home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
The CDPD Public Domain Collection for CDTV 3
/
CDPDIII.bin
/
books
/
franklin
/
1750
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1992-07-31
|
6KB
|
154 lines
_Poor Richard Improved_
1750
To the READER.
The Hope of acquiring lasting FAME, is, with many Authors, a
most powerful Motive to Writing. Some, tho' few, have succeeded; and
others, tho' perhaps fewer, may succeed hereafter, and be as well
known to Posterity by their Works, as the Antients are to us. We
_Philomaths_, as ambitious of Fame as any other Writers whatever,
after all our painful Watchings and laborious Calculations, have the
constant Mortification to see our Works thrown by at the End of the
Year, and treated as mere waste Paper. Our only Consolation is, that
short-lived as they are, they out-live those of most of our
Cotemporaries.
Yet, condemned to renew the _Sisyphean_ Toil, we every Year
heave another heavy Mass up the Muses Hill, which never can the
Summit reach, and soon comes tumbling down again.
This, kind Reader, is my seventeenth Labour of the Kind. Thro'
thy continued Good-will, they have procur'd me, if no _Bays_, at
least _Pence_; and the latter is perhaps the better of the two; since
'tis not improbable that a Man may receive more solid Satisfaction
from _Pudding_, while he is _living_, than from _Praise_, after he is
_dead._
In my last, a few Faults escap'd; some belong to the Author,
but most to the Printer: Let each take his Share of the Blame,
confess, and amend for the future. In the second Page of _August_, I
mention'd 120 as the next perfect Number to 28; it was wrong, 120
being no perfect Number; the next to 28 I find to be 496. The first
is 6; let the curious Reader, fond of mathematical Questions, find
the fourth. In the 2d Page of _March_, in some Copies, the Earth's
Circumference was said to be nigh 4000, instead of 24000 Miles, the
Figure 2 being omitted at the Beginning. This was Mr. Printer's
Fault; who being also somewhat niggardly of his Vowels, as well as
profuse of his Consonants, put in one Place, among the Poetry, _mad_,
instead of _made_, and in another _wrapp'd_, instead of _warp'd_; to
the utter demolishing of all Sense in those Lines, leaving nothing
standing but the Rhime. These, and some others, of the like kind,
let the Readers forgive, or rebuke him for, as to their Wisdom and
Goodness shall seem meet: For in such Cases the Loss and Damage is
chiefly to the Reader, who, if he does not take my Sense at first
Reading, 'tis odds he never gets it; for ten to one he does not read
my Works a second Time.
Printers indeed should be very careful how they omit a Figure
or a Letter: For by such Means sometimes a terrible Alteration is
made in the Sense. I have heard, that once, in a new Edition of the
_Common Prayer_, the following Sentence, _We shall all be changed in
a Moment, in the Twinkling of an Eye_; by the Omission of a single
Letter, became, _We shall all be hanged in a Moment,_ &c. to the no
small Surprize of the first Congregation it was read to.
May this Year prove a happy One to Thee and Thine, is the
hearty Wish of, Kind Reader,
_Thy obliged Friend,_
R. SAUNDERS.
______
There are three Things extreamly hard, Steel, a Diamond and to
know one's self.
Hunger is the best Pickle.
He is a Governor that governs his Passions, and he a Servant
that serves them.
A Cypher and Humility make the other Figures & Virtues of
ten-fold Value.
If it were not for the Belly, the Back might wear Gold.
Wouldst thou confound thine Enemy, be good thy self.
_Pride_ is as loud a Beggar as _Want_, and a great deal more
saucy.
Pay what you owe, and what you're worth you'll know.
Sorrow is good for nothing but Sin.
Many a Man thinks he is buying Pleasure, when he is really
selling himself a Slave to it.
Graft good Fruit all,
Or graft not at all.
Tis hard (but glorious) to be poor and honest: An empty Sack
can hardly stand upright; but if it does, 'tis a stout one!
He that can bear a Reproof, and mend by it, if he is not wise,
is in a fair way of being so.
Beatus esse sine Virtute, nemo potest.
_Sound_, & sound Doctrine, may pass through a Ram's Horn, and a
Preacher, without straitening the one, or amending the other.
Clean your Finger, before you point at my Spots.
He that spills the Rum, loses that only; He that drinks it,
often loses both that and himself.
That Ignorance makes devout, if right the Notion,
'Troth, _Rufus_, thou'rt a Man of great Devotion.
______
What an admirable Invention is Writing, by which a Man may
communicate his Mind without opening his Mouth, and at 1000 Leagues
Distance, and even to future Ages, only by the Help of 22 Letters,
which may be joined 5852616738497664000 Ways, and will express all
Things in a very narrow Compass. 'Tis a Pity this excellent Art has
not preserved the Name and Memory of its Inventor.
______
Those that have much Business must have much Pardon.
Discontented Minds, and Fevers of the Body are not to be cured
by changing Beds or Businesses.
Little Strokes,
Fell great Oaks.
You may be too cunning for One, but not for All.
Genius without Education is like Silver in the Mine.
Many would live by their Wits, but break for want of Stock.
Poor _Plain dealing_! dead without Issue!
You can bear your own Faults, and why not a Fault in your Wife.
Tho' Modesty is a Virtue, Bashfulness is a Vice.
Hide not your Talents, they for Use were made.
What's a Sun-Dial in the Shade!
What signifies knowing the Names, if you know not the Natures
of Things.
_Tim_ was so learned, that he could name a Horse in nine
Languages; So ignorant, that he bought a Cow to ride on.
The Golden Age never was the present Age.
'Tis a Shame that your Family is an Honour to you! You ought
to be an Honour to your Family.
Glass, China, and Reputation, are easily crack'd, and never
well mended.