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Page:The Vicar of Wakefield (Volume 2) - Goldsmith (1766, 1st edition).djvu/29

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The Vicar of Wakefield.
27

matter. Upon my asking how he had been taught the art of a connoscento so very suddenly, he assured me that no­thing was more easy. The whole secret consisted in a strict adherence to two rules: the one always to observe, that the pic­ture might have been better if the pain­ter had taken more pains; and the other, to praise the works of Pietro Perugino. But, says he, as I once taught you how to be an author in London, I'll now undertake to instruct you in the art of picture buying at Paris.

"With this proposal I very readily closed, as it was a living, and now all my ambition was to live. I went there­fore to his lodgings, improved my dress by his assistance, and after some time, accompanied him to auctions of pictures, where the English gentry were expected to be purchasers. I was not a little sur­prised at his intimacy with people of the"best