nil ^vvMf ■^^0Uk SSjp m W*t'"uaiv6/uiEva' which Lord Grenville translates, " Real virtue is most loved where it is most nearly seen;" and Langhorne, " Real and solid virtue, indeed, the more it is seen the more glo- rious it appears." ccxix. Pleasures are generally most valued which are most productive of engagement and activity in the pursuit. ccxx. Indiscriminate praise, however it may affect to be thought excess of candour, is commonly the effusion of a frivolous under- standing. ccxxi. Engagement and occupation are essential to happiness. 68 MAXIMS. CCXXII. The quality we call Vice, in a moral sense, is that if generally practised would pro- duce misery ; and Virtue, that which pro- motes the general happiness. By this rule the knot may be untied which has so often perplexed moralists, by the Proteus cha- racter of these two qualities in different nations, and in different ages of the world. CCXXIII. Liberty, as it regards wild animals, is the power to follow their natural instincts ; as it regards man in a civilized state, it is the not being restrained by any law but what conduces in a greater degree to the public welfare. ccxxiv. Flippant nonsense is more popular than grave and silent dulness ; for although the former be more troublesome, yet we escape the suspicion that there lurks any latent pride by which we may by possibility be undervalued. MAXIMS, 69 CCXXV. Obstinate people fancy every body wrong but themselves. A juryman once told me that he was always empannelled with eleven obstinate men. ccxxvi. Who talks from thought and reflection is rarely eloquent ; Madame de Stael was the only exception I ever knew to that rule. ccxxvu. Falsehoods enforced with daring assu- rance, succeed better with the world than truth feebly told and feebly supported. ccxxvm. An appetite to account for every thing is the origin of endless absurdities, even among men of sense. ccxxix. Singularity is pride in one of the count- less shapes it assumes. 70 MAXIMS. ccxxx. Poverty is the mother of sedition and want is always dangerous to public tran- quillity. ccxxxi. Those who have an object depending which strongly engages their hopes and fears, are inclinable to superstition. Spenser says, " it is the manner of men, that when they are fallen into any absurdity, or their actions succeed not as they would, they are always ready to impute the blame thereof unto the heavens, so to excuse their own follies and imperfections/' Hence, by im- posing on themselves, they are easily wrought upon to believe the absurdities in which they are in no way concerned, and to confound the reasonableness of things with phantoms of the imagination. CCXXXII. A man's own good breeding is the best security against other people's ill manners. MAXIMS. 71 CCXXXIIL The permanency of most friendships de- pends upon the continuity of good fortune. ccxxxiv. Ambition is a primary cause of unhap- piness in the world : Montesquieu says, " I visited the galleys and I did not see one unhappy face." ccxxxv. Enjoy the present hours so as not to in- jure those that follow.* ccxxxvi. Heroism that results from just morals interests few ; the heroism that is most destructive, is the admiration of the multi- tude ! ccxxxvu. Enmity is the more bitter where a sense of dignity obliges us to conceal the cause of our resentment. * Sic prsesentibus utaris voluptatibus, ut futuris non noceas. — Seneca. 72 MAXIMS. CCXXXVIII. To oppose a favourite prejudice is to risk odium, if you succeed, and contempt, if you fail. ccxxxix. Friendship and affection are the most delightful qualities in human life ; though like other qualities they are subject to decay. CCXL. Hope is the link that unites all our plea- sures. ccxli. Men of talents govern fools ; yet some fool or other often governs a man of talent. CCXLII. In critical times it is a false calculation to suppose that men will suffer bad things because their ancestors have suffered worse ; and it is a rare quality to know the best time and manner of yielding what it is impos- sible to keep. MAXIMS. 