AN EPISTLE TO JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ.

OCCASIONED BY HIS HAVING TRANSMITTED THE MORAL WRITINGS OF DR. SAMUEL JOHNSON, TO PASCAL PAOLI, GENERAL OF THE CORSICANS.

WITH A POSTSCRIPT, CONTAINING THOUGHTS ON LIBERTY; AND A PARALLEL, AFTER THE MANNER OF PLUTARCH, BETWEEN THE CELEBRATED PATRIOT OF CORTE, AND JOHN WILKES, ESQ.

MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT FOR MIDDLESEX.

BY W. K. ESQ.

LONDON: PRINTED FOR FLETCHER AND ANDERSON, IN ST. PAUL'S CHURCH-YARD.

MDCCLXVIII.

APOLOGY.

CRITICISM has so often given occasion to the envious and ill-natured of gratifying their malignity, that some have thought it necessary to recommend the virtue of candour without restriction, and to preclude all future liberty of cen­sure. Writers possessed with this opi­nion, are continually enforcing civility and decency, recommending to criticks the proper diffidence of themselves, and inculcating the veneration due to cele­brated names.

I am not of opinion that these professed enemies of arrogance, and severity, have much more benevolence or modesty than the rest of mankind; or that they feel in their own hearts, any other intentions [Page vi] than to distinguish themselves by their softness and delicacy. Some are modest because they are timorous, and some are lavish of praise, because they hope to be repaid.

There is indeed some tenderness due to living writers, when they attack none of those truths which are of importance to the happiness of mankind, and have com­mitted no other offence, than that of be­traying their own ignorance or dulness. I should think it cruelty to crush an in­sect, who had provoked me only by buz­zing in my ear, and would not willingly interrupt the dream of harmless stupi­dity, or destroy the jest which makes its author laugh. Yet I am far from think­ing this tenderness universally necessary; for he that writes may be considered as a kind of general challenger, whom every one has a right to attack; since he quits the common rank of life, steps forward beyond the lists, and offers his merit to the publick judgment. To commence author, is to claim praise, and no man can justly aspire to honour, but at the hazard of disgrace.

The faults of a writer of acknow­ledged excellence, are more dangerous, because the influence of his example is [Page vii] more extensive; and the interest of learn­ing requires that they should be discover­ed and stigmatized, before they have the sanction of antiquity conferred on them, and become precedents of indisputable authority.

The duty of criticism is neither to de­preciate, nor dignify by partial represen­tations, but to hold out the light of REA­SON, whatever it may discover; and to pro­mulgate the determinations of TRUTH, whatever she shall dictate.

RAMBLER, N o XCIII.

AN EPISTLE TO JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ. &c.

SIR,

HAVING acquired a kind of friendship for the brave Corsicans, from the perusal of your in­teresting account of their situation, manners, and principles, I could not fail of being greatly affected by the mistake into which your zeal for the welfare of that heroic people, and the honour of Paoli, their general, seems precipitately to have hurried you.

The admiration which pursues celebrity, is in­deed so very universal, that I am not surprized a veneration for illustrious names should prevail even to enthusiasm in young and unexperienced minds. Perhaps this veneration is no less amiable in its cause, than exceptionable in its effects. As it is generally corrected by age and observation, it were [Page 2] a pity, therefore, to hurt a susceptible and inge­nuous mind, by too rudely attempting to eradicate so natural a sentiment, while confined to the breast of the individual *. But when a public display of it renders its puerility conspicuous; when the sallies of youth and inexperience are obtruded on the world as the dictates of wisdom and understanding, it becomes a necessary, I will say a friendly task, to make a distinction between the giddy flights of a loose and bewildered fancy, and the sober researches of solid sense and profound penetration.

If those who exalt trifles by immoderate praise, are to be ranked among the perverters of reason and corrupters of the world, I am afraid you have not been sufficiently attentive to the general obli­gation of mankind to promote happiness and vir­tue, ‘in being careful not to mislead unwary minds, by appearing to set too high a value upon things by which no real excellence is conferred.’

I doubt not, Sir, that time and reflection will correct many of those mistaken notions you at pre­sent entertain of men and manners in general, as well as of your illustrious friends in particular; I [Page 3] should therefore have spared both you and myself the trouble of this address, had the propagation of such notions been confined to the circle of your personal acquaintance. But when we see them dis­seminated in printed books throughout Europe; when we see the morals, and consequently the poli­tical happiness of a whole nation endangered by your indiscreet and officious endeavours to promote their unnecessary reformation; who can with-hold remonstrance! Quum tota insula periclitatur, non ex­postulemus? non accusemus? non graviter feramus?—Truth, justice, humanity forbid it.

You have been pleased to assure the world, that the Corsicans are arrived at that ‘period in the progress of society, in which mankind appear to the greatest advantage.’ You have been pleased to tell us, ‘they are bold, active, steady, ardent in the love of liberty and their native country: that their manners are simple, their social affec­tions warm, and though they are greatly influ­enced by the ties of blood, yet they are generous, hospitable, and religious *.’

Of the character and sentiments of their illustri­ous chief, you give us also an idea, worthy the leader of such a nation; a nation composed of men of ‘honour, sense and abilities.’

Little did I imagine a people so circumstanced, under the conduct of a chief so amiable and so en­lightened, could stand in need of either the moral or political reveries of speculative theorists of other nations ? Yet are you farther pleased to inform [Page 4] us, that diverted with the scanty library of the Cor­sican general, you have sent him over some English books in favour of Liberty; as also some of our best books of Morality, particularly the works of Mr. Samuel Johnson; whose name you revere, of whose sapience you are always mindful, and whom you magnificently stile a majestick teacher of moral and religious wisdom *!

Would to God, Sir, you had left the General's library as bare as you found it! or that you had timely considered the nature and tendency of the fatal gift you were going to make him!

It is natural to suppose, from the superlative re­gard you prosess for the two celebrated personages just mentioned, that you intended your literary pre­sent should be as useful to the one as honourable to the other. You doubtless conceived the writings of our English philosopher would serve either to confirm, or inform, the mind of the Corsican pa­triot; and by his means to edify the minds, and improve the morals of the whole Corsican nation.

Had the principles of both been the same indeed, those of Paoli might be confirmed by a knowledge of their coincidence; presuming always on that Chief's implicit acceptation of the exalted character you gave him of Dr. Johnson. Nay, were they different, without being very essentially so, Paoli might possibly submit to be corrected by the more accurate judgment of a man, whose comprehen­sive and vigorous understanding, you could have [Page 5] assured him, has by long observation attained to a perfect knowledge of human nature *. But if, as it really happens, they should be found totally in­compatible; if neither Paoli nor his Corsicans can possibly adopt the sentiments of Dr. Johnson, with­out entirely divesting themselves of their own, they would by so doing, make the most perilous ex­change imaginable. It is impossible to conceive how eventually fatal your well-intended gift may prove to that now happy country: for happy will I call a people, such as you have described the Corsicans; a people possessed of every patriot and domestic virtue , and glorying in the fairest pros­pects of a political happiness inferior to nothing but that which they now enjoy.

