OLIVER GOLDSMITH'S LIFE AND TIMES. [BOOK n. 1-759. The time will come when Mr. Griffiths, with acconi- .ffiUJi. paniment such as that of his ancient countryman's friend when the leek was offered, will publicly withdraw these vulgar falsehoods ; and meanwhile they are not deserving of remark. Indeed the quarrel, or interchange of foul reproach, as between author and bookseller, may claim at all times the least possible part of attention. It is a third more serious influence to which appeal is made, and on whose right interference the righteous arrangement must at last depend. But at the close of the second epoch, so brief yet so sorrowful, in the life of this great and genuine man-of-letters, it becomes us at least to understand the appeal he would have entered against the existing controul and government of the destinies of literature. It was manifestly premature, and some passages of his after-life will plainly avow as much : but it had too sharp an experience in it not to have also much truth, and it would better have become certain bystanders in that age to have gone in and parted the combatants, than, as they did, make a ring around them for enjoyment of the sport, or in philosophic weariness abandon the scene altogether. " You know," said Walpole to one of his correspondents, " how I shun authors, and would never have been one " myself, if it obliged me to keep such bad company. " They are always in earnest, and think their profession " serious, and dwell upon trifles, and reverence learning. " I laugh at all these things, and divert myself." "It is " probable," said David Hume, " that Paris will be long rny " home . . I have even thoughts of settling in Paris for the " rest of my life . . I have a reluctance to think of living " among the factious barbarians of London. Letters are " there held in no honour. The taste for literature is fiths's letter, ante, p. 170.