
+expression.
+
+There prevails among men of letters an opinion, that all appearance of
+science is particularly hateful to women; and that therefore, whoever
+desires to be well received in female assemblies, must qualify himself
+by a total rejection of all that is serious, rational, or important;
+must consider argument or criticism, as perpetually interdicted; and
+devote all his attention to trifles, and all his eloquence to
+compliment.
+
+Students often form their notions of the present generation from the
+writings of the past, and are not very early informed of those changes
+which the gradual diffusion of knowledge, or the sudden caprice of
+fashion, produces in the world. Whatever might be the state of female
+literature in the last century, there is now no longer any danger lest
+the scholar should want an adequate audience at the tea-table; and
+whoever thinks it necessary to regulate his conversation by antiquated
+rules, will be rather despised for his futility than caressed for his
+politeness.
+
+To talk intentionally in a manner above the comprehension of those whom
+we address, is unquestionable pedantry; but surely complaisance
+requires, that no man should, without proof, conclude his company
+incapable of following him to the highest elevation of his fancy, or the
+utmost extent of his knowledge. It is always safer to err in favour of
+others than of ourselves, and therefore we seldom hazard much by
+endeavouring to excel.
+
+It ought at least to be the care of learning, when she quits her
+exaltation, to descend with dignity. Nothing is more despicable than the
+airiness and jocularity of a man bred to severe science, and solitary
+meditation. To trifle agreeably is a secret which schools cannot impart;
+that gay negligence and vivacious levity, which charm down resistance
+wherever they appear, are never attainable by him who, having spent his
+first years among the dust of libraries, enters late into the gay world
+with an unpliant attention and established habits.
+
+It is observed in the panegyrick on Fabricius the mechanist, that,
+though forced by publick employments into mingled conversation, he never
+lost the modesty and seriousness of the convent, nor drew ridicule upon
+himself by an affected imitation of fashionable life. To the same praise
+every man devoted to learning ought to aspire. If he attempts the softer
+arts of pleasing, and endeavours to learn the graceful bow and the
+familiar embrace, the insinuating accent and the general smile, he will
+lose the respect due to the character of learning, without arriving at
+the envied honour of doing any thing with elegance and facility.
+
+Theophrastus was discovered not to be a native of Athens, by so strict
+an adherence to the Attick dialect, as shewed that he had learned it not
+by custom, but by rule. A man not early formed to habitual elegance,
+betrays, in like manner, the effects of his education, by an unnecessary
+anxiety of behaviour. It is as possible to become pedantick, by fear of
+pedantry, as to be troublesome by ill-timed civility. There is no kind
+of impertinence more justly censurable than his who is always labouring
+to level thoughts to intellects higher than his own; who apologizes for
+every word which his own narrowness of converse inclines him to think
+unusual; keeps the exuberance of his faculties under visible restraint;
+is solicitous to anticipate inquiries by needless explanations; and
+endeavours to shade his own abilities, lest weak eyes should be dazzled
+with their lustre.
+
+
+
+No. 174. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1751.
+
+ _Faenum habet in cornu, longe fuge; dummodo risum
+ Excutiat sibi, non hic cuiquam parcet amico_.
+ HOR. Lib. i. Sat. iv. 34.
+
+ Yonder he drives--avoid that furious beast:
+ If he may have his jest, he never cares
+ At whose expense; nor friend nor patron spares. FRANCIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+MR. RAMBLER,
+
+The laws of social benevolence require, that every man should endeavour
+to assist others by his experience. He that has at last escaped into
+port from the fluctuations of chance, and the gusts of opposition, ought
+to make some improvements in the chart of life, by marking the rocks on
+which he has been dashed, and the shallows where he has been stranded.
+
+The errour into which I was betrayed, when custom first gave me up to my
+own direction, is very frequently incident to the quick, the sprightly,
+the fearless, and the gay; to all whose ardour hurries them into
+precipitate execution of their designs, and imprudent declaration of
+their opinions; who seldom count the cost of pleasure, or examine the
+distant consequences of any practice that flatters them with immediate
+gratification.
+
+I came forth into the crowded world with the usual juvenile ambition,
+and desired nothing beyond the title of a wit. Money I considered as
+below my care; for I saw such multitudes grow rich without
+understanding, that I could not forbear to look on wealth as an
+acquisition easy to industry directed by genius, and therefore threw it
+aside as a secondary convenience, to be procured when my principal wish
+should be satisfied, and the claim to intellectual excellence
+universally acknowledged.
+
+With this view I regulated my behaviour in publick, and exercised my
+meditations in solitude. My life was divided between the care of
+providing topicks for the entertainment of my company, and that of
+collecting company worthy to be entertained; for I soon found, that wit,
+like every other power, has its boundaries; that its success depends
+upon the aptitude of others to receive impressions; and that as some
+bodies, indissoluble by heat, can set the furnace and crucible at
+defiance, there are minds upon which the rays of fancy may be pointed
+without effect, and which no fire of sentiment can agitate or exalt.
+
+It was, however, not long before I fitted myself with a set of
+companions who knew how to laugh, and to whom no other recommendation
+was necessary than the power of striking out a jest. Among those I fixed
+my residence, and for a time enjoyed the felicity of disturbing the
+neighbours every night with the obstreperous applause which my sallies
+forced from the audience. The reputation of our club every day
+increased, and as my flights and remarks were circulated by my admirers,
+every day brought new solicitations for admission into our society.
+
+To support this perpetual fund of merriment, I frequented every place of
+concourse, cultivated the acquaintance of all the fashionable race, and
+passed the day in a continual succession of visits, in which I collected
+a treasure of pleasantry for the expenses of the evening. Whatever
+errour of conduct I could discover, whatever peculiarity of manner I
+could observe, whatever weakness was betrayed by confidence, whatever
+lapse was suffered by neglect, all was drawn together for the diversion
+of my wild companions, who when they had been taught the art of
+ridicule, never failed to signalize themselves by a zealous imitation,
+and filled the town on the ensuing day with scandal and vexation, with
+merriment and shame.
+
+I can scarcely believe, when I recollect my own practice, that I could
+have been so far deluded with petty praise, as to divulge the secrets of
+trust, and to expose the levities of frankness; to waylay the walks of
+the cautious, and surprise the security of the thoughtless. Yet it is
+certain, that for many years I heard nothing but with design to tell it,
+and saw nothing with any other curiosity than after some failure that
+might furnish out a jest.
+
+My heart, indeed, acquits me of deliberate malignity, or interested
+insidiousness. I had no other purpose than to heighten the pleasure of
+laughter by communication, nor ever raised any pecuniary advantage from
+the calamities of others. I led weakness and negligence into
+difficulties, only that I might divert myself with their perplexities
+and distresses; and violated every law of friendship, with no other hope
+than that of gaining the reputation of smartness and waggery.
+
+I would not be understood to charge myself with any crimes of the
+atrocious or destructive kind. I never betrayed an heir to gamesters, or
+a girl to bebauchees; [Transcriber's note: sic] never intercepted the
+kindness of a patron, or sported away the reputation of innocence. My
+delight was only in petty mischief, and momentary vexations, and my
+acuteness was employed not upon fraud and oppression, which it had been
+meritorious to detect, but upon harmless ignorance or absurdity,
+prejudice or mistake.
+
+This inquiry I pursued with so much diligence and sagacity, that I was
+able to relate, of every man whom I knew, some blunder or miscarriage;
+to betray the most circumspect of my friends into follies, by a
+judicious flattery of his predominant passion; or expose him to
+contempt, by placing him in circumstances which put his prejudices into
+action, brought to view his natural defects, or drew the attention of
+the company on his airs of affectation.
+
+The power had been possessed in vain if it had never been exerted; and
+it was not my custom to let any arts of jocularity remain unemployed. My
+impatience of applause brought me always early to the place of
+entertainment; and I seldom failed to lay a scheme with the small knot
+that first gathered round me, by which some of those whom we expected
+might be made subservient to our sport. Every man has some favourite
+topick of conversation, on which, by a feigned seriousness of attention,
+he may be drawn to expatiate without end. Every man has some habitual
+contortion of body, or established mode of expression, which never fails
+to raise mirth if it be pointed out to notice. By premonitions of these
+particularities I secured our pleasantry. Our companion entered with his
+usual gaiety, and began to partake of our noisy cheerfulness, when the
+conversation was imperceptibly diverted to a subject which pressed upon
+his tender part, and extorted the expected shrug, the customary
+exclamation, or the predicted remark. A general clamour of joy then
+burst from all that were admitted to the stratagem. Our mirth was often
+increased by the triumph of him that occasioned it; for as we do not
+hastily form conclusions against ourselves, seldom any one suspected,
+that he had exhilarated us otherwise than by wit.
+
+You will hear, I believe, with very little surprise, that by this
+conduct I had in a short time united mankind against me, and that every
+tongue was diligent in prevention or revenge. I soon perceived myself
+regarded with malevolence or distrust, but wondered what had been
+discovered in me either terrible or hateful. I had invaded no man's
+property; I had rivalled no man's claims: nor had ever engaged in any of
+those attempts which provoke the jealousy of ambition or the rage of
+faction. I had lived but to laugh, and make others laugh; and believed
+that I was loved by all who caressed, and favoured by all who applauded
+me. I never imagined, that he who, in the mirth of a nocturnal revel,
+concurred in ridiculing his friend, would consider, in a cooler hour,
+that the same trick might be played against himself; or that even where
+there is no sense of danger, the natural pride of human nature rises
+against him, who, by general censures, lays claim to general
+superiority.
+
+I was convinced, by a total desertion, of the impropriety of my conduct;
+every man avoided, and cautioned others to avoid me. Wherever I came, I
+found silence and dejection, coldness and terrour. No one would venture
+to speak, lest he should lay himself open to unfavourable
+representations; the company, however numerous, dropped off at my
+entrance upon various pretences; and, if I retired to avoid the shame of
+being left, I heard confidence and mirth revive at my departure.
+
+If those whom I had thus offended could have contented themselves with
+repaying one insult for another, and kept up the war only by a
+reciprocation of sarcasms, they might have perhaps vexed, but would
+never have much hurt me; for no man heartily hates him at whom he can
+laugh. But these wounds which they give me as they fly, are without
+cure; this alarm which they spread by their solicitude to escape me,
+excludes me from all friendship and from all pleasure. I am condemned to
+pass a long interval of my life in solitude, as a man suspected of
+infection is refused admission into cities; and must linger in
+obscurity, till my conduct shall convince the world, that I may be
+approached without hazard.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+DICACULUS.
+
+
+
+No. 175. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1751.
+
+ _Rari quippe boni: numerus vix est totidem quot
+ Thebarum portae, vel divitis ostia Nili_. Juv. Sat. xiii. 26.
+
+ Good men are scarce; the just are thinly sown:
+ They thrive but ill, nor can they last when grown;
+ And should we count them, and our store compile,
+ Yet Thebes more gates could show, more mouths the Nile. CREECH.
+
+None of the axioms of wisdom which recommend the ancient sages to
+veneration, seem to have required less extent of knowledge or
+perspicacity of penetration, than the remarks of Bias, that [Greek: oi
+pleones kakoi], "the majority are wicked."
+
+The depravity of mankind is so easily discoverable, that nothing but the
+desert or the cell can exclude it from notice. The knowledge of crimes
+intrudes uncalled and undesired. They whom their abstraction from common
+occurrences hinders from seeing iniquity, will quickly have their
+attention awakened by feeling it. Even he who ventures not into the
+world, may learn its corruption in his closet. For what are treatises of
+morality, but persuasives to the practice of duties, for which no
+arguments would be necessary, but that we are continually tempted to
+violate or neglect them? What are all the records of history, but
+narratives of successive villanies, of treasons and usurpations,
+massacres and wars?
+
+But, perhaps, the excellence of aphorisms consists not so much in the
+expression of some rare and abstruse sentiment, as in the comprehension
+of some obvious and useful truths in a few words. We frequently fall
+into errour and folly, not because the true principles of action are not
+known, but because, for a time, they are not remembered; and he may,
+therefore, be justly numbered among the benefactors of mankind, who
+contracts the great rules of life into short sentences, that may be
+easily impressed on the memory, and taught by frequent recollection to
+recur habitually to the mind.
+
+However those who have passed through half the life of man, may now
+wonder that any should require to be cautioned against corruption, they
+will find that they have themselves purchased their conviction by many
+disappointments and vexations which an earlier knowledge would have
+spared them; and may see, on every side, some entangling themselves in
+perplexities, and some sinking into ruin, by ignorance or neglect of the
+maxim of Bias.
+
+Every day sends out, in quest of pleasure and distinction, some heir
+fondled in ignorance, and flattered into pride. He comes forth with all
+the confidence of a spirit unacquainted with superiors, and all the
+benevolence of a mind not yet irritated by opposition, alarmed by fraud,
+or embittered by cruelty. He loves all, because he imagines himself the
+universal favourite. Every exchange of salutation produces new
+acquaintance, and every acquaintance kindles into friendship.
+
+Every season brings a new flight of beauties into the world, who have
+hitherto heard only of their own charms, and imagine that the heart
+feels no passion but that of love. They are soon surrounded by admirers
+whom they credit, because they tell them only what is heard with
+delight. Whoever gazes upon them is a lover; and whoever forces a sigh,
+is pining in despair.
+
+He surely is a useful monitor, who inculcates to these thoughtless
+strangers, that the _majority are wicked_; who informs them, that the
+train which wealth and beauty draw after them, is lured only by the
+scent of prey; and that, perhaps, among all those who crowd about them
+with professions and flatteries, there is not one who does not hope for
+some opportunity to devour or betray them, to glut himself by their
+destruction, or to share their spoils with a stronger savage.
+
+Virtue presented singly to the imagination or the reason, is so well
+recommended by its own graces, and so strongly supported by arguments,
+that a good man wonders how any can be bad; and they who are ignorant of
+the force of passion and interest, who never observed the arts of
+seduction, the contagion of example, the gradual descent from one crime
+to another, or the insensible depravation of the principles by loose
+conversation, naturally expect to find integrity in every bosom, and
+veracity on every tongue.
+
+It is, indeed, impossible not to hear from those who have lived longer,
+of wrongs and falsehoods, of violence and circumvention; but such
+narratives are commonly regarded by the young, the heady, and the
+confident, as nothing more than the murmurs of peevishness, or the
+dreams of dotage; and, notwithstanding all the documents of hoary
+wisdom, we commonly plunge into the world fearless and credulous,
+without any foresight of danger, or apprehension of deceit.
+
+I have remarked, in a former paper, that credulity is the common failing
+of unexperienced virtue; and that he who is spontaneously suspicious,
+may be justly charged with radical corruption; for, if he has not known
+the prevalence of dishonesty by information, nor had time to observe it
+with his own eyes, whence can he take his measures of judgment but from
+himself?
+
+They who best deserve to escape the snares of artifice, are most likely
+to be entangled. He that endeavours to live for the good of others, must
+always be exposed to the arts of them who live only for themselves,
+unless he is taught by timely precepts the caution required in common
+transactions, and shewn at a distance the pitfalls of treachery.
+
+To youth, therefore, it should be carefully inculcated, that, to enter
+the road of life without caution or reserve, in expectation of general
+fidelity and justice, is to launch on the wide ocean without the
+instruments of steerage, and to hope that every wind will be prosperous,
+and that every coast will afford a harbour.
+
+To enumerate the various motives to deceit and injury, would be to count
+all the desires that prevail among the sons of men; since there is no
+ambition however petty, no wish however absurd, that by indulgence will
+not be enabled to overpower the influence of virtue. Many there are, who
+openly and almost professedly regulate all their conduct by their love
+of money; who have no other reason for action or forbearance, for
+compliance or refusal, than that they hope to gain more by one than by
+the other. These are indeed the meanest and cruellest of human beings, a
+race with whom, as with some pestiferous animals, the whole creation
+seems to be at war; but who, however detested or scorned, long continue
+to add heap to heap, and when they have reduced one to beggary, are
+still permitted to fasten on another.
+
+Others, yet less rationally wicked, pass their lives in mischief,
+because they cannot bear the sight of success, and mark out every man
+for hatred, whose fame or fortune they believe increasing.
+
+Many who have not advanced to these degrees of guilt are yet wholly
+unqualified for friendship, and unable to maintain any constant or
+regular course of kindness. Happiness may be destroyed not only by union
+with the man who is apparently the slave of interest, but with him whom
+a wild opinion of the dignity of perseverance, in whatever cause,
+disposes to pursue every injury with unwearied and perpetual resentment;
+with him whose vanity inclines him to consider every man as a rival in
+every pretension; with him whose airy negligence puts his friend's
+affairs or secrets in continual hazard, and who thinks his forgetfulness
+of others excused by his inattention to himself; and with him whose
+inconstancy ranges without any settled rule of choice through varieties
+of friendship, and who adopts and dismisses favourites by the sudden
+impulse of caprice.
+
+Thus numerous are the dangers to which the converse of mankind exposes
+us, and which can be avoided only by prudent distrust. He therefore
+that, remembering this salutary maxim, learns early to withhold his
+fondness from fair appearances, will have reason to pay some honours to
+Bias of Priene, who enabled him to become wise without the cost of
+experience.
+
+
+
+No. 176. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1751
+
+ --_Naso suspendis adunco_. HOR. Lib. i. Sat. vi. 5.
+
+ On me you turn the nose.--
+
+There are many vexatious accidents and uneasy situations which raise
+little compassion for the sufferer, and which no man but those whom they
+immediately distress can regard with seriousness. Petty mischiefs, that
+have no influence on futurity, nor extend their effects to the rest of
+life, are always seen with a kind of malicious pleasure. A mistake or
+embarrassment, which for the present moment fills the face with blushes,
+and the mind with confusion, will have no other effect upon those who
+observe it, than that of convulsing them with irresistible laughter.
+Some circumstances of misery are so powerfully ridiculous, that neither
+kindness nor duty can withstand them; they bear down love, interest, and
+reverence, and force the friend, the dependent, or the child, to give
+way to, instantaneous motions of merriment.
+
+Among the principal of comick calamities, may be reckoned the pain which
+an author, not yet hardened into insensibility, feels at the onset of a
+furious critick, whose age, rank, or fortune, gives him confidence to
+speak without reserve; who heaps one objection upon another, and
+obtrudes his remarks, and enforces his corrections, without tenderness
+or awe.
+
+The author, full of the importance of his work, and anxious for the
+justification of every syllable, starts and kindles at the slightest
+attack; the critick, eager to establish his superiority, triumphing in
+every discovery of failure, and zealous to impress the cogency of his
+arguments, pursues him from line to line without cessation or remorse.
+The critick, who hazards little, proceeds with vehemence, impetuosity,
+and fearlessness; the author, whose quiet and fame, and life and
+immortality, are involved in the controversy, tries every art of
+subterfuge and defence; maintains modestly what he resolves never to
+yield, and yields unwillingly what cannot be maintained. The critick's
+purpose is to conquer, the author only hopes to escape; the critick
+therefore knits his brow, and raises his voice, and rejoices whenever he
+perceives any tokens of pain excited by the pressure of his assertions,
+or the point of his sarcasms. The author, whose endeavour is at once to
+mollify and elude his persecutor, composes his features and softens his
+accent, breaks the force of assault by retreat, and rather steps aside
+than flies or advances.
+
+As it very seldom happens that the rage of extemporary criticism
+inflicts fatal or lasting wounds, I know not that the laws of
+benevolence entitle this distress to much sympathy. The diversion of
+baiting an author has the sanction of all ages and nations, and is more
+lawful than the sport of teasing other animals, because, for the most
+part, he comes voluntarily to the stake, furnished, as he imagines, by
+the patron powers of literature, with resistless weapons, and
+impenetrable armour, with the mail of the boar of Erymanth, and the paws
+of the lion of Nemea.
+
+But the works of genius are sometimes produced by other motives than
+vanity; and he whom necessity or duty enforces to write, is not always
+so well satisfied with himself, as not to be discouraged by censorious
+impudence. It may therefore be necessary to consider, how they whom
+publication lays open to the insults of such as their obscurity secures
+against reprisals, may extricate themselves from unexpected encounters.
+
+Vida, a man of considerable skill in the politicks of literature,
+directs his pupil wholly to abandon his defence, and even when he can
+irrefragably refute all objections, to suffer tamely the exultations of
+his antagonist.
+
+This rule may perhaps be just, when advice is asked, and severity
+solicited, because no man tells his opinion so freely as when he
+imagines it received with implicit veneration; and criticks ought never
+to be consulted, but while errours may yet be rectified or insipidity
+suppressed. But when the book has once been dismissed into the world,
+and can be no more retouched, I know not whether a very different
+conduct should not be prescribed, and whether firmness and spirit may
+not sometimes be of use to overpower arrogance and repel brutality.
+Softness, diffidence, and moderation, will often be mistaken for
+imbecility and dejection; they hire cowardice to the attack by the hopes
+of easy victory, and it will soon be found that he whom every man thinks
+he can conquer, shall never be at peace.
+
+The animadversions of criticks are commonly such as may easily provoke
+the sedatest writer to some quickness of resentment and asperity of
+reply. A man, who by long consideration has familiarized a subject to
+his own mind, carefully surveyed the series of his thoughts, and planned
+all the parts of his composition into a regular dependance on each
+other, will often start at the sinistrous interpretations or absurd
+remarks of haste and ignorance, and wonder by what infatuation they have
+been led away from the obvious sense, and upon what peculiar principles
+of judgment they decide against him.
+
+The eye of the intellect, like that of the body, is not equally perfect
+in all, nor equally adapted in any to all objects; the end of criticism
+is to supply its defects; rules are the instruments of mental vision,
+which may indeed assist our faculties when properly used, but produce
+confusion and obscurity by unskilful application.
+
+Some seem always to read with the microscope of criticism, and employ
+their whole attention upon minute elegance, or faults scarcely visible
+to common observation. The dissonance of a syllable, the recurrence of
+the same sound, the repetition of a particle, the smallest deviation
+from propriety, the slightest defect in construction or arrangement,
+swell before their eyes into enormities. As they discern with great
+exactness, they comprehend but a narrow compass, and know nothing of the
+justness of the design, the general spirit of the performance, the
+artifice of connection, or the harmony of the parts; they never,
+conceive how small a proportion that which they are busy in
+contemplating bears to the whole, or how the petty inaccuracies, with
+which they are offended, are absorbed and lost in general excellence.
+
+Others are furnished by criticism with a telescope. They see with great
+clearness whatever is too remote to be discovered by the rest of
+mankind, but are totally blind to all that lies immediately before them.
+They discover in every passage some secret meaning, some remote
+allusion, some artful allegory, or some occult imitation, which no other
+reader ever suspected; but they have no perception of the cogency of
+arguments, the force of pathetick sentiments, the various colours of
+diction, or the flowery embellishments of fancy; of all that engages the
+attention of others they are totally insensible, while they pry into
+worlds of conjecture, and amuse themselves with phantoms in the clouds.
+
+In criticism, as in every other art, we fail sometimes by our weakness,
+but more frequently by our fault. We are sometimes bewildered by
+ignorance, and sometimes by prejudice, but we seldom deviate far from
+the right, but when we deliver ourselves up to the direction of vanity.
+
+
+
+No. 177. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1751.
+
+ _Turpe est difficiles habere nugas_. MART. Lib. ii. Ep. lxxxvi. 9.
+
+ Those things which now seem frivolous and slight,
+ Will be of serious consequence to you,
+ When they have made you once ridiculous. ROSCOMMON.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+When I was, at the usual time, about to enter upon the profession to
+which my friends had destined me, being summoned, by the death of my
+father, into the country, I found myself master of an unexpected sum of
+money, and of an estate, which, though not large, was, in my opinion,
+sufficient to support me in a condition far preferable to the fatigue,
+dependance, and uncertainty of any gainful occupation. I therefore
+resolved to devote the rest of my life wholly to curiosity, and without
+any confinement of my excursions, or termination of my views, to wander
+over the boundless regions of general knowledge.
+
+This scheme of life seemed pregnant with inexhaustible variety, and
+therefore I could not forbear to congratulate myself upon the wisdom of
+my choice. I furnished a large room with all conveniences for study;
+collected books of every kind; quitted every science at the first
+perception of disgust; returned to it again as soon as my former ardour
+happened to revive; and having no rival to depress me by comparison, nor
+any critick to alarm me with objections, I spent day after day in
+profound tranquillity, with only so much complaisance in my own
+improvements, as served to excite and animate my application.
+
+Thus I lived for some years with complete acquiescence in my own plan of
+conduct, rising early to read, and dividing the latter part of the day
+between economy, exercise, and reflection. But, in time, I began to find
+my mind contracted and stiffened by solitude. My ease and elegance were
+sensibly impaired; I was no longer able to accommodate myself with
+readiness to the accidental current of conversation; my notions grew
+particular and paradoxical, and my phraseology formal and unfashionable;
+I spoke, on common occasions, the language of books. My quickness of
+apprehension, and celerity of reply, had entirely deserted me; when I
+delivered my opinion, or detailed my knowledge, I was bewildered by an
+unseasonable interrogatory, disconcerted by any slight opposition, and
+overwhelmed and lost in dejection, when the smallest advantage was
+gained against me in dispute. I became decisive and dogmatical,
+impatient of contradiction, perpetually jealous of my character,
+insolent to such as acknowledged my superiority, and sullen and
+malignant to all who refused to receive my dictates.
+
+This I soon discovered to be one of those intellectual diseases which a
+wise man should make haste to cure. I therefore resolved for a time to
+shut my books, and learn again the art of conversation; to defecate and
+clear my mind by brisker motions, and stronger impulses; and to unite
+myself once more to the living generation.
+
+For this purpose I hasted to London, and entreated one of my academical
+acquaintances to introduce me into some of the little societies of
+literature which are formed in taverns and coffee-houses. He was pleased
+with an opportunity of shewing me to his friends, and soon obtained me
+admission among a select company of curious men, who met once a week to
+exhilarate their studies, and compare their acquisitions.
+
+The eldest and most venerable of this society was Hirsutus, who, after
+the first civilities of my reception, found means to introduce the
+mention of his favourite studies, by a severe censure of those who want
+the due regard for their native country. He informed me, that he had
+early withdrawn his attention from foreign trifles, and that since he
+began to addict his mind to serious and manly studies, he had very
+carefully amassed all the English books that were printed in the black
+character. This search he had pursued so diligently, that he was able to
+shew the deficiencies of the best catalogues. He had long since
+completed his Caxton, had three sheets of Treveris unknown to the
+antiquaries, and wanted to a perfect Pynson but two volumes, of which
+one was promised him as a legacy by its present possessor, and the other
+he was resolved to buy, at whatever price, when Quisquilius's library
+should be sold. Hirsutus had no other reason for the valuing or
+slighting a book, than that it was printed in the Roman or the Gothic
+letter, nor any ideas but such as his favourite volumes had supplied;
+when he was serious he expatiated on the narratives "of Johan de
+Trevisa," and when he was merry, regaled us with a quotation from the
+"Shippe of Foles."
+
+While I was listening to this hoary student, Ferratus entered in a
+hurry, and informed us with the abruptness of ecstacy, that his set of
+halfpence was now complete; he had just received in a handful of change,
+the piece that he had so long been seeking, and could now defy mankind
+to outgo his collection of English copper.
+
+Chartophylax then observed how fatally human sagacity was sometimes
+baffled, and how often the most valuable discoveries are made by chance.
+He had employed himself and his emissaries seven years at great expense
+to perfect his series of Gazettes, but had long wanted a single paper,
+which, when he despaired of obtaining it, was sent him wrapped round a
+parcel of tobacco.
+
+Cantilenus turned all his thoughts upon old ballads, for he considered
+them as the genuine records of the national taste. He offered to shew me
+a copy of "The Children in the Wood," which he firmly believed to be of
+the first edition, and, by the help of which, the text might be freed
+from several corruptions, if this age of barbarity had any claim to such
+favours from him.
+
+Many were admitted into this society as inferior members, because they
+had collected old prints and neglected pamphlets, or possessed some
+fragment of antiquity, as the seal of an ancient corporation, the
+charter of a religious house, the genealogy of a family extinct, or a
+letter written in the reign of Elizabeth.
+
+Every one of these virtuosos looked on all his associates as wretches of
+depraved taste and narrow notions. Their conversation was, therefore,
+fretful and waspish, their behaviour brutal, their merriment bluntly
+sarcastick, and their seriousness gloomy and suspicious. They were
+totally ignorant of all that passes, or has lately passed, in the world;
+unable to discuss any question of religious, political, or military
+knowledge; equally strangers to science and politer learning, and
+without any wish to improve their minds, or any other pleasure than that
+of displaying rarities, of which they would not suffer others to make
+the proper use.
+
+Hirsutus graciously informed me, that the number of their society was
+limited, but that I might sometimes attend as an auditor. I was pleased
+to find myself in no danger of an honour, which I could not have
+willingly accepted, nor gracefully refused, and left them without any
+intention of returning; for I soon found that the suppression of those
+habits with which I was vitiated, required association with men very
+different from this solemn race.
+
+I am, Sir, &c.
+
+VIVACULUS.
+
+It is natural to feel grief or indignation when any thing necessary or
+useful is wantonly wasted, or negligently destroyed; and therefore my
+correspondent cannot be blamed for looking with uneasiness on the waste
+of life. Leisure and curiosity might soon make great advances in useful
+knowledge, were they not diverted by minute emulation and laborious
+trifles. It may, however, somewhat mollify his anger to reflect, that
+perhaps none of the assembly which he describes, was capable of any
+nobler employment, and that he who does his best, however little, is
+always to be distinguished from him who does nothing. Whatever busies
+the mind without corrupting it, has at least this use, that it rescues
+the day from idleness, and he that is never idle will not often be
+vicious.
+
+
+
+No. 178. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1751.
+
+ _Purs sanitatis velle sanuria fuit_. SENECA.
+
+ To yield to remedies is half the cure.
+
+Pythagoras is reported to have required from those whom he instructed in
+philosophy a probationary silence of five years. Whether this
+prohibition of speech extended to all the parts of this time, as seems
+generally to be supposed, or was to be observed only in the school or in
+the presence of their master, as is more probable, it was sufficient to
+discover the pupil's disposition; to try whether he was willing to pay
+the price of learning, or whether he was one of those whose ardour was
+rather violent than lasting, and who expected to grow wise on other
+terms than those of patience and obedience.
+
+Many of the blessings universally desired, are very frequently wanted,
+because most men, when they should labour, content themselves to
+complain, and rather linger in a state in which they cannot be at rest,
+than improve their condition by vigour and resolution.
+
+Providence has fixed the limits of human enjoyment by immoveable
+boundaries, and has set different gratifications at such a distance from
+each other, that no art or power can bring them together. This great law
+it is the business of every rational being to understand, that life may
+not pass away in an attempt to make contradictions consistent, to
+combine opposite qualities, and to unite things which the nature of
+their being must always keep asunder.
+
+Of two objects tempting at a distance on contrary sides, it is
+impossible to approach one but by receding from the other; by long
+deliberation and dilatory projects, they may be both lost, but can never
+be both gained. It is, therefore, necessary to compare them, and, when
+we have determined the preference, to withdraw our eyes and our thoughts
+at once from that which reason directs us to reject. This is more
+necessary, if that which we are forsaking has the power of delighting
+the senses, or firing the fancy. He that once turns aside to the
+allurements of unlawful pleasure, can have no security that he shall
+ever regain the paths of virtue.
