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'Mauvaise honte' not only hinders young people from making; a great many friends; but makes them a great many enemies。  They are ashamed of doing the thing they know to be right; and would otherwise do; for fear of the momentary laugh of some fine gentleman or lady; or of some 'mauvais plaisant'。  I have been in this case: and have often wished an obscure acquaintance at the devil; for meeting and taking notice of me when I was in what I thought and called fine company。  I have returned their notice shyly; awkwardly; and consequently offensively; for fear of a momentary joke; not considering; as I ought to have done; that the very people who would have joked upon me at first; would have esteemed me the more for it afterward。  An example explains a rule best: Suppose you were walking in the Tuileries with some fine folks; and that you should unexpectedly meet your old acquaintance; little crooked Grierson; what would you do? I will tell you what you should do; by telling you what I would now do in that case myself。  I would run up to him; and embrace him; say some kind of things to him; and then return to my company。  There I should be immediately asked: 'Mais qu'est ce que c'est donc que ce petit Sapajou que vous avez embrasse si tendrement?  Pour cela; l'accolade a ete charmante'; with a great deal more festivity of that sort。  To this I should answer; without being the least ashamed; but en badinant: O je ne vous dirai tas qui c'est; c'est un petit ami que je tiens incognito; qui a son merite; et qui; a force d'etre connu; fait oublier sa figure。  Que me donnerez…vous; et je vous le presenterai'?  And then; with a little more seriousness; I would add: 'Mais d'ailleurs c'est que je ne desavoue jamais mes connoissances; a cause de leur etat ou de leur figure。  Il faut avoir bien peu de sentimens pour le faire'。  This would at once put an end to that momentary pleasantry; and give them all a better opinion of me than they had before。  Suppose another case; and that some of the finest ladies 'du bon ton' should come into a room; and find you sitting by; and talking politely to 'la vieille' Marquise de Bellefonds; the joke would; for a moment; turn upon that 'tete…a…tete':  He bien!  avez vous a la fin fixd la belle Marquise?  La partie est…elle faite pour la petite maison?  Le souper sera galant sans doute: Mais ne faistu donc point scrupule de seduire une jeune et aimable persone comme celle…la'? To this I should answer: 'La partie n'etoit pas encore tout…a fait liee; vous nous avez interrompu; mais avec le tems que fait…on?  D'ailleurs moquezvous de mes amours tant qu'il vous plaira; je vous dirai que je respecte tant les jeunes dames; que je respecte meme les vieilles; pour l'avoir ete。  Apre cela il y a souvent des liaisons entre les vieilles et les jeunes'。  This would at once turn the pleasantry into an esteem for your good sense and your good…breeding。  Pursue steadily; and without fear or shame; whatever your reason tells you is right; and what you see is practiced by people of more experience than yourself; and of established characters of good sense and good…breeding。

After all this; perhaps you will say; that it is impossible to please everybody。  I grant it; but it does not follow that one should not therefore endeavor to please as many as one can。  Nay; I will go further; and admit that it is impossible for any man not to have some enemies。 But this truth from long experience I assert; that he who has the most friends and the fewest enemies; is the strongest; will rise the highest with the least envy; and fall; if he does fall; the gentlest; and the most pitied。  This is surely an object worth pursuing。  Pursue it according to the rules I have here given you。  I will add one observation more; and two examples to enforce it; and then; as the parsons say; conclude。

