FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   343   344   345   346   347   348   349   350   351   352   353   354   355   356   357   358   359   360   361   362   363   364   365   366   367  
368   369   370   371   372   373   374   375   376   >>  
y ignorant. I desired his opinion yesterday of the German war, and was told, that if the Prussians were well supported, something great may be expected; but that they have very powerful enemies to encounter; that the Austrian general has long experience, and the Russians are hardy and resolute; but that no human power is invincible. I then drew the conversation to our own affairs, and invited him to balance the probabilities of war and peace. He told me that war requires courage, and negociation judgment, and that the time will come when it will be seen, whether our skill in treaty is equal to our bravery in battle. To this general prattle he will appeal hereafter, and will demand to have his foresight applauded, whoever shall at last be conquered or victorious. With Ned Smuggle all is a secret. He believes himself watched by observation and malignity on every side, and rejoices in the dexterity by which he has escaped snares that never were laid. Ned holds that a man is never deceived if he never trusts, and, therefore, will not tell the name of his tailor or his hatter. He rides out every morning for the air, and pleases himself with thinking that nobody knows where he has been. When he dines with a friend, he never goes to his house the nearest way, but walks up a by-street to perplex the scent. When he has a coach called, he never tells him at the door the true place to which he is going, but stops him in the way that he may give him directions where nobody can hear him. The price of what he buys or sells is always concealed. He often takes lodgings in the country by a wrong name, and thinks that the world is wondering where he can be hid. All these transactions he registers in a book, which, he says, will some time or other amaze posterity. It is remarked by Bacon, that many men try to procure reputation only by objections, of which, if they are once admitted, the nullity never appears, because the design is laid aside. "This false feint of wisdom," says he, "is the ruin of business." The whole power of cunning is privative; to say nothing, and to do nothing, is the utmost of its reach. Yet men thus narrow by nature, and mean by art, are sometimes able to rise by the miscarriages of bravery and the openness of integrity; and by watching failures and snatching opportunities, obtain advantages which belong properly to higher characters. No. 93. SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 1760. Sam Softly was bred a sugar-bak
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   343   344   345   346   347   348   349   350   351   352   353   354   355   356   357   358   359   360   361   362   363   364   365   366   367  
368   369   370   371   372   373   374   375   376   >>  



Top keywords:

bravery

 

general

 
called
 

posterity

 
transactions
 

remarked

 

registers

 
thinks
 

directions

 

wondering


country

 

concealed

 

lodgings

 
openness
 

miscarriages

 

integrity

 
watching
 

snatching

 

failures

 

Softly


nature
 

opportunities

 
obtain
 
SATURDAY
 

JANUARY

 
characters
 

advantages

 

belong

 

properly

 

higher


narrow

 

appears

 

design

 
nullity
 

admitted

 

reputation

 

procure

 

objections

 

utmost

 

privative


wisdom

 

business

 
cunning
 

hatter

 

probabilities

 

requires

 

courage

 

balance

 

invited

 
conversation