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- Gentleman, by Laurence Sterne
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- Title: The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman
- Author: Laurence Sterne
- Commentator: George Saintsbury
- Release Date: March 26, 2012 [EBook #39270]
- Language: English
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- Everyman’s Library
- Edited By Ernest Rhys
- FICTION
- TRISTRAM SHANDY
- With An Introduction By
- GEORGE SAINTSBURY
- This is No. 617 of _EVERYMAN’S LIBRARY_. The Publishers will be
- pleased to send freely to all applicants a list of the published
- and projected volumes, arranged under the following sections:
- Travel * Science * Fiction
- Theology & Philosophy
- History * Classical
- For Young People
- Essays * Oratory
- Poetry & Drama
- Biography
- Reference
- Romance
- [Decoration]
- In four styles of binding: Cloth, Flat Back, Coloured Top;
- Leather, Round Corners, Gilt Top; Library Binding in Cloth,
- & Quarter Pigskin
- London: J. M. DENT & SONS, Ltd.
- New York: E. P. DUTTON & CO.
- [Decorative Text:
- A TALE
- WHICH
- HOLDETH
- CHILDREN
- FROM PLAY
- & OLD MEN
- FROM THE
- CHIMNEY
- CORNER
- Sir Philip Sidney]
- [Decorative Text:
- THE LIFE &
- OPINIONS of
- TRISTRAM
- SHANDY *
- GENTLEMAN
- By LAURENCE
- * STERNE
- London & Toronto
- J·M·Dent & Sons
- Ltd. * New York
- E·P·Dutton & Co]
- First Issue of this Edition 1912
- Reprinted 1915, 1917
- INTRODUCTION
- It can hardly be said that Sterne was an unfortunate person during his
- lifetime, though he seems to have thought himself so. His childhood was
- indeed a little necessitous, and he died early, and in debt, after some
- years of very bad health. But from the time when he went to Cambridge,
- things went on the whole very fairly well with him in respect of
- fortune; his ill-health does not seem to have caused him much disquiet;
- his last ten years gave him fame, flirting, wandering, and other
- pleasures and diversions to his heart’s content; and his debts only
- troubled those he left behind him. He delighted in his daughter; he was
- able to get rid of his wife, when he was more than usually _fatigatus et
- aegrotus_ of her, with singular ease. During the unknown, or almost
- unknown, middle of his life he had friends of the kind most congenial to
- him; and both in his time of preparation and his time of production in
- literature, he was able to indulge his genius in a way by no means
- common with men of letters. If his wish to die in a certain manner and
- circumstance was only bravado--and borrowed bravado--still it was
- granted; and it is quite certain that to him an old age of real illness
- would have been unmitigated torture. Even if we admit the ghastly
- stories of the fate of his remains, there was very little reason why any
- one should not have anticipated Mr. Swinburne’s words on the morrow of
- Sterne’s death and said, “Oh! brother, the gods were good to you,”
- though even then he might have said it with a sort of mental reservation
- on the question whether Sterne had been very good to the gods.
- Nemesis, for the purpose of adjusting things, played him the
- exceptionally savage trick of using the intervention of his idolised
- daughter. Little or nothing seems to be known of “Lydia Sterne de
- Medalle,” as she was pleased to sign herself; “Mrs. Medalle,” as her
- bluff British contemporaries call her. But that she must have been
- either a very silly, a very stupid, or an excessively callous person,
- appears certain. It would seem, indeed, to require a combination of the
- flightiness and lack of taste which her father too often displayed, with
- the stolidity which (from rather unfair inference through Mrs. Shandy)
- is sometimes supposed to have characterised her mother, to prompt or
- permit a daughter to publish such a collection of letters as those which
- were first given to the world in 1775. Charity, not unsupported by
- probability, has trusted that Madame de Medalle could not read Latin,
- but she certainly could read English; and only an utterly corrupted
- heart, or an incurably dense or feather-brained head, could hide from
- her the fact that not a few of the English letters she published were
- damaging to her father’s character. Her alleged excuse--that her mother,
- who was then dead, had desired her, if any letters should be published
- under her father’s name, to publish these, and that the “Yorick and
- Eliza” correspondence had appeared--is utterly insufficient. For Mrs.
- Sterne, of whose conduct we know nothing unfavourable, and one or two
- things decidedly to her credit, could only have meant “such of these as
- will put your father in a favourable light,” else she would have
- published them herself. Yet though Lydia could, while taking no
- editorial trouble whatever, go out of her way to make a silly missish
- apology for publishing a passage in which her charms and merits are
- celebrated, she seems never to have given a thought to what she was
- doing in other ways. Nor were Sterne’s misfortunes in this way over with
- the publication of these things; for the subsequently discovered
- Fourmentelle correspondence sunk him, with precise judges, a little
- deeper. No doubt _Tristram Shandy_, the _Sentimental Journey_, and the
- curious stories or traditions about their author, were not exactly
- calculated to give Sterne a very high reputation with grave authorities.
- But it is these unlucky letters which put him almost hopelessly out of
- court. Even the slight relenting of fortune which gave him at last, in
- Mr. Percy Fitzgerald, a biographer very good-natured, very
- indefatigable, and with a natural genius for detecting undiscovered
- facts and documents, only made matters worse in some ways. And the
- consequence is, that it has become a commonplace and almost a necessity
- to make up for praising Sterne’s genius by damning his character.
- Johnson, while declining to deny him ability, seems to have been too
- much disgusted to talk freely about him; Scott’s natural kindliness,
- warm admiration for my Uncle Toby, and total freedom from squeamish
- prudery, seem yet to have left him ill at ease and tongue-tied in
- discussing Sterne; Thackeray, as is well known, exceeded all measure in
- denouncing him; and his chief recent critical biographer, Mr. Traill,
- who is probably as free from cant, Britannic or other, as any man who
- ever wrote in English, speaks his mind in the most unsparing fashion.
- For my own part, I do not hesitate to say that I do not think letters of
- this kind ought to be published at all; and though it may seem
- paradoxical or foolish, I am by no means sure that, if they are
- published, they ought to be admitted as evidence. That which is not
- written for the public, is no business of the public’s; and I never read
- letters of this kind, published for the first time, without feeling like
- an eavesdropper.[I.1] Unluckily, the evidence furnished by the letters
- fits in only too well with that furnished by the published works, by his
- favourite cronies and companions, and by his general reputation, so that
- “what the prisoner says” must, no doubt, “be used against him.”
- [Footnote I.1: It is perhaps barely necessary to observe that
- the parallel does not extend to a further parallel between
- republication and tale-bearing. Once published, the thing is
- public.]
- * * * * *
- It may be doubted whether it was accident or his usual deliberate
- fantasticality that made Sterne, in the well-known summary of his life
- which (very late in it) he drew up for his daughter, devote almost the
- whole space to his childhood. Perhaps it may be accounted for,
- reasonably enough, by supposing that of his later years he thought his
- daughter knew quite as much as he wished her to know, while of the
- middle period he had little or nothing to tell. In fact, of the two
- earlier divisions we still know very little but what he has chosen to
- tell us in one of the most characteristic and not the least charming
- excursions of his pen. Laurence Sterne was, with two sisters, the only
- “permanent child” (to borrow a pleasant phrase of Mr. Traill’s) out of a
- very plentiful but most impermanent family, borne in the most
- inconvenient circumstances possible by Agnes Nuttle or Herbert or
- Sterne, a widow, and daughter or stepdaughter of a sutler of our army in
- Flanders, to Roger, second son of Simon Sterne of Elvington, in
- Yorkshire, who was the third son of Dr. Richard Sterne, Archbishop of
- York. The Sternes were of a gentle if not very distinguished family,
- which, after being seated in Suffolk, migrated to Nottinghamshire. After
- the promotion of the archbishop (who had been a stout cavalier, as
- Master of Jesus at Cambridge, in the bad times), they obtained, as was
- fitting, divers establishments by marriage or benefice in Yorkshire
- itself. Very little endowment of any kind, however, fell to the lot of
- Roger Sterne, who was an ensign in what ranked later as the 34th
- regiment. Laurence, his eldest son, was born at Clonmel, in Ireland,
- where his mother’s relations lived, and just after his father’s regiment
- had been disbanded. It was shortly re-established, however, and became
- the most “marching” of all marching corps; for though its headquarters
- were generally in Ireland, it was constantly being ordered elsewhere,
- and Roger Sterne saw active service both at Vigo and Gibraltar. In this
- latter station he fought a duel of an extremely Shandean character
- “about a goose.” He was run through the body and pinned to the wall;
- whereupon, it is said, he requested his antagonist to be so kind as to
- wipe the plaster off the sword before pulling it out of his body. In
- despite of this thoughtfulness, however, and of an immediate recovery,
- the wound so weakened him that, being ordered to Jamaica, he took fever
- and died there in March 1731. As Lawrence had been born on November 24,
- 1713, he was nearly eighteen; and the family had meanwhile been
- increased by four other children who all died, and a youngest daughter,
- Catherine, who, like the eldest, Mary, lived. Till he was about nine or
- ten the boy followed the exceedingly fluctuating fortunes of his family,
- which he diversified further on by falling through, not a millrace, but
- a going mill. Then he was sent to school at Halifax, in Yorkshire, and
- soon after practically adopted by his cousin Sterne of Elvington, who,
- when the time came, sent him to Jesus College at Cambridge, the family
- connection with which had begun with his great-grandfather. He was
- admitted there on July 6, 1733, being then nearly twenty, and took his
- degree of B.A. in 1736, and that of M.A. in 1740. The only tradition of
- his school career is his own story that, having written his name on the
- school ceiling, he was whipped by the usher, but complimented as a “boy
- of genius” by the master, who said the name should never be effaced.
- This anecdote, as might be expected, has not escaped the _aqua fortis_
- of criticism.
- We know practically nothing of Sterne’s Cambridge career except the
- dates above mentioned, the fact of his being elected first to a
- sizarship and then as founder’s kin to a scholarship endowed by
- Archbishop Sterne, and the incident told by himself that he there
- contracted his lifelong friendship with a distant relative and fellow
- Jesus man, John Hall, or John Hall Stevenson, of whom more presently.
- But Sterne had further reason to acknowledge that his family stood
- together. He had no sooner taken his degree, than he was taken up by a
- brother of his father’s, Jaques Sterne, a great pluralist in the diocese
- of York, a very busy and masterful person, and a strong Whig and
- Hanoverian. Under his care, Sterne took deacon’s orders in March 1736 at
- the hands of the Bishop of Lincoln; and as soon as, two years later, he
- had been ordained priest, he was appointed to the living of
- Sutton-on-the-Forest, eight miles from York. The uncle and nephew some
- years later quarrelled bitterly--according to the latter’s account,
- because he would not write “dirty paragraphs in the newspapers,” being
- “no party man.” That Sterne would have been particularly squeamish about
- what he wrote may be doubted; but it is certain that he shows no
- partisan spirit anywhere, and very little interest in politics as such.
- However, for some years his uncle was certainly his active patron, and
- obtained for him two prebends and some other special preferments in
- connection with the diocese and chapter of York, so that he became, as
- _Tristram_ shows, intimately acquainted with cathedral society there.
- It has been a steady rule in the Anglican Church (if not, as in the
- Greek, a _sine quâ non_) that when a man has been provided with a
- living, he should, if he has not done so before, provide himself with a
- wife; and Sterne was a very unlikely man to break good custom in this
- respect. Very soon at least after his ordination he fell in love with
- Elizabeth Lumley, a young lady of a good Yorkshire family, and of some
- little fortune, which, however, for a time she thought “not enough” to
- share with him, but which, as she told him during a fit of illness, she
- left to him in her will. On the strength of two quite unauthenticated
- and, I believe, not now traceable portraits seen by this or that person
- in printshops or elsewhere, she is said to have been plain. Certain
- expressions in Sterne’s letters seem to imply that she had a rather
- exasperatingly steady and not too intelligent will of her own; and some
- twenty or five and twenty years after the marriage, M. Tollot,
- a gossiping Frenchman, with French ideas on the duty of husbands and
- wives going separate ways, said that she wished to have a finger in
- every pie, and pestered “the good and agreeable Tristram” with her
- presence. But Sterne, despite his reckless confessions of conjugal
- indifference, and worse, says nothing serious or even ill-natured of
- her; and one or two traits and sayings of hers, especially her refusal
- to listen to a meddlesome person who wished to tell her tales about
- “Eliza,” seem to argue sense and dignity. That in the latter years she
- cared little to be with a husband who had long been “tired and sick” of
- her is not to her discredit. Their daughter, with the almost invariable
- ill-luck or ill-judgment which seems to have attended her, printed
- certain letters of this courtship time, though she gave nothing for many
- years afterwards. The use made of these Strephon or Damon blandishments,
- in contrast with the expressions used by the writer of his wife, and of
- other women, long afterwards, is perhaps a little unfair; but it must be
- admitted that though far too characteristic and amusing to be omitted,
- they are anything but brilliant specimens of their kind. In particular,
- Thackeray’s bitter fun on the ineffably lackadaisical passage, “My L.
- has seen a polyanthus blow in December,” is pretty fully justified.
- If, however, the marriage, which, difficulties being removed, took place
- on Easter Monday, March 30, 1741, did not bring lasting happiness to
- Sterne, it probably brought him some at the time, and it certainly
- brought him an accession of fortune; for in addition to what little
- money Miss Lumley had, a friend of hers bestowed the additional living
- of Stillington on her husband. These various sources of income must have
- made a tolerable revenue, which, after the publication of _Tristram_,
- was further supplemented by yet another benefice given him by Lord
- Falconbridge at Coxwold, a living of no great value, but a pleasant
- place of residence. Add to this the profits of his books in the last
- eight years of his life, which were for that day considerable, and it
- will be seen that, as has been said above, Sterne might have been much
- worse off in this world’s goods than he was. He seems, like other
- people, to have made some rather costly experiments in farming; and his
- way of life latterly, what with his own journeys and sojourns in London,
- and the long separate residence of his wife and daughter in France, was
- expensive. But he complains little of poverty; and though he died in
- debt, much of that debt was due to no fault of his, but to the burning
- of the parsonage of Sutton.
- It is all the more remarkable in one way, though the absence of any
- pressure of want may explain it in another, that Sterne’s great literary
- gifts should have remained so long without finding any kind of literary
- expression, unless it was in the newspaper way, in respect to which he
- first obliged and afterwards disobliged his uncle. There is, I believe,
- no dispute about the fact that he distances, and that by many years,
- every other man of letters of anything like his rank--except Cowper,
- whose affliction puts him out of comparison--in the lateness of his
- fruiting time. All but a quarter of a century had passed since he took
- his degree when _Tristram Shandy_ appeared; and, putting sermons aside,
- the very earliest thing of his known, _The History of a Good Watch
- Coat_, only antedated _Tristram_ by two years or rather less. He was no
- doubt “making himself all this time;” but the making must have been an
- uncommonly slow process. Nor did he, like a good many writers, occupy
- the time in preparing what he was afterwards to publish, unless in the
- case of a few of his sermons. It is positively known that _Tristram_ was
- written merely as it was published, and the _Journey_ likewise. Nor is
- even the first by any means a long book. It is as nearly as possible the
- same length as Fielding’s _Amelia_ when printed straight on; and even
- then more allowance has to be made, not merely for its free and
- audacious plagiarisms, but for its constantly broken paragraphs, stars,
- dashes, and other trickeries. If it were possible to squeeze it up, as
- one squeezes a sponge, into the solid texture of an ordinary book,
- I doubt whether it would be very much longer than _Joseph Andrews_.
- It will probably be admitted, however, that the idiosyncrasy of the
- writings of Sterne’s last and incomplete decade, even if it be in part
- only an idiosyncrasy of mannerism, is almost great enough to justify the
- nearly three decades of _Lehrjahre_ (starting from his entrance at
- Cambridge) which preceded it. It is true that of the actual occupations
- of these years we know extremely little--indeed, what we know as
- distinguished from what is guesswork and inference is mostly summed up
- by Sterne’s own current and curvetting pen thus: “I remained near twenty
- years at Sutton, doing duty at both places [_i.e._, Sutton and
- Stillington]. I had then very good health. Books, painting, fiddling,
- and shooting were my amusements;” to which he adds only that he and the
- squire of Sutton were not very good friends, but that at Stillington the
- Croft family were extremely kind and amiable. From other sources,
- including, it is true, his own letters--though the dates and allusions
- of these are so uncertain that they are very doubtful guides--we find
- that his chief crony during this period, as during his life, was the
- already-mentioned John Hall, who had taken to the name of Stevenson, and
- was master of Skelton Castle, a very old and curious house on the border
- of the Cleveland moors, not far from the town of Guisborough. The master
- of “Crazy” Castle--he liked to give his house this name, which he
- afterwards used in entitling his book of _Crazy Tales_--his ways and his
- library, have usually been charged with debauching Sterne’s innocent
- mind, which I should imagine lent itself to that process in a most
- docile and _morigerant_ fashion; but whether this was the case or not,
- it is clear that Stevenson bore no very good reputation. It is not
- certain, but was asserted, that he had been a monk of Medmenham. He
- gathered about him at Skelton a society which, though no such
- imputations were made on it as on that of Wilkes and Dashwood, was of a
- pretty loose kind; he was a humourist, both in the old and the modern
- sense; and his _Crazy Tales_ were, if not very mad, rather sad and bad
- exercises of the imagination.
- Amid all this dream- and guess-work, almost the only solid facts in
- Sterne’s life are the births of two daughters, one in 1745, and the
- other two years later. Both were christened Lydia; the first died soon
- after she was born, the second lived to be the darling of both her
- parents, the object of the most respectable emotions of Sterne’s life,
- the wife of an unknown Frenchman, M. de Medalle, and, as has been said,
- the probably unwitting destroyer of her father’s last chance of
- reputation.
- Our exuberant nescience in matters Sternian extends up to the very
- publication of _Tristram_, as far as the determining causes of its
- production are concerned. It is true that in passages of the letters
- Sterne seems to say that his experiment with the pen was prompted by a
- desire to make good some losses in farming, and elsewhere that he was
- tired of employing his brains for other people’s advantage, as he had
- done for some years for an ungrateful person, that is to say, his uncle.
- This last passage was written just before _Tristram_ came out; but at no
- time was Sterne a very trustworthy reporter of his own motives, and it
- would seem that the quarrel with his uncle must have been a good deal
- earlier. At any rate, the year 1759 seems to have been spent in writing
- the first two volumes of the book, and _The Life and Opinions of
- Tristram Shandy, Gent._, published by John Hinxham, Stonegate, York, but
- obtainable also from divers London booksellers, appeared on the 1st of
- January 1760. I wish Sterne had thought of keeping it till the 1st of
- April, which he would probably then have done.
- The comparatively short last scenes of his life were as busy and varied
- as his long middle course had been outwardly monotonous. Although his
- book was nominally published at York, he had gone up to London to
- superintend arrangements for its sale there, perhaps not without a hope
- of triumph. If so, Fortune chose not to play him her usual tricks. In
- York, the extreme personality of the book excited interest of a twofold
- and dubious kind; but, to play on some words of Dryden’s, “London liked
- grossly” and swallowed _Tristram Shandy_ whole with singular avidity.
- Its author came to town just in time to enjoy the results of this, and
- was one of the chief lions of the season of 1760, a position which he
- enjoyed with a childish frankness that is not the least pleasant thing
- in his history. One, probably of the least important, though by accident
- one of the best known of his innumerable flirtations, with a Miss
- Fourmentelle, was apparently quenched by this distraction when it was on
- the point of going such lengths that the lady had actually come up alone
- to London to meet Sterne there. He was introduced to persons as
- different as Garrick and Warburton, from the latter of whom he received,
- in rather mysterious circumstances, a present of money. He haunted
- Ministers and Knights of the Garter; he was overwhelmed with invitations
- and callers; and, as has been said, he received one very solid present
- in the shape of the living of Coxwold. _Tristram_ went into a second
- edition rapidly; its author was enabled to announce a collection of
- “_Sermons_ by Mr. Yorick” in April; and he went to his new living in the
- early summer, determined to set to work vigorously on more of the work
- that had been so fortunate. By the end of the year he was ready with two
- more volumes, again came up to town, and again, when vols. iii. and iv.
- had appeared, at the end of January 1761, was besieged by admirers. For
- these two he received £380 from Dodsley, who had fought shy of the book
- earlier. They were quite as successful as the first pair; and again
- Sterne stayed all the spring and earlier summer in London, returning to
- Yorkshire to make more _Shandy_ in the autumn. He was still quicker over
- the third batch, and it was published in December 1761, when he was
- again in town, but he now meditated a longer flight. His health had been
- really declining, and he obtained leave from the archbishop for a year
- certain, and perhaps two, that he might go to the south of France. He
- was warmly received in Paris, where his work had obtained a popularity
- which it has never wholly lost, and the framework of fact (including the
- passport difficulties) for the _Sentimental Journey_, as well as for the
- seventh volume of _Tristram_, was laid during the spring. His plans were
- now changed, it being determined that his wife and daughter (who had
- inherited his constitution) should join him. They did so after some
- difficulties, and the consumptive novelist, having spent all the winter
- in one of the worst climates in Europe, that of the French capital,
- started with his family in the torrid heats of July for Toulouse, where
- at last they were established about the middle of August.
- Toulouse became Sterne’s abode for nearly a year, his headquarters for a
- somewhat longer period, and the home of his wife and daughter, with
- migrations to Bagnères, Montpellier, and a great many other places in
- France, for about five years. He himself--he had been ill at Toulouse,
- and worse at Montpellier--reached England again (after a short stay in
- Paris) during the early summer of 1764. Nor was it till January 1765
- that the seventh and eighth volumes of _Tristram_ appeared. As usual
- Sterne went to town to receive the congratulations of the public, which
- seem to have been fairly hearty; for though the instalment immediately
- preceding had not been an entire success, the longer interval had now
- had its effect not merely on the art and materials of the caterer, but
- on the appetite of his guests. He followed this up with two more volumes
- of Sermons, of a much more characteristic kind than his earlier venture
- in this way, and published partly by subscription. These, however, were
- not actually issued till 1766. Meanwhile, in October 1765, Sterne had
- set out for his second attempt in travel on the Continent, which was to
- supply the remaining material for the _Sentimental Journey_, and to be
- prolonged as far as Naples. Little is known of his winter stay at that
- city and in Rome. On his way homeward he met his wife and daughter in
- Franche-Comté, but at Mrs. Sterne’s request left them there, and went on
- alone to Coxwold.
- He reached England in extremely bad health, and never left it again; but
- he had still nearly two years of fairly well filled life to run. The
- ninth, or last volume of _Tristram_ occupied him during the autumn of
- 1766, and was produced with the invariable accompaniment of its author’s
- appearance in London during January 1767. This visit, which lasted till
- May, saw the flirtation with “Eliza” Draper, the young wife of an Indian
- official, who was at home for her health, an affair which exalted Sterne
- in the eyes of eighteenth-century sensibility, especially in France,
- about as much as it has depressed him in the eyes not merely of the
- propriety, not merely of the common sense, but of the romance of later
- times. He was very ill when he got back to Coxwold, but recovered, and
- in October was joined by his wife and daughter. Even then, however, the
- community was a very temporary and divided one, for he took a house for
- them at York, and they were not to stay in England beyond the spring. He
- himself finished what we have of the _Sentimental Journey_, and went to
- London with it, where it was published rather later than usual, on the
- 27th February 1768. Three weeks later its author, at his lodgings at 41
- New Bond Street, in the presence only of a hired nurse and a footman,
- who had been sent by some of his friends to inquire after him, took a
- journey other than sentimental, and so far unreported. Some odd but not
- very well authenticated stories gathered round his death, which occurred
- on Friday the 18th March. It was said, and it is probable enough, that
- his gold sleeve-links were stolen by his landlady. After his funeral,
- scantily attended, at the burying-ground of St. George’s, Hanover
- Square, opposite Hyde Park (which used to be known by the squalid brown
- of its unrestored, and afterwards made more hideous by the bedizened red
- of its restored chapel), his body is said to have been snatched by
- resurrection men. And the myth is rounded off by the addition that the
- remains, having been sold to the professor of anatomy at Cambridge, were
- dissected there in public, one of the spectators, a friend of Sterne’s,
- recognising the face too late, and fainting.
- His affairs, which had never been managed in a very business-like
- manner, were in considerable disorder. Some years before, the
- carelessness of his curate had caused or allowed the parsonage at Sutton
- to be burnt to the ground; and Sterne, besides losing valuable effects
- of his own, was of course liable for the rebuilding. He managed to put
- this off till his death, after which his widow and administratrix was
- sued for dilapidations. These, as she was in very poor circumstances,
- had to be compounded for sixty pounds only, but they probably ranked for
- a much larger sum in the £1100 at which Sterne’s indebtedness was
- reckoned. His widow had a little money of her own: £800 was collected
- for her and her daughter at York races; there must have been profits
- from the copyrights; and a fresh collection of _Sermons_ was issued by
- subscription. But though very little is known about the pair, they are
- said to have been ill off. They applied first to Wilkes and then to
- Stevenson to write a life of Sterne to prefix to his Works, but neither
- complied. Mr. Fitzgerald, who seldom deserves the curse laid on those
- who use harsh judgment, is very severe on both for this. Yet surely
- each, considering his own reputation, must have felt that he was the
- last person to set Sterne right with the stricter part of society, and
- that to write a “Crazy” or “Shandean” life of him would be a cruel
- crime. It is not known exactly when Lydia married, or when either she or
- her mother died. Mrs. Sterne must have been dead by 1775, the date of
- the publication of the letters; Lydia is said to have perished in the
- French Revolution.
- Beginning authorship very late in life, having schooled himself to an
- intensely artificial method, both in style and in construction, and not
- allowed by Fate more than a few years in which to write at all, Sterne,
- as is natural, displays a great uniformity throughout his work. Indeed,
- it might be said that he has written but one book, _Tristram Shandy_.
- The _Sentimental Journey_ (as to the relative merits of which, compared
- with the earlier and larger work, there is a _polemos aspondos_ between
- the Big-endians and the Little-endians of Sternism) is after all only an
- expansion of the seventh book of Tristram, with _fioriture_, variations,
- and new divertisements. The sermon which occurs so early is an actual
- sermon of “Yorick’s,” and a sufficient specimen of his more serious
- concionatory vein; many, if not most of his letters might have been
- twined into _Tristram_ without being in the least degree more out of
- place than most of its actual contents. And so there is more propriety
- than depends upon the mere fact that _Tristram Shandy_ is the earliest
- and the largest part of its author’s work, in making no extremely
- scholastic distinction between the specially Shandean and the generally
- Sternian characteristics; for, indeed, all Sterne is in it more or less
- eminently.
- No less a critic than M. Scherer has given his sanction to the idea that
- in Sterne we have a special, if not even _the_ special, type of the
- humourist; and probably few people who have given no particular thought
- or attention to the matter, would refuse to agree with him. I am myself
- inclined rather to a demur, or, at any rate, to a distinction, though
- few better things have been written about humour itself than a passage
- in M. Scherer’s essay on our author. Sterne has no doubt in a very
- eminent degree the sense of contrast, which all the best critics admit
- to be the root of humour--the note of the humourist. But he has it
- partially, occasionally, and, I should even go as far as to say, not
- _greatly_. The _great_ English humourists, I take it, are Shakespeare,
- Swift, Fielding, Thackeray, and Carlyle. All these--even Fielding, whose
- eighteenth-century manner, the contemporary and counterpart of Sterne’s,
- cannot hide the truth--apply the humourist contrast, the humourist sense
- of the irony of existence, to the great things, the _prima et
- novissima_. They see, and feel, and show the simultaneous sense of Death
- and Life, of Love and Loss, of the Finite and the Infinite. Sterne stops
- a long way short of this; _les grands sujets lui sont défendus_ in
- another sense than La Bruyère’s. It is scarcely too much to say that his
- ostentatious preference for the _bagatelle_ was a real, and not in the
- least affected fact. Nowhere, not in the true pathos of the famous
- deathbed letter to Mrs. James, not in the, as it seems to me, by no
- means wholly true pathos of the Le Fever episode, does he pierce to “the
- accepted hells beneath.” He has an unmatched command of the lesser and
- lower varieties of the humorous contrast--over the odd, the petty, the
- queer, above all, over what the French untranslatably call the
- _saugrenu_. His forte is the foible; his _cheval de bataille_, the
- hobby-horse. If you want to soar into the heights, or plunge into the
- depths of humour, Sterne is not for you. But if you want what his own
- generation called a frisk on middle, _very_ middle-earth, a hunt in
- curiosity-shops (especially of the technically “curious” description),
- a peep into all manner of _coulisses_ and behind-scenes of human nature,
- a ride on a sort of intellectual switchback, a view of moral, mental,
- religious, sentimental dancing of all the kinds that have delighted man,
- from the rope to the skirt, then have with Sterne in any direction he
- pleases. He may sometimes a very little disgust you, but you will seldom
- have just cause to complain that he disappoints and deceives.
- The _Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gent._ (which, as it has been
- excellently observed, is in reality based on the life of the gent’s
- uncle, and the opinions of the gent’s father), is the largest and in
- every way the chief field for these diversions. The apparatus, and, so
- far as there can be said to have been one, the object with which Sterne
- marked it out and filled it up, are clear, and even the former must have
- been clear enough to anybody of some reading and some intelligence long
- before the excellent Dr. Ferriar, in the spirit of a reverent
- iconoclast, set himself to work to point out Sterne’s exact indebtedness
- to Rabelais, Burton, Beroalde (if Beroalde wrote the _Moyen de
- Parvenir_), Bruscambille, and the rest. Of this particular part of the
- matter I do not think it necessary to say much. The charge of plagiarism
- is usually an excessively idle one; for when a man of genius steals, he
- always makes the thefts his own; and when a man steals without genius,
- the thefts are mere fairy gold which turns to leaves and pebbles under
- his hand. No doubt Sterne “lifted” in _Tristram_, and still more in the
- _Sermons_, with rather more freedom and audacity than most men of
- genius; but when we remember that he took Burton’s denunciation of the
- practice and reproduced it (all but in Burton’s very words) as his own,
- it must be clear to any one who is not very dull indeed that he was
- playing an audacious practical joke. Where he is best, he does not steal
- at all, and that is the only point of real importance.
- It is somewhat more, I think, the business of the critic (who is here
- more especially bound not to look only at the stop-watch) to note the
- far more striking way in which Sterne borrowed, not actual passages and
- words, but manner and style. Here, perhaps, we shall find him accountant
- for a greater debt; and here also we may think that though his genius is
- indisputable, he gives more reason to those who should deny him the
- highest kind of genius. Beyond doubt not merely his reading, but his
- temper and his characteristics of all kinds, inclined him to the style
- to which the French fifteenth and sixteenth centuries gave the name of
- _fatrasie_, or pillar-to-post divagation, with more or less of a covert
- satiric aim. But if we compare the dealing of Swift with Cyrano de
- Bergerac, the dealing of Fielding with the romance and novel as it
- existed before his time, nay, the dealing of Shakespeare with the
- Marlowe drama, we shall note a marked difference in Sterne’s procedure.
- Nobody, even in his own day, who knew Rabelais at all could fail to
- detect the almost servile following of manner in great things and in
- small which _Tristram_ displays. No one--a much smaller designation--who
- knows the strange, unedifying, but very far from commonplace book of
- which, as I have hinted, I never can quite believe that Beroalde de
- Verville was the author, can fail to detect an even closer, though a
- somewhat less obvious and, so to speak, less verifiable following here.
- In another region--the purgatory of all Sterne’s commentators--we can
- trace this corrupt following as distinctly at least, though it has,
- I think, been less often definitely attributed. Sterne’s too celebrated
- indecency, is, with one exception, _sui generis_. No doubt much nonsense
- has been and is talked about “indecency” in general literature. When it
- is indulged, as it has been, for instance, in French of late, it becomes
- a nuisance of the most loathsome kind. It is always perhaps better left
- alone. But if it be a sin to laugh now and then frankly at what were
- once called “gentlemen’s stories,” then not merely many a gallant,
- noble, and not unwise gentleman, but I fear not a few ladies, both fair
- and fine, are damned, with Shakespeare and Scott and Southey, with
- Margaret of Navarre and Marie de Sévigné, to keep them in countenance.
- Yet to merit indulgence, this questionable quality, in addition to being
- treated as genius treats, must have certain sub-qualities, or freedoms
- from quality, of its own. It must not be brutal and inhuman, since the
- quality of humanity is the main thing that saves it. It must not be
- underhand and sniggering. It must be frank and jovial, or frank and
- passionate. Perhaps, in some cases, it may be saved, as Swift’s is to a
- great extent, by the overmastering pessimism of despair, which enforces
- its contempt of man and man’s fate by bringing forward these evidences
- of his weakness. But Sterne can plead none of these exemptions. He has
- neither the frank laughter of Aristophanes and Rabelais, nor the frank
- passion of Catullus and Donne. He was incapable of feeling any _sæva
- indignatio_ whatever. The attraction of the thing for him was, I fear,
- merely the attraction of the improper, because it is improper; because
- it shocks people, or makes them blush, or gives them an unholy little
- quiver of sordid shamefaced delectation. His famous apology of the child
- playing on the floor and showing in innocence what is not usually shown,
- was desperately unlucky. For his displays are those of educated and
- economic un-innocency. And he took this manner, I am nearly sure, wholly
- and directly from Voltaire, who enjoys the unenviable copyright and
- patent of it.
- The third characteristic which Sterne took from others, which dyed his
- work deeply, and which injured more than it helped it, was his famous,
- his unrivalled, Sensibility or Sentimentalism. A great deal has been
- written about this admired eighteenth-century device, and there is no
- space here for discussing it. Suffice it to say, that although Sterne
- certainly did not invent it--it had been inculcated by two whole
- generations of French novelists before him, and had been familiar in
- England for half a century--he has the glory, such as it is, of carrying
- it to the farthest possible. The dead donkey and the live donkey, the
- latter (as I humbly but proudly join myself to Mr. Thackeray and Mr.
- Traill in thinking) far the finer animal; Le Fever and La Fleur; Maria
- and Eliza; Uncle Toby’s fly, and poor Mrs. Sterne’s antenuptial
- polyanthus; the stoics that Mr. Sterne (with a generous sense that he
- was in no danger of that lash) wished to be whipped, and the critics
- from whom he would have fled from Dan to Beersheba to be delivered;
- --all the celebrated persons and passages of his works, all the
- decorations and fireworks thereof, are directed mainly to the exhibition
- of _Sensibility_, once so charming, now, alas! hooted and contemned of
- the people!
- And now it will be possible to have done with his foibles, all the rest
- in Sterne being for praise, with hardly any mixture of blame. We have
- seen what he borrowed from others, mostly to his hurt; let us now see
- what he contributed of his own, almost wholly to his credit and
- advantage. He had, in the first place, what most writers when they begin
- almost invariably and almost inevitably lack, a long and carefully
- amassed store, not merely of reading, but of observation of mankind.
- Although his nearly fifty years of life had been in the ordinary sense
- uneventful, they had given him opportunities which he had amply taken.
- A “son of the regiment,” he had evidently studied with the greatest and
- most loving care the ways of an army which still included a large
- proportion of Marlborough’s veterans; and it has been constantly and
- reasonably held that his chief study had been his father, whom he
- evidently adored in a way. Roger Sterne is the admitted model of my
- Uncle Toby; and I at least have no doubt that he was the original of Mr.
- Shandy also, for some of the qualities which appear in his son’s
- character of him are Walter’s, not Toby’s. It would have required,
- perhaps, even greater genius than Sterne possessed, and an environment
- less saturated with the delusive theory of the “ruling passion,” to have
- given us the mixed and blended temperament instead of separating it into
- two gentlemen at once, and making Walter Shandy all wayward intellect,
- and Tobias all gentle goodness. But if it had been done--as Shakespeare
- perhaps alone could have done it--we should have had a greater and more
- human figure than either. Mr. Shandy would then never have come near, as
- he does sometimes, to being a bore; and my Uncle Toby (if I may say so
- without taking the wings of the morning to flee from the wrath of the
- extreme Tobyolaters) would have been saved from the occasional
- appearance of being something like a fool.
- Still, these two are delightful even in their present dichotomy; and
- Sterne was amply provided by his genius, working on his experience, with
- company for them. His fancy portrait of himself as “Yorick” (his
- unfeigned Shakespearianism is one of his best traits) is a little vague
- and fantastic; and that of Eugenius, which is supposed to represent John
- Hall Stevenson, is almost as slight as it is flattering. But Dr. Slop,
- who is known to have been drawn (with somewhat unmerciful fidelity in
- externals, but not at all unkindly when we look deeper) from Dr. Burton,
- a well-known Jacobite practitioner who had suffered from the Hanoverian
- zeal of Yorick’s uncle Jaques in the ’45, is a masterpiece. The York
- dignitaries are veritable etchings in outline, more instinct with life
- and individuality than a thousand elaborately painted pictures; all the
- servants, Obadiah, Susannah, Bridget, and the rest, are the equals of
- Fielding’s, or of Thackeray’s domestics; and though Tristram himself is
- the shadow of a shade, I confess that I seem to see a vivid portrait in
- the three or four strokes which alone give us “my dear, dear Jenny.” Mr.
- Fitzgerald, succumbing to a not unnatural temptation, considering the
- close juxtaposition in time, approximates this to the “dear, dear Kitty”
- of the letters to Miss Catherine de Fourmentelle. But this, taking all
- things together, would be a rather serious _scandalum damigellarum_; and
- I do not think it necessary to identify, though the traits seem to me to
- suit not ill with the few genuine ones in the letters about Mrs. Sterne
- herself. That the “dear, dear” should be ironical more or less is quite
- Shandean. All these, if not drawn directly from individuals (the lower
- exercise), are first generalised and then precipitated into
- individuality from a large observation (which is the infinitely higher
- and better). I fear I must except Widow Wadman, save in the sentry-box
- scene, from this encomium. But then Widow Wadman is not really a real
- person. She is partly an instrument to put my Uncle Toby through some
- new motions, and partly a cue to enable Sterne to indulge in his worst
- foible. As for Trim, _quis vituperavit_ Trim? The lover of the “popish
- clergywoman” is simply perfect, with a not much less good heart and a
- much better head than his master’s, and in his own degree hardly less of
- a gentleman.
- The manner in which these delightful persons (I observe with shame that
- I had omitted the modest worth of Mrs. Shandy, nearly the most
- delightful of them all) are introduced to the reader, may have suffered
- a little from that corrupt following of which enough has been said.
- I can only say, that I would compound for a good deal more corruption of
- the same kind, allied with a good deal less genius. It can scarcely be
- doubted that there was a real pre-established harmony between Sterne’s
- gifts and the _fatrasie_ manner; certainly this manner, if it sometimes
- exhibited his weaknesses, gave rare opportunities to his strength. And
- the same may be said of his style. He might certainly have given us less
- of the typographical tricks with which he chose to bedizen and bedaub
- it, and sometimes in his ultra-Rabelaisian moods --I do not mean of
- _gauloiserie_ but of sheer fooling--we feel the falsetto rather
- disastrously. It is constantly forgotten by unfavourable critics of
- Rabelais that his extravagances were to a great extent, at any rate,
- quite natural outbursts of animal spirits. The Middle Ages, though it
- has become the fashion with those who know nothing about them to
- represent them as ages of gloom, were probably the merriest time of this
- world’s history; and the Reformation and the Renaissance, with their
- pedantry and their puritanism, and worst of all their physical science,
- had not quite killed the merriment when Rabelais wrote. But though
- animal spirits still survived in Sterne’s day, it cannot be said that in
- England, any more than elsewhere, there was much genuine merriment of
- the honest, childish, mediæval kind, and thus his manner perpetually
- jars. Still the style, independently of the tricks, was excellently
- suited for the work. It is a moot point how far the extremely loose and
- ungirt character of this style, which sometimes, and indeed often,
- reaches sheer slovenliness and solecism, was intentional. I think myself
- that it was nearly as deliberate as the asterisks, and the black and
- marble pages. We know from the _Sermons_ that Sterne could write
- carefully enough when he chose, and we know from the MS. of the
- _Journey_ that he corrected sedulously. Nor is it likely that he had the
- excuse of hurry. The shortest time that he ever took over one of his
- two-volume batches was more than six months; and looking at the
- practice, not of miracles of industry and facility like Scott, but of
- rather dilatory writers like Thackeray, one would think that the
- quantity (which is not more than a couple of hundred pages of one of
- these present volumes) might be written in little more than six weeks.
- At any rate, the style, conversational, unpretentious, too easy to be
- jerky, and yet too broken to be sustained, suits subject and scheme as
- few others could.
- * * * * *
- But there is perhaps little need to say more about a book which, though
- some say that few read it through nowadays, is thoroughly well known in
- outline and in its salient passages, and which will pretty certainly lay
- hold of all fit readers as soon as they take to it. Of its writer a very
- little more may perhaps be said, all the more so because those who, not
- understanding critical admiration, think that biographers and editors
- ought not only to be just and a little kind, but extravagantly partial
- to their subjects, may conceive that I have been a little unjust, or, at
- any rate, a little unkind to Sterne. If so, they have not read his own
- extremely ingenious, and in general, if not in particular, very sound
- attack on the adage _de mortuis_. But if not _nil nisi_, there is yet
- very much _bonum_ to be said of Sterne. He was not merely endowed with a
- singular and essential genius; he was not merely the representative and
- mouthpiece, in a way hardly surpassed by any one, of a certain way of
- thought and feeling more or less peculiar to his time. These were his
- merits, his very great merits as a writer. But he had others, and great,
- if not very great ones, as a man. Though never rich, he seems to have
- been free from the fault of parsimony; and albeit he died in debt, not
- deeply tainted with that of extravagance in money matters. For most of
- his later expenditure was on others, and he might justly calculate on
- his pen paying, and more than paying, his shot. Little love as there was
- lost between him and his wife, he always took the greatest care to
- provide for her wants in the rather costly severance of their
- establishments, and never even in his most indiscreet moments hints a
- grumble at her expenditure, a vice of which some people of much higher
- general reputation have been known to be guilty. Though he was certainly
- pleased at the attentions of “the great,” I do not know that there is
- any just cause for accusing him of truckling to, or fawning on them
- beyond the custom and courtesy of the time. For all his reckless humour,
- there was no ill-nature in him. His worst enemies have admitted that his
- affection for his daughter was very pretty and quite unaffected; and his
- letters to and of Mrs. James show that he could think of a woman nobly
- and wholesomely as a friend, for all his ignoble and unwholesome ways of
- thought in regard to the sex. If it had not been for the cruel
- indiscretion of his Lydia (which, however, has something of the old
- virtue of conveying the balm as well as the sting), he would probably
- have been much better thought of than he is. And considering the
- delightful books here once more presented, I think we may consent to
- forgive the faults which, after all, were mainly his own business, for
- the merits by which we so largely benefit and for which he reaped no
- over-bounteous guerdon.
- GEORGE SAINTSBURY.
- WORKS. --The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Vols. I. and II.,
- 1759; III. and IV., 1761; V. and VI., 1762; VII. and VIII., 1765;
- IX., 1767; first collected edition, 1767; numerous later editions,
- chiefly of recent date. Sermons of Mr. Yorick, Vols. I. and II.,
- 1760; III. and IV., 1766; V., VI., and VII., 1769. A Sentimental
- Journey, 1768; many later editions; Letters from Yorick to Eliza,
- 1775; Sterne’s Letters to his Friends on Various Occasions, 1775;
- Letters of Laurence Sterne to his most intimate friends, 1775;
- Original Letters never before published, 1788; Letters of Yorick and
- Eliza, 1807; Seven Letters written by Sterne and his Friends,
- hitherto unpublished, 1844; Unpublished Letters of Laurence Sterne,
- edited by J. Murray, 1856.
- Collected editions of the works of Laurence Sterne appeared in 1779,
- 1780; edited by G. Saintsbury, 1894; by Wilbur L. Cross, 1906.
- LIFE. --An account of the life and writings of the author is prefixed
- to the edition of his Works, 1779; a life of the author written by
- himself in edition of works, 1780; by Sir W. Scott in edition of
- Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, 1867; by H. D. Traill, 1878;
- by P. H. Fitzgerald, 1896; Laurence Sterne in Germany, by H. W.
- Thayer, 1905; Life and Times, by Wilbur L. Cross, 1909; A Study, by
- Walter S. Sichel, 1910; Life and Letters, by Lewis Melville, 1911.
- ⁂ The text which has been here adopted is that of the ten-volume
- edition, first printed in 1781, and reprinted several times before the
- end of the century, which is as near as anything to the “standard”
- Sterne. It seems, however, to have had no competent editing; and the
- renumbering of the chapters to suit the _four_ volumes, in which
- _Tristram_ was printed, completely upsets the original and important
- division into _nine_ volumes, or books, which has here, as in some other
- editions, been restored. Another piece of thoughtlessness was that of
- sticking the Dedication, which originally came between the eighth and
- ninth volumes, or books, at the beginning of the _fourth_ volume as
- reprinted, thereby making nonsense or puzzle of Sterne’s joke about _à
- priori_. It should be observed that the Dedication to Pitt, which here
- leads off, was not prefixed till the _second_ edition of the original,
- and that sometimes in the last-century editions it appears displaced at
- a later spot. No attempt has been made to correct any oddities of
- spelling that are not clearly mere misprints.
- CONTENTS
- PAGE
- BOOK I. 3
- BOOK II. 59
- BOOK III. 113
- BOOK IV. 176
- BOOK V. 251
- BOOK VI. 300
- BOOK VII. 349
- BOOK VIII. 395
- BOOK IX. 441
- THE LIFE AND OPINIONS
- OF
- TRISTRAM SHANDY
- GENTLEMAN
- Ταράσσει τοὺς Ἀνθρώπους οὐ τὰ Πράγματα,
- Ἀλλὰ τὰ περὶ τῶν Πραγμάτων Δόγματα.
- TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE
- _MR. PITT_
- SIR, --Never poor Wight of a Dedicator had less hopes from his
- Dedication, than I have from this of mine; for it is written in a bye
- corner of the kingdom, and in a retir’d thatch’d house, where I live in
- a constant endeavour to fence against the infirmities of ill health, and
- other evils of life, by mirth; being firmly persuaded that every time a
- man smiles, ----but much more so, when he laughs, it adds something to
- this Fragment of Life.
- I humbly beg, Sir, that you will honour this book, by taking it----(not
- under your Protection, ----it must protect itself, but)----into the
- country with you; where, if I am ever told, it has made you smile; or
- can conceive it has beguiled you of one moment’s pain ----I shall think
- myself as happy as a minister of state; ------perhaps much happier than
- any one (one only excepted) that I have read or heard of.
- I am, GREAT SIR,
- (and what is more to your Honour)
- I am, GOOD SIR,
- Your Well-wisher, and
- most humble Fellow-subject,
- THE AUTHOR.
- THE LIFE AND OPINIONS OF
- TRISTRAM SHANDY, GENT.
