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<header>
<title>The Spectator</title>
  <number>no. 195</number>
  <date>1711-10-13</date>
  <author>Joseph Addison</author>
  <quotation>&#925;&#951;&#960;&#953;&#959;&#953;, &#959;&#965;&#948; &#953;&#963;&#945;&#963;&#953;&#957; &#959;&#963;&#969; &#960;&#955;&#949;&#959;&#957; &#951;&#956;&#953;&#963;&#965; &#960;&#945;&#957;&#964;&#959;&#962;,</quotation>
  <quotation>&#927;&#965;&#948; &#959;&#963;&#959;&#957; &#949;&#957; &#956;&#945;&#955;&#945;&#967;&#951;&#964;&#949; &#948;&#949; &#945;&#963;&#966;&#959;&#948;&#949;&#955;&#969; &#956;&#949;&#947; &#959;&#957;&#949;&#953;&#945;&#961;. --Hes.</quotation>
  <translation>Hesiod, Works and Days, 40-41.</translation>
  <translation>Fools not to know that half exceeds the whole,</translation>
  <translation>How blest the sparing meal and temperate bowl.</translation>
  </header>
<text>
<paragraph>THERE is a Story in the <italic>Arabian Nights Tales</italic><footnote name="(1)" url="../october_footnotes/footnote195.xml"></footnote> of a King
who had long languished under an ill Habit of Body, and had taken
abundance of Remedies to no purpose. At length, says the Fable, a
Physician cured him by the following Method: He took an hollow Ball
of Wood, and filled it with several Drugs; after which he clos'd it
up so artificially that nothing appeared. He likewise took a Mall,
and after having hollowed the Handle, and that part which strikes
the Ball, he enclosed in them several Drugs after the same Manner
as in the Ball it self. He then ordered the Sultan, who was his
Patient, to exercise himself early in the Morning with these
<italic>rightly prepared</italic> Instruments, till such time as he should Sweat:
When, as the Story goes, the Vertue of the Medicaments perspiring
through the Wood, had so good an Influence on the Sultan's
Constitution, that they cured him of an Indisposition which all the
Compositions he had taken inwardly had not been able to remove.
This Eastern Allegory is finely contrived to shew us how beneficial
bodily Labour is to Health, and that Exercise is the most effectual
Physick. I have described in my Hundred and Fifteenth Paper, from
the general Structure and Mechanism of an Human Body, how
absolutely necessary Exercise is for its Preservation. I shall in
this Place recommend another great Preservative of Health, which in
many Cases produces the same Effects as Exercise, and may, in some
measure, supply its Place, where Opportunities of Exercise are
wanting. The Preservative I am speaking of is Temperance, which has
those particular Advantages above all other Means of Health, that
it may be practised by all Ranks and Conditions, at any Season or
in any Place. It is a kind of Regimen into which every Man may put
himself without Interruption to Business, Expence of Molly, or Loss
of Time. If Exercise throws off all Superfluities, Temperance
prevents them; if Exercise clears the Vessels, Temperance neither
satiates nor overstrains them; if Exercise raises proper Ferments
in the Humours, and promotes the Circulation of the Blood,
Temperance gives Nature her full Play, and enables her to exert her
self in all her Force and Vigour; if Exercise dissipates a growing
Distemper, Temperance starves it.</paragraph>
<paragraph>Physick, for the most part, is
nothing else but the Substitute of Exercise or Temperance.
Medicines are indeed absolutely necessary in acute Distempers, that
cannot wait the slow Operations of these two great Instruments of
Health; but did Men live in an habitual Course of Exercise and
Temperance, there would be but little Occasion for them.
Accordingly we find that those Parts of the World are the most
healthy, where they subsist by the Chace; and that Men lived
longest when their Lives were employed in hunting, and when they
had little Food besides what they caught. Blistering, Cupping,
Bleeding, are seldom of use but to the Idle and Intemperate; as all
those inward Applications which are so much in practice among us,
are for the most part nothing else but Expedients to make Luxury
consistent with Health. The Apothecary is perpetually employed in
countermining the Cook and the Vintner. It is said of <italic>Diogenes,</italic><footnote name="(2)" url="../october_footnotes/footnote195.xml"></footnote>
that meeting a young Man who was going to a Feast, he took him up
in the Street and carried him home to his Friends, as one who was
running into imminent Danger had not he prevented him. What would
that Philosopher have said, had he been present at the Gluttony of
a modem Meal? Would not he have thought the Master of a Family mad,
and have begged his Servants to tie down his Hands, had he seen him
devour Fowl, Fish, and Flesh; swallow Oyl and Vinegar, Wines and
Spices; throw down Sallads of twenty different Herbs, Sauces of an
hundred Ingredients, Confections and Fruits of numberless Sweets
and Flavours? What unnatural Motions and Counterferments must such
a Medley of Intemperance produce in the Body? For my Part, when I
behold a fashionable Table set out in all its Magnificence, I fancy
that I see Gouts and Dropsies, Feavers and Lethargies, with other
innumerable Distempers lying in Ambuscade among the Dishes.</paragraph>
<paragraph>Nature delights in the most plain and simple Diet. Every Animal, but Man,
keeps to one Dish. Herbs are the Food of this Species, Fish of
that, and Flesh of a Third Man falls upon every thing that comes in
his Way, not the smallest Fruit or Excrescence of the Earth, scarce
a Berry or a Mushroom, can escape him.</paragraph>
<paragraph>It is impossible to lay down any determinate Rule for Temperance, because what is Luxury in one
