<SPAN name="To_Miss_Elsie_Dean"></SPAN>
<h2>To Miss Elsie Dean</h2>
<p class="c3">Regarding the Habit of Exaggeration<br/>
</p>
<p>During your visit here with my niece, I became much interested
in you.
</p>
<p>Zoe had often written me of her affection for you, and I can
readily understand her feeling, now that I have your personal
acquaintance.
</p>
<p>You have no mother, and your father, you say, absorbed in
business, like so many American fathers, seems almost a stranger.
Even the most devoted fathers, rarely understand their daughters.
</p>
<p>Now, I want to take the part of a mother and write you to-day,
as I would write my own daughter, had one been bestowed upon me
with the many other blessings which are mine.
</p>
<p>I could not ask for a fairer, more amiable, or brighter daughter
than you, nor one possessed of a kinder or more unselfish nature.
</p>
<p>You are lovable, entertaining, industrious, and refined.
</p>
<p>But you possess one fault which needs eradicating, or at least a
propensity which needs directing.
</p>
<p><i>It is the habit of exaggeration in conversation</i>.
</p>
<p>I noticed that small happenings, amusing or exciting, became
events of colossal importance when related by you.
</p>
<p>I noticed that brief remarks were amplified and grew into
something like orations when you repeated them.
</p>
<p>I confess that you made small incidents more interesting, and
insignificant words acquired poetic meaning under your tongue.
</p>
<p>And I confess also that you never once wronged or injured any
one by your exaggerations—save yourself.
</p>
<p>Zoe often said to me, "Isn't it wonderful how Elsie's
imagination lends a halo to the commonest event," and all your
friends know that you have this habit of hyperbole in conversation.
</p>
<p>Now, in your early girlhood, it is lightly regarded as "Elsie's
way." Later, in your maturity, I fear it will be called a harsher
name.
</p>
<p>When you come to the time of life that larger subjects than
girlish pranks and badinage engage your mind, it will be necessary
for you to be more exact in your descriptions of occurrences and
conversations. Besides this, there is the heritage of your unborn
children to consider. I once knew a little girl who possessed the
same vivid imagination, and allowed it to continue unchecked
through life. She married, and her son, to-day, is utterly devoid
of fine moral senses. He is a mental monstrosity—incapable of
telling the truth. His falsehoods are many and varied, and his name
is a synonym of untruth. He relates, as truth, the most marvellous
exploits in which he really never took part, and describes scenes
and places he has never visited, save through the pages of some
novel.
</p>
<p>His lack of moral sense has blighted his mother's life, and she
is wholly unconscious that he is only an exaggerated edition of
herself.
</p>
<p>I think, as a rule, such imaginations as you possess belong to
the literary mind. I would advise you to turn your attention to
story-writing, and in that occupation you will find vent for your
romantic tendencies.
</p>
<p>Meanwhile watch yourself and control your speech.
</p>
<p>Learn to be exact.
</p>
<p>Tell the truth in small matters, and do not allow yourself to
indulge in seemingly harmless white lies of exaggeration.
</p>
<p>There are times when we should refrain from speaking all the
truth, but we should refrain by silence or an adroit change of
subject. We should not feel called upon to relate all the
unpleasant truths we know of people.
</p>
<p>When asked what we know of some acquaintance, we are justified
in telling the worthy and commendable traits, and saying nothing of
the faults.
</p>
<p>Therefore, while to suppress a portion of the truth is at times
wise and kind, to distort it, or misstate facts, is never needed
and never excusable.
</p>
<p>When you and Zoe came from your drive one day you were full of
excitement over an adventure with a Greek road merchant.
</p>
<p>As you told the story, the handsome peddler had accosted you at
the exit of the post-office and asked you to look at his wares.
</p>
<p>When you declined he became familiar, paid a compliment to Zoe's
beauty, and assured her that a certain lace shawl in his possession
would be irresistible draped about her face.
</p>
<p>Then he had pursued the carriage on his wheel and continued to
"make eyes" and pay compliments to the very gate of my home, where
he abandoned the chase.
</p>
<p>The facts were, according to further investigation, that the man
paid a simple trade compliment in reference to the shawl and its
becomingness to a pretty face, mounted his wheel and rode away, as
it happened, in the same direction you and Zoe were taking.
</p>
<p>Again, you related a bit of repartee between Zoe and a caller,
which I had chanced to over-hear, and out of two short sentences
you made a small brochure, most amusing, but most untrue.
</p>
<p>It was complimentary to both Zoe and her caller, yet it was not
the conversation which took place, and therefore was not truthful.
</p>
<p>These are trifling incidents, yet they are the straws, telling
that the wind blows from the marsh-lands of inexactness—not from
the mountain tops of truth.
</p>
<p>Once a woman loses a sense of the great value of absolute
truthfulness, she has blurred the clear mirror of her soul.
</p>
<p>Put yourself upon a diet of <i>facts</i>, my sweet young friend,
and cure this propensity, harmless enough now, but dangerous for
your future.
</p>
<p>Watch your tongue that it does not say <i>five or six</i> when
it should say <i>two</i>, or <i>yards</i> when it should say
<i>inches</i>.
</p>
<p>Even in the smallest matters, practise the habit of being exact.
</p>
<p>You will thank me for this advice sometime, even if it seems
unreasonable to you to-day, and remember, I would not take the
liberty or the trouble to so advise you, did I not love you and
feel anxious for your welfare.
</p><hr class="c2">
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