- BOOK I
- CHAPTER I
- I wish either my father or my mother, or indeed both of them, as they
- were in duty both equally bound to it, had minded what they were about
- when they begot me; had they duly consider’d how much depended upon what
- they were then doing; --that not only the production of a rational Being
- was concerned in it, but that possibly the happy formation and
- temperature of his body, perhaps his genius and the very cast of his
- mind; --and, for aught they knew to the contrary, even the fortunes of
- his whole house might take their turn from the humours and dispositions
- which were then uppermost; ----Had they duly weighed and considered all
- this, and proceeded accordingly, ----I am verily persuaded I should have
- made a quite different figure in the world from that in which the reader
- is likely to see me. --Believe me, good folks, this is not so
- inconsiderable a thing as many of you may think it; --you have all,
- I dare say, heard of the animal spirits, as how they are transfused from
- father to son, &c., &c. --and a great deal to that purpose: --Well, you
- may take my word, that nine parts in ten of a man’s sense or his
- nonsense, his successes and miscarriages in this world depend upon their
- motions and activity, and the different tracts and trains you put them
- into, so that when they are once set a-going, whether right or wrong,
- ’tis not a halfpenny matter, --away they go cluttering like hey-go mad;
- and by treading the same steps over and over again, they presently make
- a road of it, as plain and as smooth as a garden-walk, which, when they
- are once used to, the Devil himself sometimes shall not be able to drive
- them off it.
- _Pray, my Dear_, quoth my mother, _have you not forgot to wind up the
- clock? ------Good G--!_ cried my father, making an exclamation, but
- taking care to moderate his voice at the same time, ----_Did ever woman,
- since the creation of the world, interrupt a man with such a silly
- question?_ Pray, what was your father saying? ------Nothing.
- CHAPTER II
- ------Then, positively, there is nothing in the question that I can see,
- either good or bad. ----Then, let me tell you, Sir, it was a very
- unseasonable question at least, --because it scattered and dispersed the
- animal spirits, whose business it was to have escorted and gone hand in
- hand with the _HOMUNCULUS_, and conducted him safe to the place destined
- for his reception.
- The HOMUNCULUS, Sir, in however low and ludicrous a light he may appear,
- in this age of levity, to the eye of folly or prejudice; --to the eye of
- reason in scientifick research, he stands confess’d--a BEING guarded and
- circumscribed with rights. ----The minutest philosophers, who, by the
- bye, have the most enlarged understandings (their souls being inversely
- as their enquiries), shew us incontestably, that the HOMUNCULUS is
- created by the same hand, --engender’d in the same course of nature,
- --endow’d with the same locomotive powers and faculties with us: --That
- he consists as we do, of skin, hair, fat, flesh, veins, arteries,
- ligaments, nerves, cartilages, bones, marrow, brains, glands, genitals,
- humours, and articulations; --is a Being of as much activity, --and, in
- all senses of the word, as much and as truly our fellow-creature as my
- Lord Chancellor of _England_. --He may be benefited, --he may be
- injured, --he may obtain redress; --in a word, he has all the claims and
- rights of humanity, which _Tully_, _Puffendorf_, or the best ethick
- writers allow to arise out of that state and relation.
- Now, dear Sir, what if any accident had befallen him in his way alone!
- --or that, through terror of it, natural to so young a traveller, my
- little Gentleman had got to his journey’s end miserably spent; --his
- muscular strength and virility worn down to a thread; --his own animal
- spirits ruffled beyond description, --and that in this sad disordered
- state of nerves, he had lain down a prey to sudden starts, or a series
- of melancholy dreams and fancies, for nine long, long months together.
- --I tremble to think what a foundation had been laid for a thousand
- weaknesses both of body and mind, which no skill of the physician or the
- philosopher could ever afterwards have set thoroughly to rights.
- CHAPTER III
- To my uncle Mr. _Toby Shandy_ do I stand indebted for the preceding
- anecdote, to whom my father, who was an excellent natural philosopher,
- and much given to close reasoning upon the smallest matters, had oft,
- and heavily complained of the injury; but once more particularly, as my
- uncle _Toby_ well remember’d, upon his observing a most unaccountable
- obliquity (as he call’d it) in my manner of setting up my top, and
- justifying the principles upon which I had done it, --the old gentleman
- shook his head, and in a tone more expressive by half of sorrow than
- reproach, --he said his heart all along foreboded, and he saw it
- verified in this, and from a thousand other observations he had made
- upon me, That I should neither think nor act like any other man’s child:
- --_But alas!_ continued he, shaking his head a second time, and wiping
- away a tear which was trickling down his cheeks, _My Tristram’s
- misfortunes began nine months before ever he came into the world_.
- --My mother, who was sitting by, look’d up, --but she knew no more than
- her backside what my father meant, --but my uncle, Mr. _Toby Shandy_,
- who had been often informed of the affair, --understood him very well.
- CHAPTER IV
- I know there are readers in the world, as well as many other good people
- in it, who are no readers at all, who find themselves ill at ease,
- unless they are let into the whole secret from first to last, of
- everything which concerns you.
- It is in pure compliance with this humour of theirs, and from a
- backwardness in my nature to disappoint any one soul living, that I have
- been so very particular already. As my life and opinions are likely to
- make some noise in the world, and, if I conjecture right, will take in
- all ranks, professions, and denominations of men whatever, --be no less
- read than the _Pilgrim’s Progress_ itself--and in the end, prove the
- very thing which _Montaigne_ dreaded his Essays should turn out, that
- is, a book for a parlour-window; --I find it necessary to consult every
- one a little in his turn; and therefore must beg pardon for going on a
- little farther in the same way: For which cause, right glad I am, that I
- have begun the history of myself in the way I have done; and that I am
- able to go on, tracing everything in it, as _Horace_ says, _ab Ovo_.
- _Horace_, I know, does not recommend this fashion altogether: But that
- gentleman is speaking only of an epic poem or a tragedy; --(I forget
- which), --besides, if it was not so, I should beg Mr. _Horace’s_ pardon;
- --for in writing what I have set about, I shall confine myself neither
- to his rules, nor to any man’s rules that ever lived.
- To such, however, as do not choose to go so far back into these things,
- I can give no better advice, than that they skip over the remaining part
- of this chapter; for I declare before-hand, ’tis wrote only for the
- curious and inquisitive.
- ------------Shut the door. -------------------------------------- I was
- begot in the night, betwixt the first _Sunday_ and the first _Monday_ in
- the month of _March_, in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred
- and eighteen. I am positive I was. --But how I came to be so very
- particular in my account of a thing which happened before I was born, is
- owing to another small anecdote known only in our own family, but now
- made publick for the better clearing up this point.
- My father, you must know, who was originally a _Turkey_ merchant, but
- had left off business for some years, in order to retire to, and die
- upon, his paternal estate in the county of ------, was, I believe, one
- of the most regular men in everything he did, whether ’twas matter of
- business, or matter of amusement, that ever lived. As a small specimen
- of this extreme exactness of his, to which he was in truth a slave, --he
- had made it a rule for many years of his life, --on the first
- _Sunday-night_ of every month throughout the whole year, --as certain as
- ever the _Sunday-night_ came, ----to wind up a large house-clock, which
- we had standing on the back-stairs head, with his own hands: --And being
- somewhere between fifty and sixty years of age at the time I have been
- speaking of, --he had likewise gradually brought some other little
- family concernments to the same period, in order, as he would often say
- to my uncle _Toby_, to get them all out of the way at one time, and be
- no more plagued and pestered with them the rest of the month.
- It was attended but with one misfortune, which, in a great measure, fell
- upon myself, and the effects of which I fear I shall carry with me to my
- grave; namely, that from an unhappy association of ideas, which have no
- connection in nature, it so fell out at length, that my poor mother
- could never hear the said clock wound up, ----but the thoughts of some
- other things unavoidably popped into her head--and _vice versâ_:
- ----Which strange combination of ideas, the sagacious _Locke_, who
- certainly understood the nature of these things better than most men,
- affirms to have produced more wry actions than all other sources of
- prejudice whatsoever.
- But this by the bye.
- Now it appears by a memorandum in my father’s pocket-book, which now
- lies upon the table, “That on _Lady-day_, which was on the 25th of the
- same month in which I date my geniture, ----my father set out upon his
- journey to _London_, with my eldest brother _Bobby_, to fix him at
- _Westminster_ school;” and, as it appears from the same authority, “That
- he did not get down to his wife and family till the _second week_ in
- _May_ following,” --it brings the thing almost to a certainty. However,
- what follows in the beginning of the next chapter, puts it beyond all
- possibility of doubt.
- ------But pray, Sir, What was your father doing all _December_,
- _January_, and _February?_ ----Why, Madam, --he was all that time
- afflicted with a Sciatica.
- CHAPTER V
- On the fifth day of _November_, 1718, which to the æra fixed on, was as
- near nine calendar months as any husband could in reason have expected,
- --was I _Tristram Shandy_, Gentleman, brought forth into this scurvy and
- disasterous world of ours. ----I wish I had been born in the Moon, or in
- any of the planets (except _Jupiter_ or _Saturn_, because I never could
- bear cold weather) for it could not well have fared worse with me in any
- of them (though I will not answer for _Venus_) than it has in this vile,
- dirty planet of ours, --which, o’ my conscience, with reverence be it
- spoken, I take to be made up of the shreds and clippings of the rest;
- ----not but the planet is well enough, provided a man could be born in
- it to a great title or to a great estate; or could any how contrive to
- be called up to publick charges, and employments of dignity or power;
- ----but that is not my case; ----and therefore every man will speak of
- the fair as his own market has gone in it; ------for which cause I
- affirm it over again to be one of the vilest worlds that ever was made;
- --for I can truly say, that from the first hour I drew my breath in it,
- to this, that I can now scarce draw it at all, for an asthma I got in
- scating against the wind in _Flanders_; --I have been the continual
- sport of what the world calls Fortune; and though I will not wrong her
- by saying, She has ever made me feel the weight of any great or signal
- evil; ----yet with all the good temper in the world, I affirm it of her,
- that in every stage of my life, and at every turn and corner where she
- could get fairly at me, the ungracious duchess has pelted me with a set
- of as pitiful misadventures and cross accidents as ever small HERO
- sustained.
- CHAPTER VI
- In the beginning of the last chapter, I informed you exactly _when_ I
- was born; but I did not inform you _how. No_, that particular was
- reserved entirely for a chapter by itself; --besides, Sir, as you and I
- are in a manner perfect strangers to each other, it would not have been
- proper to have let you into too many circumstances relating to myself
- all at once. --You must have a little patience. I have undertaken, you
- see, to write not only my life, but my opinions also; hoping and
- expecting that your knowledge of my character, and of what kind of a
- mortal I am, by the one, would give you a better relish for the other:
- As you proceed farther with me, the slight acquaintance, which is now
- beginning betwixt us, will grow into familiarity; and that, unless one
- of us is in fault, will terminate in friendship. --_O diem
- præclarum!_--then nothing which has touched me will be thought trifling
- in its nature, or tedious in its telling. Therefore, my dear friend and
- companion, if you should think me somewhat sparing of my narrative on my
- first setting out--bear with me, --and let me go on, and tell my story
- my own way: --Or, if I should seem now and then to trifle upon the road,
- --or should sometimes put on a fool’s cap with a bell to it, for a
- moment or two as we pass along, --don’t fly off, --but rather
- courteously give me credit for a little more wisdom than appears upon my
- outside; --and as we jog on, either laugh with me, or at me, or in
- short, do anything, --only keep your temper.
- CHAPTER VII
- In the same village where my father and my mother dwelt, dwelt also a
- thin, upright, motherly, notable, good old body of a midwife, who with
- the help of a little plain good sense, and some years full employment in
- her business, in which she had all along trusted little to her own
- efforts, and a great deal to those of dame Nature, --had acquired, in
- her way, no small degree of reputation in the world: ----by which word
- _world_, need I in this place inform your worship, that I would be
- understood to mean no more of it, than a small circle described upon the
- circle of the great world, of four _English_ miles diameter, or
- thereabouts, of which the cottage where the good old woman lived, is
- supposed to be the centre? --She had been left, it seems, a widow in
- great distress, with three or four small children, in her forty-seventh
- year; and as she was at that time a person of decent carriage, --grave
- deportment, --a woman moreover of few words, and withal an object of
- compassion, whose distress, and silence under it, called out the louder
- for a friendly lift: the wife of the parson of the parish was touched
- with pity; and having often lamented an inconvenience, to which her
- husband’s flock had for many years been exposed, inasmuch as there was
- no such thing as a midwife, of any kind or degree, to be got at, let the
- case have been never so urgent, within less than six or seven long miles
- riding; which seven said long miles in dark nights and dismal roads, the
- country thereabouts being nothing but a deep clay, was almost equal to
- fourteen; and that in effect was sometimes next to having no midwife at
- all; it came into her head, that it would be doing as seasonable a
- kindness to the whole parish, as to the poor creature herself, to get
- her a little instructed in some of the plain principles of the business,
- in order to set her up in it. As no woman thereabouts was better
- qualified to execute the plan she had formed than herself, the
- gentlewoman very charitably undertook it; and having great influence
- over the female part of the parish, she found no difficulty in effecting
- it to the utmost of her wishes. In truth, the parson join’d his interest
- with his wife’s in the whole affair; and in order to do things as they
- should be, and give the poor soul as good a title by law to practise, as
- his wife had given by institution, --he chearfully paid the fees for the
- ordinary’s licence himself, amounting in the whole, to the sum of
- eighteen shillings and four pence; so that betwixt them both, the good
- woman was fully invested in the real and corporal possession of her
- office, together with all its _rights, members, and appurtenances
- whatsoever_.
- These last words, you must know, were not according to the old form in
- which such licences, faculties, and powers usually ran, which in like
- cases had heretofore been granted to the sisterhood. But it was
- according to a neat _Formula_ of _Didius_ his own devising, who having a
- particular turn for taking to pieces, and new framing over again, all
- kind of instruments in that way, not only hit upon this dainty
- amendment, but coaxed many of the old licensed matrons in the
- neighbourhood, to open their faculties afresh, in order to have this
- wham-wham of his inserted.
- I own I never could envy _Didius_ in these kinds of fancies of his:
- --But every man to his own taste. --Did not Dr. _Kunastrokius_, that
- great man, at his leisure hours, take the greatest delight imaginable in
- combing of asses tails, and plucking the dead hairs out with his teeth,
- though he had tweezers always in his pocket? Nay, if you come to that,
- Sir, have not the wisest of men in all ages, not excepting _Solomon_
- himself, --have they not had their HOBBY-HORSES; --their running horses,
- --their coins and their cockle-shells, their drums and their trumpets,
- their fiddles, their pallets, --their maggots and their butterflies?
- --and so long as a man rides his HOBBY-HORSE peaceably and quietly along
- the King’s highway, and neither compels you or me to get up behind him,
- --pray, Sir, what have either you or I to do with it?
- CHAPTER VIII
- --_De gustibus non est disputandum_; --that is, there is no disputing
- against HOBBY-HORSES; and for my part, I seldom do; nor could I with any
- sort of grace, had I been an enemy to them at the bottom; for happening,
- at certain intervals and changes of the moon, to be both fidler and
- painter, according as the fly stings: --Be it known to you, that I keep
- a couple of pads myself, upon which, in their turns, (nor do I care who
- knows it) I frequently ride out and take the air; --though sometimes, to
- my shame be it spoken, I take somewhat longer journies than what a wise
- man would think altogether right. --But the truth is, --I am not a wise
- man; --and besides am a mortal of so little consequence in the world, it
- is not much matter what I do: so I seldom fret or fume at all about it:
- Nor does it much disturb my rest, when I see such great Lords and tall
- Personages as hereafter follow; --such, for instance, as my Lord A, B,
- C, D, E, F, G, H, I, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, and so on, all of a row,
- mounted upon their several horses; --some with large stirrups, getting
- on in a more grave and sober pace; ----others on the contrary, tucked up
- to their very chins, with whips across their mouths, scouring and
- scampering it away like so many little party-coloured devils astride a
- mortgage, --and as if some of them were resolved to break their necks.
- ----So much the better--say I to myself; --for in case the worst should
- happen, the world will make a shift to do excellently well without them;
- and for the rest, ----why ----God speed them----e’en let them ride on
- without opposition from me; for were their lordships unhorsed this very
- night--’tis ten to one but that many of them would be worse mounted by
- one half before to-morrow morning.
- Not one of these instances therefore can be said to break in upon my
- rest. ----But there is an instance, which I own puts me off my guard,
- and that is, when I see one born for great actions, and what is still
- more for his honour, whose nature ever inclines him to good ones; --when
- I behold such a one, my Lord, like yourself, whose principles and
- conduct are as generous and noble as his blood, and whom, for that
- reason, a corrupt world cannot spare one moment; --when I see such a
- one, my Lord, mounted, though it is but for a minute beyond the time
- which my love to my country has prescribed to him, and my zeal for his
- glory wishes, --then, my Lord, I cease to be a philosopher, and in the
- first transport of an honest impatience, I wish the HOBBY-HORSE, with
- all his fraternity, at the Devil.
- “MY LORD,
- “I maintain this to be a dedication, notwithstanding its singularity in
- the three great essentials of matter, form, and place: I beg, therefore,
- you will accept it as such, and that you will permit me to lay it, with
- the most respectful humility, at your Lordship’s feet, --when you are
- upon them, --which you can be when you please; --and that is, my Lord,
- whenever there is occasion for it, and I will add, to the best purposes
- too. I have the honour to be,
- “_My Lord,
- Your Lordship’s most obedient,
- and most devoted,
- and most humble servant_,
- TRISTRAM SHANDY.”
- CHAPTER IX
- I solemnly declare to all mankind, that the above dedication was made
- for no one Prince, Prelate, Pope, or Potentate, --Duke, Marquis, Earl,
- Viscount, or Baron, of this, or any other Realm in Christendom; ----nor
- has it yet been hawked about, or offered publicly or privately, directly
- or indirectly, to any one person or personage, great or small; but is
- honestly a true Virgin-Dedication untried on, upon any soul living.
- I labour this point so particularly, merely to remove any offence or
- objection which might arise against it from the manner in which I
- propose to make the most of it; --which is the putting it up fairly to
- public sale; which I now do.
- ----Every author has a way of his own in bringing his points to bear;
- --for my own part, as I hate chaffering and higgling for a few guineas
- in a dark entry; --I resolved within myself, from the very beginning, to
- deal squarely and openly with your Great Folks in this affair, and try
- whether I should not come off the better by it.
- If therefore there is any one Duke, Marquis, Earl, Viscount, or Baron,
- in these his Majesty’s dominions, who stands in need of a tight, genteel
- dedication, and whom the above will suit, (for by the bye, unless it
- suits in some degree, I will not part with it)----it is much at his
- service for fifty guineas; ----which I am positive is twenty guineas
- less than it ought to be afforded for, by any man of genius.
- My Lord, if you examine it over again, it is far from being a gross
- piece of daubing, as some dedications are. The design, your Lordship
- sees, is good, --the colouring transparent, --the drawing not amiss;
- --or to speak more like a man of science, --and measure my piece in the
- painter’s scale, divided into 20, --I believe, my Lord, the outlines
- will turn out as 12, --the composition as 9, --the colouring as 6, --the
- expression 13 and a half, --and the design, --if I may be allowed, my
- Lord, to understand my own _design_, and supposing absolute perfection
- in designing, to be as 20, --I think it cannot well fall short of 19.
- Besides all this, --there is keeping in it, and the dark strokes in the
- HOBBY-HORSE, (which is a secondary figure, and a kind of back-ground to
- the whole) give great force to the principal lights in your own figure,
- and make it come off wonderfully; ----and besides, there is an air of
- originality in the _tout ensemble_.
- Be pleased, my good Lord, to order the sum to be paid into the hands of
- Mr. _Dodsley_, for the benefit of the author; and in the next edition
- care shall be taken that this chapter be expunged, and your Lordship’s
- titles, distinctions, arms, and good actions, be placed at the front of
- the preceding chapter: All which, from the words, _De gustibus non est
- disputandum_, and whatever else in this book relates to HOBBY-HORSES,
- but no more, shall stand dedicated to your Lordship. --The rest I
- dedicate to the MOON, who, by the bye, of all the PATRONS or MATRONS I
- can think of, has most power to set my book a-going, and make the world
- run mad after it.
- _Bright Goddess_,
- If thou art not too busy with CANDID and Miss CUNEGUND’S affairs, --take
- _Tristram Shandy’s_ under thy protection also.
- CHAPTER X
- Whatever degree of small merit the act of benignity in favour of the
- midwife might justly claim, or in whom that claim truly rested, --at
- first sight seems not very material to this history; ----certain however
- it was, that the gentlewoman, the parson’s wife, did run away at that
- time with the whole of it: And yet, for my life, I cannot help thinking
- but that the parson himself, though he had not the good fortune to hit
- upon the design first, --yet, as he heartily concurred in it the moment
- it was laid before him, and as heartily parted with his money to carry
- it into execution, had a claim to some share of it, --if not to a full
- half of whatever honour was due to it.
- The world at that time was pleased to determine the matter otherwise.
- Lay down the book, and I will allow you half a day to give a probable
- guess at the grounds of this procedure.
- Be it known then, that, for about five years before the date of the
- midwife’s licence, of which you have had so circumstantial an account,
- --the parson we have to do with had made himself a country-talk by a
- breach of all decorum, which he had committed against himself, his
- station, and his office; --and that was in never appearing better, or
- otherwise mounted, than upon a lean, sorry, jack-ass of a horse, value
- about one pound fifteen shillings; who, to shorten all description of
- him, was full brother to _Rosinante_, as far as similitude congenial
- could make him; for he answered his description to a hair-breadth in
- every thing, --except that I do not remember ’tis any where said, that
- _Rosinante_ was broken-winded; and that, moreover, _Rosinante_, as is
- the happiness of most _Spanish_ horses, fat or lean, --was undoubtedly a
- horse at all points.
- I know very well that the HERO’S horse was a horse of chaste deportment,
- which may have given grounds for the contrary opinion: But it is as
- certain at the same time, that _Rosinante’s_ continency (as may be
- demonstrated from the adventure of the _Yanguesian_ carriers) proceeded
- from no bodily defect or cause whatsoever, but from the temperance and
- orderly current of his blood. --And let me tell you, Madam, there is a
- great deal of very good chastity in the world, in behalf of which you
- could not say more for your life.
- Let that be as it may, as my purpose is to do extra justice to every
- creature brought upon the stage of this dramatic work, --I could not
- stifle this distinction in favour of Don _Quixote’s_ horse; ----in all
- other points, the parson’s horse, I say, was just such another, --for he
- was as lean, and as lank, and as sorry a jade, as HUMILITY herself could
- have bestrided.
- In the estimation of here and there a man of weak judgment, it was
- greatly in the parson’s power to have helped the figure of this horse of
- his, --for he was master of a very handsome demi-peak’d saddle, quilted
- on the seat with green plush, garnished with a double row of
- silver-headed studs, and a noble pair of shining brass stirrups, with a
- housing altogether suitable, of grey superfine cloth, with an edging of
- black lace, terminating in a deep, black, silk fringe, _poudré d’or_,
- --all which he had purchased in the pride and prime of his life,
- together with a grand embossed bridle, ornamented at all points as it
- should be. ----But not caring to banter his beast, he had hung all these
- up behind his study door: --and, in lieu of them, had seriously befitted
- him with just such a bridle and such a saddle, as the figure and value
- of such a steed might well and truly deserve.
- In the several sallies about his parish, and in the neighbouring visits
- to the gentry who lived around him, --you will easily comprehend, that
- the parson, so appointed, would both hear and see enough to keep his
- philosophy from rusting. To speak the truth, he never could enter a
- village, but he caught the attention of both old and young. ----Labour
- stood still as he pass’d----the bucket hung suspended in the middle of
- the well, ----the spinning-wheel forgot its round, ----even
- chuck-farthing and shuffle-cap themselves stood gaping till he had got
- out of sight; and as his movement was not of the quickest, he had
- generally time enough upon his hands to make his observations, --to hear
- the groans of the serious, --and the laughter of the light-hearted;
- --all which he bore with excellent tranquillity. --His character was,
- --he loved a jest in his heart--and as he saw himself in the true point
- of ridicule, he would say he could not be angry with others for seeing
- him in a light, in which he so strongly saw himself: So that to his
- friends, who knew his foible was not the love of money, and who
- therefore made the less scruple in bantering the extravagance of his
- humour, --instead of giving the true cause, --he chose rather to join in
- the laugh against himself; and as he never carried one single ounce of
- flesh upon his own bones, being altogether as spare a figure as his
- beast, --he would sometimes insist upon it, that the horse was as good
- as the rider deserved; --that they were, centaur-like, --both of a
- piece. At other times, and in other moods, when his spirits were above
- the temptation of false wit, --he would say, he found himself going off
- fast in a consumption; and, with great gravity, would pretend, he could
- not bear the sight of a fat horse, without a dejection of heart, and a
- sensible alteration in his pulse; and that he had made choice of the
- lean one he rode upon, not only to keep himself in countenance, but in
- spirits.
- At different times he would give fifty humorous and apposite reasons for
- riding a meek-spirited jade of a broken-winded horse, preferably to one
- of mettle; --for on such a one he could sit mechanically, and meditate
- as delightfully _de vanitate mundi et fugâ sæculi_, as with the
- advantage of a death’s-head before him; --that, in all other
- exercitations, he could spend his time, as he rode slowly along, --to as
- much account as in his study; --that he could draw up an argument in his
- sermon, --or a hole in his breeches, as steadily on the one as in the
- other; --that brisk trotting and slow argumentation, like wit and
- judgment, were two incompatible movements. --But that upon his steed--he
- could unite and reconcile every thing, --he could compose his sermon--he
- could compose his cough, ----and, in case nature gave a call that way,
- he could likewise compose himself to sleep. --In short, the parson upon
- such encounters would assign any cause but the true cause, --and he
- with-held the true one, only out of a nicety of temper, because he
- thought it did honour to him.
- But the truth of the story was as follows: In the first years of this
- gentleman’s life, and about the time when the superb saddle and bridle
- were purchased by him, it had been his manner, or vanity, or call it
- what you will, --to run into the opposite extreme. --In the language of
- the county where he dwelt, he was said to have loved a good horse, and
- generally had one of the best in the whole parish standing in his stable
- always ready for saddling; and as the nearest midwife, as I told you,
- did not live nearer to the village than seven miles, and in a vile
- country, --it so fell out that the poor gentleman was scarce a whole
- week together without some piteous application for his beast; and as he
- was not an unkind-hearted man, and every case was more pressing and more
- distressful than the last, --as much as he loved his beast, he had never
- a heart to refuse him; the upshot of which was generally this, that his
- horse was either clapp’d, or spavin’d, or greaz’d; --or he was
- twitter-bon’d, or broken-winded, or something, in short, or other had
- befallen him, which would let him carry no flesh; --so that he had every
- nine or ten months a bad horse to get rid of, --and a good horse to
- purchase in his stead.
- What the loss on such a balance might amount to, _communibus annis_, I
- would leave to a special jury of sufferers in the same traffick, to
- determine; --but let it be what it would, the honest gentleman bore it
- for many years without a murmur, till at length, by repeated ill
- accidents of the kind, he found it necessary to take the thing under
- consideration; and upon weighing the whole, and summing it up in his
- mind, he found it not only disproportioned to his other expences, but
- withal so heavy an article in itself, as to disable him from any other
- act of generosity in his parish: Besides this, he considered that with
- half the sum thus galloped away, he could do ten times as much good;
- --and what still weighed more with him than all other considerations put
- together, was this, that it confined all his charity into one particular
- channel, and where, as he fancied, it was the least wanted, namely, to
- the child-bearing and child-getting part of his parish; reserving
- nothing for the impotent, --nothing for the aged, --nothing for the many
- comfortless scenes he was hourly called forth to visit, where poverty,
- and sickness, and affliction dwelt together.
- For these reasons he resolved to discontinue the expence; and there
- appeared but two possible ways to extricate him clearly out of it; --and
- these were, either to make it an irrevocable law never more to lend his
- steed upon any application whatever, --or else be content to ride the
- last poor devil, such as they had made him, with all his aches and
- infirmities, to the very end of the chapter.
- As he dreaded his own constancy in the first--he very chearfully betook
- himself to the second; and though he could very well have explained it,
- as I said, to his honour, --yet, for that very reason, he had a spirit
- above it; choosing rather to bear the contempt of his enemies, and the
- laughter of his friends, than undergo the pain of telling a story, which
- might seem a panegyrick upon himself.
- I have the highest idea of the spiritual and refined sentiments of this
- reverend gentleman, from this single stroke in his character, which I
- think comes up to any of the honest refinements of the peerless knight
- of _La Mancha_, whom, by the bye, with all his follies, I love more, and
- would actually have gone farther to have paid a visit to, than the
- greatest hero of antiquity.
- But this is not the moral of my story: The thing I had in view was to
- shew the temper of the world in the whole of this affair. --For you must
- know, that so long as this explanation would have done the parson
- credit, --the devil a soul could find it out, --I suppose his enemies
- would not, and that his friends could not. ----But no sooner did he
- bestir himself in behalf of the midwife, and pay the expences of the
- ordinary’s licence to set her up, --but the whole secret came out; every
- horse he had lost, and two horses more than ever he had lost, with all
- the circumstances of their destruction, were known and distinctly
- remembered. --The story ran like wild-fire-- “The parson had a returning
- fit of pride which had just seized him; and he was going to be well
- mounted once again in his life; and if it was so, ’twas plain as the sun
- at noon-day, he would pocket the expence of the licence, ten times told,
- the very first year: --So that every body was left to judge what were
- his views in this act of charity.”
- What were his views in this, and in every other action of his life, --or
- rather what were the opinions which floated in the brains of other
- people concerning it, was a thought which too much floated in his own,
- and too often broke in upon his rest, when he should have been sound
- asleep.
- About ten years ago this gentleman had the good fortune to be made
- entirely easy upon that score, --it being just so long since he left his
- parish, --and the whole world at the same time behind him, --and stands
- accountable to a Judge of whom he will have no cause to complain.
- But there is a fatality attends the actions of some men: Order them as
- they will, they pass thro’ a certain medium, which so twists and
- refracts them from their true directions----that, with all the titles to
- praise which a rectitude of heart can give, the doers of them are
- nevertheless forced to live and die without it.
- Of the truth of which, this gentleman was a painful example. ----But to
- know by what means this came to pass, --and to make that knowledge of
- use to you, I insist upon it that you read the two following chapters,
- which contain such a sketch of his life and conversation, as will carry
- its moral along with it. --When this is done, if nothing stops us in our
- way, we will go on with the midwife.
- CHAPTER XI
- Yorick was this parson’s name, and, what is very remarkable in it
- (as appears from a most ancient account of the family, wrote upon strong
- vellum, and now in perfect preservation) it had been exactly so spelt
- for near, ----I was within an ace of saying nine hundred years; ----but
- I would not shake my credit in telling an improbable truth, however
- indisputable in itself; ----and therefore I shall content myself with
- only saying ----It had been exactly so spelt, without the least variation
- or transposition of a single letter, for I do not know how long; which
- is more than I would venture to say of one half of the best surnames in
- the kingdom; which, in a course of years, have generally undergone as
- many chops and changes as their owners. --Has this been owing to the
- pride, or to the shame of the respective proprietors? --In honest truth,
- I think sometimes to the one, and sometimes to the other, just as the
- temptation has wrought. But a villainous affair it is, and will one day
- so blend and confound us altogether, that no one shall be able to stand
- up and swear, “That his own great grandfather was the man who did either
- this or that.”
- This evil had been sufficiently fenced against by the prudent care of
- the _Yorick’s_ family, and their religious preservation of these records
- I quote, which do farther inform us, That the family was originally of
- _Danish_ extraction, and had been transplanted into _England_ as early
- as in the reign of _Horwendillus_, king of _Denmark_, in whose court, it
- seems, an ancestor of this Mr. _Yorick’s_, and from whom he was lineally
- descended, held a considerable post to the day of his death. Of what
- nature this considerable post was, this record saith not; --It only
- adds, That, for near two centuries, it had been totally abolished, as
- altogether unnecessary, not only in that court, but in every other court
- of the Christian world.
- It has often come into my head, that this post could be no other than
- that of the king’s chief Jester; --and that _Hamlet’s Yorick_, in our
- _Shakespeare_, many of whose plays, you know, are founded upon
- authenticated facts, was certainly the very man.
- I have not the time to look into _Saxo-Grammaticus’s Danish_ history, to
- know the certainty of this; --but if you have leisure, and can easily
- get at the book, you may do it full as well yourself.
- I had just time, in my travels through _Denmark_ with Mr. _Noddy’s_
- eldest son, whom, in the year 1741, I accompanied as governor, riding
- along with him at a prodigious rate thro’ most parts of _Europe_, and of
- which original journey performed by us two, a most delectable narrative
- will be given in the progress of this work; I had just time, I say, and
- that was all, to prove the truth of an observation made by a long
- sojourner in that country; ----namely, “That nature was neither very
- lavish, nor was she very stingy in her gifts of genius and capacity to
- its inhabitants; --but, like a discreet parent, was moderately kind to
- them all; observing such an equal tenor in the distribution of her
- favours, as to bring them, in those points, pretty near to a level with
- each other; so that you will meet with few instances in that kingdom of
- refined parts; but a great deal of good plain household understanding
- amongst all ranks of people, of which everybody has a share;” which is,
- I think, very right.
- With us, you see, the case is quite different: --we are all ups and
- downs in this matter; --you are a great genius; --or ’tis fifty to one,
- Sir, you are a great dunce and a blockhead; --not that there is a total
- want of intermediate steps, --no, --we are not so irregular as that
- comes to; --but the two extremes are more common, and in a greater
- degree in this unsettled island, where nature, in her gifts and
- dispositions of this kind, is most whimsical and capricious; fortune
- herself not being more so in the bequest of her goods and chattels than
- she.
- This is all that ever staggered my faith in regard to _Yorick’s_
- extraction, who, by what I can remember of him, and by all the accounts
- I could ever get of him, seemed not to have had one single drop of
- _Danish_ blood in his whole crasis; in nine hundred years, it might
- possibly have all run out: ----I will not philosophize one moment with
- you about it; for happen how it would, the fact was this: --That instead
- of that cold phlegm and exact regularity of sense and humours, you would
- have looked for, in one so extracted; --he was, on the contrary, as
- mercurial and sublimated a composition, --as heteroclite a creature in
- all his declensions; --with as much life and whim, and _gaité de cœur_
- about him, as the kindliest climate could have engendered and put
- together. With all this sail, poor _Yorick_ carried not one ounce of
- ballast; he was utterly unpractised in the world; and, at the age of
- twenty-six, knew just about as well how to steer his course in it, as a
- romping, unsuspicious girl of thirteen: So that upon his first setting
- out, the brisk gale of his spirits, as you will imagine, ran him foul
- ten times in a day of somebody’s tackling; and as the grave and more
- slow-paced were oftenest in his way, ----you may likewise imagine, ’twas
- with such he had generally the ill luck to get the most entangled. For
- aught I know there might be some mixture of unlucky wit at the bottom of
- such _Fracas_: ----For, to speak the truth, _Yorick_ had an invincible
- dislike and opposition in his nature to gravity; --not to gravity as
- such; --for where gravity was wanted, he would be the most grave or
- serious of mortal men for days and weeks together; --but he was an enemy
- to the affectation of it, and declared open war against it, only as it
- appeared a cloak for ignorance, or for folly: and then, whenever it fell
- in his way, however sheltered and protected, he seldom gave it much
- quarter.
- Sometimes, in his wild way of talking, he would say that Gravity was an
- errant scoundrel, and he would add, --of the most dangerous kind too,
- --because a sly one; and that he verily believed, more honest,
- well-meaning people were bubbled out of their goods and money by it in
- one twelve-month, than by pocket-picking and shop-lifting in seven. In
- the naked temper which a merry heart discovered, he would say, there was
- no danger, --but to itself: --whereas the very essence of gravity was
- design, and consequently deceit; --’twas a taught trick to gain credit
- of the world for more sense and knowledge than a man was worth; and
- that, with all its pretensions, --it was no better, but often worse,
- than what a _French_ wit had long ago defined it, --_viz._ _A mysterious
- carriage of the body to cover the defects of the mind_; --which
- definition of gravity, _Yorick_, with great imprudence, would say,
- deserved to be wrote in letters of gold.
- But, in plain truth, he was a man unhackneyed and unpractised in the
- world, and was altogether as indiscreet and foolish on every other
- subject of discourse where policy is wont to impress restraint. _Yorick_
- had no impression but one, and that was what arose from the nature of
- the deed spoken of; which impression he would usually translate into
- plain _English_ without any periphrasis; --and too oft without much
- distinction of either person, time, or place; --so that when mention was
- made of a pitiful or an ungenerous proceeding----he never gave himself a
- moment’s time to reflect who was the hero of the piece, ----what his
- station, ----or how far he had power to hurt him hereafter; ----but if
- it was a dirty action, --without more ado, --The man was a dirty fellow,
- --and so on. --And as his comments had usually the ill fate to be
- terminated either in a _bon mot_, or to be enlivened throughout with
- some drollery or humour of expression, it gave wings to _Yorick’s_
- indiscretion. In a word, tho’ he never sought, yet, at the same time, as
- he seldom shunned occasions of saying what came uppermost, and without
- much ceremony; ----he had but too many temptations in life, of
- scattering his wit and his humour, --his gibes and his jests about him.
- ----They were not lost for want of gathering.
- What were the consequences, and what was _Yorick’s_ catastrophe
- thereupon, you will read in the next chapter.
- CHAPTER XII
- The _Mortgager_ and _Mortgagée_ differ the one from the other, not more
- in length of purse, than the _Jester_ and _Jestée_ do, in that of
- memory. But in this the comparison between them runs, as the scholiasts
- call it, upon all-four; which, by the bye, is upon one or two legs more
- than some of the best of _Homer’s_ can pretend to; --namely, That the
- one raises a sum, and the other a laugh at your expence, and thinks no
- more about it. Interest, however, still runs on in both cases; --the
- periodical or accidental payments of it, just serving to keep the memory
- of the affair alive; till, at length, in some evil hour, --pop comes the
- creditor upon each, and by demanding principal upon the spot, together
- with full interest to the very day, makes them both feel the full extent
- of their obligations.
- As the reader (for I hate your _ifs_) has a thorough knowledge of human
- nature, I need not say more to satisfy him, that my HERO could not go on
- at this rate without some slight experience of these incidental
- mementos. To speak the truth, he had wantonly involved himself in a
- multitude of small book-debts of this stamp, which, notwithstanding
- _Eugenius’s_ frequent advice, he too much disregarded; thinking, that as
- not one of them was contracted thro’ any malignancy; --but, on the
- contrary, from an honesty of mind, and a mere jocundity of humour, they
- would all of them be cross’d out in course.
- _Eugenius_ would never admit this; and would often tell him, that one
- day or other he would certainly be reckoned with; and he would often
- add, in an accent of sorrowful apprehension, --to the uttermost mite. To
- which _Yorick_, with his usual carelessness of heart, would as often
- answer with a pshaw! --and if the subject was started in the
- fields--with a hop, skip, and a jump at the end of it; but if close pent
- up in the social chimney-corner, where the culprit was barricado’d in,
- with a table and a couple of armchairs, and could not so readily fly off
- in a tangent, --_Eugenius_ would then go on with his lecture upon
- discretion in words to this purpose, though somewhat better put
- together.
- Trust me, dear _Yorick_, this unwary pleasantry of thine will sooner or
- later bring thee into scrapes and difficulties, which no after-wit can
- extricate thee out of. ----In these sallies, too oft, I see, it happens,
- that a person laughed at, considers himself in the light of a person
- injured, with all the rights of such a situation belonging to him; and
- when thou viewest him in that light too, and reckons up his friends, his
- family, his kindred and allies, ----and musters up with them the many
- recruits which will list under him from a sense of common danger;
- ----’tis no extravagant arithmetick to say, that for every ten jokes,
- --thou hast got an hundred enemies; and till thou hast gone on, and
- raised a swarm of wasps about thine ears, and art half stung to death by
- them, thou wilt never be convinced it is so.
- I cannot suspect it in the man whom I esteem, that there is the least
- spur from spleen or malevolence of intent in these sallies ----I believe
- and know them to be truly honest and sportive: --But consider, my dear
- lad, that fools cannot distinguish this, --and that knaves will not: and
- thou knowest not what it is, either to provoke the one, or to make merry
- with the other: ----whenever they associate for mutual defence, depend
- upon it, they will carry on the war in such a manner against thee, my
- dear friend, as to make thee heartily sick of it, and of thy life too.
- Revenge from some baneful corner shall level a tale of dishonour at
- thee, which no innocence of heart or integrity of conduct shall set
- right. ----The fortunes of thy house shall totter, --thy character,
- which led the way to them, shall bleed on every side of it, --thy faith
- questioned, --thy works belied, --thy wit forgotten, --thy learning
- trampled on. To wind up the last scene of thy tragedy, CRUELTY and
- COWARDICE, twin ruffians, hired and set on by MALICE in the dark, shall
- strike together at all thy infirmities and mistakes: ----The best of us,
- my dear lad, lie open there, ----and trust me, ----trust me, _Yorick,
- when to gratify a private appetite, it is once resolved upon, that an
- innocent and an helpless creature shall be sacrificed, ’tis an easy
- matter to pick up sticks enough from any thicket where it has strayed,
- to make a fire to offer it up with_.
- _Yorick_ scarce ever heard this sad vaticination of his destiny read
- over to him, but with a fear stealing from his eye, and a promissory
- look attending it, that he was resolved, for the time to come, to ride
- his tit with more sobriety. --But, alas, too late! --a grand
- confederacy, with ***** and ***** at the head of it, was formed before
- the first prediction of it. --The whole plan of the attack, just as
- _Eugenius_ had foreboded, was put in execution all at once, --with so
- little mercy on the side of the allies, --and so little suspicion in
- _Yorick_, of what was carrying on against him, --that when he thought,
- good easy man! full surely preferment was o’ ripening, --they had smote
- his root, and then he fell, as many a worthy man had fallen before him.
- _Yorick_, however, fought it out with all imaginable gallantry for some
- time; till, overpowered by numbers, and worn out at length by the
- calamities of the war, --but more so, by the ungenerous manner in which
- it was carried on, --he threw down the sword; and though he kept up his
- spirits in appearance to the last, he died, nevertheless, as was
- generally thought, quite broken-hearted.
- What inclined _Eugenius_ to the same opinion was as follows:
- A few hours before _Yorick_ breathed his last, _Eugenius_ stept in with
- an intent to take his last sight and last farewell of him. Upon his
- drawing _Yorick’s_ curtain, and asking how he felt himself, _Yorick_
- looking up in his face took hold of his hand, --and after thanking him
- for the many tokens of his friendship to him, for which, he said, if it
- was their fate to meet hereafter, --he would thank him again and again,
- --he told him, he was within a few hours of giving his enemies the slip
- for ever. --I hope not, answered _Eugenius_, with tears trickling down
- his cheeks, and with the tenderest tone that ever man spoke. --I hope
- not, _Yorick_, said he. ----_Yorick_ replied, with a look up, and a
- gentle squeeze of _Eugenius’s_ hand, and that was all, --but it cut
- _Eugenius_ to his heart, --Come--come, _Yorick_, quoth _Eugenius_,
- wiping his eyes, and summoning up the man within him, --my dear lad, be
- comforted, --let not all thy spirits and fortitude forsake thee at this
- crisis when thou most wants them; ----who knows what resources are in
- store, and what the power of God may yet do for thee? ----_Yorick_ laid
- his hand upon his heart, and gently shook his head; --For my part,
- continued _Eugenius_, crying bitterly as he uttered the words, --I
- declare I know not, _Yorick_, how to part with thee, and would gladly
- flatter my hopes, added _Eugenius_, chearing up his voice, that there is
- still enough left of thee to make a bishop, and that I may live to see
- it. ----I beseech thee, _Eugenius_, quoth _Yorick_, taking off his
- night-cap as well as he could with his left hand, ----his right being
- still grasped close in that of _Eugenius_, ----I beseech thee to take a
- view of my head. --I see nothing that ails it, replied _Eugenius_. Then,
- alas! my friend, said _Yorick_, let me tell you, that ’tis so bruised
- and mis-shapened with the blows which ***** and *****, and some others
- have so unhandsomely given me, in the dark, that I might say with
- _Sancho Pança_, that should I recover, and “Mitres thereupon be suffered
- to rain down from heaven as thick as hail, not one of them would fit
- it.” ----_Yorick’s_ last breath was hanging upon his trembling lips
- ready to depart as he uttered this: ----yet still it was uttered with
- something of a _Cervantick_ tone; ----and as he spoke it, _Eugenius_
- could perceive a stream of lambent fire lighted up for a moment in his
- eyes; ----faint picture of those flashes of his spirit, which
- (as _Shakespeare_ said of his ancestor) were wont to set the table in a
- roar!
- _Eugenius_ was convinced from this, that the heart of his friend was
- broke: he squeezed his hand, ----and then walked softly out of the room,
- weeping as he walked. _Yorick_ followed _Eugenius_ with his eyes to the
- door, --he then closed them, --and never opened them more.
- [Illustration (full-page black tombstone)]
- He lies buried in the corner of his churchyard, in the parish of ------,
- under a plain marble slab, which his friend _Eugenius_, by leave of his
- executors, laid upon his grave, with no more than these three words of
- inscription, serving both for his epitaph and elegy.
- ____________________
- | |
- | Alas, poor YORICK! |
- |____________________|
- Ten times a day has _Yorick’s_ ghost the consolation to hear his
- monumental inscription read over with such a variety of plaintive tones,
- as denote a general pity and esteem for him; ----a foot-way crossing the
- churchyard close by the side of his grave, --not a passenger goes by
- without stopping to cast a look upon it, --and sighing as he walks on,
- Alas, poor YORICK!
- CHAPTER XIII
- It is so long since the reader of this rhapsodical work has been parted
- from the midwife, that it is high time to mention her again to him,
- merely to put him in mind that there is such a body still in the world,
- and whom, upon the best judgment I can form upon my own plan at present,
- --I am going to introduce to him for good and all: But as fresh matter
- may be started, and much unexpected business fall out betwixt the reader
- and myself, which may require immediate dispatch; ----’twas right to
- take care that the poor woman should not be lost in the meantime;
- --because when she is wanted, we can no way do without her.
- I think I told you that this good woman was a person of no small note
- and consequence throughout our whole village and township; --that her
- fame had spread itself to the very out-edge and circumference of that
- circle of importance, of which kind every soul living, whether he has a
- shirt to his back or no, ----has one surrounding him; --which said
- circle, by the way, whenever ’tis said that such a one is of great
- weight and importance in the _world_, ----I desire may be enlarged or
- contracted in your worship’s fancy, in a compound ratio of the station,
- profession, knowledge, abilities, height and depth (measuring both ways)
- of the personage brought before you.
