neither stinted nor grudged any expense that could
be of use or real pleasure to you; and I can assure
you, by the way, that you have traveled at a much more
considerable expense than I did myself; but I never
so much as thought of that, while Mr. Harte was at
the head of your finances; being very sure that the
sums granted were scrupulously applied to the uses
for which they were intended. But the case will
soon be altered, and you will be your own receiver
and treasurer. However, I promise you, that we
will not quarrel singly upon the quantum, which shall
be cheerfully and freely granted: the application
and appropriation of it will be the material point,
which I am now going to clear up and finally settle
with you. I will fix, or even name, no settled
allowance; though I well know in my own mind what
would be the proper one; but I will first try your
draughts, by which I can in a good degree judge of
your conduct. This only I tell you in general,
that if the channels through which my money is to go
are the proper ones, the source shall not be scanty;
but should it deviate into dirty, muddy, and obscure
ones (which by the bye, it cannot do for a week without
my knowing it); I give you fair and timely notice,
that the source will instantly be dry. Mr. Harte,
in establishing you at Paris, will point out to you
those proper channels; he will leave you there upon
the foot of a man of fashion, and I will continue you
upon the same; you will have your coach, your valet
de chambre, your own footman, and a valet de place;
which, by the way, is one servant more than I had.
I would have you very well dressed, by which I mean
dressed as the generality of people of fashion are;
that is, not to be taken notice of, for being either
more or less fine than other people: it is by
being well dressed, not finely dressed, that a gentleman
should be distinguished. You must frequent ‘les
spectacles’, which expense I shall willingly
supply. You must play ‘a des petits jeux
de commerce’ in mixed companies; that article
is trifling; I shall pay it cheerfully. All the
other articles of pocket-money are very inconsiderable
at Paris, in comparison of what they are here, the
silly custom of giving money wherever one dines or
sups, and the expensive importunity of subscriptions,
not being yet introduced there. Having thus reckoned
up all the decent expenses of a gentleman, which I
will most readily defray, I come now to those which
I will neither bear nor supply. The first of these
is gaming, of which, though I have not the least reason
to suspect you, I think it necessary eventually to
assure you, that no consideration in the world shall
ever make me pay your play debts; should you ever
urge to me that your honor is pawned, I should most
immovably answer you, that it was your honor, not
mine, that was pawned; and that your creditor might
e’en take the pawn for the debt.
Low company, and low pleasures, are always much more costly than liberal and elegant ones. The disgraceful riots of a tavern are much more expensive, as well as dishonorable, than the sometimes pardonable excesses in good company. I must absolutely hear of no tavern scrapes and squabbles.