The inhabitants of more polished and luxurious countries may pique themselves on their enjoy­ment of a greater share of such happiness: but, their vanity deceives them; and I may, on your own authority, safely venture to call the Corsicans the happiest nation in the world. In which case, I dread to think what may be the consequence of a total perversion of their present system of morals.

Better, far better might it have been for them, as a nation, that they had risked the contagion of a corporal plague, by the importation of a bale of cotton from Aleppo, than to catch the infection [Page 6] of a sentimental pestilence, by that of a bale of books from the port of London.

But, to wave declamation, and prove that my fears are not more imaginary than your inadver­tency hath been real.

This cannot be more impartially effected, than by displaying the moral characters and sentiments of your two friends, the celebrated personages abovementioned, in a comparative point of view. I shall begin therefore with the Corsican chief, as described by your own pen.

MORAL CHARACTER AND SENTIMENTS OF PASCAL PAOLI.

  • 1. His notions of morality are high and refined, such as become the father of a nation *.
  • 2. He hath so noble a conception of virtue in theory, as to think it natural to the heart of man. ‘There is no man,’ says he, ‘who has not a hor­rour at some vice: different vices and different virtues, have the strongest impression on differ­ent men: but VIRTUE IN THE ABSTRACT IS THE FOOD OF OUR HEARTS.’ Il virtù in as­tratto è il nutrimenti dei nostri cuori .
  • 3. He hath seldom deviated from virtue in prac­tice: and that not from a defect of feeling or pas­sion, but that his mind being filled with important [Page 7] objects, his passions have been employed in more noble pursuits than those of licentious pleasures *.
  • 4. He possesses in the vigour of life, a rational and voluntary piety; relying so devoutly on his maker, that he never feels a moment of despon­dency .
  • 5. He is so justly satisfied with the dispensations of Providence, that he adores it for what it hath done, and reveres it for what it hath not done .
  • 6. He is every moment of his life a hero, and has a mind fitted for philosophical speculations, as well as for affairs of state §.

It is difficult to say more in favour of any man: the chief of a nation would have been made suffi­ciently illustrious by much less.

Of Dr. Johnson I shall speak, as he has spoken of himself and the rest of mankind; and as far as the contrast will admit, in his own words.

MORAL CHARACTER AND SENTIMENTS OF SAMUEL JOHNSON.

  • 1. His notions of morality are low and gross: such as would ill become a friar in a convent.
  • [Page 8]2. He hath so mean a conception of virtue in theory, as to think the little there is of it in the world, is chiefly the effect of human misery. So far from conceiving, with Paoli, that virtue is the food of our hearts, he describes mankind in gene­ral, as naturally prone to every vice; and as hav­ing no sense even of common justice, but what they acquire from their suffering by the injustice of one another *.
  • 3. How often, he has deviated from the prac­tice of virtue, he hath not told us; but he declares that the passions of mankind naturally lead them to licentious pleasures, and that their reason hath no authority over them, but by its power to warn them against evil; so that unless vice was check­ed by misery, it would swell to universal and un­limited dominion.—In a world like ours, says he, where our senses assault us, and our hearts betray us, we should pass on from crime to crime, heed­less and remorseless, if misery did not stand in our way, and our own pains admonish us of our folly.—And again, If neither disease nor poverty were selt or dreaded, every one would sink down in idle sensuality, without any care of others or him­self. To eat and drink, and iie down to sleep, would be the whole business of mankind!
  • 4. He prosesses in the decline of life, such an irrational and slavish system of piety, that he de­scribes the regular discharge of the duties of reli­gion, as the constrained and involuntary occupation of infancy or dotage. In manhood, he tells us, religion and piety are neglected. None, says he, [Page 9] would have recourse to an invisible power, but that all other subjects had eluded their hopes. The gloom of age which intercepts our prospects of long enjoyment, forces us to fix our hopes on an­other state; and when we have contended with the tempests of life till our strength fails us, we fly at last to the shelter of religion.—Hence it is that he lives in a state of constant doubt, distrust and de­spondency.
  • 5. He is so unjustly dissatisfied with the dispensa­tions of providence, that he conceives the only thinking being of this globe, is doomed to think merely to be wretched, and to pass his time from youth to age in nothing but fearing or suffering calamities. Nay, he insinuates that the blessings of providence tend immediately to corrupt us; and affirms that none would fix their attention on a future state, but that they are discontented with the present.
  • 6. He is at no time a hero, and has not a mind fitted either for philosophical speculations, or af­fairs of state.

Such is the patriot Paoli, and such the philoso­pher Johnson! What a contrast! * Surely, Sir, you must have been fascinated, not to have observ­ed so striking a difference! A difference that pre­vails even to a total distortion in every feature! [Page 10] But I leave you to dwell minutely on the compa­rison. That I may not be supposed, however, to have taken any unfair advantage of the desultory manner of an essayist, or to have misrepresented his principles by partial quotations; I shall transcribe the whole of the tract from which the above cha­racter and sentiments are deduced. This is the 89th number of the IDLER: which, being one of Dr. Johnson's latest performances, may reasonably be presumed the least exceptionable, as a test of his sentiments. In doing this, I shall take the liberty also of making some occasional remarks on the vera­city, consistency and tendency of the positions ad­vanced, so far as they are applicable either to Mr. Boswell, Dr. Johnson, Paoli or his Corsicans.

The IDLER, N o LXXXIX.

How evil came into the world; for what reason it is that life is overspread with such boundless va­rieties of misery; why the only thinking being of this globe is doomed to think merely to be wretched, and to pass his time from youth to age in fearing or in suffering calamities, is a question which philosophers have long asked, and which philosophy could never answer.

The reality of this miserable case, is yet piously taken for granted. But it is notorious that philo­sophers have been frequently employed in the inves­tigation of causes, whose effects existed only in their own distempered imaginations.

Our Idler should therefore have proved, his in­sinuations true, viz. that man is the only thinking Being of this globe; and even then, that he was [Page 11] doomed to think merely to be wretched, before he had entered upon an enquiry, why or how he be­came so. The insinuation itself, however, is suf­ficient to give the reader some idea of the writer's temper and disposition, and to raise a suspicion at least that he may be one of that species of beings in human form, which he hath himself, not improperly marked out as the screech-owls of mankind *.

RELIGION informs us that misery and sin were produced together. The depravation of human will was followed by a disorder of the harmony of nature; and by that providence which often places antidotes in the neighbourhood of poisons; vice was checked by misery, lest it should swell to universal and unli­mited dominion.

