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THE RAMBLER
No. 129. TUESDAY, JUNE 11. 1751

Оглавление

  —Nunc, O nunc, Daedale, dixit,

    Materiam, qua sis ingeniosus, habes.

  Possidet en terras, et possidet aequara, Minos:

    Nec tellus nostrae, nec patet undo fugae.

  Restat iter coelo: tentabimus ire.

    Da veniam caepto, Jupiter alte, meo. OVID. Ar. Am. Lib. ii. 33.


  Now, Daedalus, behold, by fate assign'd,

  A task proportion'd to thy mighty mind!

  Unconquer'd bars on earth and sea withstand;

  Thine, Minos, is the main, and thine the land.

  The skies are open—let us try the skies:

  Forgive, great Jove, the daring enterprize.


Moralists, like other writers, instead of casting their eyes abroad in the living world, and endeavouring to form maxims of practice and new hints of theory, content their curiosity with that secondary knowledge which books afford, and think themselves entitled to reverence by a new arrangement of an ancient system, or new illustration of established principles5. The sage precepts of the first instructors of the world are transmitted from age to age with little variation, and echoed from one author to another, not perhaps without some loss of their original force at every repercussion.

I know not whether any other reason than this idleness of imitation can be assigned for that uniform and constant partiality, by which some vices have hitherto escaped censure, and some virtues wanted recommendation; nor can I discover why else we have been warned only against part of our enemies, while the rest have been suffered to steal upon us without notice; why the heart has on one side been doubly fortified, and laid open on the other to the incursions of errour, and the ravages of vice.

Among the favourite topicks of moral declamation, may be numbered the miscarriages of imprudent boldness, and the folly of attempts beyond our power. Every page of every philosopher is crowded with examples of temerity that sunk under burdens which she laid upon herself, and called out enemies to battle by whom she was destroyed.

5

Johnson gained his knowledge from actual experience. He told Boswell that before he wrote the Rambler he had been running about the world more than almost any body. Boswell's Life of Johnson, vol. i. p. 196.; and vol. iii. pp. 20, 21.

The Works of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. in Nine Volumes, Volume 03

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