+
+The philosophick goddess of Boethius, having related the story of
+Orpheus, who, when he had recovered his wife from the dominions of
+death, lost her again by looking back upon her in the confines of light,
+concludes with a very elegant and forcible application. "Whoever you are
+that endeavour to elevate your minds to the illuminations of Heaven,
+consider yourselves as represented in this fable; for he that is once so
+far overcome as to turn back his eyes towards the infernal caverns,
+loses at the first sight all that influence which attracted him on
+high:"
+
+ Vos haec fabula respicit,
+ Quicunque in superum diem
+ Mentem ducere quaeritis.
+ Nam qui Tartareum in specus
+ Victus lumina flexerit,
+ Quidquid praecipuum trahit,
+ Perdit, dum videt inferos.
+
+It may be observed, in general, that the future is purchased by the
+present. It is not possible to secure instant or permanent happiness but
+by the forbearance of some immediate gratification. This is so evidently
+true with regard to the whole of our existence, that all the precepts of
+theology have no other tendency than to enforce a life of faith; a life
+regulated not by our senses but our belief; a life in which pleasures
+are to be refused for fear of invisible punishments, and calamities
+sometimes to be sought, and always endured, in hope of rewards that
+shall be obtained in another state.
+
+Even if we take into our view only that particle of our duration which
+is terminated by the grave, it will be found that we cannot enjoy one
+part of life beyond the common limitations of pleasure, but by
+anticipating some of the satisfaction which should exhilarate the
+following years. The heat of youth may spread happiness into wild
+luxuriance, but the radical vigour requisite to make it perennial is
+exhausted, and all that can be hoped afterwards is languor and
+sterility.
+
+The reigning errour of mankind is, that we are not content with the
+conditions on which the goods of life are granted. No man is insensible
+of the value of knowledge, the advantages of health, or the convenience
+of plenty, but every day shews us those on whom the conviction is
+without effect.
+
+Knowledge is praised and desired by multitudes whom her charms could
+never rouse from the couch of sloth; whom the faintest invitation of
+pleasure draws away from their studies; to whom any other method of
+wearing out the day is more eligible than the use of books, and who are
+more easily engaged by any conversation, than such as may rectify their
+notions or enlarge their comprehension.
+
+Every man that has felt pain, knows how little all other comforts can
+gladden him to whom health is denied. Yet who is there does not
+sometimes hazard it for the enjoyment of an hour? All assemblies of
+jollity, all places of public entertainment, exhibit examples of
+strength wasting in riot, and beauty withering in irregularity; nor is
+it easy to enter a house in which part of the family is not groaning in
+repentance of past intemperance, and part admitting disease by
+negligence, or soliciting it by luxury.
+
+There is no pleasure which men of every age and sect have more generally
+agreed to mention with contempt, than the gratifications of the palate;
+an entertainment so far removed from intellectual happiness, that
+scarcely the most shameless of the sensual herd have dared to defend it:
+yet even to this, the lowest of our delights, to this, though neither
+quick nor lasting, is health with all its activity and sprightliness
+daily sacrificed; and for this are half the miseries endured which urge
+impatience to call on death.
+
+The whole world is put in motion by the wish for riches and the dread of
+poverty. Who, then, would not imagine that such conduct as will
+inevitably destroy what all are thus labouring to acquire, must
+generally be avoided? That he who spends more than he receives, must in
+time become indigent, cannot be doubted; but, how evident soever this
+consequence may appear, the spendthrift moves in the whirl of pleasure
+with too much rapidity to keep it before his eyes, and, in the
+intoxication of gaiety, grows every day poorer without any such sense of
+approaching ruin as is sufficient to wake him into caution.
+
+Many complaints are made of the misery of life; and indeed it must be
+confessed that we are subject to calamities by which the good and bad,
+the diligent and slothful, the vigilant and heedless, are equally
+afflicted. But surely, though some indulgence may be allowed to groans
+extorted by inevitable misery, no man has a right to repine at evils
+which, against warning, against experience, he deliberately and
+leisurely brings upon his own head; or to consider himself as debarred
+from happiness by such obstacles as resolution may break or dexterity
+may put aside.
+
+Great numbers who quarrel with their condition, have wanted not the
+power but the will to obtain a better state. They have never
+contemplated the difference between good and evil sufficiently to
+quicken aversion, or invigorate desire; they have indulged a drowsy
+thoughtlessness or giddy levity; have committed the balance of choice to
+the management of caprice; and when they have long accustomed themselves
+to receive all that chance offered them, without examination, lament at
+last that they find themselves deceived.
+
+
+
+No. 179. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1751.
+
+ _Perpetuo risu pulmonem agitare solebat_. JUV. Sat. x. 33.
+
+ Democritus would feed his spleen, and shake
+ His sides and shoulders till he felt them ake. DRYDEN
+
+Every man, says Tully, has two characters; one which he partakes with
+all mankind, and by which he is distinguished from brute animals;
+another which discriminates him from the rest of his own species, and
+impresses on him a manner and temper peculiar to himself; this
+particular character, if it be not repugnant to the laws of general
+humanity, it is always his business to cultivate and preserve.
+
+Every hour furnishes some confirmation of Tully's precept. It seldom
+happens, that an assembly of pleasure is so happily selected, but that
+some one finds admission, with whom the rest are deservedly offended;
+and it will appear, on a close inspection, that scarce any man becomes
+eminently disagreeable, but by a departure from his real character, and
+an attempt at something for which nature or education have left him
+unqualified.
+
+Ignorance or dulness have indeed no power of affording delight, but they
+never give disgust except when they assume the dignity of knowledge, or
+ape the sprightliness of wit. Awkwardness and inelegance have none of
+those attractions by which ease and politeness take possession of the
+heart; but ridicule and censure seldom rise against them, unless they
+appear associated with that confidence which belongs only to long
+acquaintance with the modes of life, and to consciousness of unfailing
+propriety of behaviour. Deformity itself is regarded with tenderness
+rather than aversion, when it does not attempt to deceive the sight by
+dress and decoration, and to seize upon fictitious claims the
+prerogatives of beauty.
+
+He that stands to contemplate the crowds that fill the streets of a
+populous city, will see many passengers whose air and motion it will be
+difficult to behold without contempt and laughter; but if he examines
+what are the appearances that thus powerfully excite his risibility, he
+will find among them neither poverty nor disease, nor any involuntary or
+painful defect. The disposition to derision and insult is awakened by
+the softness of foppery, the swell of insolence, the liveliness of
+levity, or the solemnity of grandeur; by the sprightly trip, the stately
+stalk, the formal strut, the lofty mien; by gestures intended to catch
+the eye, and by looks elaborately formed as evidences of importance.
+
+It, has, I think, been sometimes urged in favour of affectation, that it
+is only a mistake of the means to a good end, and that the intention
+with which it is practised is always to please. If all attempts to
+innovate the constitutional or habitual character have really proceeded
+from publick spirit and love of others, the world has hitherto been
+sufficiently ungrateful, since no return but scorn has yet been made to
+the most difficult of all enterprises, a contest with nature; nor has
+any pity been shown to the fatigues of labour which never succeeded, and
+the uneasiness of disguise by which nothing was concealed.
+
+It seems therefore to be determined by the general suffrage of mankind,
+that he who decks himself in adscititious qualities rather purposes to
+command applause than impart pleasure: and he is therefore treated as a
+man who, by an unreasonable ambition, usurps the place in society to
+which he has no right. Praise is seldom paid with willingness even to
+incontestable merit, and it can be no wonder that he who calls for it
+without desert is repulsed with universal indignation.
+
+Affectation naturally counterfeits those excellencies which are placed
+at the greatest distance from possibility of attainment. We are
+conscious of our own defects, and eagerly endeavour to supply them by
+artificial excellence; nor would such efforts be wholly without excuse,
+were they not often excited by ornamental trifles, which he, that thus
+anxiously struggles for the reputation of possessing them, would not
+have been known to want, had not his industry quickened observation.
+
+Gelasimus passed the first part of his life in academical privacy and
+rural retirement, without any other conversation than that of scholars,
+grave, studious, and abstracted as himself. He cultivated the
+mathematical sciences with indefatigable diligence, discovered many
+useful theorems, discussed with great accuracy the resistance of fluids,
+and, though his priority was not generally acknowledged, was the first
+who fully explained all the properties of the catenarian curve.
+
+Learning, when if rises to eminence, will be observed in time, whatever
+mists may happen to surround it. Gelasimus, in his forty-ninth year, was
+distinguished by those who have the rewards of knowledge in their hands,
+and called out to display his acquisitions for the honour of his
+country, and add dignity by his presence to philosophical assemblies. As
+he did not suspect his unfitness for common affairs, he fell no
+reluctance to obey the invitation, and what he did not feel he had yet
+too much honesty to feign. He entered into the world as a larger and
+more populous college, where his performances would be more publick, and
+his renown farther extended; and imagined that he should find his
+reputation universally prevalent, and the influence of learning every
+where the same.
+
+His merit introduced him to splendid tables and elegant acquaintance;
+but he did not find himself always qualified to join in the
+conversation. He was distressed by civilities, which he knew not how to
+repay, and entangled in many ceremonial perplexities, from which his
+books and diagrams could not extricate him. He was sometimes unluckily
+engaged in disputes with ladies, with whom algebraick axioms had no
+great weight, and saw many whose favour and esteem he could not but
+desire, to whom he was very little recommended by his theories of the
+tides, or his approximations to the quadrature of the circle.
+
+Gelasimus did not want penetration to discover, that no charm was more
+generally irresistible than that of easy facetiousness and flowing
+hilarity. He saw that diversion was more frequently welcome than
+improvement; that authority and seriousness were rather feared than
+loved; and that the grave scholar was a kind of imperious ally, hastily
+dismissed when his assistance was no longer necessary. He came to a
+sudden resolution of throwing off those cumbrous ornaments of learning
+which hindered his reception, and commenced a man of wit and jocularity.
+Utterly unacquainted with every topick of merriment, ignorant of the
+modes and follies, the vices and virtues of mankind, and unfurnished
+with any ideas but such as Pappas and Archimedes had given him, he began
+to silence all inquiries with a jest instead of a solution, extended his
+face with a grin, which he mistook for a smile, and in the place of
+scientifick discourse, retailed in a new language, formed between the
+college and the tavern, the intelligence of the newspaper.
+
+Laughter, he knew, was a token of alacrity; and, therefore, whatever he
+said or heard, he was careful not to fail in that great duty of a wit.
+If he asked or told the hour of the day, if he complained of heat or
+cold, stirred the fire, or filled a glass, removed his chair, or snuffed
+a candle, he always found some occasion to laugh. The jest was indeed a
+secret to all but himself; but habitual confidence in his own
+discernment hindered him from suspecting any weakness or mistake. He
+wondered that his wit was so little understood, but expected that his
+audience would comprehend it by degrees, and persisted all his life to
+shew by gross buffoonery, how little the strongest faculties can perform
+beyond the limits of their own province.
+
+
+
+No. 180. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1751.
+
+ [Greek: Taut eidos sophos isthi, mataen d' Epikouron eason
+ Poy to kenon zaetein, kai tines ai monades.] AUTOMEDON.
+
+ On life, on morals, be thy thoughts employ'd;
+ Leave to the schools their atoms and their void.
+
+It is somewhere related by Le Clerc, that a wealthy trader of good
+understanding, having the common ambition to breed his son a scholar,
+carried him to an university, resolving to use his own judgment in the
+choice of a tutor. He had been taught, by whatever intelligence, the
+nearest way to the heart of an academick, and at his arrival entertained
+all who came about him with such profusion, that the professors were
+lured by the smell of his table from their books, and flocked round him
+with all the cringes of awkward complaisance. This eagerness answered
+the merchant's purpose: he glutted them with delicacies, and softened
+them with caresses, till he prevailed upon one after another to open his
+bosom, and make a discovery of his competitions, jealousies, and
+resentments. Having thus learned each man's character, partly from
+himself, and partly from his acquaintances, he resolved to find some
+other education for his son, and went away convinced, that a scholastick
+life has no other tendency than to vitiate the morals and contract the
+understanding: nor would he afterwards hear with patience the praises of
+the ancient authors, being persuaded that scholars of all ages must have
+been the same, and that Xenophon and Cicero were professors of some
+former university, and therefore mean and selfish, ignorant and servile,
+like those whom he had lately visited and forsaken.
+
+Envy, curiosity, and a sense of the imperfection of our present state,
+incline us to estimate the advantages which are in the possession of
+others above their real value. Every one must have remarked, what powers
+and prerogatives the vulgar imagine to be conferred by learning. A man
+of science is expected to excel the unlettered and unenlightened even on
+occasions where literature is of no use, and among weak minds, loses
+part of his reverence, by discovering no superiority in those parts of
+life, in which all are unavoidably equal; as when a monarch makes a
+progress to the remoter provinces, the rustics are said sometimes to
+wonder that they find him of the same size with themselves.
+
+These demands of prejudice and folly can never be satisfied; and
+therefore many of the imputations which learning suffers from
+disappointed ignorance, are without reproach. But there are some
+failures, to which men of study are peculiarly exposed. Every condition
+has its disadvantages. The circle of knowledge is too wide for the most
+active and diligent intellect, and while science is pursued, other
+accomplishments are neglected; as a small garrison must leave one part
+of an extensive fortress naked, when an alarm calls them to another.
+
+The learned, however, might generally support their dignity with more
+success, if they suffered not themselves to be misled by the desire of
+superfluous attainments. Raphael, in return to Adam's inquiries into the
+courses of the stars, and the revolutions of heaven, counsels him to
+withdraw his mind from idle speculations, and employ his faculties upon
+nearer and more interesting objects, the survey of his own life, the
+subjection of his passions, the knowledge of duties which must daily be
+performed, and the detection of dangers which must daily be incurred.
+
+This angelick counsel every man of letters should always have before
+him. He that devotes himself to retired study naturally sinks from
+omission to forgetfulness of social duties; he must be therefore
+sometimes awakened and recalled to the general condition of mankind.
+
+I am far from any intention to limit curiosity, or confine the labours
+of learning to arts of immediate and necessary use. It is only from the
+various essays of experimental industry, and the vague excursions of
+minds sent out upon discovery, that any advancement of knowledge can be
+expected; and, though many must be disappointed in their labours, yet
+they are not to be charged with having spent their time in vain; their
+example contributed to inspire emulation, and their miscarriages taught
+others the way to success.
+
+But the distant hope of being one day useful or eminent, ought not to
+mislead us too far from that study which is equally requisite to the
+great and mean, to the celebrated and obscure; the art of moderating the
+desires, of repressing the appetites, and of conciliating or retaining
+the favour of mankind.
+
+No man can imagine the course of his own life, or the conduct of the
+world around him, unworthy his attention; yet, among the sons of
+learning, many seem to have thought of every thing rather than of
+themselves, and to have observed every thing but what passes before
+their eyes: many who toil through the intricacy of complicated systems,
+are insuperably embarrassed with the least perplexity in common affairs;
+many who compare the actions, and ascertain the characters of ancient
+heroes, let their own days glide away without examination, and suffer
+vicious habits to encroach upon their minds without resistance or
+detection.
+
+The most frequent reproach of the scholastick race is the want of
+fortitude, not martial but philosophick. Men bred in shades and silence,
+taught to immure themselves at sunset, and accustomed to no other weapon
+than syllogism, may be allowed to feel terrour at personal danger, and
+to be disconcerted by tumult and alarm. But why should he whose life is
+spent in contemplation, and whose business is only to discover truth, be
+unable to rectify the fallacies of imagination, or contend successfully
+against prejudice and passion? To what end has he read and meditated, if
+he gives up his understanding to false appearances, and suffers himself
+to be enslaved by fear of evils to which only folly or vanity can expose
+him, or elated by advantages to which, as they are equally conferred
+upon the good and bad, no real dignity is annexed.
+
+Such, however, is the state of the world, that the most obsequious of
+the slaves of pride, the most rapturous of the gazers upon wealth, the
+most officious of the whisperers of greatness, are collected from
+seminaries appropriated to the study of wisdom and of virtue, where it
+was intended that appetite should learn to be content with little, and
+that hope should aspire only to honours which no human power can give or
+take away[j].
+
+The student, when he comes forth into the world, instead of
+congratulating himself upon his exemption from the errours of those
+whose opinions have been formed by accident or custom, and who live
+without any certain principles of conduct, is commonly in haste to
+mingle with the multitude, and shew his sprightliness and ductility by
+an expeditious compliance with fashions or vices. The first smile of a
+man, whose fortune gives him power to reward his dependants, commonly
+enchants him beyond resistance; the glare of equipage, the sweets of
+luxury, the liberality of general promises, the softness of habitual
+affability, fill his imagination; and he soon ceases to have any other
+wish than to be well received, or any measure of right and wrong but the
+opinion of his patron.
+
+A man flattered and obeyed, learns to exact grosser adulation, and
+enjoin lower submission. Neither our virtues nor vices are all our own.
+If there were no cowardice, there would be little insolence; pride
+cannot rise to any great degree, but by the concurrence of blandishment
+or the sufferance of tameness. The wretch who would shrink and crouch
+before one that should dart his eyes upon him with the spirit of natural
+equality, becomes capricious and tyrannical when he sees himself
+approached with a downcast look, and hears the soft address of awe and
+servility. To those who are willing to purchase favour by cringes and
+compliance, is to be imputed the haughtiness that leaves nothing to be
+hoped by firmness and integrity.
+
+If, instead of wandering after the meteors of philosophy, which fill the
+world with splendour for a while, and then sink and are forgotten, the
+candidates of learning fixed their eyes upon the permanent lustre of
+moral and religious truth, they would find a more certain direction to
+happiness. A little plausibility of discourse, and acquaintance with
+unnecessary speculations, is dearly purchased, when it excludes those
+instructions which fortify the heart with resolution, and exalt the
+spirit to independence.
+
+[Footnote j: "Such are a sort of sacrilegious ministers in the temple of
+intellect. They profane its shew-bread to pamper the palate, its
+everlasting lamp they use to light unholy fires within their breast, and
+show them the way to the sensual chambers of sense and worldliness."
+IRVING.]
+
+
+
+No. 181. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1751.
+
+ _--Neu fluitem dubue spe pendulus horae_. HOR. Lib. i. Ep. xviii. 110.
+
+ Nor let me float in fortune's pow'r,
+ Dependent on the future hour. FRANCIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+As I have passed much of my life in disquiet and suspense, and lost many
+opportunities of advantage by a passion which I have reason to believe
+prevalent in different degrees over a great part of mankind, I cannot
+but think myself well qualified to warn those who are yet uncaptivated,
+of the danger which they incur by placing themselves within its
+influence.
+
+I served an apprenticeship to a linen-draper, with uncommon reputation
+for diligence and fidelity; and at the age of three-and-twenty opened a
+shop for myself with a large stock, and such credit among all the
+merchants, who were acquainted with my master, that I could command
+whatever was imported curious or valuable. For five years I proceeded
+with success proportionate to close application and untainted integrity;
+was a daring bidder at every sale; always paid my notes before they were
+due; and advanced so fast in commercial reputation, that I was
+proverbially marked out as the model of young traders, and every one
+expected that a few years would make me an alderman.
+
+In this course of even prosperity, I was one day persuaded to buy a
+ticket in the lottery. The sum was inconsiderable, part was to be repaid
+though fortune might fail to favour me, and therefore my established
+maxims of frugality did not restrain me from so trifling an experiment.
+The ticket lay almost forgotten till the time at which every man's fate
+was to be determined; nor did the affair even then seem of any
+importance, till I discovered by the publick papers that the number next
+to mine had conferred the great prize.
+
+My heart leaped at the thought of such an approach to sudden riches,
+which I considered myself, however contrarily to the laws of
+computation, as having missed by a single chance; and I could not
+forbear to revolve the consequences which such a bounteous allotment
+would have produced, if it had happened to me. This dream of felicity,
+by degrees, took possession of my imagination. The great delight of my
+solitary hours was to purchase an estate, and form plantations with
+money which once might have been mine, and I never met my friends but I
+spoiled all their merriment by perpetual complaints of my ill luck.
+
+At length another lottery was opened, and I had now so heated my
+imagination with the prospect of a prize, that I should have pressed
+among the first purchasers, had not my ardour been withheld by
+deliberation upon the probability of success from one ticket rather than
+another. I hesitated long between even and odd; considered the square
+and cubick numbers through the lottery; examined all those to which good
+luck had been hitherto annexed; and at last fixed upon one, which, by
+some secret relation to the events of my life, I thought predestined to
+make me happy. Delay in great affairs is often mischievous; the ticket
+was sold, and its possessor could not be found.
+
+I returned to my conjectures, and after many arts of prognostication,
+fixed upon another chance, but with less confidence. Never did captive,
+heir, or lover, feel so much vexation from the slow pace of time, as I
+suffered between the purchase of my ticket and the distribution of the
+prizes. I solaced my uneasiness as well as I could, by frequent
+contemplation of approaching happiness; when the sun rose I knew it
+would set, and congratulated myself at night that I was so much nearer
+to my wishes. At last the day came, my ticket appeared, and rewarded all
+my care and sagacity with a despicable prize of fifty pounds.
+
+My friends, who honestly rejoiced upon my success, were very coldly
+received; I hid myself a fortnight in the country, that my chagrin might
+fume away without observation, and then returning to my shop, began to
+listen after another lottery.
+
+With the news of a lottery I was soon gratified, and having now found
+the vanity of conjecture, and inefficacy of computation, I resolved to
+take the prize by violence, and therefore bought forty tickets, not
+omitting, however, to divide them between the even and odd numbers, that
+I might not miss the lucky class. Many conclusions did I form, and many
+experiments did I try, to determine from which of those tickets I might
+most reasonably expect riches. At last, being unable to satisfy myself
+by any modes of reasoning, I wrote the numbers upon dice, and allotted
+five hours every day to the amusement of throwing them in a garret; and,
+examining the event by an exact register, found, on the evening before
+the lottery was drawn, that one of my numbers had been turned up five
+times more than any of the rest in three hundred and thirty thousand
+throws.
+
+This experiment was fallacious; the first day presented the hopeful
+ticket, a detestable blank. The rest came out with different fortune,
+and in conclusion I lost thirty pounds by this great adventure.
+
+I had now wholly changed the cast of my behaviour and the conduct of my
+life. The shop was for the most part abandoned to my servants, and if I
+entered it, my thoughts were so engrossed by my tickets, that I scarcely
+heard or answered a question, but considered every customer as an
+intruder upon my meditations, whom I was in haste to despatch. I mistook
+the price of my goods, committed blunders in my bills, forgot to file my
+receipts, and neglected to regulate my books. My acquaintances by
+degrees began to fall away; but I perceived the decline of my business
+with little emotion, because whatever deficience there might be in my
+gains, I expected the next lottery to supply.
+
+Miscarriage naturally produces diffidence; I began now to seek
+assistance against ill luck, by an alliance with those that had been
+more successful. I inquired diligently at what office any prize had been
+sold, that I might purchase of a propitious vender; solicited those who
+had been fortunate in former lotteries, to partake with me in my new
+tickets; and whenever I met with one that had in any event of his life
+been eminently prosperous, I invited him to take a larger share. I had,
+by this rule of conduct, so diffused my interest, that I had a fourth
+part of fifteen tickets, an eighth of forty, and a sixteenth of ninety.
+
+I waited for the decision of my fate with my former palpitations, and
+looked upon the business of my trade with the usual neglect. The wheel
+at last was turned, and its revolutions brought me a long succession of
+sorrows and disappointments. I indeed often partook of a small prize,
+and the loss of one day was generally balanced by the gain of the next;
+but my desires yet remained unsatisfied, and when one of my chances had
+failed, all my expectation was suspended on those which remained yet
+undetermined. At last a prize of five thousand pounds was proclaimed; I
+caught fire at the cry, and inquiring the number, found it to be one of
+my own tickets, which I had divided among those on whose luck I
+depended, and of which I had retained only a sixteenth part.
+
+You will easily judge with what detestation of himself, a man thus
+intent upon gain reflected that he had sold a prize which was once in
+his possession. It was to no purpose, that I represented to my mind the
+impossibility of recalling the past, or the folly of condemning an act,
+which only its event, an event which no human intelligence could
+foresee, proved to be wrong. The prize which, though put in my hands,
+had been suffered to slip from me, filled me with anguish, and knowing
+that complaint would only expose me to ridicule, I gave myself up
+silently to grief, and lost by degrees my appetite and my rest.
+
+My indisposition soon became visible; I was visited by my friends, and
+among them by Eumathes, a clergyman, whose piety and learning gave him
+such an ascendant over me, that I could not refuse to open my heart.
+There are, said he, few minds sufficiently firm to be trusted in the
+hands of chance. Whoever finds himself inclined to anticipate futurity,
+and exalt possibility to certainty, should avoid every kind of casual
+adventure, since his grief must be always proportionate to his hope. You
+have long wasted that time, which, by a proper application, would have
+certainly, though moderately, increased your fortune, in a laborious and
+anxious pursuit of a species of gain, which no labour or anxiety, no art
+or expedient, can secure or promote. You are now fretting away your life
+in repentance of an act, against which repentance can give no caution,
+but to avoid the occasion of committing it. Rouse from this lazy dream
+of fortuitous riches, which, if obtained, you could scarcely have
+enjoyed, because they could confer no consciousness of desert; return to
+rational and manly industry, and consider the mere gift of luck as below
+the care of a wise man.
+
+
+
+No. 182. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1751.
+
+ _--Dives qui fieri vult,
+ Et cilo vult fieri.--_ JUV. Sat. xiv. 176
+
+ The lust of wealth can never bear delay.
+
+It has been observed in a late paper, that we are unreasonably desirous
+to separate the goods of life from those evils which Providence has
+connected with them, and to catch advantages without paying the price at
+which they are offered us. Every man wishes to be rich, but very few
+have the powers necessary to raise a sudden fortune, either by new
+discoveries, or by superiority of skill, in any necessary employment;
+and among lower understandings, many want the firmness and industry
+requisite to regular gain and gradual acquisitions.
+
+From the hope of enjoying affluence by methods more compendious than
+those of labour, and more generally practicable than those of genius,
+proceeds the common inclination to experiment and hazard, and that
+willingness to snatch all opportunities of growing rich by chance,
+which, when it has once taken possession of the mind, is seldom driven
+out either by time or argument, but continues to waste life in perpetual
+delusion, and generally ends in wretchedness and want.
+
+The folly of untimely exultation and visionary prosperity, is by no
+means peculiar to the purchasers of tickets; there are multitudes whose
+life is nothing but a continual lottery; who are always within a few
+months of plenty and happiness, and how often soever they are mocked
+with blanks, expect a prize from the next adventure.
+
+Among the most resolute and ardent of the votaries of chance, may be
+numbered the mortals whose hope is to raise themselves by a wealthy
+match; who lay out all their industry on the assiduities of courtship,
+and sleep and wake with no other ideas than of treats, compliments,
+guardians and rivals.
+
+One of the most indefatigable of this class, is my old friend Leviculus,
+whom I have never known for thirty years without some matrimonial
+project of advantage. Leviculus was bred under a merchant, and by the
+graces of his person, the sprightliness of his prattle, and the neatness
+of his dress, so much enamoured his master's second daughter, a girl of
+sixteen, that she declared her resolution to have no other husband. Her
+father, after having chidden her for undutifulness, consented to the
+match, not much to the satisfaction of Leviculus, who was sufficiently
+elated with his conquest to think himself entitled to a larger fortune.
+He was, however, soon rid of his perplexity, for his mistress died
+before their marriage.
+
+He was now so well satisfied with his own accomplishments, that he
+determined to commence fortune-hunter; and when his apprenticeship
+expired, instead of beginning, as was expected, to walk the Exchange
+with a face of importance, or associating himself with those who were
+most eminent for their knowledge of the stocks, he at once threw off the
+solemnity of the counting-house, equipped himself with a modish wig,
+listened to wits in coffee-houses, passed his evenings behind the scenes
+in the theatres, learned the names of beauties of quality, hummed the
+last stanzas of fashionable songs, talked with familiarity of high play,
+boasted of his achievements upon drawers and coachmen, was often brought
+to his lodgings at midnight in a chair, told with negligence and
+jocularity of bilking a tailor, and now and then let fly a shrewd jest
+at a sober citizen.
+
+Thus furnished with irresistible artillery, he turned his batteries upon
+the female world, and, in the first warmth of self-approbation, proposed
+no less than the possession of riches and beauty united. He therefore
+paid his civilities to Flavilla, the only daughter of a wealthy
+shop-keeper, who not being accustomed to amorous blandishments, or
+respectful addresses, was delighted with the novelty of love, and easily
+suffered him to conduct her to the play, and to meet her where she
+visited. Leviculus did not doubt but her father, however offended by a
+clandestine marriage, would soon be reconciled by the tears of his
+daughter, and the merit of his son-in-law, and was in haste to conclude
+the affair. But the lady liked better to be courted than married, and
+kept him three years in uncertainty and attendance. At last she fell in
+love with a young ensign at a ball, and having danced with him all
+night, married him in the morning.
+
+Leviculus, to avoid the ridicule of his companions, took a journey to a
+small estate in the country, where, after his usual inquiries concerning
+the nymphs in the neighbourhood, he found it proper to fall in love with
+Altilia, a maiden lady, twenty years older than himself, for whose
+favour fifteen nephews and nieces were in perpetual contention. They
+hovered round her with such jealous officiousness, as scarcely left a
+moment vacant for a lover. Leviculus, nevertheless, discovered his
+passion in a letter, and Altilia could not withstand the pleasure of
+hearing vows and sighs, and flatteries and protestations. She admitted
+his visits, enjoyed for five years the happiness of keeping all her
+expectants in perpetual alarms, and amused herself with the various
+stratagems which were practised to disengage her affections. Sometimes
+she was advised with great earnestness to travel for her health, and
+sometimes entreated to keep her brother's house. Many stories were
+spread to the disadvantage of Leviculus, by which she commonly seemed
+affected for a time, but took care soon afterwards to express her
+conviction of their falsehood. But being at last satiated with this
+ludicrous tyranny, she told her lover, when he pressed for the reward of
+his services, that she was very sensible of his merit, but was resolved
+not to impoverish an ancient family.
+
+He then returned to the town, and soon after his arrival, became
+acquainted with Latronia, a lady distinguished by the elegance of her
+equipage, and the regularity of her conduct. Her wealth was evident in
+her magnificence, and her prudence in her economy, and therefore
+Leviculus, who had scarcely confidence to solicit her favour, readily
+acquitted fortune of her former debts, when he found himself
+distinguished by her with such marks of preference as a woman of modesty
+is allowed to give. He now grew bolder, and ventured to breathe out his
+impatience before her. She heard him without resentment, in time
+permitted him to hope for happiness, and at last fixed the nuptial day,
+without any distrustful reserve of pin-money, or sordid stipulations for
+jointure, and settlements.
