OF THE INTELLECT. 427 



tomary fashion, as well to all the constituent parts of this 

 formula on absolute necessity, as if they were universally 

 indispensable and inviolable : for we do not hold, that the 

 industry and the happiness of man are to be indissolubly 

 bound, as it were, to a single pillar. Nothing, indeed, need 

 prevent those who possess greater leisure, or have sur 

 mounted the difficulties infallibly encountered in the begin 

 ning of the experiment, from carrying onward the process 

 here pointed out. On the contrary, it is our firm conviction 

 that true art is always capable of advancing. 



F. W. 