73 CCXLIII. Old friends are the best advisers, but seldom the most agreeable, because they are generally regardless of pleasing at the expense of truth. CCXLIV. Those whom guilt stains, it equals. CCXLV. Patriotism,* like pure gold, has, in every age, been estimated as of the highest value ; but pretenders have always made it a base currency in popular commotions. * A whimsical view of this quality was given to the Emperor Joseph II. by Zoffany, the painter, when he was once asked by him, in the Florence Gallery, what countryman he was; to which he replied, an Englishman. " An Englishman ! Zof- fany is not an English name." " No, I was born in Germany." " Then," said the Emperor, with some surprise, " how is it that you are an English- man ?" " Because England is the country where I have been able to live since I was born." The Em- peror felt the ingenuity of the remark, and gave him a commission to paint a large picture of himself and the imperial family. D 74 MAXIMS. CCXLVI. He who encumbers another with obliga- tions which he expects to be repaid with interest, courts hostility from the very per- son on whom he confers his favours. CCXLVII. When the mind is engrossed by a preju- dice, it seldom reflects, though the person be not wanting in previous knowledge or sagacity Old Gerard, who was a scientific man and an observer of nature, believed in the existence of a goose produced from the spume or froth of the sea ; and concludes his extraordinary account by saying, " For the truth hereof, if any doubt, may it please them to repair to me, and I will satisfy them by the testimony of good witnesses." Josephus says, that several wild beasts brought to Rome, and turned into the Cir- cus where there were parcels of earth taken from their respective countries, each imme- diately ran to his native soil. The story MAXIMS. 75 of Arion, and Pliny's dolphin, that daily carried a boy to school, across the bay of Baia, are instances of blind belief of the same kind. CCXLVIIL It is to live twice when you can enjoy the recollection of your former life. CCXLIX. It is the last of all infamies to prefer existence to honour, or for the sake of life, to lose every inducement to live. CCL. In successful military operations all men assume a part; but disasters are always attributed to one. CCLI. Speaking is acting, in philosophical strictness, and as to all moral purposes ; for, if the mischief and motive of our con- duct be the same, the means we use make no difference. 76 MAXIMS. CCLII. In language, the ignorant have pre- scribed laws to the learned. CCLIII. History is philosophy teaching by exam- ples ; and if it does not make us morally or politically better; the study, Tillotson says, is only a plausible sort of idleness. CCLIV. To doubt the truth of those facts, re- specting the nature of which we are entirely ignorant, and concerning which we have no previous knowledge, is generally a con- trivance to make our ignorance wear the appearance of reasonable scepticism. CCLV. A true story embellished with fictitious circumstances takes from its real value : for a story should be a specimen of life and manners ; but if the surrounding circum- stances are false, it is no more a represen- tation of reality ; and, therefore, no longer Worthy of attention. Dr. Johnson. MAXIMS. 77 CCLVI. He is deserving of praise who considers not what he may do, but what it is be- coming him to do. CCLVII. There can be no friendship without virtue, for that intimacy, which amongst good men is called friendship, becomes faction, when it subsists amongst the unprincipled. — Saiiusu CCLVIII. The powerful hold in deep remembrance an ill-timed pleasantry, CCLIX. When modesty is once extinguished it never returns. — Seneca. CCLX. Meddling with what does not belong to us is the fermenting leaven of social life. When any one acts with indiscretion, it is common to enlarge upon it with reference to our own superior prudence ; whereas the better part would be to conceal what we often, through want of knowledge, or by design, uncharitably aggravate. 78 MAXIMS. CCLXI. Men are more prone to revenge an injury than to repay a benefit; because obliga- tions are burdensome and painful ; but taking vengeance seems to be something gained. CCLXII. Monarchy is the best government or the worst. A French author of celebrity, in the reign of our Henry VI., says that Eng- land is the place in the world where public justice is most equally administered, and where the people suffer the least violence ; and so it is at this day. CCLXIII. A promise given only to serve a purpose, and not kept, does more injury to him who gives it, than the serving that purpose does him good. CCLXI v. Craftiness is a despicable quality, and undoes itself. It can never deceive long ; and where it becomes apparent, it becomes impotent. MAXIMS. 