| Description | Tunbridge wells 14th September 1805
Dear Sir I feel quite ashamed on looking at the date of your kind and flattering letter I have suffered more than a month to elapse without acknowledging it. I had left town for the summer when your protege Mr Phillips brought it, and of course have not had the pleasure of making his personal acquaintance. I however lost no time on its being transmitted to me to give orders that not only everything in my house might be shewn him but that every convenience might be afforded him for copying at his greatest care and leisure whatever he might think worthy of any attention. I think myself highly honoured indeed, my dear Sir by the great compliment you pay my taste, in thinking that the forms and ornaments I have adopted in the arrangement and finishing of my little collection of art can in any degree add to the merit of the interesting and useful productions that issue from your intensive and magnificent establishment. at the same time I observed to Mr Phillips that if there was any novelty in my house, it was only in the application of very old forms, that if the forms of my furniture were more agreeable than the generality of those one met with, it was only owing to my having not servibly imitated but endeavoured to make myself master of the spirit of the antique. that consequently imitating me was only imitating the imitator and that he would do better still in applying at once to the fountain head to those sources of beauty which lay open to every body I mean the most approved works on ancient art: Sir William Hamilton’s vases , Winckelman’s [P……?], [S…..?] Athens, Ionian antiquities &c. &c. &c. beauty consists not in ornaments it consists in outline where this is elegant and well understood the simplest object will be pleasing without a good outline , the richest and most decorated will only appear tawdry. Ornaments can only be of use after we have sufficiently surveyed and dwelt upon the perfection of the whole to make us find new pleasure in examining the detail. but for that reason it should always appear to be subordinate particularly in objects of utility I most sincerely regret my dear Sir that your health far from mending should as you seem to say be still more [in….] than when I had the pleasure of paying my respects to you at Soho. you are in the predicaments of a sovereign who cannot quit his capital and no capital Ever diffused such beneficial influence over a whole country as that of your creating does, in the midst of which you live
I have the honour to remain with the highest regard dear sir your most [honoured?] and obliged humble servant
Tho. Hope |