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diftinguished infamy. Few are so totally vitiated, as to have abandoned all fentiments of shame; and when every other principle of integrity is furrendered, we generally find the conflict is still maintained in this last post of retreating virtue. In this view, therefore, it should seem, the function of a satirist may be juftified, notwithstanding it should be true (what an excellent moralist has afferted) that his chastisements rather exasperate, than reclaim those on whom they fall. Perhaps, no human penalties are of any moral advantage to the criminal himself : and the principal benefit that seems to be derived from civil punishments of any kind, is their restraining influence upon the conduct of others.

It is not every arm, however, that is qualified to manage this formidable bow. The arrows of fatire, when they are not pointed by virtue, as well as wit, recoil upon the hand that directs them, and wound none but him from whom they proceed. Accordingly, Horace refts the whole fuccefs of writings of this fort upon the poet's being Integer ipfe; free himself from those immoral ftains which he points

out

out in others. There cannot, indeed, be a more odious, nor at the fame time a more

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contemptible character, than that of a vi tious fatirift:

Quis cælum terris non mifceat & mare cœlo,
Si fur difpliceat Verri, bomicida Miloni?

Juv.

The most favorable light in which a cenfor of this fpecies could poffibly be viewed, would be that of a public executioner, who inflicts the punishment on others, which he has already merited himself. But the truth of it is, he is not qualified even for fo wretched an office; and there is nothing to be dreaded from a fatirift of known difhonefty, but his applaufe. Adieu.

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To PALA MEDES.

EREMONY is never more unwelcome

than at that seafon in which you will probably have the greatest share of it; and as I should be extremely unwilling to add to the number of thofe, who, in pure goodmanners,

manners, may interrupt your enjoyments, I chufe to give you my congratulations a little prematurely. After the happy office fhall be completed, your moments will be too valuable to be laid out in forms; and it would be paying you a compliment with a very ill grace, to draw off your eyes from the highest beauty, though it were to turn them on the most exquifite wit. I hope however, you will give me timely notice of your wedding day, that I may be prepared with my epithalamium. I have already laid in half a dozen deities extremely proper for the occafion, and have even made fome progress in my firft, fimile. But I am fomewhat at a lofs how to proceed, not being able to determine whether your future bride is moft like. Venus or Hebe. That the resembles both, is univerfally agreed, I find, by those who have seen her. But it would be offending, you know, against all the rules of poetical justice, if I should only fay fhe is as handfome as fhe is young, when after all, perhaps, the truth may be that she has even more beauty than youth. In the mean while, I am turning over all the tender compliments that love has in

fpired

fpired, from the Lesbia of Catullus to the Chloe of Prior, and hope to gather fuch a collection of flowers as may not be unworthy of entering into a garland composed for your Stella. But before But before you introduce me as a poet, let me be recommended to her by a much better title, and affure her, that 1 am your, &c.

I

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AM much inclined to join with you in thinking that the Romans had no peculiar word in their language, which answers precisely to what we call good-fenfe in ours. For tho' prudentia indeed feems frequently used by their best writers to express that idea, yet it is not confined to that fingle meaning, but is often applied by them to fignify skill in any particular science. But good-fenfe is fomething very diftinct from knowledge; and it is an instance of the poverty of the Latin language, that the is obliged to use the fame word as a mark for two fuch remote ideas.

WERE

WERE I to explain what I understand by good-fenfe, I fhould call it right reason; but right reason that arises, not from for mal and logical deductions, but from a fort. of intuitive faculty in the foul, which diftinguishes by immediate perception: a kind of innate fagacity, that in many of its properties feems very much to resemble inftinct. It would be improper, therefore, to fay, that Sir Ifaac Newton fhewed his good-fenfe, by thofe amazing difcoveries which he made in natural philofophy: the operations of this gift of heaven are rather instantaneous, than the refult of any tedious procefs. Like Diomed, after Minerva had endowed him with the power of difcerning gods from mortals, the man of goodfense discovers at once the truth of those objects he is most concerned to diftinguish; and conducts himself with fuitable caution and fecurity.

It is for this reafon, poffibly, that this quality of the mind is not fo often found united with learning as one could with: for good-fenfe being accustomed to receive her discoveries without labor or ftudy, the cannot so easily wait for those truths, which

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