This question, which, we are told philosophers have so long asked, and philosophy could not an­swer, is here pretended to be solved by religion; I presume the christian religion, as revealed in the books of the old and new testament. To speak then as a christian, as well as a philosopher, I ad­mit that the doctrine of original sin and its conse­quences are inculcated in those books : but in the [Page 12] same books also are we told of the propitiation of a saviour, and of the ordinance of baptism; by which sacrament christians are delivered from original sin with its effects, and restored to their primitive in­nocence *. Whence then the necessity of human misery to check vice? of what use a disorder in the harmony of nature to attend the human will when no longer depraved? why should misery survive the sin that produced it? if we reason on the prin­ciples, and use the language, of religion, in lay­ing down the premises of an argument; let us abide by them in drawing the conclusion. There is an effential distinction beteen sin, which accord­ing to divines, brought death and misery into the world ; and vice or immorality, which, accord­ing to the natural order of things, is universally its own punishment. For the guilt of sin God hath provided a Saviour. From the guilt of vice no­thing can save but virtue. I will grant that adver­sity is sometimes a good preceptor; it may awa­ken the latent principles of virtue in the mind. [Page 13] But wretched is the sophistry of that writer who would insinuate that men are made virtuous only by being made miserable!

A state of innocence and happiness is so remote from all that we have ever seen, that though we can easily conceive it possible, and may therefore hope to attain it, yet our speculations upon it must be general and confused.

The IDLER is certainly the first philosopher in the world that has founded the hope of attaining a thing merely on his being able to conceive the possibility of its existence. It is indeed very na­tural to suppose that our speculations on a state, so remote from all we have ever seen as only to be conceived possible, should be general and confused.

Amidst these general and confused speculations, however, he makes such a discovery as cannot fail to give his admirers the highest opinion of his ta­lents for philosophical investigation.

We can discover that where there is universal in­nocence, there will probably be universal happiness; for why should afflictions be permitted to infest Be­ings who are not in danger of corruption from bles­sings, and where there is no use of terror nor cause of punishment?

This is a notable discovery indeed! but let me be permitted to ask why innocence should proba­bly infer happiness? happiness is as naturally and universally annexed to virtue, as misery is entailed on vice; but a state of Innocence is a neutral state between both, neither meriting the one nor de­meriting the other.

[Page 14]His reason for the existence of such a state is also no less curious than his discovery of it. ‘Why should afflictions be permitted to infest beings who are not in danger of corruption from bles­sings?’ Is not this plainly to insinuate that the blessings of providence tend to corrupt the heart of man; and that, if they did not, it were unreasona­ble for him to suffer its afflictions? What a strange insinuation!

But in a world like ours, where our senses assault us, and our hearts betray us, we should pass on from crime to crime, heedless and ramorseless, if misery did not stand in our way, and our own pains ad­monish us of our folly.

Surely, Sir, you never read this passage, or must have totally forgot it, when you laboured to per­suade Paoli, that Dr. Johnson entertained a moral sense of distinction between virtue and vice; telling him he once facetiously said to you, that ‘when a man who has no sense of such distinction leaves our houses, we should count our spoons *!’ It appears, however, incontestible from the last quoted [Page 15] passage, that if those prudent monitors, the whip­ping-post and the gallows, did not stand in the way, we ought to count our spoons when such men as the IDLER come into our houses, ay and our money too, before they go out of it.

Almost all ths moral good which is left among us, is the apparent effect of physical evil.

As the two qualifying words almost and apparent are introduced in this assertion, I shall make no other remark on it than to observe, the writer might on his own principles have reversed the terms [Page 16] of it. For, if mankind are in danger of being corrupted by the blessings of Providence, as he in­finuates, moral evil may also be called the effect of physical good.

Goodness is divided by divines into scberness, righte­ousness, and godliness. Let it be examined how each of these duties would be practised, if there were no physical evil to ensorce it.

I have already observed the impropriety of mak­ing use of the terms of different sciences in one and the same argument. The divines, who make the divisions here specified, would impute the re­gular practice of the duties mentioned rather to the operations of divine grace, than to the effects of physical evil. The IDLER shews himself there­fore no better a Christian than a philosopher by snch a motley mode of reasoning.

SOBRIETY, or temperance, is nothing but the for­bearance of pleasure; and if plesure was not followed by pain, who would forbear it? We see every hour those in whom the desire of present indulgence over­powers all seuse of past, and all foresight of future misery. In a remission of the gout, the drunkard re­turns to his wine, and the glutton to his feast; and if neither disease nor poverty were felt or dreaded, every one would sink down in idle sensuacility, without any care of others or himself. To eat and drink, and lie down to sleep, would be the whole business of man­kind.

What a picture of human nature! What a de­scription of society! What a man must the IDLER be! And what company must he have kept! Surely [Page 17] the most dissolute, the most abandoned, the most beastly of mankind! For heaven's sake are all men drunkards and gluttons? Or ought the gratification of such vitiated appetites to be called by the gene­ral term pleasure, as opposed to pain *? How diffe­rent an idea had your Genevan friend, of the decency and dignity of our nature. ‘The funda­mental principle of all morality, says he, that on which I have reasoned in all my writings, is this; that man is naturally good; that he loves justice and order; that there is no original perversity in the human heart, and that the first emotions of nature are always right. I have shewn that the only passion which is born with man, to wit self-love, is in itself indifferent either to good or evil; that it becomes good or evil only by those adventitious circumstances in which it is dis­played. [Page 18] I have shewn that none of the vices imputed to the human heart are natural to it; and have described the manner in which man­kind, by successive deviations from their original goodness are become what they are *.’

There can be no doubt which is the more ami­able description of humanity. And if you ques­tion which is the more just, I might refer you to the united evidence of the wisest and most cele­brated philosophers both ancient and modern . But perhaps the shocking caricaturas, which Dr. Johnson so frequently exhibits, of human nature, are not deduced from his actual observation of even the vilest class of people in any nation now in Chris­tendom. Indeed I more than suspect these wretched daubings to be copied from the horrid anamor­phoses of the lower antiquity, and to resemble the life just as the staring figures of its worm-eaten hangings, resemble the drawings of a Raphael or a Michael Angelo . Your gloomy friend, I am told, pins his faith much on the primitive fathers. But the founders of the Christian church had in view the conversion of the heathen, at a time when unenlightened by Christianity, and unpolished by philosophy, they were sunk into brutality and bar­barism. [Page 19] The fathers were very naturally led there­fore to speak of human nature, as it appeared to them in such a state of unregeneracy. But what hath an age, in which genuine Christianity and true philosophy are cultivated, as at present, to do with such vile, such abominable misrepresentations?

RIGHTEOUSNESS, or the system of social duty, may be subdivided into justice and charity. Of jus­stice, one of the heathen sages has shewn with great acuteness, that it was impressed upon mankind only by the inconveniences which injustice had produced. In the first ages, says he, men acted without any rule but the impulse of desire they practised injus­tice upon others, and suffered it from others in their turn; but in time it was discovered, that the pain of suffering wrong was greater than the pleasure of doing it; and mankind, by a general compact, sub­mitted to the restraint of laws, and resigned the plea­sure to escape the pain.

