<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE issue SYSTEM "spectator.dtd">
<?xml-stylesheet href="spectator.xsl" type="text/xsl"?>
<?cocoon-process type="xslt"?>
<issue>
<header>
<title>The Spectator</title>
  <number>no. 189</number>
  <date>1711-10-06</date>
  <author>Joseph Addison</author>
  <quotation>-----Patriae pietatis imago.-----Virg.</quotation>
  <translation>Virg. &#198;n. x. 824.</translation>
  <translation>An image of paternal tenderness.</translation>
  </header>
<text>
<paragraph>THE following Letter being written to my
bookseller, upon a Subject of which I treated some time since, I
shall publish it in this Paper, together with the Letter that was
inclosed in it.</paragraph>
<paragraph><italic>Mr. Buckley,</italic></paragraph>
<paragraph>Mr. SPECTATOR having of late descanted
upon the Cruelty of Parents to their Children, I have been induced
(at the Request of several of Mr. SPECTATOR'S Admirers) to inclose
this Letter, which I assure you is the Original from a Father to
his own Son, notwithstanding the latter gave but little or no
Provocation. It would be wonderfully obliging to the World, if Mr.
SPECTATOR would give his Opinion of it, in some of his
Speculations, and particularly to</paragraph>
<paragraph><italic>(Mr. Buckley)</italic></paragraph>
<paragraph><italic>Your Humblen Servant.</italic></paragraph>
<paragraph>SIRRAH,</paragraph>
<paragraph>You are a sawcy audacious Rascal, and both Fool
and Mad, and I care not a Farthing whether you comply or no; that
does not raze out my Impressions of your Insolence, going about
Railing at me, and the next Day to sollicit my Favour: These are
Inconsistencies, such as discover thy Reason depraved. To be brief;
I never desire to see your Face; and, Sirrah, if you go to the
Work-house, it is no Disgrace to me for you to be supported there;
and if you Starve in the Streets, I'll never give any thing
underhand in your Behalf If I have any more of your scribling
Nonsense I'll break your Head the first Time I set Sight on you.
You are a stubborn Beast; is this your Gratitude for my giving you
Mony? You Rogue, I'll better your Judgment, and give you a greater
Sense: of your Duty to (I regret to say) your Father, <italic>&#38;c.</italic></paragraph>
<paragraph><italic>P. S.</italic> It's Prudence for you to keep out of my Sight; for to reproach me,
that Might overcomes Right, on the Outside of your Letter, I shall
give you a great Knock on the Skull for it.</paragraph>
<paragraph>Was there ever such an Image of Paternal Tenderness! It was usual among some of the <italic>Greeks</italic>
to make their Slaves drink to Excess, and then expose them to their
Children, who by that means conceived an early Aversion to a Vice
which makes Men appear so monstrous and irrational. I have exposed
this Picture of an unnatural Father with the same Intention, that
its Deformity may deter others from its Resemblance. If the Reader
has a mind to see a Father of the same Stamp represented in the
most exquisite Stroaks of Humour, he may meet with it in one of the
finest Comedies that ever appeared upon the <italic>English</italic> Stage: I mean
the Part of Sir <italic>Sampson</italic><footnote name="(1)" url="../october_footnotes/footnote189.xml"></footnote> in <italic>Love for Love.</italic></paragraph>
<paragraph>I must not however engage my self blindly on the Side of the Son, to whom the fond
Letter above-written was directed. His Father calls him a <italic>sawcy and
audacious Rascal</italic> in the first Line, and I am afraid upon
Examination he will prove but an ungracious Youth. <italic>To go about
railing</italic> at his Father, and to find no other Place <italic>but the Outside
of his Letter</italic> to tell him <italic>that Might overcomes Right,</italic> if it does
not discover <italic>his Reason to be depraved,</italic> and <italic>that he is either Fool
or Mad,</italic> as the cholerick old Gentleman tells him, we may at least
allow that the Father will do very well in endeavouring to <italic>better
his Judgment,</italic> and <italic>give him a greater Sense of his Duty.</italic> But whether
this may be brought about <italic>by breaking his Head,</italic> or <italic>giving him a
great Knock on the Skull,</italic> ought, I think, to be well considered.