79 CCLXV. Ingenuity may be founded in deceptive nonsense ; but there can be no good taste which is not founded in truth. CCLXVI. One ungrateful man does an injury to all who are wretched. CCLXVII. The many more readily submit to here- ditary greatness than to greatness acquired by superior merit and talents ; because envy has a greater influence over our minds with regard to those who have been born our equals, than towards those who, in rank, have always been our superiors. CCLXVIII. In an argument, he who advances more reasons than are necessary is sure to lose the benefit of those that are directly to his purpose; for he who is weak in defence will seize the weak points of his adversary, and endeavour to make them principal to 80 MAXIMS. smother and annihilate those positions which cannot be successfully opposed. CCLXIX. The science which teaches men their duty, and the reasons of it, is called moral philosophy, and was the basis of all the different systems of philosophy of the an- cient world. It was the high sense of this science that fortified Metellus against the entreaties of his friends, when they urged him to vote for a law he disapproved, yet dangerous to him to withhold his assent. On which occasion he said, "It is the characteristic of a man of virtue and honour to act rightly, whatever consequences may ensue." This maxim is so important to morals that it cannot be too often insisted upon, or too firmly fixed in the mind. ERRATA. Page 32, for Covalli read Cavalti. Dele Maxim CHI., it being repeated, by mistake. APHORISMS TRANSLATED FROM THE GREEK. useful I. Wisdom alone is lasting. ii. Men are deceived by unreasonable hopes. m. A road is never long to learn what i$ IV. Friends are only known in adversity. v. Valour is the greatest shield to mortals. VI. When a kindness is received, remember it ; and conferring one, forget it. d2 82 APHORISMS. VII. Injury makes a tyrant. VIII. The secrets of a friend, for the sake of revenge, should never be revealed. IX. Injury and sorrow should be borne with fortitude. x. Either say what is better than silence, or be silent. XI. Not only abstain from wrong, but even from the pursuit of what may create sus- picion. XII. Virtue alone should govern the affairs of men. XIII. He who is about to consult with any one concerning his affairs, should first know how he has managed his own. APHORISMS. 83 XIV. When a rich man engages in disgraceful affairs, what would he not do were he poor ! xv. Pleasures are proper if they are honour- able ; but not, if they are sensual. XVI. Clouds obscure the sun, and passions the mind. XVII. Resolve deliberately ; but when resolved, act firmly. XVIII. Having been guilty of a disgraceful ac- tion, hope not to lie concealed ; for although you may be concealed from others, you will be conscious to yourself. XIX. Consider what you are about to say, that the tongue may not run before the understanding. 84 APHORISMS. xx. Those citizens are most wise who dread infamy more than the laws. XXI. Wicked men who obtain authority never fail to produce public calamities. XXII. His death is to be envied who dies doing good to a friend. XXIII. A Lacedaemonian, being asked why Sparta was unfortified, said, Do not deceive your- self; it is fortified by the virtues of the inhabitants. xxiv. If orderly men see the wicked disgraced, they will adhere more readily to virtue. xxv. He who spares the wicked, injures the good. XXVI. Misfortunes bring men together. APHORISMS. 