Page:Johnson - Rambler 2.djvu/109

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N° 72.
THE RAMBLER.
101

Numb. 72. Saturday, November 24, 1750.

Omnis Aristippum decuit status, et color, et res,
Sectantem majora fere; presentibus æquum.

Hor.

 Yet Aristippus ev'ry dress became,
 In ev'ry various change of life the same;
 And though he aim'd at things of higher kind,
 Yet to the present held an equal mind.

Francis
To the RAMBLER
SIR,

THOSE who exalt themselves into the chair of instruction, without enquiring whether any will submit to their authority, have not sufficiently considered how much of human life passes in little incidents, cursory conversation, slight business, and casual amusements; and therefore they have endeavoured only to inculcate the more awful virtues, without condescending to regard those petty qualities, which grow important only by their frequency, and which though they produce no single acts of heroism, nor astonish us by great events, yet are every moment exerting their influence upon us, and make the draught of life sweet or bitter by imperceptible instillations. They operate unseen and unregarded, as change of air makes us sick or healthy, though we breathe it without attention, and only know the particles that impregnate it by their salutary or malignant effects.

You have shewn yourself not ignorant of the value of those subaltern endowments, yet have hitherto neglected to recommend good-humour to the world, though a little reflection will shew