may be Temperance in another; but there are few that have lived any
time in the World, who are not Judges of their own Constitutions,
so far as to know what Kinds and what Proportions of Food do best
agree with them. Were I to consider my Readers as my Patients, and
to prescribe such a Kind of Temperance as is accommodated to all
Persons, and such as is particularly suitable to our Climate and
Way of Living, I would copy the following Rules of a very eminent
Physician. Make your whole Repast out of one Dish. If you indulge
in a second, avoid drinking any thing Strong, till you have
finished your Meal; [at<footnote name="(3)" url="../october_footnotes/footnote195.xml"></footnote>] the same time abstain from all Sauces,
or at least such as are not the most plain and simple. A Man could
not be well guilty of Gluttony, if he stuck to these few obvious
and easy Rules. In the first Case there would be no Variety of
Tastes to sollicit his Palate, and occasion Excess; nor in the
second any artificial Provocatives to relieve Satiety, and create a
false Appetite. Were I to prescribe a Rule for Drinking, it should
be form'd upon a Saying quoted by Sir <italic>William Temple;</italic><footnote name="(4)" url="../october_footnotes/footnote195.xml"></footnote> <italic>The first
Glass for my self, the second for my Friends, the third for good
Humour, and the fourth for mine Enemies.</italic> But because it is
impossible for one who lives in the World to diet himself always in
so Philosophical a manner, I think every Man should have his Days
of Abstinence, according as his Constitution will permit. These are
great Reliefs to Nature, as they qualifie her for struggling with
Hunger and Thirst, whenever any Distemper or Duty of Life may put
her upon such Difficulties; and at the same time give her an
Opportunity of extricating her self from her Oppressions, and
recovering the several Tones and Springs of her distended Vessels.
Besides that Abstinence well timed often kills a Sickness in
Embryo, and destroys the first Seeds of an Indisposition. It is
observed by two or three Ancient Authors,<footnote name="(5)" url="../october_footnotes/footnote195.xml"></footnote> that Socrates,
notwithstanding he lived in <italic>Athens</italic> during that great Plague, which
has made so much Noise through all Ages, and has been celebrated at
different Times by such eminent Hands; I say, notwithstanding that
he lived in the time of this devouring Pestilence, he never caught
the least Infection, which those Writers unanimously ascribe to
that uninterrupted Temperance which he always observed.</paragraph>
<paragraph>And here I cannot but mention an Observation which I have often made, upon
reading the Lives of the Philosophers, and comparing them with any
Series of Kings or great Men of the same number. If we consider
these Ancient Sages, a great Part of whose Philosophy consisted in
a temperate and abstemious Course of Life, one would think the Life
of a Philosopher and the Life of a Man were of two different Dates.
For we find that the Generality of these wise Men were nearer an
hundred than sixty Years of Age at the Time of their respective
Deaths. But the most remarkable Instance of the Efficacy of
Temperance towards the procuring of long Life, is what we meet with
in a little Book published by <italic>Lewis Cornaro</italic> the <italic>Venetian;</italic> which I
the rather mention, because it is of undoubted Credit, as the late
<italic>Venetian</italic> Ambassador, who was of the same Family, attested more than
once in Conversation, when he resided in <italic>England. Cornaro,</italic> who was
the Author of the little Treatise I am mentioning, ,vas of an
Infirm Constitution, till about forty, when by obstinately
persisting in an exact Course of Temperance, he recovered a perfect
State of Health; insomuch that at fourscore he published his Book,
which has been translated into <italic>English</italic> upon the Title of [<italic>Sure and
certain Methods</italic><footnote name="(6)" url="../october_footnotes/footnote195.xml"></footnote>] <italic>of attaining a long and healthy Life.</italic> He lived
to give a 3rd or 4th Edition of it, and after having passed his
hundredth Year, died without Pain or Agony, and like one who falls
asleep. The Treatise I mention has been taken notice of by several
Eminent Authors, and is written with such a Spirit of Chearfulness,
Religion, and good Sense, as are the natural Concomitants of
Temperance and Sobriety. The Mixture of the old Man in it is rather
a Recommendation than a Discredit to it.</paragraph>
<paragraph>Having designed this Paper as the Sequel to that upon Exercise, I have not here considered
Temperance as it is a Moral Virtue, which I shall make the Subject
of a future Speculation, but only as it is the Means of Health.</paragraph>
<paragraph>L.</paragraph>

<paragraph>1. 'The History of the Greek King and Douban the Physician' told by
the Fisherman to the Genie in the story of 'the Fisherman.'</paragraph>
<paragraph>2. Diog. Laert., Lives of the Philosophers, Bk. vi. ch. 2.</paragraph>
<paragraph>3. [and at]</paragraph>
<paragraph>4. Sir William Temple does not quote as a saying but says himself,
near the end of his Essay upon Health and Long Life of Government
of Diet and. Exercise, 'In both which, all excess is to be avoided,
especially in the common use of wine: Whereof the first Glass may
pass for Health, the second for good Humour, the third for our
Friends; but the fourth is for our Enemies.'</paragraph>
<paragraph>5. Diogenes Laertius in Life of Socrates; &#198;lian in Var. Hist. Bk. xiii.</paragraph>
<paragraph>6. [<italic>The Sure Way</italic>]</paragraph>
</text>
</issue>