85 XXVII. Immortal glory cannot be bought with money. XXVIII. No one who is arrogant escapes the punishment that is due to arrogance. XXIX. A wise man in himself carries about him his possessions. xxx. Labour is the parent of glory. XXXI. iEsop, once, having lit a lamp, went about with it, in the day-time, and being asked why he did so, said, that he sought a Man. XXXII. Wicked manners pervert nature. XXXIII. Simplicity of discourse characterises an innocent man. 86 APHORISMS. XXXIV. Alexander, having heard that Darius was leading three hundred thousand men into the field, said, One butcher is not afraid of many sheep. xxxv. Bears and lions are the most savage beasts in the mountains ; but tax-collectors and informers, in the cities. xxxvi. Anacharsis the Scythian being asked, what was hostile to men, said, They, to themselves. XXXVII. It is equally dangerous to give a sword to a madman, and power to a wicked man. XXXVIII. Hidden wickedness is more mischievous than declared wickedness. xxxix. Virtue, although a man be dead, is not lost. APHORISMS. 87 XL. Antisthenes, being praised by wicked men, said, I fear lest something badly has been done by me, that I please such. XLI. Be not elated to appear better than wicked men ; but grieve, being worse than good men. XLII. He who knows useful things, not he who knows many things, is wise. XLIII. Look into your own words and actions, that you may yourself commit the fewest mistakes. XLIV. It is the business of a skilful pilot to be provided against the changes of the winds ; but of a wise man against those of fortune. XLV. All men affirm that wisdom is the great- est good ; but there are few who strive to possess it. 88 APHORISMS. XLVI. It behoves a good man to remember past, and to do present things ; but it also behoves him to make sure of the future. XL VII. Virtue is the greatest accomplishment among men. XLVIII. There is nothing more intolerable than the presumption of ignorance. XLIX. Socrates, seeing a young man rich and uninformed, said, Behold a gilded slave. L. Glory and riches, without understanding, are not safe possessions. LI. Thunders affright children, and threats, fools. LII. A coward bears arms against himself APHORISMS. 89 Lin. Alexander, when certain persons asked him to behold the daughters and the wife of Darius, said, It was shameful that those who had conquered men should be con- quered by women. LIV. Leonidas, hearing that the sun was ob- scured by the weapons of the Persians, said, That is good news ; for then we shall fight in the shade. LV. Socrates, being asked, From what things it behoves us chiefly to abstain, said, From base and unjust pleasures. LVI. A Lacedaemonian woman, when her son was lamed in battle, said, O son, grieve not, for thou shalt remember thy own valour at every step. LVII. Bion the sophist said, That the love of money was the source of every evil. 90 APHORISMS. LVIII. Timon the misanthropist said, That in- satiableness and vanity were the elements of evils. LIX. iEsop, being asked what advantage was derived from a falsehood to those who prac- tised lying, said, This, although they speak truth, not to be believed. LX. It is preferable to fall amongst ravens than amongst flatterers ; for although the former injure the body of the dead man, the latter hurt the soul of the living. LXI. Demosthenes, when a certain man was lampooning him, said, I do not descend into a contest, in which the conqueror loses more than the conquered. LXII. Little kindnesses in season are greatest to those who receive them in adversity. APHORISMS. 91 LXIII. To conquer one's self is the first and best of all conquests ; but to be conquered by one's self is both most shameful and most disgraceful. LXIV. Anacreon, the lyric poet, upon receiving a talent of gold from Polycratus the tyrant, gave it back, saying, I hate a gift that compels me to have sleepless nights. LXV. Socrates thought that he knew nothing, except this one thing, that he knew no- thing, but others knew not that. LXVI. Simonides said, That he never repented of silence, but of prating, often. LXVII. Bion the sophist, seeing an envious man very dejected, said, either to him has hap- pened a great evil, or to another a great good. 92 APHORISMS. LXVIII. jEsop, being reproached because he had a hard favoured countenance, said, Attend not to my face, but to my mind. LXIX. Antisthenes the Socratic, to a man saying that war destroyed many poor, said, No, but it will make many. LXX. Socrates, to a person inquiring how any one might be well esteemed among men, said, If he endeavours to be such as he is desirous to seem. LXXI. The Cretans commanded their children to learn the laws in a certain recitative ; and then ordered them to learn the hymns of the gods. LXXII. Solon, being asked why he had not enacted a punishment against those who beat their fathers, said, Because I did not think that there could be such persons. APHORISMS. 