to get as near it as I can. I will approach it
every day, possibly, I may arrive at it at last; at
least, what I am sure is in my own power, I will not
be distanced. Many fools (speaking of you) say
to me: What! would you have him perfect?
I answer: Why not? What hurt would it do
him or me? O, but that is impossible, say they;
I reply, I am not sure of that: perfection in
the abstract, I admit to be unattainable, but what
is commonly called perfection in a character I maintain
to be attainable, and not only that, but in every
man’s power. He hath, continue they, a
good head, a good heart, a good fund of knowledge,
which would increase daily: What would you have
more? Why, I would have everything more that
can adorn and complete a character. Will it do
his head, his heart, or his knowledge any harm, to
have the utmost delicacy of manners, the most shining
advantages of air and address, the most endearing attentions,
and the most engaging graces? But as he is, say
they, he is loved wherever he is known. I am
very glad of it, say I; but I would have him be liked
before he is known, and loved afterward. I would
have him, by his first abord and address, make people
wish to know him, and inclined to love him: he
will save a great deal of time by it. Indeed,
reply they, you are too nice, too exact, and lay too
much stress upon things that are of very little consequence.
Indeed, rejoin I, you know very little of the nature
of mankind, if you take those things to be of little
consequence: one cannot be too attentive to them;
it is they that always engage the heart, of which
the understanding is commonly the bubble. And
I would much rather that he erred in a point of grammar,
of history, of philosophy, etc., than in point
of manners and address. But consider, he is very
young; all this will come in time. I hope so;
but that time must be when he is young, or it will
never be at all; the right ‘pli’ must be
taken young, or it will never be easy or seem natural.
Come, come, say they (substituting, as is frequently
done, assertion instead of argument), depend upon
it he will do very well: and you have a great
deal of reason to be satisfied with him. I hope
and believe he will do well, but I would have him
do better than well. I am very well pleased with
him, but I would be more, I would be proud of him.
I would have him have lustre as well as weight.
Did you ever know anybody that reunited all these
talents? Yes, I did; Lord Bolingbroke joined all
the politeness, the manners, and the graces of a courtier,
to the solidity of a statesman, and to the learning
of a pedant. He was ‘omnis homo’;
and pray what should hinder my boy from being so too,
if he ’hath, as I think he hath, all the other
qualifications that you allow him? Nothing can
hinder him, but neglect of or inattention to, those
objects which his own good sense must tell him are,
of infinite consequence to him, and which therefore
I will not suppose him capable of either neglecting
or despising.