Page:Johnson - Rambler 4.djvu/87

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174
THE RAMBLER.
77

Numb. 174. Saturday, November 15, 1751.

Fænum habet in cornu, longe fuge, dummodo risum
 Excutiat sibi, non hic cuiquam parcet amico.

Hor.

 Yonder he drives —— avoid that furious beast:
  If he may have his jest, he never cares
  At whose expence; nor friend nor patron spares.

Francis.

Tothe RAMBLER

Mr. Rambler,

THE laws of social benevolence require, that every man should endeavour to assist others by his experience. He that has at last escaped into port from the fluctuations of chance and the gusts of opposition, ought to make some improvements in the chart of life, by marking the rocks on which he has been dashed, and the shallows where he has been stranded.

The error into which I was betrayed, when custom first gave me up to my own direction, is very frequently incident to the quick, the sprightly, the fearless, and the gay; to all whose ardour hurries them into precipitate execution of their designs, and imprudent declaration of their opinions; who seldom count the cost of pleasure, or examine the distant consequences of any practice that flatters them with immediate gratification.

I came forth into the crowded world with the usual juvenile ambition, and desired nothing beyond the title of a wit. Money I considered as below my care; for I saw such multitudes grow rich without understanding, that I could not forbear to look on wealth as an acquisition easy to