+
+Leviculus was triumphing on the eve of marriage, when he heard on the
+stairs the voice of Latronia's maid, whom frequent bribes had secured in
+his service. She soon burst into his room, and told him that she could
+not suffer him to be longer deceived; that her mistress was now spending
+the last payment of her fortune, and was only supported in her expense
+by the credit of his estate. Leviculus shuddered to see himself so near
+a precipice, and found that he was indebted for his escape to the
+resentment of the maid, who having assisted Latronia to gain the
+conquest, quarrelled with her at last about the plunder.
+
+Leviculus was now hopeless and disconsolate, till one Sunday he saw a
+lady in the Mall, whom her dress declared a widow, and whom, by the
+jolting prance of her gait, and the broad resplendence of her
+countenance, he guessed to have lately buried some prosperous citizen.
+He followed her home, and found her to be no less than the relict of
+Prune the grocer, who, having no children, had bequeathed to her all his
+debts and dues, and his estates real and personal. No formality was
+necessary in addressing madam Prune, and therefore Leviculus went next
+morning without an introductor. His declaration was received with a loud
+laugh; she then collected her countenance, wondered at his impudence,
+asked if he knew to whom he was talking, then shewed him the door, and
+again laughed to find him confused. Leviculus discovered that this
+coarseness was nothing more than the coquetry of Cornhill, and next day
+returned to the attack. He soon grew familiar to her dialect, and in a
+few weeks heard, without any emotion, hints of gay clothes with empty
+pockets; concurred in many sage remarks on the regard due to people of
+property; and agreed with her in detestation of the ladies at the other
+end of the town, who pinched their bellies to buy fine laces, and then
+pretended to laugh at the city.
+
+He sometimes presumed to mention marriage; but was always answered with
+a slap, a hoot, and a flounce. At last he began to press her closer, and
+thought himself more favourably received; but going one morning, with a
+resolution to trifle no longer, he found her gone to church with a young
+journeyman from the neighbouring shop, of whom she had become enamoured
+at her window.
+
+In these, and a thousand intermediate adventures, has Leviculus spent
+his time, till he is now grown grey with age, fatigue, and
+disappointment. He begins at last to find that success is not to be
+expected, and being unfit for any employment that might improve his
+fortune, and unfurnished with any arts that might amuse his leisure, is
+condemned to wear out a tasteless life in narratives which few will
+hear, and complaints which none will pity.
+
+
+
+No. 183. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1751.
+
+ _Nidla fides regni sociis, omnisque potestas
+ Impatiens consortis erit_. LUCAN. Lib. i. 92.
+
+ No faith of partnership dominion owns;
+ Still discord hovers o'er divided thrones.
+
+The hostility perpetually exercised between one man and another, is
+caused by the desire of many for that which only few can possess. Every
+man would be rich, powerful, and famous; yet fame, power, and riches are
+only the names of relative conditions, which imply the obscurity,
+dependance, and poverty of greater numbers. This universal and incessant
+competition produces injury and malice by two motives, interest and
+envy; the prospect of adding to our possessions what we can take from
+others, and the hope of alleviating the sense of our disparity by
+lessening others, though we gain nothing to ourselves.
+
+Of these two malignant and destructive powers, it seems probable at the
+first view, that interest has the strongest and most extensive
+influence. It is easy to conceive that opportunities to seize what has
+been long wanted, may excite desires almost irresistible; but surely the
+same eagerness cannot be kindled by an accidental power of destroying
+that which gives happiness to another. It must be more natural to rob
+for gain, than to ravage only for mischief.
+
+Yet I am inclined to believe, that the great law of mutual benevolence
+is oftener violated by envy than by interest, and that most of the
+misery which the defamation of blameless actions, or the obstruction of
+honest endeavours, brings upon the world, is inflicted by men that
+propose no advantage to themselves but the satisfaction of poisoning the
+banquet which they cannot taste, and blasting the harvest which they
+have no right to reap.
+
+Interest can diffuse itself but to a narrow compass. The number is never
+large of those who can hope to fill the posts of degraded power, catch
+the fragments of shattered fortune, or succeed to the honours of
+depreciated beauty. But the empire of envy has no limits, as it requires
+to its influence very little help from external circumstances. Envy may
+always be produced by idleness and pride, and in what place will they
+not be found?
+
+Interest requires some qualities not universally bestowed. The ruin of
+another will produce no profit to him who has not discernment to mark
+his advantage, courage to seize, and activity to pursue it; but the cold
+malignity of envy may be exerted in a torpid and quiescent state, amidst
+the gloom of stupidity, in the coverts of cowardice. He that falls by
+the attacks of interest, is torn by hungry tigers; he may discover and
+resist his enemies. He that perishes in the ambushes of envy, is
+destroyed by unknown and invisible assailants, and dies like a man
+suffocated by a poisonous vapour, without knowledge of his danger, or
+possibility of contest.
+
+Interest is seldom pursued but at some hazard. He that hopes to gain
+much, has commonly something to lose, and when he ventures to attack
+superiority, if he fails to conquer, is irrecoverably crushed. But envy
+may act without expense or danger. To spread suspicion, to invent
+calumnies, to propagate scandal, requires neither labour nor courage. It
+is easy for the author of a lie, however malignant, to escape detection,
+and infamy needs very little industry to assist its circulation.
+
+Envy is almost the only vice which is practicable at all times, and in
+every place; the only passion which can never lie quiet for want of
+irritation: its effects therefore are every where discoverable, and its
+attempts always to be dreaded.
+
+It is impossible to mention a name which any advantageous distinction
+has made eminent, but some latent animosity will burst out. The wealthy
+trader, however he may abstract himself from publick affairs, will never
+want those who hint, with Shylock, that ships are but boards. The
+beauty, adorned only with the unambitious graces of innocence and
+modesty, provokes, whenever she appears, a thousand murmurs of
+detraction. The genius, even when he endeavours only to entertain or
+instruct, yet suffers persecution from innumerable criticks, whose
+acrimony is excited merely by the pain of seeing others pleased, and of
+hearing applauses which another enjoys.
+
+The frequency of envy makes it so familiar, that it escapes our notice;
+nor do we often reflect upon its turpitude or malignity, till we happen
+to feel its influence. When he that has given no provocation to malice,
+but by attempting to excel, finds himself pursued by multitudes whom he
+never saw, with all the implacability of personal resentment; when he
+perceives clamour and malice let loose upon him as a publick enemy, and
+incited by every stratagem of defamation; when he hears the misfortunes
+of his family, or the follies of his youth, exposed to the world; and
+every failure of conduct, or defect of nature, aggravated and ridiculed;
+he then learns to abhor those artifices at which he only laughed before,
+and discovers how much the happiness of life would be advanced by the
+eradication of envy from the human heart.
+
+Envy is, indeed, a stubborn weed of the mind, and seldom yields to the
+culture of philosophy. There are, however, considerations, which, if
+carefully implanted and diligently propagated, might in time overpower
+and repress it, since no one can nurse it for the sake of pleasure, as
+its effects are only shame, anguish, and perturbation. It is above all
+other vices inconsistent with the character of a social being, because
+it sacrifices truth and kindness to very weak temptations. He that
+plunders a wealthy neighbour gains as much as he takes away, and may
+improve his own condition in the same proportion as he impairs
+another's; but he that blasts a flourishing reputation, must be content
+with a small dividend of additional fame, so small as can afford very
+little consolation to balance the guilt by which it is obtained.
+
+I have hitherto avoided that dangerous and empirical morality, which
+cures one vice by means of another. But envy is so base and detestable,
+so vile in its original, and so pernicious in its effects, that the
+predominance of almost any other quality is to be preferred. It is one
+of those lawless enemies of society, against which poisoned arrows may
+honestly be used. Let it therefore be constantly remembered, that
+whoever envies another, confesses his superiority, and let those be
+reformed by their pride who have lost their virtue.
+
+It is no slight aggravation of the injuries which envy incites, that
+they are committed against those who have given no intentional
+provocation; and that the sufferer is often marked out for ruin, not
+because he has failed in any duty, but because he has dared to do more
+than was required.
+
+Almost every other crime is practised by the help of some quality which
+might have produced esteem or love, if it had been well employed; but
+envy is mere unmixed and genuine evil; it pursues a hateful end by
+despicable means, and desires not so much its own happiness as another's
+misery. To avoid depravity like this, it is not necessary that any one
+should aspire to heroism or sanctity, but only that he should resolve
+not to quit the rank which nature assigns him, and wish to maintain the
+dignity of a human being.
+
+
+
+No. 184. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1751.
+
+ _Permittes ipsis expendere numinibus, quid
+ Conveniat nobis, rebusque sit utile nostris_. JUV. Sat. x. 347.
+
+ Intrust thy fortune to the pow'rs above;
+ Leave them to manage for thee, and to grant
+ What their unerring wisdom sees thee want. DRYDEN.
+
+As every scheme of life, so every form of writing, has its advantages
+and inconveniencies, though not mingled in the same proportions. The
+writer of essays escapes many embarrassments to which a large work would
+have exposed him; he seldom harasses his reason with long trains of
+consequences, dims his eyes with the perusal of antiquated volumes, or
+burthens his memory with great accumulations of preparatory knowledge. A
+careless glance upon a favourite author, or transient survey of the
+varieties of life, is sufficient to supply the first hint or seminal
+idea, which, enlarged by the gradual accretion of matter stored in the
+mind, is by the warmth of fancy easily expanded into flowers, and
+sometimes ripened into fruit.
+
+The most frequent difficulty by which the authors of these petty
+compositions are distressed, arises from the perpetual demand of novelty
+and change. The compiler of a system of science lays his invention at
+rest, and employs only his judgment, the faculty exerted with least
+fatigue. Even the relator of feigned adventures, when once the principal
+characters are established, and the great events regularly connected,
+finds incidents and episodes crowding upon his mind; every change opens
+new views, and the latter part of the story grows without labour out of
+the former. But he that attempts to entertain his reader with
+unconnected pieces, finds the irksomeness of his task rather increased
+than lessened by every production. The day calls afresh upon him for a
+new topick, and he is again obliged to choose, without any principle to
+regulate his choice.
+
+It is indeed true, that there is seldom any necessity of looking far, or
+inquiring long for a proper subject. Every diversity of art or nature,
+every publick blessing or calamity, every domestick pain or
+gratification, every sally of caprice, blunder of absurdity, or
+stratagem of affectation, may supply matter to him whose only rule is to
+avoid uniformity. But it often happens, that the judgment is distracted
+with boundless multiplicity, the imagination ranges from one design to
+another, and the hours pass imperceptibly away, till the composition can
+be no longer delayed, and necessity enforces the use of those thoughts
+which then happen to be at hand. The mind, rejoicing at deliverance on
+any terms from perplexity and suspense, applies herself vigorously to
+the work before her, collects embellishments and illustrations, and
+sometimes finishes, with great elegance and happiness, what in a state
+of ease and leisure she never had begun.
+
+It is not commonly observed, how much, even of actions, considered as
+particularly subject to choice, is to be attributed to accident, or some
+cause out of our own power, by whatever name it be distinguished. To
+close tedious deliberations with hasty resolves, and after long
+consultations with reason to refer the question to caprice, is by no
+means peculiar to the essayist. Let him that peruses this paper review
+the series of his life, and inquire how he was placed in his present
+condition. He will find, that of the good or ill which he has
+experienced, a great part came unexpected, without any visible
+gradations of approach; that every event has been influenced by causes
+acting without his intervention; and that whenever he pretended to the
+prerogative of foresight, he was mortified with new conviction of the
+shortness of his views.
+
+The busy, the ambitious, the inconstant, and the adventurous, may be
+said to throw themselves by design into the arms of fortune, and
+voluntarily to quit the power of governing themselves; they engage in a
+course of life in which little can be ascertained by previous measures;
+nor is it any wonder that their time is passed between elation and
+despondency, hope and disappointment.
+
+Some there are who appear to walk the road of life with more
+circumspection, and make no step till they think themselves secure from
+the hazard of a precipice, when neither pleasure nor profit can tempt
+them from the beaten path; who refuse to climb lest they should fall, or
+to run lest they should stumble, and move slowly forward without any
+compliance with those passions by which the heady and vehement are
+seduced and betrayed.
+
+Yet even the timorous prudence of this judicious class is far from
+exempting them from the dominion of chance, a subtle and insidious
+power, who will intrude upon privacy and embarrass caution. No course of
+life is so prescribed and limited, but that many actions must result
+from arbitrary election. Every one must form the general plan of his
+conduct by his own reflections; he must resolve whether he will
+endeavour at riches or at content; whether he will exercise private or
+publick virtues; whether he will labour for the general benefit of
+mankind, or contract his beneficence to his family and dependants.
+
+This question has long exercised the schools of philosophy, but remains
+yet undecided; and what hope is there that a young man, unacquainted
+with the arguments on either side, should determine his own destiny
+otherwise than by chance?
+
+When chance has given him a partner of his bed, whom he prefers to all
+other women, without any proof of superior desert, chance must again
+direct him in the education of his children; for, who was ever able to
+convince himself by arguments, that he had chosen for his son that mode
+of instruction to which his understanding was best adapted, or by which
+he would most easily be made wise or virtuous?
+
+Whoever shall inquire by what motives he was determined on these
+important occasions, will find them such as his pride will scarcely
+suffer him to confess; some sudden ardour of desire, some uncertain
+glimpse of advantage, some petty competition, some inaccurate
+conclusion, or some example implicitly reverenced. Such are often the
+first causes of our resolves; for it is necessary to act, but impossible
+to know the consequences of action, or to discuss all the reasons which
+offer themselves on every part to inquisitiveness and solicitude.
+
+Since life itself is uncertain, nothing which has life for its basis can
+boast much stability. Yet this is but a small part of our perplexity. We
+set out on a tempestuous sea in quest of some port, where we expect to
+find rest, but where we are not sure of admission, we are not only in
+danger of sinking in the way, but of being misled by meteors mistaken
+for stars, of being driven from our course by the changes of the wind,
+and of losing it by unskilful steerage; yet it sometimes happens, that
+cross winds blow us to a safer coast, that meteors draw us aside from
+whirlpools, and that negligence or errour contributes to our escape from
+mischiefs to which a direct course would have exposed us. Of those that,
+by precipitate conclusions, involve themselves in calamities without
+guilt, very few, however they may reproach themselves, can be certain
+that other measures would have been more successful.
+
+In this state of universal uncertainty, where a thousand dangers hover
+about us, and none can tell whether the good that he pursues is not evil
+in disguise, or whether the next step will lead him to safety or
+destruction, nothing can afford any rational tranquillity, but the
+conviction that, however we amuse ourselves with unideal sounds, nothing
+in reality is governed by chance, but that the universe is under the
+perpetual superintendance of Him who created it; that our being is in
+the hands of omnipotent Goodness, by whom what appears casual to us, is
+directed for ends ultimately kind and merciful; and that nothing can
+finally hurt him who debars not himself from the Divine favour.
+
+
+
+No. 185. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1751.
+
+ _At vindicta bonum vita jucundius ipsa,
+ Nempe hoc indocti.--
+ Chrysippus non dicet idem, nec mite Thaletis
+ Ingenium, dulcique senex vicinus Hymetto,
+ Qui partem adceptae saeva inter vincla Cicutae
+ Adcusatori nollet dare.--
+ --Quippe minuti
+ Semper et infirmi est animi exiguique voluptas
+ Ultio_. JUV. Sat. xiii. 180.
+
+ _But O! revenge is sweet_.
+ Thus think the crowd; who, eager to engage,
+ Take quickly fire, and kindle into rage.
+ Not so mild Thales nor Chrysippus thought,
+ Nor that good man, who drank the poisonous draught.
+ With mind serene; and could not wish to see
+ His vile accuser drink as deep as he:
+ Exalted Socrates! divinely brave!
+ Injur'd he fell, and dying he forgave!
+ Too noble for revenge; which still we find
+ The weakest frailty of a feeble mind. DRYDEN.
+
+No vicious dispositions of the mind more obstinately resist both the
+counsels of philosophy and the injunctions of religion, than those which
+are complicated with an opinion of dignity; and which we cannot dismiss
+without leaving in the hands of opposition some advantage iniquitously
+obtained, or suffering from our own prejudices some imputation of
+pusillanimity.
+
+For this reason scarcely any law of our Redeemer is more openly
+transgressed, or more industriously evaded, than that by which he
+commands his followers to forgive injuries, and prohibits, under the
+sanction of eternal misery, the gratification of the desire which every
+man feels to return pain upon him that inflicts it. Many who could have
+conquered their anger, are unable to combat pride, and pursue offences
+to extremity of vengeance, lest they should be insulted by the triumph
+of an enemy.
+
+But certainly no precept could better become him, at whose birth _peace_
+was proclaimed _to the earth_. For, what would so soon destroy all the
+order of society, and deform life with violence and ravage, as a
+permission to every one to judge his own cause, and to apportion his own
+recompense for imagined injuries?
+
+It is difficult for a man of the strictest justice not to favour himself
+too much, in the calmest moments of solitary meditation. Every one
+wishes for the distinctions for which thousands are wishing at the same
+time, in their own opinion, with better claims. He that, when his reason
+operates in its full force, can thus, by the mere prevalence of
+self-love, prefer himself to his fellow-beings, is very unlikely to
+judge equitably when his passions are agitated by a sense of wrong, and
+his attention wholly engrossed by pain, interest, or danger. Whoever
+arrogates, to himself the right of vengeance, shews how little he is
+qualified to decide his own claims, since he certainly demands what he
+would think unfit to be granted to another.
+
+Nothing is more apparent than that, however injured, or however
+provoked, some must at last be contented to forgive. For it can never be
+hoped, that he who first commits an injury, will contentedly acquiesce
+in the penalty required: the same haughtiness of contempt, or vehemence
+of desire, that prompt the act of injustice, will more strongly incite
+its justification; and resentment can never so exactly balance the
+punishment with the fault, but there will remain an overplus of
+vengeance which even he who condemns his first action will think himself
+entitled to retaliate. What then can ensue but a continual exacerbation
+of hatred, an unextinguishable feud, an incessant reciprocation of
+mischief, a mutual vigilance to entrap, and eagerness to destroy.
+
+Since then the imaginary right of vengeance must be at last remitted,
+because it is impossible to live in perpetual hostility, and equally
+impossible that of two enemies, either should first think himself
+obliged by justice to submission, it is surely eligible to forgive
+early. Every passion is more easily subdued before it has been long
+accustomed to possession of the heart; every idea is obliterated with
+less difficulty, as it has been more slightly impressed, and less
+frequently renewed. He who has often brooded over his wrongs, pleased
+himself with schemes of malignity, and glutted his pride with the
+fancied supplications of humbled enmity, will not easily open his bosom
+to amity and reconciliation, or indulge the gentle sentiments of
+benevolence and peace.
+
+It is easiest to forgive, while there is yet little to be forgiven. A
+single injury may be soon dismissed from the memory; but a long
+succession of ill offices by degrees associates itself with every idea;
+a long contest involves so many circumstances, that every place and
+action will recall it to the mind, and fresh remembrance of vexation
+must still enkindle rage, and irritate revenge.
+
+A wise man will make haste to forgive, because he knows the true value
+of time, and will not suffer it to pass away in unnecessary pain. He
+that willingly suffers the corrosions of inveterate hatred, and gives up
+his days and nights to the gloom of malice, and perturbations of
+stratagem, cannot surely be said to consult his ease. Resentment is an
+union of sorrow with malignity, a combination of a passion which all
+endeavour to avoid, with a passion which all concur to detest. The man
+who retires to meditate mischief, and to exasperate his own rage; whose
+thoughts are employed only on means of distress and contrivances of
+ruin; whose mind never pauses from the remembrance of his own
+sufferings, but to indulge some hope of enjoying the calamities of
+another, may justly be numbered among the most miserable of human
+beings, among those who are guilty without reward, who have neither the
+gladness of prosperity, nor the calm of innocence.
+
+Whoever considers the weakness both of himself and others, will not long
+want persuasives to forgiveness. We know not to what degree of malignity
+any injury is to be imputed; or how much its guilt, if we were to
+inspect the mind of him that committed it, would be extenuated by
+mistake, precipitance, or negligence; we cannot be certain how much more
+we feel than was intended to be inflicted, or how much we increase the
+mischief to ourselves by voluntary aggravations. We may charge to design
+the effects of accident; we may think the blow violent only because we
+have made ourselves delicate and tender; we are on every side in danger
+of errour and of guilt; which we are certain to avoid only by speedy
+forgiveness.
+
+From this pacifick and harmless temper, thus propitious to others and
+ourselves, to domestick tranquillity and to social happiness, no man is
+withheld but by pride, by the fear of being insulted by his adversary,
+or despised by the world.
+
+It may be laid down as an unfailing and universal axiom, that "all pride
+is abject and mean." It is always an ignorant, lazy, or cowardly
+acquiescence in a false appearance of excellence, and proceeds not from
+consciousness of our attainments, but insensibility of our wants.
+
+Nothing can be great which is not right. Nothing which reason condemns
+can be suitable to the dignity of the human mind. To be driven by
+external motives from the path which our own heart approves, to give way
+to any thing but conviction, to suffer the opinion of others to rule our
+choice, or overpower our resolves, is to submit tamely to the lowest and
+most ignominious slavery, and to resign the right of directing our own
+lives.
+
+The utmost excellence at which humanity can arrive, is a constant and
+determinate pursuit of virtue, without regard to present dangers or
+advantage; a continual reference of every action to the divine will; an
+habitual appeal to everlasting justice; and an unvaried elevation of the
+intellectual eye to the reward which perseverance only can obtain. But
+that pride which many, who presume to boast of generous sentiments,
+allow to regulate their measures, has nothing nobler in view than the
+approbation of men, of beings whose superiority we are under no
+obligation to acknowledge, and who, when we have courted them with the
+utmost assiduity, can confer no valuable or permanent reward; of beings
+who ignorantly judge of what they do not understand, or partially
+determine what they never have examined; and whose sentence is therefore
+of no weight till it has received the ratification of our own
+conscience.
+
+He that can descend to bribe suffrages like these, at the price of his
+innocence; he that can suffer the delight of such acclamations to
+withhold his attention from the commands of the universal Sovereign, has
+little reason to congratulate himself upon the greatness of his mind;
+whenever he awakes to seriousness and reflection, he must become
+despicable in his own eyes, and shrink with shame from the remembrance
+of his cowardice and folly.
+
+Of him that hopes to be forgiven, it is indispensably required that he
+forgive. It is therefore superfluous to urge any other motive. On this
+great duty eternity is suspended, and to him that refuses to practise
+it, the Throne of mercy is inaccessible, and the Saviour of the world
+has been born in vain.
+
+
+
+No. 186. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1751.
+
+ _Pone me, pigris ubi nulla campis
+ Arbor aestica recreatur aura--
+ Dulce ridentem Lalagen amabo,
+ Dulce loquentem_. HOR. Lib. i. Ode xxii. 17.
+
+ Place me where never summer breeze
+ Unbinds the glebe, or warms the trees;
+ Where ever lowering clouds appear,
+ And angry Jove deforms th' inclement year:
+ Love and the nymph shall charm my toils,
+ The nymph, who sweetly speaks and sweetly smiles. FRANCIS.
+
+Of the happiness and misery of our present state, part arises from our
+sensations, and part from our opinions; part is distributed by nature,
+and part is in a great measure apportioned by ourselves. Positive
+pleasure we cannot always obtain, and positive pain we often cannot
+remove. No man can give to his own plantations the fragrance of the
+Indian groves; nor will any precepts of philosophy enable him to
+withdraw his attention from wounds or diseases. But the negative
+infelicity which proceeds, not from the pressure of sufferings, but the
+absence of enjoyments, will always yield to the remedies of reason.
+
+One of the great arts of escaping superfluous uneasiness, is to free our
+minds from the habit of comparing our condition with that of others on
+whom the blessings of life are more bountifully bestowed, or with
+imaginary states of delight and security, perhaps unattainable by
+mortals. Few are placed in a situation so gloomy and distressful, as not
+to see every day beings yet more forlorn and miserable, from whom they
+may learn to rejoice in their own lot.
+
+No inconvenience is less superable by art or diligence than the
+inclemency of climates, and therefore none affords more proper exercise
+for this philosophical abstraction. A native of England, pinched with
+the frosts of December, may lessen his affection for his own country by
+suffering his imagination to wander in the vales of Asia, and sport
+among the woods that are always green, and streams that always murmur;
+but if he turns his thought towards the polar regions, and considers the
+nations to whom a great portion of the year is darkness, and who are
+condemned to pass weeks and months amidst mountains of snow, he will
+soon recover his tranquillity, and, while he stirs his fire, or throws
+his cloak about him, reflect how much he owes to Providence, that he is
+not placed in Greenland or Siberia.
+
+The barrenness of the earth and the severity of the skies in these
+dreary countries, are such as might be expected to confine the mind
+wholly to the contemplation of necessity and distress, so that the care
+of escaping death from cold and hunger, should leave no room for those
+passions which, in lands of plenty, influence conduct, or diversify
+characters; the summer should be spent only in providing for the winter,
+and the winter in longing for the summer.
+
+Yet learned curiosity is known to have found its way into these abodes
+of poverty and gloom: Lapland and Iceland have their historians, their
+criticks, and their poets; and love, that extends his dominion wherever
+humanity can be found, perhaps exerts the same power in the
+Greenlander's hut as in the palaces of eastern monarchs.
+
+In one of the large caves to which the families of Greenland retire
+together, to pass the cold months, and which may be termed their
+villages or cities, a youth and maid, who came from different parts of
+the country, were so much distinguished for their beauty, that they were
+called by the rest of the inhabitants Anningait and Ajut, from a
+supposed resemblance to their ancestors of the same names, who had been
+transformed of old into the sun and moon.
+
+Anningait for some time heard the praises of Ajut with little emotion,
+but at last, by frequent interviews, became sensible of her charms, and
+first made a discovery of his affection, by inviting her with her
+parents to a feast, where he placed before Ajut the tail of a whale.
+Ajut seemed not much delighted by this gallantry; yet, however, from
+that time was observed rarely to appear, but in a vest made of the skin
+of a white deer; she used frequently to renew the black dye upon her
+hands and forehead, to adorn her sleeves with coral and shells, and to
+braid her hair with great exactness.
+
+The elegance of her dress, and the judicious disposition of her
+ornaments, had such an effect upon Anningait, that he could no longer be
+restrained from a declaration of his love. He therefore composed a poem
+in her praise, in which, among other heroick and tender sentiments, he
+protested, that "she was beautiful as the vernal willow, and fragrant as
+the thyme upon the mountains; that her fingers were white as the teeth
+of the morse, and her smile grateful as the dissolution of the ice; that
+he would pursue her, though she should pass the snows of the midland
+cliffs, or seek shelter in the caves of the eastern cannibals: that he
+would tear her from the embraces of the genius of the rocks, snatch her
+from the paws of Amarock, and rescue her from the ravine of Hafgufa." He
+concluded with a wish, that "whoever shall attempt to hinder his union
+with Ajut, might be buried without his bow, and that, in the land of
+souls, his skull might serve for no other use than to catch the
+droppings of the starry lamps."
+
+This ode being universally applauded, it was expected that Ajut would
+soon yield to such fervour and accomplishments; but Ajut, with the
+natural haughtiness of beauty, expected all the forms of courtship; and
+before she would confess herself conquered, the sun returned, the ice
+broke, and the season of labour called all to their employments.
+
+Anningait and Ajut for a time always went out in the same boat, and
+divided whatever was caught. Anningait, in the sight of his mistress,
+lost no opportunity of signalizing his courage: he attacked the
+sea-horses on the ice; pursued the seals into the water, and leaped upon
+the back of the whale, while he was yet struggling with the remains of
+life. Nor was his diligence less to accumulate all that could be
+necessary to make winter comfortable: he dried the roe of fishes and the
+flesh of seals; he entrapped deer and foxes, and dressed their skins to
+adorn his bride; he feasted her with eggs from the rocks, and strewed her
+tent with flowers.
+
+It happened that a tempest drove the fish to a distant part of the
+coast, before Anningait had completed his store; he therefore entreated
+Ajut, that she would at last grant him her hand, and accompany him to
+that part of the country whither he was now summoned by necessity. Ajut
+thought him not yet entitled to such condescension, but proposed, as a
+trial of his constancy, that he should return at the end of summer to
+the cavern where their acquaintance commenced, and there expect the
+reward of his assiduities. "O virgin, beautiful as the sun shining on
+the water, consider," said Anningait, "what thou hast required. How
+easily may my return be precluded by a sudden frost or unexpected fogs!
+then must the night be passed without my Ajut. We live not, my fair, in
+those fabled countries, which lying strangers so wantonly describe;
+where the whole year is divided into short days and nights; where the
+same habitation serves for summer and winter; where they raise houses in
+rows above the ground, dwell together from year to year, with flocks of
+tame animals grazing in the fields about them; can travel at any time
+from one place to another, through ways inclosed with trees, or over
+walls raised upon the inland waters; and direct their course through
+wide countries by the sight of green hills or scattered buildings. Even
+in summer we have no means of crossing the mountains, whose snows are
+never dissolved; nor can remove to any distant residence, but in our
+boats coasting the bays. Consider, Ajut, a few summer-days, and a few
+winter-nights, and the life of man is at an end. Night is the time of
+ease and festivity, of revels and gaiety; but what will be the flaming
+lamp, the delicious seal, or the soft oil, without the smile of Ajut?"
+
+The eloquence of Anningait was vain; the maid continued inexorable, and
+they parted with ardent promises to meet again before the night of
+winter.
+
+
+
+No. 187. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1751.
+
+ _Non illum nostri possunt mutare labores;
+ Non si frigoribus mediis Hebrunique bibamus,
+ Sithoniasque nives hyemis subeamus aquosae:--
+ Ominia vincit amor. Vinc. Ec. x. 64_.
+
+ Love alters not for us his hard decrees,
+ Not though beneath the Thracian clime we freeze,
+ Or the mild bliss of temperate skies forego,
+ And in raid winter tread Sithonian snow:--
+ Love conquers all.--DRYDEN.
+
+Anningait, however discomposed by the dilatory coyness of Ajut, was yet
+resolved to omit no tokens of amorous respect; and therefore presented
+her at his departure with the skins of seven white fawns, of five swans
+and eleven seals, with three marble lamps, ten vessels of seal oil, and
+a large kettle of brass, which he had purchased from a ship, at the
+price of half a whale, and two horns of sea-unicorns.
+
+Ajut was so much affected by the fondness of her lover, or so much
+overpowered by his magnificence, that she followed him to the sea-side;
+and, when she saw him enter the boat, wished aloud, that he might return
+with plenty of skins and oil; that neither the mermaids might snatch him
+into the deeps, nor the spirits of the rocks confine him in their
+caverns.
