| [No. 105] | Saturday, June 30, 1711 | Addison |
... Id arbitror
Adprime in vita esse utile, ne quid nimis.
Ter. And.
My Friend
Will. Honeycomb
values himself very much upon what he calls the Knowledge of Mankind, which has cost him many Disasters in his Youth; for
Will
. reckons every Misfortune that he has met with among the Women, and every Rencounter among the Men, as Parts of his Education, and fancies he should never have been the Man he is, had not he broke Windows, knocked down Constables, disturbed honest People with his Midnight Serenades, and beat up a lewd Woman's Quarters, when he was a young Fellow. The engaging in Adventures of this Nature
