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THE LETTER.

"MADAME,

"Je suis pénétré de la douleur la plus vive, et réduit en même temps au désespoir par ce retour imprévu du caporal qui rend notre entrevue de ce soir la chose du monde la plus impossible.

"Mais vive la joie! et toute la mienne sera de penser

à vous.

"L'amour n'est rien sans sentiment.

"Et le sentiment est encore moins sans amour.

"On dit qu'on ne doit jamais se désespérer.

"On dit aussi que Monsieur le Caporal monte la garde mercredi: alors ce sera mon tour.

"Chacun à son tour.

"En attendant-Vive l'amour! et vive la bagatelle !

"Je suis, Madame,

"Avec tous les sentimens les plus respectueux "et les plus tendres, tout à vous,

"JAQUES ROCQUE."

It was but changing the corporal into the count, and saying nothing about mounting guard on Wednesday, and the letter was neither right nor wrong: so, to gratify the poor fellow, who stood trembling for my honour, his own, and the honour of his letter, I took the cream gently off it, and, whipping it up in my own way, I sealed it up, and sent him with it to Madame de L- ; and the next morning we pursued our journey to Paris.

PARIS.

WHEN a man can contest the point by dint of equipage, and carry all on floundering before him with half-a-dozen lackeys and a couple of cooks, 't is very well in such a place as Paris; drive in at which end of a street he will.

he

may

A poor prince who is weak in cavalry, and whose whole infantry does not exceed a single man, had best quit the field, and signalise himself in the cabinet, if he can get up into it: I say up into it, for there is no descending perpendicular amongst 'em with a "Me voici! mes enfans"-" Here I am, whatever many may think."

I own my first sensations, as soon as I was left solitary and alone in my own chamber in the hotel, were far from being so flattering as I had prefigured them. I walked up gravely to the window in my dusty black coat, and, looking through the glass, saw all the world in yellow, blue, and green, running at the ring of pleasure: the old with broken lances, and in helmets which had lost their vizards; the young in armour bright, which shone like gold, beplumed with each gay feather of the east; all, all tilting at it, like fascinated knights in tournaments of yore for fame and love.

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Alas, poor Yorick!" cried I, "what art thou doing here? On the very first onset of all this glittering clatter, thou art reduced to an atom: seek, seek some winding alley, with a tourniquet at the end of it, where chariot never rolled, or flambeau shot its rays; there thou mayst solace thy soul in converse sweet with some kind grisette of a barber's wife, and get into such coteries!

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May I perish if I do!" said I, pulling out the letter

which I had to present to Madame de R

"I'll wait

upon this lady the very first thing I do." So I called La Fleur to go seek me a barber directly, and come back and brush my coat.

THE WIG.

PARIS.

WHEN the barber came, he absolutely refused to have anything to do with my wig; 'twas either above or below his art: I had nothing to do but to take one ready made of his own recommendation.

"But I fear, friend," said I, "this buckle won't stand." "You may immerge it," replied he, "into the ocean, and it will stand."

K

"What a great scale is everything upon in this city!" thought I. "The utmost stretch of an English periwigmaker's ideas could have gone no further than to have ‘dipped it into a pail of water.' What difference! 't is like time to eternity."

I confess I do hate all cold conceptions, as I do the puny ideas which engender them; and am generally so struck with the great works of nature, that, for my own part, if I could help it, I never would make a comparison less than a mountain at least. All that can be said against the French sublime in this instance of it is this, that the grandeur is more in the word, and less in the thing. No doubt, the ocean fills the mind with vast ideas; but Paris being so far inland, it was not likely I should run post a hundred miles out of it to try the experiment:-the Parisian barber meant nothing.

The pail of water standing beside the great deep, makes certainly but a sorry figure in speech; but, 't will be said, it has one advantage: 't is in the next room, and the truth of the buckle may be tried in it, without more ado, in a single

moment.

In honest truth, and upon a more candid revision of the matter, the French expression professes more than it performs.

I think I can see the precise and distinguishing marks of national characters more in these nonsensical minutiœ, than in the most important matters of state; where great men of all nations talk and stalk so much alike, that I would not give ninepence to choose amongst them.

I was so long in getting from under my barber's hands, that it was too late to think of going with my letter to Madame R― that night; but when a man is once dressed at all points for going out, his reflections turn to little account: so, taking down the name of the Hôtel de Modène, where I lodged, I walked forth without any determination where to go:-"I shall consider of that," said I, "as I walk along."

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HAIL, ye small sweet courtesies of life! for smooth do ye

make

the road of it; like grace and beauty, which beget inclinations to love at first sight: 't is ye who open this door, and let the stranger in.

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"Pray, madam," said I, "have the goodness to tell me which way I must turn to go to the Opera Comique?" "Most willingly, monsieur," said she, laying aside her work.

I had given a cast with my eye into half-a-dozen shops as I came along, in search of a face not likely to be disordered by such an interruption: till, at last, this hitting my fancy, I had walked in.

She was working a pair of ruffles as she sat in a low chair on the far-side of the shop, facing the door.

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