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<h2> LETTER LXXII </h2>
<h3> LONDON, June 16, O. S. 1749. </h3>
<p>DEAR BOY: I do not guess where this letter will find you, but I hope it
will find you well: I direct it eventually to Laubach; from whence I
suppose you have taken care to have your letters sent after you. I
received no account from Mr. Harte by last post, and the mail due this day
is not yet come in; so that my informations come down no lower than the 2d
June, N. S., the date of Mr. Harte's last letter. As I am now easy about
your health, I am only curious about your motions, which I hope have been
either to Inspruck or Verona; for I disapprove extremely of your proposed
long and troublesome journey to Switzerland. Wherever you may be, I
recommend to you to get as much Italian as you can, before you go either
to Rome or Naples: a little will be of great use to you upon the road; and
the knowledge of the grammatical part, which you can easily acquire in two
or three months, will not only facilitate your progress, but accelerate
your perfection in that language, when you go to those places where it is
generally spoken; as Naples, Rome, Florence, etc.</p>
<p>Should the state of your health not yet admit of your usual application to
books, you may, in a great degree, and I hope you will, repair that loss
by useful and instructive conversations with Mr. Harte: you may, for
example, desire him to give you in conversation the outlines, at least, of
Mr. Locke's logic; a general notion of ethics, and a verbal epitome of
rhetoric; of all which Mr. Harte will give you clearer ideas in half an
hour, by word of mouth, than the books of most of the dull fellows who
have written upon those subjects would do in a week.</p>
<p>I have waited so long for the post, which I hoped would come, that the
post, which is just going out, obliges me to cut this letter short. God
bless you, my dear child! and restore you soon to perfect health!</p>
<p>My compliments to Mr. Harte; to whose care your life is the least thing
that you owe.</p>
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<h2> LETTER LXXIII </h2>
<h3> LONDON, June 22, O. S. 1749. </h3>
<p>DEAR BOY: The outside of your letter of the 7th N. S., directed by your
own hand, gave me more pleasure than the inside of any other letter ever
did. I received it yesterday at the same time with one from Mr. Harts of
the 6th. They arrived at a very proper time, for they found a consultation
of physicians in my room, upon account of a fever which I had for four or
five days, but which has now entirely left me. As Mr. Harte Says THAT YOUR
LUNGS NOW AND THEN GIVE YOU A LITTLE PAIN, and that YOUR SWELLINGS COME
AND GO VARIABLY, but as he mentions nothing of your coughing, spitting, or
sweating, the doctors take it for granted that you are entirely free from
those three bad symptoms: and from thence conclude, that, the pain which
you sometimes feel upon your lungs is only symptomatical of your rheumatic
disorder, from the pressure of the muscles which hinders the free play of
the lungs. But, however, as the lungs are a point of the utmost importance
and delicacy, they insist upon your drinking, in all events, asses' milk
twice a day, and goats' whey as often as you please, the oftener the
better: in your common diet, they recommend an attention to pectorals,
such as sago, barley, turnips, etc. These rules are equally good in
rheumatic as in consumptive cases; you will therefore, I hope, strictly
observe them; for I take it for granted that you are above the silly
likings or dislikings, in which silly people indulge their tastes, at the
expense of their health.</p>
<p>I approve of your going to Venice, as much as I disapproved of your going
to Switzerland. I suppose that you are by this time arrived; and, in that
supposition, I direct this letter there. But if you should find the heat
too great, or the water offensive, at this time of the year, I would have
you go immediately to Verona, and stay there till the great heats are
over, before you return to Venice.</p>
<p>The time which you will probably pass at Venice will allow you to make
yourself master of that intricate and singular form of government, of
which few of our travelers know anything. Read, ask, and see everything
that is relative to it. There are likewise many valuable remains of the
remotest antiquity, and many fine pieces of the Antico-moderno, all which
deserve a different sort of attention from that which your countrymen
commonly give them. They go to see them, as they go to see the lions, and
kings on horseback, at the Tower here, only to say that they have seen
them. You will, I am sure, view them in another light; you will consider
them as you would a poem, to which indeed they are akin. You will observe
whether the sculptor has animated his stone, or the painter his canvas,
into the just expression of those sentiments and passions which should
characterize and mark their several figures. You will examine, likewise,
whether in their groups there be a unity of action, or proper relation; a
truth of dress and manners. Sculpture and painting are very justly called
liberal arts; a lively and strong imagination, together with a just
observation, being absolutely necessary to excel in either; which, in my
opinion, is by no means the case of music, though called a liberal art,
and now in Italy placed even above the other two; a proof of the decline
of that country. The Venetian school produced many great painters, such as
Paul Veronese, Titian, Palma, etc., of whom you will see, as well in
private houses as in churches, very fine pieces. The Last Supper, of Paul
Veronese, in the church of St. George, is reckoned his capital
performance, and deserves your attention; as does also the famous picture
of the Cornaro Family, by Titian. A taste for sculpture and painting is,
in my mind, as becoming as a taste for fiddling and piping is unbecoming,
a man of fashion. The former is connected with history and poetry; the
latter, with nothing that I know of but bad company.</p>
<p>Learn Italian as fast as ever you can, that you may be able to understand
it tolerably, and speak it a little before you go to Rome and Naples:
There are many good historians in that language, and excellent
translations of the ancient Greek and Latin authors; which are called the
Collana; but the only two Italian poets that deserve your acquaintance are
Ariosto and Tasso; and they undoubtedly have great merit.</p>
