CHAP. VII.} APPEAL FOR AUTHORS BY PROFESSION. was passed to "protect" them, under cover of which their most valuable private rights were confiscated to the public use; and it is not twenty years since another act was passed with a sort of kindly consideration on then* behalf, by favour of which the poet and the teacher of writing, the historian and the teacher of dancing, the philosopher and the royal coachman, Sir Christopher Wren's great grand-daughter and the descendant of Charles the Second's French riding-master, are permitted to appear in the same annual charitable list. But though statesmen have yet to learn what the state loses by such unwise scorn of what enlightens and refines it, they cannot much longer remain ignorant \o what extent they are themselves enslaved by the power they thus affect to despise, or of the special functions of government and statesmanship which it is gradually assuming to itself. Its progress has been unin- terrupted since Johnson's and Goldsmith's time, and cannot for as many more years continue unacknowledged. Pitt sneered when the case of Burns was stated to him, and talked of literature taldng care of itself;—which indeed it can do, and in a different and larger sense from what the minister intended: but whether society can take care of itself, is also a material question. Towards its solution, one sentence of Goldsmith's protest is an offering from his sorrow in these times of authorship by compulsion, not less worthy than his more cheerful offerings in those days of authorship by choice, to which the reader is now invited. " An author may be considered " as a merciful substitute to the legislature. He acts not by " punishing crimes, but by preventing them." .END OF BOOK THE SECOND. heir claims