Page:Johnson - Rambler 2.djvu/267

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N° 98.
THE RAMBLER.
259

danger to which they are exposed. At one time or other, women, not utterly thoughtless, will be convinced of the justice of your censure, and the charity of your instruction.

But should your expostulations and reproofs have no effect upon those who are far gone in fashionable folly, they may be retailed from their mouths to their nieces, (marriage will not often have entitled these to daughters), when they, the meteors of a day, find themselves elbowed off the stage of vanity by other flutterers; for the most admired women cannot have many Tunbridge, many Bath seasons to blaze in; since even fine faces, often seen, are less regarded than new faces, the proper punishment of showy girls, for rendering themselves so impolitickly cheap.

I am,SIR,

Your sincere admirer, &c.



Numb. 98. Saturday, February 23, 1751,

Quæ nec Sarmentus iniquas
Cæsaris ad mensas, nec vilis Gabba tulisset.

Juv.

  Which not Sarmentus brook'd at Cæsar's board,
 Nor grov'ling Gabba from his haughty Lord.

Elphinston.


To the Author of the RAMBLER.

Mr. Rambler,

YO U have often endeavoured to impress upon your readers an observation of more truth than novelty, that life passes, for the most part, in petty transactions; that our hours glide away in trifling