93 LXXIII. Aristotle said, That the roots of discipline were bitter, but the fruits, sweet. LXXIV. Choose rather to die honourably than to live disgracefully. LXXV. He is not rich who possesses many things, but he who does not stand in need of many things. LXXVI. Honour has been a preceptor to all men. LXXVII. Nothing so conduces to benevolence as the good estimation of good actions. LXXVIII. Every wise and useful man hates a lie. LXXIX. Solon, being asked how states could best preserve their family compact, said, " By the citizens obeying the magistrates, and the magistrates the laws." 94 APHORISMS. LXXX. That city is most strongly fortified which has good men, who live according to the law, and who punish the unjust. LXXXI. All men who have learnt to be ruled rightly will also know how to govern when they have authority entrusted to them. LXXXII. Glorious war is to be preferred to dis- graceful peace. LXXXIII. To bad men, gain is preferable to justice. LXXXIV. Iron for safety in war is better than gold ; but in life, reason is better than riches. LXXXV. Pythagoras said, that was the best of States which had good men. THE END. C. Whittingham 21, Tooks Court, Chancery Lane. WORKS BY R. DUPPA, LL. B. SUBVERSION OF THE PAPAL GOVERN- MENT. 8vo. Two Editions, 1799 ; and a Third Edition, 1807. A DISSERTATION ON THE PICTURE OF THE LAST JUDGMENT. By Michel Angelo Buonar- roti ; and a LIFE OF RAFFAELLO ; accompanied with Twelve Heads from the Last Judgment in the Sistine Chapel, and Twelve Heads from the Fresco Pictures of RafFaello in the Stanze of the Vatican ; traced from the original Pictures, and engraved of the same size. Atlas folio, 1801. LIFE OF MICHEL ANGELO BUONAR- ROTI, with his Poetry and Letters ; and Outlines of his Sculp- ture, Paintings, and Designs. Two Editions in 4to. 1807 ; and a third Edition in 8vo. 1816. ELEMENTS OF THE SCIENCE OF BOTANY, as established by Linnreus, with Plates to illustrate his System. Three vols. 8vo. fourth Edition, 1816. The first Edition, in two vols, small 8vo. 1809. LEE'S TERMINI BOTANICI; a new Edition, 8vo. 1813. AN ADDRESS TO THE PARLIAMENT OF GREAT BRITAIN, on the Claims of Authors to their own Copyright. A Pamphlet. Third Edition, 8vo. 1813. PROFESSOR MARTYN'S ECLOGUES OF VIRGIL ; a New Edition, with additional Botanical Illustra- tions ; the original Text from Heyne, and all the Notes examined with the best edition of each Classic referred to. 8vo. 1813. %* Of this Edition sixty copies only were printed. WORKS BY R. DUPPA, LL. B. MEMOIRS OF A CELEBRATED LITERARY AND POLITICAL CHARACTER, from the Resignation of Sir Robert Walpole, in 1742, to the establishment of Lord Chatham's second Administration, in 1757. 8vo. Price 7s. 6d. 1813. INQUIRY CONCERNING THE AUTHOR OF THE LETTERS OF JUNIUS. 8vo. Price 7s. 6d. 1814. OBSERVATIONS ON THE PRICE OF CORN, As connected with the Commerce of the Country and the Public Revenue. A Pamphlet. 8vo. 1815. A SHORT INTRODUCTION TO THE GREEK LANGUAGE, containing Greek Precepts, a Speech of Clear- chus, from Xenophon's Anabasis ; and the Shield of Achilles, from Homer's Iliad ; with literal Translations and Examples in Parsing. 8vo. 1815. ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE LOTUS OF THE ANCIENTS AND THE TAMARA OF INDIA. Thin folio. 1816. LIFE OF RAFFAELLO. Foolscap 8vo. 1816. A DIARY OF A JOURNEY INTO NORTH WALES, by Dr. Johnson. Edited with Notes. Foolscap 8vo. 1816. MISCELLANEOUS OBSERVATIONS AND OPINIONS ON THE CONTINENT. Large 8vo. 1825. TRAVELS IN ITALY SICILY AND THE LIPARI ISLANDS. Foolscap 8vo. 1828. TRAVELS ON THE CONTINENT, SICILY, AND THE LIPARI ISLANDS. Second Edition. 8vo. 1829. MAXIMS, REFLECTIONS, &c. 12mo. 1830. 33SS=ar- ssaaaaafe "1 Thomson Park Drive r^V^wWvAAAf LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 1 020 857 244 1 I W * v^ ( ,^'*»V; rtSKM SEffSBISHiK (^WW 5$$ U^n'^vH^ »%iSfiSr m H '■ U il/lfn?TOBff^ •5^oi ft" JvpftPfPE 'jftSSP *-*rf ^T HP: HA &Jfi M w*'~ 111 W(W :** JSNsWf Si y « i ■V vm vr UK J M3 v ,VX>