Here again we see one of the sub-divisions, made by christian divines, of righteousness into justice and charity, enforced and explained by the opinion of a heathen sage; by whose great acute­ness justice is shewn not to arise from any innate principle implanted in our nature, but to be a discovery made by reason and experience.

It were easier to consute a better logician than one who makes use of terms so vague, and argues with such notable inconsistency. Does the IDLER mean that a sense of the justice or injustice of any action, is primarily impressed on mankind, by the inconveniences they suffer from injustice *? Or [Page 20] does he mean that a knowledge of the rules of jus­tice necessary to be laid down between man and man, to regulate their actions in a state of society, are only thus deducible? If he only meant the lat­ter, I should have no dispute with him; but when he insinuates with his ancient sage, that, because men, in the first ages of the world, acted without any rule but the impulse of desire, they practised injustice upon others; I cannot help being struck with the impropriety, and shocked at the injustice of such an imputation. Is human nature led by any natural impulse of desire to injustice? We have been repeatedly taught both by ancient and modern sages, that virtue in general is desireable on its own account merely from the immediate satisfaction it conveys; and that man is possessed of an internal sense, or feeling which distinguishes moral good and evil, and which embraces the one and rejects the other *. Nay, doctor Johnson himself, in his 81st RAMBLER, declares that the measure of jus­tice prescribed by christianity, is an universal prin­ciple, a law of which every man may find the ex­position in his own breast .

[Page 21]Of charity it is superfluous to observe that it could have no place, if there were no want; for of a virtue which could not be practised, the omission could not be culpable. Evil is not only the occasional but the efficient cause of charity; we are incited to the re­lief of misery, by the consciousness that we have the same nature with the sufferer, that we are in dan­ger of the same distresses, and may sometime implore the same assistance.

You will please to observe, Sir, that the IDLER introduces the word charity here confessedly in a theological sense; that is, as it is accepted by our divines; whereas in his comment on the practice of it he confines it solely to the practice of giving [Page 22] alms. From this practice, however, it is notori­ously distinguished by the apostle Paul in his first Epistle to the Corinthians; where charity as a christian virtue is at large defined, and cannot without the greatest impropriety, if not impiety, be imputed, as to its efficient cause, to EVIL *. Indeed, Mr. Boswell, when your majestic teacher affects to talk again in the stile of christian divines, he ought to take the meaning of words rather of the rector of his parish, than the church-warden.

If he acquits himself but ill as a theologue in the beginning of the above passage, he is no less un­successful, as a philosopher in the close of it. ‘We are incited, says he, to the relief of misery by the consciousness that we have the same nature with the sufferer, that we are in danger of the same distresses; and may sometime implore the same assistance.’ Now the motive inciting us to the relief of misery, is what we call compassion; which is here accounted for entirely on that selfish system, which has been so much railed at by some philosophers; who are thus spoken of by Dr. John­son himself in the fourth number of his IDLER.

Compassion is by some reasoners, on whom the [Page 23] name of philosophers has been too easily conser­red, resolved into an affection merely selfish.

Now whether your friend chuses to relinquish or abide by the selfish system, you certainly must own him to be one of those reasoners, on whom the name of philosopher has been too easily conferred *.

Nothing but your partiality at least can possibly prevent it, when I quote the words immediately following; in which this affection merely selfish, is called ‘an involuntary perception of pain at the involuntary sight of a being like ourselves lan­guishing in misery.’

Now the philosophers, who tell us we must re­nounce the theory which accounts for moral senti­ments by the principle of self-love, adopt this very involuntary fellow-feeling for others. They call it not a selfish but a social affection, and affirm that the welfare of others, even on their own account is not indifferent to us. They do not represent com­passion as a consciousness arising from a retrospect to ourselves, but allow that every thing which con­tributes [Page 24] to the happiness of others, recommends itself directly to our approbation and good-will.

'Tis needless, say they, to push our resear­ches so far as to ask why we have humanity or a fellow-feeling for others. 'Tis sufficient, that this is experienced to be a principle in human nature. We must stop somewhere in our exa­mination of causes; and there are, in every science, some general principles beyond which we cannot find any principle more general. *

Whatever principles we adopt, however, they ought to be consistent with themselves; nor can he possibly have a mind fitted for philosophical speculations, who thus confounds the principles of others, and contradicts his own.

GODLINESS, or piety, is elevation of the mind towards the supreme being, and extension of the thoughts to another life. The other life is future, and the supreme being is invisible. None would have recourse to an invisible power, but that all other subjects had eluded their hopes. None would fix their attention upon the future, but that they are discontented with the present. If the senses were feasted with perpetual pleasure, they would always keep the mind in subjection. Reason has no authority over us, but by its power to warn us against evil.

IGNORANCE is even proverbially stiled the mother of devotion, and when joined to weakness, fear and melancholy has been called the parent of superstition. But never hath godliness or piety been [Page 25] represented before as the joint offspring of doubt, discontent, and disappointment.

You will not forget that in the paper under con­sideration, the IDLER sets out with describing us as thinking beings. Even in the passage immediate­ly before us, he speaks of man as a being compos­ed of corporeal senses and of mind; viz. of sensual and intellectual appetites. As a mere sensitive be­ing, man may indeed be supposed so sensual an ani­mal, as to be capable of a total subjection to the pleasures of brutal nature. But reason is as much a part of him as appetite; the enjoyments also of the sensitive being and that of the intelligent, are as Rousseau justly observes, totally different. Reason never, therefore, can be so destitute of influence over a thinking being, as to be only capable of warning it against physical evil *.

[Page 26]If you require farther conviction of the inconsis­tency of the IDLER, as to the pursuits and enjoy­ments of reasonable beings, attend to the voice of Religion, as delivered by the RAMBLER on the the same subject. ‘The proper tendency of every rational being, from the highest order of rap­tured seraphs, to the meanest ranks of men, is to rise incessantly from lower degrees of happi­ness to higher. They have each faculties assign­ed them for various order of delights.’—And again, ‘the true enjoyments of a reasonable being, do not consist in unbounded indulgence or luxu­rious ease, in the tumult of passions, the lan­guor of indolence, or the flutter of light amuse­ments.’

"SUPERSTITION", says the same voice *, ‘is the child of discontent, and her followers are fear and sorrow. Look round and survey the various beauties of the globe, which heaven has destined for the seat of human race, and consi­der whether a world thus exquisitely framed, could be meant for the abode of misery and pain. For what end has the lavish hand of providence diffused such innumerable objects of delight, but that all might rejoice in the privilege of exis­tence, and be filled with gratitude to the bene­ficent author of it? Thus to enjoy the blessings he has sent, is virtue and obedience; and to re­ject [Page 27] ject them merely as means of pleasure, is pitiable ignorance or absurd perverseness *.’

If the words which the RAMBLER hath here made to flow from the lips of religion, be the words of truth and soberness, and where is the man that does not feel their veracity? how pitiably igno­rant, or absurdly perverse, must be the IDLER!— Dr. Johnson may chuse which appellation he likes best. As an amusing essayist, we may admire the elegance of his literary effusions, but, for consis­tency's sake, give him no more the title of a phi­losopher .