- In the present case, if I remember, I fixed it about four or five miles,
- which not only comprehended the whole parish, but extended itself to two
- or three of the adjacent hamlets in the skirts of the next parish; which
- made a considerable thing of it. I must add, That she was, moreover,
- very well looked on at one large grange-house, and some other odd houses
- and farms within two or three miles, as I said, from the smoke of her
- own chimney: ----But I must here, once for all, inform you, that all
- this will be more exactly delineated and explain’d in a map, now in the
- hands of the engraver, which, with many other pieces and developements
- of this work, will be added to the end of the twentieth volume, --not to
- swell the work, --I detest the thought of such a thing; --but by way of
- commentary, scholium, illustration, and key to such passages, incidents,
- or innuendos as shall be thought to be either of private interpretation,
- or of dark or doubtful meaning, after my life and my opinions shall have
- been read over (now don’t forget the meaning of the word) by all the
- _world_; ----which, betwixt you and me, and in spite of all the
- gentlemen-reviewers in _Great Britain_, and of all that their worships
- shall undertake to write or say to the contrary, --I am determined shall
- be the case. --I need not tell your worship, that all this is spoke in
- confidence.
- CHAPTER XIV
- Upon looking into my mother’s marriage-settlement, in order to satisfy
- myself and reader in a point necessary to be cleared up, before we could
- proceed any farther in this history; --I had the good fortune to pop
- upon the very thing I wanted before I had read a day and a half straight
- forwards, --it might have taken me up a month; --which shews plainly,
- that when a man sits down to write a history, --tho’ it be but the
- history of _Jack Hickathrift_ or _Tom Thumb_, he knows no more than his
- heels what lets and confounded hindrances he is to meet with in his way,
- --or what a dance he may be led, by one excursion or another, before all
- is over. Could a historiographer drive on his history, as a muleteer
- drives on his mule, --straight forward; ----for instance, from _Rome_
- all the way to _Loretto_, without ever once turning his head aside
- either to the right hand or to the left, ----he might venture to
- foretell you to an hour when he should get to his journey’s end; ----but
- the thing is, morally speaking, impossible: For, if he is a man of the
- least spirit, he will have fifty deviations from a straight line to make
- with this or that party as he goes along, which he can no ways avoid. He
- will have views and prospects to himself perpetually soliciting his eye,
- which he can no more help standing still to look at than he can fly; he
- will moreover have various
- Accounts to reconcile:
- Anecdotes to pick up:
- Inscriptions to make out:
- Stories to weave in:
- Traditions to sift:
- Personages to call upon:
- Panegyricks to paste up at this door;
- Pasquinades at that: ----All which both the man and his mule are quite
- exempt from. To sum up all; there are archives at every stage to be
- look’d into, and rolls, records, documents, and endless genealogies,
- which justice ever and anon calls him back to stay the reading of:
- ----In short, there is no end of it; ----for my own part, I declare I
- had been at it these six weeks, making all the speed I possibly could,
- --and am not yet born: --I have just been able, and that’s all, to tell
- you _when_ it happen’d, but not _how_; --so that you see the thing is
- yet far from being accomplished.
- These unforeseen stoppages, which I own I had no conception of when I
- first set out; --but which, I am convinced now, will rather increase
- than diminish as I advance, --have struck out a hint which I am resolved
- to follow; ----and that is, --not to be in a hurry; but to go on
- leisurely, writing and publishing two volumes of my life every year;
- ----which, if I am suffered to go on quietly, and can make a tolerable
- bargain with my bookseller, I shall continue to do as long as I live.
- CHAPTER XV
- The article in my mother’s marriage-settlement, which I told the reader
- I was at the pains to search for, and which, now that I have found it,
- I think proper to lay before him, --is so much more fully express’d in
- the deed itself, than ever I can pretend to do it, that it would be
- barbarity to take it out of the lawyer’s hand: --It is as follows.
- “#And this Indenture further witnesseth#, That the said _Walter Shandy_,
- merchant, in consideration of the said intended marriage to be had, and,
- by God’s blessing, to be well and truly solemnised and consummated
- between the said _Walter Shandy_ and _Elizabeth Mollineux_ aforesaid,
- and divers other good and valuable causes and considerations him
- thereunto specially moving, --doth grant, covenant, condescend, consent,
- conclude, bargain, and fully agree to and with _John Dixon_, and _James
- Turner_, Esqrs. the above-named Trustees, _&c. &c._--#to Wit#, --That in
- case it should hereafter so fall out, chance, happen, or otherwise come
- to pass, --That the said _Walter Shandy_, merchant, shall have left off
- business before the time or times, that the said _Elizabeth Mollineux_
- shall, according to the course of nature, or otherwise, have left off
- bearing and bringing forth children; --and that, in consequence of the
- said _Walter Shandy_ having so left off business, he shall in despight,
- and against the free-will, consent, and good-liking of the said
- _Elizabeth Mollineux_, --make a departure from the city of _London_, in
- order to retire to, and dwell upon, his estate at _Shandy Hall_, in the
- county of ----, or at any other country-seat, castle, hall,
- mansion-house, messuage or grainge-house, now purchased, or hereafter to
- be purchased, or upon any part or parcel thereof: --That then, and as
- often as the said _Elizabeth Mollineux_ shall happen to be enceint with
- child or children severally and lawfully begot, or to be begotten, upon
- the body of the said _Elizabeth Mollineux_, during her said coverture,
- --he the said _Walter Shandy_ shall, at his own proper cost and charges,
- and out of his own proper monies, upon good and reasonable notice, which
- is hereby agreed to be within six weeks of her the said _Elizabeth
- Mollineux’s_ full reckoning, or time of supposed and computed delivery,
- --pay, or cause to be paid, the sum of one hundred and twenty pounds of
- good and lawful money, to _John Dixon_, and _James Turner_, Esqrs. or
- assigns, --upon TRUST and confidence, and for and unto the use and uses,
- intent, end, and purpose following: --#That is to say#, --That the said
- sum of one hundred and twenty pounds shall be paid into the hands of the
- said _Elizabeth Mollineux_, or to be otherwise applied by them the said
- Trustees, for the well and truly hiring of one coach, with able and
- sufficient horses, to carry and convey the body of the said _Elizabeth
- Mollineux_, and the child or children which she shall be then and there
- enceint and pregnant with, --unto the city of _London_; and for the
- further paying and defraying of all other incidental costs, charges, and
- expences whatsoever, --in and about, and for, and relating to, her said
- intended delivery and lying-in, in the said city or suburbs thereof. And
- that the said _Elizabeth Mollineux_ shall and may, from time to time,
- and at all such time and times as are here covenanted and agreed upon,
- --peaceably and quietly hire the said coach and horses, and have free
- ingress, egress, and regress throughout her journey, in and from the
- said coach, according to the tenor, true intent, and meaning of these
- presents, without any let, suit, trouble, disturbance, molestation,
- discharge, hindrance, forfeiture, eviction, vexation, interruption, or
- incumbrance whatsoever. --And that it shall moreover be lawful to and
- for the said _Elizabeth Mollineux_, from time to time, and as oft or
- often as she shall well and truly be advanced in her said pregnancy, to
- the time heretofore stipulated and agreed upon, --to live and reside in
- such place or places, and in such family or families, and with such
- relations, friends, and other persons within the said city of _London_,
- as she at her own will and pleasure, notwithstanding her present
- coverture, and as if she was a _femme sole_ and unmarried, --shall think
- fit. --#And this Indenture further Witnesseth#, That for the more
- effectually carrying of the said covenant into execution, the said
- _Walter Shandy_, merchant, doth hereby grant, bargain, sell, release,
- and confirm unto the said _John Dixon_, and _James Turner_, Esqrs. their
- heirs, executors, and assigns, in their actual possession now being, by
- virtue of an indenture of bargain and sale for a year to them the said
- _John Dickson_, and _James Turner_, Esqrs. by him the said _Walter
- Shandy_, merchant, thereof made; which said bargain and sale for a year,
- bears date the day next before the date of these presents, and by force
- and virtue of the statute for transferring of uses into possession,
- --#All# that the manor and lordship of _Shandy_, in the county of ----,
- with all the rights, members, and appurtenances thereof; and all and
- every the messuages, houses, buildings, barns, stables, orchards,
- gardens, backsides, tofts, crofts, garths, cottages, lands, meadows,
- feedings, pastures, marshes, commons, woods, underwoods, drains,
- fisheries, waters, and water-courses; --together with all rents,
- reversions, services, annuities, fee-farms, knights fees, views of
- frankpledge, escheats, reliefs, mines, quarries, goods and chattels of
- felons and fugitives, felons of themselves, and put in exigent,
- deodands, free warrens, and all other royalties and seigniories, rights
- and jurisdictions, privileges and hereditaments whatsoever. ----#And
- also# the advowson, donation, presentation, and free disposition of the
- rectory or parsonage of _Shandy_ aforesaid, and all and every the
- tenths, tythes, glebe-lands.” ----In three words, ----“My mother was to
- lay in, (if she chose it) in _London_.”
- But in order to put a stop to the practice of any unfair play on the
- part of my mother, which a marriage-article of this nature too
- manifestly opened a door to, and which indeed had never been thought of
- at all, but for my uncle _Toby Shandy_; --a clause was added in security
- of my father, which was this: --“That in case my mother hereafter
- should, at any time, put my father to the trouble and expence of a
- _London_ journey, upon false cries and tokens; ----that for every such
- instance, she should forfeit all the right and title which the covenant
- gave her to the next turn; ----but to no more, --and so on, _toties
- quoties_, in as effectual a manner, as if such a covenant betwixt them
- had not been made.” --This, by the way, was no more than what was
- reasonable; --and yet, as reasonable as it was, I have ever thought it
- hard that the whole weight of the article should have fallen entirely,
- as it did, upon myself.
- But I was begot and born to misfortunes: --for my poor mother, whether
- it was wind or water--or a compound of both, --or neither; --or whether
- it was simply the mere swell of imagination and fancy in her; --or how
- far a strong wish and desire to have it so, might mislead her judgment:
- --in short, whether she was deceived or deceiving in this matter, it no
- way becomes me to decide. The fact was this, That in the latter end of
- _September_ 1717, which was the year before I was born, my mother having
- carried my father up to town much against the grain, --he peremptorily
- insisted upon the clause; --so that I was doom’d, by marriage-articles,
- to have my nose squeez’d as flat to my face, as if the destinies had
- actually spun me without one.
- How this event came about, --and what a train of vexatious
- disappointments, in one stage or other of my life, have pursued me from
- the mere loss, or rather compression, of this one single member, --shall
- be laid before the reader all in due time.
- CHAPTER XVI
- My father, as anybody may naturally imagine, came down with my mother
- into the country, in but a pettish kind of a humour. The first twenty or
- five-and-twenty miles he did nothing in the world but fret and teaze
- himself, and indeed my mother too, about the cursed expence, which he
- said might every shilling of it have been saved; --then what vexed him
- more than everything else was, the provoking time of the year, --which,
- as I told you, was towards the end of _September_, when his wall-fruit
- and green gages especially, in which he was very curious, were just
- ready for pulling: ----“Had he been whistled up to _London_, upon a _Tom
- Fool’s_ errand, in any other month of the whole year, he should not have
- said three words about it.”
- For the next two whole stages, no subject would go down, but the heavy
- blow he had sustain’d from the loss of a son, whom it seems he had fully
- reckon’d upon in his mind, and register’d down in his pocket-book, as a
- second staff for his old age, in case _Bobby_ should fail him. The
- disappointment of this, he said, was ten times more to a wise man, than
- all the money which the journey, etc., had cost him, put together, --rot
- the hundred and twenty pounds, ----he did not mind it a rush.
- From _Stilton_, all the way to _Grantham_, nothing in the whole affair
- provoked him so much as the condolences of his friends, and the foolish
- figure they should both make at church, the first _Sunday_; ----of
- which, in the satirical vehemence of his wit, now sharpen’d a little by
- vexation, he would give so many humorous and provoking descriptions,
- --and place his rib and self in so many tormenting lights and attitudes
- in the face of the whole congregation; --that my mother declared, these
- two stages were so truly tragi-comical, that she did nothing but laugh
- and cry in a breath, from one end to the other of them all the way.
- From _Grantham_, till they had cross’d the _Trent_, my father was out of
- all kind of patience at the vile trick and imposition which he fancied
- my mother had put upon him in this affair-- “Certainly,” he would say to
- himself, over and over again, “the woman could not be deceived
- herself----if she could, ----what weakness!” --tormenting word! --which
- led his imagination a thorny dance, and, before all was over, play’d the
- duce and all with him; ----for sure as ever the word _weakness_ was
- uttered, and struck full upon his brain--so sure it set him upon running
- divisions upon how many kinds of weaknesses there were; ----that there
- was such a thing as weakness of the body, ----as well as weakness of the
- mind, --and then he would do nothing but syllogize within himself for a
- stage or two together, How far the cause of all these vexations might,
- or might not, have arisen out of himself.
- In short, he had so many little subjects of disquietude springing out of
- this one affair, all fretting successively in his mind as they rose up
- in it, that my mother, whatever was her journey up, had but an uneasy
- journey of it down. ----In a word, as she complained to my uncle _Toby_,
- he would have tired out the patience of any flesh alive.
- CHAPTER XVII
- Though my father travelled homewards, as I told you, in none of the best
- of moods, --pshawing and pishing all the way down, --yet he had the
- complaisance to keep the worst part of the story still to himself;
- --which was the resolution he had taken of doing himself the justice,
- which my uncle _Toby’s_ clause in the marriage-settlement empowered him;
- nor was it till the very night in which I was begot, which was thirteen
- months after, that she had the least intimation of his design: when my
- father, happening, as you remember, to be a little chagrin’d and out of
- temper, ----took occasion as they lay chatting gravely in bed
- afterwards, talking over what was to come, ----to let her know that she
- must accommodate herself as well as she could to the bargain made
- between them in their marriage-deeds; which was to lye-in of her next
- child in the country, to balance the last year’s journey.
- My father was a gentleman of many virtues, --but he had a strong spice
- of that in his temper, which might, or might not, add to the number.
- --’Tis known by the name of perseverance in a good cause, --and of
- obstinacy in a bad one: Of this my mother had so much knowledge, that
- she knew ’twas to no purpose to make any remonstrance, --so she e’en
- resolved to sit down quietly, and make the most of it.
- CHAPTER XVIII
- As the point was that night agreed, or rather determined, that my mother
- should lye-in of me in the country, she took her measures accordingly;
- for which purpose, when she was three days, or thereabouts, gone with
- child, she began to cast her eyes upon the midwife, whom you have so
- often heard me mention; and before the week was well got round, as the
- famous Dr. _Manningham_ was not to be had, she had come to a final
- determination in her mind, ----notwithstanding there was a scientific
- operator within so near a call as eight miles of us, and who, moreover,
- had expressly wrote a five shillings book upon the subject of midwifery,
- in which he had exposed, not only the blunders of the sisterhood itself,
- ----but had likewise superadded many curious improvements for the
- quicker extraction of the fœtus in cross births, and some other cases of
- danger, which belay us in getting into the world; notwithstanding all
- this, my mother, I say, was absolutely determined to trust her life, and
- mine with it, into no soul’s hand but this old woman’s only. --Now this
- I like; --when we cannot get at the very thing we wish----never to take
- up with the next best in degree to it: --no; that’s pitiful beyond
- description; --it is no more than a week from this very day, in which I
- am now writing this book for the edification of the world; --which is
- _March_ 9, 1759, ----that my dear, dear _Jenny_, observing I looked a
- little grave, as she stood cheapening a silk of five-and-twenty
- shillings a yard, --told the mercer, she was sorry she had given him so
- much trouble; --and immediately went and bought herself a yard-wide
- stuff of tenpence a yard. --’Tis the duplication of one and the same
- greatness of soul; only what lessened the honour of it, somewhat, in my
- mother’s case, was, that she could not heroine it into so violent and
- hazardous an extreme, as one in her situation might have wished, because
- the old widwife had really some little claim to be depended upon, --as
- much, at least, as success could give her; having, in the course of her
- practice of near twenty years in the parish, brought every mother’s son
- of them into the world without any one slip or accident which could
- fairly be laid to her account.
- These facts, tho’ they had their weight, yet did not altogether satisfy
- some few scruples and uneasinesses which hung upon my father’s spirits
- in relation to this choice. --To say nothing of the natural workings of
- humanity and justice--or of the yearnings of parental and connubial
- love, all which prompted him to leave as little to hazard as possible in
- a case of this kind; ----he felt himself concerned in a particular
- manner, that all should go right in the present case; --from the
- accumulated sorrow he lay open to, should any evil betide his wife and
- child in lying-in at _Shandy-Hall_. ----He knew the world judged by
- events, and would add to his afflictions in such a misfortune, by
- loading him with the whole blame of it. ----“Alas, o’day; --had Mrs.
- _Shandy_, poor gentlewoman! had but her wish in going up to town just to
- lye-in and come down again; --which, they say, she begged and prayed for
- upon her bare knees, ----and which, in my opinion, considering the
- fortune which Mr. _Shandy_ got with her, --was no such mighty matter to
- have complied with, the lady and her babe might both of them have been
- alive at this hour.”
- This exclamation, my father knew, was unanswerable; --and yet, it was
- not merely to shelter himself, --nor was it altogether for the care of
- his offspring and wife that he seemed so extremely anxious about this
- point; --my father had extensive views of things, ----and stood
- moreover, as he thought, deeply concerned in it for the publick good,
- from the dread he entertained of the bad uses an ill-fated instance
- might be put to.
- He was very sensible that all political writers upon the subject had
- unanimously agreed and lamented, from the beginning of Queen
- _Elizabeth’s_ reign down to his own time, that the current of men and
- money towards the metropolis, upon one frivolous errand or another,
- --set in so strong, --as to become dangerous to our civil rights,
- --though, by the bye, ----a _current_ was not the image he took most
- delight in, --a _distemper_ was here his favourite metaphor, and he
- would run it down into a perfect allegory, by maintaining it was
- identically the same in the body national as in the body natural where
- the blood and spirits were driven up into the head faster than they
- could find their ways down; ----a stoppage of circulation must ensue,
- which was death in both cases.
- There was little danger, he would say, of losing our liberties by
- _French_ politicks or _French_ invasions; ----nor was he so much in pain
- of a consumption from the mass of corrupted matter and ulcerated humours
- in our constitution, which he hoped was not so bad as it was imagined;
- --but he verily feared, that in some violent push, we should go off, all
- at once, in a state-apoplexy; --and then he would say, _The Lord have
- mercy upon us all_.
- My father was never able to give the history of this distemper,
- --without the remedy along with it.
- “Was I an absolute prince,” he would say, pulling up his breeches with
- both his hands, as he rose from his arm-chair, “I would appoint able
- judges, at every avenue of my metropolis, who should take cognizance of
- every fool’s business who came there; --and if, upon a fair and candid
- hearing, it appeared not of weight sufficient to leave his own home, and
- come up, bag and baggage, with his wife and children, farmer’s sons,
- &c., &c., at his backside, they should be all sent back, from constable
- to constable, like vagrants as they were, to the place of their legal
- settlements. By this means I shall take care, that my metropolis
- totter’d not thro’ its own weight; --that the head be no longer too big
- for the body; --that the extremes, now wasted and pinn’d in, be restored
- to their due share of nourishment, and regain with it their natural
- strength and beauty: --I would effectually provide, That the meadows and
- corn-fields of my dominions, should laugh and sing; --that good chear
- and hospitality flourish once more; --and that such weight and influence
- be put thereby into the hands of the Squirality of my kingdom, as should
- counterpoise what I perceive my Nobility are now taking from them.
- “Why are there so few palaces and gentlemen’s seats,” he would ask, with
- some emotion, as he walked across the room, “throughout so many
- delicious provinces in _France?_ Whence is it that the few remaining
- _Chateaus_ amongst them are so dismantled, --so unfurnished, and in so
- ruinous and desolate a condition? ----Because, Sir,” (he would say) “in
- that kingdom no man has any country-interest to support; --the little
- interest of any kind which any man has anywhere in it, is concentrated
- in the court, and the looks of the Grand Monarch: by the sunshine of
- whose countenance, or the clouds which pass across it, every _French_
- man lives or dies.”
- Another political reason which prompted my father so strongly to guard
- against the least evil accident in my mother’s lying-in in the country,
- ----was, That any such instance would infallibly throw a balance of
- power, too great already, into the weaker vessels of the gentry, in his
- own, or higher stations; ----which, with the many other usurped rights
- which that part of the constitution was hourly establishing, --would, in
- the end, prove fatal to the monarchical system of domestick government
- established in the first creation of things by God.
- In this point he was entirely of Sir _Robert Filmer’s_ opinion, That the
- plans and institutions of the greatest monarchies in the eastern parts
- of the world were, originally, all stolen from that admirable pattern
- and prototype of this household and paternal power; --which, for a
- century, he said, and more, had gradually been degenerating away into a
- mix’d government; ----the form of which, however desirable in great
- combinations of the species, ----was very troublesome in small ones,
- --and seldom produced anything, that he saw, but sorrow and confusion.
- For all these reasons, private and publick, put together, --my father
- was for having the man-midwife by all means, --my mother by no means. My
- father begg’d and intreated she would for once recede from her
- prerogative in this matter, and suffer him to choose for her; --my
- mother, on the contrary, insisted upon her privilege in this matter, to
- choose for herself, --and have no mortal’s help but the old woman’s.
- --What could my father do? He was almost at his wit’s end; ----talked it
- over with her in all moods; --placed his arguments in all lights;
- --argued the matter with her like a christian, --like a heathen, --like
- a husband, --like a father, --like a patriot, --like a man: --My mother
- answered everything only like a woman; which was a little hard upon her;
- --for as she could not assume and fight it out behind such a variety of
- characters, --’twas no fair match: --’twas seven to one. --What could my
- mother do? ----She had the advantage (otherwise she had been certainly
- overpowered) of a small reinforcement of chagrin personal at the bottom,
- which bore her up, and enabled her to dispute the affair with my father
- with so equal an advantage, ----that both sides sung _Te Deum_. In a
- word, my mother was to have the old woman, --and the operator was to
- have licence to drink a bottle of wine with my father and my uncle _Toby
- Shandy_ in the back parlour, --for which he was to be paid five guineas.
- I must beg leave, before I finish this chapter, to enter a caveat in the
- breast of my fair reader; --and it is this, ----Not to take it
- absolutely for granted, from an unguarded word or two which I have
- dropp’d in it, ----“That I am a married man.” --I own, the tender
- appellation of my dear, dear _Jenny_, --with some other strokes of
- conjugal knowledge, interspersed here and there, might, naturally
- enough, have misled the most candid judge in the world into such a
- determination against me. --All I plead for, in this case, Madam, is
- strict justice, and that you do so much of it, to me as well as to
- yourself, --as not to prejudge, or receive such an impression of me,
- till you have better evidence, than, I am positive, at present can be
- produced against me. --Not that I can be so vain or unreasonable, Madam,
- as to desire you should therefore think, that my dear, dear _Jenny_ is
- my kept mistress; --no, --that would be flattering my character in the
- other extreme, and giving it an air of freedom, which, perhaps, it has
- no kind of right to. All I contend for, is the utter impossibility, for
- some volumes, that you, or the most penetrating spirit upon earth,
- should know how this matter really stands. --It is not impossible, but
- that my dear, dear _Jenny!_ tender as the appellation is, may be my
- child. ----Consider, --I was born in the year eighteen. --Nor is there
- anything unnatural or extravagant in the supposition, that my dear
- _Jenny_ may be my friend. --Friend! --My friend. --Surely, Madam,
- a friendship between the two sexes may subsist, and be supported
- without ------Fy! Mr. _Shandy_: --Without anything, Madam, but that
- tender and delicious sentiment, which ever mixes in friendship, where
- there is a difference of sex. Let me intreat you to study the pure and
- sentimental parts of the best _French_ Romances; --it will really,
- Madam, astonish you to see with what a variety of chaste expressions
- this delicious sentiment, which I have the honour to speak of, is
- dress’d out.
- CHAPTER XIX
- I would sooner undertake to explain the hardest problem in geometry,
- than pretend to account for it, that a gentleman of my father’s great
- good sense, ----knowing, as the reader must have observed him, and
- curious too in philosophy, --wise also in political reasoning, --and in
- polemical (as he will find) no way ignorant, --could be capable of
- entertaining a notion in his head, so out of the common track, --that I
- fear the reader, when I come to mention it to him, if he is the least of
- a cholerick temper, will immediately throw the book by; if mercurial, he
- will laugh most heartily at it; --and if he is of a grave and saturnine
- cast, he will, at first sight, absolutely condemn as fanciful and
- extravagant; and that was in respect to the choice and imposition of
- christian names, on which he thought a great deal more depended than
- what superficial minds were capable of conceiving.
- His opinion, in this matter, was, That there was a strange kind of
- magick bias, which good or bad names, as he called them, irresistibly
- impressed upon our characters and conduct.
- The hero of _Cervantes_ argued not the point with more seriousness,
- ----nor had he more faith, ----or more to say on the powers of
- necromancy in dishonouring his deeds, --or on DULCINEA’S name, in
- shedding lustre upon them, than my father had on those of TRISMEGISTUS
- or ARCHIMEDES, on the one hand--or of NYKY and SIMKIN on the other. How
- many CÆSARS and POMPEYS, he would say, by mere inspiration of the names,
- have been rendered worthy of them? And how many, he would add, are
- there, who might have done exceeding well in the world, had not their
- characters and spirits been totally depressed and NICOMEDUS’D into
- nothing?
- I see plainly, Sir, by your looks (or as the case happened), my father
- would say--that you do not heartily subscribe to this opinion of mine,
- --which, to those, he would add, who have not carefully sifted it to the
- bottom, --I own has an air more of fancy than of solid reasoning in it;
- ----and yet, my dear Sir, if I may presume to know your character, I am
- morally assured, I should hazard little in stating a case to you, --not
- as a party in the dispute, --but as a judge, and trusting my appeal upon
- it to your own good sense and candid disquisition in this matter;
- ----you are a person free from as many narrow prejudices of education as
- most men; --and, if I may presume to penetrate farther into you, --of a
- liberality of genius above bearing down an opinion, merely because it
- wants friends. Your son, --your dear son, --from whose sweet and open
- temper you have so much to expect. --Your BILLY, Sir! --would you, for
- the world, have called him JUDAS? --Would you, my dear Sir, he would
- say, laying his hand upon your breast, with the genteelest address,
- --and in that soft and irresistible _piano_ of voice, which the nature
- of the _argumentum ad hominem_ absolutely requires, --Would you, Sir, if
- a _Jew_ of a godfather had proposed the name for your child, and offered
- you his purse along with it, would you have consented to such a
- desecration of him? ----O my God! he would say, looking up, if I know
- your temper right, Sir, --you are incapable of it; ----you would have
- trampled upon the offer; --you would have thrown the temptation at the
- tempter’s head with abhorrence.
- Your greatness of mind in this action, which I admire, with that
- generous contempt of money, which you shew me in the whole transaction,
- is really noble; --and what renders it more so, is the principle of it;
- --the workings of a parent’s love upon the truth and conviction of this
- very hypothesis, namely, That was your son called JUDAS, --the sordid
- and treacherous idea, so inseparable from the name, would have
- accompanied him through life like his shadow, and, in the end, made a
- miser and a rascal of him, in spite, Sir, of your example.
- I never knew a man able to answer this argument. ----But, indeed, to
- speak of my father as he was; --he was certainly irresistible; --both in
- his orations and disputations; --he was born an orator; --Θεοδίδακτος.
- --Persuasion hung upon his lips, and the elements of Logick and
- Rhetorick were so blended up in him, --and, withal, he had so shrewd a
- guess at the weaknesses and passions of his respondent, ----that NATURE
- might have stood up and said, --“This man is eloquent.” --In short,
- whether he was on the weak or the strong side of the question, ’twas
- hazardous in either case to attack him. --And yet, ’tis strange, he had
- never read _Cicero_, nor _Quintilian de Oratore_, nor _Isocrates_, nor
- _Aristotle_, nor _Longinus_ amongst the antients; --nor _Vossius_, nor
- _Skioppius_, nor _Ramus_, nor _Farnaby_ amongst the moderns; --and what
- is more astonishing, he had never in his whole life the least light or
- spark of subtilty struck into his mind, by one single lecture upon
- _Crackenthorp_ or _Burgersdicius_, or any Dutch logician or commentator;
- --he knew not so much as in what the difference of an argument _ad
- ignorantiam_, and an argument _ad hominem_ consisted; so that I well
- remember, when he went up along with me to enter my name at _Jesus
- College_ in ****, --it was a matter of just wonder with my worthy tutor,
- and two or three fellows of that learned society, --that a man who knew
- not so much as the names of his tools, should be able to work after that
- fashion with them.
- To work with them in the best manner he could, was what my father was,
- however, perpetually forced upon; ----for he had a thousand little
- sceptical notions of the comick kind to defend----most of which notions,
- I verily believe, at first entered upon the footing of mere whims, and
- of a _vive la Bagatelle_; and as such he would make merry with them for
- half an hour or so, and having sharpened his wit upon them, dismiss them
- till another day.
- I mention this, not only as matter of hypothesis or conjecture upon the
- progress and establishment of my father’s many odd opinions, --but as a
- warning to the learned reader against the indiscreet reception of such
- guests, who, after a free and undisturbed entrance, for some years, into
- our brains, --at length claim a kind of settlement there, ----working
- sometimes like yeast; --but more generally after the manner of the
- gentle passion, beginning in jest, --but ending in downright earnest.
- Whether this was the case of the singularity of my father’s notions--or
- that his judgment, at length, became the dupe of his wit; --or how far,
- in many of his notions, he might, though odd, be absolutely right;
- ----the reader, as he comes at them, shall decide. All that I maintain
- here, is, that in this one, of the influence of christian names, however
- it gained footing, he was serious; --he was all uniformity; --he was
- systematical, and, like all systematick reasoners, he would move both
- heaven and earth, and twist and torture everything in nature, to support
- his hypothesis. In a word, I repeat it over again; --he was serious;
- --and, in consequence of it, he would lose all kind of patience whenever
- he saw people, especially of condition, who should have known better,
- ----as careless and as indifferent about the name they imposed upon
- their child, --or more so, than in the choice of _Ponto_ or _Cupid_ for
- their puppy-dog.
- This, he would say, look’d ill; --and had, moreover, this particular
- aggravation in it, viz., That when once a vile name was wrongfully or
- injudiciously given, ’twas not like the case of a man’s character,
- which, when wrong’d, might hereafter be cleared; ----and, possibly, some
- time or other, if not in the man’s life, at least after his death, --be,
- somehow or other, set to rights with the world: But the injury of this,
- he would say, could never be undone; --nay, he doubted even whether an
- act of parliament could reach it: ----He knew as well as you, that the
- legislature assumed a power over surnames; --but for very strong
- reasons, which he could give, it had never yet adventured, he would say,
- to go a step farther.
- It was observable, that tho’ my father, in consequence of this opinion,
- had, as I have told you, the strongest likings and dislikings towards
- certain names; --that there were still numbers of names which hung so
- equally in the balance before him, that they were absolutely indifferent
- to him. _Jack_, _Dick_, and _Tom_ were of this class: These my father
- called neutral names; --affirming of them, without a satire, That there
- had been as many knaves and fools, at least, as wise and good men, since
- the world began, who had indifferently borne them; --so that, like equal
- forces acting against each other in contrary directions, he thought they
- mutually destroyed each other’s effects; for which reason, he would
- often declare, He would not give a cherry-stone to choose amongst them.
- _Bob_, which was my brother’s name, was another of these neutral kinds
- of christian names, which operated very little either way; and as my
- father happen’d to be at _Epsom_, when it was given him, --he would
- oft-times thank Heaven it was no worse. _Andrew_ was something like a
- negative quantity in Algebra with him; --’twas worse, he said, than
- nothing. --_William_ stood pretty high: ----_Numps_ again was low with
- him: --and _Nick_, he said, was the DEVIL.
- But, of all the names in the universe, he had the most unconquerable
- aversion for TRISTRAM; --he had the lowest and most contemptible opinion
- of it of anything in the world, --thinking it could possibly produce
- nothing in _rerum naturâ_, but what was extremely mean and pitiful: So
- that in the midst of a dispute on the subject, in which, by the bye, he
- was frequently involved, ----he would sometimes break off in a sudden
- and spirited EPIPHONEMA, or rather EROTESIS, raised a third, and
- sometimes a full fifth above the key of the discourse, ----and demand it
- categorically of his antagonist, Whether he would take upon him to say,
- he had ever remembered, ----whether he had ever read, --or even whether
- he had ever heard tell of a man, called _Tristram_, performing anything
- great or worth recording? --No, --he would say, --TRISTRAM! --The thing
- is impossible.
- What could be wanting in my father but to have wrote a book to publish
- this notion of his to the world? Little boots it to the subtle
- speculatist to stand single in his opinions, --unless he gives them
- proper vent: --It was the identical thing which my father did: --for in
- the year sixteen, which was two years before I was born, he was at the
- pains of writing an express DISSERTATION simply upon the word
- _Tristram_, --shewing the world, with great candour and modesty, the
- grounds of his great abhorrence to the name.
- When this story is compared with the title-page, --Will not the gentle
- reader pity my father from his soul? --to see an orderly and
- well-disposed gentleman, who tho’ singular, --yet inoffensive in his
- notions, --so played upon in them by cross purposes; ----to look down
- upon the stage, and see him baffled and overthrown in all his little
- systems and wishes; to behold a train of events perpetually falling out
- against him, and in so critical and cruel a way, as if they had
- purposedly been plann’d and pointed against him, merely to insult his
- speculations. ----In a word, to behold such a one, in his old age,
- ill-fitted for troubles, ten times in a day suffering sorrow; --ten
- times in a day calling the child of his prayers TRISTRAM! --Melancholy
- dissyllable of sound! which, to his ears, was unison to _Nincompoop_,
- and every name vituperative under heaven. ----By his ashes! I swear it,
- --if ever malignant spirit took pleasure, or busied itself in traversing
- the purposes of mortal man, --it must have been here; --and if it was
- not necessary I should be born before I was christened, I would this
- moment give the reader an account of it.
- CHAPTER XX
- ------How could you, Madam, be so inattentive in reading the last
- chapter? I told you in it, _That my mother was not a papist_.
- ----Papist! You told me no such thing, Sir. --Madam, I beg leave to
- repeat it over again, that I told you as plain, at least, as words, by
- direct inference, could tell you such a thing. --Then, Sir, I must have
- miss’d a page. --No, Madam, --you have not miss’d a word. ----Then I was
- asleep, Sir. --My pride, Madam, cannot allow you that refuge. ----Then,
- I declare, I know nothing at all about the matter. --That, Madam, is the
- very fault I lay to your charge; and as a punishment for it, I do insist
- upon it, that you immediately turn back, that is, as soon as you get to
- the next full stop, and read the whole chapter over again. I have
- imposed this penance upon the lady, neither out of wantonness nor
- cruelty; but from the best of motives; and therefore shall make her no
- apology for it when she returns back: --’Tis to rebuke a vicious taste,
- which has crept into thousands besides herself, --of reading straight
- forwards, more in quest of the adventures, than of the deep erudition
- and knowledge which a book of this cast, if read over as it should be,
- would infallibly impart with them ----The mind should be accustomed to
- make wise reflections, and draw curious conclusions as it goes along;
- the habitude of which made _Pliny_ the younger affirm, “That he never
- read a book so bad, but he drew some profit from it.” The stories of
- _Greece_ and _Rome_, run over without this turn and application, --do
- less service, I affirm it, than the history of _Parismus_ and
- _Parismenus_, or of the Seven Champions of _England_, read with it.
- ------But here comes my fair lady. Have you read over again the chapter,
- Madam, as I desired you? --You have: And did you not observe the
- passage, upon the second reading, which admits the inference? ----Not a
- word like it! Then, Madam, be pleased to ponder well the last line but
- one of the chapter, where I take upon me to say, “It was _necessary_ I
- should be born before I was christen’d.” Had my mother, Madam, been a
- Papist, that consequence did not follow.[1.1]
- It is a terrible misfortune for this same book of mine, but more so to
- the Republick of letters; --so that my own is quite swallowed up in the
- consideration of it, --that this selfsame vile pruriency for fresh
- adventures in all things, has got so strongly into our habit and humour,
- --and so wholly intent are we upon satisfying the impatience of our
- concupiscence that way, --that nothing but the gross and more carnal
- parts of a composition will go down: --The subtle hints and sly
- communications of science fly off, like spirits upwards, ----the heavy
- moral escapes downwards; and both the one and the other are as much lost
- to the world, as if they were still left in the bottom of the ink-horn.
- I wish the male-reader has not pass’d by many a one, as quaint and
- curious as this one, in which the female-reader has been detected.
- I wish it may have its effects; --and that all good people, both male
- and female, from her example, may be taught to think as well as read.
- MEMOIRE presenté à Messieurs les Docteurs de SORBONNE[1.2]
- _Un Chirurgien Accoucheur, represente à Messieurs les Docteurs de
- SORBONNE, qu’il y a des cas, quoique très rares, où une mere ne sçauroit
- accoucher, & même où l’enfant est tellement renfermé dans le sein de sa
- mere, qu’il ne fait parôitre aucune partie de son corps, ce qui seroit
- un cas, suivant les Rituels, de lui conférer, du moins sous condition,
- le baptême. Le Chirurgien, qui consulte, prétend, par le moyen d’une
- _petite canulle_, de pouvoir baptiser immediatement l’enfant, sans
- faire aucun tort à la mere. ----Il demand si ce moyen, qu’il vient de
- proposer, est permis & légitime, & s’il peut s’en servir dans les cas
- qu’il vient d’exposer._
- [Footnote 1.1: The _Romish_ Rituals direct the baptizing of the
- child, in cases of danger, _before_ it is born; --but upon this
- proviso, That some part or other of the child’s body be seen by
- the baptizer: ----But the Doctors of the _Sorbonne_, by a
- deliberation held amongst them, _April_ 10, 1733, --have enlarged
- the powers of the midwives, by determining, That though no part
- of the child’s body should appear, ----that baptism shall,
- nevertheless, be administered to it by injection, --_par le moyen
- d’une petite canulle_, --Anglicè _a squirt_. ----’Tis very strange
- that St. _Thomas Aquinas_, who had so good a mechanical head,
- both for tying and untying the knots of school-divinity, --should,
- after so much pains bestowed upon this, --give up the point at
- last, as a second _La chose impossible_, --“Infantes in maternis
- uteris existentes (quoth St. _Thomas!_) baptizari possunt _nullo
- modo_.” --O _Thomas!_ _Thomas!_
- If the reader has the curiosity to see the question upon baptism
- _by injection_, as presented to the Doctors of the _Sorbonne_,
- with their consultation thereupon, it is as follows.]
- [Footnote 1.2: Vide Deventer, Paris edit., 4to, 1734, p. 366.]
- REPONSE
- _Le Conseil estime, que la question proposée souffre de grandes
- difficultés. Les Théologiens posent d’un côté pour principe, que le
- baptême, qui est une naissance spirituelle, suppose une premiere
- naissance; il faut être né dans le monde, pour renaître en _Jesus
- Christ_, comme ils l’enseignent. _S. Thomas, 3 part, quæst. 88, artic.
- II_, suit cette doctrine comme une verité constante; l’on ne peut, dit
- ce S. Docteur, baptiser les enfans qui sont renfermés dans le sein de
- leurs meres, & _S. Thomas_ est fondé sur ce, que les enfans ne sont
- point nés, & ne peuvent être comptés parmi les autres hommes; d’où il
- conclud, qu’ils ne peuvent être l’objet d’une action extérieure, pour
- reçevoir par leur ministére, les sacremens nécessaires au salut:_ Pueri
- in maternis uteris existentes nondum prodierunt in lucem ut cum aliis
- hominibus vitam ducant; unde non possunt subjici actioni humanæ, ut per
- eorum ministerium sacramenta recipiant ad salutem. _Les rituels
- ordonnent dans la pratique ce que les théologiens ont établi sur les
- mêmes matiéres, & ils deffendent tous d’une maniére uniforme, de
- baptiser les enfans qui sont renfermés dans le sein de leurs meres,
- s’ils ne font paroître quelque partie de leurs corps. Le concours des
- théologiens, & des rituels, qui sont les régles des diocéses, paroit
- former une autorité qui termine la question presente; cependant le
- conseil de conscience considerant d’un côté, que le raisonnement des
- théologiens est uniquement fondé sur une raison de convenance, & que la
- deffense des rituels suppose que l’on ne peut baptiser immediatement les
- enfans ainsi renfermés dans le sein de leurs meres, ce qui est contre la
- supposition presente; & d’un autre côté, considerant que les mêmes
- théologiens enseignent, que l’on peut risquer les sacremens que _Jesus
- Christ_ a établis comme des moyens faciles, mais nécessaires pour
- sanctifier les hommes; & d’ailleurs estimant, que les enfans renfermés
- dans le sein de leurs meres, pourroient être capables de salut,
- parcequ’ils sont capables de damnation; --pour ces considerations, & en
- egard à l’exposé, suivant lequel on assure avoir trouvé un moyen certain
- de baptiser ces enfans ainsi renfermés, sans faire aucun tort à la mere,
- le Conseil estime que l’on pourroit se servir du moyen proposé, dans la
- confiance qu’il a, que Dieu n’a point laissé ces sortes d’enfans sans
- aucuns secours, & supposant, comme il est exposé, que le moyen dont il
- s’agit est propre à leur procurer le baptême; cependant comme il
- s’agiroit, en autorisant la pratique proposée, de changer une regie
- universellement établie, le Conseil croit que celui qui consulte doit
- s’addresser à son evêque, & à qui il appartient de juger de l’utilité, &
- du danger du moyen proposé, & comme, sous le bon plaisir de l’evêque, le
- Conseil estime qu’il faudroit recourir au Pape, qui a le droit
- d’expliquer les régles de l’eglise, & d’y déroger dans le cas, ou la loi
- ne sçauroit obliger, quelque sage & quelque utile que paroisse la
- maniére de baptiser dont il s’agit, le Conseil ne pourroit l’approuver
- sans le concours de ces deux autorités. On conseile au moins à celui qui
- consulte, de s’addresser à son evêque, & de lui faire part de la
- presente décision, afin que, si le prelat entre dans les raisons sur
- lesquelles les docteurs soussignés s’appuyent, il puisse être autorisé
- dans le cas de nécessité, ou il risqueroit trop d’attendre que la
- permission fût demandée & accordée d’employer le moyen qu’il propose si
- avantageux au salut de l’enfant. Au reste, le Conseil, en estimant que
- l’on pourroit s’en servir, croit cependant, que si les enfans dont il
- s’agit, venoient au monde, contre l’esperance de ceux qui se seroient
- servis du même moyen, il seroit nécessaire de les baptiser sous
- condition; & en cela le Conseil se conforme à tous les rituels, qui en
- autorisant le baptême d’un enfant qui fait paroître quelque partie de
- son corps, enjoignent néantmoins, & ordonnent de le baptiser sous
- condition, s’il vient heureusement au monde._
- Deliberé en _Sorbonne_, le 10 _Avril_, 1733.
- A. LE MOYNE.
- L. DE ROMIGNY.
- DE MARCILLY.
- Mr. _Tristram Shandy’s_ compliments to Messrs. _Le Moyne_, _De Romigny_,
- and _De Marcilly_; hopes they all rested well the night after so
- tiresome a consultation. --He begs to know, whether after the ceremony
- of marriage, and before that of consummation, the baptizing all the
- HOMUNCULI at once, slapdash, by _injection_, would not be a shorter and
- safer cut still; on condition, as above, That if the HOMUNCULI do well,
- and come safe into the world after this, that each and every of them
- shall be baptized again (_sous condition_) ----And provided, in the
- second place, That the thing can be done, which _Mr. Shandy_ apprehends
- it may, _par le moyen d’une petite canulle_, and _sans faire aucun tort
- au pere_.
- CHAPTER XXI
- ----I wonder what’s all that noise, and running backwards and forwards
- for, above stairs, quoth my father, addressing himself, after an hour
- and a half’s silence, to my uncle _Toby_, ----who, you must know, was
- sitting on the opposite side of the fire, smoking his social pipe all
- the time, in mute contemplation of a new pair of black plush-breeches
- which he had got on: --What can they be doing, brother? --quoth my
- father, --we can scarce hear ourselves talk.
- I think, replied my uncle _Toby_, taking his pipe from his mouth, and
- striking the head of it two or three times upon the nail of his left
- thumb, as he began his sentence, ----I think, says he: ----But to enter
- rightly into my uncle _Toby’s_ sentiments upon this matter, you must be
- made to enter first a little into his character, the outlines of which I
- shall just give you, and then the dialogue between him and my father
- will go on as well again.
- Pray what was that man’s name, --for I write in such a hurry, I have no
- time to recollect or look for it, ----who first made the observation,
- “That there was great inconstancy in our air and climate?” Whoever he
- was, ’twas a just and good observation in him. --But the corollary drawn
- from it, namely, “That it is this which has furnished us with such a
- variety of odd and whimsical characters;” --that was not his; --it was
- found out by another man, at least a century and a half after him: Then
- again, --that this copious store-house of original materials, is the
- true and natural cause that our Comedies are so much better than those
- of _France_, or any others that either have, or can be wrote upon the
- Continent: ----that discovery was not fully made till about the middle
- of King _William’s_ reign, --when the great _Dryden_, in writing one of
- his long prefaces, (if I mistake not) most fortunately hit upon it.
- Indeed toward the latter end of Queen _Anne_, the great _Addison_ began
- to patronize the notion, and more fully explained it to the world in one
- or two of his Spectators; --but the discovery was not his. --Then,
- fourthly and lastly, that this strange irregularity in our climate,
- producing so strange an irregularity in our characters, ----doth
- thereby, in some sort, make us amends, by giving us somewhat to make us
- merry with when the weather will not suffer us to go out of doors,
- --that observation is my own; --and was struck out by me this very rainy
- day, _March_ 26, 1759, and betwixt the hours of nine and ten in the
- morning.
- Thus--thus, my fellow-labourers and associates in this great harvest
- of our learning, now ripening before our eyes; thus it is, by slow
- steps of casual increase, that our knowledge physical, metaphysical,
- physiological, polemical, nautical, mathematical, ænigmatical,
- technical, biographical, romantical, chemical, and obstetrical, with
- fifty other branches of it, (most of ’em ending as these do, in _ical_)
- have for these two last centuries and more, gradually been creeping
- upwards towards that Ἀκμὴ of their perfections, from which, if we may
- form a conjecture from the advances of these last seven years, we cannot
- possibly be far off.