+
+She stood a while to gaze upon the departing vessel, and then returning
+to her hut, silent and dejected, laid aside, from that hour, her white
+deer skin, suffered her hair to spread unbraided on her shoulders, and
+forbore to mix in the dances of the maidens. She endeavoured to divert
+her thoughts, by continual application to feminine employments, gathered
+moss for the winter lamps, and dried grass to line the boots of
+Anningait. Of the skins which he had bestowed upon her, she made a
+fishing-coat, a small boat, and tent, all of exquisite manufacture; and
+while she was thus busied, solaced her labours with a song, in which she
+prayed, "that her lover might have hands stronger than the paws of the
+bear, and feet swifter than the feet of the reindeer; that his dart
+might never err, and that his boat might never leak; that he might never
+stumble on the ice, nor faint in the water; that the seal might rush on
+his harpoon, and the wounded whale might dash the waves in vain."
+
+The large boats in which the Greenlanders transport their families, are
+always rowed by women; for a man will not debase himself by work, which
+requires neither skill nor courage. Anningait was therefore exposed by
+idleness to the ravages of passion. He went thrice to the stern of the
+boat, with an intent to leap into the water, and swim back to his
+mistress; but, recollecting the misery which they must endure in the
+winter, without oil for the lamp, or skins for the bed, he resolved to
+employ the weeks of absence in provision for a night of plenty and
+felicity. He then composed his emotions as he could, and expressed, in
+wild numbers and uncouth images, his hopes, his sorrows, and his fears.
+"O life!" says he, "frail and uncertain! where shall wretched man find
+thy resemblance, but in ice floating on the ocean? It towers on high, it
+sparkles from afar, while the storms drive and the waters beat it, the
+sun melts it above, and the rocks shatter it below. What art thou,
+deceitful pleasure! but a sudden blaze streaming from the north, which
+plays a moment on the eye, mocks the traveller with the hopes of light,
+and then vanishes for ever? What, love, art thou but a whirlpool, which
+we approach without knowledge of our danger, drawn on by imperceptible
+degrees, till we have lost all power of resistance and escape? Till I
+fixed my eyes on the graces of Ajut, while I had not yet called her to
+the banquet, I was careless as the sleeping morse, was merry as the
+singers in the stars. Why, Ajut, did I gaze upon thy graces? why, my
+fair, did I call thee to the banquet? Yet, be faithful, my love,
+remember Anningait, and meet my return with the smile of virginity. I
+will chase the deer, I will subdue the whale, resistless as the frost of
+darkness, and unwearied as the summer sun. In a few weeks I shall return
+prosperous and wealthy; then shall the roe-fish and the porpoise feast
+thy kindred; the fox and hare shall cover thy couch; the tough hide of
+the seal shall shelter thee from cold; and the fat of the whale
+illuminate thy dwelling."
+
+Anningait having with these sentiments consoled his grief, and animated
+his industry, found that they had now coasted the headland, and saw the
+whales spouting at a distance. He therefore placed himself in his
+fishing-boat, called his associates to their several employments, plied
+his oar and harpoon with incredible courage and dexterity; and, by
+dividing his time between the chace and fishery, suspended the miseries
+of absence and suspicion.
+
+Ajut, in the mean time, notwithstanding her neglected dress, happened,
+as she was drying some skins in the sun, to catch the eye of Norngsuk,
+on his return from hunting. Norngsuk was of birth truly illustrious. His
+mother had died in child-birth, and his father, the most expert fisher
+of Greenland, had perished by too close pursuit of the whale. His
+dignity was equalled by his riches; he was master of four men's and two
+women's boats, had ninety tubs of oil in his winter habitation, and
+five-and-twenty seals buried in the snow against the season of darkness.
+When he saw the beauty of Ajut, he immediately threw over her the skin
+of a deer that he had taken, and soon after presented her with a branch
+of coral. Ajut refused his gifts, and determined to admit no lover in
+the place of Anningait.
+
+Norngsuk, thus rejected, had recourse to stratagem. He knew that Ajut
+would consult an Angekkok, or diviner, concerning the fate of her lover,
+and the felicity of her future life. He therefore applied himself to the
+most celebrated Angekkok of that part of the country, and, by a present
+of two seals and a marble kettle, obtained a promise, that when Ajut
+should consult him, he would declare that her lover was in the land of
+souls. Ajut, in a short time, brought him a coat made by herself, and
+inquired what events were to befall her, with assurances of a much
+larger reward at the return of Anningait, if the prediction should
+flatter her desires. The Angekkok knew the way to riches, and foretold
+that Anningait, having already caught two whales, would soon return home
+with a large boat laden with provisions.
+
+This prognostication she was ordered to keep secret; and Norngsuk
+depending upon his artifice, renewed his addresses with greater
+confidence; but finding his suit still unsuccessful, applied himself to
+her parents with gifts and promises. The wealth of Greenland is too
+powerful for the virtue of a Greenlander; they forgot the merit and the
+presents of Anningait, and decreed Ajut to the embraces of Norngsuk. She
+entreated; she remonstrated; she wept, and raved; but finding riches
+irresistible, fled away into the uplands, and lived in a cave upon such
+berries as she could gather, and the birds or hares which she had the
+fortune to ensnare, taking care, at an hour when she was not likely to
+be found, to view the sea every day, that her lover might not miss her
+at his return.
+
+At last she saw the great boat in which Anningait had departed, stealing
+slow and heavy laden along the coast. She ran with all the impatience of
+affection to catch her lover in her arms, and relate her constancy and
+sufferings. When the company reached the land, they informed her that
+Anningait, after the fishery was ended, being unable to support the slow
+passage of the vessel of carriage, had set out before them in his
+fishing-boat, and they expected at their arrival to have found him on
+shore.
+
+Ajut, distracted at this intelligence, was about to fly into the hills,
+without knowing why, though she was now in the hands of her parents, who
+forced her back to their own hut, and endeavoured to comfort her; but
+when at last they retired to rest, Ajut went down to the beach; where,
+finding a fishing-boat, she entered it without hesitation, and telling
+those who wondered at her rashness, that she was going in search of
+Anningait, rowed away with great swiftness, and was seen no more.
+
+The fate of these lovers gave occasion to various fictions and
+conjectures. Some are of opinion, that they were changed into stars;
+others imagine, that Anningait was seized in his passage by the genius
+of the rocks, and that Ajut was transformed into a mermaid, and still
+continues to seek her lover in the deserts of the sea. But the general
+persuasion is, that they are both in that part of the land of souls
+where the sun never sets, where oil is always fresh, and provisions
+always warm. The virgins sometimes throw a thimble and a needle into the
+bay, from which the hapless maid departed; and when a Greenlander would
+praise any couple for virtuous affection, he declares that they love
+like Anningait and Ajut.
+
+
+
+No. 188. SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 1751.
+
+ --_Si te colo, Sexte, non amabo_. MART. Lib. ii. Ep. lv. 33.
+
+ The more I honour thee, the less I love.
+
+None of the desires dictated by vanity is more general, or less
+blamable, than that of being distinguished for the arts of conversation.
+Other accomplishments may be possessed without opportunity of exerting
+them, or wanted without danger that the defect can often be remarked;
+but as no man can live, otherwise than in an hermitage, without hourly
+pleasure or vexation, from the fondness or neglect of those about him,
+the faculty of giving pleasure is of continual use. Few are more
+frequently envied than those who have the power of forcing attention
+wherever they come, whose entrance is considered as a promise of
+felicity, and whose departure is lamented, like the recess of the sun
+from northern climates, as a privation of all that enlivens fancy, or
+inspirits gaiety.
+
+It is apparent, that to excellence in this valuable art, some peculiar
+qualifications are necessary; for every one's experience will inform
+him, that the pleasure which men are able to give in conversation, holds
+no stated proportion to their knowledge or their virtue. Many find their
+way to the tables and the parties of those who never consider them as of
+the least importance in any other place; we have all, at one time or
+other, been content to love those whom we could not esteem, and been
+persuaded to try the dangerous experiment of admitting him for a
+companion, whom we knew to be too ignorant for a counsellor, and too
+treacherous for a friend.
+
+I question whether some abatement of character is not necessary to
+general acceptance. Few spend their time with much satisfaction under
+the eye of uncontestable superiority; and therefore, among those whose
+presence is courted at assemblies of jollity, there are seldom found men
+eminently distinguished for powers or acquisitions. The wit whose
+vivacity condemns slower tongues to silence, the scholar whose knowledge
+allows no man to fancy that he instructs him, the critick who suffers no
+fallacy to pass undetected, and the reasoner who condemns the idle to
+thought, and the negligent to attention, are generally praised and
+feared, reverenced and avoided.
+
+He that would please must rarely aim at such excellence as depresses his
+hearers in their own opinion, or debars them from the hope of
+contributing reciprocally to the entertainment of the company.
+Merriment, extorted by sallies of imagination, sprightliness of remark,
+or quickness of reply, is too often what the Latins call, the Sardinian
+laughter, a distortion of the face without gladness of heart.
+
+For this reason, no style of conversation is more extensively acceptable
+than the narrative. He who has stored his memory with slight anecdotes,
+private incidents, and personal peculiarities, seldom fails to find his
+audience favourable. Almost every man listens with eagerness to
+contemporary history; for almost every man has some real or imaginary
+connexion with a celebrated character, some desire to advance or oppose
+a rising name. Vanity often co-operates with curiosity. He that is a
+hearer in one place, qualifies himself to become a speaker in another;
+for though he cannot comprehend a series of argument, or transport the
+volatile spirit of wit without evaporation, he yet thinks himself able
+to treasure up the various incidents of a story, and please his hopes
+with the information which he shall give to some inferior society.
+
+Narratives are for the most part heard without envy, because they are
+not supposed to imply any intellectual qualities above the common rate.
+To be acquainted with facts not yet echoed by plebeian mouths, may
+happen to one man as well as to another; and to relate them when they
+are known, has in appearance so little difficulty, that every one
+concludes himself equal to the task.
+
+But it is not easy, and in some situations of life not possible, to
+accumulate such a stock of materials as may support the expense of
+continual narration; and it frequently happens, that they who attempt
+this method of ingratiating themselves, please only at the first
+interview; and, for want of new supplies of intelligence, wear out their
+stories by continual repetition.
+
+There would be, therefore, little hope of obtaining the praise of a good
+companion, were it not to be gained by more compendious methods; but
+such is the kindness of mankind to all, except those who aspire to real
+merit and rational dignity, that every understanding may find some way
+to excite benevolence; and whoever is not envied may learn the art of
+procuring love. We are willing to be pleased, but are not willing to
+admire: we favour the mirth or officiousness that solicits our regard,
+but oppose the worth or spirit that enforces it.
+
+The first place among those that please, because they desire only to
+please, is due to the _merry fellow_, whose laugh is loud, and whose
+voice is strong; who is ready to echo every jest with obstreperous
+approbation, and countenance every frolick with vociferations of
+applause. It is not necessary to a merry fellow to have in himself any
+fund of jocularity, or force of conception; it is sufficient that he
+always appears in the highest exaltation of gladness, for the greater
+part of mankind are gay or serious by infection, and follow without
+resistance the attraction of example.
+
+Next to the merry fellow is the _good-natured man_, a being generally
+without benevolence, or any other virtue, than such as indolence and
+insensibility confer. The characteristick of a good-natured man is to
+bear a joke; to sit unmoved and unaffected amidst noise and turbulence,
+profaneness and obscenity; to hear every tale without contradiction; to
+endure insult without reply; and to follow the stream of folly, whatever
+course it shall happen to take. The good-natured man is commonly the
+darling of the petty wits, with whom they exercise themselves in the
+rudiments of raillery; for he never takes advantage of failings, nor
+disconcerts a puny satirist with unexpected sarcasms; but while the
+glass continues to circulate, contentedly bears the expense of an
+uninterrupted laughter, and retires rejoicing at his own importance.
+
+The _modest man_ is a companion of a yet lower rank, whose only power of
+giving pleasure is not to interrupt it. The modest man satisfies himself
+with peaceful silence, which all his companions are candid enough to
+consider as proceeding not from inability to speak, but willingness to
+hear.
+
+Many, without being able to attain any general character of excellence,
+have some single art of entertainment which serves them as a passport
+through the world. One I have known for fifteen years the darling of a
+weekly club, because every night, precisely at eleven, he begins his
+favourite song, and during the vocal performance, by corresponding
+motions of his hand, chalks out a giant upon the wall. Another has
+endeared himself to a long succession of acquaintances by sitting among
+them with his wig reversed; another by contriving to smut the nose of
+any stranger who was to be initiated in the club; another by purring
+like a cat, and then pretending to be frighted; and another by yelping
+like a hound, and calling to the drawers to drive out the dog[k].
+
+Such are the arts by which cheerfulness is promoted, and sometimes
+friendship established; arts, which those who despise them should not
+rigorously blame, except when they are practised at the expense of
+innocence; for it is always necessary to be loved, but not always
+necessary to be reverenced.
+
+
+
+No. 189. TUESDAY, JANUARY 7, 1752.
+
+ _Quod tam grande Sophos clamat tibi turba togata;
+ Non tu, Pomponi; caena diserta tua est_. MART. Lib. vi. Ep. xlviii.
+
+ Resounding plaudits though the crowd have rung;
+ Thy treat is eloquent, and not thy tongue. F. LEWIS.
+
+The world scarcely affords opportunities of making any
+observation more frequently, than on false claims to commendation.
+Almost every man wastes part of his life in attempts to display
+qualities which he does not possess, and to gain applause which he
+cannot keep; so that scarcely can two persons casually meet, but one is
+offended or diverted by the ostentation of the other.
+
+Of these pretenders it is fit to distinguish those who endeavour to
+deceive from them who are deceived; those who by designed impostures
+promote their interest, or gratify their pride, from them who mean only
+to force into regard their latent excellencies and neglected virtues;
+who believe themselves qualified to instruct or please, and therefore
+invite the notice of mankind.
+
+The artful and fraudulent usurpers of distinction deserve greater
+severities than ridicule and contempt, since they are seldom content
+with empty praise, but are instigated by passions more pernicious than
+vanity. They consider the reputation which they endeavour to establish
+as necessary to the accomplishment of some subsequent design, and value
+praise only as it may conduce to the success of avarice or ambition.
+
+The commercial world is very frequently put into confusion by the
+bankruptcy of merchants, that assumed the splendour of wealth only to
+obtain the privilege of trading with the stock of other men, and of
+contracting debts which nothing but lucky casualties could enable them
+to pay; till after having supported their appearance a while by
+tumultuous magnificence of boundless traffick, they sink at once, and
+drag down into poverty those whom their equipages had induced to trust
+them.
+
+Among wretches that place their happiness in the favour of the great, of
+beings whom only high titles or large estates set above themselves,
+nothing is more common than to boast of confidence which they do not
+enjoy; to sell promises which they know their interest unable to
+perform; and to reimburse the tribute which they pay to an imperious
+master, from the contributions of meaner dependants, whom they can amuse
+with tales of their influence, and hopes of their solicitation.
+
+Even among some, too thoughtless and volatile for avarice or ambition,
+may be found a species of falsehood more detestable than the levee or
+exchange can shew. There are men that boast of debaucheries, of which
+they never had address to be guilty; ruin, by lewd tales, the characters
+of women to whom they are scarcely known, or by whom they have been
+rejected; destroy in a drunken frolick the happiness of families; blast
+the bloom of beauty, and intercept the reward of virtue.
+
+Other artifices of falsehood, though utterly unworthy of an ingenuous
+mind, are not yet to be ranked with flagitious enormities, nor is it
+necessary to incite sanguinary justice against them, since they may be
+adequately punished by detection and laughter. The traveller who
+describes cities which he has never seen; the squire, who, at his return
+from London, tells of his intimacy with nobles to whom he has only bowed
+in the park or coffee-house; the author who entertains his admirers with
+stories of the assistance which he gives to wits of a higher rank; the
+city dame who talks of her visits at great houses, where she happens to
+know the cook-maid, are surely such harmless animals as truth herself
+may be content to despise without desiring to hurt them.
+
+But of the multitudes who struggle in vain for distinction, and display
+their own merits only to feel more acutely the sting of neglect, a great
+part are wholly innocent of deceit, and are betrayed, by infatuation and
+credulity, to that scorn with which the universal love of praise incites
+us all to drive feeble competitors out of our way.
+
+Few men survey themselves with so much severity, as not to admit
+prejudices in their own favour, which an artful flatterer may gradually
+strengthen, till wishes for a particular qualification are improved to
+hopes of attainment, and hopes of attainment to belief of possession.
+Such flatterers every one will find, who has power to reward their
+assiduities. Wherever there is wealth there will be dependance and
+expectation, and wherever there is dependance, there will be an
+emulation of servility.
+
+Many of the follies which provoke general censure, are the effects of
+such vanity as, however it might have wantoned in the imagination, would
+scarcely have dared the publick eye, had it not been animated and
+emboldened by flattery. Whatever difficulty there may be in the
+knowledge of ourselves, scarcely any one fails to suspect his own
+imperfections, till he is elevated by others to confidence. We are
+almost all naturally modest and timorous; but fear and shame are uneasy
+sensations, and whosoever helps to remove them is received with
+kindness.
+
+Turpicula was the heiress of a large estate, and having lost her mother
+in her infancy, was committed to a governess, whom misfortunes had
+reduced to suppleness and humility. The fondness of Turpicula's father
+would not suffer him to trust her at a publick school, but he hired
+domestick teachers, and bestowed on her all the accomplishments that
+wealth could purchase. But how many things are necessary to happiness
+which money cannot obtain! Thus secluded from all with whom she might
+converse on terms of equality, she heard none of those intimations of
+her defects, which envy, petulance, or anger, produce among children,
+where they are not afraid of telling what they think.
+
+Turpicula saw nothing but obsequiousness, and heard nothing but
+commendations. None are so little acquainted with the heart, as not to
+know that woman's first wish is to be handsome, and that consequently
+the readiest method of obtaining her kindness is to praise her beauty.
+Turpicula had a distorted shape and a dark complexion; yet, when the
+impudence of adulation had ventured to tell her of the commanding
+dignity of her motion, and the soft enchantment of her smile, she was
+easily convinced, that she was the delight or torment of every eye, and
+that all who gazed upon her felt the fire of envy or love. She therefore
+neglected the culture of an understanding which might have supplied the
+defects of her form, and applied all her care to the decoration of her
+person; for she considered that more could judge of beauty than of wit,
+and was, like the rest of human beings, in haste to be admired. The
+desire of conquest naturally led her to the lists in which beauty
+signalizes her power. She glittered at court, fluttered in the park, and
+talked aloud in the front box; but after a thousand experiments of her
+charms, was at last convinced that she had been flattered, and that her
+glass was honester than her maid.
+
+[Footnote k: Mrs. Piozzi, in her Anecdotes, informs us, that the man who
+sung, and, by corresponding motions of his arm, chalked out a giant on
+the wall, was one Richardson, an attorney: the ingenious imitator of a
+cat, was one Busby, a proctor in the Commons: and the father of Dr.
+Salter, of the Charter-House, a friend of Johnson's, and a member of the
+Ivy-Lane Club, was the person who yelped like a hound, and perplexed the
+distracted waiters.--Mr. Chalmers, in his preface to the Rambler,
+observes, that the above-quoted lively writer was the only authority for
+these assignments. She is certainly far too hasty and negligent to be
+relied on, when unsupported by other testimony.--See Preface.]
+
+
+
+No. 190. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1752.
+
+ _Ploravere suis non respondere favorem
+ Speratum meritis_.--HOR. Lib. ii. Ep. i. 9.
+
+ Henry and Alfred--
+ Clos'd their long glories with a sigh, to find
+ Th' unwilling gratitude of base mankind. POPE.
+
+Among the emirs and visiers, the sons of valour and of wisdom, that
+stand at the corners of the Indian throne, to assist the counsels or
+conduct the wars of the posterity of Timur, the first place was long
+held by Morad the son of Hanuth. Morad, having signalized himself in
+many battles and sieges, was rewarded with the government of a province,
+from which the fame of his wisdom and moderation was wafted to the
+pinnacles of Agra, by the prayers of those whom his administration made
+happy. The emperour called him into his presence, and gave into his hand
+the keys of riches, and the sabre of command. The voice of Morad was
+heard from the cliffs of Taurus to the Indian ocean, every tongue
+faultered in his presence, and every eye was cast down before him.
+
+Morad lived many years in prosperity; every day increased his wealth,
+and extended his influence. The sages repeated his maxims, the captains
+of thousands waited his commands. Competition withdrew into the cavern
+of envy, and discontent trembled at his own murmurs. But human greatness
+is short and transitory, as the odour of incense in the fire. The sun
+grew weary of gilding the palaces of Morad, the clouds of sorrow
+gathered round his head, and the tempest of hatred roared about his
+dwelling.
+
+Morad saw ruin hastily approaching. The first that forsook him were his
+poets; their example was followed by all those whom he had rewarded for
+contributing to his pleasures, and only a few, whose virtue had entitled
+them to favour, were now to be seen in his hall or chambers. He felt his
+danger, and prostrated himself at the foot of the throne. His accusers
+were confident and loud, his friends stood contented with frigid
+neutrality, and the voice of truth was overborne by clamour. He was
+divested of his power, deprived of his acquisitions, and condemned to
+pass the rest of his life on his hereditary estate.
+
+Morad had been so long-accustomed to crowds and business, supplicants
+and flattery, that he knew not how to fill up his hours in solitude; he
+saw with regret the sun rise to force on his eye a new day for which he
+had no use; and envied the savage that wanders in the desert, because he
+has no time vacant from the calls of nature, but is always chasing his
+prey, or sleeping in his den.
+
+His discontent in time vitiated his constitution, and a slow disease
+seized upon him. He refused physick, neglected exercise, and lay down on
+his couch peevish and restless, rather afraid to die than desirous to
+live. His domesticks, for a time, redoubled their assiduities; but
+finding that no officiousness could soothe, nor exactness satisfy, they
+soon gave way to negligence and sloth; and he that once commanded
+nations, often languished in his chamber without an attendant.
+
+In this melancholy state, he commanded messengers to recall his eldest
+son Abouzaid from the army. Abouzaid was alarmed at the account of his
+father's sickness, and hasted by long journeys to his place of
+residence. Morad was yet living, and felt his strength return at the
+embraces of his son; then commanding him to sit down at his bedside,
+"Abouzaid," says he, "thy father has no more to hope or fear from the
+inhabitants of the earth; the cold hand of the angel of death is now
+upon him, and the voracious grave is howling for his prey. Hear,
+therefore, the precepts of ancient experience, let not my last
+instructions issue forth in vain. Thou hast seen me happy and
+calamitous, thou hast beheld my exaltation and my fall. My power is in
+the hands of my enemies, my treasures have rewarded my accusers; but my
+inheritance, the clemency of the emperour has spared, and my wisdom his
+anger could not take away. Cast thine eyes around thee; whatever thou
+beholdest will, in a few hours, be thine: apply thine ear to my
+dictates, and these possessions will promote thy happiness. Aspire not
+to public honours, enter not the palaces of kings; thy wealth will set
+thee above insult, let thy moderation keep thee below envy. Content
+thyself with private dignity, diffuse thy riches among thy friends, let
+every day extend thy beneficence, and suffer not thy heart to be at rest
+till thou art loved by all to whom thou art known. In the height of my
+power, I said to defamation, Who will hear thee? and to artifice, What
+canst thou perform? But, my son, despise not thou the malice of the
+weakest, remember that venom supplies the want of strength, and that the
+lion may perish by the puncture of an asp."
+
+Morad expired in a few hours. Abouzaid, after the months of mourning,
+determined to regulate his conduct by his father's precepts, and
+cultivate the love of mankind by every art of kindness and endearment.
+He wisely considered, that domestick happiness was first to be secured,
+and that none have so much power of doing good or hurt, as those who are
+present in the hour of negligence, hear the bursts of thoughtless
+merriment, and observe the starts of unguarded passion. He therefore
+augmented the pay of all his attendants, and requited every exertion of
+uncommon diligence by supernumerary gratuities. While he congratulated
+himself upon the fidelity and affection of his family, he was in the
+night alarmed with robbers, who, being pursued and taken, declared that
+they had been admitted by one of his servants; the servant immediately
+confessed, that he unbarred the door, because another not more worthy of
+confidence was entrusted with the keys.
+
+Abouzaid was thus convinced that a dependant could not easily be made a
+friend; and that while many were soliciting for the first rank of
+favour, all those would be alienated whom he disappointed. He therefore
+resolved to associate with a few equal companions selected from among
+the chief men of the province. With these he lived happily for a time,
+till familiarity set them free from restraint, and every man thought
+himself at liberty to indulge his own caprice, and advance his own
+opinions. They then disturbed each other with contrariety of
+inclinations, and difference of sentiments, and Abouzaid was
+necessitated to offend one party by concurrence, or both by
+indifference.
+
+He afterwards determined to avoid a close union with beings so
+discordant in their nature, and to diffuse himself in a larger circle.
+He practised the smile of universal courtesy, and invited all to his
+table, but admitted none to his retirements. Many who had been rejected
+in his choice of friendship, now refused to accept his acquaintance; and
+of those whom plenty and magnificence drew to his table, every one
+pressed forward toward intimacy, thought himself overlooked in the
+crowd, and murmured because he was not distinguished above the rest. By
+degrees all made advances, and all resented repulse. The table was then
+covered with delicacies in vain; the musick sounded in empty rooms; and
+Abouzaid was left to form in solitude some new scheme of pleasure or
+security.
+
+Resolving now to try the force of gratitude, he inquired for men of
+science, whose merit was obscured by poverty. His house was soon crowded
+with poets, sculptors, painters, and designers, who wantoned in
+unexperienced plenty, and employed their powers in celebration of their
+patron. But in a short time they forgot the distress from which they had
+been rescued, and began to consider their deliverer as a wretch of
+narrow capacity, who was growing great by works which he could not
+perform, and whom they overpaid by condescending to accept his bounties.
+Abouzaid heard their murmurs and dismissed them, and from that hour
+continued blind to colours, and deaf to panegyrick.
+
+As the sons of art departed, muttering threats of perpetual infamy,
+Abouzaid, who stood at the gate, called to him Hamet the poet. "Hamet,"
+said he, "thy ingratitude has put an end to my hopes and experiments: I
+have now learned the vanity of those labours that wish to be rewarded by
+human benevolence; I shall henceforth do good, and avoid evil, without
+respect to the opinion of men; and resolve to solicit only the
+approbation of that Being whom alone we are sure to please by
+endeavouring to please him."
+
+
+
+No. 191. TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1752.
+
+ _Cereus in vitium flecli, monitoribus asper_. HOR. Art. Poet. 163.
+
+ The youth--
+ Yielding like wax, th' impressive folly bears;
+ Rough to reproof, and slow to future cares. FRANCIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+DEAR MR. RAMBLER,
+
+I have been four days confined to my chamber by a cold, which has
+already kept me from three plays, nine sales, five shows, and six
+card-tables, and put me seventeen visits behind-hand; and the doctor
+tells my mamma, that, if I fret and cry, it will settle in my head,
+and I shall not be fit to be seen these six weeks. But, dear Mr. Rambler,
+how can I help it? At this very time Melissa is dancing with the
+prettiest gentleman;--she will breakfast with him to-morrow, and then run
+to two auctions, and hear compliments, and have presents; then she will
+be drest, and visit, and get a ticket to the play; then go to cards and
+win, and come home with two flambeaux before her chair. Dear Mr.
+Rambler, who can bear it?
+
+My aunt has just brought me a bundle of your papers for my amusement.
+She says you are a philosopher, and will teach me to moderate my
+desires, and look upon the world with indifference. But, dear sir, I do
+not wish nor intend to moderate my desires, nor can I think it proper to
+look upon the world with indifference, till the world looks with
+indifference on me. I have been forced, however, to sit this morning a
+whole quarter of an hour with your paper before my face; but just as my
+aunt came in, Phyllida had brought me a letter from Mr. Trip, which I
+put within the leaves; and read about _absence_ and _inconsolableness_,
+and _ardour_, and _irresistible passion_, and _eternal constancy_, while
+my aunt imagined that I was puzzling myself with your philosophy, and
+often cried out when she saw me look confused, "If there is any word
+that you do not understand, child, I will explain it."
+
+Dear soul! how old people that think themselves wise may be imposed
+upon! But it is fit that they should take their turn, for I am sure,
+while they can keep poor girls close in the nursery, they tyrannize over
+us in a very shameful manner, and fill our imaginations with tales of
+terrour, only to make us live in quiet subjection, and fancy that we can
+never be safe but by their protection.
+
+I have a mamma and two aunts, who have all been formerly celebrated for
+wit and beauty, and are still generally admired by those that value
+themselves upon their understanding, and love to talk of vice and
+virtue, nature and simplicity, and beauty and propriety; but if there
+was not some hope of meeting me, scarcely a creature would come near
+them that wears a fashionable coat. These ladies, Mr. Rambler, have had
+me under their government fifteen years and a half, and have all that
+time been endeavouring to deceive me by such representations of life as
+I now find not to be true; but I know not whether I ought to impute them
+to ignorance or malice, as it is possible the world may be much changed
+since they mingled in general conversation.
+
+Being desirous that I should love books, they told me, that nothing but
+knowledge could make me an agreeable companion to men of sense, or
+qualify me to distinguish the superficial glitter of vanity from the
+solid merit of understanding; and that a habit of reading would enable
+me to fill up the vacuities of life without the help of silly or
+dangerous amusements, and preserve me from the snares of idleness and
+the inroads of temptation.
+
+But their principal intention was to make me afraid of men; in which
+they succeeded so well for a time, that I durst not look in their faces,
+or be left alone with them in a parlour; for they made me fancy, that no
+man ever spoke but to deceive, or looked but to allure; that the girl
+who suffered him that had once squeezed her hand, to approach her a
+second time, was on the brink of ruin; and that she who answered a
+billet, without consulting her relations, gave love such power over her,
+that she would certainly become either poor or infamous.
+
+From the time that my leading-strings were taken off, I scarce heard any
+mention of my beauty but from the milliner, the mantua-maker, and my own
+maid; for my mamma never said more, when she heard me commended, but
+"the girl is very well," and then endeavoured to divert my attention by
+some inquiry after my needle, or my book.
+
+It is now three months since I have been suffered to pay and receive
+visits, to dance at publick assemblies, to have a place kept for me in
+the boxes, and to play at lady Racket's rout; and you may easily imagine
+what I think of those who have so long cheated me with false
+expectations, disturbed me with fictitious terrours, and concealed from
+me all that I have found to make the happiness of woman.
+
+I am so far from perceiving the usefulness or necessity of books, that
+if I had not dropped all pretensions to learning, I should have lost Mr.
+Trip, whom I once frighted into another box, by retailing some of
+Dryden's remarks upon a tragedy; for Mr. Trip declares, that he hates
+nothing like hard words, and I am sure, there is not a better partner to
+be found; his very walk is a dance. I have talked once or twice among
+ladies about principles and ideas, but they put their fans before their
+faces, and told me I was too wise for them, who for their part never
+pretended to read any thing but the play-bill, and then asked me the
+price of my best head.
