<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0140" id="link2H_4_0140"></SPAN></p>
<h2> LETTER CXXXVIII </h2>
<h3> LONDON, April 15, O. S. 1751 </h3>
<p>MY DEAR FRIEND: What success with the graces, and in the accomplishments,
elegancies, and all those little nothings so indispensably necessary to
constitute an amiable man? Do you take them, do you make a progress in
them? The great secret is the art of pleasing; and that art is to be
attained by every man who has a good fund of common sense. If you are
pleased with any person, examine why; do as he does; and you will charm
others by the same things which please you in him. To be liked by women,
you must be esteemed by men; and to please men, you must be agreeable to
women. Vanity is unquestionably the ruling passion in women; and it is
much flattered by the attentions of a man who is generally esteemed by
men; when his merit has received the stamp of their approbation, women
make it current, that is to say, put him in fashion. On the other hand, if
a man has not received the last polish from women, he may be estimable
among men, but will never be amiable. The concurrence of the two sexes is
as necessary to the perfection of our being, as to the formation of it. Go
among women with the good qualities of your sex, and you will acquire from
them the softness and the graces of theirs. Men will then add affection to
the esteem which they before had for you. Women are the only refiners of
the merit of men; it is true, they cannot add weight, but they polish and
give lustre to it. 'A propos', I am assured, that Madame de Blot, although
she has no great regularity of features, is, notwithstanding, excessively
pretty; and that, for all that, she has as yet been scrupulously constant
to her husband, though she has now been married above a year. Surely she
does not reflect, that woman wants polishing. I would have you polish one
another reciprocally. Force, assiduities, attentions, tender looks, and
passionate declarations, on your side will produce some irresolute wishes,
at least, on hers; and when even the slightest wishes arise, the rest will
soon follow.</p>
<p>As I take you to be the greatest 'juris peritus' and politician of the
whole Germanic body, I suppose you will have read the King of Prussia's
letter to the Elector of Mayence, upon the election of a King of the
Romans; and on the other side, a memorial entitled, IMPARTIAL
REPRESENTATION OF WHAT IS JUST WITH REGARD TO THE ELECTION OF A KING OF
THE ROMANS, etc. The first is extremely well written, but not grounded
upon the laws and customs of the empire. The second is very ill written
(at least in French), but well grounded. I fancy the author is some
German, who has taken into his head that he understands French. I am,
however, persuaded that the elegance and delicacy of the King of Prussia's
letter will prevail with two-thirds of the public, in spite of the
solidity and truth contained in the other piece. Such is the force of an
elegant and delicate style!</p>
<p>I wish you would be so good as to give me a more particular and
circumstantial account of the method of passing your time at Paris. For
instance, where it is that you dine every Friday, in company with that
amiable and respectable old man, Fontenelle? Which is the house where you
think yourself at home? For one always has such a one, where one is better
established, and more at ease than anywhere else. Who are the young
Frenchmen with whom you are most intimately connected? Do you frequent the
Dutch Ambassador's. Have you penetrated yet into Count Caunitz's house?
Has Monsieur de Pignatelli the honor of being one of your humble servants?
And has the Pope's nuncio included you in the jubilee? Tell me also freely
how you are with Lord Huntingdon: Do you see him often? Do you connect
yourself with him? Answer all these questions circumstantially in your
first letter.</p>
<p>I am told that Du Clos's book is not in vogue at Paris, and that it is
violently criticised: I suppose that is because one understands it; and
being intelligible is now no longer the fashion. I have a very great
respect for fashion, but a much greater for this book; which is, all at
once, true, solid, and bright. It contains even epigrams; what can one
wish for more?</p>
<p>Mr.———will, I suppose, have left Paris by this time for
his residence at Toulouse. I hope he will acquire manners there; I am sure
he wants them. He is awkward, he is silent, and has nothing agreeable in
his address,—most necessary qualifications to distinguish one's self
in business, as well as in the POLITE WORLD! In truth, these two things
are so connected, that a man cannot make a figure in business, who is not
qualified to shine in the great world; and to succeed perfectly in either
the one or the other, one must be in 'utrumque paratus'. May you be that,
my dear friend! and so we wish you a good night.</p>
<p>P. S. Lord and Lady Blessington, with their son Lord Mountjoy, will be at
Paris next week, in their way to the south of France; I send you a little
packet of books by them. Pray go wait upon them, as soon as you hear of
their arrival, and show them all the attentions you can.</p>
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