London Tatler (Newspaper) - June 15, 1710, London, Middlesex i U By fola Claud from June 15. Co Saturday June 17. 1710c June 16. it has been the Endeavour of our Labours td extirpate from among the or Part of Mankind all iuch as are either prejudicial or td fo it ought to be no left bur Study td the Havock we have rhade by an Care of the growing But when we begin to inculcate Precept's to the Children of this except we could take them out of their we tit an Amendment is impracticable for we find the whole Species of our Youth and grown Men is incorrigibly with or according td the to which they turn By which Means the World is infatuated with the Love of Appearances of Thus the vain Mah takes for the proud Man Ceremony for the ambitious Man Power for Three Characters are indeed of very near but different ly received by Vanity makes Men and The Foundation of all which That they are grounded upon For if of to appear were in their own Hearts of the for the Acceptance they unfortunately aim at would be as from as Approbation is from Truth it By this Means they would have fome Rule to walk by and they may ever be that a good of Action will certainly receive a Effect It may bean Hint in iuch Cafes for a Man to ask of Whether he really is what he has a Mind to be thought If he he need not give much further What will the World is the common in Matters of Difficulty as if the Terror lay wholly in the which and not we our have of our From this one Source arife all the Importers in every Art and in all among all in as well as in Hence it that a vain Fellow takes twice as much Pains to be as would make him Can any one be better better or has any one more than f But the whole Scope his Looks and tends fo immediately to gain the good Opinion of all he that he lofes it for that only As it is the Nature of Vanity to Shews for fo does it alio turn Real into Imaginary by to what he has robs of what he There is nothing more to than to the Enjoyment of in He that cannot bear the of Merit with muft of For Fame being the general of whoever gives it to all to whom he relates any to his own He is as an open of that for whom all others pine in But fome Minds are fo incapable of any Temperance in this that on every Second in their you may an in their which they wait for your Approbation s and perhaps the next caft an Eye on a Glafs to fee how they like Walking the other Day in a neighbouring Inn of I faw a more happy and more graceful Orator than I ever before had or read of. A. of about Nineteen Years of was in an Indian and pleading a Caufe before a Glafs The young Fellow had a very good and to hold his Brief in his Hand rather to help his than that he wanted Notes for his further When I began to I he would foon be alarmed but he was fo 2ealous for and lb favourably received by the that he went on with great Fluency to inform the That he humbly hoped they would not let the Merit of the by the Youth anif Inexperience of the that in all Things he to their and they would not but that Strength of Argument and Force of may be confident with Grace of 3nd of To