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Shakespeare To Read

 

All About Our World

Letters to His Son 1746-47
Chesterfield

Page 72 of 82

advanced age; and if we do not plant it while young, it will give us no
shade when we grow old.  I neither require nor expect from you great
application to books, after you are once thrown out into the great world.
I know it is impossible; and it may even, in some cases, be improper;
this, therefore, is your time, and your only time, for unwearied and
uninterrupted application.  If you should sometimes think it a little
laborious, consider that labor is the unavoidable fatigue of a necessary
journey.  The more hours a day you travel, the sooner you will be at your
journey's end.  The sooner you are qualified for your liberty, the sooner
you shall have it; and your manumission will entirely depend upon the
manner in which you employ the intermediate time.  I think I offer you a
very good bargain, when I promise you, upon my word, that if you will do
everything that I would have you do, till you are eighteen, I will do
everything that you would have me do ever afterward. 

I knew a gentleman, who was so good a manager of his time, that he would
not even lose that small portion of it, which the calls of nature obliged
him to pass in the necessary-house; but gradually went through all the
Latin poets, in those moments.  He bought, for example, a common edition
of Horace, of which he tore off gradually a couple of pages, carried them

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