登陆注册
15429000000285

第285章 LETTER CLXXXI(3)

He was impeached after the death of Queen Anne,only because that,having been engaged in the same measures with those who were necessarily to be impeached,his impeachment,for form's sake,became necessary.But he was impeached without acrimony,and without the lest intention that he should suffer,notwithstanding the party violence of those times.The question for his impeachment,in the House of Commons,was carried by many fewer votes than any other question of impeachment;and Earl Stanhope,then Mr.Stanhope,and Secretary'of State,who impeached him,very soon after negotiated and concluded his accommodation with the late King;to whom he was to have been presented the next day.But the late Bishop of Rochester,Atterbury,who thought that the Jacobite cause might suffer by losing the Duke of Ormond,went in all haste,and prevailed with the poor weak man to run away;assuring him that he was only to be gulled into a disgraceful submission,and not to be pardoned in consequence of it.When his subsequent attainder passed,it excited mobs and disturbances in town.He had not a personal enemy in the world;and had a thousand friends.All this was simply owing to his natural desire of pleasing,and to the mechanical means that his education,not his parts,had given him of doing it.The other instance is the late Duke of Marlborough,who studied the art of pleasing,because he well knew the importance of it:he enjoyed and used it more than ever man did.He gained whoever he had a mind to gain;and he had a mind to gain everybody,because he knew that everybody was more or less worth gaining.

Though his power,as Minister and General,made him many political and party enemies,they did not make him one personal one;and the very people who would gladly have displaced,disgraced,and perhaps attainted the Duke of Marlborough,at the same time personally loved Mr.Churchill,even though his private character was blemished by sordid avarice,the most unamiable of all vices.He had wound up and turned his whole machine to please and engage.He had an inimitable sweetness and gentleness in his countenance,a tenderness in his manner of speaking,a graceful dignity in every motion,and an universal and minute attention to the least things that could possibly please the least person.This was all art in him;art of which he well knew and enjoyed the advantages;for no man ever had more interior ambition,pride,and avarice,than he had.

Though you have more than most people of your age,you have yet very little experience and knowledge of the world;now,I wish to inoculate mine upon you,and thereby prevent both the dangers and the marks of youth and inexperience.If you receive the matter kindly,and observe my prescriptions scrupulously,you will secure the future advantages of time and join them to the present inestimable ones of one-and-twenty.

I most earnestly recommend one thing to you,during your present stay at Paris.I own it is not the most agreeable;but I affirm it to be the most useful thing in the world to one of your age;and therefore I do hope that you will force and constrain yourself to do it.I mean,to converse frequently,or rather to be in company frequently with both men and women much your superiors in age and rank.I am very sensible that,at your age,'vous y entrez pour peu de chose,et meme souvent pour rien,et que vous y passerez meme quelques mauvais quart-d'heures';but no matter;you will be a solid gainer by it:you will see,hear,and learn the turn and manners of those people;you will gain premature experience by it;and it will give you a habit of engaging and respectful attentions.Versailles,as much as possible,though probably unentertaining:the Palais Royal often,however dull:foreign ministers of the first rank,frequently,and women,though old,who are respectable and respected for their rank or parts;such as Madame de Pusieux,Madame de Nivernois,Madame d'Aiguillon,Madame Geoffrain,etc.This 'sujetion',if it be one to you,will cost you but very little in these three or four months that you are yet to pass in Paris,and will bring you in a great deal;nor will it,nor ought it,to hinder you from being in a more entertaining company a great part of the day.'Vous pouvez,si vous le voulex,tirer un grand parti de ces quatre mois'.May God make you so,and bless you!Adieu.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 当怪盗少女遇上天才侦探

    当怪盗少女遇上天才侦探

    童氏的存在是为了收回原属圆明园院中的宝物,而“夜玫瑰”是他们在国际各界通用的代号,这一回,身为童家第185代传人的童瞳和童纯将在日本展开行动,这回接手案子的是在侦探界被誉为“天才”的小侦探仓木沉楠,一场惊心动魄,扣人心弦的华丽交锋正式开场,当爱情来临时,他或她,又该怎样选择,看怪盗少女如何玩转东京!
  • 总裁撩妹计划

    总裁撩妹计划

    “天青色等烟雨而我在等你,老公你快看...”吃干抹净...“好饿好饿,老公我们出去吃...”吃干抹净...“老公学习太难了,三五太难了,我...”继续吃干抹净...“离远你混蛋!”“小米,快来给我吃一口,乖~”
  • 剑圣拯救世界

    剑圣拯救世界

    虚空将吞噬世界。拥有神秘玉石之人,得到抵抗虚空的力量。想要更强,那就去掠夺。即便是剑圣,也想要拯救世界。
  • 幸好有晴天

    幸好有晴天

    有些爱情轰轰烈烈天翻地覆,可结束时终究还是要化云成烟。除了你自己,没有谁会记得爱有多深,恨有多重,痛有多难熬。在追逐爱情的荒漠中,无论你付出过多少得到过多少,总难免有一天发现自己落了单。从此一个人在漫无人烟的荒野里,踽踽独行。
  • 灵之录

    灵之录

    因为爷爷的遗物让男主以及父亲这二人穿越到不知名的世界,父子两失散与异世界开始寻亲之旅
  • 罂粟系列之心已碎当初何必再爱

    罂粟系列之心已碎当初何必再爱

    【她们,儿时便看透世间冷暖,为了复仇来到圣熙学院,遇到了他们他们一次又一次的伤害,她们一次又一次的原谅,最后她们的心凉了,她们不相信爱情了,最后发誓跟他们同归于尽.】
  • 荒途上的黎明

    荒途上的黎明

    我很害怕绝望,而同时绝望又能带给我很多希望
  • TFBOYS冰晶之恋

    TFBOYS冰晶之恋

    当三个普通与女孩遇上三小只,会展开怎样的故事?请尽情期待。
  • FateDaisakusen

    FateDaisakusen

    那一刻——你跟我说:“等我回来”。然后,我一直等到如今。可是,我已经厌烦了。我不想再空虚的等下去了。于是我来了。Fate——InfiniteEyesRoleSystem(命运之无限视野任务系统)它会替我找到你的——弟弟,吾王!书友群——242215899、欢迎来吐槽!
  • 蒹葭怨

    蒹葭怨

    自幼便被封为北燕太子的高越,一人之下,万人之上,却无心政权,终日厮混与内帏之中;他身上流淌着贵族的血液,自幼善骑射,却气质阴柔内心深处盘根错节着无数脆弱的神经。年轻的皇子,容貌俊美,优雅矜贵,举世无双,坐拥锦绣万里,尊受万人敬仰,却极为优柔多情,总是在不经意中揣摩着各色女子······人世间,红尘外,命运无常,一生如梦似黄粱;当明月照亮天涯,秋水无边,最后谁又得到了蒹葭?