Words representing the Pleasure rather than the
Sin, are for this Reason indecent and dishonest.
Your Papers would be chargeable with something worse
than Indelicacy, they would be Immoral, did you treat
the detestable Sins of Uncleanness in the same manner
as you rally an impertinent Self-love and an artful
Glance; as those Laws would be very unjust, that
should chastise Murder and Petty Larceny with the
same Punishment. Even Delicacy requires that
the Pity shewn to distressed indigent Wickedness,
first betrayed into, and then expelled the Harbours
of the Brothel, should be changed to Detestation, when
we consider pampered Vice in the Habitations of
the Wealthy. The most free Person of Quality,
in Mr. Courtly’s Phrase, that is, to speak properly,
a Woman of Figure who has forgot her Birth and Breeding,
dishonoured her Relations and her self, abandoned
her Virtue and Reputation, together with the natural
Modesty of her Sex, and risqued her very Soul, is
so far from deserving to be treated with no worse
Character than that of a kind Woman, (which is doubtless
Mr. Courtly’s Meaning, if he has any,) that
one can scarce be too severe on her, in as much
as she sins against greater Restraints, is less exposed,
and liable to fewer Temptations, than Beauty in
Poverty and Distress. It is hoped therefore,
Sir, that you will not lay aside your generous Design
of exposing that monstrous Wickedness of the Town,
whereby a Multitude of Innocents are sacrificed
in a more barbarous Manner than those who were offered
to Moloch. The Unchaste are provoked to see their
Vice exposed, and the Chaste cannot rake into such
Filth without Danger of Defilement; but a meer SPECTATOR
may look into the Bottom, and come off without partaking
in the Guilt. The doing so will convince us
you pursue publick Good, and not meerly your own Advantage:
But if your Zeal slackens, how can one help thinking
that Mr. Courtly’s Letter is but a Feint to
get off from a Subject, in which either your own,
or the private and base Ends of others to whom you
are partial, or those [of] whom you are afraid, would
not endure a Reformation?
I am, Sir, your humble Servant and Admirer,
so long as you tread in
the Paths of Truth, Virtue, and Honour.
Mr. SPECTATOR,
Trin. Coll. Cantab. Jan. 12, 1711-12.
It is my Fortune to have a Chamber-Fellow, with whom, tho I agree very well in many Sentiments, yet there is one in which we are as contrary as Light and Darkness. We are both in Love: his Mistress is a lovely Fair, and mine a lovely Brown. Now as the Praise of our Mistresses Beauty employs much of our Time, we have frequent Quarrels in entering upon that Subject, while each says all he can to defend his Choice. For my own part, I have racked my Fancy to the utmost; and sometimes, with the greatest Warmth of Imagination, have told him, That Night was made before Day, and many more fine Things, tho without any effect: Nay, last