The Potiphar Papers 
 
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Title: The Potiphar Papers 
Author: George William Curtis 
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[Illustration: George William Curtis] 
THE POTIPHAR PAPERS 
BY 
GEORGE WILLIAM CURTIS 
[Illustration: ILLUSTRATED BY A. HOPPIN] 
 
"Imagination fondly stoops to trace The parlor splendors of that festive 
place." 
_Goldsmith's Deserted Village._ 
"Manners are what vex or soothe, corrupt or purify, exalt or debase, 
barbarise or refine us, by a constant, steady, uniform, insensible 
operation, like that of the air we breathe in." 
_Burke's First Letter on a Regicide Peace._ 
"And I do seriously approve of that saying of yours, 'that you would 
rather be a civil, well-governed, well-grounded, temperate, poor angler, 
than a drunken lord.' But I hope there is none such." 
_Walton's Angler._ 
"'Mon petit faquin de philosophé,' dit le Chevalier de Grammont, 'tu 
fais ici le Caton de Normandie.'" 
"'Est-ce que je mens?' poursuivit Saint-Evremond." 
_Memoires de Grammont._ 
 
PREFATORY LETTER TO REV. CREAM CHEESE. 
REV. AND DEAR SIR: 
It is surely unnecessary to call the attention of so astute an observer, 
and so austere a critic, as yourself, to the fact that the title of the leading 
essay in this little volume (of which, permit me to say, you are so
essential an ornament) is marked as a quotation; and a quotation, as you 
will very well remember, from the lips of our friend, Mrs, Potiphar, 
herself. 
Therefore, Rev. Sir, your judgment, which, you must allow me to say, 
is no less impartial than your experience is profound, will suggest to 
you that the subject of that essay (of the points of which the succeeding 
sketches are but elaborations) is the aspect of what is currently termed 
"our best society"--whether with reason or not, is beside the purpose. 
Your pastoral charity, I am convinced, will persuade you to direct the 
attention of your parishioners to this fact, and to assure them, that, 
when you prepared your timely treatise upon the progress of purple 
chasubles among the Feejee islanders, you were not justly amenable to 
the charge of omitting all notice of the cultivation of artificial flowers 
by the Grim Tartars. The latter are, I believe, a very estimable people, 
but they were not the subjects of your consideration. 
To those in your parish, and elsewhere, who have thought fit to suppose 
that Mrs. Potiphar is Mrs. Somebody-else,--what can we say? 
conscious as we are, that they who have once known that lady could 
never confound her with another. 
But for those who have actually supposed you, yourself, Reverend Sir, 
to be, not somebody else, but nobody, (!) we can only smile 
compassionately, and express the hope that a broader experience may 
give them greater wisdom. 
In taking leave of you, Sir, I know that I express the warmest wish of a 
large, a very large parish (might almost say, diocese) that you may long 
survive. For your parish is fully, and, as I think, most correctly 
persuaded, that while there is a Cream Cheese, there will always be a 
Mrs. Potiphar. 
With all proper regard, 
I am, 
Reverend and Dear Sir, 
Your very obedient, 
humble servant, 
THE EDITOR. 
NEW YORK, December, 1853. 
 
I.
"OUR BEST SOCIETY." 
If gilt were only gold, or sugar-candy common sense, what a fine thing 
our society would be! If to lavish money upon objets de vertu, to wear 
the most costly dresses, and always to have them cut in the height of 
the fashion; to build houses thirty feet broad, as if they were palaces; to 
furnish them with all the luxurious devices of Parisian genius; to give    
    
		
	
	
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