[Page 28]In childhood, while our minds are yet unoccupied; religion is impressed upon them, and the first years of almost all who have been well educated, are passed in a regular discharge of the duties of piety.

As the IDLER, in the preceding passage, gave the name of godliness, and piety, to confessed su­perstition, so here he has given the name of piety and religion to the ritual formalities of devotion, and the futile farce of hypocrisy. For children are at best but parrots in matters of religion. To talk of a child's regularly discharging his duty to­wards God, before it can form any idea of his ex­istence and perfections, is to talk very unlike ‘a man whose comprehensive and vigorous under­standing has by long observation attained to a perfect knowledge of human nature.’ Nothing can be more just than the following observations of Rousseau.

‘No education, says he, however truly chris­tian, can confer on a child a degree of under­standing above his years, or detach his ideas from material objects, from which even grown persons cannot detach theirs.—You may, indeed, make him repeat after you the words you dictate to him; you may also, if it be required, make him say he understands them: for that conces­sion costs him little, and he had much rather say, he comprehends you, than be chid or beaten for want of apprehension *.’ Thus children, as I [Page 29] observed, may be made hypocrites; but genuine piety can be practised only by persons of riper un­derstandings. That this is most probably the case, appears also, from the IDLER's subsequent sugges­tion, that in youth and manhood nobody has any piety at all; which could hardly be the case, if true religion were really impressed on childhood.

But as we advance forward into the crouds of life, innumerable delights sollicit our inclinations, and innumerable cares distract our attention; the time of youth is Passed in noisy srolicks; manhood is led on from hope, to hope, from project to project; the dissoluteness of pleasure, the incbriation of suc­cess, the ardour of expectation, and the vehemence of competition, chain down the mind alike to the present scene, nor is it remembered how soon this mist of trifles must be scattered, and the bubbles that float upon the river of life, be lost for ever in the gulph of eternity.

What an appearance of precision amidst this pretty farrago of metaphors! But it is merely ver­bal; the plain English of it being a false, scanda­lous and wicked libel on the most active and sensible part of mankind; for what else is it to declare that men in the prime of life, and the vigour of their understanding, are too much taken up with this world, to think at all of the next? Doubtless the cares and pleasures of the world engross too much the time and attention of many; but there are none whose business or amusements take up so much of either, as not to afford them both time and occa­sion for such reflection, as is of all others the most natural to a thinking being. Yet the IDLER goes on to say,

[Page 30] To this consideration scarce any manis awakened but by some pressing and resistless evil. The death of those from whom he derived his pleasures, or to whom he destined his possessions, some disease which shews him the vanity of all external acquisitions, or the gloom of age, which intercepts his prospect of long enjoyment, forces him to fix his hopes upon an­other state; and when he has contended with the tempests of life till his strength fails him, he flies at last to the shelter of religion.

And is this said in a christion country? in a na­tion of philosopheers? And that by a writer who affects to be both a christian and a philosopher! I blush to think it. Admit the regular discharge of religious duties to lay some kind of restraint on men engaged in business or pleasure, the yoke of chris­tian religion is easy, and its burthen light. Will nothing then but the most slavish motives compel us to bear them? Is there no man in the world, but Paoli, who in the tumult and uncertainty of human affairs, can repose a confidence in his maker, and pay a voluntary and religious reverence to the author and disposer of the various dispensations of providence? I am so far from thinking with the IDLER, that scarce any man does this; that I con­ceive there are few of those who deserve the name of thinking beings, who do not.

That misery does not make all virtuous, experi­ence too certainly informs us; but it is no less cer­tain that of what virtue there is, misery produces far the greater Part.

This passage seems intended only as a forcible repetition of the writer's former assertion, that al­most all the moral good which is left among us, [Page 31] is the effect of physical evil. A true philosopher, however, would have made a distinction between moral good and virtue; the former relating more immediately to the merit of an action, and the lat­ter to that of the agent: so that though the former assertion should be admitted, the latter may still be false.

We come now to the inference, drawn from the above curious chain of philosophical reasoning.

Physical evil may be therefore endured with pa­tience, since it is the cause of moral good; and pa­tience itself is one virtue by which we are prepared for that state in which evil shall be no more.

What an incentive this to the virtue of patience! If physical evil be the cause of moral good, the effect cannot be greater than the cause. Add to this, that in a world so wicked as the IDLER de­scribes it, moral good is desirable only on account of the physical good attending it. What motive then hath any individual to adopt the virtue of pa­tience, unless reason be given him to think the physical good resulting to him from the virtue of his fellow creatures, will indemnify him for the phy sical evil he must suffer from their vices, and in the ordinary course of nature.

Oh! but the IDLER says, ‘patience is a virtue by which we are prepared for that state in which evil shall be no more.’

What an idea must a writer entertain of a future state of happiness, who supposes the virtue of pa­tience requisite to render us capable of enduring it! It had certainly been more philosophical to [Page 32] have supposed patience rather a proper preparative for our supporting a perpetual state of misery. It is indeed no wonder Dr. Johnson is so weary of this life, and so fearful of going to the Devil, when he seems to think a degree of patience ne­cessary to enable him to live comfortably even in heaven!

What a disposition for a philosopher! What a system of christian philosophy! How different is this gloomy hypothesis, to that which a cotempo­rary writer hath deduced from the nature of man; confirmed by the concurring testimony of almost all the sages of antiquity.

Behold his description of it.

It is no meagre mortifying system of self-de­nial.—It suppresses no social and natural affec­tions, nor takes away any social and natural rela­tions.—It prescribes no abstainings, no forbear­ances out of nature; no gloomy, sad, and lonely rules of life, without which' tis evident men may be as honest as with, and be infinitely more use­ful and worthy members of society.—It refuses no pleasure, not inconsistent with temperance.—It rejects no gain, not inconsistent with justice.—Universally, as far as virtue neither forbids nor dissuades, it endeavours to render life, even in the most vulgar acceptation, as chearful, joyous, and easy as possible *!

And now, Sir, as I cannot suppose you ever read the Essay I have here reprinted, I make no [Page 33] doubt, you will be very ready to give up your friend Johnson as a philosopher and a moralist. Let us recur therefore to the part you have acted in transmitting the works of so supersicial, so incon­sistent, so unprofitable a writer, to the judicious and heroic leader of a sensible and flourishing na­tion.

If Paoli, indeed, be such as you have described him, I have not the least doubt, that on reading the 89th number of the IDLER, he will commit the Moral Works of Dr. Samuel Johnson to the flames, and issue an immediate prohibition against their ever being imported again into the island of Corsica. But as it may happen with him, as it has with you, that through a prepossession in their favour, he may diffuse such writings. before he give them a critical reading; I own, I tremble for the poor Corsicans, when I think what is like to become of their present simplicity of manners, their warmth of social affection, their attachment to their kindred, their generosity, their hospitality, their religion! For what is the moral tendency of such writings but to render them deceitful, unsocial, undutiful, ungenerous, inhospitable and irreligious?

