You know, by experience, that I grudge no expense
in your education, but I will positively not keep you a flapper. You may read, in Dr. Swift, the description of these flappers, and the use they were of to their friends.
Dancing.—Learn to dance, not so much for the
sake of dancing, as for coming into a room,
and presenting yourself genteelly and gracefully.
Women, whom you ought to endeavor to please,
cannot forgive a vulgar and awkward air and gesture;
il leur faut du brillant. The generality of men
are pretty like them, and are equally taken by the
same exterior graces. [Same date.]
Finery Unfit for the Old.—I am very glad
that you have received the diamond buckles safe:
all I desire in return for them is, that they may be
buckled upon your feet, and that your stockings may
not hide them. I should be sorry you were an
egregious fop; but I protest that, of the two, I
would rather have you a fop than a sloven. I think
negligence in my own dress, even at my age, when
certainly I expect no advantages from my dress,
would be indecent with regard to others. I have
done with fine clothes; but I will have my plain
clothes fit me, and made like other people's. In the