tional tranquillity, but the conviction that, however we amuse ourselves with unideal sounds, nothing in reality is governed by chance, but that the universe is under the perpetual superintendance of Him who created it; that our being is in the hands of omnipotent goodness, by whom what appears casual to us, is directed for ends ultimately kind and merciful; and that nothing can finally hurt him who debars not himself from the Divine favour.
Numb. 185. Tuesday, December 24, 1751.
At vindicta bonum vita jucundius ipsa, |
Juv. |
But O! revenge is sweet. |
Dryden. |
NO vicious dispositions of the mind more obstinately resist both the counsels of philosophy and the injunctions of religion, than those