<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"></SPAN></p>
<h2> 1746-1747 </h2>
<p>LETTER I</p>
<p>BATH, October 9, O. S. 1746</p>
<p>DEAR BOY: Your distresses in your journey from Heidelberg to Schaffhausen,
your lying upon straw, your black bread, and your broken 'berline,' are
proper seasonings for the greater fatigues and distresses which you must
expect in the course of your travels; and, if one had a mind to moralize,
one might call them the samples of the accidents, rubs, and difficulties,
which every man meets with in his journey through life. In this journey,
the understanding is the 'voiture' that must carry you through; and in
proportion as that is stronger or weaker, more or less in repair, your
journey will be better or worse; though at best you will now and then find
some bad roads, and some bad inns. Take care, therefore, to keep that
necessary 'voiture' in perfect good repair; examine, improve, and
strengthen it every day: it is in the power, and ought to be the care, of
every man to do it; he that neglects it, deserves to feel, and certainly
will feel, the fatal effects of that negligence.</p>
<p>'A propos' of negligence: I must say something to you upon that subject.
You know I have often told you, that my affection for you was not a weak,
womanish one; and, far from blinding me, it makes me but more
quick-sighted as to your faults; those it is not only my right, but my
duty to tell you of; and it is your duty and your interest to correct
them. In the strict scrutiny which I have made into you, I have (thank
God) hitherto not discovered any vice of the heart, or any peculiar
weakness of the head: but I have discovered laziness, inattention, and
indifference; faults which are only pardonable in old men, who, in the
decline of life, when health and spirits fail, have a kind of claim to
that sort of tranquillity. But a young man should be ambitious to shine,
and excel; alert, active, and indefatigable in the means of doing it; and,
like Caesar, 'Nil actum reputans, si quid superesset agendum.' You seem to
want that 'vivida vis animi,' which spurs and excites most young men to
please, to shine, to excel. Without the desire and the pains necessary to
be considerable, depend upon it, you never can be so; as, without the
desire and attention necessary to please, you never can please. 'Nullum
numen abest, si sit prudentia,' is unquestionably true, with regard to
everything except poetry; and I am very sure that any man of common
understanding may, by proper culture, care, attention, and labor, make
himself whatever he pleases, except a good poet. Your destination is the
great and busy world; your immediate object is the affairs, the interests,
and the history, the constitutions, the customs, and the manners of the
several parts of Europe. In this, any man of common sense may, by common
application, be sure to excel. Ancient and modern history are, by
attention, easily attainable. Geography and chronology the same, none of
them requiring any uncommon share of genius or invention. Speaking and
Writing, clearly, correctly, and with ease and grace, are certainly to be
acquired, by reading the best authors with care, and by attention to the
best living models. These are the qualifications more particularly
necessary for you, in your department, which you may be possessed of, if
you please; and which, I tell you fairly, I shall be very angry at you, if
you are not; because, as you have the means in your hands, it will be your
own fault only.</p>
<p>If care and application are necessary to the acquiring of those
qualifications, without which you can never be considerable, nor make a
figure in the world, they are not less necessary with regard to the lesser
accomplishments, which are requisite to make you agreeable and pleasing in
society. In truth, whatever is worth doing at all, is worth doing well;
and nothing can be done well without attention: I therefore carry the
necessity of attention down to the lowest things, even to dancing and
dress. Custom has made dancing sometimes necessary for a young man;
therefore mind it while you learn it that you may learn to do it well, and
not be ridiculous, though in a ridiculous act. Dress is of the same
nature; you must dress; therefore attend to it; not in order to rival or
to excel a fop in it, but in order to avoid singularity, and consequently
ridicule. Take great care always to be dressed like the reasonable people
of your own age, in the place where you are; whose dress is never spoken
of one way or another, as either too negligent or too much studied.</p>
<p>What is commonly called an absent man, is commonly either a very weak, or
a very affected man; but be he which he will, he is, I am sure, a very
disagreeable man in company. He fails in all the common offices of
civility; he seems not to know those people to-day, whom yesterday he
appeared to live in intimacy with. He takes no part in the general
conversation; but, on the contrary, breaks into it from time to time, with
some start of his own, as if he waked from a dream. This (as I said
before) is a sure indication, either of a mind so weak that it is not able
to bear above one object at a time; or so affected, that it would be
supposed to be wholly engrossed by, and directed to, some very great and
important objects. Sir Isaac Newton, Mr. Locke, and (it may be) five or
six more, since the creation of the world, may have had a right to
absence, from that intense thought which the things they were
investigating required. But if a young man, and a man of the world, who
has no such avocations to plead, will claim and exercise that right of
absence in company, his pretended right should, in my mind, be turned into
an involuntary absence, by his perpetual exclusion out of company. However
frivolous a company may be, still, while you are among them, do not show
them, by your inattention, that you think them so; but rather take their
tone, and conform in some degree to their weakness, instead of manifesting
your contempt for them. There is nothing that people bear more
impatiently, or forgive less, than contempt; and an injury is much sooner
forgotten than an insult. If, therefore, you would rather please than
offend, rather be well than ill spoken of, rather be loved than hated;
remember to have that constant attention about you which flatters every
man's little vanity; and the want of which, by mortifying his pride, never
fails to excite his resentment, or at least his ill will. For instance,
most people (I might say all people) have their weaknesses; they have
their aversions and their likings, to such or such things; so that, if you
were to laugh at a man for his aversion to a cat, or cheese (which are
common antipathies), or, by inattention and negligence, to let them come
in his way, where you could prevent it, he would, in the first case, think
himself insulted, and, in the second, slighted, and would remember both.
Whereas your care to procure for him what he likes, and to remove from him
what he hates, shows him that he is at least an object of your attention;
flatters his vanity, and makes him possibly more your friend, than a more
important service would have done. With regard to women, attentions still
below these are necessary, and, by the custom of the world, in some
measure due, according to the laws of good-breeding.</p>
<p>My long and frequent letters, which I send you, in great doubt of their
success, put me in mind of certain papers, which you have very lately, and
I formerly, sent up to kites, along the string, which we called
messengers; some of them the wind used to blow away, others were torn by
the string, and but few of them got up and stuck to the kite. But I will
content myself now, as I did then, if some of my present messengers do but
stick to you. Adieu!</p>
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