The Works of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. in Eleven Volumes, Volume 06 / Reviews, Political Tracts, and Lives of Eminent Persons
AND
LIVES OF EMINENT PERSONS.
THE WORKS OF
SAMUEL JOHNSON, LL.D.
IN ELEVEN VOLUMES.
VOLUME THE SIXTH.
MDCCCXXV.
There are few nations in the world more talked of, or less known, than the Chinese. The confused and imperfect account which travellers have given of their grandeur, their sciences, and their policy, have, hitherto, excited admiration, but have not been sufficient to satisfy even a superficial curiosity. I, therefore, return you my thanks for having undertaken, at so great an expense, to convey to English readers the most copious and accurate account, yet published, of that remote and celebrated people, whose antiquity, magnificence, power, wisdom, peculiar customs, and excellent constitution, undoubtedly deserve the attention of the publick.
As the satisfaction found in reading descriptions of distant countries arises from a comparison which every reader naturally makes, between the ideas which he receives from the relation, and those which were familiar to him before; or, in other words, between the countries with which he is acquainted, and that which the author displays to his imagination; so it varies according to the likeness or dissimilitude of the manners of the two nations. Any custom or law, unheard and unthought of before, strikes us with that surprise which is the effect of novelty; but a practice conformable to our own pleases us, because it flatters our self-love, by showing us that our opinions are approved by the general concurrence of mankind. Of these two pleasures, the first is more violent, the other more lasting; the first seems to partake more of instinct than reason, and is not easily to be explained, or defined; the latter has its foundation in good sense and reflection, and evidently depends on the same principles with most human passions.
An attentive reader will frequently feel each of these agreeable emotions in the perusal of Du Halde. He will find a calm, peaceful satisfaction, when he reads the moral precepts and wise instructions of the Chinese sages; he will find that virtue is in every place the same; and will look with new contempt on those wild reasoners, who affirm, that morality is merely ideal, and that the distinctions between good and ill are wholly chimerical.
Samuel Johnson
---
Contents
CONTENTS OF THE SIXTH VOLUME.
REVIEWS.
LETTER ON DU HALDE'S HISTORY OF CHINA, 1738.
REVIEW OF MEMOIRS OF THE COURT OF AUGUSTUS;
REVIEW OF FOUR LETTERS FROM SIR ISAAC NEWTON TO DR BENTLEY,
REVIEW OF A JOURNAL OF EIGHT DAYS' JOURNEY,
REVIEW OF THE HISTORY OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON, FOR IMPROVING OF
REVIEW OF THE GENERAL HISTORY OP POLYBIUS,
REVIEW OF MISCELLANIES ON MORAL AND RELIGIOUS SUBJECTS,
ACCOUNT OF A BOOK ENTITLED AN HISTORICAL AND CRITICAL ENQUIRY
MARMOR NORFOLCIENSE:
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE POLITICAL STATE OF GREAT BRITAIN.
OBSERVATIONS ON THE TREATY
INTRODUCTION TO THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE COMMITTEE,
POLITICAL TRACTS.
PREFATORY OBSERVATIONS TO POLITICAL TRACTS.
THE FALSE ALARM. 1770.
PREFATORY OBSERVATIONS ON FALKLAND'S ISLANDS.
THOUGHTS ON THE LATE TRANSACTIONS RESPECTING FALKLAND'S ISLANDS. 1771.
TAXATION NO TYRANNY;
LIVES OF EMINENT PERSONS.
BOERHAAVE.
BLAKE.
BROWNE.
FOOTNOTES