- When that happens, it is to be hoped, it will put an end to all kind of
- writings whatsoever; --the want of all kind of writing will put an end
- to all kind of reading; --and that in time, _As war begets poverty;
- poverty peace_, ----must, in course, put an end to all kind of
- knowledge, --and then----we shall have all to begin over again; or, in
- other words, be exactly where we started.
- ------Happy! thrice happy times! I only wish that the æra of my
- begetting, as well as the mode and manner of it, had been a little
- alter’d, ----or that it could have been put off, with any convenience to
- my father or mother, for some twenty or five-and-twenty years longer,
- when a man in the literary world might have stood some chance.----
- But I forget my uncle _Toby_, whom all this while we have left knocking
- the ashes out of his tobacco-pipe.
- His humour was of that particular species, which does honour to our
- atmosphere; and I should have made no scruple of ranking him amongst one
- of the first-rate productions of it, had not there appeared too many
- strong lines in it of a family-likeness, which shewed that he derived
- the singularity of his temper more from blood, than either wind or
- water, or any modifications or combinations of them whatever: And I
- have, therefore, oft-times wondered, that my father, tho’ I believe he
- had his reasons for it, upon his observing some tokens of eccentricity,
- in my course, when I was a boy, --should never once endeavour to account
- for them in this way: for all the SHANDY FAMILY were of an original
- character throughout: ----I mean the males, --the females had no
- character at all, --except, indeed, my great aunt DINAH, who, about
- sixty years ago, was married and got with child by the coachman, for
- which my father, according to his hypothesis of christian names, would
- often say, She might thank her godfathers and godmothers.
- It will seem very strange, ----and I would as soon think of dropping a
- riddle in the reader’s way, which is not my interest to do, as set him
- upon guessing how it could come to pass, that an event of this kind, so
- many years after it had happened, should be reserved for the
- interruption of the peace and unity, which otherwise so cordially
- subsisted, between my father and my uncle _Toby_. One would have
- thought, that the whole force of the misfortune should have spent and
- wasted itself in the family at first, --as is generally the case. --But
- nothing ever wrought with our family after the ordinary way. Possibly at
- the very time this happened, it might have something else to afflict it;
- and as afflictions are sent down for our good, and that as this had
- never done the SHANDY FAMILY any good at all, it might lie waiting till
- apt times and circumstances should give it an opportunity to discharge
- its office. ----Observe, I determine nothing upon this. ----My way is
- ever to point out to the curious, different tracts of investigation, to
- come at the first springs of the events I tell; --not with a pedantic
- _Fescue_, --or in the decisive manner of _Tacitus_, who outwits himself
- and his reader; --but with the officious humility of a heart devoted to
- the assistance merely of the inquisitive; --to them I write, ----and by
- them I shall be read, ----if any such reading as this could be supposed
- to hold out so long, --to the very end of the world.
- Why this cause of sorrow, therefore, was thus reserved for my father and
- uncle, is undetermined by me. But how and in what direction it exerted
- itself so as to become the cause of dissatisfaction between them, after
- it began to operate, is what I am able to explain with great exactness,
- and is as follows:
- My uncle TOBY SHANDY, Madam, was a gentleman, who, with the virtues
- which usually constitute the character of a man of honour and rectitude,
- ----possessed one in a very eminent degree, which is seldom or never put
- into the catalogue; and that was a most extreme and unparallel’d modesty
- of nature; ----though I correct the word nature, for this reason, that I
- may not prejudge a point which must shortly come to a hearing, and that
- is, Whether this modesty of his was natural or acquir’d. ----Whichever
- way my uncle _Toby_ came by it, ’twas nevertheless modesty in the truest
- sense of it; and that is, Madam, not in regard to words, for he was so
- unhappy as to have very little choice in them, --but to things; ----and
- this kind of modesty so possessed him, and it arose to such a height in
- him, as almost to equal, if such a thing could be, even the modesty of a
- woman: That female nicety, Madam, and inward cleanliness of mind and
- fancy, in your sex, which makes you so much the awe of ours.
- You will imagine, Madam, that my uncle _Toby_ had contracted all this
- from this very source; --that he had spent a great part of his time in
- converse with your sex; and that from a thorough knowledge of you, and
- the force of imitation which such fair examples render irresistible, he
- had acquired this amiable turn of mind.
- I wish I could say so, --for unless it was with his sister-in-law, my
- father’s wife and my mother----my uncle _Toby_ scarce exchanged three
- words with the sex in as many years; --no, he got it, Madam, by a blow.
- ----A blow! --Yes, Madam, it was owing to a blow from a stone, broke off
- by a ball from the parapet of a horn-work at the siege of _Namur_, which
- struck full upon my uncle _Toby’s_ groin. --Which way could that effect
- it? The story of that, Madam, is long and interesting; --but it would be
- running my history all upon heaps to give it you here. ----’Tis for an
- episode hereafter; and every circumstance relating to it, in its proper
- place, shall be faithfully laid before you: --’Till then, it is not in
- my power to give farther light into this matter, or say more than what I
- have said already, ----That my uncle _Toby_ was a gentleman of
- unparallel’d modesty, which happening to be somewhat subtilized and
- rarified by the constant heat of a little family pride, ----they both so
- wrought together within him, that he could never bear to hear the affair
- of my aunt DINAH touch’d upon, but with the greatest emotion. ----The
- least hint of it was enough to make the blood fly into his face; --but
- when my father enlarged upon the story in mixed companies, which the
- illustration of his hypothesis frequently obliged him to do, --the
- unfortunate blight of one of the fairest branches of the family, would
- set my uncle _Toby’s_ honour and modesty o’bleeding; and he would often
- take my father aside, in the greatest concern imaginable, to expostulate
- and tell him, he would give him anything in the world, only to let the
- story rest.
- My father, I believe, had the truest love and tenderness for my uncle
- _Toby_, that ever one brother bore towards another, and would have done
- any thing in nature, which one brother in reason could have desir’d of
- another, to have made my uncle _Toby’s_ heart easy in this, or any other
- point. But this lay out of his power.
- ----My father, as I told you, was a philosopher in grain, --speculative,
- --systematical; --and my aunt _Dinah’s_ affair was a matter of as much
- consequence to him, as the retrogradation of the planets to
- _Copernicus_: --The backslidings of _Venus_ in her orbit fortified the
- _Copernican_ system, called so after his name; and the backslidings of
- my aunt _Dinah_ in her orbit, did the same service in establishing my
- father’s system, which, I trust, will for ever hereafter be called the
- _Shandean System_, after this.
- In any other family dishonour, my father, I believe, had as nice a sense
- of shame as any man whatever; ----and neither he, nor, I dare say,
- _Copernicus_, would have divulged the affair in either case, or have
- taken the least notice of it to the world, but for the obligations they
- owed, as they thought, to truth. --_Amicus Plato_, my father would say,
- construing the words to my uncle _Toby_, as he went along, _Amicus
- Plato_; that is, DINAH was my aunt; --_sed magis amica veritas_----but
- TRUTH is my sister.
- This contrariety of humours betwixt my father and my uncle, was the
- source of many a fraternal squabble. The one could not bear to hear the
- tale of family disgrace recorded, ----and the other would scarce ever
- let a day pass to an end without some hint at it.
- For God’s sake, my uncle _Toby_ would cry, ----and for my sake, and for
- all our sakes, my dear brother _Shandy_, --do let this story of our
- aunt’s and her ashes sleep in peace; ----how can you, ----how can you
- have so little feeling and compassion for the character of our family?
- ----What is the character of a family to an hypothesis? my father would
- reply. ----Nay, if you come to that--what is the life of a family?
- ----The life of a family! --my uncle _Toby_ would say, throwing himself
- back in his arm chair, and lifting up his hands, his eyes, and one leg.
- ----Yes, the life, ----my father would say, maintaining his point. How
- many thousands of ’em are there every year that come cast away, (in all
- civilized countries at least)----and considered as nothing but common
- air, in competition of an hypothesis. In my plain sense of things, my
- uncle _Toby_ would answer, ----every such instance is downright MURDER,
- let who will commit it. ----There lies your mistake, my father would
- reply; ----for, in _Foro Scientiæ_ there is no such thing as MURDER,
- ----’tis only DEATH, brother.
- My uncle _Toby_ would never offer to answer this by any other kind of
- argument, than that of whistling half a dozen bars of _Lillabullero_.
- ----You must know it was the usual channel thro’ which his passions got
- vent, when any thing shocked or surprized him: ----but especially when
- any thing, which he deem’d very absurd, was offered.
- As not one of our logical writers, nor any of the commentators upon
- them, that I remember, have thought proper to give a name to this
- particular species of argument, --I here take the liberty to do it
- myself, for two reasons. First, That, in order to prevent all confusion
- in disputes, it may stand as much distinguished for ever, from every
- other species of argument------as the _Argumentum ad Verecundiam_, _ex
- Absurdo, ex Fortiori_, or any other argument whatsoever: ----And,
- secondly, That it may be said by my children’s children, when my head is
- laid to rest, ----that their learn’d grandfather’s head had been busied
- to as much purpose once, as other people’s; --That he had invented a
- name, --and generously thrown it into the TREASURY of the _Ars Logica_,
- for one of the most unanswerable arguments in the whole science. And, if
- the end of disputation is more to silence than convince, --they may add,
- if they please, to one of the best arguments too.
- I do therefore, by these presents, strictly order and command, That it
- be known and distinguished by the name and title of the _Argumentum
- Fistulatorium_, and no other; --and that it rank hereafter with the
- _Argumentum Baculinum_ and the _Argumentum ad Crumenam_, and for ever
- hereafter be treated of in the same chapter.
- As for the _Argumentum Tripodium_, which is never used but by the woman
- against the man; --and the _Argumentum ad Rem_, which, contrarywise, is
- made use of by the man only against the woman; --As these two are enough
- in conscience for one lecture; ----and, moreover, as the one is the best
- answer to the other, --let them likewise be kept apart, and be treated
- of in a place by themselves.
- CHAPTER XXII
- The learned Bishop _Hall_, I mean the famous Dr. _Joseph Hall_, who was
- Bishop of _Exeter_ in King _James_ the First’s reign, tells us in one of
- his _Decads_, at the end of his divine art of meditation, imprinted at
- _London_, in the year 1610, by _John Beal_, dwelling in
- _Aldersgate-street_, “That it is an abominable thing for a man to
- commend himself;” ----and I really think it is so.
- And yet, on the other hand, when a thing is executed in a masterly kind
- of a fashion, which thing is not likely to be found out; --I think it is
- full as abominable, that a man should lose the honour of it, and go out
- of the world with the conceit of it rotting in his head.
- This is precisely my situation.
- For in this long digression which I was accidentally led into, as in all
- my digressions (one only excepted) there is a masterstroke of digressive
- skill, the merit of which has all along, I fear, been overlooked by my
- reader, --not for want of penetration in him, --but because ’tis an
- excellence seldom looked for, or expected indeed, in a digression; --and
- it is this: That tho’ my digressions are all fair, as you observe, --and
- that I fly off from what I am about, as far, and as often too, as any
- writer in _Great Britain_; yet I constantly take care to order affairs
- so that my main business does not stand still in my absence.
- I was just going, for example, to have given you the great outlines of
- my uncle _Toby’s_ most whimsical character; --when my aunt _Dinah_ and
- the coachman came across us, and led us a vagary some millions of miles
- into the very heart of the planetary system: Notwithstanding all this,
- you perceive that the drawing of my uncle _Toby’s_ character went on
- gently all the time; --not the great contours of it, --that was
- impossible, --but some familiar strokes and faint designations of it,
- were here and there touch’d on, as we went along, so that you are much
- better acquainted with my uncle _Toby_ now than you was before.
- By this contrivance the machinery of my work is of a species by itself;
- two contrary motions are introduced into it, and reconciled, which were
- thought to be at variance with each other. In a word, my work is
- digressive, and it is progressive too, --and at the same time.
- This, Sir, is a very different story from that of the earth’s moving
- round her axis, in her diurnal rotation, with her progress in her
- elliptick orbit which brings about the year, and constitutes that
- variety and vicissitude of seasons we enjoy; --though I own it suggested
- the thought, --as I believe the greatest of our boasted improvements and
- discoveries have come from such trifling hints.
- Digressions, incontestably, are the sunshine; ----they are the life, the
- soul of reading! --take them out of this book, for instance, --you might
- as well take the book along with them; --one cold eternal winter would
- reign in every page of it; restore them to the writer; --he steps forth
- like a bridegroom, --bids All-hail; brings in variety, and forbids the
- appetite to fail.
- All the dexterity is in the good cookery and management of them, so as
- to be not only for the advantage of the reader, but also of the author,
- whose distress, in this matter, is truly pitiable: For, if he begins a
- digression, --from that moment, I observe, his whole work stands stock
- still; --and if he goes on with his main work, --then there is an end of
- his digression.
- ----This is vile work. --For which reason, from the beginning of this,
- you see, I have constructed the main work and the adventitious parts of
- it with such intersections, and have so complicated and involved the
- digressive and progressive movements, one wheel within another, that the
- whole machine, in general, has been kept a-going; --and, what’s more, it
- shall be kept a-going these forty years, if it pleases the fountain of
- health to bless me so long with life and good spirits.
- CHAPTER XXIII
- I have a strong propensity in me to begin this chapter very
- nonsensically, and I will not baulk my fancy. --Accordingly I set off
- thus:
- If the fixture of _Momus’s_ glass in the human breast, according to the
- proposed emendation of that arch-critick, had taken place, ----first,
- This foolish consequence would certainly have followed, --That the very
- wisest and very gravest of us all, in one coin or other, must have paid
- window-money every day of our lives.
- And, secondly, That had the said glass been there set up, nothing more
- would have been wanting, in order to have taken a man’s character, but
- to have taken a chair and gone softly, as you would to a dioptrical
- beehive, and look’d in, --view’d the soul stark naked; --observed all
- her motions, --her machinations; --traced all her maggots from their
- first engendering to their crawling forth; --watched her loose in her
- frisks, her gambols, her capricios; and after some notice of her more
- solemn deportment, consequent upon such frisks, etc. ----then taken your
- pen and ink and set down nothing but what you had seen, and could have
- sworn to: --But this is an advantage not to be had by the biographer in
- this planet; --in the planet _Mercury_ (belike) it may be so, if not
- better still for him; ----for there the intense heat of the country,
- which is proved by computators, from its vicinity to the sun, to be more
- than equal to that of red-hot iron, --must, I think, long ago have
- vitrified the bodies of the inhabitants, (as the efficient cause) to
- suit them for the climate (which is the final cause); so that betwixt
- them both, all the tenements of their souls, from top to bottom, may be
- nothing else, for aught the soundest philosophy can shew to the
- contrary, but one fine transparent body of clear glass (bating the
- umbilical knot)--so that, till the inhabitants grow old and tolerably
- wrinkled, whereby the rays of light, in passing through them, become so
- monstrously refracted, ----or return reflected from their surfaces in
- such transverse lines to the eye, that a man cannot be seen through;
- --his soul might as well, unless for mere ceremony, or the trifling
- advantage which the umbilical point gave her, --might, upon all other
- accounts, I say, as well play the fool out o’doors as in her own house.
- But this, as I said above, is not the case of the inhabitants of this
- earth; --our minds shine not through the body, but are wrapt up here in
- a dark covering of uncrystalized flesh and blood; so that, if we would
- come to the specific characters of them, we must go some other way to
- work.
- Many, in good truth, are the ways, which human wit has been forced to
- take, to do this thing with exactness.
- Some, for instance, draw all their characters with wind-instruments.
- --_Virgil_ takes notice of that way in the affair of _Dido_ and _Æneas_;
- --but it is as fallacious as the breath of fame; --and, moreover,
- bespeaks a narrow genius. I am not ignorant that the _Italians_ pretend
- to a mathematical exactness in their designations of one particular sort
- of character among them, from the _forte_ or _piano_ of a certain
- wind-instrument they use, --which they say is infallible. --I dare not
- mention the name of the instrument in this place; --’tis sufficient we
- have it amongst us, --but never think of making a drawing by it; --this
- is ænigmatical, and intended to be so, at least _ad populum_: --And
- therefore, I beg, Madam, when you come here, that you read on as fast as
- you can, and never stop to make any inquiry about it.
- There are others again, who will draw a man’s character from no other
- helps in the world, but merely from his evacuations; --but this often
- gives a very incorrect outline, --unless, indeed, you take a sketch of
- his repletions too; and by correcting one drawing from the other,
- compound one good figure out of them both.
- I should have no objection to this method, but that I think it must
- smell too strong of the lamp, --and be render’d still more operose, by
- forcing you to have an eye to the rest of his _Non-naturals_. ----Why
- the most natural actions of a man’s life should be called his
- Non-naturals, --is another question.
- There are others, fourthly, who disdain every one of these expedients;
- --not from any fertility of their own, but from the various ways of
- doing it, which they have borrowed from the honourable devices which the
- Pentagraphic Brethren[1.3] of the brush have shewn in taking copies.
- --These, you must know, are your great historians.
- One of these you will see drawing a full-length character _against the
- light_; --that’s illiberal, --dishonest, --and hard upon the character
- of the man who sits.
- Others, to mend the matter, will make a drawing of you in the _Camera_;
- --that is most unfair of all, --because, _there_ you are sure to be
- represented in some of your most ridiculous attitudes.
- To avoid all and every one of these errors in giving you my uncle
- _Toby’s_ character, I am determined to draw it by no mechanical help
- whatever; ----nor shall my pencil be guided by any one wind-instrument
- which ever was blown upon, either on this, or on the other side of the
- _Alps_; --nor will I consider either his repletions or his discharges,
- --or touch upon his Non-naturals--but, in a word, I will draw my uncle
- _Toby’s_ character from his HOBBY-HORSE.
- [Footnote 1.3: Pentagraph, an instrument to copy Prints and
- Pictures mechanically, and in any proportion.]
- CHAPTER XXIV
- If I was not morally sure that the reader must be out of all patience
- for my uncle _Toby’s_ character, ----I would here previously have
- convinced him that there is no instrument so fit to draw such a thing
- with, as that which I have pitch’d upon.
- A man and his HOBBY-HORSE, tho’ I cannot say that they act and re-act
- exactly after the same manner in which the soul and body do upon each
- other: Yet doubtless there is a communication between them of some kind;
- and my opinion rather is, that there is something in it more of the
- manner of electrified bodies, --and that, by means of the heated parts
- of the rider, which come immediately into contact with the back of the
- HOBBY-HORSE, --by long journeys and much friction, it so happens, that
- the body of the rider is at length fill’d as full of HOBBY-HORSICAL
- matter as it can hold; ----so that if you are able to give but a clear
- description of the nature of the one, you may form a pretty exact notion
- of the genius and character of the other.
- Now the HOBBY-HORSE which my uncle _Toby_ always rode upon, was in my
- opinion a HOBBY-HORSE well worth giving a description of, if it was only
- upon the score of his great singularity; --for you might have travelled
- from _York_ to _Dover_, --from _Dover_ to _Penzance_ in _Cornwall_, and
- from _Penzance_ to _York_ back again, and not have seen such another
- upon the road; or if you had seen such a one, whatever haste you had
- been in, you must infallibly have stopp’d to have taken a view of him.
- Indeed, the gait and figure of him was so strange, and so utterly unlike
- was he, from his head to his tail, to any one of the whole species, that
- it was now and then made a matter of dispute, ----whether he was really
- a HOBBY-HORSE or no: but as the Philosopher would use no other argument
- to the Sceptic, who disputed with him against the reality of motion,
- save that of rising up upon his legs, and walking across the room; --so
- would my uncle _Toby_ use no other argument to prove his HOBBY-HORSE was
- a HOBBY-HORSE indeed, but by getting upon his back and riding him about;
- --leaving the world, after that, to determine the point as it thought
- fit.
- In good truth, my uncle _Toby_ mounted him with so much pleasure, and he
- carried my uncle _Toby_ so well, ----that he troubled his head very
- little with what the world either said or thought about it.
- It is now high time, however, that I give you a description of him:
- --But to go on regularly, I only beg you will give me leave to acquaint
- you first, how my uncle _Toby_ came by him.
- CHAPTER XXV
- The wound in my uncle _Toby’s_ groin, which he received at the siege of
- _Namur_, rendering him unfit for the service, it was thought expedient
- he should return to _England_, in order, if possible, to be set to
- rights.
- He was four years totally confined, --part of it to his bed, and all of
- it to his room: and in the course of his cure, which was all that time
- in hand, suffer’d unspeakable miseries, --owing to a succession of
- exfoliations from the _os pubis_, and the outward edge of that part of
- the _coxendix_ called the _os illium_, ----both which bones were
- dismally crush’d, as much by the irregularity of the stone, which I told
- you was broke off the parapet, --as by its size, --(tho’ it was pretty
- large) which inclined the surgeon all along to think, that the great
- injury which it had done my uncle _Toby’s_ groin, was more owing to the
- gravity of the stone itself, than to the projectile force of it, --which
- he would often tell him was a great happiness.
- My father at that time was just beginning business in _London_, and had
- taken a house; --and as the truest friendship and cordiality subsisted
- between the two brothers, --and that my father thought my uncle _Toby_
- could no where be so well nursed and taken care of as in his own house,
- ----he assign’d him the very best apartment in it. --And what was a much
- more sincere mark of his affection still, he would never suffer a friend
- or an acquaintance to step into the house on any occasion, but he would
- take him by the hand, and lead him up stairs to see his brother _Toby_,
- and chat an hour by his bedside.
- The history of a soldier’s wound beguiles the pain of it; --my uncle’s
- visitors at least thought so, and in their daily calls upon him, from
- the courtesy arising out of that belief, they would frequently turn the
- discourse to that subject, --and from that subject the discourse would
- generally roll on to the siege itself.
- These conversations were infinitely kind; and my uncle _Toby_ received
- great relief from them, and would have received much more, but that they
- brought him into some unforeseen perplexities, which, for three months
- together, retarded his cure greatly; and if he had not hit upon an
- expedient to extricate himself out of them, I verily believe they would
- have laid him in his grave.
- What these perplexities of my uncle _Toby_ were, ----’tis impossible for
- you to guess; --if you could, --I should blush; not as a relation, --not
- as a man, --nor even as a woman, --but I should blush as an author;
- inasmuch as I set no small store by myself upon this very account, that
- my reader has never yet been able to guess at anything. And in this,
- Sir, I am of so nice and singular a humour, that if I thought you was
- able to form the least judgment or probable conjecture to yourself, of
- what was to come in the next page, --I would tear it out of my book.
- BOOK II
- CHAPTER I
- I have begun a new book, on purpose that I might have room enough to
- explain the nature of the perplexities in which my uncle _Toby_ was
- involved, from the many discourses and interrogations about the siege of
- _Namur_, where he received his wound.
- I must remind the reader, in case he has read the history of King
- _William’s_ wars, --but if he has not, --I then inform him, that one of
- the most memorable attacks in that siege, was that which was made by the
- _English_ and _Dutch_ upon the point of the advanced counterscarp,
- between the gate of _St. Nicolas_, which inclosed the great sluice or
- water-stop, where the _English_ were terribly exposed to the shot of the
- counter-guard and demi-bastion of _St. Roch_. The issue of which hot
- dispute, in three words, was this; That the _Dutch_ lodged themselves
- upon the counter-guard, --and that the _English_ made themselves masters
- of the covered-way before _St. Nicolas_-gate, notwithstanding the
- gallantry of the _French_ officers, who exposed themselves upon the
- glacis sword in hand.
- As this was the principal attack of which my uncle _Toby_ was an
- eye-witness at _Namur_, ----the army of the besiegers being cut off, by
- the confluence of the _Maes_ and _Sambre_, from seeing much of each
- other’s operations, ----my uncle _Toby_ was generally more eloquent and
- particular in his account of it; and the many perplexities he was in,
- arose out of the almost insurmountable difficulties he found in telling
- his story intelligibly, and giving such clear ideas of the differences
- and distinctions between the scarp and counter-scarp, --the glacis and
- covered-way, --the half-moon and ravelin, --as to make his company fully
- comprehend where and what he was about.
- Writers themselves are too apt to confound these terms; so that you will
- the less wonder, if in his endeavours to explain them, and in opposition
- to many misconceptions, that my uncle _Toby_ did oft-times puzzle his
- visitors, and sometimes himself too.
- To speak the truth, unless the company my father led upstairs were
- tolerably clear-headed, or my uncle _Toby_ was in one of his explanatory
- moods, ’twas a difficult thing, do what he could, to keep the discourse
- free from obscurity.
- What rendered the account of this affair the more intricate to my uncle
- _Toby_, was this, --that in the attack of the counterscarp, before the
- gate of _St. Nicolas_, extending itself from the bank of the _Maes_,
- quite up to the great water-stop, --the ground was cut and cross cut
- with such a multitude of dykes, drains, rivulets, and sluices, on all
- sides, --and he would get so sadly bewildered, and set fast amongst
- them, that frequently he could neither get backwards or forwards to save
- his life; and was oft-times obliged to give up the attack upon that very
- account only.
- These perplexing rebuffs gave my uncle _Toby Shandy_ more perturbations
- than you would imagine: and as my father’s kindness to him was
- continually dragging up fresh friends and fresh enquirers, ----he had
- but a very uneasy task of it.
- No doubt my uncle _Toby_ had great command of himself, could guard
- appearances, I believe, as well as most men; --yet any one may imagine,
- that when he could not retreat out of the ravelin without getting into
- the half-moon, or get out of the covered-way without falling down the
- counterscarp, nor cross the dyke without danger of slipping into the
- ditch, but that he must have fretted and fumed inwardly: --He did so;
- and the little and hourly vexations, which may seem trifling and of no
- account to the man who has not read _Hippocrates_, yet, whoever has read
- _Hippocrates_, or Dr. _James Mackenzie_, and has considered well the
- effects which the passions and affections of the mind have upon the
- digestion--(Why not of a wound as well as of a dinner?)--may easily
- conceive what sharp paroxysms and exacerbations of his wound my uncle
- _Toby_ must have undergone upon that score only.
- --My uncle _Toby_ could not philosophize upon it; --’twas enough he felt
- it was so, --and having sustained the pain and sorrows of it for three
- months together, he was resolved some way or other to extricate himself.
- He was one morning lying upon his back in his bed, the anguish and
- nature of the wound upon his groin suffering him to lie in no other
- position, when a thought came into his head, that if he could purchase
- such a thing, and have it pasted down upon a board, as a large map of
- the fortification of the town and citadel of _Namur_, with its environs,
- it might be a means of giving him ease. --I take notice of his desire to
- have the environs along with the town and citadel, for this reason,
- --because my uncle _Toby’s_ wound was got in one of the traverses, about
- thirty toises from the returning angle of the trench, opposite to the
- salient angle of the demi-bastion of _St. Roch_: ----so that he was
- pretty confident he could stick a pin upon the identical spot of ground
- where he was standing on when the stone struck him.
- All this succeeded to his wishes, and not only freed him from a world of
- sad explanations, but, in the end, it proved the happy means, as you
- will read, of procuring my uncle _Toby_ his HOBBY-HORSE.
- CHAPTER II
- There is nothing so foolish, when you are at the expence of making an
- entertainment of this kind, as to order things so badly, as to let your
- criticks and gentry of refined taste run it down: Nor is there anything
- so likely to make them do it, as that of leaving them out of the party,
- or, what is full as offensive, of bestowing your attention upon the rest
- of your guests in so particular a way, as if there was no such thing as
- a critick (by occupation) at table.
- ----I guard against both; for, in the first place, I have left half a
- dozen places purposely open for them; --and in the next place, I pay
- them all court. --Gentlemen, I kiss your hands, I protest no company
- could give me half the pleasure, --by my soul I am glad to see
- you ------I beg only you will make no strangers of yourselves, but sit
- down without any ceremony, and fall on heartily.
- I said I had left six places, and I was upon the point of carrying my
- complaisance so far, as to have left a seventh open for them, --and in
- this very spot I stand on; but being told by a Critick (tho’ not by
- occupation, --but by nature) that I had acquitted myself well enough,
- I shall fill it up directly, hoping, in the meantime, that I shall be
- able to make a great deal of more room next year.
- ------How, in the name of wonder! could your uncle _Toby_, who, it
- seems, was a military man, and whom you have represented as no fool,
- ----be at the same time such a confused, pudding-headed, muddle-headed,
- fellow, as --Go look.
- So, Sir Critick, I could have replied; but I scorn it. --’Tis language
- unurbane, --and only befitting the man who cannot give clear and
- satisfactory accounts of things, or dive deep enough into the first
- causes of human ignorance and confusion. It is moreover the reply
- valiant--and therefore I reject it: for tho’ it might have suited my
- uncle _Toby’s_ character as a soldier excellently well, and had he not
- accustomed himself, in such attacks, to whistle the _Lillabullero_, as
- he wanted no courage, ’tis the very answer he would have given; yet it
- would by no means have done for me. You see as plain as can be, that I
- write as a man of erudition; --that even my similies, my allusions, my
- illustrations, my metaphors, are erudite, --and that I must sustain my
- character properly, and contrast it properly too, --else what would
- become of me? Why, Sir, I should be undone; --at this very moment that I
- am going here to fill up one place against a critick, --I should have
- made an opening for a couple.
- ----Therefore I answer thus:
- Pray, Sir, in all the reading which you have ever read, did you ever
- read such a book as _Locke’s_ Essay upon the Human Understanding?
- ----Don’t answer me rashly--because many, I know, quote the book, who
- have not read it--and many have read it who understand it not: --If
- either of these is your case, as I write to instruct, I will tell you in
- three words what the book is. --It is a history. --A history! of who?
- what? where? when? Don’t hurry yourself ----It is a history-book, Sir
- (which may possibly recommend it to the world) of what passes in a man’s
- own mind; and if you will say so much of the book, and no more, believe
- me, you will cut no contemptible figure in a metaphysick circle.
- But this by the way.
- Now if you will venture to go along with me, and look down into the
- bottom of this matter, it will be found that the cause of obscurity and
- confusion, in the mind of a man, is threefold.
- Dull organs, dear Sir, in the first place. Secondly, slight and
- transient impressions made by the objects, when the said organs are not
- dull. And thirdly, a memory like unto a sieve, not able to retain what
- it has received. --Call down _Dolly_ your chambermaid, and I will give
- you my cap and bell along with it, if I make not this matter so plain
- that _Dolly_ herself should understand it as well as _Malbranch_.
- ----When _Dolly_ has indited her epistle to _Robin_, and has thrust her
- arm into the bottom of her pocket hanging by her right side; --take that
- opportunity to recollect that the organs and faculties of perception
- can, by nothing in this world, be so aptly typified and explained as by
- that one thing which _Dolly’s_ hand is in search of. --Your organs are
- not so dull that I should inform you--’tis an inch, Sir, of red
- seal-wax.
- When this is melted, and dropped upon the letter, if _Dolly_ fumbles too
- long for her thimble, till the wax is over hardened, it will not receive
- the mark of her thimble from the usual impulse which was wont to imprint
- it. Very well. If _Dolly’s_ wax, for want of better, is bees-wax, or of
- a temper too soft, --tho’ it may receive, --it will not hold the
- impression, how hard soever _Dolly_ thrusts against it; and last of all,
- supposing the wax good, and eke the thimble, but applied thereto in
- careless haste, as her Mistress rings the bell; ----in any one of these
- three cases the print left by the thimble will be as unlike the
- prototype as a brass-jack.
- Now you must understand that not one of these was the true cause of the
- confusion in my uncle _Toby’s_ discourse; and it is for that very reason
- I enlarge upon them so long, after the manner of great physiologists--to
- shew the world, what it did _not_ arise from.
- What it did arise from, I have hinted above, and a fertile source of
- obscurity it is, --and ever will be, --and that is the unsteady uses of
- words, which have perplexed the clearest and most exalted
- understandings.
- It is ten to one (at _Arthur’s_) whether you have ever read the literary
- histories of past ages; --if you have, what terrible battles, ’yclept
- logomachies, have they occasioned and perpetuated with so much gall and
- ink-shed, --that a good-natured man cannot read the accounts of them
- without tears in his eyes.
- Gentle critick! when thou hast weighed all this, and considered within
- thyself how much of thy own knowledge, discourse, and conversation has
- been pestered and disordered at one time or other, by this, and this
- only: --What a pudder and racket in COUNCILS about οὐσία and ὑπόστασις;
- and in the SCHOOLS of the learned about power and about spirit; --about
- essences, and about quintessences; ----about substances, and about
- space. ----What confusion in greater THEATRES from words of little
- meaning, and as indeterminate a sense! when thou considerest this, thou
- wilt not wonder at my uncle _Toby’s_ perplexities, --thou wilt drop a
- tear of pity upon his scarp and his counterscarp; --his glacis and his
- covered way; --his ravelin and his half-moon: ’Twas not by ideas, --by
- Heaven; his life was put in jeopardy by words.
- CHAPTER III
- When my uncle _Toby_ got his map of _Namur_ to his mind, he began
- immediately to apply himself, and with the utmost diligence, to the
- study of it; for nothing being of more importance to him than his
- recovery, and his recovery depending, as you have read, upon the
- passions and affections of his mind, it behoved him to take the nicest
- care to make himself so far master of his subject, as to be able to talk
- upon it without emotion.
- In a fortnight’s close and painful application, which, by the bye, did
- my uncle _Toby’s_ wound, upon his groin, no good, --he was enabled, by
- the help of some marginal documents at the feet of the elephant,
- together with _Gobesius’s_ military architecture and pyroballogy,
- translated from the _Flemish_, to form his discourse with passable
- perspicuity; and before he was two full months gone, --he was right
- eloquent upon it, and could make not only the attack of the advanced
- counterscarp with great order; ----but having, by that time, gone much
- deeper into the art, than what his first motive made necessary, my uncle
- _Toby_ was able to cross the _Maes_ and _Sambre_; make diversions as far
- as _Vauban’s_ line, the abbey of _Salsines_, etc., and give his visitors
- as distinct a history of each of their attacks, as of that of the gate
- of _St. Nicolas_, where he had the honour to receive his wound.
- But desire of knowledge, like the thirst of riches, increases ever with
- the acquisition of it. The more my uncle _Toby_ pored over his map, the
- more he took a liking to it! --by the same process and electrical
- assimilation, as I told you, through which I ween the souls of
- connoisseurs themselves, by long friction and incumbition, have the
- happiness, at length, to get all be-virtu’d--be-pictured,
- --be-butterflied, and befiddled.
- The more my uncle _Toby_ drank of this sweet fountain of science, the
- greater was the heat and impatience of his thirst, so that before the
- first year of his confinement had well gone round, there was scarce a
- fortified town in _Italy_ or _Flanders_, of which, by one means or
- other, he had not procured a plan, reading over as he got them, and
- carefully collating therewith the histories of their sieges, their
- demolitions, their improvements, and new works, all which he would read
- with that intense application and delight, that he would forget himself,
- his wound, his confinement, his dinner.
- In the second year my uncle _Toby_ purchased _Ramelli_ and _Cataneo_,
- translated from the _Italian_; --likewise _Stevinus_, _Moralis_, the
- Chevalier _de Ville_, _Lorini_, _Cochorn_, _Sheeter_, the Count _de
- Pagan_, the Marshal _Vauban_, Mons. _Blondel_, with almost as many more
- books of military architecture, as Don _Quixote_ was found to have of
- chivalry, when the curate and barber invaded his library.
- Towards the beginning of the third year, which was in _August_,
- ninety-nine, my uncle _Toby_ found it necessary to understand a little
- of projectiles: --and having judged it best to draw his knowledge from
- the fountain-head, he began with _N. Tartaglia_, who it seems was the
- first man who detected the imposition of a cannon-ball’s doing all that
- mischief under the notion of a right line --This _N. Tartaglia_ proved
- to my uncle _Toby_ to be an impossible thing.
- ----Endless is the search of Truth.
- No sooner was my uncle _Toby_ satisfied which road the cannon-ball did
- not go, but he was insensibly led on, and resolved in his mind to
- enquire and find out which road the ball did go: For which purpose he
- was obliged to set off afresh with old _Maltus_, and studied him
- devoutly. --He proceeded next to _Galileo_ and _Torricellius_, wherein,
- by certain Geometrical rules, infallibly laid down, he found the precise
- part to be a PARABOLA--or else an HYPERBOLA, --and that the parameter,
- or _latus rectum_, of the conic section of the said path, was to the
- quantity and amplitude in a direct _ratio_, as the whole line to the
- sine of double the angle of incidence, formed by the breech upon an
- horizontal plane; --and that the semiparameter, ----stop! my dear uncle
- _Toby_----stop! --go not one foot farther into this thorny and
- bewildered track, --intricate are the steps! intricate are the mazes of
- this labyrinth! intricate are the troubles which the pursuit of this
- bewitching phantom KNOWLEDGE will bring upon thee. --O my uncle;
- --fly--fly, fly from it as from a serpent. ----Is it fit----good-natured
- man! thou should’st sit up, with the wound upon thy groin, whole nights
- baking thy blood with hectic watchings? ----Alas! ’twill exasperate thy
- symptoms, --check thy perspirations--evaporate thy spirits--waste thy
- animal strength, --dry up thy radical moisture, bring thee into a
- costive habit of body, ----impair thy health, ----and hasten all the
- infirmities of thy old age. ----O my uncle! my uncle _Toby_.
- CHAPTER IV
- I would not give a groat for that man’s knowledge in pencraft, who does
- not understand this, ----That the best plain narrative in the world,
- tacked very close to the last spirited apostrophe to my uncle
- _Toby_----would have felt both cold and vapid upon the reader’s palate;
- --therefore I forthwith put an end to the chapter, though I was in the
- middle of my story.
- ------Writers of my stamp have one principle in common with painters.
- Where an exact copying makes our pictures less striking, we choose the
- less evil; deeming it even more pardonable to trespass against truth,
- than beauty. This is to be understood _cum grano salis_; but be it as it
- will, --as the parallel is made more for the sake of letting the
- apostrophe cool, than any thing else, --’tis not very material whether
- upon any other score the reader approves of it or not.
- In the latter end of the third year, my uncle _Toby_ perceiving that the
- parameter and semiparameter of the conic section angered his wound, he
- left off the study of projectiles in a kind of a huff, and betook
- himself to the practical part of fortification only; the pleasure of
- which, like a spring held back, returned upon him with redoubled force.
- It was in this year that my uncle began to break in upon the daily
- regularity of a clean shirt, ----to dismiss his barber unshaven, ----and
- to allow his surgeon scarce time sufficient to dress his wound,
- concerning himself so little about it, as not to ask him once in seven
- times dressing, how it went on: when, lo! --all of a sudden, for the
- change was quick as lightning, he began to sigh heavily for his
- recovery, ----complained to my father, grew impatient with the surgeon:
- ----and one morning, as he heard his foot coming up stairs, he shut up
- his books, and thrust aside his instruments, in order to expostulate
- with him upon the protraction of the cure, which, he told him, might
- surely have been accomplished at least by that time: --He dwelt long
- upon the miseries he had undergone, and the sorrows of his four years
- melancholy imprisonment; --adding, that had it not been for the kind
- looks and fraternal chearings of the best of brothers, --he had long
- since sunk under his misfortunes. ----My father was by: My uncle
- _Toby’s_ eloquence brought tears into his eyes; ----’twas unexpected:
- ----My uncle _Toby_, by nature was not eloquent; --it had the greater
- effect: ----The surgeon was confounded; ----not that there wanted
- grounds for such, or greater marks of impatience, --but ’twas unexpected
- too; in the four years he had attended him, he had never seen anything
- like it in my uncle _Toby’s_ carriage; he had never once dropped one
- fretful or discontented word; ----he had been all patience, --all
- submission.
- --We lose the right of complaining sometimes by forbearing it; --but we
- often treble the force: --The surgeon was astonished; but much more so,
- when he heard my uncle _Toby_ go on, and peremptorily insist upon his
- healing up the wound directly, --or sending for Monsieur _Ronjat_, the
- king’s serjeant-surgeon, to do it for him.
- The desire of life and health is implanted in man’s nature; ----the love
- of liberty and enlargement is a sister-passion to it: These my uncle
- _Toby_ had in common with his species; ----and either of them had been
- sufficient to account for his earnest desire to get well and out of
- doors; ----but I have told you before, that nothing wrought with our
- family after the common way; ----and from the time and manner in which
- this eager desire shewed itself in the present case, the penetrating
- reader will suspect there was some other cause or crotchet for it in my
- uncle _Toby’s_ head: ----There was so, and ’tis the subject of the next
- chapter to set forth what that cause and crotchet was. I own, when
- that’s done, ’twill be time to return back to the parlour fire-side,
- where we left my uncle _Toby_ in the middle of his sentence.
- CHAPTER V
- When a man gives himself up to the government of a ruling passion, --or,
- in other words, when his HOBBY-HORSE grows headstrong, ----farewel cool
- reason and fair discretion!
- My uncle _Toby’s_ wound was near well, and as soon as the surgeon
- recovered his surprize, and could get leave to say as much----he told
- him, ’twas just beginning to incarnate; and that if no fresh exfoliation
- happened, which there was no sign of, --it would be dried up in five or
- six weeks. The sound of as many Olympiads, twelve hours before, would
- have conveyed an idea of shorter duration to my uncle _Toby’s_ mind.
- ----The succession of his ideas was now rapid, --he broiled with
- impatience to put his design in execution; ----and so, without
- consulting farther with any soul living, --which, by the bye, I think is
- right, when you are predetermined to take no one soul’s advice, ----he
- privately ordered _Trim_, his man, to pack up a bundle of lint and
- dressings, and hire a chariot-and-four to be at the door exactly by
- twelve o’clock that day, when he knew my father would be upon ’Change.
- ----So leaving a banknote upon the table for the surgeon’s care of him,
- and a letter of tender thanks for his brother’s--he packed up his maps,
- his books of fortification, his instruments, &c., and by the help of a
- crutch on one side, and _Trim_ on the other, ----my uncle _Toby_
- embarked for _Shandy-Hall_.
- The reason, or rather the rise of this sudden demigration was as
- follows:
- The table in my uncle _Toby’s_ room, and at which, the night before this
- change happened, he was sitting with his maps, &c., about him--being
- somewhat of the smallest, for that infinity of great and small
- instruments of knowledge which usually lay crowded upon it--he had the
- accident, in reaching over for his tobacco-box, to throw down his
- compasses, and in stooping to take the compasses up, with his sleeve he
- threw down his case of instruments and snuffers; --and as the dice took
- a run against him, in his endeavouring to catch the snuffers in falling,
- ----he thrust Monsieur _Blondel_ off the table, and Count _de Pagan_
- o’top of him.
- ’Twas to no purpose for a man, lame as my uncle _Toby_ was, to think of
- redressing these evils by himself, --he rung his bell for his man
- _Trim_; ------_Trim_, quoth my uncle _Toby_, prithee see what confusion
- I have here been making --I must have some better contrivance, _Trim_.
- ----Can’st not thou take my rule, and measure the length and breadth of
- this table, and then go and bespeak me one as big again? ----Yes, an’
- please your Honour, replied _Trim_, making a bow; but I hope your Honour
- will be soon well enough to get down to your country-seat, where, --as
- your Honour takes so much pleasure in fortification, we could manage
- this matter to a T.
- I must here inform you, that this servant of my uncle _Toby’s_, who went
- by the name of _Trim_, had been a corporal in my uncle’s own company,
- --his real name was _James Butler_, --but having got the nick-name of
- _Trim_ in the regiment, my uncle _Toby_, unless when he happened to be
- very angry with him, would never call him by any other name.
- The poor fellow had been disabled for the service, by a wound on his
- left knee by a musket-bullet, at the battle of _Landen_, which was two
- years before the affair of _Namur_; --and as the fellow was well-beloved
- in the regiment, and a handy fellow into the bargain, my uncle _Toby_
- took him for his servant; and of an excellent use was he, attending my
- uncle _Toby_ in the camp and in his quarters as a valet, groom, barber,
- cook, sempster, and nurse; and indeed, from first to last, waited upon
- him and served him with great fidelity and affection.
- My uncle _Toby_ loved the man in return, and what attached him more to
- him still, was the similitude of their knowledge. ----For Corporal
- _Trim_ (for so, for the future, I shall call him), by four years
- occasional attention to his Master’s discourse upon fortified towns, and
- the advantage of prying and peeping continually into his Master’s plans,
- &c., exclusive and besides what he gained HOBBY-HORSICALLY, as a
- body-servant, _Non Hobby Horsical per se_; ----had become no mean
- proficient in the science; and was thought, by the cook and
- chamber-maid, to know as much of the nature of strongholds as my uncle
- _Toby_ himself.
- I have but one more stroke to give to finish Corporal _Trim’s_
- character, ----and it is the only dark line in it. --The fellow loved to
- advise, --or rather to hear himself talk; his carriage, however, was so
- perfectly respectful, ’twas easy to keep him silent when you had him so;
- but set his tongue a-going, --you had no hold of him--he was voluble;
- --the eternal interlardings of _your Honour_, with the respectfulness of
- Corporal _Trim’s_ manner, interceding so strong in behalf of his
- elocution, --that though you might have been incommoded, ----you could
- not well be angry. My uncle _Toby_ was seldom either the one or the
- other with him, --or, at least, this fault, in _Trim_, broke no squares
- with them. My uncle _Toby_, as I said, loved the man; ----and besides,
- as he ever looked upon a faithful servant, --but as an humble friend,
- --he could not bear to stop his mouth. ----Such was Corporal _Trim_.
- If I durst presume, continued _Trim_, to give your Honour my advice, and
- speak my opinion in this matter. --Thou art welcome, _Trim_, quoth my
- uncle _Toby_--speak, ----speak what thou thinkest upon the subject, man,
- without fear. Why then, replied _Trim_ (not hanging his ears and
- scratching his head like a country-lout, but) stroking his hair back
- from his forehead, and standing erect as before his division, --I think,
- quoth _Trim_, advancing his left, which was his lame leg, a little
- forwards, --and pointing with his right hand open towards a map of
- _Dunkirk_, which was pinned against the hangings, ----I think, quoth
- Corporal _Trim_, with humble submission to your Honour’s better
- judgment, ----that these ravelins, bastions, curtins, and horn-works,
- make but a poor, contemptible, fiddle-faddle piece of work of it here
- upon paper, compared to what your Honour and I could make of it were we
- in the country by ourselves, and had but a rood, or a rood and a half of
- ground to do what we pleased with: As summer is coming on, continued
- _Trim_, your Honour might sit out of doors, and give me the
- nography--(Call it ichnography, quoth my uncle)----of the town or
- citadel, your Honour was pleased to sit down before, --and I will be
- shot by your Honour upon the glacis of it, if I did not fortify it to
- your Honour’s mind ----I dare say thou would’st, _Trim_, quoth my uncle.
