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riches, and to confider thofe as the minions of fortune, who are wealthy from their cradles, whofe eftate is "res non parta labore fed relicta;" "the acqui"fition of another, not of themselves;" and whom à father's industry has dispensed from a laborious attention to arts or commerce, and left at liberty to dif pofe of life as fancy fhall direct them.

If every man were wife and virtuous, capable to difcern the best use of time, and refolute to practise it; it might be granted, I think, without hesitation, that total liberty would be a bleffing; and that it would be defirable to be left at large to the exercise of religious and focial duties, without the interruption of importunate avocations.

But fince felicity is relative, and that which is the means of happinefs to one man may be to another the caufe of mifery, we are to confider, what ftate is beft adapted to human nature in its prefent degeneracy and frailty. And, furely, to far the greater number it is highly expedient, that they fhould by fome fettled fcheme of duties be refcued from the tyranny of caprice, that they should be driven on by neceffity through the paths of life with their attention confined to a stated tafk, that they may be lefs at leifure to deviate into mifchief at the call of folly.

When we obferve the lives of those whom an ample inheritance has let loose to their own direction, what do we difcover that can excite our envy? Their time feems not to pafs with much applaufe from others, or fatisfaction to themfelves: many fquander their exuberance of fortune in luxury and debauchery, and have no other ufe of money than to inflame their paffions, and riot in a wide range of licentioufnefs ;

licentiousness; others, lefs criminal indeed, but, furely, not much to be praifed, lie down to fleep, and rife up to trifle, are employed every morning in finding expedients to rid themfelves of the day, chafe pleasure through all the places of publick refort, fly from London to Bath, and from Bath to London, without any other reafon for changing place, but that they go in queft of company as idle and as vagrant as themselves, always endeavouring to raise fome new defire that they may have fomething to pursue, to rekindle fome hope which they know will be disappointed, changing one amusement for another which a few months will make equally infipid, or finking into languor and disease for want of fomething to actuate their bodies or exhilarate their minds.

Whoever has frequented those places, where idlers affemble to escape from folitude, knows that this is generally the ftate of the wealthy; and from this state it is no great hardship to be debarred. No man can be happy in total idlenefs: he that fhould be condemned to lie torpid and motionlefs, "would fly for re"creation,” says South, "to the mines and the gal"lies;" and it is well, when nature or fortune find employment for thofe, who would not have known how to procure it for themfelves.

He, whofe mind is engaged by the acquifition or improvement of a fortune, not only escapes the infipidity of indifference, and the tediousness of inactivity, but gains enjoyments wholly unknown to thofe, who live lazily on the toil of others; for life affords no higher pleasure than that of furmounting difficulties, paffing from one ftep of fuccefs to

another,

another, forming new wishes, and feeing them gratified. He that labours in any great or laudable undertaking, has his fatigues first fupported by hope, and afterwards rewarded by joy; he is always moving to a certain end, and when he has attained it, an end more distant invites him to a new pursuit.

It does not, indeed, always happen, that diligence is fortunate; the wifeft fchemes are broken by unexpected accidents; the most conftant perfeverance fometimes toils through life without a recompence; but labour, though unsuccessful, is more eligible than idleness; he that profecutes a lawful purpofe by lawful means, acts always with the approbation of his own reafon; he is animated through the courfe of his endeavours by an expectation which, though not certain, he knows to be just; and is at last comforted in his disappointment, by the confcioufnefs that he has not failed by his own fault.

That kind of life is moft happy which affords us moft opportunities of gaining our own efteem; and what can any man infer in his own favour from a condition to which, however profperous, he contributed nothing, and which the vileft and weakest of the fpecies would have obtained by the fame right, had he happened to be the fon of the fame father.

To strive with difficulties, and to conquer them, is the highest human felicity; the next, is to strive, and deferve to conquer: but he whose life has passed without a conteft, and who can boaft neither fuccefs nor merit, can furvey himself only as a useless filler

of

of existence; and if he is content with his own character, muft owe his fatisfaction to infenfibility.

Thus it appears that the fatirift advised rightly, when he directed us to refign ourselves to the hands of Heaven, and to leave to fuperior powers the determination of our lot:

Permittes ipfis expendere Numinibus, quid
Conveniat nobis, rebufque fit utile noftris :
Carior eft illis homo quam fibi.

Intrust thy fortune to the pow'rs above:
Leave them to manage for thee, and to grant
What their unerring wifdom fees thee want
In goodness as in greatness they excel :
Ah! that we lov'd ourselves but half fo well.

DRYDEN.

What state of life admits most happiness, is uncertain; but that uncertainty ought to reprefs the petulance of comparison, and filence the murmurs of discontent.

NUMB. 115. TUESDAY, December 11, 1753

Scribimus indocti doctique.

All dare to write, who can or cannot read.

HOR.

TH

HEY who have attentively confidered the history of mankind, know that every age has its peculiar character. At one time, no defire is felt but for military honours; every fummer affords battles and fieges, and the world is filled with ravage, bloodfhed, and devaftation: this fanguinary fury at length fubfides, and nations are divided into factions, by controverfies about points that will never be decided. Men then grow weary of debate and altercation, and apply themfelves to the arts of profit; trading companies are formed, manufactures improved, and navigation extended; and nothing is any longer thought on, but the increase and prefervation of property, the artifices of getting money, and the pleafures of spending it.

The prefent age, if we confider chiefly the state of our own country, may be ftiled with great propriety The age of Authors; for, perhaps, there never was a time in which men of all degrees of ability, of every kind of education, of every profeffion and employment, were pofting with ardour fo general to the prefs. The province of writing was formerly left to

thofe,

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