+
+Those vacancies of time which are to be filled up with books I have
+never vet obtained; for, consider, Mr. Rambler, I go to bed late, and
+therefore cannot rise early; as soon as I am up, I dress for the
+gardens; then walk in the park; then always go to some sale or show, or
+entertainment at the little theatre; then must be dressed for dinner;
+then must pay my visits; then walk in the park; then hurry to the play;
+and from thence to the card-table. This is the general course of the
+day, when there happens nothing extraordinary; but sometimes I ramble
+into the country, and come back again to a ball; sometimes I am engaged
+for a whole day and part of the night. If, at any time, I can gain an
+hour by not being at home, I have so many things to do, so many orders
+to give to the milliner, so many alterations to make in my clothes, so
+many visitants' names to read over, so many invitations to accept or
+refuse, so many cards to write, and so many fashions to consider, that I
+am lost in confusion, forced at last to let in company or step into my
+chair, and leave half my affairs to the direction of my maid.
+
+This is the round of my day; and when shall I either stop my course, or
+so change it as to want a book? I suppose it cannot be imagined, that
+any of these diversions will soon be at an end. There will always be
+gardens, and a park, and auctions, and shows, and playhouses, and cards;
+visits will always be paid, and clothes always be worn; and how can I
+have time unemployed upon my hands?
+
+But I am most at a loss to guess for what purpose they related such
+tragick stories of the cruelty, perfidy, and artifices of men, who, if
+they ever were so malicious and destructive, have certainly now reformed
+their manners. I have not, since my entrance into the world, found one
+who does not profess himself devoted to my service, and ready to live or
+die as I shall command him. They are so far from intending to hurt me,
+that their only contention is, who shall be allowed most closely to
+attend, and most frequently to treat me; when different places of
+entertainment, or schemes of pleasure are mentioned, I can see the eye
+sparkle and the cheeks glow of him whose proposals obtain my
+approbation; he then leads me off in triumph, adores my condescension,
+and congratulates himself that he has lived to the hour of felicity. Are
+these, Mr. Rambler, creatures to be feared? Is it likely that an injury
+will be done me by those who can enjoy life only while I favour them
+with my presence?
+
+As little reason can I yet find to suspect them of stratagems and fraud.
+When I play at cards, they never take advantage of my mistakes, nor
+exact from me a rigorous observation of the game. Even Mr. Shuffle, a
+grave gentleman, who has daughters older than myself, plays with me so
+negligently, that I am sometimes inclined to believe he loses his money
+by design, and yet he is so fond of play, that he says, he will one day
+take me to his house in the country, that we may try by ourselves who
+can conquer. I have not yet promised him; but when the town grows a
+little empty, I shall think upon it, for I want some trinkets, like
+Letitia's, to my watch. I do not doubt my luck, but must study some
+means of amusing my relations.
+
+For all these distinctions I find myself indebted to that beauty which I
+was never suffered to hear praised, and of which, therefore, I did not
+before know the full value. The concealment was certainly an intentional
+fraud, for my aunts have eyes like other people, and I am every day
+told, that nothing but blindness can escape the influence of my charms.
+Their whole account of that world which they pretend to know so well,
+has been only one fiction entangled with another; and though the modes
+of life oblige me to continue some appearances of respect, I cannot
+think that they, who have been so clearly detected in ignorance or
+imposture, have any right to the esteem, veneration, or obedience of,
+
+Sir, Yours,
+BELLARIA.
+
+
+
+No. 192. SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1752.
+
+ [Greek:
+ Genos ouden eis Erota;
+ Sophiae, tropos pateitai;
+ Monon arguron blepousin.
+ Apoloito protos autos
+ Ho ton arguron philaesas.
+ Dia touton ou tokaees,
+ Dai touton ou tokaees;
+ Polemoi, phonoi di auton.
+ To de cheiron, ollymestha
+ Dia touton oi philountes.] ANACREON. [Greek: ODLI Ms.] 5.
+
+ Vain the noblest birth would prove,
+ Nor worth or wit avail in love;
+ 'Tis gold alone succeeds--by gold
+ The venal sex is bought and sold.
+ Accurs'd be he who first of yore
+ Discover'd the pernicious ore!
+ This sets a brother's heart on fire,
+ And arms the son against the sire;
+ And what, alas! is worse than all,
+ To this the lover owes his fall. F. LEWIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I am the son of a gentleman, whose ancestors, for many ages, held the
+first rank in the country; till at last one of them, too desirous of
+popularity, set his house open, kept a table covered with continual
+profusion, and distributed his beef and ale to such as chose rather to
+live upon the folly of others, than their own labour, with such
+thoughtless liberality, that he left a third part of his estate
+mortgaged. His successor, a man of spirit, scorned to impair his dignity
+by parsimonious retrenchments, or to admit, by a sale of his lands, any
+participation of the rights of his manour; he therefore made another
+mortgage to pay the interest of the former, and pleased himself with the
+reflection, that his son would have the hereditary estate without the
+diminution of an acre.
+
+Nearly resembling this was the practice of my wise progenitors for many
+ages. Every man boasted the antiquity of her family, resolved to support
+the dignity of his birth, and lived in splendour and plenty at the
+expense of his heir, who, sometimes by a wealthy marriage, and sometimes
+by lucky legacies, discharged part of the incumbrances, and thought
+himself entitled to contract new debts, and to leave to his children the
+same inheritance of embarrassment and distress.
+
+Thus the estate perpetually decayed; the woods were felled by one, the
+park ploughed by another, the fishery let to farmers by a third; at last
+the old hall was pulled down to spare the cost of reparation, and part
+of the materials sold to build a small house with the rest. We were now
+openly degraded from our original rank, and my father's brother was
+allowed with less reluctance to serve an apprenticeship, though we never
+reconciled ourselves heartily to the sound of haberdasher, but always
+talked of warehouses and a merchant, and when the wind happened to blow
+loud, affected to pity the hazards of commerce, and to sympathize with
+the solicitude of my poor uncle, who had the true retailer's terrour of
+adventure, and never exposed himself or his property to any wider water
+than the Thames.
+
+In time, however, by continual profit and small expenses, he grew rich,
+and began to turn his thoughts towards rank. He hung the arms of the
+family over his parlour-chimney; pointed at a chariot decorated only
+with a cypher; became of opinion that money could not make a gentleman;
+resented the petulance of upstarts; told stories of alderman Puff's
+grandfather the porter; wondered that there was no better method for
+regulating precedence; wished for some dress peculiar to men of fashion;
+and when his servant presented a letter, always inquired whether it came
+from his brother the esquire.
+
+My father was careful to send him game by every carrier, which, though
+the conveyance often cost more than the value, was well received,
+because it gave him an opportunity of calling his friends together,
+describing the beauty of his brother's seat, and lamenting his own
+folly, whom no remonstrances could withhold from polluting his fingers
+with a shop-book.
+
+The little presents which we sent were always returned with great
+munificence. He was desirous of being the second founder of his family,
+and could not bear that we should be any longer outshone by those whom
+we considered as climbers upon our ruins, and usurpers of our fortune.
+He furnished our house with all the elegance of fashionable expense, and
+was careful to conceal his bounties, lest the poverty of his family
+should be suspected.
+
+At length it happened that, by misconduct like our own, a large estate,
+which had been purchased from us, was again exposed to the best bidder.
+My uncle, delighted with an opportunity of reinstating the family in
+their possessions, came down with treasures scarcely to be imagined in a
+place where commerce has not made large sums familiar, and at once drove
+all the competitors away, expedited the writings, and took possession.
+He now considered himself as superior to trade, disposed of his stock,
+and as soon as he had settled his economy, began to shew his rural
+sovereignty, by breaking the hedges of his tenants in hunting, and
+seizing the guns or nets of those whose fortunes did not qualify them
+for sportsmen. He soon afterwards solicited the office of sheriff, from
+which all his neighbours were glad to be reprieved, but which he
+regarded as a resumption of ancestral claims, and a kind of restoration
+to blood after the attainder of a trade.
+
+My uncle, whose mind was so filled with this change of his condition,
+that he found no want of domestick entertainment, declared himself too
+old to marry, and resolved to let the newly-purchased estate fall into
+the regular channel of inheritance. I was therefore considered as heir
+apparent, and courted with officiousness and caresses, by the gentlemen
+who had hitherto coldly allowed me that rank which they could not
+refuse, depressed me with studied neglect, and irritated me with
+ambiguous insults.
+
+I felt not much pleasure from the civilities for which I knew myself
+indebted to my uncle's industry, till, by one of the invitations which
+every day now brought me, I was induced to spend a week with Lucius,
+whose daughter Flavilla I had often seen and admired like others,
+without any thought of nearer approaches. The inequality which had
+hitherto kept me at a distance being now levelled, I was received with
+every evidence of respect: Lucius told me the fortune which he intended
+for his favourite daughter; many odd accidents obliged us to be often
+together without company, and I soon began to find that they were
+spreading for me the nets of matrimony.
+
+Flavilla was all softness and complaisance. I, who had been excluded by
+a narrow fortune from much acquaintance with the world, and never been
+honoured before with the notice of so fine a lady, was easily enamoured.
+Lucius either perceived my passion, or Flavilla betrayed it; care was
+taken, that our private meetings should be less frequent, and my charmer
+confessed by her eyes how much pain she suffered from our restraint. I
+renewed my visit upon every pretence, but was not allowed one interview
+without witness; at last I declared my passion to Lucius, who received
+me as a lover worthy of his daughter, and told me that nothing was
+wanting to his consent, but that my uncle should settle his estate upon
+me. I objected the indecency of encroaching on his life, and the danger
+of provoking him by such an unseasonable demand. Lucius seemed not to
+think decency of much importance, but admitted the danger of
+displeasing, and concluded that as he was now old and sickly, we might,
+without any inconvenience, wait for his death.
+
+With this resolution I was better contented, as it procured me the
+company of Flavilla, in which the days passed away amidst continual
+rapture; but in time I began to be ashamed of sitting idle, in
+expectation of growing rich by the death of my benefactor, and proposed
+to Lucius many schemes of raising my own fortune by such assistance as I
+knew my uncle willing to give me. Lucius, afraid lest I should change my
+affection in absence, diverted me from my design by dissuasives to which
+my passion easily listened. At last my uncle died, and considering
+himself as neglected by me, from the time that Flavilla took possession
+of my heart, left his estate to my younger brother, who was always
+hovering about his bed, and relating stories of my pranks and
+extravagance, my contempt of the commercial dialect, and my impatience
+to be selling stock.
+
+My condition was soon known, and I was no longer admitted by the father
+of Flavilla. I repeated the protestations of regard, which had been
+formerly returned with so much ardour, in a letter which she received
+privately, but returned by her father's footman. Contempt has driven out
+my love, and I am content to have purchased, by the loss of fortune, an
+escape from a harpy, who has joined the artifices of age to the
+allurements of youth. I am now going to pursue my former projects with a
+legacy which my uncle bequeathed me, and if I succeed, shall expect to
+hear of the repentance of Flavilla.
+
+I am, Sir, Yours, &c.
+
+CONSTANTIUS.
+
+
+
+No. 193. TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1752.
+
+ _Laudis amore tumes? sunt certa piacula, quoe te
+ Ter pure lecto poterunt recreare libello_. HOR. Lib. i. Ep. i. 36.
+
+ Or art thou vain? books yield a certain spell
+ To stop thy tumour; you shall cease to swell
+ When you have read them thrice, and studied well. CREECH.
+
+Whatever is universally desired, will be sought by industry and
+artifice, by merit and crimes, by means good and bad, rational and
+absurd, according to the prevalence of virtue or vice, of wisdom or
+folly. Some will always mistake the degree of their own desert, and some
+will desire that others may mistake it. The cunning will have recourse
+to stratagem, and the powerful to violence, for the attainment of their
+wishes; some will stoop to theft, and others venture upon plunder.
+
+Praise is so pleasing to the mind of man, that it is the original motive
+of almost all our actions. The desire of commendation, as of every thing
+else, is varied indeed by innumerable differences of temper, capacity,
+and knowledge; some have no higher wish than for the applause of a club;
+some expect the acclamations of a county; and some have hoped to fill
+the mouths of all ages and nations with their names. Every man pants for
+the highest eminence within his view; none, however mean, ever sinks
+below the hope of being distinguished by his fellow-beings, and very few
+have by magnanimity or piety been so raised above it, as to act wholly
+without regard to censure or opinion.
+
+To be praised, therefore, every man resolves; but resolutions will not
+execute themselves. That which all think too parsimoniously distributed
+to their own claims, they will not gratuitously squander upon others,
+and some expedient must be tried, by which praise may be gained before
+it can be enjoyed.
+
+Among the innumerable bidders for praise, some are willing to purchase
+at the highest rate, and offer ease and health, fortune and life. Yet
+even of these only a small part have gained what they so earnestly
+desired; the student wastes away in meditation, and the soldier perishes
+on the ramparts, but unless some accidental advantage cooperates with
+merit, neither perseverance nor adventure attracts attention, and
+learning and bravery sink into the grave, without honour or remembrance.
+
+But ambition and vanity generally expect to be gratified on easier
+terms. It has been long observed, that what is procured by skill or
+labour to the first possessor, may be afterwards transferred for money;
+and that the man of wealth may partake all the acquisitions of courage
+without hazard, and all the products of industry without fatigue. It was
+easily discovered, that riches would obtain praise among other
+conveniencies, and that he whose pride was unluckily associated with
+laziness, ignorance, or cowardice, needed only to pay the hire of a
+panegyrist, and he might be regaled with periodical eulogies; might
+determine, at leisure, what virtue or science he would be pleased to
+appropriate, and be lulled in the evening with soothing serenades, or
+waked in the morning by sprightly gratulations.
+
+The happiness which mortals receive from the celebration of beneficence
+which never relieved, eloquence which never persuaded, or elegance which
+never pleased, ought not to be envied or disturbed, when they are known
+honestly to pay for their entertainment. But there are unmerciful
+exactors of adulation, who withhold the wages of venality; retain their
+encomiast from year to year by general promises and ambiguous
+blandishments; and when he has run through the whole compass of
+flattery, dismiss him with contempt, because his vein of fiction is
+exhausted.
+
+A continual feast of commendation is only to be obtained by merit or by
+wealth; many are therefore obliged to content themselves with single
+morsels, and recompense the infrequency of their enjoyment by excess and
+riot, whenever fortune sets the banquet before them. Hunger is never
+delicate; they who are seldom gorged to the full with praise, may be
+safely fed with gross compliments; for the appetite must be satisfied
+before it is disgusted.
+
+It is easy to find the moment at which vanity is eager for sustenance,
+and all that impudence or servility can offer will be well received.
+When any one complains of the want of what he is known to possess in an
+uncommon degree, he certainly waits with impatience to be contradicted.
+When the trader pretends anxiety about the payment of his bills, or the
+beauty remarks how frightfully she looks, then is the lucky moment to
+talk of riches or of charms, of the death of lovers, or the honour of a
+merchant.
+
+Others there are yet more open and artless, who, instead of suborning a
+flatterer, are content to supply his place, and, as some animals
+impregnate themselves, swell with the praises which they hear from their
+own tongues. _Recte is dicitur laudare sese, cui nemo alius contigit
+laudator_. "It is right," says Erasmus, "that he, whom no one else will
+commend, should bestow commendations on himself." Of all the sons of
+vanity, these are surely the happiest and greatest; for what is
+greatness or happiness but independence on external influences,
+exemption from hope or fear, and the power of supplying every want from
+the common stores of nature, which can neither be exhausted nor
+prohibited? Such is the wise man of the stoicks; such is the divinity of
+the epicureans; and such is the flatterer of himself. Every other
+enjoyment malice may destroy; every other panegyrick envy may withhold;
+but no human power can deprive the boaster of his own encomiums. Infamy
+may hiss, or contempt may growl, the hirelings of the great may follow
+fortune, and the votaries of truth may attend on virtue; but his
+pleasures still remain the same; he can always listen with rapture to
+himself, and leave those who dare not repose upon their own attestation,
+to be elated or depressed by chance, and toil on in the hopeless task of
+fixing caprice, and propitiating malice.
+
+This art of happiness has been long practised by periodical writers,
+with little apparent violation of decency. When we think our
+excellencies overlooked by the world, or desire to recall the attention
+of the publick to some particular performance, we sit down with great
+composure and write a letter to ourselves. The correspondent, whose
+character we assume, always addresses us with the deference due to a
+superior intelligence; proposes his doubts with a proper sense of his
+own inability; offers an objection with trembling diffidence; and at
+last has no other pretensions to our notice than his profundity of
+respect, and sincerity of admiration, his submission to our dictates,
+and zeal for our success. To such a reader, it is impossible to refuse
+regard, nor can it easily be imagined with how much alacrity we snatch
+up the pen which indignation or despair had condemned to inactivity,
+when we find such candour and judgment yet remaining in the world.
+
+A letter of this kind I had lately the honour of perusing, in which,
+though some of the periods were negligently closed, and some expressions
+of familiarity were used, which I thought might teach others to address
+me with too little reverence, I was so much delighted with the passages
+in which mention was made of universal learning--unbounded genius--soul
+of Homer, Pythagoras, and Plato--solidity of thought--accuracy of
+distinction--elegance of combination--vigour of fancy--strength of
+reason--and regularity of composition--that I had once determined to lay
+it before the publick. Three times I sent it to the printer, and three
+times I fetched it back. My modesty was on the point of yielding, when
+reflecting that I was about to waste panegyricks on myself, which might
+be more profitably reserved for my patron, I locked it up for a better
+hour, in compliance with the farmer's principle, who never eats at home
+what he can carry to the market.
+
+
+
+No. 194. SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1752.
+
+ _Si damnosa senem juvat alea, ludit et heres
+ Bullatus, parvoque eadem movet arma fritillo_. JUV. Sat. xiv. 4.
+
+ If gaming does an aged sire entice,
+ Then my young master swiftly learns the vice,
+ And shakes in hanging sleeves the little box and dice. J. DRYDEN, jun.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+That vanity which keeps every man important in his own eyes, inclines me
+to believe that neither you nor your readers have yet forgotten the name
+of Eumathes, who sent you a few months ago an account of his arrival at
+London, with a young nobleman his pupil. I shall therefore continue my
+narrative without preface or recapitulation.
+
+My pupil, in a very short time, by his mother's countenance and
+direction, accomplished himself with all those qualifications which
+constitute puerile politeness. He became in a few days a perfect master
+of his hat, which with a careless nicety he could put off or on, without
+any need to adjust it by a second motion. This was not attained but by
+frequent consultations with his dancing-master, and constant practice
+before the glass, for he had some rustick habits to overcome; but, what
+will not time and industry perform? A fortnight more furnished him with
+all the airs and forms of familiar and respectful salutation, from the
+clap on the shoulder to the humble bow; he practises the stare of
+strangeness, and the smile of condescension, the solemnity of promise,
+and the graciousness of encouragement, as if he had been nursed at a
+levee; and pronounces, with no less propriety than his father, the
+monosyllables of coldness, and sonorous periods of respectful
+profession.
+
+He immediately lost the reserve and timidity which solitude and study
+are apt to impress upon the most courtly genius; was able to enter a
+crowded room with airy civility; to meet the glances of a hundred eyes
+without perturbation; and address those whom he never saw before with
+ease and confidence. In less than a month his mother declared her
+satisfaction at his proficiency by a triumphant observation, that she
+believed _nothing would make him blush_.
+
+The silence with which I was contented to hear my pupil's praises, gave
+the lady reason to suspect me not much delighted with his acquisitions;
+but she attributed my discontent to the diminution of my influence, and
+my fears of losing the patronage of the family; and though she thinks
+favourably of my learning and morals, she considers me as wholly
+unacquainted with the customs of the polite part of mankind; and
+therefore not qualified to form the manners of a young nobleman, or
+communicate the knowledge of the world. This knowledge she comprises in
+the rules of visiting, the history of the present hour, an early
+intelligence of the change of fashions, an extensive acquaintance with
+the names and faces of persons of rank, and a frequent appearance in
+places of resort.
+
+All this my pupil pursues with great application. He is twice a day in
+the Mall, where he studies the dress of every man splendid enough to
+attract his notice, and never comes home without some observation upon
+sleeves, button-holes, and embroidery. At his return from the theatre,
+he can give an account of the gallantries, glances, whispers, smiles,
+sighs, flirts, and blushes of every box, so much to his mother's
+satisfaction, that when I attempted to resume my character, by inquiring
+his opinion of the sentiments and diction of the tragedy, she at once
+repressed my criticism, by telling me, "that she hoped he did not go to
+lose his time in attending to the creatures on the stage."
+
+But his acuteness was most eminently signalized at the masquerade, where
+he discovered his acquaintance through their disguises, with such
+wonderful facility, as has afforded the family an inexhaustible topick
+of conversation. Every new visitor is informed how one was detected by
+his gait, and another by the swinging of his arms, a third by the toss
+of his head, and another by his favourite phrase; nor can you doubt but
+these performances receive their just applause, and a genius thus
+hastening to maturity is promoted by every art of cultivation.
+
+Such have been his endeavours, and such his assistances, that every
+trace of literature was soon obliterated. He has changed his language
+with his dress, and instead of endeavouring at purity or propriety, has
+no other care than to catch the reigning phrase and current exclamation,
+till, by copying whatever is peculiar in the talk of all those whose
+birth or fortune entitles them to imitation, he has collected every
+fashionable barbarism of the present winter, and speaks a dialect not to
+be understood among those who form their style by poring upon authors.
+
+To this copiousness of ideas, and felicity of language, he has joined
+such eagerness to lead the conversation, that he is celebrated among the
+ladies as the prettiest gentleman that the age can boast of, except that
+some who love to talk themselves, think him too forward, and others
+lament that, with so much wit and knowledge, he is not taller.
+
+His mother listens to his observations with her eyes sparkling and her
+heart beating, and can scarcely contain, in the most numerous
+assemblies, the expectations which she has formed for his future
+eminence. Women, by whatever fate, always judge absurdly of the
+intellects of boys. The vivacity and confidence which attract female
+admiration, are seldom produced in the early part of life, but by
+ignorance at least, if not by stupidity; for they proceed not from
+confidence of right, but fearlessness of wrong. Whoever has a clear
+apprehension, must have quick sensibility, and where he has no
+sufficient reason to trust his own judgment, will proceed with doubt and
+caution, because he perpetually dreads the disgrace of errour. The pain
+of miscarriage is naturally proportionate to the desire of excellence;
+and, therefore, till men are hardened by long familiarity with reproach,
+or have attained, by frequent struggles, the art of suppressing their
+emotions, diffidence is found the inseparable associate of
+understanding.
+
+But so little distrust has my pupil of his own abilities, that he has
+for some time professed himself a wit, and tortures his imagination on
+all occasions for burlesque and jocularity. How he supports a character
+which, perhaps, no man ever assumed without repentance, may be easily
+conjectured. Wit, you know, is the unexpected copulation of ideas, the
+discovery of some occult relation between images in appearance remote
+from each other; an effusion of wit, therefore, presupposes an
+accumulation of knowledge; a memory stored with notions, which the
+imagination may cull out to compose, new assemblages. Whatever may be
+the native vigour of the mind, she can never form many combinations from
+few ideas, as many changes can never be rung upon a few bells. Accident
+may indeed sometimes produce a lucky parallel or a striking contrast;
+but these gifts of chance are not frequent, and he that has nothing of
+his own, and yet condemns himself to needless expenses, must live upon
+loans or theft.
+
+The indulgence which his youth has hitherto obtained, and the respect
+which his rank secures, have hitherto supplied the want of intellectual
+qualifications; and he imagines that all admire who applaud, and that
+all who laugh are pleased. He therefore returns every day to the charge
+with increase of courage, though not of strength, and practises all the
+tricks by which wit is counterfeited. He lays trains for a quibble; he
+contrives blunders for his footman; he adapts old stories to present
+characters; he mistakes the question, that he may return a smart answer;
+he anticipates the argument, that he may plausibly object; when he has
+nothing to reply, he repeats the last words of his antagonist, then
+says, "your humble servant," and concludes with a laugh of triumph.
+
+These mistakes I have honestly attempted to correct; but what can be
+expected from reason unsupported by fashion, splendour, or authority? He
+hears me, indeed, or appears to hear me, but is soon rescued from the
+lecture by more pleasing avocations; and shows, diversions, and
+caresses, drive my precepts from his remembrance.
+
+He at last imagines himself qualified to enter the world, and has met
+with adventures in his first sally, which I shall, by your paper,
+communicate to the publick.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+EUMATHES.
+
+
+
+No. 195. TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1752.
+
+ --_Nescit equo rudis
+ Haerere ingenuus puer,
+ Venarique timet; ludere doctior,
+ Seu Graeco jubeas trocho,
+ Seu malis vetita legibus alea_. HOR. Lib. iii. Ode xxiv. 54.
+
+ Nor knows our youth, of noblest race,
+ To mount the manag'd steed, or urge the chace;
+ More skill'd in the mean arts of vice,
+ The whirling troque, or law-forbidden dice. FRANCIS.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Favours of every kind are doubled when they are speedily conferred. This
+is particularly true of the gratification of curiosity. He that long
+delays a story, and suffers his auditor to torment himself with
+expectation, will seldom be able to recompense the uneasiness, or equal
+the hope which he suffers to be raised.
+
+For this reason, I have already sent you the continuation of my pupil's
+history, which, though it contains no events very uncommon, may be of
+use to young men who are in too much haste to trust their own prudence,
+and quit the wing of protection before they are able to shift for
+themselves.
+
+When he first settled in London, he was so much bewildered in the
+enormous extent of the town, so confounded by incessant noise, and
+crowds, and hurry, and so terrified by rural narratives of the arts of
+sharpers, the rudeness of the populace, malignity of porters, and
+treachery of coachmen, that he was afraid to go beyond the door without
+an attendant, and imagined his life in danger if he was obliged to pass
+the streets at night in any vehicle but his mother's chair.
+
+He was therefore contented, for a time, that I should accompany him in
+all his excursions. But his fear abated as he grew more familiar with
+its objects; and the contempt to which his rusticity exposed him from
+such of his companions as had accidentally known the town longer,
+obliged him to dissemble his remaining terrours.
+
+His desire of liberty made him now willing to spare me the trouble of
+observing his motions; but knowing how much his ignorance exposed him to
+mischief, I thought it cruel to abandon him to the fortune of the town.
+We went together every day to a coffee-house, where he met wits, heirs,
+and fops, airy, ignorant, and thoughtless as himself, with whom he had
+become acquainted at card-tables, and whom he considered as the only
+beings to be envied or admired. What were their topicks of conversation,
+I could never discover; for, so much was their vivacity repressed by my
+intrusive seriousness, that they seldom proceeded beyond the exchange of
+nods and shrugs, an arch grin, or a broken hint, except when they could
+retire, while I was looking on the papers, to a corner of the room,
+where they seemed to disburden their imaginations, and commonly vented
+the superfluity of their sprightliness in a peal of laughter. When they
+had tittered themselves into negligence, I could sometimes overhear a
+few syllables, such as--solemn rascal--academical airs--smoke the tutor--
+company for gentlemen!--and other broken phrases, by which I did not
+suffer my quiet to be disturbed, for they never proceeded to avowed
+indignities, but contented themselves to murmur in secret, and, whenever
+I turned my eye upon them, shrunk into stillness.
+
+He was, however, desirous of withdrawing from the subjection which he
+could not venture to break, and made a secret appointment to assist his
+companions in the persecution of a play. His footman privately procured
+him a catcall, on which he practised in a back-garret for two hours in
+the afternoon. At the proper time a chair was called; he pretended an
+engagement at lady Flutter's, and hastened to the place where his
+critical associates had assembled. They hurried away to the theatre,
+full of malignity and denunciations against a man whose name they had
+never heard, and a performance which they could not understand; for they
+were resolved to judge for themselves, and would not suffer the town to
+be imposed upon by scribblers. In the pit, they exerted themselves with
+great spirit and vivacity; called out for the tunes of obscene songs,
+talked loudly at intervals of Shakespeare and Jonson, played on their
+catcalls a short prelude of terrour, clamoured vehemently for a
+prologue, and clapped with great dexterity at the first entrance of the
+players.
+
+Two scenes they heard without attempting interruption; but, being no
+longer able to restrain their impatience, they then began to exert
+themselves in groans and hisses, and plied their catcalls with incessant
+diligence; so that they were soon considered by the audience as
+disturbers of the house; and some who sat near them, either provoked at
+the obstruction of their entertainment, or desirous to preserve the
+author from the mortification of seeing his hopes destroyed by children,
+snatched away their instruments of criticism, and, by the seasonable
+vibration of a stick, subdued them instantaneously to decency and
+silence.
+
+To exhilarate themselves after this vexatious defeat, they posted to a
+tavern, where they recovered their alacrity, and, after two hours of
+obstreperous jollity, burst out big with enterprize, and panting for
+some occasion to signalize their prowess. They proceeded vigorously
+through two streets, and with very little opposition dispersed a rabble
+of drunkards less daring than themselves, then rolled two watchmen in
+the kennel, and broke the windows of a tavern in which the fugitives
+took shelter. At last it was determined to march up to a row of chairs,
+and demolish them for standing on the pavement; the chairmen formed a
+line of battle, and blows were exchanged for a time with equal courage
+on both sides. At last the assailants were overpowered, and the
+chairmen, when they knew then-captives, brought them home by force.
+
+The young gentleman, next morning, hung his head, and was so much
+ashamed of his outrages and defeat, that perhaps he might have been
+checked in his first follies, had not his mother, partly in pity of his
+dejection, and partly in approbation of his spirit, relieved him from
+his perplexity by paying the damages privately, and discouraging all
+animadversion and reproof.
+
+This indulgence could not wholly preserve him from the remembrance of
+his disgrace, nor at once restore his confidence and elation. He was for
+three days silent, modest, and compliant, and thought himself neither
+too wise for instruction, nor too manly for restraint. But his levity
+overcame this salutary sorrow; he began to talk with his former raptures
+of masquerades, taverns, and frolicks; blustered when his wig was not
+combed with exactness; and threatened destruction to a tailor who had
+mistaken his directions about the pocket.
+
+I knew that he was now rising again above control, and that his
+inflation of spirits would burst out into some mischievous absurdity. I
+therefore watched him with great attention; but one evening, having
+attended his mother at a visit, he withdrew himself, unsuspected, while
+the company was engaged at cards. His vivacity and officiousness were
+soon missed, and his return impatiently expected; supper was delayed,
+and conversation suspended; every coach that rattled through the street
+was expected to bring him, and every servant that entered the room was
+examined concerning his departure. At last the lady returned home, and
+was with great difficulty preserved from fits by spirits and cordials.
+The family was despatched a thousand ways without success, and the house
+was filled with distraction, till, as we were deliberating what further
+measures to take, he returned from a petty gaming-table, with his coat
+torn and his head broken; without his sword, snuff-box, sleeve-buttons,
+and watch.
+
+Of this loss or robbery, he gave little account; but, instead of sinking
+into his former shame, endeavoured to support himself by surliness and
+asperity. "He was not the first that had played away a few trifles, and
+of what use were birth and fortune if they would not admit some sallies
+and expenses?" His mamma was so much provoked by the cost of this prank,
+that she would neither palliate nor conceal it; and his father, after
+some threats of rustication which his fondness would not suffer him to
+execute, reduced the allowance of his pocket, that he might not be
+tempted by plenty to profusion. This method would have succeeded in a
+place where there are no panders to folly and extravagance, but was now
+likely to have produced pernicious consequences; for we have discovered
+a treaty with a broker, whose daughter he seems disposed to marry, on
+condition that he shall be supplied with present money, for which he is
+to repay thrice the value at the death of his father.
