OLIVEE GOLDSMITH S LIFE AND TIMES. [BOOK in. 1762. " be done immediately. I am, &c. 0. G. The printer lias MUM. "the copy of the rest" To this, his good nature having returned, Newbery acceded; and the book was finished by Mr. Collier, to whom a share of the pittance advanced had of course to be returned. * These paltry advances are a hopeless entanglement. They bar freedom of judgment on anything proposed, and escape is felt to be impossible. Some days, some weeks perhaps, have been lost in idleness or illness; the future becomes a mortgage to the past; every hour has its want, forestalled upon the labour of the succeeding hour; and Gulliver lies bound in Lilliput. " Sir," said Johnson, who had excellent experience on this head, "you may escape a heavy debt, but "not a small one. Small debts are like small shot; they " are rattling on every side, and can scarcely be escaped " without a wound. Great debts are like cannon, of loud " noise but little danger, "t Mention of Goldsmith's illness now frequently recurs. It originated in the habits of his London life, contrasting with the activity and movement they had replaced; and the remedy prescribed was change of scene, if change of life was impossible. Pie is to be traced in this year to Tunbridge and Bath; I find him known to Mr. Wood, whose solid and tasteful architecture was ennobling the latter city; and one of Mr. Newbery's pithy acknowledgments is connected with those brief residences, where the improbus labor had not failed to follow him. " Received from Mr. Newbery at " different times, and for which gave receipts, fourteen * Prior, i. 391—398. Mr. Fewbery's grandson appears to have collected all such papers as he could find of his grandfather's, throwing light on Goldsmith's connexion with him; and to these I shall have frequent occasion to refer as the Newbery MSS. f From a letter written in 1759, to the son of an old Lichfield friend. y be con-