more clearly than any other book had done before.
You judge very rightly that I love ’le style
le r et fleuri’. I do, and so does everybody
who has any parts and taste. It should, I confess,
be more or less ‘fleuri’, according to
the subject; but at the same time I assert that there
is no subject that may not properly, and which ought
not to be adorned, by a certain elegance and beauty
of style. What can be more adorned than Cicero’s
Philosophical Works? What more than Plato’s?
It is their eloquence only that has preserved and
transmitted them down to us through so many centuries;
for the philosophy of them is wretched, and the reasoning
part miserable. But eloquence will always please,
and has always pleased. Study it therefore; make
it the object of your thoughts and attention.
Use yourself to relate elegantly; that is a good step
toward speaking well in parliament. Take some
political subject, turn it in your thoughts, consider
what may be said both for and against it, then put
those arguments into writing, in the most correct
and elegant English you can. For instance, a standing
army, a place bill, etc.; as to the former, consider,
on one side, the dangers arising to a free country
from a great standing military force; on the other
side, consider the necessity of a force to repel force
with. Examine whether a standing army, though
in itself an evil, may not, from circumstances, become
a necessary evil, and preventive of greater dangers.
As to the latter, consider, how far places may bias
and warp the conduct of men, from the service of their
country, into an unwarrantable complaisance to the
court; and, on the other hand, consider whether they
can be supposed to have that effect upon the conduct
of people of probity and property, who are more solidly
interested in the permanent good of their country,
than they can be in an uncertain and precarious employment.
Seek for, and answer in your own mind, all the arguments
that can be urged on either side, and write them down
in an elegant style. This will prepare you for
debating, and give you an habitual eloquence; for
I would not give a farthing for a mere holiday eloquence,
displayed once or twice in a session, in a set declamation,
but I want an every-day, ready, and habitual eloquence,
to adorn extempore and debating speeches; to make
business not only clear but agreeable, and to please
even those whom you cannot inform, and who do not desire
to be informed. All this you may acquire, and
make habitual to you, with as little trouble as it
cost you to dance a minuet as well as you do.
You now dance it mechanically and well without thinking
of it.
I am surprised that you found but one letter for me at Manheim, for you ought to have found four or five; there are as many lying for you at your banker’s at Berlin, which I wish you had, because I always endeavored to put something into them, which, I hope, may be of use to you.