The Further Adventures of Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe Chapter 8 Page 41

memorandums would do well to turn his thoughts entirely from it, and expect to read of the follies of an old man, not warned by his own harms, much less by those of other men, to beware; not cooled by almost forty years’ miseries and disappointments — not satisfied with prosperity beyond expectation, nor made cautious by afflictions and distress beyond example.