To please him, none would foolishly forbear OF THE DANGER OF IDLENESS, &C. 295 CHAPTER THE SEVENTH. OF THE DANGER OF IDLENESS IN SOLITUDE I DLENESS is truly faid to be the root of all evil; and Solitude certainly encourages in the generality of its votaries this baneful difpofition. Nature has so framed the character of man, that his happiness essentially depends on his paffions being properly interested, his imagination busied, and his faculties employed; but these engagements are seldom found in the vacant scenes and tedious hours of retirement from the world, except by those who have acquired the great and happy art of furnishing their own amusements: an art which, as we have already shewn, can never be learnt in the irrational folitude of caves and cells. The idleness which folitude is so apt to induce, is dangerous in proportion to the natural strength, activity, and spirit of the mind; for it is observed, that the highest characters are frequently goaded by that restlessness which accompanies leifure, to acts of the wildest outrage and greatest enormity. The ancient legiflators were so confcious that indolence, whether indulged in Solitude or in Society, is the nurse of civil commotion, and the chief instigator of moral turpitude, that they wisely framed their laws to prevent its existence. SOLON observing that the city was filled with persons who affembled from all parts on account of the great security in which people lived in ATTICA, that the country withal was poor and barren, and being confcious that merchants, who traffic by sea, do not use to transport their goods where they can have nothing in exchange, turned the attention of the citizens to manufactures; and for this purpose made a law, that he who was three times convicted of idleness, should be deemed infamous; that no son should be obliged to maintain his father if he had not taught him a trade; that trades should be accounted honourable; and that the council of the Areopagus should examine into every man's means of living, and chastise the idle with the greatest severity. DRACO conceived it so necessary to prevent the prevalency of a vice to which man is by nature prone, and which is so destructive to his character, and ruinous to his manners, that he punished idleness with death. The tyrant PISISTRATUS, as THEOPHRASTUS relates, was fo convinced of the importance of preventing idleness among his subjects, that he made a law against against it, which produced at once industry in the country, and tranquillity in the city. PERICLES, who, in order to relieve ATHENS from a number of lazy citizens, whose lives were neither employed in virtuous actions, nor guarded from guilt by habits of industry, planted colonies in Cherfonefus, Naxos, Andros, Thrace, and even in Italy, and sent them thither; for this sagacious statesmen saw the danger of indulging this growing vice, and wisely took precautions to prevent it. Nothing, indeed, contributes more effentially to the tranquillity of a nation, and to the peaceful demeanour of its inhabitants, than those artificial wants which luxury introduces; for by creating a demand for the fashionable articles, they engage the attention, and employ the hands, of a multitude of manufacturers and artificers, who, if they were left in that restless indolence which the want of work creates, would certainly be unhappy themselves, and in all probability would be fomenting mischief in the minds of others. To suspend, only for one week, the vast multitudes that are employed in the several mechanical trades and manufactories in Great Britain, would be to run the risque of involving the metropolis of that great, flourishing and powerful country once more in flames; for it would be converting the populace into an aptly disposed train of combustible matter, which be ing ing kindled by the least spark of accidental enthusiasm, by the heat of political faction, or, indeed, by their own internal fermentation, would explode into the most flagrant enormities. Nature, it is said, abhors a vacuum; and this old Peripatetic principle may be properly applied to the intellect, which will embrace any thing, however absurd or criminal, rather than be wholly without an object. The same author also observes, that every man may date the predominance of those defires that disturb his life, and contaminate his confcience, from some unhappy hour when too much leisure exposed him to their incurfions; for that he has lived with little observation, either on himself or others, who does not know, that to be idle is to be vicious. " Many writers of eminence in physic," continues this eminent writer, whose works not only disclose his general acquaintance with life and manners, but a profound knowledge of human nature, " have laid out their diligence upon the confideration of those distempers to which men are expofed by particular states of life, and very learned treatises have been produced upon the maladies of the camp, the sea, and the mines. There are, indeed, few employments which a man accustomed to academical enquiries, and medical refinements, would not find reason for declining as dangerous to health, did not his learning |