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<h2> SPECIAL INTRODUCTION </h2>
<p>The proud Lord Chesterfield would have turned in his grave had he known
that he was to go down to posterity as a teacher and preacher of the
gospel of not grace, but—"the graces, the graces, the graces."
Natural gifts, social status, open opportunities, and his ambition, all
conspired to destine him for high statesmanship. If anything was lacking
in his qualifications, he had the pluck and good sense to work hard and
persistently until the deficiency was made up. Something remained lacking,
and not all his consummate mastery of arts could conceal that conspicuous
want,—the want of heart.</p>
<p>Teacher and preacher he assuredly is, and long will be, yet no thanks are
his due from a posterity of the common people whom he so sublimely
despised. His pious mission was not to raise the level of the multitude,
but to lift a single individual upon a pedestal so high that his lowly
origin should not betray itself. That individual was his, Lord
Chesterfield's, illegitimate son, whose inferior blood should be given the
true blue hue by concentrating upon him all the externals of aristocratic
education.</p>
<p>Never had pupil so devoted, persistent, lavish, and brilliant a guide,
philosopher, and friend, for the parental relation was shrewdly merged in
these. Never were devotion and uphill struggle against doubts of success
more bitterly repaid. Philip Stanhope was born in 1732, when his father
was thirty-eight. He absorbed readily enough the solids of the ideal
education supplied him, but, by perversity of fate, he cared not a fig for
"the graces, the graces, the graces," which his father so wisely deemed by
far the superior qualities to be cultivated by the budding courtier and
statesman. A few years of minor services to his country were rendered,
though Chesterfield was breaking his substitute for a heart because his
son could not or would not play the superfine gentleman—on the
paternal model, and then came the news of his death, when only thirty-six.
What was a still greater shock to the lordly father, now deaf, gouty,
fretful, and at outs with the world, his informant reported that she had
been secretly married for several years to Young Hopeful, and was left
penniless with two boys. Lord Chesterfield was above all things a
practical philosopher, as hard and as exquisitely rounded and polished as
a granite column. He accepted the vanishing of his lifelong dream with the
admirable stolidity of a fatalist, and in those last days of his radically
artificial life he disclosed a welcome tenderness, a touch of the divine,
none the less so for being common duty, shown in the few brief letters to
his son's widow and to "our boys." This, and his enviable gift of being
able to view the downs as well as the ups of life in the consoling
humorous light, must modify the sterner judgment so easily passed upon his
characteristic inculcation, if not practice, of heartlessness.</p>
<p>The thirteenth-century mother church in the town from which Lord
Chesterfield's title came has a peculiar steeple, graceful in its lines,
but it points askew, from whatever quarter it is seen. The writer of these
Letters, which he never dreamed would be published, is the best
self-portrayed Gentleman in literature. In everything he was naturally a
stylist, perfected by assiduous art, yet the graceful steeple is somehow
warped out of the beauty of the perpendicular. His ideal Gentleman is the
frigid product of a rigid mechanical drill, with the mien of a posture
master, the skin-deep graciousness of a French Marechal, the calculating
adventurer who cuts unpretentious worthies to toady to society magnates,
who affects the supercilious air of a shallow dandy and cherishes the
heart of a frog. True, he repeatedly insists on the obligation of
truthfulness in all things, and of, honor in dealing with the world. His
Gentleman may; nay, he must, sail with the stream, gamble in moderation if
it is the fashion, must stoop to wear ridiculous clothes and ornaments if
they are the mode, though despising his weakness all to himself, and no
true Gentleman could afford to keep out of the little gallantries which so
effectively advertised him as a man of spirit sad charm. Those repeated
injunctions of honor are to be the rule, subject to these exceptions,
which transcend the common proprieties when the subject is the rising
young gentleman of the period and his goal social success. If an
undercurrent of shady morality is traceable in this Chesterfieldian
philosophy it must, of course, be explained away by the less perfect moral
standard of his period as compared with that of our day. Whether this
holds strictly true of men may be open to discussion, but his lordship's
worldly instructions as to the utility of women as stepping-stones to
favor in high places are equally at variance with the principles he so
impressively inculcates and with modern conceptions of social honor. The
externals of good breeding cannot be over-estimated, if honestly come by,
nor is it necessary to examine too deeply into the prime motives of those
who urge them upon a generation in whose eyes matter is more important
than manner. Superficial refinement is better than none, but the
Chesterfield pulpit cannot afford to shirk the duty of proclaiming loud
and far that the only courtesy worthy of respect is that 'politesse de
coeur,' the politeness of the heart, which finds expression in
consideration for others as the ruling principle of conduct. This
militates to some extent against the assumption of fine airs without the
backing of fine behavior, and if it tends to discourage the effort to use
others for selfish ends, it nevertheless pays better in the long run.</p>
<p>Chesterfield's frankness in so many confessions of sharp practice almost
merits his canonization as a minor saint of society. Dr. Johnson has
indeed placed him on a Simeon Stylites pillar, an immortality of penance
from which no good member of the writers' guild is likely to pray his
deliverance. He commends the fine art and high science of dissimulation
with the gusto of an apostle and the authority of an expert. Dissimulate,
but do not simulate, disguise your real sentiments, but do not falsify
them. Go through the world with your eyes and ears open and mouth mostly
shut. When new or stale gossip is brought to you, never let on that you
know it already, nor that it really interests you. The reading of these
Letters is better than hearing the average comedy, in which the wit of a
single sentence of Chesterfield suffices to carry an act. His
man-of-the-world philosophy is as old as the Proverbs of Solomon, but will
always be fresh and true, and enjoyable at any age, thanks to his pithy
expression, his unfailing common sense, his sparkling wit and charming
humor. This latter gift shows in the seeming lapses from his rigid rule
requiring absolute elegance of expression at all times, when an unexpected
coarseness, in some provincial colloquialism, crops out with picturesque
force. The beau ideal of superfineness occasionally enjoys the bliss of
harking back to mother English.</p>
<p>Above all the defects that can be charged against the Letters, there rises
the substantial merit of an honest effort to exalt the gentle in woman and
man—above the merely genteel. "He that is gentil doeth gentil
deeds," runs the mediaeval saying which marks the distinction between the
genuine and the sham in behavior. A later age had it thus: "Handsome is as
handsome does," and in this larger sense we have agreed to accept the
motto of William of Wykeham, which declares that "Manners maketh Man."<br/><br/>
OLIVER H. G. LEIGH</p>
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