As they are in the, hands of Providence, indeed, I shall only offer up on this account a short prayer. —May Heaven preserve the virtue you allow them, by averting the dreadful conseqences of your inadvertency!

I cannot close my letter, however, without mak­ing some remarks on the political tendency of your gift. You tell us, that besides, the Moral Writings of Dr. Johnson, you sent over our best books in [Page 34] favour of Liberty. But, let me ask to what end? You describe the Corsicans as already ardent in the love of liberty and their native country. Do you think them capable of being rendered more so, by the laboured reasonings of Harrington, Sidney, Trenchard or Gordon?—Paoli says, ‘If a man would preserve the generous glow of patriotism, he must not reason too much.—Virtuous sen­ments and habits are beyond philosophical rea­sonings, which are not so strong, and are conti­nually varying. If all the professors in Europe were formed into one society, it would no doubt be a society of very respectable men, and we should be entertained with the best moral lessons. Yet I believe I should find more real virtue in a so­ciety of good peasants, in some little village, in the heart of our island. It might be said of these two societies, as was said of Demosthenes, and Themistocles, Illius dicta, hujus facta magis valebant *.’

Can you then wish, Sir, to be accessory to such an imposition on these brave people, and to tempt them thus to exchange the substance for the sha­dow? In a word, the only apology that can be of­fered is, that you conceived an addition to Paoli's English library, might be received as an accepta­ble return of civility; that it would afford him an elegant amusement, and might be the means of diffusing a taste for literature, and the polite arts among the people.

You might excusably be impatient for their im­provement, and be willing to accelerate the fulfill­ing of his prediction. ‘Come twenty or thir­ty [Page 35] years hence, and we'll shew you arts and sci­ences, and concerts, and assemblies, and fine ladies, and we'll make you fall in love among us, Sir *.’ You might I say, be reasonably enough willing to shorten this period, justly ap­prehensive that thirty years hence you might not be in a humour, to revisit Corsica, or in a disposition, to fall in love with their fine ladies, if you did.

The only circumstance which you represent as disagreeable in the present situation of the Corsi­cans, is their living in a perpetual state of publick warfare with the Genoese. You appear to think they want nothing but peace, with its attendant improvements in the useful and polite arts, to com­pleat their political happiness.

But let us attend to what is advanced on this sub­ject, by a philosopher of whom, you tell us, Paoli expressed an high admiration; I mean your friend Rousseau, already quoted, whom the Corsican ge­neral invited over, as another Solon, to assist him in drawing up a code of laws, for the use of his nation. And here let me congratulate these brave islanders, on observing, in your own account of them, that criterion of national prosperity, which the author of the social compact, affirms to be in­disputable.

What, says he, is the end of political society? Doubtiess the preservation and prosperity of its members. And what is the most certain sign or proof of these? Certainly it is their number and population. Let us not look elsewhere for this dis­puted proof; since it is plain that government must be the best, under which the citizens increasc and [Page 36] multiply most, supposing all other circumstances equal, and no foreigners naturalized, nor colo­nies introduced to cause such increase; and that, on the contrary, that government must be the worst under which caeteris paribus, the number of people should most diminish *.

Now, Sir, you tells us that the Corsicans, not­withstanding their frequent losses in action, have in a few years increased sixteen thousand . An in­crease much greater in proportion to their number, than has been experienced in other nations, where peace and commerce have afforded the almost en­couragement to all the arts.

It is on this principle of population, conti­nues Rousseau, that we ought to judge of the several periods of time that merit the preference, in being distinguished for the prosperity of man­kind. We have in general, too much admired those, in which literature, and the fine arts have flourished, without investigating the secret causes of their cultivation, or duly considering their fa­tal effects, id queapud imperito humanitas voca­batur, cum pars servitutis esset. No, let interest­ed writers say what they will, whenever the in­habitants of a country decrease, it is not true that all things go well, whatever be its exter­nal prosperity and splendour.—We should not so much regard the apparent repose of the world, and the tranquility of its governors, as the well being of whole nations, and particularly of the most populous states. A storm of hail may lay waste some few provinces, but it seldom causes a famine. Temporary tumults and civil wars [Page 37] may give much disturbance to the administra­tors of government; but they do not constitute the real misfortunes of a people; who may even enjoy some respite, while their ministers are dis­puting who shall play the tyrant over them.

It is from the permanent situation of a peo­ple, that their real prosperity or calamity must arise. When they all tamely submit to the yoke; then it is that all are perishing. Then it is that the ministry, destroying them at its ease, ubi so­litudinem facit pacem appellat.

When the intrigues of the French nobles had set the whole kingdom of Franee in an uproar, and the coadjutor of Paris carried a stiletto in his pocket to parliament; all this did not hinder the bulk of the nation from growing numerous, and en­joying themselves at ease. Ancient Greece flou­rished in the midst of the most cruel wars; hu­man blood was split in torrents, and yet the country swarmed with inhabitants.

It appears, says Machiavel, that in the midst of murders, proscriptions and civil wars, our republick became only the more powerful; the virtue of the citizens, their manners, their in­dependence had a greater effect to strenthen it, than all its disentions had to weaken it. A little agitation gives vigour to a state, and LIBERTY, not PEACE, is the real source of the prosperity of our species.

And now, Sir, permit me to take my leave; flattering myself that your candour will induce you to lay hold of the earliest opportunity, to transmit a genuine copy of the present epistle to your friend [Page 38] Pascal Paoli, general of the Corsicans. It is in­deed but just that he should receive the antidote from the same hand, that incautiously administered the poison.

I am, SIR, Yours, &c. &c.

POSTSCRIPT.

IT may be expected, Sir, as you profess so ar­dent an ambition for literary fame, that I should on this occasion take some notice of your merit as an author. I have too great a regard, however, for those learned friends, whose names you have drawn up in battle array, in your preface, to pass any strictures on a work, which you tell us, they have corrected. I should otherwise have at least expressed some concern, that a gentleman so curious in the formation of language in its various modes *, should stoop so low, as to copy those trivial singularities in orthography, which not the authority of a vo­luminous dictionary in folio can recommend to one polite or elegant writer. I should be sorrow to rank Mr. Boswell among the imitatores, servum pe­cus, yet it had certainly well become him to have recovered a little of the English idiom, which he probably lost by his wandering among other lan­guages, before he sat down to write the history of his peregrinations: he had well, I say, have learned the difference between Scotch and English, [Page 40] before he piqued himself, on his imitation of the illustrious Mr. Samuel Johnson, in the futile restoration of an useless k or an obsolete u. Could he have successfully imitated the verbosity, the pomposity, the scrupulosity, and the tortuosity of that admired and admirable writer, he might, in­deed—but, I beg pardon, nobody can possibly form a truer idea of your performance, than you have given us yourself *, and therefore I drop this subject.

