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<h2> LETTER CIII </h2>
<h3> LONDON, January 25, O. S. 1750 </h3>
<p>MY DEAR FRIEND: It is so long since I have heard from you, that I suppose
Rome engrosses every moment of your time; and if it engrosses it in the
manner I could wish, I willingly give up my share of it. I would rather
'prodesse quam conspici'. Put out your time, but to good interest; and I
do not desire to borrow much of it. Your studies, the respectable remains
of antiquity, and your evening amusements cannot, and indeed ought not, to
leave you much time to write. You will, probably, never see Rome again;
and therefore you ought to see it well now; by seeing it well, I do not
mean only the buildings, statues, and paintings, though they undoubtedly
deserve your attention: but I mean seeing into the constitution and
government of it. But these things certainly occur to your own common
sense.</p>
<p>How go, your pleasures at Rome? Are you in fashion there? that is, do you
live with the people who are?—the only way of being so yourself, in
time. Are you domestic enough in any considerable house to be called 'le
petit Stanhope'? Has any woman of fashion and good-breeding taken the
trouble of abusing and laughing at you amicably to your face? Have you
found a good 'decrotteuse'. For those are the steps by which you must rise
to politeness. I do not presume to ask if you have any attachment, because
I believe you will not make me your confident; but this I will say,
eventually, that if you have one, 'il faut bien payer d'attentions et de
petits soin', if you would have your sacrifice propitiously received.
Women are not so much taken by beauty as men are, but prefer those men who
show them the most attention.</p>
<p>Would you engage the lovely fair?<br/>
With gentlest manners treat her;<br/>
With tender looks and graceful air,<br/>
In softest accents greet her.<br/>
<br/>
Verse were but vain, the Muses fail,<br/>
Without the Graces' aid;<br/>
The God of Verse could not prevail<br/>
To stop the flying maid.<br/>
<br/>
Attention by attentions gain,<br/>
And merit care by cares;<br/>
So shall the nymph reward your pain;<br/>
And Venus crown your prayers.<br/>
Probatum est.<br/></p>
<p>A man's address and manner weigh much more with them than his beauty; and,
without them, the Abbati and Monsignori will get the better of you. This
address and manner should be exceedingly respectful, but at the same time
easy and unembarrassed. Your chit-chat or 'entregent' with them neither
can, nor ought to be very solid; but you should take care to turn and
dress up your trifles prettily, and make them every now and then convey
indirectly some little piece of flattery. A fan, a riband, or a
head-dress, are great materials for gallant dissertations, to one who has
got 'le ton leger et aimable de la bonne compagnie'. At all events, a man
had better talk too much to women, than too little; they take silence for
dullness, unless where they think that the passion they have inspired
occasions it; and in that case they adopt the notion, that</p>
<p>Silence in love betrays more woe<br/>
Than words, though ne'er so witty;<br/>
The beggar that is dumb, we know,<br/>
Deserves a double pity.<br/></p>
<p>'A propos' of this subject: what progress do you make in that language, in
which Charles the Fifth said that he would choose to speak to his
mistress? Have you got all the tender diminutives, in 'etta, ina', and
'ettina', which, I presume, he alluded to? You already possess, and, I
hope, take care not to forget, that language which he reserved for his
horse. You are absolutely master, too, of that language in which he said
he would converse with men; French. But, in every language, pray attend
carefully to the choice of your words, and to the turn of your expression.
Indeed, it is a point of very great consequence. To be heard with success,
you must be heard with pleasure: words are the dress of thoughts; which
should no more be presented in rags, tatters, and dirt, than your person
should. By the way, do you mind your person and your dress sufficiently?
Do you take great care of your teeth? Pray have them put in order by the
best operator at Rome. Are you be-laced, bepowdered, and be-feathered, as
other young fellows are, and should be? At your age, 'il faut du brillant,
et meme un peu de fracas, mais point de mediocre; il faut un air vif, aise
et noble. Avec les hommes, un maintien respectueux et en meme tems
respectable; avec les femmes, un caquet leger, enjoue, et badin, mais
toujours fort poli'.</p>
<p>To give you an opportunity of exerting your talents, I send you, here
inclosed, a letter of recommendation from Monsieur Villettes to Madame de
Simonetti at Milan; a woman of the first fashion and consideration there;
and I shall in my next send you another from the same person to Madame
Clerici, at the same place. As these two ladies' houses are the resort of
all the people of fashion at Milan, those two recommendations will
introduce you to them all. Let me know, in due time, if you have received
these two letters, that I may have them renewed, in case of accidents.</p>
<p>Adieu, my dear friend! Study hard; divert yourself heartily; distinguish
carefully between the pleasures of a man of fashion, and the vices of a
scoundrel; pursue the former, and abhor the latter, like a man of sense.</p>
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