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her stature be equal to that of an ear of green corn, and her girth a handful.

'We will send our mandarines ambassadors to clothe her, and to conduct her to us, and we will meet her on the bank of the great river, making her to leap up into our chariot. She may with us worship her own god, together with twenty-four virgins of her own choosing; and she may sing with them as the turtle in the spring. You, O father and friend, complying with this our desire, may be an occasion of uniting in perpetual friendship our high empire with your European kingdoms, and we may embrace your laws as the ivy embraces the tree; and we ourselves may scatter our royal blood into your provinces; warming the chief of your princes with the amorous fire of our Amazons, the resembling pictures of some of which our said mandarines ambassadors shall convey to you.

f

'We exhort you to keep in peace two good religious families of missionaries, the black sons of Ig natius, and the white and black sons of Dominicus, that the counsel, both of the one and the other, may serve as a guide to us in our government, and a light to interpret the divine law, as the oil cast into the sea produces light.

To conclude: we rising up in our throne to embrace you, we declare you our ally and confederate; and have ordered this leaf to be sealed with our imperial signet; in our royal city the head of the world. The eighth day of the third lunation, and the fourth year of our reign.'

Letters from Rome say, the whole conversation,

f Not in the Italian original, of the posterior editions, though in the Spect. in folio.

both among gentlemen and ladies, has turned upon the subject of this epistle, ever since it arrived. The jesuit who translated it says, it loses much of the majesty of the original in the Italian. It seems there was an offer of the same nature made by a predecessor of the present emperor to Lewis XIII. of France, but no lady of that court would take the voyage, that sex not being at that time so much used in politic negotiations. The manner of treating the pope is, according to the Chinese ceremonial, very respectful: for the emperor writes to him with the quill of a virgin ostrich, which was never used before but in writing prayers. Instructions are preparing for the lady who shall have so much. zeal as to undertake this pilgrimage, and be an empress for the sake of her religion. The principal of the Indian missionaries has given in a list of the reigning sins in China, in order to prepare the indulgencies necessary to this lady and her retinue, in advancing the interests of the Roman catholic religion in those kingdoms."

'TO THE SPECTATOR GENERAL.

'May it please your Honour,

I HAVE of late seen French hats of a prodigious magnitude pass by my observatory.

T.1

'JOHN SLY.'

To any other prince, it is said in the untranslated part of the letter, that the emperor would have written with the pen of a peacock.

The whole paper is a banter on the most immoral practices of the jesuit missionaries in China, their impious abominable corruptions, profanations, denials, &c. of Christianity, of which the curious reader may see authentic instances and proofs in Paschal's eloquent Lettres Provinciales, and in the Hist. Gen. des Voyages, passim, 4to. xix tomes.

i By Steele. See No. 324, ad fin. and No. 526, and note.

At the Hay-market, Wednesday, Nov. 26, The Faithful Shepherd, an opera composed by Mr. Hendel. Performed by S. Cavaliero V. Pellegrini, S. Valent. Urbani, signora M. de L'Epine, Mrs. Barbier, and Mr. Leveridge. See sir J. Hawkin's Hist. of Music, passim.

No. 546. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1712.

Omnia patefacienda, ut ne quid omnino quod venditor norit, emptor ignoret. • TULL. Everything should be fairly told, that the buyer may not be ignorant of any thing which the seller knows.

It gives me very great scandal to observe, whereever I go, how much skill, in buying all manner of goods, there is necessary to defend yourself from being cheated in whatever you see exposed to sale. My reading makes such a strong impression upon me, that I should think myself a cheat in my way, if I should translate any thing from another tongue, and not acknowledge it to my readers. I understood from common report, that Mr. Cibber was introducing a French play upon our stage, and thought myself concerned to let the town know what was his and what was foreign. When I came to the rehearsal, I found the house so partial to one of their own fraternity, that they gave every thing which was said such grace, emphasis, and force in their action, that it was no easy matter to make any judgment of the performance. Mrs. Oldfield,' who, it seems, is the heroic daughter, had so just a conception of her part, that her action made what she spoke appear decent, just, and noble. The passions of terror and compassion they made me believe were

k

* Ximena, or the Heroic Daughter; a tragedy taken from the Cid of Racine, by C. Cibber.

1 See Tat. Nos. 212, 239, verses, &c.

very artfully raised, and the whole conduct of the play artful and surprising. We authors do not much relish the endeavours of players in this kind; but have the same disdain as physicians and lawyers have when attorneys and apothecaries give advice. Cibber himself took the liberty to tell me that he expected I would do him justice, and allow the play well prepared for his spectators, whatever it was for his readers. He added very many particulars not uncurious concerning the manner of taking an audience, and laying wait not only for their superficial applause, but also for insinuating into their affections and passions, by the artful management of the look, voice, and gesture of the speaker. I could not but consent that the Heroic Daughter appeared in the rehearsal a moving entertainment wrought out of a great and exemplary virtue.

The advantages of action, show, and dress, on these occasions, are allowable, because the merit consists in being capable of imposing upon us to our advantage and entertainment. All that I was going to say about the honesty of an author in the sale of his ware was, that he ought to own all that he had borrowed from others, and lay in a clear light all that he gives his spectators for their money, with an account of the first manufactures. But I intended to give the lecture of this day upon the common and prostituted behaviour of traders in ordinary commerce. The philosopher made it a rule of trade, that your profit ought to be the common profit; and it is unjust to make any step towards gain, wherein the gain of even those to whom you sell is not consulted. A man may deceive himself if he thinks fit, but he is no better than a cheat who sells any thing without telling the exceptions

against it, as well as what is to be said to its advantage. The scandalous abuse of language and hardening of conscience, which may be observed every day in going from one place to another, is what makes a whole city to an unprejudiced eye a den of thieves. It was no small pleasure to me for this reason to remark, as I passed by Cornhill, that the shop of that worthy, honest, though lately unfortu nate citizen, Mr. John Morton," so well known in the linen trade, is fitting up anew. Since a man has been in a distressed condition, it ought to be a great satisfaction to have passed through it in such a manner as not to have lost the friendship of those who suffered with him, but to receive an honourable acknowledgment of his honesty from those very persons to whom the law had consigned his estate.

The misfortune of this citizen is like to prove of a very general advantage to those who shall deal with him hereafter: for the stock with which he now sets up being the loan of his friends, he cannot expose that to the hazards of giving credit, but enters into a ready-money trade, by which means he will both buy and sell the best and cheapest. He imposes upon himself a rule of affixing the value of each piece he sells to the piece itself; so that the most ignorant servant or child will be as good a buyer at his shop as the most skilful in the trade. For all which, you have all his hopes and fortune for your security. To encourage dealing after this way, there is not only the avoiding the most infamous guilt in ordinary bartering; but this observation that he who buys with ready money saves as

See Spect. No. 248, where the letter 'I have heard of the casualties &c.' was written by sir William Scawin. See also Spect. No. 346.

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