unless, it be a very mean and contemptible one, which
those make there who silently vote, and who do ‘pedibus
ire in sententiam’. Foreign affairs, when
skillfully managed, and supported by a parliamentary
reputation, lead to whatever is most considerable in
this country. You have the languages necessary
for that purpose, with a sufficient fund of historical
and treaty knowledge; that is to say, you have the
matter ready, and only want the manner. Your objects
being thus fixed, I recommend to you to have them
constantly in your thoughts, and to direct your reading,
your actions, and your words, to those views.
Most people think only ‘ex re nata’, and
few ‘ex professo’: I would have you
do both, but begin with the latter. I explain
myself: Lay down certain principles, and reason
and act consequently from them. As, for example,
say to yourself, I will make a figure in parliament,
and in order to do that, I must not only speak, but
speak very well. Speaking mere common sense will
by no means do; and I must speak not only correctly
but elegantly; and not only elegantly but eloquently.
In order to do this, I will first take pains to get
an habitual, but unaffected, purity, correctness and
elegance of style in my common conversation; I will
seek for the best words, and take care to reject improper,
inexpressive, and vulgar ones. I will read the
greatest masters of oratory, both ancient and modern,
and I will read them singly in that view. I will
study Demosthenes and Cicero, not to discover an old
Athenian or Roman custom, nor to puzzle myself with
the value of talents, mines, drachms, and sesterces,
like the learned blockheads in us; but to observe
their choice of words, their harmony of diction, their
method, their distribution, their exordia, to engage
the favor and attention of their audience; and their
perorations, to enforce what they have said, and to
leave a strong impression upon the passions. Nor
will I be pedant enough to neglect the modern; for
I will likewise study Atterbury, Dryden, Pope, and
Bolingbroke; nay, I will read everything that I do
read in that intention, and never cease improving
and refining my style upon the best models, till at
last I become a model of eloquence myself, which,
by care, it is in every man’s power to be.
If you set out upon this principle, and keep it constantly
in your mind, every company you go into, and every
book you read, will contribute to your improvement,
either by showing you what to imitate, or what to avoid.
Are .you to give an account of anything to a mixed
company? or are you to endeavor to persuade either
man or woman? This principle, fixed in your mind,
will make you carefully attend to the choice of your
words, and to the clearness and harmony of your diction.
So much for your parliamentary object; now to the foreign one.