My chief reason, for taking up the pen again, is to prevent its being supposed, that I am more solicitous for the welfare of the Corsicans, than that of my own countrymen; who, it is thought by some, may be in as much danger of being infected by your writings, as the brave islanders under Paoli are by those of Dr. Johnson.

Your professed encomiums on private assassina­tion, and your tacit approbation of the trial of criminals by torture , are indeed circumstances in [Page 41] in theirown nature too shocking to the humanity and generosity of Englishmen, to make it necessary for me to say any thing against the absurdity and Cruel­ty of such odious practices *. Large as the strides, and hasty as the progress, which injustice and des­potism have lately made in the world, I flatter my­self, [Page 42] such barbarous notions will never prevail in England; but that murder, both publick and pri­vate, will ever be regarded with horror and detes­tation, by the conscientious, the christian, inhabi­tants of South-Britain.

It is otherwise with respect to your mistaken no­tions of LIBERTY; for which you prosess the most laudable zeal. Liberty, say you, is so na­tural and so dear to mankind, whether as indi­viduals, or as members of society, that it is indis­pensibly necessary to our happiness. Every thing worthy arises from it.—Liberty is, indeed, the parent of felicity, of every noble virtue, and even of every art and science. *

I am afraid, Sir, we go a little too far here. The arts and sciences have flourished in countries, to which liberty was at the same time a stranger. At least, if the arts and sciences be the natural offspring of liberty, they have generally proved very unnatural children of a most indulgent parent: for there are sew countries in which they have flourished to any remarkable degree, which they have not in time, by their fomentation of vice and luxury, and the occasion they have given to the multiplicity, and uncertainty of the laws, betrayed into the most ab­ject slavery .

[Page 43]Will you object, that there is a difference be­tween a parent and a nurse; that an art may be improved and sflourish where it was not invented. I grant it. Necessity is notoriously the mother of invention: but between liberty and necessity, I hope I need not remark the difference.—Will you say, that a state of natural necessity, may be a state of political liberty? It may so, and almost as good a one, as that state of political liberty, in which the most useful part of society, are reduced to state a of natural necessity.—But not to be too ludicious on so serious a subject. I will readily admit every thing you say in favour of liberty, on condition you make no use of it to restrain its prerogatives.

There is no doubt, you say, but by entering into society, mankind voluntarily give up a part of their natural rights, and bind themselves to the obedience of laws, calculated for the general good. But we must distinguish between autho­rity and oppression; between laws, and capri­cious [Page 44] dictates; and keeping the original inten­tion of government ever in view, we should take care that no more restraint be laid upon natural liberty, than what the necessities of so­ciety require *.

So far all is well: and to this you might have added, that ‘when the social compact is vio­lated, individuals recover their natural liberty and are re-invested with their original rights, by losing that conventional liberty, for the sake of which they had renounced them .’

But you proceed; ‘perhaps the limits between the power of government, and the liberty of the people, should not be too strictly marked out. Men of taste reckon that picture hard, where the out-lines are so strong as to be clearly seen. They admire a piece of painting, where the co­lours are delicately blended, and the tints, which point out every particular object, are softened into each other, by an insensible gradation. So in a virtuous state, there should be such a mu­tual confidence between the government and the people, that the rights of each should not be expressly defined. But flagrant injustice, on one side or other, is not to be concealed; and, with­out question it is the privilege of the side that is injured, to vindicate itself.’

As you have been in Italy, Sir, I shall not dis­pute your taste for painting; there is beauty in the allusion. The fault is, it wants propriety. [Page 45] If instances of flagrant injustice, either in the ad­ministration of government or in the people, are to be resented by the party injured, I should think it would be better for both parties, that the limits of power in the one, and of liberty in the other, should be strictly marked out; by which means such flagrant instances might be prevented. It is much easier to prevent than amend; and perhaps there is no greater natural tendency or moral temp­tation to our trespassing on the rights of others, than their being left vague and indeterminate. We are seduced to take one step, because it is almost imperceptible to ourselves, and the next, because it may not be perceived by others, a third, because the two former were overlooked; and then we have proceeded far enough to think we have a right to maintain our ground. The recipro­cal encroachments which are thus daily making by the government and the people, require a fixed and, if possible, invariable line to be drawn between them. ‘Thus far shalt thou go, and no farther,’ ought to be the language of the laws. For, as a very sensible Italian author justly observes, there is no exception to this general maxim, ‘every mem­ber of society should know when he is criminal, and when he is innocent *.’

[Page 46]It is the primary encroachments both on liberty and authority that ought to be checked, in order to prevent the one degenerating into licentiousness, and the other into oppression.

You would have the injured party vindic [...] [...]t­felf, in cases of flagrant injustice; but, [...] [...]n cases of flagrant injustice on the part of g [...] ­ment, how are the people to vindicate them [...]? I know of no way but one, and that is a dread [...]l one. Will you say, with Rousseau, that the social compact is violated, and therefore the people are justified in the exertion of their natural rights? [Page 47] But grant the whole people are justifiable, with res­pect to government, reflect on the consequences of the want of government, in the mean time to individuals: reflect on the horrours attending an universal scene of anarchy and outrage. It will be said, perhaps, that in a general struggle between government and the people, it is soon ended;

—Concurritur—horae.
Momento cita mors venit, aut victoria Iaeta;

and that a momentary conflict however desperate, even for precarious liberty, is better than a slow and gradual descent, however peaceful, into con­firmed slavery *. Be this granted; in any case the preservation of liberty, depends on the precise de­termination of the limits, between the privileges of the people, and the powers of government.

Another mistake, which you have made in the na­ture of liberty, and which might be fatal, if adopt­ed in this country, is that the different orders of men, in every nation, considered as the consti­tuent parts of a state, should never clash together. When a people indeed are projecting, to throw off a foreign yoke, as in the cases you mention of the Corsicans and the Hollanders *, it is undoubtedly necessary that they should not be at variance among each other. But you must not thence infer, be­cause the Corsican signors and peasants, ought for the preservation of their liberty, to concur in a mode of government, to exclude the tyranny of [Page 48] the Genoese, that therefore the preservation of na­tional liberty, depends on a perfect coalition be­tween the lords and commons of every other coun­try. There are countries, in which the reciprocal jealousy subsisting between the several constituent parts of government, and their caution against the the encroachments of each other, form the bul­wark of the constitution. Their mutual jealousy, is their mutual security, and their occasional dis­cord the constant guardian of public freedom.

HAVING thus, sir, very seriously taken you to task with regard to your mistaken notions in poli­ticks and morals, I must beg leave to have a word or two more with you, respecting your very sin­gular penetration as to personal characters and the knowlege of mankind. But in this we will be less serious.

