PERSIAN LETTERS
LETTER 83
Rica to Ibben, at Smyrna
ALTHOUGH the French are great talkers, there is nevertheless among them
a sort of silent dervishes, called Carthusians. They are said to cut out
their tongues on entering the convent; and it is much to be desired that
all other dervishes would deprive themselves in the same way of that which
their profession renders useless to them.
Talking of these taciturn people reminds me
that there are others who excel them in taciturnity, and who have a very
remarkable gift. These are they who know how to talk without saying anything;
and who carry on a conversation for two whole hours without its being possible
to discover their meaning, to rehearse their talk, or to remember a word
of what they have said.
This class of people are adored by the women;
but not so much as some others who have received from nature the charming
gift of smiling at the proper time, that is to say, every moment; and who
receive with delighted approbation everything the ladies say.
But these people carry wit to its highest
pitch; for they can detect subtlety in everything, and perceive a thousand
little ingenious touches in the merest commonplaces.
I know others of them who are fortunate enough
to be able to introduce into conversation inanimate things, and to make
a long story about an embroidered coat, a white peruke, a snuff-box, a
cane, a pair of gloves. It is well to begin in the street to make oneself
heard by the noise of a coach and a thundering rap at the door: such a
prologue paves the way for the rest of the discourse; and when the exordium
is good, it secures toleration for all the nonsense which follows, but
which fortunately, arrives too late to be detected.
I assure you that these little gifts, which
with us are of no account, are of great advantage here to those who are
happy enough to possess them; and that a sensible man has no chance of
shining where they are displayed.
Paris, the 6th of the second
moon of Rebiab, 1715.