The author examines the salon as a social institution in France and its transplantation to England, tracing origins, characteristics, and the eighteenth-century salon scene. He explores earlier English salons, conversation parties, literary assemblies, and the Bluestocking circle, and profiles figures such as Mrs. Montagu as patron and influence on the London salon. He argues that conversation, clubs, and familiar correspondence fostered new literary forms—intimate biography, diaries, and familiar letters—and shaped the social spirit of English letters. Close readings consider how conversational practice affected writers including Johnson, Walpole, Fanny Burney, and Boswell, and assess the results of integrating social intercourse with literary production.