+
+There was now no time to be lost. A domestick consultation was
+immediately held, and he was doomed to pass two years in the country;
+but his mother, touched with his tears, declared, that she thought him
+too much of a man to be any longer confined to his book, and he
+therefore begins his travels to-morrow under a French governour.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+EUMATHES.
+
+
+
+No. 196. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1752.
+
+ _Multa ferunt anni venientes commoda secum,
+ Multa recedentes adimunt.--_ HOR. De Ar. Poet. 175.
+
+ The blessings flowing in with life's full tide,
+ Down with our ebb of life decreasing glide. FRANCIS.
+
+Baxter, in the narrative of his own life, has enumerated several
+opinions, which, though he thought them evident and incontestable at his
+first entrance into the world, time and experience disposed him to
+change.
+
+Whoever reviews the state of his own mind from the dawn of manhood to
+its decline, and considers what he pursued or dreaded, slighted or
+esteemed, at different periods of his age, will have no reason to
+imagine such changes of sentiment peculiar to any station or character.
+Every man, however careless and inattentive, has conviction forced upon
+him; the lectures of time obtrude themselves upon the most unwilling or
+dissipated auditor; and, by comparing our past with our present
+thoughts, we perceive that we have changed our minds, though perhaps we
+cannot discover when the alteration happened, or by what causes it was
+produced.
+
+This revolution of sentiments occasions a perpetual contest between the
+old and young. They who imagine themselves entitled to veneration by the
+prerogative of longer life, are inclined to treat the notions of those
+whose conduct they superintend with superciliousness and contempt, for
+want of considering that the future and the past have different
+appearances; that the disproportion will always be great between
+expectation and enjoyment, between new possession and satiety; that the
+truth of many maxims of age gives too little pleasure to be allowed till
+it is felt; and that the miseries of life would be increased beyond all
+human power of endurance, if we were to enter the world with the same
+opinions as we carry from it.
+
+We naturally indulge those ideas that please us. Hope will predominate
+in every mind, till it has been suppressed by frequent disappointments.
+The youth has not yet discovered how many evils are continually hovering
+about us, and when he is set free from the shackles of discipline, looks
+abroad into the world with rapture; he sees an elysian region open
+before him, so variegated with beauty, and so stored with pleasure, that
+his care is rather to accumulate good, than to shun evil; he stands
+distracted by different forms of delight, and has no other doubt, than
+which path to follow of those which all lead equally to the bowers of
+happiness.
+
+He who has seen only the superficies of life believes every thing to be
+what it appears, and rarely suspects that external splendour conceals
+any latent sorrow or vexation. He never imagines that there may be
+greatness without safety, affluence without content, jollity without
+friendship, and solitude without peace. He fancies himself permitted to
+cull the blessings of every condition, and to leave its inconveniencies
+to the idle and the ignorant. He is inclined to believe no man miserable
+but by his own fault, and seldom looks with much pity upon failings or
+miscarriages, because he thinks them willingly admitted, or negligently
+incurred.
+
+It is impossible, without pity and contempt, to hear a youth of generous
+sentiments and warm imagination, declaring, in the moment of openness
+and confidence, his designs and expectations; because long life is
+possible, he considers it as certain, and therefore promises himself all
+the changes of happiness, and provides gratifications for every desire.
+He is, for a time, to give himself wholly to frolick and diversion, to
+range the world in search of pleasure, to delight every eye, to gain
+every heart, and to be celebrated equally for his pleasing levities and
+solid attainments, his deep reflections and his sparkling repartees. He
+then elevates his views to nobler enjoyments, and finds all the
+scattered excellencies of the female world united in a woman, who
+prefers his addresses to wealth and titles; he is afterwards to engage
+in business, to dissipate difficulty, and overpower opposition: to
+climb, by the mere force of merit, to fame and greatness; and reward all
+those who countenanced his rise, or paid due regard to his early
+excellence. At last he will retire in peace and honour; contract his
+views to domestick pleasures; form the manners of children like himself;
+observe how every year expands the beauty of his daughters, and how his
+sons catch ardour from their father's history; he will give laws to the
+neighbourhood; dictate axioms to posterity; and leave the world an
+example of wisdom and of happiness.
+
+With hopes like these, he sallies jocund into life; to little purpose is
+he told, that the condition of humanity admits no pure and unmingled
+happiness; that the exuberant gaiety of youth ends in poverty or
+disease; that uncommon qualifications and contrarieties of excellence,
+produce envy equally with applause; that whatever admiration and
+fondness may promise him, he must marry a wife like the wives of others,
+with some virtues and some faults, and be as often disgusted by her
+vices, as delighted by her elegance; that if he adventures into the
+circle of action, he must expect to encounter men as artful, as daring,
+as resolute as himself; that of his children, some may be deformed, and
+others vicious; some may disgrace him by their follies, some offend him
+by their insolence, and some exhaust him by their profusion. He hears
+all this with obstinate incredulity, and wonders by what malignity old
+age is influenced, that it cannot forbear to fill his ears with
+predictions of misery.
+
+Among other pleasing errours of young minds, is the opinion of their own
+importance. He that has not yet remarked, how little attention his
+contemporaries can spare from their own affairs, conceives all eyes
+turned upon himself, and imagines every one that approaches him to be an
+enemy or a follower, an admirer or a spy. He therefore considers his
+fame as involved in the event of every action. Many of the virtues and
+vices of youth proceed from this quick sense of reputation. This it is
+that gives firmness and constancy, fidelity, and disinterestedness, and
+it is this that kindles resentment for slight injuries, and dictates all
+the principles of sanguinary honour.
+
+But as time brings him forward into the world, he soon discovers that he
+only shares fame or reproach with innumerable partners; that he is left
+unmarked in the obscurity of the crowd; and that what he does, whether
+good or bad, soon gives way to new objects of regard. He then easily
+sets himself free from the anxieties of reputation, and considers praise
+or censure as a transient breath, which, while he hears it, is passing
+away, without any lasting mischief or advantage.
+
+In youth, it is common to measure right and wrong by the opinion of the
+world, and, in age, to act without any measure but interest, and to lose
+shame without substituting virtue.
+
+Such is the condition of life, that something is always wanting to
+happiness. In youth, we have warm hopes, which are soon blasted by
+rashness and negligence, and great designs, which are defeated by
+inexperience. In age, we have knowledge and prudence without spirit to
+exert, or motives to prompt them; we are able to plan schemes and
+regulate measures, but have not time remaining to bring them to
+completion.
+
+
+
+No. 197. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1752.
+
+ _Cujus vulturis hoc erit cadaver_? MART. Lib. vi. Ep. lxii. 4.
+
+ Say, to what vulture's share this carcase falls? F. LEWIS
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+I belong to an order of mankind, considerable at least for their number,
+to which your notice has never been formally extended, though equally
+entitled to regard with those triflers, who have hitherto supplied you
+with topicks of amusement or instruction. I am, Mr. Rambler, a
+legacy-hunter; and, as every man is willing to think well of the tribe
+in which his name is registered, you will forgive my vanity, if I remind
+you that the legacy-hunter, however degraded by an ill-compounded
+appellation in our barbarous language, was known, as I am told, in
+ancient Rome, by the sonorous titles of Captator and Haeredipeta.
+
+My father was an attorney in the country, who married his master's
+daughter in hopes of a fortune which he did not obtain, having been, as
+he afterwards discovered, chosen by her only because she had no better
+offer, and was afraid of service. I was the first offspring of a
+marriage, thus reciprocally fraudulent, and therefore could not be
+expected to inherit much dignity or generosity, and if I had them not
+from nature, was not likely ever to attain them; for, in the years which
+I spent at home, I never heard any reason for action or forbearance, but
+that we should gain money or lose it; nor was taught any other style of
+commendation, than that Mr. Sneaker is a warm man, Mr. Gripe has done
+his business, and needs care for nobody.
+
+My parents, though otherwise not great philosophers, knew the force of
+early education, and took care that the blank of my understanding should
+be filled with impressions of the value of money. My mother used, upon
+all occasions, to inculcate some salutary axioms, such as might incite
+me _to keep what I had, and get what I could_; she informed me that we
+were in a world, where _all must catch that catch can_; and as I grew
+up, stored my memory with deeper observations; restrained me from the
+usual puerile expenses, by remarking that _many a little made a mickle_;
+and, when I envied the finery of my neighbours, told me that _brag was a
+good dog, but hold-fast was a better_.
+
+I was soon sagacious enough to discover that I was not born to great
+wealth; and having heard no other name for happiness, was sometimes
+inclined to repine at my condition. But my mother always relieved me, by
+saying, that there was money enough in the family, that _it was good to
+be of kin to means_, that I had nothing to do but to please my friends,
+and I might come to hold up my head with the best squire in the country.
+
+These splendid expectations arose from our alliance to three persons of
+considerable fortune. My mother's aunt had attended on a lady, who, when
+she died, rewarded her officiousness and fidelity with a large legacy.
+My father had two relations, of whom one had broken his indentures and
+run to sea, from whence, after an absence of thirty years, he returned
+with ten thousand pounds; and the other had lured an heiress out of a
+window, who, dying of her first child, had left him her estate, on which
+he lived, without any other care than to collect his rents, and preserve
+from poachers that game which he could not kill himself.
+
+These hoarders of money were visited and courted by all who had any
+pretence to approach them, and received presents and compliments from
+cousins who could scarcely tell the degree of their relation. But we had
+peculiar advantages, which encouraged us to hope, that we should by
+degrees supplant our competitors. My father, by his profession, made
+himself necessary in their affairs; for the sailor and the chambermaid,
+he inquired out mortgages and securities, and wrote bonds and contracts;
+and had endeared himself to the old woman, who once rashly lent an
+hundred pounds without consulting him, by informing her, that her
+debtor, was on the point of bankruptcy, and posting so expeditiously
+with an execution, that all the other creditors were defrauded.
+
+To the squire he was a kind of steward, and had distinguished himself in
+his office by his address in raising the rents, his inflexibility in
+distressing the tardy tenants, and his acuteness in setting the parish
+free from burdensome inhabitants, by shifting them off to some other
+settlement.
+
+Business made frequent attendance necessary; trust soon produced
+intimacy; and success gave a claim to kindness; so that we had
+opportunity to practise all the arts of flattery and endearment. My
+mother, who could not support the thoughts of losing any thing,
+determined, that all their fortunes should centre in me; and, in the
+prosecution of her schemes, took care to inform me that _nothing cost
+less than good words_, and that it is comfortable to leap into an estate
+which another has got.
+
+She trained me by these precepts to the utmost ductility of obedience,
+and the closest attention to profit. At an age when other boys are
+sporting in the fields or murmuring in the school, I was contriving some
+new method of paying my court; inquiring the age of my future
+benefactors; or considering how I should employ their legacies.
+
+If our eagerness of money could have been satisfied with the possessions
+of any one of my relations, they might perhaps have been obtained; but
+as it was impossible to be always present with all three, our
+competitors were busy to efface any trace of affection which we might
+have left behind; and since there was not, on any part, such superiority
+of merit as could enforce a constant and unshaken preference, whoever
+was the last that flattered or obliged, had, for a time, the ascendant.
+
+My relations maintained a regular exchange of courtesy, took care to
+miss no occasion of condolence or congratulation, and sent presents at
+stated times, but had in their hearts not much esteem for one another.
+The seaman looked with contempt upon the squire as a milksop and a
+landman, who had lived without knowing the points of the compass, or
+seeing any part of the world beyond the county-town; and whenever they
+met, would talk of longitude and latitude, and circles and tropicks,
+would scarcely tell him the hour without some mention of the horizon and
+meridian, nor shew him the news without detecting his ignorance of the
+situation of other countries.
+
+The squire considered the sailor as a rude uncultivated savage, with
+little more of human than his form, and diverted himself with his
+ignorance of all common objects and affairs; when he could persuade him
+to go into the field, he always exposed him to the sportsmen, by sending
+him to look for game in improper places; and once prevailed upon him to
+be present at the races, only that he might shew the gentlemen how a
+sailor sat upon a horse.
+
+The old gentlewoman thought herself wiser than both, for she lived with
+no servant but a maid, and saved her money. The others were indeed
+sufficiently frugal; but the squire could not live without dogs and
+horses, and the sailor never suffered the day to pass but over a bowl of
+punch, to which, as he was not critical in the choice of his company,
+every man was welcome that could roar out a catch, or tell a story.
+
+All these, however, I was to please; an arduous task; but what will not
+youth and avarice undertake? I had an unresisting suppleness of temper,
+and an insatiable wish for riches; I was perpetually instigated by the
+ambition of my parents, and assisted occasionally by their instructions.
+What these advantages enabled me to perform, shall be told in the next
+letter of,
+
+Yours, &c.
+
+CAPTATOR.
+
+
+
+No. 198. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1752.
+
+ _Nil mihi das vivus: dicis, post fata daturum.
+ Si non es stultus, scis, Maro, quid cupiam_. MART. Lib. xi. 67.
+
+ You've told me, Maro, whilst you live,
+ You'd not a single penny give,
+ But that whene'er you chance to die,
+ You'd leave a handsome legacy:
+ You must be mad beyond redress,
+ If my next wish you cannot guess. F. LEWIS.
+
+MR. RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+You, who must have observed the inclination which almost every man,
+however unactive or insignificant, discovers of representing his life as
+distinguished by extraordinary events, will not wonder that Captator
+thinks his narrative important enough to be continued. Nothing is more
+common than for those to tease their companions with their history, who
+have neither done nor suffered any thing that can excite curiosity, or
+afford instruction.
+
+As I was taught to flatter with the first essays of speech, and had very
+early lost every other passion in the desire of money, I began my
+pursuit with omens of success; for I divided my officiousness so
+judiciously among my relations, that I was equally the favourite of all.
+When any of them entered the door, I went to welcome him with raptures;
+when he went away, I hung down my head, and sometimes entreated to go
+with him with so much importunity, that I very narrowly escaped a
+consent which I dreaded in my heart. When at an annual entertainment
+they were altogether, I had a harder task; but plied them so impartially
+with caresses, that none could charge me with neglect; and when they
+were wearied with my fondness and civilities, I was always dismissed
+with money to buy playthings.
+
+Life cannot be kept at a stand: the years of innocence and prattle were
+soon at an end, and other qualifications were necessary to recommend me
+to continuance of kindness. It luckily happened that none of my friends
+had high notions of book-learning. The sailor hated to see tall boys
+shut up in a school, when they might more properly be seeing the world,
+and making their fortunes; and was of opinion, that when the first rules
+of arithmetick were known, all that was necessary to make a man complete
+might be learned on ship-board. The squire only insisted, that so much
+scholarship was indispensably necessary, as might confer ability to draw
+a lease and read the court hands; and the old chambermaid declared
+loudly her contempt of books, and her opinion that they only took the
+head off the main chance.
+
+To unite, as well as we could, all their systems, I was bred at home.
+Each was taught to believe, that I followed his directions, and I gained
+likewise, as my mother observed, this advantage, that I was always in
+the way; for she had known many favourite children sent to schools or
+academies, and forgotten.
+
+As I grew fitter to be trusted to my own discretion, I was often
+despatched upon various pretences to visit my relations, with directions
+from my parents how to ingratiate myself, and drive away competitors.
+
+I was, from my infancy, considered by the sailor as a promising genius,
+because I liked punch better than wine; and I took care to improve this
+prepossession by continual inquiries about the art of navigation, the
+degree of heat and cold in different climates, the profits of trade, and
+the dangers of shipwreck. I admired the courage of the seamen, and
+gained his heart by importuning him for a recital of his adventures, and
+a sight of his foreign curiosities. I listened with an appearance of
+close attention to stories which I could already repeat, and at the
+close never failed to express my resolution to visit distant countries,
+and my contempt of the cowards and drones that spend all their lives in
+their native parish; though I had in reality no desire of any thing but
+money, nor ever felt the stimulations of curiosity or ardour of
+adventure, but would contentedly have passed the years of Nestor in
+receiving rents, and lending upon mortgages.
+
+The squire I was able to please with less hypocrisy, for I really
+thought it pleasant enough to kill the game and eat it. Some arts of
+falsehood, however, the hunger of gold persuaded me to practise, by
+which, though no other mischief was produced, the purity of my thoughts
+was vitiated, and the reverence for truth gradually destroyed. I
+sometimes purchased fish, and pretended to have caught them; I hired the
+countrymen to shew me partridges, and then gave my uncle intelligence of
+their haunt; I learned the seats of hares at night, and discovered them
+in the morning with a sagacity that raised the wonder and envy of old
+sportsmen. One only obstruction to the advancement of my reputation I
+could never fully surmount; I was naturally a coward, and was therefore
+always left shamefully behind, when there was a necessity to leap a
+hedge, to swim a river, or force the horses to the utmost speed; but as
+these exigencies did not frequently happen, I maintained my honour with
+sufficient success, and was never left out of a hunting party.
+
+The old chambermaid was not so certainly, nor so easily pleased, for she
+had no predominant passion but avarice, and was therefore cold and
+inaccessible. She had no conception of any virtue in a young man but
+that of saving his money. When she heard of my exploits in the field,
+she would shake her head, inquire how much I should be the richer for
+all my performances, and lament that such sums should be spent upon dogs
+and horses. If the sailor told her of my inclination to travel, she was
+sure there was no place like England, and could not imagine why any man
+that can live in his own country should leave it. This sullen and frigid
+being I found means, however, to propitiate by frequent commendations of
+frugality, and perpetual care to avoid expense.
+
+From the sailor was our first and most considerable expectation; for he
+was richer than the chambermaid, and older than the squire. He was so
+awkward and bashful among women, that we concluded him secure from
+matrimony; and the noisy fondness with which he used to welcome me to
+his house, made us imagine that he would look out for no other heir, and
+that we had nothing to do but wait patiently for his death. But in the
+midst of our triumph, my uncle saluted us one morning with a cry of
+transport, and, clapping his hand hard on my shoulder, told me, I was a
+happy fellow to have a friend like him in the world, for he came to fit
+me out for a voyage with one of his old acquaintances. I turned pale,
+and trembled; my father told him, that he believed my constitution not
+fitted to the sea; and my mother, bursting into tears, cried out, that
+her heart would break if she lost me. All this had no effect; the sailor
+was wholly insusceptive of the softer passions, and, without regard to
+tears or arguments, persisted in his resolution to make me a man. We
+were obliged to comply in appearance, and preparations were accordingly
+made. I took leave of my friends with great alacrity, proclaimed the
+beneficence of my uncle with the highest strains of gratitude, and
+rejoiced at the opportunity now put into my hands of gratifying my
+thirst of knowledge. But, a week before the day appointed for my
+departure, I fell sick by my mother's direction, and refused all food
+but what she privately brought me; whenever my uncle visited me I was
+lethargick or delirious, but took care in my raving fits to talk
+incessantly of travel and merchandize. The room was kept dark; the table
+was filled with vials and gallipots; my mother was with difficulty
+persuaded not to endanger her life with nocturnal attendance; my father
+lamented the loss of the profits of the voyage; and such superfluity of
+artifices was employed, as perhaps might have discovered the cheat to a
+man of penetration. But the sailor, unacquainted with subtilties and
+stratagems, was easily deluded; and as the ship could not stay for my
+recovery, sold the cargo, and left me to re-establish my health at
+leisure.
+
+I was sent to regain my flesh in a purer air, lest it should appear
+never to have been wasted, and in two months returned to deplore my
+disappointment. My uncle pitied my dejection, and bid me prepare myself
+against next year, for no land-lubber should touch his money.
+
+A reprieve however was obtained, and perhaps some new stratagem might
+have succeeded another spring; but my uncle unhappily made amorous
+advances to my mother's maid, who, to promote so advantageous a match,
+discovered the secret with which only she had been entrusted. He
+stormed, and raved, and declaring that he would have heirs of his own,
+and not give his substance to cheats and cowards, married the girl in
+two days, and has now four children.
+
+Cowardice is always scorned, and deceit universally detested. I found my
+friends, if not wholly alienated, at least cooled in their affection;
+the squire, though he did not wholly discard me, was less fond, and
+often inquired when I would go to sea. I was obliged to bear his
+insults, and endeavoured to rekindle his kindness by assiduity and
+respect; but all my care was vain; he died without a will, and the
+estate devolved to the legal heir.
+
+Thus has the folly of my parents condemned me to spend in flattery and
+attendance those years in which I might have been qualified to place
+myself above hope or fear. I am arrived at manhood without any useful
+art, or generous sentiment; and, if the old woman should likewise at
+last deceive me, am in danger at once of beggary and ignorance.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+CAPTATOR.
+
+
+
+No. 199. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1752.
+
+ _Decolor, obscurus, cilis. Non ille repexam
+ Caesariem Regum, nec Candida virginis ornat
+ Colla, nec insigni splendet per cingula morsu:
+ Sed nova si nigri videas miracula suai,
+ Tum pulcros superat cultus, et quldquid Evis
+ Indus litoribus rubra scrutatur in alga_. CLAUDIANUS, xlviii. 10.
+
+ Obscure, unpris'd, and dark, the magnet lies,
+ Nor lures the search of avaricious eyes,
+ Nor binds the neck, nor sparkles in the hair,
+ Nor dignifies the great, nor decks the fair.
+ But search the wonders of the dusky stone,
+ And own all glories of the mine outdone,
+ Each grace of form, each ornament of state,
+ That decks the fair, or dignifies the great.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+SIR,
+
+Though you have seldom digressed from moral subjects, I suppose you are
+not so rigorous or cynical as to deny the value or usefulness of natural
+philosophy; or to have lived in this age of inquiry and experiment,
+without any attention to the wonders every day produced by the pokers of
+magnetism and the wheels of electricity. At least, I may be allowed to
+hope that, since nothing is more contrary to moral excellence than envy,
+you will not refuse to promote the happiness of others, merely because
+you cannot partake of their enjoyments.
+
+In confidence, therefore, that your ignorance has not made you an enemy
+to knowledge, I offer you the honour of introducing to the notice of the
+publick, an adept, who, having long laboured for the benefit of mankind,
+is not willing, like too many of his predecessors, to conceal his
+secrets in the grave.
+
+Many have signalized themselves by melting their estates in crucibles. I
+was born to no fortune, and therefore had only my mind and body to
+devote to knowledge, and the gratitude of posterity will attest, that
+neither mind nor body have been spared. I have sat whole weeks without
+sleep by the side of an athanor, to watch the moment of projection; I
+have made the first experiment in nineteen diving engines of new
+construction; I have fallen eleven times speechless under the shock of
+electricity; I have twice dislocated my limbs, and once fractured my
+skull, in essaying to fly[l]; and four times endangered my life by
+submitting to the transfusion of blood.
+
+In the first period of my studies, I exerted the powers of my body more
+than those of my mind, and was not without hopes that fame might be
+purchased by a few broken bones without the toil of thinking; but having
+been shattered by some violent experiments, and constrained to confine
+myself to my books, I passed six-and-thirty years in searching the
+treasures of ancient wisdom, but am at last amply recompensed for all my
+perseverance.
+
+The curiosity of the present race of philosophers, having been long
+exercised upon electricity, has been lately transferred to magnetism;
+the qualities of the loadstone have been investigated, if not with much
+advantage, yet with great applause; and as the highest praise of art is
+to imitate nature, I hope no man will think the makers of artificial
+magnets celebrated or reverenced above their deserts.
+
+I have, for some time, employed myself in the same practice, but with
+deeper knowledge and more extensive views. While my contemporaries were
+touching needles and raising weights, or busying themselves with
+inclination and variation, I have been examining those qualities of
+magnetism which may be applied to the accommodation and happiness of
+common life. I have left to inferior understandings the care of
+conducting the sailor through the hazards of the ocean, and reserved to
+myself the more difficult and illustrious province of preserving the
+connubial compact from violation, and setting mankind free for ever from
+the danger of supposititious children, and the torments of fruitless
+vigilance and anxious suspicion.
+
+To defraud any man of his due praise is unworthy of a philosopher; I
+shall, therefore, openly confess that I owe the first hint of this
+inestimable secret to the rabbi Abraham Ben Hannase, who, in his
+treatise of precious stones, has left this account of the magnet:
+[Hebrew: chkalamta],&c. "The calamita, or loadstone that attracts iron,
+produces many bad fantasies in man. Women fly from this stone. If,
+therefore, any husband be disturbed with jealousy, and fear lest his
+wife converses with other men, let him lay this stone upon her while she
+is asleep. If she be pure, she will, when she wakes, clasp her husband
+fondly in her arms; but if she be guilty, she will fall out of bed, and
+run away."
+
+When I first read this wonderful passage, I could not easily conceive
+why it had remained hitherto unregarded in such a zealous competition
+for magnetical fame. It would surely be unjust to suspect that any of
+the candidates are strangers to the name or works of rabbi Abraham, or
+to conclude, from a late edict of the Royal Society in favour of the
+English language, that philosophy and literature are no longer to act in
+concert. Yet, how should a quality so useful escape promulgation, but by
+the obscurity of the language in which it was delivered? Why are footmen
+and chambermaids paid on every side for keeping secrets, which no
+caution nor expense could secure from the all-penetrating magnet? Or,
+why are so many witnesses summoned, and so many artifices practised, to
+discover what so easy an experiment would infallibly reveal?
+
+Full of this perplexity, I read the lines of Abraham to a friend, who
+advised me not to expose my life by a mad indulgence of the love of
+fame: he warned me by the fate of Orpheus, that knowledge or genius
+could give no protection to the invader of female prerogatives; assured
+me that neither the armour of Achilles, nor the antidote of Mithridates,
+would be able to preserve me; and counselled me, if I could not live
+without renown, to attempt the acquisition of universal empire, in which
+the honour would perhaps be equal, and the danger certainly be less.
+
+I, a solitary student, pretend not to much knowledge of the world, but
+am unwilling to think it so generally corrupt, as that a scheme for the
+detection of incontinence should bring any danger upon its inventor. My
+friend has indeed told me that all the women will be my enemies, and
+that, however I flatter myself with hopes of defence from the men, I
+shall certainly find myself deserted in the hour of danger. Of the young
+men, said he, some will be afraid of sharing the disgrace of their
+mothers, and some the danger of their mistresses; of those who are
+married, part are already convinced of the falsehood of their wives, and
+part shut their eyes to avoid conviction; few ever sought for virtue in
+marriage, and therefore few will try whether they have found it. Almost
+every man is careless or timorous, and to trust is easier and safer than
+to examine.
+
+These observations discouraged me, till I began to consider what
+reception I was likely to find among the ladies, whom I have reviewed
+under the three classes of maids, wives, and widows, and cannot but hope
+that I may obtain some countenance among them. The single ladies I
+suppose universally ready to patronise my method, by which connubial
+wickedness may be detected, since no woman marries with a previous
+design to be unfaithful to her husband. And to keep them steady in my
+cause, I promise never to sell one of my magnets to a man who steals a
+girl from school; marries a woman of forty years younger than himself;
+or employs the authority of parents to obtain a wife without her own
+consent.
+
+Among the married ladies, notwithstanding the insinuations of slander,
+yet I resolve to believe, that the greater part are my friends, and am
+at least convinced, that they who demand the test, and appear on my
+side, will supply, by their spirit, the deficiency of their numbers, and
+that their enemies will shrink and quake at the sight of a magnet, as
+the slaves of Scythia fled from the scourge.
+
+The widows will be confederated in my favour by their curiosity, if not
+by their virtue; for it may be observed, that women who have outlived
+their husbands, always think themselves entitled to superintend the
+conduct of young wives; and as they are themselves in no danger from
+this magnetick trial, I shall expect them to be eminently and
+unanimously zealous in recommending it.
+
+With these hopes I shall, in a short time, offer to sale magnets armed
+with a particular metallick composition, which concentrates their
+virtue, and determines their agency. It is known that the efficacy of
+the magnet, in common operations, depends much upon its armature, and it
+cannot be imagined, that a stone, naked, or cased only in a common
+manner, will discover the virtues ascribed to it by Rabbi Abraham. The
+secret of this metal I shall carefully conceal, and, therefore, am not
+afraid of imitators, nor shall trouble the offices with solicitations
+for a patent.
+
+I shall sell them of different sizes, and various degrees of strength. I
+have some of a bulk proper to be hung at the bed's head, as scare-crows,
+and some so small that they may be easily concealed. Some I have ground
+into oval forms to be hung at watches; and some, for the curious, I have
+set in wedding rings, that ladies may never want an attestation of their
+innocence. Some I can produce so sluggish and inert, that they will not
+act before the third failure; and others so vigorous and animated, that
+they exert their influence against unlawful wishes, if they have been
+willingly and deliberately indulged. As it is my practice honestly to
+tell my customers the properties of my magnets, I can judge, by their
+choice, of the delicacy of their sentiments. Many have been content to
+spare cost by purchasing only the lowest degree of efficacy, and all
+have started with terrour from those which operate upon the thoughts.
+One young lady only fitted on a ring of the strongest energy, and
+declared that she scorned to separate her wishes from her acts, or allow
+herself to think what she was forbidden to practise.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+HERMETICUS.
+
+[Footnote l: In the sixth chapter of Rasselas we have an excellent story
+of an experimentalist in the art of flying. Dr. Johnson sketched perhaps
+from life, for we are informed that he once lodged in the same house
+with a man who broke his legs in the daring attempt.]
+
+
+
+No. 200. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1752.
+
+ _Nemo petit, modicis quae mittebantur amicis
+ A Seneca, quae Piso bonus, quae Cotta solebut
+ Largiri; namque et titulis, et fascibus olim
+ Major habebatur donandi gloria: solum
+ Poscimus, ut caenes civiliter. Hoc face, el esto,
+ Esto, ut nunc multi, dives tibi, pauper amicis_. JUV. Sat. v. 108.
+
+ No man expects (for who so much a sot
+ Who has the times he lives in so forgot?)
+ What Seneca, what Piso us'd to send,
+ To raise or to support a sinking friend.
+ Those godlike men, to wanting virtue kind,
+ Bounty well plac'd, preferr'd, and well design'd,
+ To all their titles, all that height of pow'r,
+ Which turns the brains of fools, and fools alone adore.
+ When your poor client is condemn'd t' attend,
+ 'Tis all we ask, receive him as a friend:
+ Descend to this, and then we ask no more;
+ Rich to yourself, to all beside be poor. BOWLES.
+
+TO THE RAMBLER.
+
+MR. RAMBLER,
+
+Such is the tenderness or infirmity of many minds, that when any
+affliction oppresses them, they have immediate recourse to lamentation
+and complaint, which, though it can only be allowed reasonable when
+evils admit of remedy, and then only when addressed to those from whom
+the remedy is expected, yet seems even in hopeless and incurable
+distresses to be natural, since those by whom it is not indulged,
+imagine that they give a proof of extraordinary fortitude by suppressing
+it.
