|
Gentleman's Magazine 1761 p.73
inhabitants, unless prevented by sickness, repair to a small
chapel, where divine service is devoutly performed by a
reverend divine, who, after labouring many years in the
vineyard of his master, and learning from experience, that
merit alone is not always sufficient to procure preferment,
has found at least a pleasing retreat, where his hours are
spent in tranquillity and peace, and he enjoys the
heart-felt pleasure of beholding the precepts of his great
master practised by his flock, and his preaching attended
with the desired success.
Such is the tranquillity, such a happiness that reigns in
this pleasing solitude; and could the votaries of noisy
mirth and riotous intemperance be prevailed upon to visit
this calm retreat, and behold the true content and unalloyed
delights these peasants enjoy, they would, I am persuaded,
be convinced, that they have pursued only the shadow of
pleasure, who has here fixed her throne.
For my own part, I must confess that I left this happy
valley with regret, and tho' age has impaired my faculties,
and almost dried up the fountains of life, yet I beheld with
pleasure their innocent diversions, and could hardly forbear
joining in their rural pastimes. "Happy mortals (I said to
myself) you enjoy that satisfaction which the rich, the
great, the ambitious, and the powerful, seek in vain amidst
the crowds of a splendid court, and the gay assemblies of a
populous city. And after gliding thus serenely down the
stream of life, you will pass, with equal serenity, through
the straits of death, into the boundless ocean of a happy
eternity."
Forgive the loquacity of an old man, who, though he can no
longer hope to share in the pleasures of the world, rejoices
in the happiness of others; and is desirous, even on the
verge of life, to do every thing in his power to promote it,
and to spend his last breath in the service of virtue.
St Paul's Coffee-house,
Jan. 6, 1761. J. HARRIS.
|