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To Thomas Mann Randolph, Jr. Paris, Aug. 27, 1786
DEAR SIR, -- I am honoured with your favour of the 16th
instant, and desirous, without delay, of manifesting my wishes to be
useful to you I shall venture to you some thoughts on the course of
your studies, which must be submitted to the better choice with which
you are surrounded. A longer race through life may have entitled me
to seize some truths which have not yet been presented to your
observation & more intimate knowledge of the country in which you are
to live & of the circumstances in which you will be placed, may
enable me to point your attention to the branches of science which
will administer the most to your happiness there. The foundations
which you have laid in languages and mathematics are proper for every
superstructure. The former exercises our memory while that and no
other faculty is yet matured & prevents our acquiring habits of
idleness. The latter gives exercise to our reason, as soon as that
has acquired a certain degree of strength, and stores the mind with
truths which are useful in other branches of science. At this moment
then a second order of preparation is to commence. I shall propose
to you that it be extensive, comprehending Astronomy, Natural
Philosophy (or Physics), Natural History, Anatomy, Botany &
Chemistry. No inquisitive mind will be content to be ignorant of any
of these branches. But I would advise you to be contented with a
course of lectures in most of them, without attempting to make
yourself master of the whole. This is more than any genius joined to
any length of life is equal to. You will find among them some one
study to which your mind will more particularly attach itself. This
then I would pursue & propose to attain eminence in. Your own
country furnishes the most aliment for Natural History, Botany &
Physics & as you express a fondness for the former you might make it
your principal object, endeavoring however to make yourself more
acquainted with the two latter than with other branches likely to be
less useful. In fact you will find botany offering it's charms to
you at every step -- during summer & Physics in every season. All
these branches of science will be better attained by attending
courses of lectures in them. You are now in a place where the best
courses upon earth are within your reach and being delivered in your
native language -- you lose no part of their benefit. Such an
opportunity you will never again have. I would therefore strongly
press on you to fix no other limit to your stay in Edinborough than
your having got thro this whole course. The omission of any one part
of it will be an affliction & loss to you as long as you live.
Beside the comfort of knowledge, every science is auxiliary to every
other. While you are attending these courses you can proceed by
yourself in a regular series of historical reading. It would be a
waste of time to attend a professor of this. It is to be acquired
from books and if you pursue it by yourself you can accommodate it to
your other reading so as to fill up those chasms of time not
otherwise appropriated. There are portions of the day too when the
mind should be eased, particularly after dinner it should be applied
to lighter occupation: history is of this kind. It exercises
principally the memory. Reflection also indeed is necessary but not
generally in a laborious degree. To conduct yourself in this branch
of science you have only to consider what aeras of it merit a grasp &
what a particular attention, & in each aera also to distinguish
between the countries the knowledge of whose history will be useful &
those where it suffices only to be not altogether ignorant. Having
laid down your plan as to the branches of history you would pursue,
the order of time will be your sufficient guide. After what you have
read in antient history I should suppose Millot's digest would be
useful & sufficient. The histories of Greece and Rome are worthy a
good degree of attention, they should be read in the original
authors. The transition from antient to modern history will be best
effected by reading Gibbon's. Then a general history of the
principal states of Europe, but particular ones of England. Here too
the original writers are to be preferred. Kennet published a
considerable collection of these in 3 vols. folio, but there are some
others not in his collection well worth being read. After the
history of England that of America will claim your attention. Here
too original authors & not compilers are best. An author who writes
of his own times or of times near his own presents in his own ideas &
manner the best picture of the moment of which he writes. History
need not be hurried but may give way to the other sciences because
history can be pursued after you shall have left your present
situation as well as while you remain in it. When you shall have got
thro this second order of preparation the study of the law is to be
begun. This like history is to be acquired from books. All the aid
you will want will be a catalogue of the books to be read & the order
in which they are to be read. It being absolutely indifferent in
what place you carry on this reading I should propose your doing it
in France. The advantages of this will be that you will at the same
time acquire the habit of speaking French which is the object of a
year or two. You may be giving attention to such of the fine arts as
your turn may lead you to & you will be forming an acquaintance with
the individuals & characters of a nation with whom we must long
remain in the closest intimacy & to whom we are bound by the strong
ties of gratitude and policy. A nation in short of the most amiable
dispositions on earth, the whole mass of which is penetrated with an
affection for us. You might before you return to your own country
make a visit to Italy also.
I should have performed the office of but half a friend were I
to confine myself to the improvement of the mind only. Knowledge
indeed is a desirable, a lovely possession, but I do not scruple to
say that health is more so. It is of little consequence to store the
mind with science if the body be permitted to become debilitated. If
the body be feeble, the mind will not be strong -- the sovereign
invigorator of the body is exercise, and of all exercises walking is
best. A horse gives but a kind of half exercise, and a carriage is
no better than a cradle. No one knows, till he tries, how easily a
habit of walking is acquired. A person who never walked three miles
will in the course of a month become able to walk 15 or 20 without
fatigue. I have known some great walkers & had particular accounts
of many more: and I never knew or heard of one who was not healthy &
long lived. This species of exercise therefore is much to be
advised. Should you be disposed to try it, as your health has been
feeble, it will be necessary for you to begin with a little, & to
increase it by degrees. For the same reason you must probably at
first ascribe to it the hours most precious for study, I mean those
about the middle of the day. But when you shall find yourself strong
you may venture to take your walks in the evening after the digestion
of the dinner is pretty well over. This is making a compromise
between health & study. The latter would be too much interrupted
were you to take from it the early hours of the day and habit will
soon render the evening's exercise as salutary as that of the
morning. I speak this from my own experience having, from an
attachment to study, very early in life, made this arrangement of my
time, having ever observed it, & still observing it, & always with
perfect success. Not less than two hours a day should be devoted to
exercise, and the weather should be little regarded. A person not
sick will not be injured by getting wet. It is but taking a cold
bath which never gives a cold to any one. Brute animals are the most
healthy, & they are exposed to all weather and, of men, those are
healthiest who are the most exposed. The recipe of those two
descriptions of beings is simple diet, exercise and the open air, be
it's state what it will; and we may venture to say that this recipe
will give health & vigor to every other description. -- By this time
I am sure you will think I have sermonized enough. I have given you
indeed a lengthy lecture. I have been led through it by my zeal to
serve you; if in the whole you find one useful counsel, that will be
my reward, & a sufficient one. Few persons in your own country have
started from as advantageous ground as that whereon you will be
placed. Nature and fortune have been liberal to you. Every thing
honourable or profitable there is placed within your own reach, and
will depend on your own efforts. If these are exerted with
assiduity, and guided by unswerving honesty, your success is
infallible: and that it may be as great as you wish is the sincere
desire of Dear Sir, your most affectionate humble servant.
P.S. Be so good as to present me affectionately to your brother
& cousin.
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