+
+I am one of those who, with the Sancho of Cervantes, leave to higher
+characters the merit of suffering in silence, and give vent without
+scruple to any sorrow that swells in my heart. It is therefore to me a
+severe aggravation of a calamity, when it is such as in the common
+opinion will not justify the acerbity of exclamation, or support the
+solemnity of vocal grief. Yet many pains are incident to a man of
+delicacy, which the unfeeling world cannot be persuaded to pity, and
+which, when they are separated from their peculiar and personal
+circumstances, will never be considered as important enough to claim
+attention, or deserve redress.
+
+Of this kind will appear to gross and vulgar apprehensions, the miseries
+which I endured in a morning visit to Prospero, a man lately raised to
+wealth by a lucky project, and too much intoxicated by sudden elevation,
+or too little polished by thought and conversation, to enjoy his present
+fortune with elegance and decency.
+
+We set out in the world together; and for a long time mutually assisted
+each other in our exigencies, as either happened to have money or
+influence beyond his immediate necessities. You know that nothing
+generally endears men so much as participation of dangers and
+misfortunes; I therefore always considered Prospero as united with me in
+the strongest league of kindness, and imagined that our friendship was
+only to be broken by the hand of death. I felt at his sudden shoot of
+success an honest and disinterested joy; but as I want no part of his
+superfluities, am not willing to descend from that equality in which we
+hitherto have lived.
+
+Our intimacy was regarded by me as a dispensation from ceremonial
+visits; and it was so long before I saw him at his new house, that he
+gently complained of my neglect, and obliged me to come on a day
+appointed. I kept my promise, but found that the impatience of my friend
+arose not from any desire to communicate his happiness, but to enjoy his
+superiority.
+
+When I told my name at the door, the footman went to see if his master
+was at home, and, by the tardiness of his return, gave me reason to
+suspect that time was taken to deliberate. He then informed me, that
+Prospero desired my company, and shewed the staircase carefully secured
+by mats from the pollution of my feet. The best apartments were
+ostentatiously set open, that I might have a distant view of the
+magnificence which I was not permitted to approach; and my old friend
+receiving me with all the insolence of condescension at the top of the
+stairs, conducted me to a back room, where he told me he always
+breakfasted when he had not great company.
+
+On the floor where we sat lay a carpet covered with a cloth, of which
+Prospero ordered his servant to lift up a corner, that I might
+contemplate the brightness of the colours, and the elegance of the
+texture, and asked me whether I had ever seen any thing so fine before?
+I did not gratify his folly with any outcries of admiration, but coldly
+bade the footman let down the cloth.
+
+We then sat down, and I began to hope that pride was glutted with
+persecution, when Prospero desired that I would give the servant leave
+to adjust the cover of my chair, which was slipt a little aside, to shew
+the damask; he informed me that he had bespoke ordinary chairs for
+common use, but had been disappointed by his tradesman. I put the chair
+aside with my foot, and drew another so hastily, that I was entreated
+not to rumple the carpet.
+
+Breakfast was at last set, and as I was not willing to indulge the
+peevishness that began to seize me, I commended the tea: Prospero then
+told me, that another time I should taste his finest sort, but that he
+had only a very small quantity remaining, and reserved it for those whom
+he thought himself obliged to treat with particular respect.
+
+While we were conversing upon such subjects as imagination happened to
+suggest, he frequently digressed into directions to the servant that
+waited, or made a slight inquiry after the jeweller or silversmith; and
+once, as I was pursuing an argument with some degree of earnestness, he
+started from his posture of attention, and ordered, that if lord Lofty
+called on him that morning, he should be shown into the best parlour.
+
+My patience was yet not wholly subdued. I was willing to promote his
+satisfaction, and therefore observed that the figures on the china were
+eminently pretty. Prospero had now an opportunity of calling for his
+Dresden china, which, says he, I always associate with my chased
+teakettle. The cups were brought; I once resolved not to have looked
+upon them, but my curiosity prevailed. When I had examined them a
+little, Prospero desired me to set them down, for they who were
+accustomed only to common dishes, seldom handled china with much care.
+You will, I hope, commend my philosophy, when I tell you that I did not
+dash his baubles to the ground.
+
+He was now so much elevated with his own greatness, that he thought some
+humility necessary to avert the glance of envy, and therefore told me,
+with an air of soft composure, that I was not to estimate life by
+external appearance, that all these shining acquisitions had added
+little to his happiness, that he still remembered with pleasure the days
+in which he and I were upon the level, and had often, in the moment of
+reflection, been doubtful, whether he should lose much by changing his
+condition for mine.
+
+I began now to be afraid lest his pride should, by silence and
+submission be emboldened to insults that could not easily be borne, and
+therefore coolly considered, how I should repress it without such
+bitterness of reproof as I was yet unwilling to use. But he interrupted
+my meditation, by asking leave to be dressed, and told me, that he had
+promised to attend some ladies in the park, and, if I was going the same
+way, would take me in his chariot. I had no inclination to any other
+favours, and therefore left him without any intention of seeing him
+again, unless some misfortune should restore his understanding.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+ASPER.
+
+Though I am not wholly insensible of the provocations which my
+correspondent has received, I cannot altogether commend the keenness of
+his resentment, nor encourage him to persist in his resolution of
+breaking off all commerce with his old acquaintance. One of the golden
+precepts of Pythagoras directs, that _a friend should not be hated for
+little faults_; and surely he, upon whom nothing worse can be charged,
+than that he mats his stairs, and covers his carpet, and sets out his
+finery to show before those whom he does not admit to use it, has yet
+committed nothing that should exclude him from common degrees of
+kindness. Such improprieties often proceed rather from stupidity than
+malice. Those who thus shine only to dazzle, are influenced merely by
+custom and example, and neither examine, nor are qualified to examine,
+the motives of their own practice, or to state the nice limits between
+elegance and ostentation. They are often innocent of the pain which
+their vanity produces, and insult others when they have no worse purpose
+than to please themselves.
+
+He that too much refines his delicacy will always endanger his quiet. Of
+those with whom nature and virtue oblige us to converse, some are
+ignorant of the art of pleasing, and offend when they design to caress;
+some are negligent, and gratify themselves without regard to the quiet
+of another; some, perhaps, are malicious, and feel no greater
+satisfaction in prosperity, than that of raising envy and trampling
+inferiority. But, whatever be the motive of insult, it is always best to
+overlook it, for folly scarcely can deserve resentment, and malice is
+punished by neglect[m].
+
+[Footnote m: Garrick's little vanities are recognized by all in the
+character of Prospero. Mr. Boswell informs us, that he never forgave its
+pointed satire. On the same authority we are assured, that though
+Johnson so dearly loved to ridicule his pupil, yet he so habitually
+considered him as his own property, that he would permit no one beside
+to hold up his weaknesses to derision.]
+
+
+
+No. 201. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1752.
+
+ --_Sanctus haberi
+ Justitiaeque tenat factis dictisque mereris,
+ Adnosco procerem_. JUV. Sat. Lib. viii. 24.
+
+ Convince the world that you're devout and true;
+ Be just in all you say, and all you do;
+ Whatever be your birth, you're sure to be
+ A peer of the first magnitude to me. STEPNEY.
+
+Boyle has observed, that the excellency of manufactures, and the
+facility of labour, would be much promoted, if the various expedients
+and contrivances which lie concealed in private hands, were by
+reciprocal communications made generally known; for there are few
+operations that are not performed by one or other with some peculiar
+advantages, which, though singly of little importance, would, by
+conjunction and concurrence, open new inlets to knowledge, and give new
+powers to diligence.
+
+There are, in like manner, several moral excellencies distributed among
+the different classes of a community. It was said by Cujacius, that he
+never read more than one book by which he was not instructed; and he
+that shall inquire after virtue with ardour and attention, will seldom
+find a man by whose example or sentiments he may not be improved.
+
+Every profession has some essential and appropriate virtue, without
+which there can be no hope of honour or success, and which, as it is
+more or less cultivated, confers within its sphere of activity different
+degrees of merit and reputation. As the astrologers range the
+subdivisions of mankind under the planets which they suppose to
+influence their lives, the moralist may distribute them according to the
+virtues which they necessarily practise, and consider them as
+distinguished by prudence or fortitude, diligence or patience.
+
+So much are the modes of excellence settled by time and place, that men
+may be heard boasting in one street of that which they would anxiously
+conceal in another. The grounds of scorn and esteem, the topicks of
+praise and satire, are varied according to the several virtues or vices
+which the course of life has disposed men to admire or abhor; but he who
+is solicitous for his own improvement, must not be limited by local
+reputation, but select from every tribe of mortals their
+characteristical virtues, and constellate in himself the scattered
+graces which shine single in other men.
+
+The chief praise to which a trader aspires is that of punctuality, or an
+exact and rigorous observance of commercial engagements; nor is there
+any vice of which he so much dreads the imputation, as of negligence and
+instability. This is a quality which the interest of mankind requires to
+be diffused through all the ranks of life, but which many seem to
+consider as a vulgar and ignoble virtue, below the ambition of greatness
+or attention of wit, scarcely requisite among men of gaiety and spirit,
+and sold at its highest rate when it is sacrificed to a frolick or a
+jest.
+
+Every man has daily occasion to remark what vexations arise from this
+privilege of deceiving one another. The active and vivacious have so
+long disdained the restraints of truth, that promises and appointments
+have lost their cogency, and both parties neglect their stipulations,
+because each concludes that they will be broken by the other.
+
+Negligence is first admitted in small affairs, and strengthened by petty
+indulgences. He that is not yet hardened by custom, ventures not on the
+violation of important engagements, but thinks himself bound by his word
+in cases of property or danger, though he allows himself to forget at
+what time he is to meet ladies in the park, or at what tavern his
+friends are expecting him.
+
+This laxity of honour would be more tolerable, if it could be restrained
+to the play-house, the ball-room, or the card-table; yet even there it
+is sufficiently troublesome, and darkens those moments with expectation,
+suspense, and resentment, which are set aside for pleasure, and from
+which we naturally hope for unmingled enjoyment, and total relaxation.
+But he that suffers the slightest breach in his morality, can seldom
+tell what shall enter it, or how wide it shall be made; when a passage
+is open, the influx of corruption is every moment wearing down
+opposition, and by slow degrees deluges the heart.
+
+Aliger entered the world a youth of lively imagination, extensive views,
+and untainted principles. His curiosity incited him to range from place
+to place, and try all the varieties of conversation; his elegance of
+address and fertility of ideas gained him friends wherever he appeared;
+or at least he found the general kindness of reception always shown to a
+young man whose birth and fortune give him a claim to notice, and who
+has neither by vice nor folly destroyed his privileges. Aliger was
+pleased with this general smile of mankind, and was industrious to
+preserve it by compliance and officiousness, but did not suffer his
+desire of pleasing to vitiate his integrity. It was his established
+maxim, that a promise is never to be broken; nor was it without long
+reluctance that he once suffered himself to be drawn away from a festal
+engagement by the importunity of another company.
+
+He spent the evening, as is usual in the rudiments of vice, in
+perturbation and imperfect enjoyment, and met his disappointed friends
+in the morning with confusion and excuses. His companions, not
+accustomed to such scrupulous anxiety, laughed at his uneasiness,
+compounded the offence for a bottle, gave him courage to break his word
+again, and again levied the penalty. He ventured the same experiment
+upon another society, and found them equally ready to consider it as a
+venial fault, always incident to a man of quickness and gaiety; till, by
+degrees, he began to think himself at liberty to follow the last
+invitation, and was no longer shocked at the turpitude of falsehood. He
+made no difficulty to promise his presence at distant places, and if
+listlessness happened to creep upon him, would sit at home with great
+tranquillity, and has often sunk to sleep in a chair, while he held ten
+tables in continual expectations of his entrance.
+
+It was so pleasant to live in perpetual vacancy, that he soon dismissed
+his attention as an useless incumbrance, and resigned himself to
+carelessness and dissipation, without any regard to the future or the
+past, or any other motive of action than the impulse of a sudden desire,
+or the attraction of immediate pleasure. The absent were immediately
+forgotten, and the hopes or fears felt by others, had no influence upon
+his conduct. He was in speculation completely just, but never kept his
+promise to a creditor; he was benevolent, but always deceived those
+friends whom he undertook to patronise or assist; he was prudent, but
+suffered his affairs to be embarrassed for want of regulating his
+accounts at stated times. He courted a young lady, and when the
+settlements were drawn, took a ramble into the country on the day
+appointed to sign them. He resolved to travel, and sent his chests on
+shipboard, but delayed to follow them till he lost his passage. He was
+summoned as an evidence in a cause of great importance, and loitered on
+the way till the trial was past. It is said that when he had, with great
+expense, formed an interest in a borough, his opponent contrived, by
+some agents who knew his temper, to lure him away on the day of
+election.
+
+His benevolence draws him into the commission of a thousand crimes,
+which others less kind or civil would escape. His courtesy invites
+application; his promises produce dependence; he has his pockets filled
+with petitions, which he intends some time to deliver and enforce, and
+his table covered with letters of request, with which he purposes to
+comply; but time slips imperceptibly away, while he is either idle or
+busy; his friends lose their opportunities, and charge upon him their
+miscarriages and calamities.
+
+This character, however contemptible, is not peculiar to Aliger. They
+whose activity of imagination is often shifting the scenes of
+expectation, are frequently subject to such sallies of caprice as make
+all their actions fortuitous, destroy the value of their friendship,
+obstruct the efficacy of their virtues, and set them below the meanest
+of those that persist in their resolutions, execute what they design,
+and perform what they have promised.
+
+
+
+No. 202. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1752.
+
+ [Greek: Pros apanta deilos estin o penaes pragmata,
+ Kai pantas autou kataphronein upolambanei
+ O de metrios pratton periskegesteron
+ Apanta t aniara, dampria, phepei.] CALLIMACHUS.
+
+ From no affliction is the poor exempt,
+ He thinks each eye surveys him with contempt;
+ Unmanly poverty subdues the heart,
+ Cankers each wound, and sharpen's[1] ev'ry dart. F. LEWIS.
+[1] Transcriber's note: sic.
+
+Among those who have endeavoured to promote learning, and rectify
+judgment, it has been long customary to complain of the abuse of words,
+which are often admitted to signify things so different, that, instead
+of assisting the understanding as vehicles of knowledge, they produce
+errour, dissention, and perplexity, because what is affirmed in one
+sense, is received in another.
+
+If this ambiguity sometimes embarrasses the most solemn controversies,
+and obscures the demonstrations of science, it may well be expected to
+infest the pompous periods of declaimers, whose purpose is often only to
+amuse with fallacies, and change the colours of truth and falsehood; or
+the musical compositions of poets, whose style is professedly
+figurative, and whose art is imagined to consist in distorting words
+from their original meaning.
+
+There are few words of which the reader believes himself better to know
+the import, than of _poverty_; yet, whoever studies either the poets or
+philosophers, will find such an account of the condition expressed by
+that term as his experience or observation will not easily discover to
+be true. Instead of the meanness, distress, complaint, anxiety, and
+dependance, which have hitherto been combined in his ideas of poverty,
+he will read of content, innocence, and cheerfulness, of health and
+safety, tranquillity and freedom; of pleasures not known but to men
+unencumbered with possessions; and of sleep that sheds his balsamick
+anodynes only on the cottage. Such are the blessings to be obtained by
+the resignation of riches, that kings might descend from their thrones,
+and generals retire from a triumph, only to slumber undisturbed in the
+elysium of poverty.
+
+If these authors do not deceive us, nothing can be more absurd than that
+perpetual contest for wealth which keeps the world in commotion; nor any
+complaints more justly censured than those which proceed from want of
+the gifts of fortune, which we are taught by the great masters of moral
+wisdom to consider as golden shackles, by which the wearer is at once
+disabled and adorned; as luscious poisons which may for a time please
+the palate, but soon betray their malignity by languor and by pain. It
+is the great privilege of poverty to be happy unenvied, to be healthful
+without physick, and secure without a guard; to obtain from the bounty
+of nature, what the great and wealthy are compelled to procure by the
+help of artists and attendants, of flatterers and spies.
+
+But it will be found upon a nearer view, that they who extol the
+happiness of poverty, do not mean the same state with those who deplore
+its miseries. Poets have their imaginations filled with ideas of
+magnificence; and being accustomed to contemplate the downfall of
+empires, or to contrive forms of lamentations, for monarchs in distress,
+rank all the classes of mankind in a state of poverty, who make no
+approaches to the dignity of crowns. To be poor, in the epick language,
+is only not to command the wealth of nations, nor to have fleets and
+armies in pay.
+
+Vanity has perhaps contributed to this impropriety of style. He that
+wishes to become a philosopher at a cheap rate, easily gratifies his
+ambition by submitting to poverty when he does not feel it, and by
+boasting his contempt of riches when he has already more than he enjoys.
+He who would shew the extent of his views, and grandeur of his
+conceptions, or discover his acquaintance with splendour and
+magnificence, may talk like Cowley, of an humble station and quiet
+obscurity, of the paucity of nature's wants, and the inconveniencies of
+superfluity, and at last, like him, limit his desires to five hundred
+pounds a year; a fortune, indeed, not exuberant, when we compare it with
+the expenses of pride and luxury, but to which it little becomes a
+philosopher to affix the name of poverty, since no man can, with any
+propriety, be termed poor, who does not see the greater part of mankind
+richer than himself.
+
+As little is the general condition of human life understood by the
+panegyrists and historians, who amuse us with accounts of the poverty of
+heroes and sages. Riches are of no value in themselves, their use is
+discovered only in that which they procure. They are not coveted, unless
+by narrow understandings, which confound the means with the end, but for
+the sake of power, influence, and esteem; or, by some of less elevated
+and refined sentiments, as necessary to sensual enjoyment.
+
+The pleasures of luxury, many have, without uncommon virtue, been able
+to despise, even when affluence and idleness have concurred to tempt
+them; and therefore he who feels nothing from indigence but the want of
+gratifications which he could not in any other condition make consistent
+with innocence, has given no proof of eminent patience. Esteem and
+influence every man desires, but they are equally pleasing, and equally
+valuable, by whatever means they are obtained; and whoever has found the
+art of securing them without the help of money, ought, in reality, to be
+accounted rich, since he has all that riches can purchase to a wise man.
+Cincinnatus, though he lived upon a few acres cultivated by his own
+hand, was sufficiently removed from all the evils generally comprehended
+under the name of poverty, when his reputation was such, that the voice
+of his country called him from his farm to take absolute command into
+his hand; nor was Diogenes much mortified by his residence in a tub,
+where he was honoured with the visit of Alexander the Great.
+
+The same fallacy has conciliated veneration to the religious orders.
+When we behold a man abdicating the hope of terrestrial possessions, and
+precluding himself, by an irrevocable vow, from the pursuit and
+acquisition of all that his fellow-beings consider as worthy of wishes
+and endeavours, we are immediately struck with the purity, abstraction,
+and firmness of his mind, and regard him as wholly employed in securing
+the interests of futurity, and devoid of any other care than to gain, at
+whatever price, the surest passage to eternal rest.
+
+Yet, what can the votary be justly said to have lost of his present
+happiness? If he resides in a convent, he converses only with men whose
+condition is the same with his own; he has, from the munificence of the
+founder, all the necessaries of life, and is safe from that destitution,
+which Hooker declares to be "such an impediment to virtue, as, till it
+be removed, suffereth not the mind of man to admit any other care." All
+temptations to envy and competition are shut out from his retreat; he is
+not pained with the sight of unattainable dignity, nor insulted with the
+bluster of insolence, or the smile of forced familiarity. If he wanders
+abroad, the sanctity of his character amply compensates all other
+distinctions; he is seldom seen but with reverence, nor heard but with
+submission.
+
+It has been remarked, that death, though often defied in the field,
+seldom fails to terrify when it approaches the bed of sickness in its
+natural horrour; so poverty may easily be endured, while associated with
+dignity and reputation, but will always be shunned and dreaded, when it
+is accompanied with ignominy and contempt.
+
+
+
+No. 203. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1752.
+
+ _Cum volet illa dies, quae nil nisi corporis hujus
+ Jus habet, incerti spatium mihi finiat avi_. OVID. Met. xv. 873.
+
+ Come, soon or late, death's undetermin'd day,
+ This mortal being only can decay. WELSTED.
+
+It seems to be the fate of man to seek all his consolations in futurity.
+The time present is seldom able to fill desire or imagination with
+immediate enjoyment, and we are forced to supply its deficiencies by
+recollection or anticipation.
+
+Every one has so often detected the fallaciousness of hope, and the
+inconvenience of teaching himself to expect what a thousand accidents
+may preclude, that, when time has abated the confidence with which youth
+rushes out to take possession of the world, we endeavour, or wish, to
+find entertainment in the review of life, and to repose upon real facts,
+and certain experience. This is perhaps one reason, among many, why age
+delights in narratives.
+
+But so full is the world of calamity, that every source of pleasure is
+polluted, and every retirement of tranquillity disturbed. When time has
+supplied us with events sufficient to employ our thoughts, it has
+mingled them with so many disasters, that we shrink from their
+remembrance, dread their intrusion upon our minds, and fly from them as
+from enemies that pursue us with torture.
+
+No man past the middle point of life can sit down to feast upon the
+pleasures of youth without finding the banquet embittered by the cup of
+sorrow; he may revive lucky accidents, and pleasing extravagancies; many
+days of harmless frolick, or nights of honest festivity, will perhaps
+recur; or, if he has been engaged in scenes of action, and acquainted
+with affairs of difficulty and vicissitudes of fortune, he may enjoy the
+nobler pleasure of looking back upon distress firmly supported, dangers
+resolutely encountered, and opposition artfully defeated. Aeneas
+properly comforts his companions, when, after the horrours of a storm,
+they have landed on an unknown and desolate country, with the hope that
+their miseries will be at some distant time recounted with delight.
+There are few higher gratifications, than that of reflection on
+surmounted evils, when they are not incurred nor protracted by our
+fault, and neither reproach us with cowardice nor guilt.
+
+But this felicity is almost always abated by the reflection that they
+with whom we should be most pleased to share it are now in the grave. A
+few years make such havock in human generations, that we soon see
+ourselves deprived of those with whom we entered the world, and whom the
+participation of pleasures or fatigues had endeared to our remembrance.
+The man of enterprise recounts his adventures and expedients, but is
+forced, at the close of the relation, to pay a sigh to the names of
+those that contributed to his success; he that passes his life among the
+gayer part of mankind, has his remembrance stored with remarks and
+repartees of wits, whose sprightliness and merriment are now lost in
+perpetual silence; the trader, whose industry has supplied the want of
+inheritance, repines in solitary plenty at the absence of companions,
+with whom he had planned out amusements for his latter years; and the
+scholar, whose merit, after a long series of efforts, raises him from
+obscurity, looks round in vain from his exaltation for his old friends
+or enemies, whose applause or mortification would heighten his triumph.
+
+Among Martial's requisites to happiness is, _Res non parta labore, sed
+relicta_, "an estate not gained by industry, but left by inheritance."
+It is necessary to the completion of every good, that it be timely
+obtained; for whatever comes at the close of life will come too late to
+give much delight; yet all human happiness has its defects. Of what we
+do not gain for ourselves we have only a faint and imperfect fruition,
+because we cannot compare the difference between want and possession, or
+at least can derive from it no conviction of our own abilities, nor any
+increase of self-esteem; what we acquire by bravery or science, by
+mental or corporeal diligence, comes at last when we cannot communicate,
+and, therefore, cannot enjoy it.
+
+Thus every period of life is obliged to borrow its happiness from the
+time to come. In youth we have nothing past to entertain us, and in age,
+we derive little from retrospect but hopeless sorrow. Yet the future
+likewise has its limits, which the imagination dreads to approach, but
+which we see to be not far distant. The loss of our friends and
+companions impresses hourly upon us the necessity of our own departure;
+we know that the schemes of man are quickly at an end, that we must soon
+lie down in the grave with the forgotten multitudes of former ages, and
+yield our place to others, who, like us, shall be driven awhile by hope
+or fear about the surface of the earth, and then like us be lost in the
+shades of death.
+
+Beyond this termination of our material existence, we are therefore
+obliged to extend our hopes; and almost every man indulges his
+imagination with something, which is not to happen till he has changed
+his manner of being: some amuse themselves with entails and settlements,
+provide for the perpetuation of families and honours, or contrive to
+obviate the dissipation of the fortunes, which it has been their
+business to accumulate; others, more refined or exalted, congratulate
+their own hearts upon the future extent of their reputation, the
+reverence of distant nations, and the gratitude of unprejudiced
+posterity.
+
+They whose souls are so chained down to coffers and tenements, that they
+cannot conceive a state in which they shall look upon them with less
+solicitude, are seldom attentive or flexible to arguments; but the
+votaries of fame are capable of reflection, and therefore may be called
+to reconsider the probability of their expectations.
+
+Whether to be remembered in remote times be worthy of a wise man's wish,
+has not yet been satisfactorily decided; and, indeed, to be long
+remembered, can happen to so small a number, that the bulk of mankind
+has very little interest in the question. There is never room in the
+world for more than a certain quantity or measure of renown. The
+necessary business of life, the immediate pleasures or pains of every
+condition, leave us not leisure beyond a fixed proportion for
+contemplations which do not forcibly influence our present welfare. When
+this vacuity is filled, no characters can be admitted into the
+circulation of fame, but by occupying the place of some that must be
+thrust into oblivion. The eye of the mind, like that of the body, can
+only extend its view to new objects, by losing sight of those which are
+now before it.
+
+Reputation is therefore a meteor, which blazes a while and disappears
+for ever; and, if we except a few transcendent and invincible names,
+which no revolutions of opinion or length of time is able to suppress;
+all those that engage our thoughts, or diversify our conversation, are
+every moment hasting to obscurity, as new favourites are adopted by
+fashion.
+
+It is not therefore from this world, that any ray of comfort can
+proceed, to cheer the gloom of the last hour. But futurity has still its
+prospects; there is yet happiness in reserve, which, if we transfer our
+attention to it, will support us in the pains of disease, and the
+languor of decay. This happiness we may expect with confidence, because
+it is out of the power of chance, and may be attained by all that
+sincerely desire and earnestly pursue it. On this therefore every mind
+ought finally to rest. Hope is the chief blessing of man, and that hope
+only is rational, of which we are certain that it cannot deceive us.
+
+
+
+No. 204. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1752
+
+ _Nemo tam divos habuit faventes,
+ Crastinum ut possit sibi polliceit_. SENECA.
+
+ Of heaven's protection who can be
+ So confident to utter this?--
+ To-morrow I will spend in bliss. F. LEWIS.
+
+Seged, lord of Ethiopia, to the inhabitants of the world: To the sons of
+_Presumption_, humility and fear; and to the daughters of _Sorrow_,
+content and acquiescence.
+
+Thus, in the twenty-seventh year of his reign, spoke Seged, the monarch
+of forty nations, the distributor of the waters of the Nile: "At length,
+Seged, thy toils are at an end; thou hast reconciled disaffection, thou
+hast suppressed rebellion, thou hast pacified the jealousies of thy
+courtiers, thou hast chased war from thy confines, and erected
+fortresses in the lands of thine enemies. All who have offended thee
+tremble in thy presence, and wherever thy voice is heard, it is obeyed.
+Thy throne is surrounded by armies, numerous as the locusts of the
+summer, and resistless as the blasts of pestilence. Thy magazines are
+stored with ammunition, thy treasures overflow with the tribute of
+conquered kingdoms. Plenty waves upon thy fields, and opulence glitters
+in thy cities. Thy nod is as the earthquake that shakes the mountains,
+and thy smile as the dawn of the vernal day. In thy hand is the strength
+of thousands, and thy health is the health of millions. Thy palace is
+gladdened by the song of praise, and thy path perfumed by the breath of
+benediction. Thy subjects gaze upon thy greatness, and think of danger
+or misery no more. Why, Seged, wilt not thou partake the blessings thou
+bestowest? Why shouldst thou only forbear to rejoice in this general
+felicity? Why should thy face be clouded with anxiety, when the meanest
+of those who call thee sovereign, gives the day to festivity, and the
+night to peace? At length, Seged, reflect and be wise. What is the gift
+of conquest but safety? Why are riches collected but to purchase
+happiness?"
+
+Seged then ordered the house of pleasure, built in an island of the lake
+of Dambea, to be prepared for his reception. "I will retire," says he,
+"for ten days from tumult and care, from counsels and decrees. Long
+quiet is not the lot of the governours of nations, but a cessation of
+ten days cannot be denied me. This short interval of happiness may
+surely be secured from the interruption of fear or perplexity, sorrow or
+disappointment. I will exclude all trouble from my abode, and remove
+from my thoughts whatever may confuse the harmony of the concert, or
+abate the sweetness of the banquet. I will fill the whole capacity of my
+soul with enjoyment, and try what it is to live without a wish
+unsatisfied."
+
+In a few days the orders were performed, and Seged hasted to the palace
+of Dambea, which stood in an island cultivated only for pleasure,
+planted with every flower that spreads its colours to the sun, and every
+shrub that sheds fragrance in the air. In one part of this extensive
+garden, were open walks for excursions in the morning; in another, thick
+groves, and silent arbours, and bubbling fountains for repose at noon.
+All that could solace the sense, or flatter the fancy, all that industry
+could extort from nature, or wealth furnish to art, all that conquest
+could seize, or beneficence attract, was collected together, and every
+perception of delight was excited and gratified.
+
+Into this delicious region Seged summoned all the persons of his court,
+who seemed eminently qualified to receive or communicate pleasure. His
+call was readily obeyed; the young, the fair, the vivacious, and the
+witty, were all in haste to be sated with felicity. They sailed jocund
+over the lake, which seemed to smooth its surface before them: their
+passage was cheered with musick, and their hearts dilated with
+expectation.
+
+Seged, landing here with his band of pleasure, determined from that hour
+to break off all acquaintance with discontent, to give his heart for ten
+days to ease and jollity, and then fall back to the common state of man,
+and suffer his life to be diversified, as before, with joy and sorrow.
+
+He immediately entered his chamber, to consider where he should begin
+his circle of happiness. He had all the artists of delight before him,
+but knew not whom to call, since he could not enjoy one, but by delaying
+the performance of another. He chose and rejected, he resolved and
+changed his resolution, till his faculties were harassed, and his
+thoughts confused; then returned to the apartment where his presence was
+expected, with languid eyes and clouded countenance, and spread the
+infection of uneasiness over the whole assembly. He observed their
+depression, and was offended, for he found his vexation increased by
+those whom he expected to dissipate and relieve it. He retired again to
+his private chamber, and sought for consolation in his own mind; one
+thought flowed in upon another; a long succession of images seized his
+attention; the moments crept imperceptibly away through the gloom of
+pensiveness, till, having recovered his tranquillity, he lifted his
+head, and saw the lake brightened by the setting sun. "Such," said
+Seged, sighing, "is the longest day of human existence: before we have
+learned to use it, we find it at, an end."
+
+The regret which he felt for the loss of so great a part of his first
+day, took from him all disposition to enjoy the evening; and, after
+having endeavoured, for the sake of his attendants, to force an air of
+gaiety, and excite that mirth which he could not share, he resolved to
+refer his hopes to the next morning, and lay down to partake with the
+slaves of labour and poverty the blessing of sleep.