What, in the name of common sense, could in­duce you to hint at a parallel between two such he­terogeneous beings as Pasquali Paoli and Samuel Johnson? How much more successfully might you have employed a talent for parallelizing, by mak­ing choice of a person equally popular, patriotic and enterprizing. You can be at no loss to guese whom I mean. Indeed the similitude between Mr. Wilkes and General Paoli, is so very striking, that I cannot resist the inclination I feel to draw their comparison.

A PARALLEL BETWEEN PASCAL PAOLI, GE­NERAL OF THE CORSICANS, AND JOHN WILKES ESQ; MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT FOR MIDDLESEX *.

As to the two persons whom I have chosen to compare together, it may be observed in the first place, that they yield in patriotism and popularity, to few or none of those lawgivers, generals and he­roes, which are usually the subject of Plutarch's enquiries.

With respect to their education, that of both has been liberal.

Mr. Boswell says of the general, ‘that he talked a great deal on history and on literature. I soon perceived that he was a fine classical scholar, that his mind was enriched with a variety of know­ledge, and that his conversation at meals was in­structive and entertaining. Before dinner he had spoken French .

[Page 50]All this may be said with the greatest truth of Mr. Wilkes; and I remember particularly that when I had one day the pleasure of dining with him, before dinner he had spoken French *.

Then again there is something extremely odd in each of them, in the beginning of their formation of an acquaintance. ‘In consequence of their be­ing in continual danger from treachery and assassination, they have formed a habit of studi­ously observing every new face.’ Mr. Boswell assures us, that this is the case with Paoli; and I have observed it to be so true with regard to to Mr. Wilkes, that when it has appeared there could be no danger from the parties, even when the ladies have visited him, he has been to a remar­kable degree, though a bold man, studiously ob­servant of every new face.

They are alike too in their condescension, their politeness, and the very gracious manner in which they receive compliments. I take Mr. Boswell's word for Paoli, and I appeal to the numerous as­sembly that were in Guildhall, during the late poll for city members, in regard to the singular polite­ness of Mr. Wilkes.

The success of Paoli, in acquiring such a power over the Corsicans, in the manner he has done, is very extraordinary; but the vast extent of Mr. [Page 51] Wilkes's power and popularity is absolutely amaz­ing! Mr. Boswell observes, in the words of Thua­nus, sunt mobilia Corsorum ingenia; the disposition of the Corsicans are changeable. And yet, says he, after ten years, their attachment to Paoli, is as strong as at the first. Nay they have an enthusi­astic admiration of him. Questo grand' uomo man­dalo per dio a liberare la patria. This great man whom God has sent to free our country! was the manner in which they expressed themselves to me concerning him.

Now no one can doubt that the disposition of the English is as changeable as the Corsicans; and yet after many years, their attachment to Mr. Wilkes, is as strong, or stronger than at first. And as to what his enthusiastic admirers say of him, I think it hardly decent or safe to repeat it. Mr. Boswell mentions it as a great thing that Paoli, surrounded by his guards, could restrain the impetuosity of the populace crouding to an audience. But what is this to Mr. Wilkes's insluence over the populace; who when he was committed to prison by a court of law, Was rescued by the people, and had authority enough over a multitudinous mob, to put in exe­cution the otherwise ineffectual order of his judges, and to protect their officers from insult?

As it is natural for the enthusiastic admirers of any man to fall into absurd notions of his motives of action, so it is natural for the admirers of one man to fall into the same absurdities of another.

Thus, some of Mr. Wilkes's friends have sup­posed, as Mr. Boswell did of Paoli, that he had a soul superior to interest. But what was Paoli's [Page 52] answer? Even this.— ‘It is not superior, said he, my interest is to gain a name. I know well that he who does good to his country will gain that: and I expect it *.’

Mr. Wilkes's heart grows big, like that of Paoli, when he talks of his countrymen. He seems desirous like him to settle the constitution of his country, and to wish for nothing so much, as to to have an opportunity of convincing his fellow sub­jects, ‘that the magistrates act with abilities and uprightness; so that we may place that salutary confidence in our rulers, which is necessary for securing respect and stability to government .’

In conversing on these subjects and particularly on the affairs of general warrants, he falls like Paoli, into frequent reveries, and breaks into sallies of the grandests and noblest enthusiasm. I recollect two instances of this, says Mr. Boswell, speaking of Paoli. ‘What a thought! that thousands owe their happiness to you!’ then throwing himself into an attitude, as if he saw the lofty mountain of fame before him. ‘There is my object (point­ing to the summit) if I fall, I fall at least there (pointing a good way up) magnis tamen excidit au sis .’ I remember to have observed some­thing or the same kind once in Mr. Wilkes. "What a decision!" says he (meaning that against General Warrants) ‘thousands will owe their security to me!’ then throwing himself back in his chair, as if he saw the post [Page 53] on the pinnacle of fame vacant. There, is my object,’ pointing as high as he could. ‘if I fail I fail at lead there: pointing a good way lower down, to a post of honour too, tho' not a private station!

It would be almost endless to particularize every instance of similarity in these two illustrious cha­racters *. I shall proceed therefore to mention a circumstance in which they are not similar; which is Plutarch's usual way too, as well as that of his imitators. The faculties of Mr. Wilkes's mind are not so much concentrated in that single one of foresight, as Paoli's are represented to be. Paoli is, according to Mr. Boswell, possessed of the gift, talent, or whatever you plense to call it, of second sight. Whether he be the son of a seventh son, we are not informed, but the instances of his foreseeing future events, it is hinted are as numerous as the hairs on your head. On this subject I cannot help repeating the observation of that learned imitator of Plutarch whom I endeavour to imitate, haud passi­bus equis! ‘I doubt not, but that it is the same with the faculties of the mind, as it is with [Page 54] the limbs of the body, which ever is exercised much more than the rest. It is a common ob­servation, and generally holds through the whole set, that a chairman's legs will be more muscular in proportion than his arms; and a rower's arms more muscular than his legs *.’ Just in the same manner if one man was to exercise his mental opticks, only in looking straight forward, as appears to be the case of Paoli , while another constantly exer­cises his natural opticks in looking transversely, as in the case of Mr. Wilkes, it is no wonder that the one should acquire a foresight to an infinite degree be­yond the other. Hence it is that while Paoli reads the events of futurity, it is not in the power of poor Mr. Wilkes to look right forward an inch beyond his nose.

Paoli prognosticates liberty and prosperity to his brave Corsicans after his decease; Wilkes predicts nothing, but is in doubt what will become of the rights and privileges of Englishmen even while he is alive.

Paoli is a prophet as well as a patriot: Wilkes may be a patriot, but in that he is certainly no con­jurer.

[Page 55]On the whole, it is difficult to say which hath the greater merit. If the Corsicans have reaped advan­tages from the patriotic spirit and great talents of Paoli, so have the English from those of Mr. Wilkes; each appearing to have exerted such spirits and talents in a very extraordinary manner. But of the two, Mr. Wilkes is certainly the most enter­prizing patriot in England, and Paoli by much the one more fortunate in Corsica.

FINIS.

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