Page:Johnson - Rambler 3.djvu/297

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N° 154.
THE RAMBLER.
287

nomy, 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.



Numb. 154. Saturday, Sept. 7, 1751.


 ————Tibi res antiquæ laudis et artis
Aggredior, sanctos ausus recludere fontes.

Virg.

 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