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Indeed, my son, it is better to have friends in our passage through life, than grateful dependents; and as love is a more willing, so it is a more lasting tribute than extorted obligation. As we are uneasy when greatly obliged, gratitude once refused can never after be recovered; the mind that is base enough to disallow the just return, instead of feeling any uneasiness upon recollection, triumphs in its new acquired freedom, and in some measure is pleased with conscious baseness.

Very different is the situation of disagreeing friends; their separation produces mutual uneasiness: like that divided being in fabulous creation, their sympathetic souls once more desire their former union, the joys of both are imperfect, their gayest moments tinctured with uneasiness; each seeks for the smallest concessions to clear the way to a wished for explanation; the most trifling acknowledgment, the slightest accident, serves to effect a mutual reconciliation.

But instead of pursuing the thought, permit me to soften the severity of advice by an European story, which will fully illustrate my meaning.

"A fiddler and his wife, who had rubbed through "life, as most couples usually do, sometimes good "friends, at others not quite so well, one day hap"pened to have a dispute, which was conducted "with becoming spirit on both sides. The wife "was sure she was right, and the husband was re"solved to have his own way. What was to be "done in such a case? The quarrel grew worse "by explanations, and at last the fury of both rose "to such a pitch, that they made a vow never to "sleep together in the same bed for the future. "This was the most rash vow that could be imagin"ed; for they still were friends at bottom, and be"sides they had but one bed in the house: however,

"resolved they were to go through with it, and at "night the fiddle-case was laid in bed between them, "in order to make a separation. In this manner they ❝continued for three weeks; every night the fiddlecase being placed as a barrier to divide them.

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"By this time, however, each heartily repented "of their vow, their resentment was at an end, and "their love began to return; they wished the fiddle"case away, but both had too much spirit to begin. "One night, however, as they were both lying awake "with the detested fiddle-case between them, the "husband happened to sneeze, to which the wife, as “is usual in such cases, bid God bless him. Ay, "but,' returns the husband, woman, do you say that "from your heart?' Indeed I do, my poor Nicholas,' “cried his wife, ' I say it with all my heart.' If so "then,' says the husband, we had as good remove "the fiddle-case."

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"LETTER LXVII.

From the Same.

BOOKS, my son, while they teach us to respect the interests of others, often make us unmindful of our own; while they instruct the youthful reader to grasp at social happiness, he grows miserab' in detail, and attentive to universal harmony, ofte. iorgets that he himself has a part to sustain in the concert. I dislike, therefore, the philosopher who describes the inconveniencies of life in such pleasing colours, that the pupil grows enamoured of distress, longs to try the charms of poverty, meets it without dread,

nor fears its inconveniences, till he severely feels them.

A youth, who has thus spent his life among books, new to the world, and unacquainted with man, but by philosophic information, may be considered as a being, whose mind is filled with the vulgar errors of the wise; utterly unqualified for a journey through life, yet confident of his own skill in the direction, he sets out with confidence, blunders on with vanity, and finds himself at last undone.

He first has learned from books, and then lays it down as a maxim, that all mankind are virtuous or vicious in excess; and he has been long taught to detest vice and love virtue: warm, therefore, in attachments, and stedfast in enmity, he treats every creature as a friend or foe; expects from those he loves unerring integrity, and consigns his enemies to the reproach of wanting every virtue. On this principle he proceeds; and here begin his disappointments: upon a closer inspection of human nature, he perceives, that he should have moderated his friendship, and softened his severity, for he often finds the excellencies of one part of mankind clouded with vice, and the faults of the other brightened with virtue; he finds no character so sanctified that has not its failings, none so infamous but has somewhat to attract our esteem; he beholds impiety in lawn, and fidelity in fetters.

He now, therefore, but too late, perceives that his regards should have been more cool, and his hatreds less violent; that the truly wise seldom court romantic friendships with the good, and avoid, if possible, the resentment even of the wicked: every moment gives him fresh instances, that the bonds of friendship are broken if drawn too closely, and that those whom he has treated with disrespect, more than retaliate the injury: at length, therefore, he is

obliged to confess, that he has declared war upon the vicious half of mankind, without being able to form an alliance among the virtuous to espouse his quarrel.

Our book-taught philosopher, however, is now too far advanced to recede; and though poverty be the just consequence of the many enemies his conduct has created, yet he is resolved to meet it without shrinking: philosophers have described poverty in most charming colours; and even his vanity is touched in thinking, that he should show the world, in himself, one more example of patience, fortitude, and resignation. "Come, then, O Poverty! for "what is there in thee dreadful to the wise? tem

perance, health, and frugality, walk in thy train; "cheerfulness and liberty are ever thy companions. "Shall any be ashamed of thee of whom Cincinnatus 66 was not ashamed? The running brook, the herbs "of the field can amply satisfy naturé; man wants "but little, nor that little long; come then, O Poverty, "while kings stand by and gaze with admiration at "the philosopher's resignation."

The goddess appears; for Poverty ever comes at the call but, alas! he finds her by no means the charming figure books and his warm imagination had painted. As when an eastern bride, whom her friends and relations had long described as a model of perfection, pays her first visit, the longing bridegroom lifts the veil to see a face he had never seen before, but instead of a countenance blazing with beauty like the sun, he beholds deformity shooting icicles to his heart: such appears Poverty to her new entertainer; all the fabric of enthusiasm is at once demolished, and a thousand miseries rise upon its ruins, while Contempt, with pointing finger, is foremost in the hideous procession.

The poor man now finds that he can get no kings to look at him while he is eating; he finds, that in proportion as he grows poor, the world turns its back

upon him, and gives him leave to act the philosopher in all the majesty of solitude; it might be agreeable enough to play the philosopher, while we are conscious that mankind are spectators; but what signifies wearing the mask of sturdy contentment, and mounting the stage of restraint, when not one creature will assist at the exhibition; thus is he forsaken of men, while his fortitude wants the satisfaction even of self-applause; for either he does not feel his present calamities, and that is natural insensibility; or he disguises his feelings, and that is dissimulation.

Spleen now begins to take up the man; not distinguishing in his resentment, he regards all mankind with detestation, and commencing man-hater, seeks solitude to be at liberty to rail.

It has been said that he who retires to solitude is either a beast or an angel; the censure is too severe, and the praise unmerited; the discontented being who retires from society is generally some goodnatured man, who has begun his life without experience, and knew not how to gain it in his intercourse with mankind. Adieu.

LETTER LXVIII.

From Lien Chi Altangi to Fum Hoam, first president of the Ceremonial Academy at Pekin, in China.

I FORMERLY acquainted thee, most grave Fum, with the excellence of the English in the art of healing. The Chinese boast their skill in pulses, the Siamese their botanical knowledge, but the English advertising physicians alone of being the great restorers of health, the dispensers of youth, and the insurers of longevity. I can never enough ad

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