Page:Johnson - Rambler 3.djvu/116

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
106
THE RAMBLER.
N° 123.

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.



Numb. 123. Tuesday, May 21, 1751.

Quo semel est imbuta recens, servabit odorem
Testa diu.

Hor.

 What season'd first the vessel, keeps the taste.

Creech.

TotheRAMBLER

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