+
+He rose early the second morning, and resolved now to be happy. He
+therefore fixed upon the gate of the palace an edict, importing, that
+whoever, during nine days, should appear in the presence of the king
+with a dejected countenance, or utter any expression of discontent or
+sorrow, should be driven for ever from the palace of Dambea.
+
+This edict was immediately made known in every chamber of the court, and
+bower of the gardens. Mirth was frighted away, and they who were before
+dancing in the lawns, or singing in the shades, were at once engaged in
+the care of regulating their looks, that Seged might find his will
+punctually obeyed, and see none among them liable to banishment.
+
+Seged now met every face settled in a smile; but a smile that betrayed
+solicitude, timidity, and constraint. He accosted his favourites with
+familiarity and softness; but they durst not speak without
+premeditation, lest they should be convicted of discontent or sorrow. He
+proposed diversions, to which no objection was made, because objection
+would have implied uneasiness; but they were regarded with indifference
+by the courtiers, who had no other desire than to signalize themselves
+by clamorous exultation. He offered various topicks of conversation, but
+obtained only forced jests, and laborious laughter; and after many
+attempts to animate his train to confidence and alacrity, was obliged to
+confess to himself the impotence of command, and resign another day to
+grief and disappointment.
+
+He at last relieved his companions from their terrours, and shut himself
+up in his chamber to ascertain, by different measures, the felicity of
+the succeeding days. At length he threw himself on the bed, and closed
+his eyes, but imagined, in his sleep, that his palace and gardens were
+overwhelmed by an inundation, and waked with all the terrours of a man
+struggling in the water. He composed himself again to rest, but was
+affrighted by an imaginary irruption into his kingdom; and striving, as
+is usual in dreams, without ability to move, fancied himself betrayed to
+his enemies, and again started up with horrour and indignation.
+
+It was now day, and fear was so strongly impressed on his mind, that he
+could sleep no more. He rose, but his thoughts were filled with the
+deluge and invasion, nor was he able to disengage his attention, or
+mingle with vacancy and ease in any amusement. At length his
+perturbation gave way to reason, and he resolved no longer to be
+harassed by visionary miseries; but, before this resolution could be
+completed, half the day had elapsed: he felt a new conviction of the
+uncertainty of human schemes, and could not forbear to bewail the
+weakness of that being whose quiet was to be interrupted by vapours of
+the fancy. Having been first disturbed by a dream, he afterwards grieved
+that a dream could disturb him. He at last discovered, that his terrours
+and grief were equally vain, and that to lose the present in lamenting
+the past, was voluntarily to protract a melancholy vision. The third day
+was now declining, and Seged again resolved to be happy on the morrow.
+
+
+
+No. 205. TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1752.
+
+ _Volat ambiguis
+ Mobilis alis hora, nec ulli
+ Praestat velox Fortuna fidem_. SENECA. Hippol. 1141.
+
+ On fickle wings the minutes haste,
+ And fortune's favours never last. F. LEWIS.
+
+On the fourth morning Seged rose early, refreshed with sleep, vigorous
+with health, and eager with expectation. He entered the garden, attended
+by the princes and ladies of his court, and seeing nothing about him but
+airy cheerfulness, began to say to his heart, "This day shall be a day
+of pleasure." The sun played upon the water, the birds warbled in the
+groves, and the gales quivered among the branches. He roved from walk to
+walk as chance directed him, and sometimes listened to the songs,
+sometimes mingled with the dancers, sometimes let loose his imagination
+in flights of merriment; and sometimes uttered grave reflections, and
+sententious maxims, and feasted on the admiration with which they were
+received.
+
+Thus the day rolled on, without any accident of vexation, or intrusion
+of melancholy thoughts. All that beheld him caught gladness from his
+looks, and the sight of happiness conferred by himself filled his heart
+with satisfaction: but having passed three hours in this harmless
+luxury, he was alarmed on a sudden by an universal scream among the
+women, and turning back saw the whole assembly flying in confusion. A
+young crocodile had risen out of the lake, and was ranging the garden in
+wantonness or hunger. Seged beheld him with indignation, as a disturber
+of his felicity, and chased him back into the lake, but could not
+persuade his retinue to stay, or free their hearts from the terrour
+which had seized upon them. The princesses inclosed themselves in the
+palace, and could yet scarcely believe themselves in safety. Every
+attention was fixed upon the late danger and escape, and no mind was any
+longer at leisure for gay sallies or careless prattle.
+
+Seged had now no other employment than to contemplate the innumerable
+casualties which lie in ambush on every side to intercept the happiness
+of man, and break in upon the hour of delight and tranquillity. He had,
+however, the consolation of thinking, that he had not been now
+disappointed by his own fault, and that the accident which had blasted
+the hopes of the day, might easily be prevented by future caution.
+
+That he might provide for the pleasure of the next morning, he resolved
+to repeal his penal edict, since he had already found that discontent
+and melancholy were not to be frighted away by the threats of authority,
+and that pleasure would only reside where she was exempted from control.
+He therefore invited all the companions of his retreat to unbounded
+pleasantry, by proposing prizes for those who should, on the following
+day, distinguish themselves by any festive performances; the tables of
+the antechamber were covered with gold and pearls, and robes and
+garlands decreed the rewards of those who could refine elegance or
+heighten pleasure.
+
+At this display of riches every eye immediately sparkled, and every
+tongue was busied in celebrating the bounty and magnificence of the
+emperour. But when Seged entered, in hopes of uncommon entertainment
+from universal emulation, he found that any passion too strongly
+agitated, puts an end to that tranquillity which is necessary to mirth,
+and that the mind, that is to be moved by the gentle ventilations of
+gaiety, must be first smoothed by a total calm. Whatever we ardently
+wish to gain, we must in the same degree be afraid to lose, and fear and
+pleasure cannot dwell together.
+
+All was now care and solicitude. Nothing was done or spoken, but with so
+visible an endeavour at perfection, as always failed to delight, though
+it sometimes forced admiration: and Seged could not but observe with
+sorrow, that his prizes had more influence than himself. As the evening
+approached, the contest grew more earnest, and those who were forced to
+allow themselves excelled, began to discover the malignity of defeat,
+first by angry glances, and at last by contemptuous murmurs. Seged
+likewise shared the anxiety of the day, for considering himself as
+obliged to distribute with exact justice the prizes which had been so
+zealously sought, he durst never remit his attention, but passed his
+time upon the rack of doubt, in balancing different kinds of merit, and
+adjusting the claims of all the competitors.
+
+At last, knowing that no exactness could satisfy those whose hopes he
+should disappoint, and thinking that on a day set apart for happiness,
+it would be cruel to oppress any heart with sorrow, he declared that all
+had pleased him alike, and dismissed all with presents of equal value.
+
+Seged soon saw that his caution had not been able to avoid offence. They
+who had believed themselves secure of the highest prizes, were not
+pleased to be levelled with the crowd: and though, by the liberality of
+the king, they received more than his promise had entitled them to
+expect, they departed unsatisfied, because they were honoured with no
+distinction, and wanted an opportunity to triumph in the mortification
+of their opponents. "Behold here," said Seged, "the condition of him who
+places his happiness in the happiness of others." He then retired to
+meditate, and, while the courtiers were repining at his distributions,
+saw the fifth sun go down in discontent.
+
+The next dawn renewed his resolution to be happy. But having learned how
+little he could effect by settled schemes or preparatory measures, he
+thought it best to give up one day entirely to chance, and left every
+one to please and be pleased his own way.
+
+This relaxation of regularity diffused a general complacence through the
+whole court, and the emperour imagined that he had at last found the
+secret of obtaining an interval of felicity. But as he was roving in
+this careless assembly with equal carelessness, he overheard one of his
+courtiers in a close arbour murmuring alone: "What merit has Seged above
+us, that we should thus fear and obey him, a man, whom, whatever he may
+have formerly performed, his luxury now shows to have the same weakness
+with ourselves." This charge affected him the more, as it was uttered by
+one whom he had always observed among the most abject of his flatterers.
+At first his indignation prompted him to severity; but reflecting, that
+what was spoken without intention to be heard, was to be considered as
+only thought, and was perhaps but the sudden burst of casual and
+temporary vexation, he invented some decent pretence to send him away,
+that his retreat might not be tainted with the breath of envy, and,
+after the struggle of deliberation was past, and all desire of revenge
+utterly suppressed, passed the evening not only with tranquillity, but
+triumph, though none but himself was conscious of the victory.
+
+The remembrance of his clemency cheered the beginning of the seventh
+day, and nothing happened to disturb the pleasure of Seged, till,
+looking on the tree that shaded him, he recollected, that, under a tree
+of the same kind he had passed the night after his defeat in the kingdom
+of Goiama. The reflection on his loss, his dishonour, and the miseries
+which his subjects suffered from the invader, filled him with sadness.
+At last he shook off the weight of sorrow, and began to solace himself
+with his usual pleasures, when his tranquillity was again disturbed by
+jealousies which the late contest for the prizes had produced, and
+which, having in vain tried to pacify them by persuasion, he was forced
+to silence by command.
+
+On the eighth morning Seged was awakened early by an unusual hurry in
+the apartments, and inquiring the cause, was told that the princess
+Balkis was seized with sickness. He rose, and calling the physicians,
+found that they had little hope of her recovery. Here was an end of
+jollity: all his thoughts were now upon his daughter, whose eyes he
+closed on the tenth day.
+
+Such were the days which Seged of Ethiopia had appropriated to a short
+respiration from the fatigues of war and the cares of government. This
+narrative he has bequeathed to future generations, that no man hereafter
+may presume to say, "This day shall be a day of happiness."
+
+
+
+No. 206. SATURDAY, MARCH 7, 1752.
+
+ _--Propositi nondum pudet, atque eadem est mens,
+ Ut bona summa putes, aliena vivere quadra_. JUV. Sat. v. 1.
+
+ But harden'd by affronts, and still the same,
+ Lost to all sense of honour and of fame,
+ Thou yet canst love to haunt the great man's board,
+ And think no supper good but with a lord. BOWLES.
+
+When Diogenes was once asked, what kind of wine he liked best? he
+answered, "That which is drunk at the cost of others."
+
+Though the character of Diogenes has never excited any general zeal of
+imitation, there are many who resemble him in his taste of wine; many
+who are frugal, though not abstemious; whose appetites, though too
+powerful for reason, are kept under restraint by avarice; and to whom
+all delicacies lose their flavour, when they cannot be obtained but at
+their own expense.
+
+Nothing produces more singularity of manners and inconstancy of life,
+than the conflict of opposite vices in the same mind. He that uniformly
+pursues any purpose, whether good or bad, has a settled principle of
+action; and as he may always find associates who are travelling the same
+way, is countenanced by example, and sheltered in the multitude; but a
+man, actuated at once by different desires, must move in a direction
+peculiar to himself, and suffer that reproach which we are naturally
+inclined to bestow on those who deviate from the rest of the world, even
+without inquiring whether they are worse or better.
+
+Yet this conflict of desires sometimes produces wonderful efforts. To
+riot in far-fetched dishes, or surfeit with unexhausted variety, and yet
+practise the most rigid economy, is surely an art which may justly draw
+the eyes of mankind upon them whose industry or judgment has enabled
+them to attain it. To him, indeed, who is content to break open the
+chests, or mortgage the manours, of his ancestors, that he may hire the
+ministers of excess at the highest price, gluttony is an easy science;
+yet we often hear the votaries of luxury boasting of the elegance which
+they owe to the taste of others, relating with rapture the succession of
+dishes with which their cooks and caterers supply them; and expecting
+their share of praise with the discoverers of arts and the civilizers of
+nations. But to shorten the way to convivial happiness, by eating
+without cost, is a secret hitherto in few hands, but which certainly
+deserves the curiosity of those whose principal enjoyment is their
+dinner, and who see the sun rise with no other hope than that they shall
+fill their bellies before it sets.
+
+Of them that have within my knowledge attempted this scheme of
+happiness, the greater part have been immediately obliged to desist; and
+some, whom their first attempts flattered with success, were reduced by
+degrees to a few tables, from which they were at last chased to make way
+for others; and having long habituated themselves to superfluous plenty,
+growled away their latter years in discontented competence.
+
+None enter the regions of luxury with higher expectations than men of
+wit, who imagine, that they shall never want a welcome to that company
+whose ideas they can enlarge, or whose imaginations they can elevate,
+and believe themselves able to pay for their wine with the mirth which
+it qualifies them to produce. Full of this opinion, they crowd with
+little invitation, wherever the smell of a feast allures them, but are
+seldom encouraged to repeat their visits, being dreaded by the pert as
+rivals, and hated by the dull as disturbers of the company.
+
+No man has been so happy in gaining and keeping the privilege of living
+at luxurious houses as Gulosulus, who, after thirty years of continual
+revelry, has now established, by uncontroverted prescription, his claim
+to partake of every entertainment, and whose presence they who aspire to
+the praise of a sumptuous table are careful to procure on a day of
+importance, by sending the invitation a fortnight before.
+
+Gulosulus entered the world without any eminent degree of merit; but was
+careful to frequent houses where persons of rank resorted. By being
+often seen, he became in time known; and, from sitting in the same room,
+was suffered to mix in idle conversation, or assisted to fill up a
+vacant hour, when better amusement was not readily to be had. From the
+coffee-house he was sometimes taken away to dinner; and as no man
+refuses the acquaintance of him whom he sees admitted to familiarity by
+others of equal dignity, when he had been met at a few tables, he with
+less difficulty found the way to more, till at last he was regularly
+expected to appear wherever preparations are made for a feast, within
+the circuit of his acquaintance.
+
+When he was thus by accident initiated in luxury, he felt in himself no
+inclination to retire from a life of so much pleasure, and therefore
+very seriously considered how he might continue it. Great qualities, or
+uncommon accomplishments, he did not find necessary; for he had already
+seen that merit rather enforces respect than attracts fondness; and as
+he thought no folly greater than that of losing a dinner for any other
+gratification, he often congratulated himself, that he had none of that
+disgusting excellence which impresses awe upon greatness, and condemns
+its possessors to the society of those who are wise or brave, and
+indigent as themselves.
+
+Gulosulus, having never allotted much of his time to books or
+meditation, had no opinion in philosophy or politicks, and was not in
+danger of injuring his interest by dogmatical positions or violent
+contradiction. If a dispute arose, he took care to listen with earnest
+attention; and, when either speaker grew vehement and loud, turned
+towards him with eager quickness, and uttered a short phrase of
+admiration, as if surprised by such cogency of argument as he had never
+known before. By this silent concession, he generally preserved in
+either controvertist such a conviction of his own superiority, as
+inclined him rather to pity than irritate his adversary, and prevented
+those outrages which are sometimes produced by the rage of defeat, or
+petulance of triumph.
+
+Gulosulus was never embarrassed but when he was required to declare his
+sentiments before he had been able to discover to which side the master
+of the house inclined, for it was his invariable rule to adopt the
+notions of those that invited him.
+
+It will sometimes happen that the insolence of wealth breaks into
+contemptuousness, or the turbulence of wine requires a vent; and
+Gulosulus seldom fails of being singled out on such emergencies, as one
+on whom any experiment of ribaldry may be safely tried. Sometimes his
+lordship finds himself inclined to exhibit a specimen of raillery for
+the diversion of his guests, and Gulosulus always supplies him with a
+subject of merriment. But he has learned to consider rudeness and
+indignities as familiarities that entitle him to greater freedom: he
+comforts himself, that those who treat and insult him pay for their
+laughter, and that he keeps his money while they enjoy their jest.
+
+His chief policy consists in selecting some dish from every course, and
+recommending it to the company, with an air so decisive, that no one
+ventures to contradict him. By this practice he acquires at a feast a
+kind of dictatorial authority; his taste becomes the standard of pickles
+and seasoning, and he is venerated by the professors of epicurism, as
+the only man who understands the niceties of cookery.
+
+Whenever a new sauce is imported, or any innovation made in the culinary
+system, he procures the earliest intelligence, and the most authentick
+receipt; and, by communicating his knowledge under proper injunctions of
+secrecy, gains a right of tasting his own dish whenever it is prepared,
+that he may tell whether his directions have been fully understood.
+
+By this method of life Gulosulus has so impressed on his imagination the
+dignity of feasting, that he has no other topick of talk, or subject of
+meditation. His calendar is a bill of fare; he measures the year by
+successive dainties. The only common-places of his memory are his meals;
+and if you ask him at what time an event happened, he considers whether
+he heard it after a dinner of turbot or venison. He knows, indeed, that
+those who value themselves upon sense, learning, or piety, speak of him
+with contempt; but he considers them as wretches, envious or ignorant,
+who do not know his happiness, or wish to supplant him; and declares to
+his friends, that he is fully satisfied with his own conduct, since he
+has fed every day on twenty dishes, and yet doubled his estate.
+
+
+
+No. 207. TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1752.
+
+ _Solve senescentem mature sanus equum, ne
+ Peccet ad extremum ridendus.--_ HOR. Lib. i. Ep. i. 8.
+
+ The voice of reason cries with winning force,
+ Loose from the rapid car your aged horse,
+ Lest, in the race derided, left behind,
+ He drag his jaded limbs, and burst his wind. FRANCIS.
+
+Such is the emptiness of human enjoyment, that we are always impatient
+of the present. Attainment is followed by neglect, and possession by
+disgust; and the malicious remark of the Greek epigrammatist on marriage
+may be applied to every other course of life, that its two days of
+happiness are the first and the last.
+
+Few moments are more pleasing than those in which the mind is concerting
+measures for a new undertaking. From the first hint that wakens the
+fancy, till the hour of actual execution, all is improvement and
+progress, triumph and felicity. Every hour brings additions to the
+original scheme, suggests some new expedient to secure success, or
+discovers consequential advantages not hitherto foreseen. While
+preparations are made, and materials accumulated, day glides after day
+through elysian prospects, and the heart dances to the song of hope.
+
+Such is the pleasure of projecting, that many content themselves with a
+succession of visionary schemes, and wear out their allotted time in the
+calm amusement of contriving what they never attempt or hope to execute.
+
+Others, not able to feast their imagination with pure ideas, advance
+somewhat nearer to the grossness of action, with great diligence collect
+whatever is requisite to their design, and, after a thousand researches
+and consultations, are snatched away by death, as they stand _in
+procinctu_, waiting for a proper opportunity to begin.
+
+If there were no other end of life, than to find some adequate solace
+for every day, I know not whether any condition could be preferred to
+that of the man who involves himself in his own thoughts, and never
+suffers experience to show him the vanity of speculation; for no sooner
+are notions reduced to practice, than tranquillity and confidence
+forsake the breast; every day brings its task, and often without
+bringing abilities to perform it: difficulties embarrass, uncertainty
+perplexes, opposition retards, censure exasperates, or neglect
+depresses. We proceed because we have begun; we complete our design,
+that the labour already spent may not be vain; but as expectation
+gradually dies away, the gay smile of alacrity disappears, we are
+compelled to implore severer powers, and trust the event to patience and
+constancy.
+
+When once our labour has begun, the comfort that enables us to endure it
+is the prospect of its end; for though in every long work there are some
+joyous intervals of self-applause, when the attention is recreated by
+unexpected facility, and the imagination soothed by incidental
+excellencies; yet the toil with which performance struggles after idea,
+is so irksome and disgusting, and so frequent is the necessity of
+resting below that perfection which we imagined within our reach, that
+seldom any man obtains more from his endeavours than a painful
+conviction of his defects, and a continual resuscitation of desires
+which he feels himself unable to gratify.
+
+So certainly is weariness the concomitant of our undertakings, that
+every man, in whatever he is engaged, consoles himself with the hope of
+change; if he has made his way by assiduity to publick employment, he
+talks among his friends of the delight of retreat; if by the necessity
+of solitary application he is secluded from the world, he listens with a
+beating heart to distant noises, longs to mingle with living beings, and
+resolves to take hereafter his fill of diversions, or display his
+abilities on the universal theatre, and enjoy the pleasure of
+distinction and applause.
+
+Every desire, however innocent, grows dangerous, as by long indulgence
+it becomes ascendant in the mind. When we have been much accustomed to
+consider any thing as capable of giving happiness, it is not easy to
+restrain our ardour, or to forbear some precipitation in our advances,
+and irregularity in our pursuits. He that has cultivated the tree,
+watched the swelling bud and opening blossom, and pleased himself with
+computing how much every sun and shower add to its growth, scarcely
+stays till the fruit has obtained its maturity, but defeats his own
+cares by eagerness to reward them. When we have diligently laboured for
+any purpose, we are willing to believe that we have attained it, and,
+because we have already done much, too suddenly conclude that no more is
+to be done.
+
+All attraction is increased by the approach of the attracting body. We
+never find ourselves so desirous to finish as in the latter part of our
+work, or so impatient of delay, as when we know that delay cannot be
+long. This unseasonable importunity of discontent may be partly imputed
+to languor and weariness, which must always oppress those more whose
+toil has been longer continued; but the greater part usually proceeds
+from frequent contemplation of that ease which is now considered as
+within reach, and which, when it has once flattered our hopes, we cannot
+suffer to be withheld.
+
+In some of the noblest compositions of wit, the conclusion falls below
+the vigour and spirit of the first books; and as a genius is not to be
+degraded by the imputation of human failings, the cause of this
+declension is commonly sought in the structure of the work, and
+plausible reasons are given why, in the defective part, less ornament
+was necessary, or less could be admitted. But, perhaps, the author would
+have confessed, that his fancy was tired, and his perseverance broken;
+that he knew his design to be unfinished, but that, when he saw the end
+so near, he could no longer refuse to be at rest.
+
+Against the instillations of this frigid opiate, the heart should be
+secured by all the considerations which once concurred to kindle the
+ardour of enterprise. Whatever motive first incited action, has still
+greater force to stimulate perseverance; since he that might have lain
+still at first in blameless obscurity, cannot afterwards desist but with
+infamy and reproach. He, whom a doubtful promise of distant good could
+encourage to set difficulties at defiance, ought not to remit his
+vigour, when he has almost obtained his recompense. To faint or loiter,
+when only the last efforts are required, is to steer the ship through
+tempests, and abandon it to the winds in sight of land; it is to break
+the ground and scatter the seed, and at last to neglect the harvest.
+
+The masters of rhetorick direct, that the most forcible arguments be
+produced in the latter part of an oration, lest they should be effaced
+or perplexed by supervenient images. This precept may be justly extended
+to the series of life: nothing is ended with honour, which does not
+conclude better than it began. It is not sufficient to maintain the
+first vigour; for excellence loses its effect upon the mind by custom,
+as light after a time ceases to dazzle. Admiration must be continued by
+that novelty which first produced it, and how much soever is given,
+there must always be reason to imagine that more remains.
+
+We not only are most sensible of the last impressions, but such is the
+unwillingness of mankind to admit transcendant merit, that, though it be
+difficult to obliterate the reproach of miscarriages by any subsequent
+achievement, however illustrious, yet the reputation raised by a long
+train of success may be finally ruined by a single failure; for weakness
+or errour will be always remembered by that malice and envy which it
+gratifies.
+
+For the prevention of that disgrace, which lassitude and negligence may
+bring at last upon the greatest performances, it is necessary to
+proportion carefully our labour to our strength. If the design comprises
+many parts, equally essential, and, therefore, not to be separated, the
+only time for caution is before we engage; the powers of the mind must
+be then impartially estimated, and it must be remembered that, not to
+complete the plan, is not to have begun it; and that nothing is done
+while any thing is omitted.
+
+But, if the task consists in the repetition of single acts, no one of
+which derives its efficacy from the rest, it may be attempted with less
+scruple, because there is always opportunity to retreat with honour. The
+danger is only, lest we expect from the world the indulgence with which
+most are disposed to treat themselves; and in the hour of listlessness
+imagine, that the diligence of one day will atone for the idleness of
+another, and that applause begun by approbation will be continued by
+habit.
+
+He that is himself weary will soon weary the publick. Let him therefore
+lay down his employment, whatever it be, who can no longer exert his
+former activity or attention; let him not endeavour to struggle with
+censure, or obstinately infest the stage till a general hiss commands
+him to depart.
+
+
+
+No. 208. SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1752.
+
+ [Greek: Aerakleitos ego ti me o kato helket amousoi,
+ Ouch hymin eponoun, tois de m' episgamenoi;
+ Eis emoi anthropos trismurioi; oi d' anarithmoi
+ Oudeis; taut audo kai para Persephonae] DIOG. LAERT.
+
+ Begone, ye blockheads, Heraclitus cries,
+ And leave my labours to the learn'd and wise;
+ By wit, by knowledge, studious to be read,
+ I scorn the multitude, alive and dead.
+
+ Time, which puts an end to all human pleasures and sorrows, has
+likewise concluded the labours of the Rambler. Having supported, for two
+years, the anxious employment of a periodical writer, and multiplied my
+essays to upwards of two hundred, I have now determined to desist.
+
+The reasons of this resolution it is of little importance to declare,
+since justification is unnecessary when no objection is made. I am far
+from supposing, that the cessation of my performances will raise any
+inquiry, for I have never been much a favourite of the publick, nor can
+boast that, in the progress of my undertaking, I have been animated by
+the rewards of the liberal, the caresses of the great, or the praises of
+the eminent.
+
+But I have no design to gratify pride by submission, or malice by
+lamentation; nor think it reasonable to complain of neglect from those
+whose regard I never solicited. If I have not been distinguished by the
+distributors of literary honours, I have seldom descended to the arts by
+which favour is obtained. I have seen the meteors of fashions rise and
+fall, without any attempt to add a moment to their duration. I have
+never complied with temporary curiosity, nor enabled my readers to
+discuss the topick of the day; I have rarely exemplified my assertions
+by living characters; in my papers, no man could look for censures of
+his enemies, or praises of himself; and they only were expected to
+peruse them, whose passions left them leisure for abstracted truth, and
+whom virtue could please by its naked dignity.
+
+To some, however, I am indebted for encouragement, and to others for
+assistance. The number of my friends was never great, but they have been
+such as would not suffer me to think that I was writing in vain, and I
+did not feel much dejection from the want of popularity.
+
+My obligations having not been frequent, my acknowledgments may be soon
+despatched. I can restore to all my correspondents their productions,
+with little diminution of the bulk of my volumes, though not without the
+loss of some pieces to which particular honours have been paid.
+
+The parts from which I claim no other praise than that of having given
+them an opportunity of appearing, are the four billets in the tenth
+paper, the second letter in the fifteenth, the thirtieth, the
+forty-fourth, the ninety-seventh, and the hundredth papers, and the
+second letter in the hundred and seventh.
+
+Having thus deprived myself of many excuses which candour might have
+admitted for the inequality of my compositions, being no longer able to
+allege the necessity of gratifying correspondents, the importunity with
+which publication was solicited, or obstinacy with which correction was
+rejected, I must remain accountable for all my faults, and submit,
+without subterfuge, to the censures of criticism, which, however, I
+shall not endeavour to soften by a formal deprecation, or to overbear by
+the influence of a patron. The supplications of an author never yet
+reprieved him a moment from oblivion; and, though greatness has
+sometimes sheltered guilt, it can afford no protection to ignorance or
+dulness. Having hitherto attempted only the propagation of truth, I will
+not at last violate it by the confession of terrours which I do not
+feel; having laboured to maintain the dignity of virtue, I will not now
+degrade it by the meanness of dedication.
+
+The seeming vanity with which I have sometimes spoken of myself, would
+perhaps require an apology, were it not extenuated by the example of
+those who have published essays before me, and by the privilege which
+every nameless writer has been hitherto allowed. "A mask," says
+Castiglione, "confers a right of acting and speaking with less
+restraint, even when the wearer happens to be known." He that is
+discovered without his own consent, may claim some indulgence, and
+cannot be rigorously called to justify those sallies or frolicks which
+his disguise must prove him desirous to conceal.
+
+But I have been cautious lest this offence should be frequently or
+grossly committed; for, as one of the philosophers directs us to live
+with a friend, as with one that is some time to become an enemy, I have
+always thought it the duty of an anonymous author to write, as if he
+expected to be hereafter known.
+
+I am willing to flatter myself with hopes, that, by collecting these
+papers, I am not preparing, for my future life, either shame or
+repentance. That all are happily imagined, or accurately polished, that
+the same sentiments have not sometimes recurred, or the same expressions
+been too frequently repeated, I have not confidence in my abilities
+sufficient to warrant. He that condemns himself to compose on a stated
+day, will often bring to his task an attention dissipated, a memory
+embarrassed, an imagination overwhelmed, a mind distracted with
+anxieties, a body languishing with disease: he will labour on a barren
+topick, till it is too late to change it; or, in the ardour of
+invention, diffuse his thoughts into wild exuberance, which the pressing
+hour of publication cannot suffer judgment to examine or reduce.
+
+Whatever shall be the final sentence of mankind, I have at least
+endeavoured to deserve their kindness. I have laboured to refine our
+language to grammatical purity, and to clear it from colloquial
+barbarisms, licentious idioms, and irregular combinations. Something,
+perhaps, I have added to the elegance of its construction, and something
+to the harmony of its cadence. When common words were less pleasing to
+the ear, or less distinct in their signification, I have familiarized
+the terms of philosophy, by applying them to popular ideas, but have
+rarely admitted any words not authorized by former writers; for I
+believe that whoever knows the English tongue in its present extent,
+will be able to express his thoughts without further help from other
+nations.
+
+As it has been my principal design to inculcate wisdom or piety, I have
+allotted few papers to the idle sports of imagination. Some, perhaps,
+may be found, of which the highest excellence is harmless merriment; but
+scarcely any man is so steadily serious as not to complain, that the
+severity of dictatorial instruction has been too seldom relieved, and
+that he is driven by the sternness of the Rambler's philosophy to more
+cheerful and airy companions.
+
+Next to the excursions of fancy are the disquisitions of criticism,
+which, in my opinion, is only to be ranked among the subordinate and
+instrumental arts. Arbitrary decision and general exclamation I have
+carefully avoided, by asserting nothing without a reason, and
+establishing all my principles of judgment on unalterable and evident
+truth.
+
+In the pictures of life I have never been so studious of novelty or
+surprise, as to depart wholly from all resemblance; a fault which
+writers deservedly celebrated frequently commit, that they may raise, as
+the occasion requires, either mirth or abhorrence. Some enlargement may
+be allowed to declamation, and some exaggeration to burlesque; but as
+they deviate farther from reality, they become less useful, because
+their lessons will fail of application. The mind of the reader is
+carried away from the contemplation of his own manners; he finds in
+himself no likeness to the phantom before him; and though he laughs or
+rages, is not reformed.
+
+The essays professedly serious, if I have been able to execute my own
+intentions, will be found exactly conformable to the precepts of
+Christianity, without any accommodation to the licentiousness and levity
+of the present age. I therefore look back on this part of my work with
+pleasure, which no blame or praise of man shall diminish or augment. I
+shall never envy the honours which wit and learning obtain in any other
+cause, if I can be numbered among the writers who have given ardour to
+virtue, and confidence to truth.
+
+ [Greek: Auton ek makaron autaxios eiae amoibae.]
+
+ Celestial pow'rs! that piety regard,
+ From you my labours wait their last reward.
+
+END OF VOL. III.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Works of Samuel Johnson, LL.D, In
+Nine Volumes, by Samuel Johnson
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