There is no one creature so obscure; so low; or so poor; who may not; by the strange and unaccountable changes and vicissitudes of human affairs; somehow or other; and some time or other; become an useful friend or a trouble…some enemy; to the greatest and the richest。  The late Duke of Ormond was almost the weakest but at the same time the best…bred; and most popular man in this kingdom。  His education in courts and camps; joined to an easy; gentle nature; had given him that habitual affability; those engaging manners; and those mechanical attentions; that almost supplied the place of every talent he wanted; and he wanted almost every one。  They procured him the love of all men; without the esteem of any。 He was impeached after the death of Queen Anne; only because that; having been engaged in the same measures with those who were necessarily to be impeached; his impeachment; for form's sake; became necessary。  But he was impeached without acrimony; and without the lest intention that he should suffer; notwithstanding the party violence of those times。  The question for his impeachment; in the House of Commons; was carried by many fewer votes than any other question of impeachment; and Earl Stanhope; then Mr。 Stanhope; and Secretary' of State; who impeached him; very soon after negotiated and concluded his accommodation with the late King; to whom he was to have been presented the next day。  But the late Bishop of Rochester; Atterbury; who thought that the Jacobite cause might suffer by losing the Duke of Ormond; went in all haste; and prevailed with the poor weak man to run away; assuring him that he was only to be gulled into a disgraceful submission; and not to be pardoned in consequence of it。  When his subsequent attainder passed; it excited mobs and disturbances in town。  He had not a personal enemy in the world; and had a thousand friends。  All this was simply owing to his natural desire of pleasing; and to the mechanical means that his education; not his parts; had given him of doing it。  The other instance is the late Duke of Marlborough; who studied the art of pleasing; because he well knew the importance of it: he enjoyed and used it more than ever man did。  He gained whoever he had a mind to gain; and he had a mind to gain everybody; because he knew that everybody was more or less worth gaining。 Though his power; as Minister and General; made him many political and party enemies; they did not make him one personal one; and the very people who would gladly have displaced; disgraced; and perhaps attainted the Duke of Marlborough; at the same time personally loved Mr。 Churchill; even though his private character was blemished by sordid avarice; the most unamiable of all vices。  He had wound up and turned his whole machine to please and engage。  He had an inimitable sweetness and gentleness in his countenance; a tenderness in his manner of speaking; a graceful dignity in every motion; and an universal and minute attention to the least things that could possibly please the least person。  This was all art in him; art of which he well knew and enjoyed the advantages; for no man ever had more interior ambition; pride; and avarice; than he had。

Though you have more than most people of your age; you have yet very little experience and knowledge of the world; now; I wish to inoculate mine upon you; and thereby prevent both the dangers and the marks of youth and inexperience。  If you receive the matter kindly; and observe my prescriptions scrupulously; you will secure the future advantages of time and join them to the present inestimable ones of one…and…twenty。

I most earnestly recommend one thing to you; during your present stay at Paris。  I own it is not the most agreeable; but I affirm it to be the most useful thing in the world to one of your age; and therefore I do hope that you will force and constrain yourself to do it。  I mean; to converse frequently; or rather to be in company frequently with both men and women much your superiors in age and rank。  I am very sensible that; at your age; 'vous y entrez pour peu de chose; et meme souvent pour rien; et que vous y passerez meme quelques mauvais quart…d'heures'; but no matter; you will be a solid gainer by it: you will see; hear; and learn the turn and manners of those people; you will gain premature experience by it; and it will give you a habit of engaging and respectful attentions。  Versailles; as much as possible; though probably unentertaining: the Palais Royal often; however dull: foreign ministers of the first rank; frequently; and women; though old; who are respectable and respected for their rank or parts; such as Madame de Pusieux; Madame de Nivernois; Madame d'Aiguillon; Madame Geoffrain; etc。  This 'sujetion'; if it be one to you; will cost you but very little in these three or four months that you are yet to pass in Paris; and will bring you in a great deal; nor will it; nor ought it; to hinder you from being in a more entertaining company a great part of the day。  'Vous pouvez; si vous le voulex; tirer un grand parti de ces quatre mois'。  May God make you so; and bless you! Adieu。




LETTER CLXXXII

BATH; November 16; O。 S。  1752。

MY DEAR FRIEND: Vanity; or to call it by a gentler name; the desire of admiration and applause; is; perhaps; the most universal principle of human actions; I do not say that it is the best; and I will own that it is sometimes the cause of both foolis

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