- --For if your Honour, continued the Corporal, could but mark me the
- polygon, with its exact lines and angles --That I could do very well,
- quoth my uncle. --I would begin with the fossé, and if your Honour could
- tell me the proper depth and breadth --I can to a hair’s breadth, _Trim_,
- replied my uncle. --I would throw out the earth upon this hand towards
- the town for the scarp, --and on that hand towards the campaign for the
- counterscarp. --Very right, _Trim_, quoth my uncle _Toby_: ----And when
- I had sloped them to your mind, ----an’ please your Honour, I would face
- the glacis, as the finest fortifications are done in _Flanders_, with
- sods, ----and as your Honour knows they should be, --and I would make
- the walls and parapets with sods too. --The best engineers call them
- gazons, _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_. ----Whether they are gazons or
- sods, is not much matter, replied _Trim_; your Honour knows they are ten
- times beyond a facing either of brick or stone. ----I know they are,
- _Trim_, in some respects, ----quoth my uncle _Toby_, nodding his head;
- --for a cannon-ball enters into the gazon right onwards, without
- bringing any rubbish down with it, which might fill the fossé (as was
- the case at _St. Nicolas’s_ gate), and facilitate the passage over it.
- Your Honour understands these matters, replied Corporal _Trim_, better
- than any officer in his Majesty’s service; ----but would your Honour
- please to let the bespeaking of the table alone, and let us but go into
- the country, I would work under your Honour’s directions like a horse,
- and make fortifications for you something like a tansy, with all their
- batteries, saps, ditches, and palisadoes, that it should be worth all
- the world’s riding twenty miles to go and see it.
- My uncle _Toby_ blushed as red as scarlet as _Trim_ went on; --but it
- was not a blush of guilt, --of modesty, --or of anger, --it was a blush
- of joy; --he was fired with Corporal _Trim’s_ project and description.
- ----_Trim!_ said my uncle _Toby_, thou hast said enough. --We might
- begin the campaign, continued _Trim_, on the very day that his Majesty
- and the Allies take the field, and demolish them town by town as fast
- as--_Trim_, quoth my uncle _Toby_, say no more. Your Honour, continued
- _Trim_, might sit in your arm-chair (pointing to it) this fine weather,
- giving me your orders, and I would ----Say no more, _Trim_, quoth my
- uncle _Toby_ ----Besides, your Honour would get not only pleasure and
- good pastime, --but good air, and good exercise, and good health, --and
- your Honour’s wound would be well in a month. Thou hast said enough,
- _Trim_, --quoth my uncle _Toby_ (putting his hand into his
- breeches-pocket) ----I like thy project mightily. --And if your Honour
- pleases, I’ll this moment go and buy a pioneer’s spade to take down with
- us, and I’ll bespeak a shovel and a pick-axe, and a couple of ----Say no
- more, _Trim_, quoth my uncle _Toby_, leaping up upon one leg, quite
- overcome with rapture, --and thrusting a guinea into _Trim’s_ hand,
- --_Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_, say no more; --but go down, _Trim_, this
- moment, my lad, and bring up my supper this instant.
- _Trim_ ran down and brought up his master’s supper, ----to no purpose:
- --_Trim’s_ plan of operation ran so in my uncle _Toby’s_ head, he could
- not taste it. --_Trim_, quoth my uncle _Toby_, get me to bed. --’Twas
- all one. --Corporal _Trim’s_ description had fired his imagination, --my
- uncle _Toby_ could not shut his eyes. --The more he considered it, the
- more bewitching the scene appeared to him; --so that, two full hours
- before day-light, he had come to a final determination, and had
- concerted the whole plan of his and Corporal _Trim’s_ decampment.
- My uncle _Toby_ had a little neat country-house of his own, in the
- village where my father’s estate lay at _Shandy_, which had been left
- him by an old uncle, with a small estate of about one hundred pounds
- a-year. Behind this house, and contiguous to it, was a kitchen-garden of
- about half an acre; and at the bottom of the garden, and cut off from it
- by a tall yew hedge, was a bowling-green, containing just about as much
- ground as Corporal _Trim_ wished for; --so that as _Trim_ uttered the
- words, “A rood and a half of ground to do what they would with,” --this
- identical bowling-green instantly presented itself, and became curiously
- painted all at once, upon the retina of my uncle _Toby’s_ fancy; --which
- was the physical cause of making him change colour, or at least of
- heightening his blush, to that immoderate degree I spoke of.
- Never did lover post down to a beloved mistress with more heat and
- expectation, than my uncle _Toby_ did, to enjoy this self-same thing in
- private; --I say in private; --for it was sheltered from the house, as I
- told you, by a tall yew hedge, and was covered on the other three sides,
- from mortal sight, by rough holly and thick-set flowering shrubs: --so
- that the idea of not being seen, did not a little contribute to the idea
- of pleasure pre-conceived in my uncle _Toby’s_ mind. --Vain thought!
- however thick it was planted about, ----or private soever it might seem,
- --to think, dear uncle _Toby_, of enjoying a thing which took up a whole
- rood and a half of ground, ----and not have it known!
- How my uncle _Toby_ and Corporal _Trim_ managed this matter, ----with
- the history of their campaigns, which were no way barren of events,
- ----may make no uninteresting under-plot in the epitasis and working-up
- of this drama. --At present the scene must drop, --and change for the
- parlour fire-side.
- CHAPTER VI
- ----What can they be doing, brother? said my father. --I think, replied
- my uncle _Toby_, --taking, as I told you, his pipe from his mouth, and
- striking the ashes out of it as he began his sentence; ----I think,
- replied he, --it would not be amiss, brother, if we rung the bell.
- Pray, what’s all that racket over our heads, _Obadiah?_ ----quoth my
- father; ----my brother and I can scarce hear ourselves speak.
- Sir, answered _Obadiah_, making a bow towards his left shoulder, --my
- Mistress is taken very badly. --And where’s _Susannah_ running down the
- garden there, as if they were going to ravish her? ----Sir, she is
- running the shortest cut into the town, replied _Obadiah_, to fetch the
- old midwife. --Then saddle a horse, quoth my father, and do you go
- directly for Dr. _Slop_, the man-midwife, with all our services, ----and
- let him know your mistress is fallen into labour----and that I desire he
- will return with you with all speed.
- It is very strange, says my father, addressing himself to my uncle
- _Toby_, as _Obadiah_ shut the door, ----as there is so expert an
- operator as Dr. _Slop_ so near, --that my wife should persist to the
- very last in this obstinate humour of hers, in trusting the life of my
- child, who has had one misfortune already, to the ignorance of an old
- woman; ----and not only the life of my child, brother, ----but her own
- life, and with it the lives of all the children I might, peradventure,
- have begot out of her hereafter.
- Mayhap, brother, replied my uncle _Toby_, my sister does it to save the
- expense: --A pudding’s end, --replied my father, ----the Doctor must be
- paid the same for inaction as action, ----if not better, --to keep him
- in temper.
- ----Then it can be out of nothing in the whole world, quoth my uncle
- _Toby_, in the simplicity of his heart, --but MODESTY. --My sister,
- I dare say, added he, does not care to let a man come so near her ****.
- I will not say whether my uncle _Toby_ had completed the sentence or
- not; ----’tis for his advantage to suppose he had, ----as, I think, he
- could have added no ONE WORD which would have improved it.
- If, on the contrary, my uncle _Toby_ had not fully arrived at the
- period’s end, --then the world stands indebted to the sudden snapping of
- my father’s tobacco-pipe for one of the neatest examples of that
- ornamental figure in oratory, which Rhetoricians stile the
- _Aposiopesis_. ----Just Heaven! how does the _Poco piu_ and the _Poco
- meno_ of the _Italian_ artists; --the insensible MORE OR LESS, determine
- the precise line of beauty in the sentence, as well as in the statute!
- How do the slight touches of the chisel, the pencil, the pen, the
- fiddle-stick, _et cætera_, --give the true swell, which gives the true
- pleasure! --O my countrymen; --be nice; --be cautious of your language;
- --and never, O! never let it be forgotten upon what small particles your
- eloquence and your fame depend.
- ----“My sister, mayhap,” quoth my uncle _Toby_, “does not choose to let
- a man come so near her ****.” Make this dash, --’tis an Aposiopesis.
- --Take the dash away, and write _Backside_, ----’tis Bawdy. --Scratch
- Backside out, and put _Cover’d way_ in, ’tis a Metaphor; --and, I dare
- say, as fortification ran so much in my uncle _Toby’s_ head, that if he
- had been left to have added one word to the sentence, ----that word was
- it.
- But whether that was the case or not the case; --or whether the snapping
- of my father’s tobacco-pipe, so critically, happened through accident or
- anger, will be seen in due time.
- CHAPTER VII
- Tho’ my father was a good natural philosopher, --yet he was something of
- a moral philosopher too; for which reason, when his tobacco-pipe snapp’d
- short in the middle, --he had nothing to do, as such, but to have taken
- hold of the two pieces, and thrown them gently upon the back of the
- fire. ----He did no such thing; ----he threw them with all the violence
- in the world; --and, to give the action still more emphasis, --he
- started upon both his legs to do it.
- This looked something like heat; --and the manner of his reply to what
- my uncle _Toby_ was saying, proved it was so.
- --“Not choose,” quoth my father, (repeating my uncle _Toby’s_ words) “to
- let a man come so near her!” ----By Heaven, brother _Toby!_ you would
- try the patience of _Job_; --and I think I have the plagues of one
- already without it. ----Why? ----Where? ----Wherein? ----Wherefore?
- ----Upon what account? replied my uncle _Toby_, in the utmost
- astonishment. --To think, said my father, of a man living to your age,
- brother, and knowing so little about women! ----I know nothing at all
- about them, --replied my uncle _Toby_: And I think, continued he, that
- the shock I received the year after the demolition of _Dunkirk_, in my
- affair with widow _Wadman_; --which shock you know I should not have
- received, but from my total ignorance of the sex, --has given me just
- cause to say, That I neither know nor do pretend to know anything about
- ’em or their concerns either. --Methinks, brother, replied my father,
- you might, at least, know so much as the right end of a woman from the
- wrong.
- It is said in _Aristotle’s_ _Master Piece_, “That when a man doth think
- of anything which is past, ----he looketh down upon the ground; ----but
- that when he thinketh of something that is to come, he looketh up
- towards the heavens.”
- My uncle _Toby_, I suppose, thought of neither, for he look’d
- horizontally. --Right end! quoth my uncle _Toby_, muttering the two
- words low to himself, and fixing his two eyes insensibly as he muttered
- them, upon a small crevice, formed by a bad joint in the
- chimney-piece ----Right end of a woman! ----I declare, quoth my uncle,
- I know no more which it is than the man in the moon; ----and if I was to
- think, continued my uncle _Toby_ (keeping his eye still fixed upon the
- bad joint) this month together, I am sure I should not be able to find
- it out.
- Then, brother _Toby_, replied my father, I will tell you.
- Everything in this world, continued my father (filling a fresh
- pipe)--every thing in this world, my dear brother _Toby_, has two
- handles. ----Not always, quoth my uncle _Toby_. ----At least, replied my
- father, everyone has two hands, ----which comes to the same thing.
- ----Now, if a man was to sit down coolly, and consider within himself
- the make, the shape, the construction, come-at-ability, and convenience
- of all the parts which constitute the whole of that animal, called
- Woman, and compare them analogically ----I never understood rightly the
- meaning of that word, --quoth my uncle _Toby_.--
- ANALOGY, replied my father, is the certain relation and agreement which
- different ----Here a devil of a rap at the door snapped my father’s
- definition (like his tobacco-pipe) in two, --and, at the same time,
- crushed the head of as notable and curious a dissertation as ever was
- engendered in the womb of speculation; --it was some months before my
- father could get an opportunity to be safely delivered of it: --And, at
- this hour, it is a thing full as problematical as the subject of the
- dissertation itself, --(considering the confusion and distresses of our
- domestick misadventures, which are now coming thick one upon the back of
- another) whether I shall be able to find a place for it in the third
- volume or not.
- CHAPTER VIII
- It is about an hour and a half’s tolerable good reading since my uncle
- _Toby_ rung the bell, when _Obadiah_ was ordered to saddle a horse, and
- go for Dr. _Slop_, the man-midwife; --so that no one can say, with
- reason, that I have not allowed _Obadiah_ time enough, poetically
- speaking, and considering the emergency too, both to go and come;
- ----though, morally and truly speaking, the man perhaps has scarce had
- time to get on his boots.
- If the hypercritick will go upon this; and is resolved after all to take
- a pendulum, and measure the true distance betwixt the ringing of the
- bell, and the rap at the door; --and, after finding it to be no more
- than two minutes, thirteen seconds, and three fifths, --should take upon
- him to insult over me for such a breach in the unity, or rather
- probability of time; --I would remind him, that the idea of duration,
- and of its simple modes, is got merely from the train and succession of
- our ideas, ----and is the true scholastic pendulum, ----and by which, as
- a scholar, I will be tried in this matter, --abjuring and detesting the
- jurisdiction of all other pendulums whatever.
- I would therefore desire him to consider that it is but poor eight miles
- from _Shandy-Hall_ to Dr. _Slop_, the man-midwife’s house; --and that
- whilst _Obadiah_ has been going those said miles and back, I have
- brought my uncle _Toby_ from _Namur_, quite across all _Flanders_, into
- _England_: --That I have had him ill upon my hands near four years;
- --and have since travelled him and Corporal _Trim_ in a
- chariot-and-four, a journey of near two hundred miles down into
- _Yorkshire_, ----all which put together, must have prepared the reader’s
- imagination for the entrance of Dr. _Slop_ upon the stage, --as much, at
- least (I hope) as a dance, a song, or a concerto between the acts.
- If my hypercritick is intractable, alledging, that two minutes and
- thirteen seconds are no more than two minutes and thirteen seconds,
- --when I have said all I can about them; and that this plea, though it
- might save me dramatically, will damn me biographically, rendering my
- book from this very moment, a professed ROMANCE, which, before, was a
- book apocryphal: ----If I am thus pressed --I then put an end to the
- whole objection and controversy about it all at once, ----by acquainting
- him, that _Obadiah_ had not got above threescore yards from the
- stable-yard before he met with Dr. _Slop_; --and indeed he gave a
- dirty proof that he had met with him, and was within an ace of giving a
- tragical one too.
- Imagine to yourself; --but this had better begin a new chapter.
- CHAPTER IX
- Imagine to yourself a little squat, uncourtly figure of a Doctor _Slop_,
- of about four feet and a half perpendicular height, with a breadth of
- back, and a sesquipedality of belly, which might have done honour to a
- serjeant in the horse-guards.
- Such were the out-lines of Dr. _Slop’s_ figure, which, --if you have
- read _Hogarth’s_ analysis of beauty, and if you have not, I wish you
- would; ----you must know, may as certainly be caricatured, and conveyed
- to the mind by three strokes as three hundred.
- Imagine such a one, ----for such, I say, were the outlines of Dr.
- _Slop’s_ figure, coming slowly along, foot by foot, waddling thro’ the
- dirt upon the vertebræ of a little diminutive pony, of a pretty
- colour----but of strength, ----alack! ----scarce able to have made an
- amble of it, under such a fardel, had the roads been in an ambling
- condition. ----They were not. ----Imagine to yourself, _Obadiah_ mounted
- upon a strong monster of a coach-horse, pricked into a full gallop, and
- making all practicable speed the adverse way.
- Pray, Sir, let me interest you a moment in this description.
- Had Dr. _Slop_ beheld _Obadiah_ a mile off, posting in a narrow lane
- directly towards him, at that monstrous rate, --splashing and plunging
- like a devil thro’ thick and thin, as he approached, would not such a
- phænomenon, with such a vortex of mud and water moving along with it,
- round its axis, --have been a subject of juster apprehension to Dr.
- _Slop_ in his situation, than the _worst_ of _Whiston’s_ comets? --To
- say nothing of the NUCLEUS; that is, of _Obadiah_ and the coach-horse.
- --In my idea, the vortex alone of ’em was enough to have involved and
- carried, if not the doctor, at least the doctor’s pony, quite away with
- it. What then do you think must the terror and hydrophobia of Dr. _Slop_
- have been, when you read (which you are just going to do) that he was
- advancing thus warily along towards _Shandy-Hall_, and had approached to
- within sixty yards of it, and within five yards of a sudden turn, made
- by an acute angle of the garden-wall, --and in the dirtiest part of a
- dirty lane, --when _Obadiah_ and his coach-horse turned the corner,
- rapid, furious, --pop, --full upon him! --Nothing, I think, in nature,
- can be supposed more terrible than such a rencounter, --so imprompt! so
- ill prepared to stand the shock of it as Dr. _Slop_ was.
- What could Dr. _Slop_ do? ----he crossed himself + --Pugh! --but the
- doctor, Sir, was a Papist. --No matter; he had better have kept hold of
- the pummel --He had so; --nay, as it happened, he had better have done
- nothing at all; for in crossing himself he let go his whip, ----and in
- attempting to save his whip betwixt his knee and his saddle’s skirt, as
- it slipped, he lost his stirrup, ----in losing which he lost his seat;
- ----and in the multitude of all these losses (which, by the bye, shews
- what little advantage there is in crossing) the unfortunate doctor lost
- his presence of mind. So that without waiting for _Obadiah’s_ onset, he
- left his pony to its destiny, tumbling off it diagonally, something in
- the stile and manner of a pack of wool, and without any other
- consequence from the fall, save that of being left (as it would have
- been) with the broadest part of him sunk about twelve inches deep in the
- mire.
- _Obadiah_ pull’d off his cap twice to Dr. _Slop_; --once as he was
- falling, --and then again when he saw him seated. ----Ill-timed
- complaisance; --had not the fellow better have stopped his horse, and
- got off and help’d him? --Sir, he did all that his situation would
- allow; --but the MOMENTUM of the coach-horse was so great, that
- _Obadiah_ could not do it all at once; he rode in a circle three times
- round Dr. _Slop_, before he could fully accomplish it any how; --and at
- the last, when he did stop his beast, ’twas done with such an explosion
- of mud, that _Obadiah_ had better have been a league off. In short,
- never was a Dr. _Slop_ so beluted, and so transubstantiated, since that
- affair came into fashion.
- CHAPTER X
- When Dr. _Slop_ entered the back parlour, where my father and my uncle
- _Toby_ were discoursing upon the nature of women, ----it was hard to
- determine whether Dr. _Slop’s_ figure, or Dr. _Slop’s_ presence,
- occasioned more surprize to them; for as the accident happened so near
- the house, as not to make it worth while for _Obadiah_ to remount him,
- ----Obadiah had led him in as he was, _unwiped_, _unappointed_,
- _unannealed_, with all his stains and blotches on him. --He stood like
- _Hamlet’s_ ghost, motionless and speechless, for a full minute and a
- half at the parlour-door (_Obadiah_ still holding his hand) with all the
- majesty of mud. His hinder parts, upon which he had received his fall,
- totally besmeared, ----and in every other part of him, blotched over in
- such a manner with _Obadiah’s_ explosion, that you would have sworn
- (without mental reservation) that every grain of it had taken effect.
- Here was a fair opportunity for my uncle _Toby_ to have triumphed over
- my father in his turn; --for no mortal, who had beheld Dr. _Slop_ in
- that pickle, could have dissented from so much at least, of my uncle
- _Toby’s_ opinion, “That mayhap his sister might not care to let such a
- Dr. _Slop_ come so near her ****.” But it was the _Argumentum ad
- hominem_; and if my uncle _Toby_ was not very expert at it, you may
- think, he might not care to use it. ----No; the reason was, --’twas not
- his nature to insult.
- Dr. _Slop’s_ presence at that time, was no less problematical than the
- mode of it; tho’ it is certain, one moment’s reflexion in my father
- might have solved it; for he had apprized Dr. _Slop_ but the week
- before, that my mother was at her full reckoning; and as the doctor had
- heard nothing since, ’twas natural and very political too in him, to
- have taken a ride to _Shandy-Hall_, as he did, merely to see how matters
- went on.
- But my father’s mind took unfortunately a wrong turn in the
- investigation; running, like the hypercritick’s, altogether upon the
- ringing of the bell and the rap upon the door, --measuring their
- distance, and keeping his mind so intent upon the operation as to have
- power to think of nothing else, ----common-place infirmity of the
- greatest mathematicians! working with might and main at the
- demonstration, and so wasting all their strength upon it, that they have
- none left in them to draw the corollary, to do good with.
- The ringing of the bell, and the rap upon the door, struck likewise
- strong upon the sensorium of my uncle _Toby_, --but it excited a very
- different train of thoughts; --the two irreconcileable pulsations
- instantly brought _Stevinus_, the great engineer, along with them, into
- my uncle _Toby’s_ mind. What business _Stevinus_ had in this affair,
- --is the greatest problem of all: ----It shall be solved, --but not in
- the next chapter.
- CHAPTER XI
- Writing, when properly managed (as you may be sure I think mine is) is
- but a different name for conversation. As no one, who knows what he is
- about in good company, would venture to talk all; ----so no author, who
- understands the just boundaries of decorum and good-breeding, would
- presume to think all: The truest respect which you can pay to the
- reader’s understanding, is to halve this matter amicably, and leave him
- something to imagine, in his turn, as well as yourself.
- For my own part, I am eternally paying him compliments of this kind, and
- do all that lies in my power to keep his imagination as busy as my own.
- ’Tis his turn now; --I have given an ample description of Dr. _Slop’s_
- sad overthrow, and of his sad appearance in the back-parlour; --his
- imagination must now go on with it for a while.
- Let the reader imagine then, that Dr. _Slop_ has told his tale--and in
- what words, and with what aggravations, his fancy chooses; --Let him
- suppose, that _Obadiah_ has told his tale also, and with such rueful
- looks of affected concern, as he thinks best will contrast the two
- figures as they stand by each other. ----Let him imagine, that my father
- has stepped upstairs to see my mother. --And, to conclude this work of
- imagination--let him imagine the doctor washed, --rubbed down, and
- condoled, --felicitated, --got into a pair of _Obadiah’s_ pumps,
- stepping forwards towards the door, upon the very point of entering upon
- action.
- Truce! --truce, good Dr. _Slop_: --stay thy obstetrick hand; ----return
- it safe into thy bosom to keep it warm; ----little dost thou know what
- obstacles, ------little dost thou think what hidden causes, retard its
- operation! ----Hast thou, Dr. _Slop_, --hast thou been intrusted with
- the secret articles of the solemn treaty which has brought thee into
- this place? --Art thou aware that at this instant, a daughter of
- _Lucina_ is put obstetrically over thy head? Alas! --’tis too true.
- --Besides, great son of _Pilumnus!_ what canst thou do? --Thou hast come
- forth unarm’d; --thou hast left thy _tire-tête_, --thy new-invented
- _forceps_, --thy _crotchet_, --thy _squirt_, and all thy instruments of
- salvation and deliverance, behind thee, --By Heaven! at this moment they
- are hanging up in a green bays bag, betwixt thy two pistols, at the
- bed’s head! --Ring; --call; --send _Obadiah_ back upon the coach-horse
- to bring them with all speed.
- ----Make great haste, _Obadiah_, quoth my father, and I’ll give thee a
- crown! --and quoth my uncle _Toby_, I’ll give him another.
- CHAPTER XII
- Your sudden and unexpected arrival, quoth my uncle _Toby_, addressing
- himself to Dr. _Slop_ (all three of them sitting down to the fire
- together, as my uncle _Toby_ began to speak)--instantly brought the
- great _Stevinus_ into my head, who, you must know, is a favourite author
- with me. --Then, added my father, making use of the argument _Ad
- Crumenam_, --I will lay twenty guineas to a single crown-piece (which
- will serve to give away to _Obadiah_ when he gets back) that this same
- _Stevinus_ was some engineer or other, --or has wrote something or
- other, either directly or indirectly, upon the science of fortification.
- He has so, --replied my uncle _Toby_. --I knew it, said my father,
- though, for the soul of me, I cannot see what kind of connection there
- can be betwixt Dr. _Slop’s_ sudden coming, and a discourse upon
- fortification; --yet I fear’d it. --Talk of what we will, brother,
- ----or let the occasion be never so foreign or unfit for the subject,
- --you are sure to bring it in. I would not, brother _Toby_, continued my
- father, ------I declare I would not have my head so full of curtins and
- hornworks. --That I dare say you would not, quoth Dr. _Slop_,
- interrupting him, and laughing most immoderately at his pun.
- _Dennis_ the critic could not detest and abhor a pun, or the insinuation
- of a pun, more cordially than my father; --he would grow testy upon it
- at any time; --but to be broke in upon by one, in a serious discourse,
- was as bad, he would say, as a fillip upon the nose; ----he saw no
- difference.
- Sir, quoth my uncle _Toby_, addressing himself to Dr. _Slop_, --the
- curtins my brother _Shandy_ mentions here, have nothing to do with
- bedsteads; --tho’, I know _Du Cange_ says, “That bed-curtains, in all
- probability, have taken their name from them;” --nor have the hornworks
- he speaks of, anything in the world to do with the horn-works of
- cuckoldom: --But the _Curtin_, Sir, is the word we use in fortification,
- for that part of the wall or rampart which lies between the two bastions
- and joins them --Besiegers seldom offer to carry on their attacks
- directly against the curtin, for this reason, because they are so well
- _flanked_. (’Tis the case of other curtains, quoth Dr. _Slop_,
- laughing.) However, continued my uncle _Toby_, to make them sure, we
- generally choose to place ravelins before them, taking care only to
- extend them beyond the fossé or ditch: ----The common men, who know very
- little of fortification, confound the ravelin and the half-moon
- together, --tho’ they are very different things; --not in their figure
- or construction, for we make them exactly alike, in all points; --for
- they always consist of two faces, making a salient angle, with the
- gorges, not straight, but in form of a crescent: ----Where then lies the
- difference? (quoth my father, a little testily). --In their situations,
- answered my uncle _Toby_: --For when a ravelin, brother, stands before
- the curtin, it is a ravelin; and when a ravelin stands before a bastion,
- then the ravelin is not a ravelin; --it is a half-moon; --a half-moon
- likewise is a half-moon, and no more, so long as it stands before its
- bastion; ----but was it to change place, and get before the curtin,
- --’twould be no longer a half-moon; a half-moon, in that case, is not a
- half-moon; --’tis no more than a ravelin. ----I think, quoth my father,
- that the noble science of defence has its weak sides----as well as
- others.
- --As for the horn-work (high! ho! sigh’d my father) which, continued my
- uncle _Toby_, my brother was speaking of, they are a very considerable
- part of an outwork; ----they are called by the _French_ engineers,
- _Ouvrage à corne_, and we generally make them to cover such places as we
- suspect to be weaker than the rest; --’tis formed by two epaulments or
- demi-bastions--they are very pretty, --and if you will take a walk, I’ll
- engage to shew you one well worth your trouble. --I own, continued my
- uncle _Toby_, when we crown them, --they are much stronger, but then
- they are very expensive, and take up a great deal of ground, so that, in
- my opinion, they are most of use to cover or defend the head of a camp;
- otherwise the double tenaille --By the mother who bore us! ----brother
- _Toby_, quoth my father, not able to hold out any longer, ----you would
- provoke a saint; ----here have you got us, I know not how, not only
- souse into the middle of the old subject again: --But so full is your
- head of these confounded works, that though my wife is this moment in
- the pains of labour, and you hear her cry out, yet nothing will serve
- you but to carry off the man-midwife. ----_Accoucheur_, --if you please,
- quoth Dr. _Slop_. ----With all my heart, replied my father, I don’t care
- what they call you, --but I wish the whole science of fortification,
- with all its inventors, at the devil; --it has been the death of
- thousands, --and it will be mine in the end, --I would not, I would not,
- brother _Toby_, have my brains so full of saps, mines, blinds, gabions,
- pallisadoes, ravelins, half-moons, and such trumpery, to be proprietor
- of _Namur_, and of all the towns in _Flanders_ with it.
- My uncle _Toby_ was a man patient of injuries; --not from want of
- courage, --I have told you in a former chapter, “that he was a man of
- courage:” --And will add here, that where just occasions presented, or
- called it forth, --I know no man under whose arm I would have sooner
- taken shelter; ----nor did this arise from any insensibility or
- obtuseness of his intellectual parts; --for he felt this insult of my
- father’s as feelingly as a man could do; --but he was of a peaceful,
- placid nature, --no jarring element in it, --all was mixed up so kindly
- within him; my uncle _Toby_ had scarce a heart to retaliate upon a fly.
- --Go--says he, one day at dinner, to an over-grown one which had buzzed
- about his nose, and tormented him cruelly all dinner-time, --and which
- after infinite attempts, he had caught at last, as it flew by him;
- --I’ll not hurt thee, says my uncle _Toby_, rising from his chair, and
- going across the room, with the fly in his hand, ----I’ll not hurt a
- hair of thy head: --Go, says he, lifting up the sash, and opening his
- hand as he spoke, to let it escape; --go, poor devil, get thee gone, why
- should I hurt thee? ----This world surely is wide enough to hold both
- thee and me.
- I was but ten years old when this happened: but whether it was, that the
- action itself was more in unison to my nerves at that age of pity, which
- instantly set my whole frame into one vibration of most pleasurable
- sensation; --or how far the manner and expression of it might go towards
- it; --or in what degree, or by what secret magick, --a tone of voice and
- harmony of movement, attuned by mercy, might find a passage to my heart,
- I know not; --this I know, that the lesson of universal good-will then
- taught and imprinted by my uncle _Toby_, has never since been worn out
- of my mind: And tho’ I would not depreciate what the study of the
- _Literæ humaniores_, at the university, have done for me in that
- respect, or discredit the other helps of an expensive education bestowed
- upon me, both at home and abroad since; --yet I often think that I owe
- one half of my philanthropy to that one accidental impression.
- [-->] This is to serve for parents and governors instead of a whole
- volume upon the subject.
- I could not give the reader this stroke in my uncle _Toby’s_ picture, by
- the instrument with which I drew the other parts of it, --that taking in
- no more than the mere HOBBY-HORSICAL likeness: ----this is a part of his
- moral character. My father, in this patient endurance of wrongs, which I
- mention, was very different, as the reader must long ago have noted; he
- had a much more acute and quick sensibility of nature, attended with a
- little soreness of temper; tho’ this never transported him to anything
- which looked like malignancy: --yet in the little rubs and vexations of
- life, ’twas apt to shew itself in a drollish and witty kind of
- peevishness: ----He was, however, frank and generous in his nature;
- ----at all times open to conviction; and in the little ebullitions of
- this subacid humour towards others, but particularly towards my uncle
- _Toby_, whom he truly loved: ----he would feel more pain, ten times told
- (except in the affair of my aunt _Dinah_, or where an hypothesis was
- concerned) than what he ever gave.
- The characters of the two brothers, in this view of them, reflected
- light upon each other, and appeared with great advantage in this affair
- which arose about _Stevinus_.
- I need not tell the reader, if he keeps a HOBBY-HORSE, ----that a man’s
- HOBBY-HORSE is as tender a part as he has about him; and that these
- unprovoked strokes at my uncle _Toby’s_ could not be unfelt by him.
- ----No: ------as I said above, my uncle _Toby_ did feel them, and very
- sensibly too.
- Pray, Sir, what said he? --How did he behave? --O, Sir! --it was great:
- For as soon as my father had done insulting his HOBBY-HORSE, ------he
- turned his head without the least emotion, from Dr. _Slop_, to whom he
- was addressing his discourse, and looking up into my father’s face, with
- a countenance spread over with so much good-nature; ----so placid;
- ----so fraternal; ----so inexpressibly tender towards him: --it
- penetrated my father to his heart: He rose up hastily from his chair,
- and seizing hold of both my uncle _Toby’s_ hands as he spoke: --Brother
- _Toby_, said he, --I beg thy pardon; ----forgive, I pray thee, this rash
- humour which my mother gave me. ----My dear, dear brother, answered my
- uncle _Toby_, rising up by my father’s help, say no more about it; --you
- are heartily welcome, had it been ten times as much, brother. But ’tis
- ungenerous, replied my father, to hurt any man; ----a brother worse;
- ----but to hurt a brother of such gentle manners, --so unprovoking,
- --and so unresenting; ----’tis base: ----By Heaven, ’tis cowardly. --You
- are heartily welcome, brother, quoth my uncle _Toby_, ------had it been
- fifty times as much. ----Besides, what have I to do, my dear _Toby_,
- cried my father, either with your amusements or your pleasures, unless
- it was in my power (which it is not) to increase their measure?
- ----Brother _Shandy_, answered my uncle _Toby_, looking wistfully in his
- face, ----you are much mistaken in this point: --for you do increase my
- pleasure very much, in begetting children for the _Shandy_ family at
- your time of life. --But, by that, Sir, quoth Dr. _Slop_, Mr. _Shandy_
- increases his own. --Not a jot, quoth my father.
- CHAPTER XIII
- My brother does it, quoth my uncle _Toby_, out of _principle_. ----In a
- family way, I suppose, quoth Dr. _Slop_. ----Pshaw! --said my father,
- --’tis not worth talking of.
- CHAPTER XIV
- At the end of the last chapter, my father and my uncle _Toby_ were left
- both standing, like _Brutus_ and _Cassius_, at the close of the scene,
- making up their accounts.
- As my father spoke the three last words, ----he sat down; --my uncle
- _Toby_ exactly followed his example, only, that before he took his
- chair, he rung the bell, to order Corporal _Trim_, who was in waiting,
- to step home for _Stevinus_: --my uncle _Toby’s_ house being no farther
- off than the opposite side of the way.
- Some men would have dropped the subject of _Stevinus_; ----but my uncle
- _Toby_ had no resentment in his heart, and he went on with the subject,
- to shew my father that he had none.
- Your sudden appearance, Dr. _Slop_, quoth my uncle, resuming the
- discourse, instantly brought _Stevinus_ into my head. (My father, you
- may be sure, did not offer to lay any more wagers upon _Stevinus’s_
- head.) ----Because, continued my uncle _Toby_, the celebrated sailing
- chariot, which belonged to Prince _Maurice_, and was of such wonderful
- contrivance and velocity, as to carry half a dozen people thirty
- _German_ miles, in I don’t know how few minutes, ----was invented by
- _Stevinus_, that great mathematician and engineer.
- You might have spared your servant the trouble, quoth Dr. _Slop_ (as the
- fellow is lame) of going for _Stevinus’s_ account of it, because in my
- return from _Leyden_ thro’ the _Hague_, I walked as far as _Schevling_,
- which is two long miles, on purpose to take a view of it.
- That’s nothing, replied my uncle _Toby_, to what the learned
- _Peireskius_ did, who walked a matter of five hundred miles, reckoning
- from _Paris_ to _Schevling_, and from _Schevling_ to _Paris_ back again,
- in order to see it, --and nothing else.
- Some men cannot bear to be out-gone.
- The more fool _Peireskius_, replied Dr. _Slop_. But mark, ’twas out of
- no contempt of _Peireskius_ at all; ----but that _Peireskius’s_
- indefatigable labour in trudging so far on foot, out of love for the
- sciences, reduced the exploit of Dr. _Slop_, in that affair, to nothing:
- --the more fool _Peireskius_, said he again. --Why so? --replied my
- father, taking his brother’s part, not only to make reparation as fast
- as he could for the insult he had given him, which sat still upon my
- father’s mind; ----but partly, that my father began really to interest
- himself in the discourse. ----Why so? ----said he. Why is _Peireskius_,
- or any man else, to be abused for an appetite for that, or any other
- morsel of sound knowledge: For notwithstanding I know nothing of the
- chariot in question, continued he, the inventor of it must have had a
- very mechanical head; and tho’ I cannot guess upon what principles of
- philosophy he has atchieved it; --yet certainly his machine has been
- constructed upon solid ones, be they what they will, or it could not
- have answered at the rate my brother mentions.
- It answered, replied my uncle _Toby_, as well, if not better; for, as
- _Peireskius_ elegantly expresses it, speaking of the velocity of its
- motion, _Tam citus erat, quam erat ventus_; which, unless I have forgot
- my Latin, is, _that it was as swift as the wind itself_.
- But pray, Dr. _Slop_, quoth my father, interrupting my uncle (tho’ not
- without begging pardon for it at the same time) upon what principles was
- this self-same chariot set a-going? --Upon very pretty principles to be
- sure, replied Dr. _Slop_: --And I have often wondered, continued he,
- evading the question, why none of our gentry, who live upon large plains
- like this of ours, --(especially they whose wives are not past
- child-bearing) attempt nothing of this kind; for it would not only be
- infinitely expeditious upon sudden calls, to which the sex is subject,
- --if the wind only served, --but would be excellent good husbandry to
- make use of the winds, which cost nothing, and which eat nothing, rather
- than horses, which (the devil take ’em) both cost and eat a great deal.
- For that very reason, replied my father, “Because they cost nothing, and
- because they eat nothing,” --the scheme is bad; --it is the consumption
- of our products, as well as the manufactures of them, which gives bread
- to the hungry, circulates trade, --brings in money, and supports the
- value of our lands: --and tho’, I own, if I was a Prince, I would
- generously recompense the scientifick head which brought forth such
- contrivances; --yet I would as peremptorily suppress the use of them.
- My father here had got into his element, ----and was going on as
- prosperously with his dissertation upon trade, as my uncle _Toby_ had
- before, upon his of fortification; --but to the loss of much sound
- knowledge, the destinies in the morning had decreed that no dissertation
- of any kind should be spun by my father that day, ----for as he opened
- his mouth to begin the next sentence.
- CHAPTER XV
- In popped Corporal _Trim_ with _Stevinus_: --But ’twas too late, --all
- the discourse had been exhausted without him, and was running into a new
- channel. --You may take the book home again, _Trim_, said my uncle
- _Toby_, nodding to him.
- But prithee, Corporal, quoth my father, drolling, --look first into it,
- and see if thou canst spy aught of a sailing chariot in it.
- Corporal _Trim_, by being in the service, had learned to obey, --and not
- to remonstrate; --so taking the book to a side-table, and running over
- the leaves; An’ please your Honour, said _Trim_, I can see no such
- thing; --however, continued the Corporal, drolling a little in his turn,
- I’ll make sure work of it, an’ please your Honour; --so taking hold of
- the two covers of the book, one in each hand, and letting the leaves
- fall down, as he bent the covers back, he gave the book a good sound
- shake.
- There is something falling out, however, said _Trim_, an’ please your
- Honour; --but it is not a chariot, or anything like one: --Prithee,
- Corporal, said my father, smiling, what is it then? --I think, answered
- _Trim_, stooping to take it up, ----’tis more like a sermon, ------for
- it begins with a text of scripture, and the chapter and verse; --and
- then goes on, not as a chariot, but like a sermon directly.
- The company smiled.
- I cannot conceive how it is possible, quoth my uncle _Toby_, for such a
- thing as a sermon to have got into my _Stevinus_.
- I think ’tis a sermon, replied _Trim_; --but if it please your Honours,
- as it is a fair hand, I will read you a page; --for _Trim_, you must
- know, loved to hear himself read almost as well as talk.
- I have ever a strong propensity, said my father, to look into things
- which cross my way, by such strange fatalities as these; --and as we
- have nothing better to do, at least till _Obadiah_ gets back, I shall be
- obliged to you, brother, if Dr. _Slop_ has no objection to it, to order
- the Corporal to give us a page or two of it, --if he is as able to do
- it, as he seems willing. An’ please your Honour, quoth _Trim_, I
- officiated two whole campaigns, in _Flanders_, as clerk to the chaplain
- of the regiment. ----He can read it, quoth my uncle _Toby_, as well as I
- can. ----_Trim_, I assure you, was the best scholar in my company, and
- should have had the next halberd, but for the poor fellow’s misfortune.
- Corporal _Trim_ laid his hand upon his heart, and made an humble bow to
- his master; --then laying down his hat upon the floor, and taking up the
- sermon in his left hand, in order to have his right at liberty, ----he
- advanced, nothing doubting, into the middle of the room, where he could
- best see, and be best seen by his audience.
- CHAPTER XVI
- --If you have any objection, --said my father, addressing himself to Dr.
- _Slop_. Not in the least, replied Dr. _Slop_; --for it does not appear
- on which side of the question it is wrote; ----it may be a composition
- of a divine of our church, as well as yours, --so that we run equal
- risques. ----’Tis wrote upon neither side, quoth _Trim_, for ’tis only
- upon _Conscience_, an’ please your Honours.
- _Trim’s_ reason put his audience into good-humour, --all but Dr. _Slop_,
- who turning his head about towards _Trim_, looked a little angry.
- Begin, _Trim_, --and read distinctly, quoth my father. --I will, an’
- please your Honour, replied the Corporal, making a bow, and bespeaking
- attention with a slight movement of his right hand.
- CHAPTER XVII
- ----But before the Corporal begins, I must first give you a description
- of his attitude; ----otherwise he will naturally stand represented, by
- your imagination, in an uneasy posture, --stiff, --perpendicular,
- --dividing the weight of his body equally upon both legs; ----his eye
- fixed, as if on duty; --his look determined, --clenching the sermon in
- his left hand, like his firelock. ----In a word, you would be apt to
- paint _Trim_, as if he was standing in his platoon ready for action.
- --His attitude was as unlike all this as you can conceive.
- He stood before them with his body swayed, and bent forwards just so
- far, as to make an angle of 85 degrees and a half upon the plain of the
- horizon; --which sound orators, to whom I address this, know very well
- to be the true persuasive angle of incidence; --in any other angle you
- may talk and preach; --’tis certain; --and it is done every day; --but
- with what effect, --I leave the world to judge!
- The necessity of this precise angle, of 85 degrees and a half to a
- mathematical exactness, ----does it not shew us, by the way, how the
- arts and sciences mutually befriend each other?
- How the duce Corporal _Trim_, who knew not so much as an acute angle
- from an obtuse one, came to hit it so exactly; ----or whether it was
- chance or nature, or good sense or imitation, &c., shall be commented
- upon in that part of the cyclopædia of arts and sciences, where the
- instrumental parts of the eloquence of the senate, the pulpit, and the
- bar, the coffee-house, the bed-chamber, and fire-side, fall under
- consideration.
- He stood, ----for I repeat it, to take the picture of him in at one
- view, with his body swayed, and somewhat bent forwards, --his right leg
- from under him, sustaining seven-eighths of his whole weight, ------the
- foot of his left leg, the defect of which was no disadvantage to his
- attitude, advanced a little, --not laterally, nor forwards, but in a
- line betwixt them; --his knee bent, but that not violently, --but so as
- to fall within the limits of the line of beauty; --and I add, of the
- line of science too; --for consider, it had one eighth part of his body
- to bear up; --so that in this case the position of the leg is
- determined, --because the foot could be no farther advanced, or the knee
- more bent, than what would allow him, mechanically to receive an eighth
- part of his whole weight under it, and to carry it too.
- [-->] This I recommend to painters: --need I add, --to orators! --I
- think not; for unless they practise it, ------they must fall upon their
- noses.
- So much for Corporal _Trim’s_ body and legs. ----He held the sermon
- loosely, not carelessly, in his left hand, raised something above his
- stomach, and detached a little from his breast; ----his right arm
- falling negligently by his side, as nature and the laws of gravity
- ordered it, ----but with the palm of it open and turned towards his
- audience, ready to aid the sentiment in case it stood in need.
- Corporal _Trim’s_ eyes and the muscles of his face were in full harmony
- with the other parts of him; --he looked frank, --unconstrained,
- --something assured, --but not bordering upon assurance.
- Let not the critic ask how Corporal _Trim_ could come by all this.
- ----I’ve told him it should be explained; --but so he stood before my
- father, my uncle _Toby_, and Dr. _Slop_, --so swayed his body, so
- contrasted his limbs, and with such an oratorical sweep throughout the
- whole figure, ----a statuary might have modelled from it; ----nay,
- I doubt whether the oldest Fellow of a College, --or the _Hebrew_
- Professor himself, could have much mended it.
- _Trim_ made a bow, and read as follows:
- The SERMON
- HEBREWS xiii. 18
- ----_For we _trust_ we have a good Conscience_
- “Trust! ----Trust we have a good conscience!”
- [Certainly, _Trim_, quoth my father, interrupting him, you give that
- sentence a very improper accent; for you curl up your nose, man, and
- read it with such a sneering tone, as if the Parson was going to abuse
- the Apostle.
- He is, an’ please your Honour, replied _Trim_. Pugh! said my father,
- smiling.
- Sir, quoth Dr. _Slop_, _Trim_ is certainly in the right; for the writer
- (who I perceive is a Protestant) by the snappish manner in which he
- takes up the apostle, is certainly going to abuse him; --if this
- treatment of him has not done it already. But from whence, replied my
- father, have you concluded so soon, Dr. _Slop_, that the writer is of
- our church? --for aught I can see yet, --he may be of any church.
- ----Because, answered Dr. _Slop_, if he was of ours, --he durst no more
- take such a licence, --than a bear by his beard: --If, in our communion,
- Sir, a man was to insult an apostle, ----a saint, ----or even the paring
- of a saint’s nail, --he would have his eyes scratched out. --What, by
- the saint? quoth my uncle _Toby_. No, replied Dr. _Slop_, he would have
- an old house over his head. Pray is the Inquisition an ancient building,
- answered my uncle _Toby_, or is it a modern one? --I know nothing of
- architecture, replied Dr. _Slop_. --An’ please your Honours, quoth
- _Trim_, the Inquisition is the vilest ----Prithee spare thy description,
- _Trim_, I hate the very name of it, said my father. --No matter for
- that, answered Dr. _Slop_, --it has its uses; for tho’ I’m no great
- advocate for it, yet, in such a case as this, he would soon be taught
- better manners; and I can tell him, if he went on at that rate, would be
- flung into the Inquisition for his pains. God help him then, quoth my
- uncle _Toby_. Amen, added _Trim_; for Heaven above knows, I have a poor
- brother who has been fourteen years a captive in it. --I never heard one
- word of it before, said my uncle _Toby_, hastily: --How came he there,
- _Trim?_ ----O, Sir! the story will make your heart bleed, --as it has
- made mine a thousand times; --but it is too long to be told now; --your
- Honour shall hear it from first to last some day when I am working
- beside you in our fortifications; --but the short of the story is this;
- --That my brother _Tom_ went over a servant to _Lisbon_, --and then
- married a Jew’s widow, who kept a small shop, and sold sausages, which
- somehow or other, was the cause of his being taken in the middle of the
- night out of his bed, where he was lying with his wife and two small
- children, and carried directly to the Inquisition, where, God help him,
- continued _Trim_, fetching a sigh from the bottom of his heart, --the
- poor honest lad lies confined at this hour; he was as honest a soul,
- added _Trim_, (pulling out his handkerchief) as ever blood warmed.----
- --The tears trickled down _Trim’s_ cheeks faster than he could well wipe
- them away. --And dead silence in the room ensued for some minutes.
- --Certain proof of pity!
- Come, _Trim_, quoth my father, after he saw the poor fellow’s grief had
- got a little vent, --read on, --and put this melancholy story out of thy
- head: --I grieve that I interrupted thee; but prithee begin the sermon
- again; --for if the first sentence in it is matter of abuse, as thou
- sayest, I have a great desire to know what kind of provocation the
- apostle has given.