Upon the whole, I wish the Father has not met with his Match, and
that he may not be as equally paired with a Son, as the Mother in
<italic>Virgil.</italic></paragraph>
<quotation><italic>----Crudelis tu quoque mater:</italic></quotation>
<quotation><italic>Crudelis mater magis an puer Improbus ille?</italic></quotation>
<quotation><italic>Improbus ille puer, crudelis tu quoque mater.</italic><footnote name="(2)" url="../october_footnotes/footnote189.xml"></footnote></quotation>
<paragraph>Or like the Crow and her Egg, in the Greek Proverb,</paragraph>
<quotation>&#922;&#945;&#954;&#959;&#965; &#954;&#959;&#961;&#945;&#954;&#959;&#962; &#954;&#945;&#954;&#959;&#957; &#969;$#959;&#957;.<footnote name="(3)" url="../october_footnotes/footnote189.xml"></footnote></quotation>
<paragraph>I must here take Notice of a Letter which I
have received from an unknown Correspondent, upon the Subject of my
Paper, upon which the foregoing Letter is likewise founded. The
Writer of it seems very much concerned lest that Paper should seem
to give Encouragement to the Disobedience of Children towards their
Parents; but if the Writer of it will take the Pains to read it
over again attentively, I dare say his Apprehensions will vanish.
Pardon and Reconciliation are all the Penitent Daughter requests,
and all that I contend for in her Behalf; and in this Case I may
use the Saying of an eminent Wit, who, upon some great Mens
pressing him to forgive his Daughter who had married against his
Consent, told them he could refuse nothing to their Instances, but
that he would have them remember there was Difference between
<italic>Giving</italic> and <italic>Forgiving.</italic></paragraph>
<paragraph>I must confess, in all Controversies between
Parents and their Children, I am naturally prejudiced in favour of
the former. The Obligations on that Side can never be acquitted,
and I think it is one of the greatest Reflections upon Human Nature
that Parental Instinct should be a stronger Motive to Love than
Filial Gratitude; that the receiving of Favours should be a less
Inducement to Good-will, Tenderness and Commiseration, than the
conferring of them; and that the taking care of any Person should
endear the Child or Dependant more to the Parent or Benefactor,
than the Parent or Benefactor to the Child or Dependant; yet so it
happens, that for one cruel Parent we meet with a thousand
undutiful Children. This is indeed wonderfully contrived (as I have
formerly observed) for the Support of every living Species; but at
the same time that it shews the Wisdom of the Creator, it discovers
the Imperfection and Degeneracy of the Creature.</paragraph>
<paragraph>The Obedience of Children to their Parents is the Basis of all Government, and set
forth as the Measure of that Obedience which we owe to those whom
Providence hath placed over us.</paragraph>
<paragraph>It is Father <italic>Le Conte,</italic><footnote name="(4)" url="../october_footnotes/footnote189.xml"></footnote> if I am
not mistaken, who tells us how Want of Duty in this Particular is
punished among the Chinese, insomuch that if a Son should be known
to kill, or so much as to strike his Father, not only the Criminal
but his whole Family would be rooted out, nay the Inhabitants of
the Place where he lived would be put to the Sword, nay the Place
itself would be razed to the Ground, and its Foundations sown with
Salt; For, say they, there must have been an utter Depravation of
Manners in that Clan or Society of People who could have bred up
among them so horrible an Offender. To this I shall add a Passage
out of the first Book of <italic>Herodotus.</italic> That Historian in his Account
of the <italic>Persian</italic> Customs and Religion tells us, It is their Opinion
that no Man ever killed his Father, or that it is possible such a
Crime should be in Nature; but that if any thing like it should
ever happen, they conclude that the reputed Son must have been
Illegitimate, Supposititious, or begotten in Adultery. Their
Opinion in this Particular shews sufficiently what a Notion they
must have had of Undutifulness in general.</paragraph>
<paragraph>L.</paragraph>

<paragraph>1. Sir Sampson Legend in Congreve's play, which ends with the heroine's 'punishing an
inhuman father and rewarding a faithful lover.'</paragraph>
<paragraph>2. Ecl. 8</paragraph>
<paragraph>3. Of bad Crow bad Egg.</paragraph>
<paragraph>4. Present State of China, Part 2. Letter to the Cardinal d'Estrees.</paragraph>
</text>
</issue>
