Corpus of Modern Scottish Writing (CMSW) - www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/cmsw/ Document : 317 Title: Letter from Andrew Dalzel of Edinburgh University, 1 Jun 1785 Author(s): Dalzel, Andrew Edin. Coll. June 1. 1785 My dear Sir, I perused, with very great pleasure, your Letter of the 22d. of last month, which I received several days ago; and am very happy to hear that your situation with M. Chauvet promises to turn out both agreeable and advantageous. I approve very much of your availing yourself of the opportunity of acquiring as much acquaintance as poſsible with the French Language, not only because there are ſo many good books written in French, which a gentlemen of liberal Education ſhould be able to read as easily as his own Language, but because the understanding & speaking of french has become ſo universal, That one cannot be in good Company without feeling the neceſsity of ſome knowledge and facility of this ſort. The method in which you arrange your hours of study appears to be very judicious & proper. I am sensible that it is a very difficult thing to compose ones mind for study either in or near such a great & bustling & diſsipated place as London, at least before the novelty of the different scenes be in ſome degree over. I have found this to be the case in a great degree with myself, not only in London but even in Oxford. If you bring yourself to apply 7 or 8 hours in the day, you will do a great deal. With respect to English books, I agree with you that to study Hume's list & the 1st book of Blackstone carefully ill be as much as you can well manage, considering the rest of your employments. The being in the house of Commons on great occasions is a vast advantage you poſseſs. I ſhould have liked extremely to have been at your party when you attended the post Debate on the Irish propositions. Such long [¿] however would require a strong Constitution. You will have a pleasure through Life in recollecting the noble [¿] made by the rival orators. There is no place, next to the house of Commons, wher eyou will lear english more properly spoken than in the Theatre and therefore there is no harm, but the contrary, in your going thither pretty often: although I am not altogether pleased with the state of the pieces represented in the Hay-Market Theatre. I ſhould wish much to ſee Mrs Siddons in Comedy. I find she has been much criticized in Rosalind, & yet I [¿] it must have been a fine piece of playing. I suspect a party in the Interest of Mrs [¿] raie the [¿] against her in comedy, in an unreasonable degree. But a complete judgment ſhould not be [¿] from [¿] playing ſuch a part as Rosalind. I have no news from this place to give you. We have had the Gen. Aſembly, where there was ſome [¿] and debating, in which a great keenneſs was display'd as if the tax on ſervant maids, or the Irish propositions had been the ſubjects. The continuance of your Correspondence will be exceedingly agreeable to me. As however I am going to ſet off to morrow on a jaunt to airshire & galloway, & my [¿] will be ſomewhat desultory, I ſhall not desire you to write till about a month hence, when I ſhall have the pleasure of receiving regularly the Letters you direct to me here. Edin. will be very dull for a considerable while, till the [¿] & Mrs. Siddons [¿] it. Believe me to e, with great regard & affection, my drst. [¿] Yours moſt ſincerely And. Dalzel