- Corporal _Trim_ wiped his face, and returned his handkerchief into his
- pocket, and, making a bow as he did it, --he began again.]
- The SERMON
- HEBREWS xiii. 18
- _----For we _trust_ we have a good Conscience. --_
- “Trust! trust we have a good conscience! Surely if there is any thing in
- this life which a man may depend upon, and to the knowledge of which he
- is capable of arriving upon the most indisputable evidence, it must be
- this very thing, --whether he has a good conscience or no.”
- [I am positive I am right, quoth Dr. _Slop_.]
- “If a man thinks at all, he cannot well be a stranger to the true state
- of this account; ----he must be privy to his own thoughts and desires;
- --he must remember his past pursuits, and know certainly the true
- springs and motives, which, in general, have governed the actions of his
- life.”
- [I defy him, without an assistant, quoth Dr. _Slop_.]
- “In other matters we may be deceived by false appearances; and, as the
- wise man complains, _hardly do we guess aright at the things that are
- upon the earth, and with labour do we find the things that are before
- us_. But here the mind has all the evidence and facts within herself;
- ----is conscious of the web she has wove; ----knows its texture and
- fineness, and the exact share which every passion has had in working
- upon the several designs which virtue or vice has planned before her.”
- [The language is good, and I declare _Trim_ reads very well, quoth my
- father.]
- “Now, --as conscience is nothing else but the knowledge which the mind
- has within herself of this; and the judgment, either of approbation or
- censure, which it unavoidably makes upon the successive actions of our
- lives; ’tis plain you will say, from the very terms of the proposition,
- --whenever this inward testimony goes against a man, and he stands
- self-accused, that he must necessarily be a guilty man. --And, on the
- contrary, when the report is favourable on his side, and his heart
- condemns him not: --that it is not a matter of _trust_, as the apostle
- intimates, but a matter of _certainty_ and fact, that the conscience is
- good, and that the man must be good also.”
- [Then the apostle is altogether in the wrong, I suppose, quoth Dr.
- _Slop_, and the Protestant divine is in the right. Sir, have patience,
- replied my father, for I think it will presently appear that St. _Paul_
- and the Protestant divine are both of an opinion. --As nearly so, quoth
- Dr. _Slop_, as east is to west; --but this, continued he, lifting both
- hands, comes from the liberty of the press.
- It is no more, at the worst, replied my uncle _Toby_, than the liberty
- of the pulpit; for it does not appear that the sermon is printed, or
- ever likely to be.
- Go on, _Trim_, quoth my father.]
- “At first sight this may seem to be a true state of the case: and I make
- no doubt but the knowledge of right and wrong is so truly impressed upon
- the mind of man, --that did no such thing ever happen, as that the
- conscience of a man, by long habits of sin, might (as the scripture
- assures it may) insensibly become hard; --and, like some tender parts of
- his body, by much stress and continual hard usage, lose by degrees that
- nice sense and perception with which God and nature endowed it: --Did
- this never happen; --or was it certain that self-love could never hang
- the least bias upon the judgment; --or that the little interests below
- could rise up and perplex the faculties of our upper regions, and
- encompass them about with clouds and thick darkness: ----Could no such
- thing as favour and affection enter this sacred Court: --Did WIT disdain
- to take a bribe in it; --or was ashamed to shew its face as an advocate
- for an unwarrantable enjoyment: Or, lastly, were we assured that
- INTEREST stood always unconcerned whilst the cause was hearing--and that
- Passion never got into the judgment-seat, and pronounced sentence in the
- stead of Reason, which is supposed always to preside and determine upon
- the case: --Was this truly so, as the objection must suppose; --no doubt
- then the religious and moral state of a man would be exactly what he
- himself esteemed it: --and the guilt or innocence of every man’s life
- could be known, in general, by no better measure, than the degrees of
- his own approbation and censure.
- “I own, in one case, whenever a man’s conscience does accuse him (as it
- seldom errs on that side) that he is guilty; and unless in melancholy
- and hypocondriac cases, we may safely pronounce upon it, that there is
- always sufficient grounds for the accusation.
- “But the converse of the proposition will not hold true; --namely, that
- whenever there is guilt, the conscience must accuse; and if it does not,
- that a man is therefore innocent. ----This is not fact ------So that the
- common consolation which some good christian or other is hourly
- administering to himself, --that he thanks God his mind does not misgive
- him; and that, consequently, he has a good conscience, because he hath a
- quiet one, --is fallacious; --and as current as the inference is, and as
- infallible as the rule appears at first sight, yet when you look nearer
- to it, and try the truth of this rule upon plain facts, ----you see it
- liable to so much error from a false application; ----the principle upon
- which it goes so often perverted; ----the whole force of it lost, and
- sometimes so vilely cast away, that it is painful to produce the common
- examples from human life, which confirm the account.
- “A man shall be vicious and utterly debauched in his principles;
- --exceptionable in his conduct to the world; shall live shameless, in
- the open commission of a sin which no reason or pretence can justify,
- ----a sin by which, contrary to all the workings of humanity, he shall
- ruin for ever the deluded partner of his guilt; --rob her of her best
- dowry; and not only cover her own head with dishonour; --but involve a
- whole virtuous family in shame and sorrow for her sake. Surely, you will
- think conscience must lead such a man a troublesome life; he can have no
- rest night or day from its reproaches.
- “Alas! CONSCIENCE had something else to do all this time, than break in
- upon him; as _Elijah_ reproached the god _Baal_, ----this domestic god
- _was either talking, or pursuing, or was in a journey, or peradventure
- he slept and could not be awoke_.
- “Perhaps HE was gone out in company with HONOUR to fight a duel: to pay
- off some debt at play; ----or dirty annuity, the bargain of his lust;
- Perhaps CONSCIENCE all this time was engaged at home, talking aloud
- against petty larceny, and executing vengeance upon some such puny
- crimes as his fortune and rank of life secured him against all
- temptation of committing; so that he lives as merrily” ----[If he was of
- our church, tho’, quoth Dr. _Slop_, he could not]-- “sleeps as soundly
- in his bed; --and at last meets death as unconcernedly; --perhaps much
- more so, than a much better man.”
- [All this is impossible with us, quoth Dr. _Slop_, turning to my father,
- --the case could not happen in our church. --It happens in ours,
- however, replied my father, but too often. ----I own, quoth Dr. _Slop_,
- (struck a little with my father’s frank acknowledgment)--that a man in
- the _Romish_ church may live as badly; --but then he cannot easily die
- so. ----’Tis little matter, replied my father, with an air of
- indifference, --how a rascal dies. --I mean, answered Dr. _Slop_, he
- would be denied the benefits of the last sacraments. --Pray how many
- have you in all, said my uncle _Toby_, ----for I always forget?
- ----Seven, answered Dr. _Slop_. ----Humph! --said my uncle _Toby_; tho’
- not accented as a note of acquiescence, --but as an interjection of that
- particular species of surprize, when a man in looking into a drawer,
- finds more of a thing than he expected. ----Humph! replied my uncle
- _Toby_. Dr. _Slop_, who had an ear, understood my uncle _Toby_ as well
- as if he had wrote a whole volume against the seven sacraments.
- ----Humph! replied Dr. _Slop_ (stating my uncle _Toby’s_ argument over
- again to him) ----Why, Sir, are there not seven cardinal virtues?
- ----Seven mortal sins? ----Seven golden candlesticks? ----Seven heavens?
- --’Tis more than I know, replied my uncle _Toby_. ------Are there not
- seven wonders of the world? ----Seven days of the creation? ----Seven
- planets? ----Seven plagues? ----That there are, quoth my father with a
- most affected gravity. But prithee, continued he, go on with the rest of
- thy characters, _Trim_.]
- “Another is sordid, unmerciful,” (here _Trim_ waved his right hand)
- “a strait-hearted, selfish wretch, incapable either of private
- friendship or public spirit. Take notice how he passes by the widow and
- orphan in their distress, and sees all the miseries incident to human
- life without a sigh or a prayer.” [An’ please your honours, cried
- _Trim_, I think this a viler man than the other.]
- “Shall not conscience rise up and sting him on such occasions? ----No;
- thank God there is no occasion, _I pay every man his own; --I have no
- fornication to answer to my conscience; --no faithless vows or promises
- to make up; --I have debauched no man’s wife or child; thank God, I am
- not as other men, adulterers, unjust, or even as this libertine, who
- stands before me._
- “A third is crafty and designing in his nature. View his whole life;
- --’tis nothing but a cunning contexture of dark arts and unequitable
- subterfuges, basely to defeat the true intent of all laws,
- ----plain-dealing and the safe enjoyment of our several properties.
- ----You will see such a one working out a frame of little designs upon
- the ignorance and perplexities of the poor and needy man; --shall raise
- a fortune upon the inexperience of a youth, or the unsuspecting temper
- of his friend, who would have trusted him with his life.
- “When old age comes on, and repentance calls him to look back upon this
- black account, and state it over again with his conscience --CONSCIENCE
- looks into the STATUTES AT LARGE; --finds no express law broken by what
- he has done; --perceives no penalty or forfeiture of goods and chattels
- incurred; --sees no scourge waving over his head, or prison opening his
- gates upon him: --What is there to affright his conscience? --Conscience
- has got safely entrenched behind the Letter of the Law; sits there
- invulnerable, fortified with #Cases# and #Reports# so strongly on all
- sides; --that it is not preaching can dispossess it of its hold.”
- [Here Corporal _Trim_ and my uncle _Toby_ exchanged looks with each
- other. --Aye, aye, _Trim!_ quoth my uncle _Toby_, shaking his head,
- ------these are but sorry fortifications, _Trim_. ------O! very poor
- work, answered _Trim_, to what your Honour and I make of it. ----The
- character of this last man, said Dr. _Slop_, interrupting _Trim_, is
- more detestable than all the rest; and seems to have been taken from
- some pettifogging Lawyer amongst you: --Amongst us, a man’s conscience
- could not possibly continue so long _blinded_, ----three times in a
- year, at least, he must go to confession. Will that restore it to sight?
- quoth my uncle _Toby_. ----Go on, _Trim_, quoth my father, or _Obadiah_
- will have got back before thou hast got to the end of thy sermon.
- ----’Tis a very short one, replied _Trim_. ----I wish it was longer,
- quoth my uncle _Toby_, for I like it hugely. --_Trim_ went on.]
- “A fourth man shall want even this refuge; --shall break through all
- their ceremony of slow chicane; ----scorns the doubtful workings of
- secret plots and cautious trains to bring about his purpose: ----See the
- bare-faced villain, how he cheats, lies, perjures, robs, murders!
- --Horrid! --But indeed much better was not to be expected, in the
- present case--the poor man was in the dark! ------his priest had got the
- keeping of his conscience; ----and all he would let him know of it, was,
- That he must believe in the Pope; --go to Mass; --cross himself; --tell
- his beads; --be a good Catholic, and that this, in all conscience, was
- enough to carry him to heaven. What; --if he perjures! --Why; --he had a
- mental reservation in it. --But if he is so wicked and abandoned a
- wretch as you represent him; --if he robs, --if he stabs, will not
- conscience, on every such act, receive a wound itself? --Aye, --but the
- man has carried it to confession; ----the wound digests there, and will
- do well enough, and in a short time be quite healed up by absolution.
- O Popery! what hast thou to answer for? ----when, not content with the
- too many natural and fatal ways, thro’ which the heart of man is every
- day thus treacherous to itself above all things; --thou hast wilfully
- set open the wide gate of deceit before the face of this unwary
- traveller, too apt, God knows, to go astray of himself; and confidently
- speak peace to himself, when there is no peace.
- “Of this the common instances which I have drawn out of life, are too
- notorious to require much evidence. If any man doubts the reality of
- them, or thinks it impossible for a man to be such a bubble to himself,
- --I must refer him a moment to his own reflections, and will then
- venture to trust my appeal with his own heart.
- “Let him consider in how different a degree of detestation, numbers of
- wicked actions stand _there_, tho’ equally bad and vicious in their own
- natures; --he will soon find, that such of them as strong inclination
- and custom have prompted him to commit, are generally dressed out and
- painted with all the false beauties which a soft and a flattering hand
- can give them; --and that the others, to which he feels no propensity,
- appear, at once, naked and deformed, surrounded with all the true
- circumstances of folly and dishonour.
- “When _David_ surprized _Saul_ sleeping in the cave, and cut off the
- skirt of his robe--we read his heart smote him for what he had done:
- ----But in the matter of _Uriah_, where a faithful and gallant servant,
- whom he ought to have loved and honoured, fell to make way for his lust,
- --where conscience had so much greater reason to take the alarm, his
- heart smote him not. A whole year had almost passed from the first
- commission of that crime, to the time _Nathan_ was sent to reprove him;
- and we read not once of the least sorrow or compunction of heart which
- he testified, during all that time, for what he had done.
- “Thus conscience, this once able monitor, ----placed on high as a judge
- within us, and intended by our Maker as a just and equitable one too,
- --by an unhappy train of causes and impediments, takes often such
- imperfect cognizance of what passes, ----does its office so negligently,
- ----sometimes so corruptly--that it is not to be trusted alone; and
- therefore we find there is a necessity, an absolute necessity, of
- joining another principle with it, to aid, if not govern, its
- determinations.
- “So that if you would form a just judgment of what is of infinite
- importance to you not to be misled in, --namely, in what degree of real
- merit you stand either as an honest man, an useful citizen, a faithful
- subject to your king, or a good servant to your God, ----call in
- religion and morality. --Look, What is written in the law of God?
- ----How readest thou? --Consult calm reason and the unchangeable
- obligations of justice and truth; ----what say they?
- “Let CONSCIENCE determine the matter upon these reports; ----and then if
- thy heart condemns thee not, which is the case the apostle supposes,
- ----the rule will be infallible;” --[Here Dr. _Slop_ fell asleep]--
- “_thou wilt have confidence towards God_; ----that is, have just grounds
- to believe the judgment thou hast past upon thyself, is the judgment of
- God; and nothing else but an anticipation of that righteous sentence
- which will be pronounced upon thee hereafter by that Being, to whom thou
- art finally to give an account of thy actions.
- “_Blessed is the man_, indeed, then, as the author of the book of
- _Ecclesiasticus_ expresses it, _who is not pricked with the multitude of
- his sins: Blessed is the man whose heart hath not condemned him; whether
- he be rich, or whether he be poor, if he have a good heart_ (a heart
- thus guided and informed) _he shall at all times rejoice in a chearful
- countenance; his mind shall tell him more than seven watch-men that sit
- above upon a tower on high_.” --[A tower has no strength, quoth my uncle
- _Toby_, unless ’tis flank’d.]-- “In the darkest doubts it shall conduct
- him safer than a thousand casuists, and give the state he lives in,
- a better security for his behaviour than all the causes and restrictions
- put together which law-makers are forced to multiply: --_Forced_, I say,
- as things stand; human laws not being a matter of original choice, but
- of pure necessity, brought in to fence against the mischievous effects
- of those consciences which are no law unto themselves; well intending,
- by the many provisions made, --that in all such corrupt and misguided
- cases, where principles and the checks of conscience will not make us
- upright, --to supply their force, and, by the terrors of gaols and
- halters, oblige us to it.”
- [I see plainly, said my father, that this sermon has been composed to be
- preached at the Temple, ----or at some Assize. --I like the reasoning,
- --and am sorry that Dr. _Slop_ has fallen asleep before the time of his
- conviction: --for it is now clear, that the Parson, as I thought at
- first, never insulted St. _Paul_ in the least; --nor has there been,
- brother, the least difference between them. ----A great matter, if they
- had differed, replied my uncle _Toby_, --the best friends in the world
- may differ sometimes. ----True, --brother _Toby_, quoth my father,
- shaking hands with him, --we’ll fill our pipes, brother, and then _Trim_
- shall go on.
- Well, ----what dost thou think of it? said my father speaking to
- Corporal _Trim_, as he reached his tobacco-box.
- I think, answered the Corporal, that the seven watch-men upon the tower,
- who, I suppose, are all centinels there, --are more, an’ please your
- Honour, than were necessary; --and, to go on at that rate, would harrass
- a regiment all to pieces, which a commanding officer, who loves his men,
- will never do, if he can help it, because two centinels, added the
- Corporal, are as good as twenty. --I have been a commanding officer
- myself in the _Corps de Garde_ a hundred times, continued _Trim_, rising
- an inch higher in his figure, as he spoke, --and all the time I had the
- honour to serve his Majesty King _William_, in relieving the most
- considerable posts, I never left more than two in my life. ----Very
- right, _Trim_, quoth my uncle _Toby_, --but you do not consider,
- _Trim_, that the towers, in _Solomon’s_ days, were not such things as
- our bastions, flanked and defended by other works; --this, _Trim_, was
- an invention since _Solomon’s_ death; nor had they horn-works, or
- ravelins before the curtin, in his time; ----or such a fossé as we make
- with a cuvette in the middle of it, and with covered ways and
- counterscarps pallisadoed along it, to guard against a _Coup de main_:
- --So that the seven men upon the tower were a party, I dare say, from
- the _Corps de Garde_, set there, not only to look out, but to defend it.
- --They could be no more, an’ please your Honour, than a Corporal’s
- Guard. --My father smiled inwardly, but not outwardly; --the subject
- being rather too serious, considering what had happened, to make a jest
- of. --So putting his pipe into his mouth, which he had just lighted,
- --he contented himself with ordering _Trim_ to read on. He read on as
- follows:]
- “To have the fear of God before our eyes, and, in our mutual dealings
- with each other, to govern our actions by the eternal measures of right
- and wrong: ----The first of these will comprehend the duties of
- religion; --the second, those of morality, which are so inseparably
- connected together, that you cannot divide these two _tables_, even in
- imagination (tho’ the attempt is often made in practice) without
- breaking and mutually destroying them both.
- “I said the attempt is often made; and so it is; ----there being nothing
- more common than to see a man who has no sense at all of religion, and
- indeed has so much honesty as to pretend to none, who would take it as
- the bitterest affront, should you but hint at a suspicion of his moral
- character, ----or imagine he was not conscientiously just and scrupulous
- to the uttermost mite.
- “When there is some appearance that it is so, --tho’ one is unwilling
- even to suspect the appearance of so amiable a virtue as moral honesty,
- yet were we to look into the grounds of it, in the present case, I am
- persuaded we should find little reason to envy such a one the honour of
- his motive.
- “Let him declaim as pompously as he chooses upon the subject, it will be
- found to rest upon no better foundation than either his interest, his
- pride, his ease, or some such little and changeable passion as will give
- us but small dependence upon his actions in matters of great distress.
- “I will illustrate this by an example.
- “I know the banker I deal with, or the physician I usually call in”
- --[There is no need, cried Dr. _Slop_ (waking), to call in any physician
- in this case]---- “to be neither of them men of much religion: I hear
- them make a jest of it every day, and treat all its sanctions with so
- much scorn, as to put the matter past doubt. Well; --notwithstanding
- this, I put my fortune into the hands of the one: --and what is dearer
- still to me, I trust my life to the honest skill of the other.
- “Now let me examine what is my reason for this great confidence. Why, in
- the first place, I believe there is no probability that either of them
- will employ the power I put into their hands to my disadvantage; --I
- consider that honesty serves the purposes of this life: --I know their
- success in the world depends upon the fairness of their characters. --In
- a word, I’m persuaded that they cannot hurt me without hurting
- themselves more.
- “But put it otherwise, namely, that interest lay, for once, on the other
- side; that a case should happen, wherein the one, without stain to his
- reputation, could secrete my fortune, and leave me naked in the world;
- --or that the other could send me out of it, and enjoy an estate by my
- death, without dishonour to himself or his art: --In this case, what
- hold have I of either of them? --Religion, the strongest of all motives,
- is out of the question; --Interest, the next most powerful motive in the
- world, is strongly against me: ------What have I left to cast into the
- opposite scale to balance this temptation? ------Alas! I have nothing,
- ----nothing but what is lighter than a bubble ------I must lie at the
- mercy of HONOUR, or some such capricious principle --Strait security for
- two of the most valuable blessings! --my property and myself.
- “As, therefore, we can have no dependence upon morality without
- religion; --so, on the other hand, there is nothing better to be
- expected from religion without morality; nevertheless, ’tis no prodigy
- to see a man whose real moral character stands very low, who yet
- entertains the highest notion of himself in the light of a religious
- man.
- “He shall not only be covetous, revengeful, implacable, --but even
- wanting in points of common honesty; yet inasmuch as he talks aloud
- against the infidelity of the age, ----is zealous for some points of
- religion, ----goes twice a day to church, --attends the sacraments,
- --and amuses himself with a few instrumental parts of religion, --shall
- cheat his conscience into a judgment, that, for this, he is a religious
- man, and has discharged truly his duty to God: And you will find such a
- man, through force of this delusion, generally looks down with spiritual
- pride upon every other man who has less affectation of piety, --though,
- perhaps, ten times more real honesty than himself.
- “_This likewise is a sore evil under the sun_; and I believe, there is
- no one mistaken principle, which, for its time, has wrought more serious
- mischiefs. ------For a general proof of this, --examine the history of
- the _Romish_ church;” --[Well, what can you make of that? cried Dr.
- _Slop_]-- “see what scenes of cruelty, murder, rapine, bloodshed,”
- ----[They may thank their own obstinacy, cried Dr. _Slop_]---- “have all
- been sanctified by a religion not strictly governed by morality.
- “In how many kingdoms of the world” --[Here _Trim_ kept waving his right
- hand from the sermon to the extent of his arm, returning it backwards
- and forwards to the conclusion of the paragraph.]
- “In how many kingdoms of the world has the crusading sword of this
- misguided saint-errant, spared neither age nor merit, or sex, or
- condition? --and, as he fought under the banners of a religion which set
- him loose from justice and humanity, he shewed none; mercilessly
- trampled upon both, --heard neither the cries of the unfortunate, nor
- pitied their distresses.”
- [I have been in many a battle, an’ please your Honour, quoth _Trim_,
- sighing, but never in so melancholy a one as this, --I would not have
- drawn a tricker in it against these poor souls, ----to have been made a
- general officer. ----Why? what do you understand of the affair? said Dr.
- _Slop_, looking towards _Trim_, with something more of contempt than the
- Corporal’s honest heart deserved. ----What do you know, friend, about
- this battle you talk of? --I know, replied _Trim_, that I never refused
- quarter in my life to any man who cried out for it; ----but to a woman
- or a child, continued _Trim_, before I would level my musket at them,
- I would lose my life a thousand times. ----Here’s a crown for thee,
- _Trim_, to drink with _Obadiah_ to-night, quoth my uncle _Toby_, and
- I’ll give _Obadiah_ another too. --God bless your Honour, replied
- _Trim_, ----I had rather these poor women and children had it. ----Thou
- art an honest fellow, quoth my uncle _Toby_. ----My father nodded his
- head, as much as to say, --and so he is.----
- But prithee, _Trim_, said my father, make an end, --for I see thou hast
- but a leaf or two left.
- Corporal _Trim_ read on.]
- “If the testimony of past centuries in this matter is not sufficient,
- --consider at this instant, how the votaries of that religion are every
- day thinking to do service and honour to God, by actions which are a
- dishonour and scandal to themselves.
- “To be convinced of this, go with me for a moment into the prisons of
- the Inquisition.” --[God help my poor brother _Tom_.]-- “Behold
- _Religion_, with _Mercy_ and _Justice_ chained down under her feet,
- ----there sitting ghastly upon a black tribunal, propped up with racks
- and instruments of torment. Hark! --hark! what a piteous groan!” --[Here
- _Trim’s_ face turned as pale as ashes.]---- “See the melancholy wretch
- who uttered it” --[Here the tears began to trickle down.]---- “just
- brought forth to undergo the anguish of a mock trial, and endure the
- utmost pains that a studied system of cruelty has been able to invent.”
- --[D--n them all, quoth _Trim_, his colour returning into his face as
- red as blood.]-- “Behold this helpless victim delivered up to his
- tormentors, --his body so wasted with sorrow and confinement.” ----[Oh!
- ’tis my brother, cried poor _Trim_ in a most passionate exclamation,
- dropping the sermon upon the ground, and clapping his hands together --I
- fear ’tis poor _Tom_. My father’s and my uncle _Toby’s_ heart yearned
- with sympathy for the poor fellow’s distress; even _Slop_ himself
- acknowledged pity for him. ----Why, _Trim_, said my father, this is not
- a history, ----’tis a sermon thou art reading; prithee begin the
- sentence again.]---- “Behold this helpless victim delivered up to his
- tormentors, --his body so wasted with sorrow and confinement, you will
- see every nerve and muscle as it suffers.
- “Observe the last movement of that horrid engine!” --[I would rather
- face a cannon, quoth _Trim_, stamping.]-- “See what convulsions it has
- thrown him into! ----Consider the nature of the posture in which he now
- lies stretched, --what exquisite tortures he endures by it!” --[I hope
- ’tis not in _Portugal_.]-- “’Tis all nature can bear! Good God! see how
- it keeps his weary soul hanging upon his trembling lips!” [I would not
- read another line of it, quoth _Trim_, for all this _world_; --I fear,
- an’ please your Honours, all this is in _Portugal_, where my poor
- brother _Tom_ is. I tell thee, _Trim_, again, quoth my father, ’tis not
- an historical account, --’tis a description. --’Tis only a description,
- honest man, quoth _Slop_, there’s not a word of truth in it. ----That’s
- another story, replied my father. --However, as _Trim_ reads it with so
- much concern, --’tis cruelty to force him to go on with it. --Give me
- hold of the sermon, _Trim_, --I’ll finish it for thee, and thou may’st
- go. I must stay and hear it, too, replied _Trim_, if your Honour will
- allow me; --tho’ I would not read it myself for a Colonel’s pay.
- ------Poor _Trim!_ quoth my uncle _Toby_. My father went on.]--
- “----Consider the nature of the posture in which he now lies stretched,
- --what exquisite torture he endures by it! --’Tis all nature can bear!
- Good God! See how it keeps his weary soul hanging upon his trembling
- lips, --willing to take its leave, ----but not suffered to depart!
- --Behold the unhappy wretch led back to his cell!” ----[Then, thank God,
- however, quoth _Trim_, they have not killed him.]-- “See him dragged out
- of it again to meet the flames, and the insults in his last agonies,
- which this principle, --this principle, that there can be religion
- without mercy, has prepared for him.” ----[Then, thank God, ----he is
- dead, quoth _Trim_, --he is out of his pain, --and they have done their
- worst at him. --O Sirs! --Hold your peace, _Trim_, said my father, going
- on with the sermon, lest _Trim_ should incense Dr. _Slop_, --we shall
- never have done at this rate.]
- “The surest way to try the merit of any disputed notion is, to trace
- down the consequences such a notion has produced, and compare them with
- the spirit of Christianity; ----’tis the short and decisive rule which
- our Saviour hath left us, for these and such like cases, and it is worth
- a thousand arguments----_By their fruits ye shall know them._
- “I will add no farther to the length of this sermon, than by two or
- three short and independent rules deducible from it.
- “_First_, Whenever a man talks loudly against religion, always suspect
- that it is not his reason, but his passions, which have got the better
- of his CREED. A bad life and a good belief are disagreeable and
- troublesome neighbours, and where they separate, depend upon it, ’tis
- for no other cause but quietness’ sake.
- “_Secondly_, When a man, thus represented, tells you in any particular
- instance, ----That such a thing goes against his conscience, ----always
- believe he means exactly the same thing, as when he tells you such a
- thing goes _against_ his stomach; --a present want of appetite being
- generally the true cause of both.
- “In a word, --trust that man in nothing, who has not a CONSCIENCE in
- everything.
- “And, in your own case, remember this plain distinction, a mistake in
- which has ruined thousands, --that your conscience is not a law: --No,
- God and reason made the law, and have placed conscience within you to
- determine; ----not, like an _Asiatic_ Cadi, according to the ebbs and
- flows of his own passions, --but like a _British_ judge in this land of
- liberty and good sense, who makes no new law, but faithfully declares
- that law which he knows already written.”
- _FINIS_
- Thou hast read the sermon extremely well, _Trim_, quoth my father. --If
- he had spared his comments, replied Dr. _Slop_, ----he would have read
- it much better. I should have read it ten times better, Sir, answered
- _Trim_, but that my heart was so full. --That was the very reason,
- _Trim_, replied my father, which has made thee read the sermon as well
- as thou hast done; and if the clergy of our church, continued my father,
- addressing himself to Dr. _Slop_, would take part in what they deliver
- as deeply as this poor fellow has done, --as their compositions are
- fine; --[I deny it, quoth Dr. _Slop_]-- I maintain it, --that the
- eloquence of our pulpits, with such subjects to enflame it, would be a
- model for the whole world: ----But alas! continued my father, and I own
- it, Sir, with sorrow, that, like _French_ politicians in this respect,
- what they gain in the cabinet they lose in the field. ----’Twere a pity,
- quoth my uncle, that this should be lost. I like the sermon well,
- replied my father, ----’tis dramatick, --and there is something in that
- way of writing, when skilfully managed, which catches the attention.
- ----We preach much in that way with us, said Dr. _Slop_. --I know that
- very well, said my father, ----but in a tone and manner which disgusted
- Dr. _Slop_, full as much as his assent, simply, could have pleased him.
- ----But in this, added Dr. _Slop_, a little piqued, --our sermons have
- greatly the advantage, that we never introduce any character into them
- below a patriarch or a patriarch’s wife, or a martyr or a saint. --There
- are some very bad characters in this, however, said my father, and I do
- not think the sermon a jot the worse for ’em. ----But pray, quoth my
- uncle _Toby_, --who’s can this be? --How could it get into my
- _Stevinus?_ A man must be as great a conjurer as _Stevinus_, said my
- father, to resolve the second question: --The first, I think, is not so
- difficult; --for unless my judgment greatly deceives me, ----I know the
- author, for ’tis wrote, certainly, by the parson of the parish.
- The similitude of the stile and manner of it, with those my father
- constantly had heard preached in his parish-church, was the ground of
- his conjecture, --proving it as strongly, as an argument _à priori_
- could prove such a thing to a philosophic mind, That it was _Yorick’s_
- and no one’s else: --It was proved to be so, _à posteriori_, the day
- after, when _Yorick_ sent a servant to my uncle _Toby’s_ house to
- enquire after it.
- It seems that _Yorick_, who was inquisitive after all kinds of
- knowledge, had borrowed _Stevinus_ of my uncle _Toby_, and had
- carelessly popped his sermon, as soon as he had made it, into the middle
- of _Stevinus_; and by an act of forgetfulness, to which he was ever
- subject, he had sent _Stevinus_ home, and his sermon to keep him
- company.
- Ill-fated sermon! Thou wast lost, after this recovery of thee, a second
- time, dropped thro’ an unsuspected fissure in thy master’s pocket, down
- into a treacherous and a tattered lining, --trod deep into the dirt by
- the left hind-foot of his Rosinante inhumanly stepping upon thee as thou
- falledst; --buried ten days in the mire, ----raised up out of it by a
- beggar, --sold for a halfpenny to a parish-clerk, ----transferred to his
- parson, ----lost for ever to thy own, the remainder of his days, ----nor
- restored to his restless MANES till this very moment, that I tell the
- world the story.
- Can the reader believe, that this sermon of _Yorick’s_ was preached at
- an assize, in the cathedral of _York_, before a thousand witnesses,
- ready to give oath of it, by a certain prebendary of that church, and
- actually printed by him when he had done, ----and within so short a
- space as two years and three months after _Yorick’s_ death? --_Yorick_
- indeed, was never better served in his life; ------but it was a little
- hard to maltreat him after, and plunder him after he was laid in his
- grave.
- However, as the gentleman who did it was in perfect charity with
- _Yorick_, --and, in conscious justice, printed but a few copies to give
- away; --and that I am told he could moreover have made as good a one
- himself, had he thought fit, --I declare I would not have published this
- anecdote to the world; ----nor do I publish it with an intent to hurt
- his character and advancement in the church; ----I leave that to others;
- --but I find myself impelled by two reasons, which I cannot withstand.
- The first is, That in doing justice, I may give rest to _Yorick’s_
- ghost; ----which--as the country-people, and some others, believe,
- ----_still walks_.
- The second reason is, That, by laying open this story to the world,
- I gain an opportunity of informing it, --That in case the character of
- parson _Yorick_, and this sample of his sermons, is liked, ----there are
- now in the possession of the _Shandy_ family, as many as will make a
- handsome volume, at the world’s service, ----and much good may they do
- it.
- CHAPTER XVIII
- Obadiah gained the two crowns without dispute; for he came in jingling,
- with all the instruments in the green bays bag we spoke of, slung across
- his body, just as Corporal _Trim_ went out of the room.
- It is now proper, I think, quoth Dr. _Slop_ (clearing up his looks), as
- we are in a condition to be of some service to Mrs. _Shandy_, to send
- upstairs to know how she goes on.
- I have ordered, answered my father, the old midwife to come down to us
- upon the least difficulty; --for you must know, Dr. _Slop_, continued my
- father, with a perplexed kind of a smile upon his countenance, that by
- express treaty, solemnly ratified between me and my wife, you are no
- more than an auxiliary in this affair, --and not so much as that,
- --unless the lean old mother of a midwife above stairs cannot do without
- you. --Women have their particular fancies, and in points of this
- nature, continued my father, where they bear the whole burden, and
- suffer so much acute pain for the advantage of our families, and the
- good of the species, --they claim a right of deciding, _en Souveraines_,
- in whose hands, and in what fashion, they choose to undergo it.
- They are in the right of it, ----quoth my uncle _Toby_. But, Sir,
- replied Dr. _Slop_, not taking notice of my uncle _Toby’s_ opinion, but
- turning to my father, --they had better govern in other points; ----and
- a father of a family, who wishes its perpetuity, in my opinion, had
- better exchange this prerogative with them, and give up some other
- rights in lieu of it. ----I know not, quoth my father, answering a
- little too testily, to be quite dispassionate in what he said, --I know
- not, quoth he, what we have left to give up, in lieu of who shall bring
- our children into the world, unless that, --of who shall beget them.
- ------One would almost give up anything, replied Dr. _Slop_. --I beg
- your pardon, ----answered my uncle _Toby_. --Sir, replied Dr. _Slop_, it
- would astonish you to know what improvements we have made of late years
- in all branches of obstetrical knowledge, but particularly in that one
- single point of the safe and expeditious extraction of the _fœtus_,
- ----which has received such lights, that, for my part (holding up his
- hands) I declare I wonder how the world has ----I wish, quoth my uncle
- _Toby_, you had seen what prodigious armies we had in _Flanders_.
- CHAPTER XIX
- I have dropped the curtain over this scene for a minute, ----to remind
- you of one thing, ----and to inform you of another.
- What I have to inform you, comes, I own, a little out of its due course;
- ----for it should have been told a hundred and fifty pages ago, but that
- I foresaw then ’twould come in pat hereafter, and be of more advantage
- here than elsewhere. --Writers had need look before them, to keep up the
- spirit and connection of what they have in hand.
- When these two things are done, --the curtain shall be drawn up again,
- and my uncle _Toby_, my father, and Dr. _Slop_, shall go on with their
- discourse, without any more interruption.
- First, then, the matter which I have to remind you of, is this; ----that
- from the specimens of singularity in my father’s notions in the point of
- christian-names, and that other previous point thereto, --you was led,
- I think, into an opinion (and I am sure I said as much), that my father
- was a gentleman altogether as odd and whimsical in fifty other opinions.
- In truth, there was not a stage in the life of man, from the very first
- act of his begetting, ----down to the lean and slippered pantaloon in
- his second childishness, but he had some favourite notion to himself,
- springing out of it, as sceptical, and as far out of the highway of
- thinking, as these two which have been explained.
- --Mr. _Shandy_, my father, Sir, would see nothing in the light in which
- others placed it; --he placed things in his own light; --he would weigh
- nothing in common scales; --no, he was too refined a researcher to lie
- open to so gross an imposition. --To come at the exact weight of things
- in the scientific steel-yard, the fulcrum, he would say, should be
- almost invisible, to avoid all friction from popular tenets; --without
- this the minutiæ of philosophy, which would always turn the balance,
- will have no weight at all. Knowledge, like matter, he would affirm, was
- divisible _in infinitum_; ----that the grains and scruples were as much
- a part of it, as the gravitation of the whole world. --In a word, he
- would say, error was error, --no matter where it fell, ----whether in a
- fraction, --or a pound, --’twas alike fatal to truth, and she was kept
- down at the bottom of her well, as inevitably by a mistake in the dust
- of a butterfly’s wings, ----as in the disk of the sun, the moon, and all
- the stars of heaven put together.
- He would often lament that it was for want of considering this properly,
- and of applying it skilfully to civil matters, as well as to speculative
- truths, that so many things in this world were out of joint; ----that
- the political arch was giving way; ----and that the very foundations of
- our excellent constitution, in church and state, were so sapped as
- estimators had reported.
- You cry out, he would say, we are a ruined, undone people. Why? he would
- ask, making use of the sorites or syllogism of _Zeno_ and _Chrysippus_,
- without knowing it belonged to them. --Why? why are we a ruined people?
- --Because we are corrupted. --Whence is it, dear Sir, that we are
- corrupted? ----Because we are needy; ----our poverty, and not our wills,
- consent. ----And wherefore, he would add, are we needy? --From the
- neglect, he would answer, of our pence and our halfpence: --Our bank
- notes, Sir, our guineas, --nay, our shillings take care of themselves.
- ’Tis the same, he would say, throughout the whole circle of the
- sciences; --the great, the established points of them, are not to be
- broke in upon. --The laws of nature will defend themselves; --but
- error----(he would add, looking earnestly at my mother)----error, Sir,
- creeps in thro’ the minute holes and small crevices which human nature
- leaves unguarded.
- This turn of thinking in my father, is what I had to remind you of:
- --The point you are to be informed of, and which I have reserved for
- this place, is as follows.
- Amongst the many and excellent reasons, with which my father had urged
- my mother to accept of Dr. _Slop’s_ assistance preferably to that of the
- old woman, ----there was one of a very singular nature; which, when he
- had done arguing the manner with her as a Christian, and came to argue
- it over again with her as a philosopher, he had put his whole strength
- to, depending indeed upon it as his sheet-anchor. ----It failed him;
- tho’ from no defect in the argument itself; but that, do what he could,
- he was not able for his soul to make her comprehend the drift of it.
- ----Cursed luck! ----said he to himself, one afternoon, as he walked out
- of the room, after he had been stating it for an hour and a half to her,
- to no manner of purpose; --cursed luck! said he, biting his lip as he
- shut the door, ----for a man to be master of one of the finest chains of
- reasoning in nature, --and have a wife at the same time with such a
- headpiece, that he cannot hang up a single inference within side of it,
- to save his soul from destruction.
- This argument, though it was entirely lost upon my mother, ----had more
- weight with him, than all his other arguments joined together: --I will
- therefore endeavour to do it justice, --and set it forth with all the
- perspicuity I am master of.
- My father set out upon the strength of these two following axioms:
- _First_, That an ounce of a man’s own wit, was worth a ton of other
- people’s; and,
- _Secondly_ (Which by the bye, was the ground-work of the first axiom,
- ----tho’ it comes last), That every man’s wit must come from every man’s
- own soul, ----and no other body’s.
- Now, as it was plain to my father, that all souls were by nature equal,
- ----and that the great difference between the most acute and the most
- obtuse understanding----was from no original sharpness or bluntness of
- one thinking substance above or below another, ----but arose merely from
- the lucky or unlucky organisation of the body, in that part where the
- soul principally took up her residence, ----he had made it the subject
- of his enquiry to find out the identical place.
- Now, from the best accounts he had been able to get of this matter, he
- was satisfied it could not be where _Des Cartes_ had fixed it, upon the
- top of the _pineal_ gland of the brain; which, as he philosophized,
- formed a cushion for her about the size of a marrow pea; tho’, to speak
- the truth, as so many nerves did terminate all in that one place,
- --’twas no bad conjecture; ----and my father had certainly fallen with
- that great philosopher plumb into the centre of the mistake, had it not
- been for my uncle _Toby_, who rescued him out of it, by a story he told
- him of a _Walloon_ officer at the battle of _Landen_, who had one part
- of his brain shot away by a musket-ball, --and another part of it taken
- out after by a _French_ surgeon; and after all, recovered, and did his
- duty very well without it.
- If death, said my father, reasoning with himself, is nothing but the
- separation of the soul from the body; and if it is true that people can
- walk about and do their business without brains, --then certes the soul
- does not inhabit there. Q. E. D.
- As for that certain, very thin, subtle and very fragrant juice which
- _Coglionissimo Borri_, the great _Milanese_ physician affirms, in a
- letter to _Bartholine_, to have discovered in the cellulæ of the
- occipital parts of the cerebellum, and which he likewise affirms to be
- the principal seat of the reasonable soul (for, you must know, in these
- latter and more enlightened ages, there are two souls in every man
- living, --the one, according to the great _Metheglingius_, being called
- the _Animus_, the other, the _Anima_;)--as for the opinion, I say, of
- _Borri_, --my father could never subscribe to it by any means; the very
- idea of so noble, so refined, so immaterial, and so exalted a being as
- the _Anima_, or even the _Animus_, taking up her residence, and sitting
- dabbling, like a tadpole all day long, both summer and winter, in a
- puddle, ----or in a liquid of any kind, how thick or thin soever, he
- would say, shocked his imagination; he would scarce give the doctrine a
- hearing.
- What, therefore, seemed the least liable to objections of any, was that
- the chief sensorium, or head-quarters of the soul, and to which place
- all intelligences were referred, and from whence all her mandates were
- issued, --was in, or near, the cerebellum, --or rather somewhere about
- the _medulla oblongata_, wherein it was generally agreed by _Dutch_
- anatomists, that all the minute nerves from all the organs of the seven
- senses concentered, like streets and winding alleys, into a square.
- So far there was nothing singular in my father’s opinion, --he had the
- best of philosophers, of all ages and climates, to go along with him.
- ----But here he took a road of his own, setting up another _Shandean_
- hypothesis upon these corner-stones they had laid for him; ----and which
- said hypothesis equally stood its ground; whether the subtilty and
- fineness of the soul depended upon the temperature and clearness of the
- said liquor, or of the finer network and texture in the cerebellum
- itself; which opinion he favoured.
- He maintained, that next to the due care to be taken in the act of
- propagation of each individual, which required all the thought in the
- world, as it laid the foundation of this incomprehensible contexture, in
- which wit, memory, fancy, eloquence, and what is usually meant by the
- name of good natural parts, do consist; --that next to this and his
- christian-name, which were the two original and most efficacious causes
- of all; ----that the third cause, or rather what logicians call the
- _Causa sine quâ non_, and without which all that was done was of no
- manner of significance, ----was the preservation of this delicate and
- fine-spun web, from the havock which was generally made in it by the
- violent compression and crush which the head was made to undergo, by the
- nonsensical method of bringing us into the world by that foremost.
- ----This requires explanation.
- My father, who dipped into all kinds of books, upon looking into
- _Lithopædus Senonesis de Partu difficili_,[2.1] published by _Adrianus
- Smelvgot_, had found out, that the lax and pliable state of a child’s
- head in parturition, the bones of the cranium having no sutures at that
- time, was such, ----that by force of the woman’s efforts, which, in
- strong labour-pains, was equal, upon an average, to the weight of 470
- pounds averdupois acting perpendicularly upon it; --it so happened, that
- in 49 instances out of 50, the said head was compressed and moulded into
- the shape of an oblong conical piece of dough, such as a pastry-cook
- generally rolls up in order to make a pye of. --Good God! cried my
- father, what havock and destruction must this make in the infinitely
- fine and tender texture of the cerebellum! --Or if there is such a juice
- as _Borri_ pretends, --is it not enough to make the clearest liquid in
- the world both feculent and mothery?
- But how great was his apprehension, when he farther understood, that
- this force acting upon the very vertex of the head, not only injured the
- brain itself, or cerebrum, --but that it necessarily squeezed and
- propelled the cerebrum towards the cerebellum, which was the immediate
- seat of the understanding! ----Angels and ministers of grace defend us!
- cried my father, ----can any soul withstand this shock? --No wonder the
- intellectual web is so rent and tattered as we see it; and that so many
- of our best heads are no better than a puzzled skein of silk, ----all
- perplexity, ----all confusion within-side.
- But when my father read on, and was let into the secret, that when a
- child was turned topsy-turvy, which was easy for an operator to do, and
- was extracted by the feet; --that instead of the cerebrum being
- propelled towards the cerebellum, the cerebellum, on the contrary, was
- propelled simply towards the cerebrum, where it could do no manner of
- hurt: ----By heavens! cried he, the world is in conspiracy to drive out
- what little wit God has given us, ----and the professors of the
- obstetric art are lifted into the same conspiracy. --What is it to me
- which end of my son comes foremost into the world, provided all goes
- right after, and his cerebellum escapes uncrushed?
- It is the nature of an hypothesis, when once a man has conceived it,
- that it assimilates every thing to itself, as proper nourishment; and,
- from the first moment of your begetting it, it generally grows the
- stronger by every thing you see, hear, read, or understand. This is of
- great use.
- When my father was gone with this about a month, there was scarce a
- phænomenon of stupidity or of genius, which he could not readily solve
- by it; --it accounted for the eldest son being the greatest blockhead in
- the family. ----Poor devil, he would say, --he made way for the capacity
- of his younger brothers. ----It unriddled the observations of drivellers
- and monstrous heads, ----shewing _à priori_, it could not be otherwise,
- ----unless **** I don’t know what. It wonderfully explained and
- accounted for the acumen of the _Asiatic_ genius, and that sprightlier
- turn, and a more penetrating intuition of minds, in warmer climates; not
- from the loose and common-place solution of a clearer sky, and a more
- perpetual sunshine, &c. --which for aught he knew, might as well rarefy
- and dilute the faculties of the soul into nothing, by one extreme, --as
- they are condensed in colder climates by the other; ----but he traced
- the affair up to its spring-head; --shewed that, in warmer climates,
- nature had laid a lighter tax upon the fairest parts of the creation;
- --their pleasures more; --the necessity of their pains less, insomuch
- that the pressure and resistance upon the vertex was so slight, that the
- whole organisation of the cerebellum was preserved; ----nay, he did not
- believe, in natural births, that so much as a single thread of the
- net-work was broke or displaced, ----so that the soul might just act as
- she liked.
- When my father had got so far, ------what a blaze of light did the
- accounts of the _Cæsarian_ section, and of the towering geniuses who had
- come safe into the world by it, cast upon this hypothesis? Here you see,
- he would say, there was no injury done to the sensorium; --no pressure
- of the head against the pelvis; ----no propulsion of the cerebrum
- towards the cerebellum, either by the _os pubis_ on this side, or the
- _os coxygis_ on that; ------and pray, what were the happy consequences?