<p>Make my compliments to Mr. Harte, and tell him that I have consulted about
his leg, and that if it was only a sprain, he ought to keep a tight
bandage about the part, for a considerable time, and do nothing else to
it. Adieu! 'Jubeo te bene valere'.</p>
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<h2> LETTER LXXIV </h2>
<h3> LONDON, July 6, O. S. 1749. </h3>
<p>DEAR BOY: As I am now no longer in pain about your health, which I trust
is perfectly restored; and as, by the various accounts I have had of you,
I need not be in pain about your learning, our correspondence may, for the
future, turn upon less important points, comparatively; though still very
important ones: I mean, the knowledge of the world, decorum, manners,
address, and all those (commonly called little) accomplishments, which are
absolutely necessary to give greater accomplishments their full, value and
lustre.</p>
<p>Had I the admirable ring of Gyges, which rendered the wearer invisible;
and had I, at the same time, those magic powers, which were very common
formerly, but are now very scarce, of transporting myself, by a wish, to
any given place, my first expedition would be to Venice, there to
RECONNOITRE you, unseen myself. I would first take you in the morning, at
breakfast with Mr. Harte, and attend to your natural and unguarded
conversation with him; from whence, I think, I could pretty well judge of
your natural turn of mind. How I should rejoice if I overheard you asking
him pertinent questions upon useful subjects! or making judicious
reflections upon the studies of that morning, or the occurrences of the
former day! Then I would follow you into the different companies of the
day, and carefully observe in what manner you presented yourself to, and
behaved yourself with, men of sense and dignity; whether your address was
respectful, and yet easy; your air modest, and yet unembarrassed; and I
would, at the same time, penetrate into their thoughts, in order to know
whether your first 'abord' made that advantageous impression upon their
fancies, which a certain address, air, and manners, never fail doing. I
would afterward follow you to the mixed companies of the evening; such as
assemblies, suppers, etc., and there watch if you trifled gracefully and
genteelly: if your good-breeding and politeness made way for your parts
and knowledge. With what pleasure should I hear people cry out, 'Che
garbato cavaliere, com' e pulito, disinvolto, spiritoso'! If all these
things turned out to my mind, I would immediately assume my own shape,
become visible, and embrace you: but if the contrary happened, I would
preserve my invisibility, make the best of my way home again, and sink my
disappointment upon you and the world. As, unfortunately, these
supernatural powers of genii, fairies, sylphs, and gnomes, have had the
fate of the oracles they succeeded, and have ceased for some time, I must
content myself (till we meet naturally, and in the common way) with Mr.
Harte's written accounts of you, and the verbal ones which I now and then
receive from people who have seen you. However, I believe it would do you
no harm, if you would always imagine that I were present, and saw and
heard everything you did and said.</p>
<p>There is a certain concurrence of various little circumstances which
compose what the French call 'l'aimable'; and which, now that you are
entering into the world, you ought to make it your particular study to
acquire. Without them, your learning will be pedantry, your conversation
often improper, always unpleasant, and your figure, however good in
itself, awkward and unengaging. A diamond, while rough, has indeed its
intrinsic value; but, till polished, is of no use, and would neither be
sought for nor worn. Its great lustre, it is true, proceeds from its
solidity and strong cohesion of parts; but without the last polish, it
would remain forever a dirty, rough mineral, in the cabinets of some few
curious collectors. You have; I hope, that solidity and cohesion of parts;
take now as much pains to get the lustre. Good company, if you make the
right use of it, will cut you into shape, and give you the true brilliant
polish. A propos of diamonds: I have sent you by Sir James Gray, the
King's Minister, who will be at Venice about the middle of September, my
own diamond buckles; which are fitter for your young feet than for my old
ones: they will properly adorn you; they would only expose me. If Sir
James finds anybody whom he can trust, and who will be at Venice before
him, he will send them by that person; but if he should not, and that you
should be gone from Venice before he gets there, he will in that case give
them to your banker, Monsieur Cornet, to forward to you, wherever you may
then be. You are now of an age, at which the adorning your person is not
only not ridiculous, but proper and becoming. Negligence would imply
either an indifference about pleasing, or else an insolent security of
pleasing, without using those means to which others are obliged to have
recourse. A thorough cleanliness in your person is as necessary for your
own health, as it is not to be offensive to other people. Washing
yourself, and rubbing your body and limbs frequently with a fleshbrush,
will conduce as much to health as to cleanliness. A particular attention
to the cleanliness of your mouth, teeth, hands, and nails, is but common
decency, in order not to offend people's eyes and noses.</p>
<p>I send you here inclosed a letter of recommendation to the Duke of
Nivernois, the French Ambassador at Rome; who is, in my opinion, one of
the prettiest men I ever knew in my life. I do not know a better model for
you to form yourself upon; pray observe and frequent him as much as you
can. He will show you what manners and graces are. I shall, by successive
posts, send you more letters, both for Rome and Naples, where it will be
your own fault entirely if you do not keep the very best company.</p>
<p>As you will meet swarms of Germans wherever you go, I desire that you will
constantly converse with them in their own language, which will improve
you in that language, and be, at the same time, an agreeable piece of
civility to them.</p>
<p>Your stay in Italy will, I do not doubt, make you critically master of
Italian; I know it may, if you please, for it is a very regular, and
consequently a very easy language. Adieu! God bless you!</p>
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