- Why, Sir, your _Julius Cæsar_, who gave the operation a name; --and your
- _Hermes Trismegistus_, who was born so before ever the operation had a
- name; ----your _Scipio Africanus_; your _Manlius Torquatus_; our
- _Edward_ the Sixth, --who, had he lived, would have done the same honour
- to the hypothesis: ----These, and many more who figured high in the
- annals of fame, --all came _side-way_, Sir, into the world.
- The incision of the _abdomen_ and _uterus_ ran for six weeks together in
- my father’s head; ----he had read, and was satisfied, that wounds in the
- _epigastrium_, and those in the _matrix_, were not mortal; --so that the
- belly of the mother might be opened extremely well to give a passage to
- the child. --He mentioned the thing one afternoon to my mother,
- ------merely as a matter of fact; but seeing her turn as pale as ashes
- at the very mention of it, as much as the operation flattered his hopes,
- --he thought it as well to say no more of it, ----contenting himself
- with admiring, --what he thought was to no purpose to propose.
- This was my father Mr. _Shandy’s_ hypothesis; concerning which I have
- only to add, that my brother _Bobby_ did as great honour to it (whatever
- he did to the family) as any one of the great heroes we spoke of: For
- happening not only to be christened, as I told you, but to be born too,
- when my father was at _Epsom_, ----being moreover my mother’s _first_
- child, --coming into the world with his head _foremost_, --and turning
- out afterwards a lad of wonderful slow parts, ----my father spelt all
- these together into his opinion: and as he had failed at one end, --he
- was determined to try the other.
- This was not to be expected from one of the sisterhood, who are not
- easily to be put out of their way, ----and was therefore one of my
- father’s great reasons in favour of a man of science, whom he could
- better deal with.
- Of all men in the world, Dr. _Slop_ was the fittest for my father’s
- purpose; ----for though this new-invented forceps was the armour he had
- proved, and what he maintained to be the safest instrument of
- deliverance, yet, it seems, he had scattered a word or two in his book,
- in favour of the very thing which ran in my father’s fancy; ----tho’ not
- with a view to the soul’s good in extracting by the feet, as was my
- father’s system, --but for reasons merely obstetrical.
- This will account for the coalition betwixt my father and Dr. _Slop_, in
- the ensuing discourse, which went a little hard against my uncle _Toby_.
- ----In what manner a plain man, with nothing but common sense, could
- bear up against two such allies in science, --is hard to conceive. --You
- may conjecture upon it, if you please, ----and whilst your imagination
- is in motion, you may encourage it to go on, and discover by what causes
- and effects in nature it could come to pass, that my uncle _Toby_ got
- his modesty by the wound he received upon his groin. --You may raise a
- system to account for the loss of my nose by marriage-articles, --and
- shew the world how it could happen, that I should have the misfortune to
- be called TRISTAM, in opposition to my father’s hypothesis, and the wish
- of the whole family, Godfathers and Godmothers not excepted. --These,
- with fifty other points left yet unravelled, you may endeavour to solve
- if you have time; ----but I tell you beforehand it will be in vain, for
- not the sage _Alquife_, the magician in Don _Belianis_ of _Greece_, nor
- the no less famous _Urganda_, the sorceress his wife, (were they alive),
- could pretend to come within a league of the truth.
- The reader will be content to wait for a full explanation of these
- matters till the next year, ----when a series of things will be laid
- open which he little expects.
- [Footnote 2.1: The author is here twice mistaken; for
- _Lithopædus_ should be wrote thus, _Lithopædii Senonensis Icon_.
- The second mistake is, that this _Lithopædus_ is not an author,
- but a drawing of a petrified child. The account of this,
- published by _Athosius_ 1580, may be seen at the end of
- _Cordæus’s_ works in _Spachius_. Mr. _Tristram Shandy_ has been
- led into this error, either from seeing _Lithopædus’s_ name of
- late in a catalogue of learned writers in Dr. ----, or by
- mistaking _Lithopædus_ for _Trinecavellius_, ----from the too
- great similitude of the names.]
- BOOK III
- Multitudinis imperitæ non formido judicia; meis tamen, rogo,
- parcant opusculis------in quibus fuit propositi semper,
- a jocis ad seria, a seriis vicissim ad jocos transire.
- --JOAN. SARESBERIENSIS, _Episcopus Lugdun._
- CHAPTER I
- ----“_I WISH, Dr. Slop_,” quoth my uncle _Toby_, (repeating his wish for
- Dr. _Slop_ a second time, and with a degree of more zeal and earnestness
- in his manner of wishing, than he had wished at first[3.1])---- “_I
- wish, Dr. Slop_,” quoth my uncle _Toby_, “_you had seen what prodigious
- armies we had in_ Flanders.”
- My uncle _Toby’s_ wish did Dr. _Slop_ a disservice which his heart never
- intended any man, --Sir, it confounded him----and thereby putting his
- ideas first into confusion, and then to flight, he could not rally them
- again for the soul of him.
- In all disputes, ----male or female, ----whether for honour, for profit,
- or for love, --it makes no difference in the case; --nothing is more
- dangerous, Madam, than a wish coming sideways in this unexpected manner
- upon a man: the safest way in general to take off the force of the wish,
- is for the party wish’d at, instantly to get upon his legs--and wish the
- _wisher_ something in return, of pretty near the same value, ----so
- balancing the account upon the spot, you stand as you were--nay
- sometimes gain the advantage of the attack by it.
- This will be fully illustrated to the world in my chapter of wishes.--
- Dr. _Slop_ did not understand the nature of this defence; --he was
- puzzled with it, and it put an entire stop to the dispute for four
- minutes and a half; --five had been fatal to it: --my father saw the
- danger--the dispute was one of the most interesting disputes in the
- world, “Whether the child of his prayers and endeavours should be born
- without a head or with one:” --he waited to the last moment, to allow
- Dr. _Slop_, in whose behalf the wish was made, his right of returning
- it; but perceiving, I say, that he was confounded, and continued looking
- with that perplexed vacuity of eye which puzzled souls generally stare
- with--first in my uncle _Toby’s_ face--then in his--then up--then
- down--then east--east and by east, and so on, ----coasting it along by
- the plinth of the wainscot till he had got to the opposite point of the
- compass, ----and that he had actually begun to count the brass nails
- upon the arm of his chair, --my father thought there was no time to be
- lost with my uncle _Toby_, so took up the discourse as follows.
- [Footnote 3.1: Vide page 105.] [[end of ch. II.XVIII]]
- CHAPTER II
- “--What prodigious armies you had in _Flanders!_”----
- Brother _Toby_, replied my father, taking his wig from off his head with
- his right hand, and with his _left_ pulling out a striped _India_
- handkerchief from his right coat pocket, in order to rub his head, as he
- argued the point with my uncle _Toby_.----
- ----Now, in this I think my father was much to blame; and I will give
- you my reasons for it.
- Matters of no more seeming consequence in themselves than, “_Whether my
- father should have taken off his wig with his right hand or with his
- left_,” ----have divided the greatest kingdoms, and made the crowns of
- the monarchs who governed them, to totter upon their heads. ----But need
- I tell you, Sir, that the circumstances with which every thing in this
- world is begirt, give every thing in this world its size and shape!
- --and by tightening it, or relaxing it, this way or that, make the thing
- to be, what it is--great--little--good--bad--indifferent or not
- indifferent, just as the case happens?
- As my father’s _India_ handkerchief was in his right coat pocket, he
- should by no means have suffered his right hand to have got engaged: on
- the contrary, instead of taking off his wig with it, as he did, he ought
- to have committed that entirely to the left; and then, when the natural
- exigency my father was under of rubbing his head, called out for his
- handkerchief, he would have had nothing in the world to have done, but
- to have put his right hand into his right coat pocket and taken it out;
- ----which he might have done without any violence, or the least
- ungraceful twist in any one tendon or muscle of his whole body
- In this case, (unless, indeed, my father had been resolved to make a
- fool of himself by holding the wig stiff in his left hand----or by
- making some nonsensical angle or other at his elbow-joint, or
- arm-pit)--his whole attitude had been easy--natural--unforced:
- _Reynolds_ himself, as great and gracefully as he paints, might have
- painted him as he sat.
- Now as my father managed this matter, --consider what a devil of a
- figure my father made of himself.
- In the latter end of Queen _Anne’s_ reign, and in the beginning of the
- reign of King _George_ the first-- “_Coat pockets were cut very low down
- in the skirt_.” --I need say no more--the father of mischief, had he
- been hammering at it a month, could not have contrived a worse fashion
- for one in my father’s situation.
- CHAPTER III
- It was not an easy matter in any king’s reign (unless you were as lean a
- subject as myself) to have forced your hand diagonally, quite across
- your whole body, so as to gain the bottom of your opposite coat pocket.
- ----In the year one thousand seven hundred and eighteen, when this
- happened, it was extremely difficult; so that when my uncle _Toby_
- discovered the transverse zig-zaggery of my father’s approaches towards
- it, it instantly brought into his mind those he had done duty in, before
- the gate of _St. Nicolas_; ----the idea of which drew off his attention
- so entirely from the subject in debate, that he had got his right hand
- to the bell to ring up _Trim_ to go and fetch his map of _Namur_, and
- his compasses and sector along with it, to measure the returning angles
- of the traverses of that attack, --but particularly of that one, where
- he received his wound upon his groin.
- My father knit his brows, and as he knit them, all the blood in his body
- seemed to rush up into his face----my uncle _Toby_ dismounted
- immediately.
- ----I did not apprehend your uncle _Toby_ was o’ horseback.------
- CHAPTER IV
- A man’s body and his mind, with the utmost reverence to both I speak it,
- are exactly like a jerkin, and a jerkin’s lining; --rumple the one,
- --you rumple the other. There is one certain exception however in this
- case, and that is, when you are so fortunate a fellow, as to have had
- your jerkin made of gum-taffeta, and the body-lining to it of a
- sarcenet, or thin persian.
- _Zeno_, _Cleanthes_, _Diogenes Babylonius_, _Dionysius_, _Heracleotes_,
- _Antipater_, _Panætius_, and _Posidonius_ amongst the _Greeks_;
- ----_Cato_ and _Varro_ and _Seneca_ amongst the _Romans_;
- ----_Pantæonus_ and _Clemens Alexandrinus_ and _Montaigne_ amongst the
- Christians; and a score and a half of good, honest, unthinking
- _Shandean_ people as ever lived, whose names I can’t recollect, --all
- pretended that their jerkins were made after this fashion, --you might
- have rumpled and crumpled, and doubled and creased, and fretted and
- fridged the outside of them all to pieces; ----in short, you might have
- played the very devil with them, and at the same time, not one of the
- insides of them would have been one button the worse, for all you had
- done to them.
- I believe in my conscience that mine is made up somewhat after this
- sort: ----for never poor jerkin has been tickled off at such a rate as
- it has been these last nine months together, ----and yet I declare, the
- lining to it, ------as far as I am a judge of the matter, ----is not a
- three-penny piece the worse; --pell-mell, helter-skelter, ding-dong, cut
- and thrust, back stroke and fore stroke, side way and long way, have
- they been trimming it for me: --had there been the least gumminess in my
- lining, --by heaven! it had all of it long ago been frayed and fretted
- to a thread.
- ------You Messrs. the Monthly reviewers! ------how could you cut and
- slash my jerkin as you did? ----how did you know but you would cut my
- lining too?
- Heartily and from my soul, to the protection of that Being who will
- injure none of us, do I recommend you and your affairs, --so God bless
- you; --only next month, if any one of you should gnash his teeth, and
- storm and rage at me, as some of you did last MAY (in which I remember
- the weather was very hot)--don’t be exasperated, if I pass it by again
- with good temper, --being determined as long as I live or write (which
- in my case means the same thing) never to give the honest gentleman a
- worse word or a worse wish than my uncle _Toby_ gave the fly which
- buzz’d about his nose all _dinner-time_, ------“Go, --go, poor devil,”
- quoth he, --“get thee gone, --why should I hurt thee? This world is
- surely wide enough to hold both thee and me.”
- CHAPTER V
- Any man, Madam, reasoning upwards, and observing the prodigious
- suffusion of blood in my father’s countenance, --by means of which
- (as all the blood in his body seemed to rush into his face, as I told
- you) he must have reddened, pictorically and scientifically speaking,
- six whole tints and a half, if not a full octave above his natural
- colour: --any man, Madam, but my uncle _Toby_, who had observed this,
- together with the violent knitting of my father’s brows, and the
- extravagant contortion of his body during the whole affair, --would have
- concluded my father in a rage; and taking that for granted, --had he
- been a lover of such kind of concord as arises from two such instruments
- being put in exact tune, --he would instantly have skrew’d up his, to
- the same pitch; --and then the devil and all had broke loose--the whole
- piece, Madam, must have been played off like the sixth of Avison
- Scarlatti--_con furia_, --like mad. --Grant me patience! ----What has
- _con furia_, ----_con strepito_, ----or any other hurly burly whatever
- to do with harmony?
- Any man, I say, Madam, but my uncle _Toby_, the benignity of whose heart
- interpreted every motion of the body in the kindest sense the motion
- would admit of, would have concluded my father angry, and blamed him
- too. My uncle _Toby_ blamed nothing but the taylor who cut the
- pocket-hole; ----so sitting still till my father had got his
- handkerchief out of it, and looking all the time up in his face with
- inexpressible good-will----my father, at length, went on as follows.
- CHAPTER VI
- “What prodigious armies you had in _Flanders!_” ----Brother _Toby_, quoth
- my father, I do believe thee to be as honest a man, and with as good and
- as upright a heart as ever God created; --nor is it thy fault, if all
- the children which have been, may, can, shall, will, or ought to be
- begotten, come with their heads foremost into the world: ----but believe
- me, dear _Toby_, the accidents which unavoidably waylay them, not only
- in the article of our begetting ’em----though these, in my opinion, are
- well worth considering, ----but the dangers and difficulties our
- children are beset with, after they are got forth into the world, are
- enow--little need is there to expose them to unnecessary ones in their
- passage to it. ----Are these dangers, quoth my uncle _Toby_, laying his
- hand upon my father’s knee, and looking up seriously in his face for an
- answer, ----are these dangers greater now o’ days, brother, than in
- times past? Brother _Toby_, answered my father, if a child was but
- fairly begot, and born alive, and healthy, and the mother did well after
- it, --our forefathers never looked farther. ----My uncle _Toby_
- instantly withdrew his hand from off my father’s knee, reclined his body
- gently back in his chair, raised his head till he could just see the
- cornice of the room, and then directing the buccinatory muscles along
- his cheeks, and the orbicular muscles around his lips to do their
- duty--he whistled _Lillabullero_.
- CHAPTER VII
- Whilst my uncle _Toby_ was whistling _Lillabullero_ to my father, --Dr.
- _Slop_ was stamping, and cursing and damning at _Obadiah_ at a most
- dreadful rate, ------it would have done your heart good, and cured you,
- Sir, for ever of the vile sin of swearing, to have heard him; I am
- determined therefore to relate the whole affair to you.
- When Dr. _Slop’s_ maid delivered the green bays bag with her master’s
- instruments in it, to _Obadiah_, she very sensibly exhorted him to put
- his head and one arm through the strings, and ride with it slung across
- his body: so undoing the bow-knot, to lengthen the strings for him,
- without any more ado, she helped him on with it. However, as this, in
- some measure, unguarded the mouth of the bag, lest anything should bolt
- out in galloping back, at the speed _Obadiah_ threatened, they consulted
- to take it off again: and in the great care and caution of their hearts,
- they had taken the two strings and tied them close (pursing up the mouth
- of the bag first) with half a dozen hard knots, each of which _Obadiah_,
- to make all safe, had twitched and drawn together with all the strength
- of his body.
- This answered all that _Obadiah_ and the maid intended; but was no
- remedy against some evils which neither he or she foresaw. The
- instruments, it seems, as tight as the bag was tied above, had so much
- room to play in it, towards the bottom (the shape of the bag being
- conical) that _Obadiah_ could not make a trot of it, but with such a
- terrible jingle, what with the _tire tête_, _forceps_, and _squirt_, as
- would have been enough, had _Hymen_ been taking a jaunt that way, to
- have frightened him out of the country; but when _Obadiah_ accelerated
- his motion, and from a plain trot assayed to prick his coach-horse into
- a full gallop----by Heaven! Sir, the jingle was incredible.
- As _Obadiah_ had a wife and three children----the turpitude of
- fornication, and the many other political ill consequences of this
- jingling, never once entered his brain, ----he had however his
- objection, which came home to himself, and weighed with him, as it has
- oft-times done with the greatest patriots. ----“_The poor fellow, Sir,
- was not able to hear himself whistle._”
- CHAPTER VIII
- As _Obadiah_ loved wind-music preferably to all the instrumental music
- he carried with him, --he very considerately set his imagination to
- work, to contrive and to invent by what means he should put himself in a
- condition of enjoying it.
- In all distresses (except musical) where small cords are wanted, nothing
- is so apt to enter a man’s head as his hat-band: ----the philosophy of
- this is so near the surface ----I scorn to enter into it.
- As _Obadiah’s_ was a mix’d case----mark, Sirs, ----I say, a mixed case;
- for it was obstetrical, ----_scrip_tical, squirtical, papistical----and
- as far as the coach-horse was concerned in it, ----caballistical----and
- only partly musical; --_Obadiah_ made no scruple of availing himself of
- the first expedient which offered; so taking hold of the bag and
- instruments, and griping them hard together with one hand, and with the
- finger and thumb of the other putting the end of the hat-band betwixt
- his teeth, and then slipping his hand down to the middle of it, --he
- tied and cross-tied them all fast together from one end to the other
- (as you would cord a trunk) with such a multiplicity of roundabouts and
- intricate cross turns, with a hard knot at every intersection or point
- where the strings met, --that Dr. _Slop_ must have had three-fifths of
- _Job’s_ patience at least to have unloosed them. --I think in my
- conscience, that had NATURE been in one of her nimble moods, and in
- humour for such a contest----and she and Dr. _Slop_ both fairly started
- together----there is no man living who had seen the bag with all that
- _Obadiah_ had done to it, ----and known likewise the great speed the
- Goddess can make when she thinks proper, who would have had the least
- doubt remaining in his mind--which of the two would have carried off the
- prize. My mother, Madam, had been delivered sooner than the green bag
- infallibly----at least by twenty _knots_. ----Sport of small accidents,
- _Tristram Shandy!_ that thou art, and ever will be! had that trial been
- for thee, and it was fifty to one but it had, ----thy affairs had not
- been so depress’d--(at least by the depression of thy nose) as they have
- been; nor had the fortunes of thy house and the occasions of making
- them, which have so often presented themselves in the course of thy
- life, to thee, been so often, so vexatiously, so tamely, so
- irrecoverably abandoned--as thou hast been forced to leave them; ----but
- ’tis over, ----all but the account of ’em, which cannot be given to the
- curious till I am got out into the world.
- CHAPTER IX
- Great wits jump: for the moment Dr. _Slop_ cast his eyes upon his bag
- (which he had not done till the dispute with my uncle _Toby_ about
- midwifery put him in mind of it)--the very same thought occurred. --’Tis
- God’s mercy, quoth he (to himself) that Mrs. _Shandy_ has had so bad a
- time of it, ----else she might have been brought to bed seven times
- told, before one half of these knots could have got untied. ----But here
- you must distinguish--the thought floated only in Dr. _Slop’s_ mind,
- without sail or ballast to it, as a simple proposition; millions of
- which, as your worship knows, are every day swimming quietly in the
- middle of the thin juice of a man’s understanding, without being carried
- backwards or forwards, till some little gusts of passion or interest
- drive them to one side.
- A sudden trampling in the room above, near my mother’s bed, did the
- proposition the very service I am speaking of. By all that’s
- unfortunate, quoth Dr. _Slop_, unless I make haste, the thing will
- actually befall me as it is.
- CHAPTER X
- In the case of _knots_, --by which, in the first place, I would not be
- understood to mean slip-knots--because in the course of my life and
- opinions--my opinions concerning them will come in more properly when I
- mention the catastrophe of my great uncle Mr. _Hammond Shandy_, --a
- little man, --but of high fancy: --he rushed into the duke of
- _Monmouth’s_ affair: ----nor, secondly, in this place, do I mean that
- particular species of knots called bow-knots; --there is so little
- address, or skill, or patience required in the unloosing them, that they
- are below my giving any opinion at all about them. --But by the knots I
- am speaking of, may it please your reverences to believe, that I mean
- good, honest, devilish tight, hard knots, made _bona fide_, as _Obadiah_
- made his; ----in which there is no quibbling provision made by the
- duplication and return of the two ends of the strings thro’ the annulus
- or noose made by the second _implication_ of them--to get them slipp’d
- and undone by. --I hope you apprehend me.
- In the case of these _knots_ then, and of the several obstructions,
- which, may it please your reverences, such knots cast in our way in
- getting through life----every hasty man can whip out his penknife and
- cut through them. ----’Tis wrong. Believe me, Sirs, the most virtuous
- way, and which both reason and conscience dictate----is to take our
- teeth or our fingers to them. ----Dr. _Slop_ had lost his teeth--his
- favourite instrument, by extracting in a wrong direction, or by some
- misapplication of it, unfortunately slipping, he had formerly, in a hard
- labour, knock’d out three of the best of them with the handle of it:
- ------he tried his fingers--alas; the nails of his fingers and thumbs
- were cut close. ----The duce take it! I can make nothing of it either
- way, cried Dr. _Slop_. ----The trampling overhead near my mother’s
- bedside increased. --Pox take the fellow! I shall never get the knots
- untied as long as I live. ----My mother gave a groan. ----Lend me your
- penknife ----I must e’en cut the knots at last----pugh! ----psha!
- --Lord! I have cut my thumb quite across to the very bone----curse the
- fellow--if there was not another man-midwife within fifty miles ----I am
- undone for this bout --I wish the scoundrel hang’d --I wish he was
- shot ----I wish all the devils in hell had him for a blockhead!------
- My father had a great respect for _Obadiah_, and could not bear to hear
- him disposed of in such a manner--he had moreover some little respect
- for himself--and could as ill bear with the indignity offered to himself
- in it.
- Had Dr. _Slop_ cut any part about him, but his thumb----my father had
- pass’d it by--his prudence had triumphed: as it was, he was determined
- to have his revenge.
- Small curses, Dr. _Slop_, upon great occasions, quoth my father
- (condoling with him first upon the accident), are but so much waste of
- our strength and soul’s health to no manner of purpose. --I own it,
- replied Dr. _Slop_. --They are like sparrow-shot, quoth my uncle _Toby_
- (suspending his whistling), fired against a bastion. ----They serve,
- continued my father, to stir the humours----but carry off none of their
- acrimony: --for my own part, I seldom swear or curse at all --I hold it
- bad----but if I fall into it by surprize, I generally retain so much
- presence of mind (right, quoth my uncle _Toby_) as to make it answer my
- purpose----that is, I swear on till I find myself easy. A wise and a
- just man however would always endeavour to proportion the vent given to
- these humours, not only to the degree of them stirring within
- himself--but to the size and ill intent of the offence upon which they
- are to fall. --“_Injuries come only from the heart_,” --quoth my uncle
- _Toby_. For this reason, continued my father, with the most _Cervantick_
- gravity, I have the greatest veneration in the world for that gentleman,
- who, in distrust of his own discretion in this point, sat down and
- composed (that is at his leisure) fit forms of swearing suitable to all
- cases, from the lowest to the highest provocation which could possibly
- happen to him----which forms being well considered by him, and such
- moreover as he could stand to, he kept them ever by him on the
- chimney-piece, within his reach, ready for use. --I never apprehended,
- replied Dr. _Slop_, that such a thing was ever thought of----much less
- executed. I beg your pardon, answered my father; I was reading, though
- not using, one of them to my brother _Toby_ this morning, whilst he
- pour’d out the tea--’tis here upon the shelf over my head; --but if I
- remember right, ’tis too violent for a cut of the thumb. --Not at all,
- quoth Dr. _Slop_--the devil take the fellow. ----Then, answered my
- father, ’Tis much at your service, Dr. _Slop_--on condition you will
- read it aloud; ----so rising up and reaching down a form of
- excommunication of the church of _Rome_, a copy of which, my father (who
- was curious in his collections) had procured out of the leger-book of
- the church of _Rochester_, writ by ERNULPHUS the bishop----with a most
- affected seriousness of look and voice, which might have cajoled
- ERNULPHUS himself--he put it into Dr. _Slop’s_ hands. ----Dr. _Slop_
- wrapt his thumb up in the corner of his handkerchief, and with a wry
- face, though without any suspicion, read aloud, as follows------my uncle
- _Toby_ whistling _Lillabullero_ as loud as he could all the time.
- Textus de Ecclesiâ Roffensi, per Ernulfum Episcopum.
- [Transcriber’s Note:
- The following section was printed on facing pages, Latin and English.
- For this e-text it has been broken into alternating paragraphs. The
- letters inserted between Latin lines are alternative endings determined
- by the number and gender of the person(s) being excommunicated.]
- CAP. XI
- EXCOMMUNICATIO[3.2]
- Ex auctoritate Dei omnipotentis, Patris, et Filij, et Spiritus
- Sancti, et sanctorum canonum, sanctæque et intemeratæ Virginis Dei
- genetricis Mariæ,--
- CHAPTER XI
- “By the authority of God Almighty, the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, and
- of the holy canons, and of the undefiled Virgin _Mary_, mother and
- patroness of our Saviour.” I think there is no necessity, quoth Dr.
- _Slop_, dropping the paper down to his knee, and addressing himself to
- my father----as you have read it over, Sir, so lately, to read it
- aloud----and as Captain _Shandy_ seems to have no great inclination to
- hear it ------I may as well read it to myself. That’s contrary to treaty,
- replied my father: ------besides, there is something so whimsical,
- especially in the latter part of it, I should grieve to lose the
- pleasure of a second reading. Dr. _Slop_ did not altogether like it,
- ------but my uncle _Toby_ offering at that instant to give over
- whistling, and read it himself to them; ------Dr. _Slop_ thought he
- might as well read it under the cover of my uncle _Toby’s_
- whistling------as suffer my uncle _Toby_ to read it alone; ----so
- raising up the paper to his face, and holding it quite parallel to it,
- in order to hide his chagrin------he read it aloud as follows--------my
- uncle _Toby_ whistling _Lillabullero_, though not quite so loud as
- before.
- ------Atque omnium cœlestium virtutum, angelorum, archangelorum,
- thronorum, dominationum, potestatuum, cherubin
- ac seraphin, & sanctorum patriarchum, prophetarum, & omnium
- apostolorum & evangelistarum, & sanctorum innocentum, qui
- in conspectu Agni soli digni inventi sunt canticum cantare
- novum, et sanctorum martyrum et sanctorum confessorum, et
- sanctarum virginum, atque omnium simul sanctorum et electorum
- _vel_ os
- Dei, ----Excommunicamus, et anathematizamus hunc
- s _vel_ os s
- furem, vel hunc malefactorem, N. N. et a liminibus sanctæ Dei
- _vel_ i n
- ecclesiæ sequestramus, et æternis suppliciis excruciandus, mancipetur,
- cum Dathan et Abiram, et cum his qui dixerunt Domino
- Deo, Recede à nobis, scientiam viarum tuarum nolumus: et
- _vel_ eorum
- sicut aquâ ignis extinguitur, sic extinguatur lucerna ejus in
- n n
- secula seculorum nisi resipuerit, et ad satisfactionem venerit.
- Amen.
- “By the authority of God Almighty, the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, and
- of the undefiled Virgin _Mary_, mother and patroness of our Saviour, and
- of all the celestial virtues, angels, archangels, thrones, dominions,
- powers, cherubins and seraphins, and of all the holy patriarchs,
- prophets, and of all the apostles and evangelists, and of the holy
- innocents, who in the sight of the Holy Lamb, are found worthy to sing
- the new song of the holy martyrs and holy confessors, and of the holy
- virgins, and of all the saints, together with the holy and elect of God,
- ----May he” (_Obadiah_) “be damn’d” (for tying these knots)---- “We
- excommunicate, and anathematize him, and from the thresholds of the holy
- church of God Almighty we sequester him, that he may be tormented,
- disposed, and delivered over with _Dathan_ and _Abiram_, and with those
- who say unto the Lord God, Depart from us, we desire none of thy ways.
- And as fire is quenched with water, so let the light of him be put out
- for evermore, unless it shall repent him” (_Obadiah_, of the knots which
- he has tied) “and make satisfaction” (for them) “Amen.”
- os
- Maledicat illum Deus Pater qui hominem creavit. Maledicat
- os os
- illum Dei Filius qui pro homine passus est. Maledicat illum
- os
- Spiritus Sanctus qui in baptismo effusus est. Maledicat illum
- sancta crux, quam Christus pro nostrâ salute hostem triumphans
- ascendit.
- “May the Father who created man, curse him. ----May the Son who suffered
- for us, curse him. ----May the Holy Ghost, who was given to us in
- baptism, curse him (_Obadiah_) ----May the holy cross which Christ,
- for our salvation triumphing over his enemies, ascended, curse him.
- os
- Maledicat illum sancta Dei genetrix et perpetua Virgo Maria.
- os
- Maledicat illum sanctus Michael, animarum susceptor sacrarum.
- os
- Maledicant illum omnes angeli et archangeli, principatus et
- potestates, omnisque militia cœlestis.
- “May the holy and eternal Virgin _Mary_, mother of God, curse him.
- ------May St. _Michael_, the advocate of holy souls, curse him. ----May
- all the angels and archangels, principalities and powers, and all the
- heavenly armies, curse him.” [Our armies swore terribly in _Flanders_,
- cried my uncle _Toby_, ------but nothing to this. ------For my own part
- I could not have a heart to curse my dog so.]
- os
- Maledicat illum patriarcharum et prophetarum laudabilis
- os
- numerus. Maledicat illum sanctus Johannes Præcusor et
- Baptista Christi, et sanctus Petrus, et sanctus Paulus, atque
- sanctus Andreas, omnesque Christi apostoli, simul et cæteri
- discipuli, quatuor quoque evangelistæ, qui sua prædicatione
- os
- mundum universum converterunt. Maledicat illum cuneus
- martyrum et confessorum mirificus, qui Deo bonis operibus
- placitus inventus est.
- “May St. John, the Præcursor, and St. John the Baptist, and St. Peter
- and St. Paul, and St. Andrew, and all other Christ’s apostles, together
- curse him. And may the rest of his disciples and four evangelists, who
- by their preaching converted the universal world, and may the holy and
- wonderful company of martyrs and confessors who by their holy works are
- found pleasing to God Almighty, curse him” (_Obadiah_).
- os
- Maledicant illum sacrarum virginum chori, quæ mundi vana
- causa honoris Christi respuenda contempserunt. Maledicant
- os
- illum omnes sancti qui ab initio mundi usque in finem seculi
- Deo dilecti inveniuntur.
- os
- Maledicant illum cœli et terra, et omnia sancta in eis manentia.
- “May the holy choir of the holy virgins, who for the honour of Christ
- have despised the things of the world, damn him ----May all the saints,
- who from the beginning of the world to everlasting ages are found to be
- beloved of God, damn him ------May the heavens and earth, and all the
- holy things remaining therein, damn him” (_Obadiah_) “or her”
- (or whoever else had a hand in tying these knots).
- i n n
- Maledictus sit ubicunque fuerit, sive in domo, sive in agro,
- sive in viâ, sive in semitâ, sive in silvâ, sive in aquâ, sive in
- ecclesiâ.
- i n
- Maledictus sit vivendo, moriendo, ----------------------------
- ------ ------ ------
- ------ ------ ------
- ------ ------ ------
- manducando, bibendo, esuriendo, sitiendo, jejunando, dormitando,
- dormiendo, vigilando, ambulando, stando, sedendo,
- jacendo, operando, quiescendo, mingendo, cacando, flebotomando.
- “May he (_Obadiah_) be damn’d wherever he be----whether in the house or
- the stables, the garden or the field, or the highway, or in the path, or
- in the wood, or in the water, or in the church. ----May he be cursed in
- living, in dying.” [Here my uncle _Toby_, taking the advantage of a
- _minim_ in the second bar of his tune, kept whistling one continued note
- to the end of the sentence. ----Dr. _Slop_, with his division of curses
- moving under him, like a running bass all the way.] “May he be cursed in
- eating, and drinking, in being hungry, in being thirsty, in fasting, in
- sleeping, in slumbering, in walking, in standing, in sitting, in lying,
- in working, in resting, in pissing, in shitting, and in blood-letting!”
- i n
- Maledictus sit in totis viribus corporis,
- “May he” (_Obadiah_) “be cursed in all the faculties of his body!
- i n
- Maledictus sit intus et exterius.
- i n i n i
- Maledictus sit in capillis; maledictus sit in cerebro. Maledictus
- n
- sit in vertice, in temporibus, in fronte, in auriculis, in
- superciliis, in oculis, in genis, in maxillis, in naribus, in
- dentibus, mordacibus, sive molaribus, in labiis, in guttere, in
- humeris, in harnis, in brachiis, in manubus, in digitis, in pectore,
- in corde, et in omnibus interioribus stomacho tenus, in renibus,
- in inguinibus, in femore, in genitalibus, in coxis, in genubus,
- in cruribus, in pedibus, et in inguibus.
- “May he be cursed inwardly and outwardly! ------May he be cursed in the
- hair of his head! ----May he be cursed in his brains, and in his vertex”
- (that is a sad curse, quoth my father), “in his temples, in his
- forehead, in his ears, in his eye-brows, in his cheeks, in his
- jaw-bones, in his nostrils, in his fore-teeth and grinders, in his lips,
- in his throat, in his shoulders, in his wrists, in his arms, in his
- hands, in his fingers!
- “May he be damn’d in his mouth, in his breast, in his heart and
- purtenance, down to the very stomach!
- “May he be cursed in his reins, and in his groin” (God in heaven forbid!
- quoth my uncle _Toby_), “in his thighs, in his genitals” (my father
- shook his head), “and in his hips, and in his knees, his legs, and feet,
- and toe-nails!
- Maledictus sit in totis compagibus membrorum, a vertice
- capitis, usque ad plantam pedis--non sit in eo sanitas.
- “May he be cursed in all the joints and articulations of his members,
- from the top of his head to the sole of his foot! May there be no
- soundness in him!
- Maledicat illum Christus Filius Dei vivi toto suæ majestatis
- imperio.----
- “May the Son of the living God, with all the glory of his Majesty”
- ----[Here my uncle _Toby_, throwing back his head, gave a monstrous,
- long, loud Whew--w--w--------something betwixt the interjectional
- whistle of _Hay-day!_ and the word itself.------
- ----By the golden beard of _Jupiter_--and of _Juno_ (if her majesty wore
- one) and by the beards of the rest of your heathen worships, which by
- the bye was no small number, since what with the beards of your
- celestial gods, and gods aerial and aquatick--to say nothing of the
- beards of town-gods and country-gods, or of the celestial goddesses your
- wives, or of the infernal goddesses your whores and concubines (that is
- in case they wore them)------all which beards, as _Varro_ tells me, upon
- his word and honour, when mustered up together, made no less than thirty
- thousand effective beards upon the Pagan establishment; ----every beard
- of which claimed the rights and privileges of being stroken and sworn
- by--by all these beards together then ----I vow and protest, that of the
- two bad cassocks I am worth in the world, I would have given the better
- of them, as freely as ever _Cid Hamet_ offered his----to have stood by,
- and heard my uncle _Toby’s_ accompanyment.]
- ----et insurgat adversus illum cœlum cum omnibus virtutibus
- quæ in eo moventur ad _damnandum_ eum, nisi penituerit et ad
- satisfactionem venerit. Amen. Fiat, fiat. Amen.
- ----“curse him!” continued Dr. _Slop_, --“and may heaven, with all the
- powers which move therein, rise up against him, curse and damn him”
- (_Obadiah_) “unless he repent and make satisfaction! Amen. So be it,
- --so be it. Amen.”
- I declare, quoth my uncle _Toby_, my heart would not let me curse the
- devil himself with so much bitterness. --He is the father of curses,
- replied Dr. _Slop_. ----So am not I, replied my uncle. ----But he is
- cursed, and damn’d already, to all eternity, replied Dr. _Slop_.
- I am sorry for it, quoth my uncle _Toby_.
- Dr. _Slop_ drew up his mouth, and was just beginning to return my uncle
- _Toby_ the compliment of his Whu--u--u--or interjectional
- whistle----when the door hastily opening in the next chapter but
- one----put an end to the affair.
- [Footnote 3.2: As the genuineness of the consultation of the
- _Sorbonne_ upon the question of baptism, was doubted by some,
- and denied by others----’twas thought proper to print the
- original of this excommunication; for the copy of which Mr.
- _Shandy_ returns thanks to the chapter clerk of the dean and
- chapter of _Rochester_.]
- CHAPTER XII
- Now don’t let us give ourselves a parcel of airs, and pretend that the
- oaths we make free with in this land of liberty of ours are our own; and
- because we have the spirit to swear them, ----imagine that we have had
- the wit to invent them too.
- I’ll undertake this moment to prove it to any man in the world, except
- to a connoisseur: ----though I declare I object only to a connoisseur in
- swearing, ----as I would do to a connoisseur in painting, &c., &c., the
- whole set of ’em are so hung round and _befetish’d_ with the bobs and
- trinkets of criticism, ----or to drop my metaphor, which by the bye is a
- pity, ----for I have fetch’d it as far as from the coast of _Guiney_;
- --their heads, Sir, are stuck so full of rules and compasses, and have
- that eternal propensity to apply them upon all occasions, that a work of
- genius had better go to the devil at once, than stand to be prick’d and
- tortured to death by ’em.
- --And how did _Garrick_ speak the soliloquy last night? --Oh, against
- all rule, my lord, --most ungrammatically! betwixt the substantive and
- the adjective, which should agree together in _number_, _case_, and
- _gender_, he made a breach thus, --stopping, as if the point wanted
- settling; --and betwixt the nominative case, which your lordship knows
- should govern the verb, he suspended his voice in the epilogue a dozen
- times three seconds and three-fifths by a stop-watch, my lord, each
- time, --Admirable grammarian! ----But in suspending his voice----was the
- sense suspended likewise? Did no expression of attitude or countenance
- fill up the chasm? ----Was the eye silent? Did you narrowly look?
- ------I look’d only at the stop-watch, my lord. --Excellent observer!
- And what of this new book the whole world makes such a rout about?
- ----Oh! ’tis out of all plumb, my lord, ----quite an irregular thing!
- --not one of the angles at the four corners was a right angle. --I had
- my rule and compasses, &c., my lord, in my pocket. --Excellent critick!
- ----And for the epick poem your lordship bid me look at----upon taking
- the length, breadth, height, and depth of it, and trying them at home
- upon an exact scale of _Bossu’s_----’tis out, my lord, in every one of
- its dimensions. --Admirable connoisseur!
- ----And did you step in, to take a look at the grand picture in your way
- back? --’Tis a melancholy daub! my lord; not one principle of the
- _pyramid_ in any one group! ----and what a price! ----for there is
- nothing of the colouring of _Titian_--the expression of _Rubens_--the
- grace of _Raphael_--the purity of _Dominichino_--the _corregiescity_ of
- _Corregio_--the learning of _Poussin_--the airs of _Guido_--the taste of
- the _Carrachis_--or the grand contour of _Angela_. --Grant me patience,
- just Heaven! --Of all the cants which are canted in this canting
- world--though the cant of hypocrites may be the worst----the cant of
- criticism is the most tormenting!
- I would go fifty miles on foot, for I have not a horse worth riding on,
- to kiss the hand of that man whose generous heart will give up the reins
- of his imagination into his author’s hands----be pleased he knows not
- why, and cares not wherefore.
- Great _Apollo!_ if thou art in a giving humour--give me --I ask no more,
- but one stroke of native humour, with a single spark of thy own fire
- along with it----and send _Mercury_, with the _rules and compasses_, if
- he can be spared, with my compliments to--no matter.
- Now to any one else I will undertake to prove, that all the oaths and
- imprecations which we have been puffing off upon the world for these two
- hundred and fifty years last past as originals----except St. _Paul’s
- thumb_----_God’s flesh and God’s fish_, which were oaths monarchical,
- and, considering who made them, not much amiss; and as kings’ oaths,
- ’tis not much matter whether they were fish or flesh; --else I say,
- there is not an oath, or at least a curse amongst them, which has not
- been copied over and over again out of _Ernulphus_ a thousand times:
- but, like all other copies, how infinitely short of the force and spirit
- of the original! --It is thought to be no bad oath----and by itself
- passes very well-- “_G--d damn you._” --Set it beside _Ernulphus’s_----
- “God Almighty the Father damn you --God the Son damn you --God the Holy
- Ghost damn you”--you see ’tis nothing. --There is an orientality in his,
- we cannot rise up to: besides, he is more copious in his
- invention--possess’d more of the excellencies of a swearer----had such a
- thorough knowledge of the human frame, its membranes, nerves, ligaments,
- knittings of the joints, and articulations, ----that when _Ernulphus_
- cursed--no part escaped him. --’Tis true there is something of a
- _hardness_ in his manner----and, as in _Michael Angelo_, a want of
- _grace_----but then there is such a greatness of _gusto!_
- My father, who generally look’d upon everything in a light very
- different from all mankind, would, after all, never allow this to be an
- original. ----He considered rather, _Ernulphus’s_ anathema, as an
- institute of swearing, in which, as he suspected, upon the decline of
- _swearing_ in some milder pontificate, _Ernulphus_, by order of the
- succeeding pope, had with great learning and diligence collected
- together all the laws of it; --for the same reason that _Justinian_, in
- the decline of the empire, had ordered his chancellor _Tribonian_ to
- collect the _Roman_ or civil laws all together into one code or
- digest----lest, through the rust of time----and the fatality of all
- things committed to oral tradition--they should be lost to the world for
- ever.
- For this reason my father would oft-times affirm, there was not an oath,
- from the great and tremendous oath of _William_ the Conqueror (_By the
- splendour of God_) down to the lowest oath of a scavenger (_Damn your
- eyes_) which was not to be found in _Ernulphus_. --In short, he would
- add --I defy a man to swear _out_ of it.
- The hypothesis is, like most of my father’s, singular and ingenious too;
- ----nor have I any objection to it, but that it overturns my own.
- CHAPTER XIII
- ----Bless my soul! --my poor mistress is ready to faint----and her pains
- are gone--and the drops are done--and the bottle of julap is
- broke----and the nurse has cut her arm--(and I, my thumb, cried Dr.
- _Slop_,) and the child is where it was, continued _Susannah_, --and the
- midwife has fallen backwards upon the edge of the fender, and bruised
- her hip as black as your hat. --I’ll look at it, quoth Dr. _Slop_.
- --There is no need of that, replied _Susannah_, --you had better look at
- my mistress--but the midwife would gladly first give you an account how
- things are, so desires you would go up stairs and speak to her this
- moment.
- Human nature is the same in all professions.
- The midwife had just before been put over Dr. _Slop’s_ head --He had not
- digested it, --No, replied Dr. _Slop_, ’twould be full as proper, if the
- midwife came down to me. --I like subordination, quoth my uncle _Toby_,
- --and but for it, after the reduction of _Lisle_, I know not what might
- have become of the garrison of _Ghent_, in the mutiny for bread, in the
- year Ten. --Nor, replied Dr. _Slop_, (parodying my uncle _Toby’s_
- hobby-horsical reflection; though full as hobby-horsical
- himself)------do I know, Captain _Shandy_, what might have become of the
- garrison above stairs, in the mutiny and confusion I find all things are
- in at present, but for the subordination of fingers and thumbs to
- ******------the application of which, Sir, under this accident of mine,
- comes in so _à propos_, that without it, the cut upon my thumb might
- have been felt by the _Shandy_ family, as long as the _Shandy_ family
- had a name.
- CHAPTER XIV
- Let us go back to the ******----in the last chapter.
- It is a singular stroke of eloquence (at least it was so, when eloquence
- flourished at _Athens_ and _Rome_, and would be so now, did orators wear
- mantles) not to mention the name of a thing, when you had the thing
- about you _in petto_, ready to produce, pop, in the place you want it.
- A scar, an axe, a sword, a pink’d doublet, a rusty helmet, a pound and a
- half of pot-ashes in an urn, or a three-halfpenny pickle pot--but above
- all, a tender infant royally accoutred. --Tho’ if it was too young, and
- the oration as long as _Tully’s_ second _Philippick_--it must certainly
- have beshit the orator’s mantle. --And then again, if too old, --it must
- have been unwieldy and incommodious to his action--so as to make him
- lose by his child almost as much as he could gain by it. --Otherwise,
- when a state orator has hit the precise age to a minute----hid his
- BAMBINO in his mantle so cunningly that no mortal could smell it----and
- produced it so critically, that no soul could say, it came in by head
- and shoulders --Oh Sirs! it has done wonders --It has open’d the sluices,
- and turn’d the brains, and shook the principles, and unhinged the
- politicks of half a nation.
- These feats however are not to be done, except in those states and
- times, I say, where orators wore mantles----and pretty large ones too,
- my brethren, with some twenty or five-and-twenty yards of good purple,
- superfine, marketable cloth in them--with large flowing folds and
- doubles, and in a great style of design. --All which plainly shews, may
- it please your worships, that the decay of eloquence, and the little
- good service it does at present, both within and without doors, is owing
- to nothing else in the world, but short coats, and the disuse of
- _trunk-hose_. ----We can conceal nothing under ours, Madam, worth
- shewing.
- CHAPTER XV
- Dr. _Slop_ was within an ace of being an exception to all this
- argumentation: for happening to have his green bays bag upon his knees,
- when he began to parody my uncle _Toby_--’twas as good as the best
- mantle in the world to him: for which purpose, when he foresaw the
- sentence would end in his new-invented _forceps_, he thrust his hand
- into the bag in order to have them ready to clap in, when your
- reverences took so much notice of the ***, which had he managed----my
- uncle _Toby_ had certainly been overthrown: the sentence and the
- argument in that case jumping closely in one point, so like the two
- lines which form the salient angle of a ravelin, ----Dr. _Slop_ would
- never have given them up; --and my uncle _Toby_ would as soon have
- thought of flying, as taking them by force: but Dr. _Slop_ fumbled so
- vilely in pulling them out, it took off the whole effect, and what was a
- ten times worse evil (for they seldom come alone in this life) in
- pulling out his _forceps_, his _forceps_ unfortunately drew out the
- _squirt_ along with it.
- When a proposition can be taken in two senses--’tis a law in
- disputation, That the respondent may reply to which of the two he
- pleases, or finds most convenient for him. ----This threw the advantage
- of the argument quite on my uncle _Toby’s_ side. ----“Good God!” cried
- my uncle _Toby_, “_are children brought into the world with a squirt?_”
- CHAPTER XVI
- --Upon my honour, Sir, you have tore every bit of skin quite off the
- back of both my hands with your forceps, cried my uncle _Toby_--and you
- have crush’d all my knuckles into the bargain with them to a jelly. ’Tis
- your own fault, said Dr. _Slop_----you should have clinch’d your two
- fists together into the form of a child’s head as I told you, and sat
- firm. I did so, answered my uncle _Toby_. ----Then the points of my
- forceps have not been sufficiently arm’d, or the rivet wants closing--or
- else the cut in my thumb has made me a little aukward--or possibly--’Tis
- well, quoth my father, interrupting the detail of possibilities--that
- the experiment was not first made upon my child’s head-piece. ------It
- would not have been a cherry-stone the worse, answered Dr. _Slop_. --I
- maintain it, said my uncle _Toby_, it would have broke the cerebellum
- (unless indeed the skull had been as hard as a granado) and turn’d it
- all into a perfect posset. ------Pshaw! replied Dr. _Slop_, a child’s
- head is naturally as soft as the pap of an apple; --the sutures give
- way--and besides, I could have extracted by the feet after. --Not you,
- said she. ----I rather wish you would begin that way, quoth my father.
- Pray do, added my uncle _Toby_.
- CHAPTER XVII
- ----And pray, good woman, after all, will you take upon you to say, it
- may not be the child’s hip, as well as the child’s head? ------’Tis most
- certainly the head, replied the midwife. Because, continued Dr. _Slop_
- (turning to my father) as positive as these old ladies generally
- are--’tis a point very difficult to know--and yet of the greatest
- consequence to be known; ----because, Sir, if the hip is mistaken for
- the head--there is a possibility (if it is a boy) that the forceps
- * * * * * *
- ----What the possibility was, Dr. _Slop_ whispered very low to my
- father, and then to my uncle _Toby_. ----There is no such danger,
- continued he, with the head. --No, in truth, quoth my father--but when
- your possibility has taken place at the hip--you may as well take off
- the head too.
- ----It is morally impossible the reader should understand this----’tis
- enough Dr. _Slop_ understood it; ----so taking the green bays bag in his
- hand, with the help of _Obadiah’s_ pumps, he tripp’d pretty nimbly, for
- a man of his size, across the room to the door------and from the door
- was shewn the way, by the good old midwife, to my mother’s apartments.
- CHAPTER XVIII
- It is two hours, and ten minutes--and no more--cried my father, looking
- at his watch, since Dr. _Slop_ and _Obadiah_ arrived--and I know not how
- it happens, brother _Toby_--but to my imagination it seems almost an
- age.
- ----Here--pray, Sir, take hold of my cap--nay, take the bell along with
- it, and my pantoufles too.
- Now, Sir, they are all at your service; and I freely make you a present
- of ’em, on condition you give me all your attention to this chapter.
- Though my father said, “_he knew not how it happen’d_,” --yet he knew
- very well how it happen’d; ----and at the instant he spoke it, was
- pre-determined in his mind to give my uncle _Toby_ a clear account of
- the matter by a metaphysical dissertation upon the subject of _duration
- and its simple modes_, in order to shew my uncle _Toby_ by what
- mechanism and mensurations in the brain it came to pass, that the rapid
- succession of their ideas, and the eternal scampering of the discourse
- from one thing to another, since Dr. _Slop_ had come into the room, had
- lengthened out so short a period to so inconceivable an extent. ----“I
- know not how it happens--cried my father, --but it seems an age.”
- ----’Tis owing entirely, quoth my uncle _Toby_, to the succession of our
- ideas.
- My father, who had an itch, in common with all philosophers, of
- reasoning upon everything which happened, and accounting for it
- too--proposed infinite pleasure to himself in this, of the succession of
- ideas, and had not the least apprehension of having it snatch’d out of
- his hands by my uncle _Toby_, who (honest man!) generally took
- everything as it happened; ----and who, of all things in the world,
- troubled his brain the least with abstruse thinking; --the ideas of time
- and space--or how we came by those ideas--or of what stuff they were
- made----or whether they were born with us--or we picked them up
- afterwards as we went along--or whether we did it in frocks----or not
- till we had got into breeches--with a thousand other inquiries and
- disputes about INFINITY, PRESCIENCE, LIBERTY, NECESSITY, and so forth,
- upon whose desperate and unconquerable theories so many fine heads have
- been turned and cracked----never did my uncle _Toby’s_ the least injury
- at all; my father knew it--and was no less surprized than he was
- disappointed, with my uncle’s fortuitous solution.
- Do you understand the theory of that affair? replied my father.
- Not I, quoth my uncle.
- --But you have some ideas, said my father, of what you talk about?--
- No more than my horse, replied my uncle _Toby_.
- Gracious heaven! cried my father, looking upwards, and clasping his two
- hands together----there is a worth in thy honest ignorance, brother
- _Toby_----’twere almost a pity to exchange it for a knowledge. --But
- I’ll tell thee.----
- To understand what _time_ is aright, without which we never can
- comprehend _infinity_, insomuch as one is a portion of the other----we
- ought seriously to sit down and consider what idea it is we have of
- _duration_, so as to give a satisfactory account how we came by it.
- ----What is that to anybody? quoth my uncle _Toby_. [3.3]_For if you
- will turn your eyes inwards upon your mind_, continued my father, _and
- observe attentively, you will perceive, brother, that whilst you and I
- are talking together, and thinking, and smoking our pipes, or whilst we
- receive successively ideas in our minds, we know that we do exist, and
- so we estimate the existence, or the continuation of the existence of
- ourselves, or anything else, commensurate to the succession of any ideas
- in our minds, the duration of ourselves, or any such other thing
- co-existing with our thinking----and so according to that
- preconceived_ ------You puzzle me to death, cried my uncle _Toby_.
- ------’Tis owing to this, replied my father, that in our computations of
- _time_, we are so used to minutes, hours, weeks, and months----and of
- clocks (I wish there was not a clock in the kingdom) to measure out
- their several portions to us, and to those who belong to us----that
- ’twill be well, if in time to come, the _succession of our ideas_ be of
- any use or service to us at all.
- Now, whether we observe it or no, continued my father, in every sound
- man’s head, there is a regular succession of ideas of one sort or other,
- which follow each other in train just like ------A train of artillery?
- said my uncle _Toby_ ----A train of a fiddle-stick! --quoth my
- father--which follow and succeed one another in our minds at certain
- distances, just like the images in the inside of a lanthorn turned round
- by the heat of a candle. --I declare, quoth my uncle _Toby_, mine are
- more like a smoak-jack. ------Then, brother _Toby_, I have nothing more
- to say to you upon that subject, said my father.
- [Footnote 3.3: Vide Locke.]
- CHAPTER XIX
- ----What a conjecture was here lost! ----My father in one of his best
- explanatory moods--in eager pursuit of a metaphysical point into the
- very regions, where clouds and thick darkness would soon have
- encompassed it about; --my uncle _Toby_ in one of the finest
- dispositions for it in the world; --his head like a smoak-jack; ----the
- funnel unswept, and the ideas whirling round and round about in it, all
- obfuscated and darkened over with fuliginous matter! --By the tomb-stone
- of _Lucian_----if it is in being----if not, why then by his ashes! by
- the ashes of my dear _Rabelais_, and dearer _Cervantes!_------my father
- and my uncle _Toby’s_ discourse upon TIME and ETERNITY----was a
- discourse devoutly to be wished for! and the petulancy of my father’s
- humour, in putting a stop to it as he did, was a robbery of the
- _Ontologic Treasury_ of such a jewel, as no coalition of great occasions
- and great men are ever likely to restore to it again.
- CHAPTER XX
- Tho’ my father persisted in not going on with the discourse--yet he
- could not get my uncle _Toby’s_ smoak-jack out of his head--piqued as he
- was at first with it; --there was something in the comparison at the
- bottom, which hit his fancy; for which purpose, resting his elbow upon
- the table, and reclining the right side of his head upon the palm of his
- hand----but looking first stedfastly in the fire----he began to commune
- with himself, and philosophize about it: but his spirits being wore out
- with the fatigues of investigating new tracts, and the constant exertion
- of his faculties upon that variety of subjects which had taken their
- turn in the discourse------the idea of the smoak-jack soon turned all
- his ideas upside down--so that he fell asleep almost before he knew what
- he was about.
- As for my uncle _Toby_, his smoak-jack had not made a dozen revolutions,
- before he fell asleep also. ----Peace be with them both! ----Dr. _Slop_
- is engaged with the midwife and my mother above stairs. ----_Trim_ is
- busy in turning an old pair of jackboots into a couple of mortars, to be
- employed in the siege of _Messina_ next summer--and is this instant
- boring the touch-holes with the point of a hot poker. ----All my heroes
- are off my hands; --’tis the first time I have had a moment to
- spare--and I’ll make use of it, and write my preface.
- THE AUTHOR’S PREFACE
- No, I’ll not say a word about it----here it is; --in publishing it --I
- have appealed to the world----and to the world I leave it; --it must
- speak for itself.
- All I know of the matter is--when I sat down, my intent was to write a
- good book; and as far as the tenuity of my understanding would hold
- out--a wise, aye, and a discreet--taking care only, as I went along, to
- put into it all the wit and the judgment (be it more or less) which the
- great Author and Bestower of them had thought fit originally to give
- me------so that, as your worships see--’tis just as God pleases.
- Now, _Agelastes_ (speaking dispraisingly) sayeth, That there may be some
- wit in it, for aught he knows----but no judgment at all. And
- _Triptolemus_ and _Phutatorius_ agreeing thereto, ask, How is it
- possible there should? for that wit and judgment in this world never go
- together; inasmuch as they are two operations differing from each other
- as wide as east from west ------So, says _Locke_----so are farting and
- hickuping, say I. But in answer to this, _Didius_ the great church
- lawyer, in his code _de fartendi et illustrandi fallaciis_, doth
- maintain and make fully appear, That an illustration is no
- argument----nor do I maintain the wiping of a looking-glass clean to be
- a syllogism; ----but you all, may it please your worships, see the
- better for it------so that the main good these things do is only to
- clarify the understanding, previous to the application of the argument
- itself, in order to free it from any little motes, or specks of opacular
- matter, which, if left swimming therein, might hinder a conception and
- spoil all.
- Now, my dear anti-Shandeans, and thrice able criticks, and
- fellow-labourers (for to you I write this Preface)------and to you,
- most subtle statesmen and discreet doctors (do--pull off your beards)
- renowned for gravity and wisdom; ----_Monopolus_, my politician--
- _Didius_, my counsel; _Kysarcius_, my friend; --_Phutatorius_, my guide;
- ----_Gastripheres_, the preserver of my life; _Somnolentius_, the balm
- and repose of it----not forgetting all others, as well sleeping as
- waking, ecclesiastical as civil, whom for brevity, but out of no
- resentment to you, I lump all together. ------Believe me, right worthy,
- My most zealous wish and fervent prayer in your behalf, and in my own
- too, in case the thing is not done already for us----is, that the great
- gifts and endowments both of wit and judgment, with everything which
- usually goes along with them------such as memory, fancy, genius,
- eloquence, quick parts, and what not, may this precious moment, without
- stint or measure, let or hindrance, be poured down warm as each of us
- could bear it--scum and sediment and all (for I would not have a drop
- lost) into the several receptacles, cells, cellules, domiciles,
- dormitories, refectories, and spare places of our brains------in such
- sort, that they might continue to be injected and tunn’d into, according
- to the true intent and meaning of my wish, until every vessel of them,
- both great and small, be so replenish’d, saturated, and filled up
- therewith, that no more, would it save a man’s life, could possibly be
- got either in or out.
- Bless us! --what noble work we should make! ----how should I tickle it
- off! ----and what spirits should I find myself in, to be writing away
- for such readers! ----and you--just heaven! ----with what raptures would
- you sit and read--but oh! --’tis too much ----I am sick ----I faint away
- deliciously at the thoughts of it--’tis more than nature can bear! --lay
- hold of me ----I am giddy --I am stone blind --I’m dying --I am gone.
- --Help! Help! Help! --But hold --I grow something better again, for I am
- beginning to foresee, when this is over, that as we shall all of us
- continue to be great wits--we should never agree amongst ourselves, one
- day to an end: ----there would be so much satire and sarcasm----scoffing
- and flouting, with raillying and reparteeing of it--thrusting and
- parrying in one corner or another----there would be nothing but mischief
- among us ----Chaste stars! what biting and scratching, and what a racket
- and a clatter we should make, what with breaking of heads, rapping of
- knuckles, and hitting of sore places--there would be no such thing as
- living for us.
- But then again, as we should all of us be men of great judgment, we
- should make up matters as fast as ever they went wrong; and though we
- should abominate each other ten times worse than so many devils or
- devilesses, we should nevertheless, my dear creatures, be all courtesy
- and kindness, milk and honey--’twould be a second land of promise--a
- paradise upon earth, if there was such a thing to be had--so that upon
- the whole we should have done well enough.
- All I fret and fume at, and what most distresses my invention at
- present, is how to bring the point itself to bear; for as your worships
- well know, that of these heavenly emanations of _wit_ and _judgment_,
- which I have so bountifully wished both for your worships and
- myself--there is but a certain _quantum_ stored up for us all, for the
- use and behoof of the whole race of mankind; and such small _modicums_
- of ’em are only sent forth into this wide world, circulating here and
- there in one bye corner or another--and in such narrow streams, and at
- such prodigious intervals from each other, that one would wonder how it
- holds out, or could be sufficient for the wants and emergencies of so
- many great estates, and populous empires.
- Indeed there is one thing to be considered, that in _Nova Zembla_,
- _North Lapland_, and in all those cold and dreary tracts of the globe,
- which lie more directly under the arctick and antarctick circles, where
- the whole province of a man’s concernments lies for near nine months
- together within the narrow compass of his cave--where the spirits are
- compressed almost to nothing--and where the passions of a man, with
- everything which belongs to them, are as frigid as the zone
- itself--there the least quantity of _judgment_ imaginable does the
- business--and of _wit_----there is a total and an absolute saving--for
- as not one spark is wanted--so not one spark is given. Angels and
- ministers of grace defend us! what a dismal thing would it have been to
- have governed a kingdom, to have fought a battle, or made a treaty, or
- run a match, or wrote a book, or got a child, or held a provincial
- chapter there, with so _plentiful a lack_ of wit and judgment about us!
- For mercy’s sake, let us think no more about it, but travel on as fast
- as we can southwards into _Norway_--crossing over _Swedeland_, if you
- please, through the small triangular province of _Angermania_ to the
- lake of _Bothnia_; coasting along it through east and west _Bothnia_,
- down to _Carelia_, and so on, through all those states and provinces
- which border upon the far side of the _Gulf of Finland_, and the
- north-east of the _Baltick_, up to _Petersbourg_, and just stepping into
- _Ingria_; --then stretching over directly from thence through the north
- parts of the _Russian_ empire--leaving _Siberia_ a little upon the left
- hand, till we got into the very heart of _Russian_ and _Asiatick
- Tartary_.
- Now throughout this long tour which I have led you, you observe the good
- people are better off by far, than in the polar countries which we have
- just left: --for if you hold your hand over your eyes, and look very
- attentively, you may perceive some small glimmerings (as it were) of
- wit, with a comfortable provision of good plain _household_ judgment,
- which, taking the quality and quantity of it together, they make a very
- good shift with------and had they more of either the one or the other,
- it would destroy the proper balance betwixt them, and I am satisfied
- moreover they would want occasions to put them to use.
- Now, Sir, if I conduct you home again into this warmer and more
- luxuriant island, where you perceive the spring-tide of our blood and
- humours runs high------where we have more ambition, and pride, and envy,
- and lechery, and other whoreson passions upon our hands to govern and
- subject to reason------the _height_ of our wit, and the _depth_ of our
- judgment, you see, are exactly proportioned to the _length_ and
- _breadth_ of our necessities------and accordingly we have them sent down
- amongst us in such a flowing kind of descent and creditable plenty, that
- no one thinks he has any cause to complain.
- It must however be confessed on this head, that, as our air blows hot
- and cold--wet and dry, ten times in a day, we have them in no regular
- and settled way; --so that sometimes for near half a century together,
- there shall be very little wit or judgment either to be seen or heard of
- amongst us: ----the small channels of them shall seem quite dried
- up----then all of a sudden the sluices shall break out, and take a fit
- of running again like fury----you would think they would never stop:
- ----and then it is, that in writing, and fighting, and twenty other
- gallant things, we drive all the world before us.
- It is by these observations, and a wary reasoning by analogy in that
- kind of argumentative process, which _Suidas_ calls _dialectick
- induction_------that I draw and set up this position as most true and
- veritable;
- That of these two luminaries so much of their irradiations are suffered
- from time to time to shine down upon us, as he, whose infinite wisdom
- which dispenses everything in exact weight and measure, knows will just
- serve to light us on our way in this night of our obscurity; so that
- your reverences and worships now find out, nor is it a moment longer in
- my power to conceal it from you, That the fervent wish in your behalf
- with which I set out, was no more than the first insinuating _How d’ye_
- of a caressing prefacer, stifling his reader, as a lover sometimes does
- a coy mistress, into silence. For alas! could this effusion of light
- have been as easily procured, as the exordium wished it --I tremble to
- think how many thousands for it, of benighted travellers (in the learned
- sciences at least) must have groped and blundered on in the dark, all
- the nights of their lives----running their heads against posts, and
- knocking out their brains without ever getting to their journies end;
- ----some falling with their noses perpendicularly into sinks----others
- horizontally with their tails into kennels. Here one half of a learned
- profession tilting full but against the other half of it, and then
- tumbling and rolling one over the other in the dirt like hogs. --Here
- the brethren of another profession, who should have run in opposition to
- each other, flying on the contrary like a flock of wild geese, all in a
- row the same way. --What confusion! --what mistakes! ----fiddlers and
- painters judging by their eyes and ears--admirable! --trusting to the
- passions excited--in an air sung, or a story painted to the
- heart----instead of measuring them by a quadrant.
- In the fore-ground of this picture, a _statesman_ turning the political
- wheel, like a brute, the wrong way round----_against_ the stream of
- corruption--by Heaven! ----instead of _with_ it.
- In this corner, a son of the divine _Esculapius_, writing a book against
- predestination; perhaps worse--feeling his patient’s pulse, instead of
- his apothecary’s----a brother of the Faculty in the back-ground upon his
- knees in tears--drawing the curtains of a mangled victim to beg his
- forgiveness; --offering a fee--instead of taking one.
- In that spacious HALL, a coalition of the gown, from all the bars of it,
- driving a damn’d, dirty, vexatious cause before them, with all their
- might and main, the wrong way! ----kicking it _out_ of the great doors,
- instead of _in_----and with such fury in their looks, and such a degree
- of inveteracy in their manner of kicking it, as if the laws had been
- originally made for the peace and preservation of mankind: ----perhaps a
- more enormous mistake committed by them still------a litigated point
- fairly hung up; ------for instance, Whether _John o’Nokes_ his nose
- could stand in _Tom o’Stiles_ his face, without a trespass, or
- not--rashly determined by them in five-and-twenty minutes, which, with
- the cautious pros and cons required in so intricate a proceeding, might
- have taken up as many months----and if carried on upon a military plan,
- as your honours know an ACTION should be, with all the stratagems
- practicable therein, ------such as feints, ----forced marches,
- ----surprizes----ambuscades----mask-batteries, and a thousand other
- strokes of generalship, which consist in catching at all advantages on
- both sides------might reasonably have lasted them as many years, finding
- food and raiment all that term for a centumvirate of the profession.
- As for the Clergy ------No----if I say a word against them, I’ll be shot.
- ----I have no desire; --and besides, if I had --I durst not for my soul
- touch upon the subject----with such weak nerves and spirits, and in the
- condition I am in at present, ’twould be as much as my life was worth,
- to deject and contrist myself with so bad and melancholy an account--and
- therefore ’tis safer to draw a curtain across, and hasten from it, as
- fast as I can, to the main and principal point I have undertaken to
- clear up----and that is, How it comes to pass, that your men of least
- _wit_ are reported to be men of most judgment. ----But mark --I say,
- _reported to be_--for it is no more, my dear Sirs, than a report, and
- which, like twenty others taken up every day upon trust, I maintain to
- be a vile and a malicious report into the bargain.
- This by the help of the observation already premised, and I hope already
- weighed and perpended by your reverences and worships, I shall forthwith
- make appear.
- I hate set dissertations----and above all things in the world, ’tis one
- of the silliest things in one of them, to darken your hypothesis by
- placing a number of tall, opake words, one before another, in a right
- line, betwixt your own and your reader’s conception--when in all
- likelihood, if you had looked about, you might have seen something
- standing, or hanging up, which would have cleared the point at once--
- “for what hindrance, hurt, or harm doth the laudable desire of knowledge
- bring to any man, if even from a sot, a pot, a fool, a stool,
- a winter-mittain, a truckle for a pully, the lid of a goldsmith’s
- crucible, an oil bottle, an old slipper, or a cane chair?” --I am this
- moment sitting upon one. Will you give me leave to illustrate this
- affair of wit and judgment, by the two knobs on the top of the back of
- it? --they are fastened on, you see, with two pegs stuck slightly into
- two gimlet-holes, and will place what I have to say in so clear a light,
- as to let you see through the drift and meaning of my whole preface, as
- plainly as if every point and particle of it was made up of sun-beams.
- I enter now directly upon the point.
- --Here stands _wit_--and there stands _judgment_, close beside it, just
- like the two knobs I’m speaking of, upon the back of this self-same
- chair on which I am sitting.
- --You see, they are the highest and most ornamental parts of its
- _frame_--as wit and judgment are of _ours_--and like them too,
- indubitably both made and fitted to go together, in order, as we say in
- all such cases of duplicated embellishments--------_to answer one
- another_.
- Now for the sake of an experiment, and for the clearer illustrating this
- matter--let us for a moment take off one of these two curious ornaments
- (I care not which) from the point or pinnacle of the chair it now stands
- on--nay, don’t laugh at it, --but did you ever see, in the whole course
- of your lives, such a ridiculous business as this has made of it? --Why,
- ’tis as miserable a sight as a sow with one ear; and there is just as
- much sense and symmetry in the one as in the other: ----do----pray, get
- off your seats only to take a view of it. ----Now would any man who
- valued his character a straw, have turned a piece of work out of his
- hand in such a condition? --nay, lay your hands upon your hearts, and
- answer this plain question, Whether this one single knob, which now
- stands here like a blockhead by itself, can serve any purpose upon
- earth, but to put one in mind of the want of the other? --and let me
- farther ask, in case the chair was your own, if you would not in your
- consciences think, rather than be as it is, that it would be ten times
- better without any knob at all?
- Now these two knobs------or top ornaments of the mind of man, which
- crown the whole entablature----being, as I said, wit and judgment, which
- of all others, as I have proved it, are the most needful----the most
- priz’d--the most calamitous to be without, and consequently the hardest
- to come at--for all these reasons put together, there is not a mortal
- among us, so destitute of a love of good fame or feeding----or so
- ignorant of what will do him good therein--who does not wish and
- stedfastly resolve in his own mind, to be, or to be thought at least,
- master of the one or the other, and indeed of both of them, if the thing
- seems any way feasible, or likely to be brought to pass.
- Now your graver gentry having little or no kind of chance in aiming at
- the one--unless they laid hold of the other, ----pray what do you think
- would become of them? ----Why, Sirs, in spite of all their _gravities_,
- they must e’en have been contented to have gone with their insides
- naked----this was not to be borne, but by an effort of philosophy not to
- be supposed in the case we are upon----so that no one could well have
- been angry with them, had they been satisfied with what little they
- could have snatched up and secreted under their cloaks and great
- perriwigs, had they not raised a _hue_ and _cry_ at the same time
- against the lawful owners.
- I need not tell your worships, that this was done with so much cunning
- and artifice----that the great _Locke_, who was seldom outwitted by
- false sounds------was nevertheless bubbled here. The cry, it seems, was
- so deep and solemn a one, and what with the help of great wigs, grave
- faces, and other implements of deceit, was rendered so general a one
- against the _poor wits_ in this matter, that the philosopher himself was
- deceived by it--it was his glory to free the world from the lumber of a
- thousand vulgar errors; ----but this was not of the number; so that
- instead of sitting down coolly, as such a philosopher should have done,
- to have examined the matter of fact before he philosophised upon
- it----on the contrary he took the fact for granted, and so joined in
- with the cry, and halloo’d it as boisterously as the rest.
- This has been made the _Magna Charta_ of stupidity ever since----but
- your reverences plainly see, it has been obtained in such a manner, that
- the title to it is not worth a groat: ----which by the bye is one of the
- many and vile impositions which gravity and grave folks have to answer
- for hereafter.
- As for great wigs, upon which I may be thought to have spoken my mind
- too freely ------I beg leave to qualify whatever has been unguardedly
- said to their dispraise or prejudice, by one general declaration ----That
- I have no abhorrence whatever, nor do I detest and abjure either great
- wigs or long beards, any farther than when I see they are bespoke and
- let grow on purpose to carry on this self-same imposture--for any
- purpose----peace be with them! --[-->] mark only ----I write not for
- them.
- CHAPTER XXI
- Every day for at least ten years together did my father resolve to have
- it mended--’tis not mended yet; --no family but ours would have borne
- with it an hour----and what is most astonishing, there was not a subject
- in the world upon which my father was so eloquent, as upon that of
- door-hinges. ----And yet at the same time, he was certainly one of the
- greatest bubbles to them, I think, that history can produce: his
- rhetorick and conduct were at perpetual handy-cuffs. --Never did the
- parlour-door open--but his philosophy or his principles fell a victim to
- it; ----three drops of oil with a feather, and a smart stroke of a
- hammer, had saved his honour for ever.
- ----Inconsistent soul that man is! ----languishing under wounds, which
- he has the power to heal! --his whole life a contradiction to his
- knowledge! --his reason, that precious gift of God to him--(instead of
- pouring in oil) serving but to sharpen his sensibilities--to multiply
- his pains, and render him more melancholy and uneasy under them --Poor
- unhappy creature, that he should do so! ----Are not the necessary causes
- of misery in this life enow, but he must add voluntary ones to his stock
- of sorrow; --struggle against evils which cannot be avoided, and submit
- to others, which a tenth part of the trouble they create him would
- remove from his heart for ever?
- By all that is good and virtuous, if there are three drops of oil to be
- got, and a hammer to be found within ten miles of _Shandy Hall_------the
- parlour door hinge shall be mended this reign.
- CHAPTER XXII
- When Corporal _Trim_ had brought his two mortars to bear, he was
- delighted with his handy-work above measure; and knowing what a pleasure
- it would be to his master to see them, he was not able to resist the
- desire he had of carrying them directly into his parlour.
- Now next to the moral lesson I had in view in mentioning the affair of
- _hinges_, I had a speculative consideration arising out of it, and it is
- this.
- Had the parlour door opened and turn’d upon its hinges, as a door should
- do--
- Or for example, as cleverly as our government has been turning upon its
- hinges----(that is, in case things have all along gone well with your
- worship, --otherwise I give up my simile)--in this case, I say, there
- had been no danger either to master or man, in Corporal _Trim’s_ peeping
- in: the moment he had beheld my father and my uncle _Toby_ fast
- asleep--the respectfulness of his carriage was such, he would have
- retired as silent as death, and left them both in their arm-chairs,
- dreaming as happy as he had found them: but the thing was, morally
- speaking, so very impracticable, that for the many years in which this
- hinge was suffered to be out of order, and amongst the hourly grievances
- my father submitted to upon its account--this was one; that he never
- folded his arms to take his nap after dinner, but the thoughts of being
- unavoidably awakened by the first person who should open the door, was
- always uppermost in his imagination, and so incessantly stepp’d in
- betwixt him and the first balmy presage of his repose, as to rob him, as
- he often declared, of the whole sweets of it.
- “_When things move upon bad hinges_, an’ please your lordships, _how can
- it be otherwise?_”
- Pray what’s the matter? Who is there? cried my father, waking, the
- moment the door began to creak. ----I wish the smith would give a peep
- at that confounded hinge. ----’Tis nothing, an’ please your honour, said
- _Trim_, but two mortars I am bringing in. --They shan’t make a clatter
- with them here, cried my father hastily. --If Dr. _Slop_ has any drugs
- to pound, let him do it in the kitchen. --May it please your honour,
- cried _Trim_, they are two mortar-pieces for a siege next summer, which
- I have been making out of a pair of jack-boots, which _Obadiah_ told me
- your honour had left off wearing. --By Heaven! cried my father,
- springing out of his chair, as he swore ----I have not one appointment
- belonging to me, which I set so much store by as I do by these
- jack-boots----they were our great grandfather’s, brother _Toby_--they
- were _hereditary_. Then I fear, quoth my uncle _Toby_, _Trim_ has cut
- off the entail. --I have only cut off the tops, an’ please your honour,
- cried _Trim_ ----I hate _perpetuities_ as much as any man alive, cried my
- father----but these jack-boots, continued he (smiling, though very angry
- at the same time) have been in the family, brother, ever since the civil
- wars; ----Sir _Roger Shandy_ wore them at the battle of _Marston-Moor_.
- --I declare I would not have taken ten pounds for them. ----I’ll pay you
- the money, brother _Shandy_, quoth my uncle _Toby_, looking at the two
- mortars with infinite pleasure, and putting his hand into his breeches
- pocket as he viewed them ----I’ll pay you the ten pounds this moment
- with all my heart and soul.----
- Brother _Toby_, replied my father, altering his tone, you care not what
- money you dissipate and throw away, provided, continued he, ’tis but
- upon a SIEGE. ----Have I not one hundred and twenty pounds a year,
- besides my half pay? cried my uncle _Toby_. --What is that--replied my
- father hastily--to ten pounds for a pair of jack-boots? --twelve guineas
- for your _pontoons?_ --half as much for your _Dutch_ draw-bridge? --to
- say nothing of the train of little brass artillery you bespoke last
- week, with twenty other preparations for the siege of _Messina_: believe
- me, dear brother _Toby_, continued my father, taking him kindly by the
- hand--these military operations of yours are above your strength; --you
- mean well, brother----but they carry you into greater expences than you
- were first aware of; --and take my word, dear _Toby_, they will in the
- end quite ruin your fortune, and make a beggar of you. --What signifies
- it if they do, brother, replied my uncle _Toby_, so long as we know ’tis
- for the good of the nation?----
- My father could not help smiling for his soul--his anger at the worst
- was never more than a spark; --and the zeal and simplicity of
- _Trim_--and the generous (though hobby-horsical) gallantry of my uncle
- _Toby_, brought him into perfect good humour with them in an instant.
- Generous souls! --God prosper you both, and your mortar-pieces too!
- quoth my father to himself.
- CHAPTER XXIII
- All is quiet and hush, cried my father, at least above stairs --I hear
- not one foot stirring. --Prithee, _Trim_, who’s in the kitchen? There is
- no one soul in the kitchen, answered _Trim_, making a low bow as he
- spoke, except Dr. _Slop_. --Confusion! cried my father (getting up upon
- his legs a second time)--not one single thing was gone right this day!
- had I faith in astrology, brother (which, by the bye, my father had),
- I would have sworn some retrograde planet was hanging over this
- unfortunate house of mine, and turning every individual thing in it out
- of its place. ----Why, I thought Dr. _Slop_ had been above stairs with
- my wife, and so said you. ----What can the fellow be puzzling about in
- the kitchen! --He is busy, an’ please your honour, replied _Trim_, in
- making a bridge. ----’Tis very obliging in him, quoth my uncle _Toby_:
- ------pray, give my humble service to Dr. _Slop_, _Trim_, and tell him I
- thank him heartily.
- You must know, my uncle _Toby_ mistook the bridge--as widely as my
- father mistook the mortars; ----but to understand how my uncle _Toby_
- could mistake the bridge --I fear I must give you an exact account of
- the road which led to it; --or to drop my metaphor (for there is nothing
- more dishonest in an historian than the use of one)----in order to
- conceive the probability of this error in my uncle _Toby_ aright, I must
- give you some account of an adventure of _Trim’s_, though much against
- my will, I say much against my will, only because the story, in one
- sense, is certainly out of its place here; for by right it should come
- in, either amongst the anecdotes of my uncle _Toby’s_ amours with widow
- _Wadman_, in which corporal _Trim_ was no mean actor--or else in the
- middle of his and my uncle _Toby’s_ campaigns on the bowling-green--for
- it will do very well in either place; --but then if I reserve it for
- either of those parts of my story ----I ruin the story I’m upon; ----and
- if I tell it here --I anticipate matters, and ruin it there.
- --What would your worships have me to do in this case?
- --Tell it, Mr. _Shandy_, by all means. --You are a fool, _Tristram_, if
- you do.
- O ye powers! (for powers ye are, and great ones too)--which enable
- mortal man to tell a story worth the hearing------that kindly shew him,
- where he is to begin it--and where he is to end it----what he is to put
- into it----and what he is to leave out--how much of it he is to cast
- into a shade--and whereabouts he is to throw his light! --Ye, who
- preside over this vast empire of biographical freebooters, and see how
- many scrapes and plunges your subjects hourly fall into; ----will you do
- one thing?
- I beg and beseech you (in case you will do nothing better for us) that
- wherever in any part of your dominions it so falls out, that three
- several roads meet in one point, as they have done just here----that at
- least you set up a guide-post in the centre of them, in mere charity, to
- direct an uncertain devil which of the three he is to take.
- CHAPTER XXIV
- Tho’ the shock my uncle _Toby_ received the year after the demolition of
- _Dunkirk_, in his affair with widow _Wadman_, had fixed him in a
- resolution never more to think of the sex--or of aught which belonged to
- it; --yet corporal _Trim_ had made no such bargain with himself. Indeed
- in my uncle _Toby’s_ case there was a strange and unaccountable
- concurrence of circumstances, which insensibly drew him in, to lay siege
- to that fair and strong citadel. ----In _Trim’s_ case there was a
- concurrence of nothing in the world, but of him and _Bridget_ in the
- kitchen; --though in truth, the love and veneration he bore his master
- was such, and so fond was he of imitating him in all he did, that had my
- uncle _Toby_ employed his time and genius in tagging of points ----I am
- persuaded the honest corporal would have laid down his arms, and
- followed his example with pleasure. When therefore my uncle _Toby_ sat
- down before the mistress--corporal _Trim_ incontinently took ground
- before the maid.
- Now, my dear friend _Garrick_, whom I have so much cause to esteem and
- honour--(why, or wherefore, ’tis no matter)--can it escape your
- penetration --I defy it--that so many playwrights, and opificers of
- chit-chat have ever since been working upon _Trim’s_ and my uncle
- _Toby’s_ pattern. ----I care not what _Aristotle_, or _Pacuvius_, or
- _Bossu_, or _Ricaboni_ say--(though I never read one of them)----there
- is not a greater difference between a single-horse chair and madam
- _Pompadour’s_ _vis-à-vis_; than betwixt a single amour, and an amour
- thus nobly doubled, and going upon all four, prancing throughout a grand
- drama ----Sir, a simple, single, silly affair of that kind--is quite
- lost in five acts; --but that is neither here nor there.
- After a series of attacks and repulses in a course of nine months on my
- uncle _Toby’s_ quarter, a most minute account of every particular of
- which shall be given in its proper place, my uncle _Toby_, honest man!
- found it necessary to draw off his forces and raise the siege somewhat
- indignantly.
- Corporal _Trim_, as I said, had made no such bargain either with
- himself----or with any one else----the fidelity however of his heart not
- suffering him to go into a house which his master had forsaken with
- disgust----he contented himself with turning his part of the siege into
- a blockade; --that is, he kept others off; --for though he never after
- went to the house, yet he never met _Bridget_ in the village, but he
- would either nod or wink, or smile, or look kindly at her--or
- (as circumstances directed) he would shake her by the hand--or ask her
- lovingly how she did--or would give her a ribbon--and now-and-then,
- though never but when it could be done with decorum, would give
- _Bridget_ a--
- Precisely in this situation, did these things stand for five years; that
- is, from the demolition of _Dunkirk_ in the year 13, to the latter end
- of my uncle _Toby’s_ campaign in the year 18, which was about six or
- seven weeks before the time I’m speaking of. ----When _Trim_, as his
- custom was, after he had put my uncle _Toby_ to bed, going down one
- moonshiny night to see that everything was right at his
- fortifications----in the lane separated from the bowling-green with
- flowering shrubs and holly--he espied his _Bridget_.
- As the corporal thought there was nothing in the world so well worth
- shewing as the glorious works which he and my uncle _Toby_ had made,
- _Trim_ courteously and gallantly took her by the hand, and led her in:
- this was not done so privately, but that the foul-mouth’d trumpet of
- Fame carried it from ear to ear, till at length it reach’d my father’s,
- with this untoward circumstance along with it, that my uncle _Toby’s_
- curious drawbridge, constructed and painted after the _Dutch_ fashion,
- and which went quite across the ditch--was broke down, and somehow or
- other crushed all to pieces that very night.
- My father, as you have observed, had no great esteem for my uncle
- _Toby’s_ hobby-horse, he thought it the most ridiculous horse that ever
- gentleman mounted; and indeed unless my uncle _Toby_ vexed him about it,
- could never think of it once, without smiling at it----so that it could
- never get lame or happen any mischance, but it tickled my father’s
- imagination beyond measure; but this being an accident much more to his
- humour than any one which had yet befall’n it, it proved an
- inexhaustible fund of entertainment to him. ----Well----but dear _Toby!_
- my father would say, do tell me seriously how this affair of the bridge
- happened. ----How can you tease me so much about it? my uncle _Toby_
- would reply --I have told it you twenty times, word for word as _Trim_
- told it me. --Prithee, how was it then, corporal? my father would cry,
- turning to _Trim_. --It was a mere misfortune, an’ please your honour;
- ----I was shewing Mrs. _Bridget_ our fortifications, and in going too
- near the edge of the fosse, I unfortunately slipp’d in ----Very well,
- _Trim!_ my father would cry----(smiling mysteriously, and giving a
- nod--but without interrupting him)----and being link’d fast, an’ please
- your honour, arm in arm with Mrs. _Bridget_, I dragg’d her after me, by
- means of which she fell backwards soss against the bridge----and
- _Trim’s_ foot (my uncle _Toby_ would cry, taking the story out of his
- mouth) getting into the cuvette, he tumbled full against the bridge too.
- --It was a thousand to one, my uncle _Toby_ would add, that the poor
- fellow did not break his leg. ------Ay truly, my father would say----
- a limb is soon broke, brother _Toby_, in such encounters. ----And so,
- an’ please your honour, the bridge, which your honour knows was a very
- slight one, was broke down betwixt us, and splintered all to pieces.
- At other times, but especially when my uncle _Toby_ was so unfortunate
- as to say a syllable about cannons, bombs, or petards--my father would
- exhaust all the stores of his eloquence (which indeed were very great)
- in a panegyric upon the BATTERING-RAMS of the ancients--the VINEA which
- _Alexander_ made use of at the siege of _Troy_. --He would tell my uncle
- _Toby_ of the CATAPULTÆ of the _Syrians_, which threw such monstrous
- stones so many hundred feet, and shook the strongest bulwarks from their
- very foundation: --he would go on and describe the wonderful mechanism
- of the BALLISTA which _Marcellinus_ makes so much rout about! --the
- terrible effects of the PYROBOLI, which cast fire; ----the danger of the
- TEREBRA and SCORPIO, which cast javelins. ----But what are these, would
- he say, to the destructive machinery of corporal _Trim?_ ----Believe me,
- brother _Toby_, no bridge, or bastion, or sally-port, that ever was
- constructed in this world, can hold out against such artillery.
- My uncle _Toby_ would never attempt any defence against the force of
- this ridicule, but that of redoubling the vehemence of smoaking his
- pipe; in doing which, he raised so dense a vapour one night after
- supper, that it set my father, who was a little phthisical, into a
- suffocating fit of violent coughing: my uncle _Toby_ leap’d up without
- feeling the pain upon his groin--and, with infinite pity, stood beside
- his brother’s chair, tapping his back with one hand, and holding his
- head with the other, and from time to time wiping his eyes with a clean
- cambrick handkerchief, which he pulled out of his pocket. ----The
- affectionate and endearing manner in which my uncle _Toby_ did these
- little offices--cut my father thro’ his reins, for the pain he had just
- been giving him. ----May my brains be knock’d out with a battering-ram
- or a catapulta, I care not which, quoth my father to himself--if ever I
- insult this worthy soul more!
- CHAPTER XXV
- The draw-bridge being held irreparable, _Trim_ was ordered directly to
- set about another------but not upon the same model: for cardinal
- _Alberoni’s_ intrigues at that time being discovered, and my uncle
- _Toby_ rightly foreseeing that a flame would inevitably break out
- betwixt _Spain_ and the Empire, and that the operations of the ensuing
- campaign must in all likelihood be either in _Naples_ or _Sicily_----he
- determined upon an _Italian_ bridge--(my uncle _Toby_, by the bye, was
- not far out of his conjectures)----but my father, who was infinitely the
- better politician, and took the lead as far of my uncle _Toby_ in the
- cabinet, as my uncle _Toby_ took it of him in the field------convinced
- him, that if the king of _Spain_ and the Emperor went together by the
- ears, _England_ and _France_ and _Holland_ must, by force of their
- pre-engagements, all enter the lists too; ----and if so, he would say,
- the combatants, brother _Toby_, as sure as we are alive, will fall to it
- again, pell-mell, upon the old prizefighting stage of _Flanders_; --then
- what will you do with your _Italian_ bridge?
- --We will go on with it then upon the old model, cried my uncle _Toby_.
- When Corporal _Trim_ had about half finished it in that style----my
- uncle _Toby_ found out a capital defect in it, which he had never
- thoroughly considered before. It turned, it seems, upon hinges at both
- ends of it, opening in the middle, one half of which turning to one side
- of the fosse, and the other to the other; the advantage of which was
- this, that by dividing the weight of the bridge into two equal portions,
- it impowered my uncle _Toby_ to raise it up or let it down with the end
- of his crutch, and with one hand, which, as his garrison was weak, was
- as much as he could well spare--but the disadvantages of such a
- construction were insurmountable; ----for by this means, he would say,
- I leave one half of my bridge in my enemy’s possession----and pray of
- what use is the other?
- The natural remedy for this was, no doubt, to have his bridge fast only
- at one end with hinges, so that the whole might be lifted up together,
- and stand bolt upright------but that was rejected for the reason given
- above.
- For a whole week after he was determined in his mind to have one of that
- particular construction which is made to draw back horizontally, to
- hinder a passage; and to thrust forwards again to gain a passage--of
- which sorts your worship might have seen three famous ones at _Spires_
- before its destruction--and one now at _Brisac_, if I mistake not; --but
- my father advising my uncle _Toby_, with great earnestness, to have
- nothing more to do with thrusting bridges--and my uncle foreseeing
- moreover that it would but perpetuate the memory of the Corporal’s
- misfortune--he changed his mind for that of the marquis _d’Hôpital’s_
- invention, which the younger _Bernouilli_ has so well and learnedly
- described, as your worships may see------_Act. Erud. Lips._ an. 1695--to
- these a lead weight is an eternal balance, and keeps watch as well as a
- couple of centinels, inasmuch as the construction of them was a curve
- line approximating to a cycloid------if not a cycloid itself.
- My uncle _Toby_ understood the nature of a parabola as well as any man
- in _England_--but was not quite such a master of the cycloid; ----he
- talked however about it every day----the bridge went not forwards.
- ----We’ll ask somebody about it, cried my uncle _Toby_ to _Trim_.
- CHAPTER XXVI
- When _Trim_ came in and told my father, that Dr. _Slop_ was in the
- kitchen, and busy in making a bridge--my uncle _Toby_----the affair of
- the jack-boots having just then raised a train of military ideas in his
- brain----took it instantly for granted that Dr. _Slop_ was making a
- model of the marquis _d’Hôpital’s_ bridge. ----’Tis very obliging in
- him, quoth my uncle _Toby_; --pray give my humble service to Dr. _Slop_,
- _Trim_, and tell him I thank him heartily.
- Had my uncle _Toby’s_ head been a _Savoyard’s_ box, and my father
- peeping in all the time at one end of it----it could not have given him
- a more distinct conception of the operations of my uncle _Toby’s_
- imagination, than what he had; so, notwithstanding the catapulta and
- battering-ram, and his bitter imprecation about them, he was just
- beginning to triumph----
- When _Trim’s_ answer, in an instant, tore the laurel from his brows, and
- twisted it to pieces.
- CHAPTER XXVII
- ----This unfortunate draw-bridge of yours, quoth my father ----God bless
- your honour, cried _Trim_, ’tis a bridge for master’s nose. ----In
- bringing him into the world with his vile instruments, he has crushed
- his nose, _Susannah_ says, as flat as a pancake to his face, and he is
- making a false bridge with a piece of cotton and a thin piece of
- whalebone out of _Susannah’s_ stays, to raise it up.
- ----Lead me, brother _Toby_, cried my father, to my room this instant.
- CHAPTER XXVIII
- From the first moment I sat down to write my life for the amusement of
- the world, and my opinions for its instruction, has a cloud insensibly
- been gathering over my father. ----A tide of little evils and distresses
- has been setting in against him. --Not one thing, as he observed
- himself, has gone right: and now is the storm thicken’d and going to
- break, and pour down full upon his head.
- I enter upon this part of my story in the most pensive and melancholy
- frame of mind that ever sympathetic breast was touched with. ----My
- nerves relax as I tell it. ----Every line I write, I feel an abatement
- of the quickness of my pulse, and of that careless alacrity with it,
- which every day of my life prompts me to say and write a thousand things
- I should not. ----And this moment that I last dipp’d my pen into my ink,
- I could not help taking notice what a cautious air of sad composure and
- solemnity there appear’d in my manner of doing it. ----Lord! how
- different from the rash jerks and hair-brain’d squirts thou art wont,
- _Tristram_, to transact it with in other humours--dropping thy
- pen----spurting thy ink about thy table and thy books--as if thy pen and
- thy ink, thy books and furniture cost thee nothing!
- CHAPTER XXIX
- ----I won’t go about to argue the point with you--’tis so----and I am
- persuaded of it, madam, as much as can be, “That both man and woman bear
- pain or sorrow (and, for aught I know, pleasure too) best in a
- horizontal position.”
- The moment my father got up into his chamber, he threw himself prostrate
- across the bed in the wildest disorder imaginable, but at the same time
- in the most lamentable attitude of a man borne down with sorrows, that
- ever the eye of pity dropp’d a tear for. ----The palm of his right hand,
- as he fell upon the bed, receiving his forehead, and covering the
- greatest part of both his eyes, gently sunk down with his head (his
- elbow giving way backwards) till his nose touch’d the quilt; ----his
- left arm hung insensible over the side of the bed, his knuckles
- reclining upon the handle of the chamber-pot, which peep’d out beyond
- the valance--his right leg (his left being drawn up towards his body)
- hung half over the side of the bed, the edge of it pressing upon his
- shin-bone --He felt it not. A fix’d, inflexible sorrow took possession of
- every line of his face. --He sigh’d once----heaved his breast often--but
- uttered not a word.
- An old set-stitch’d chair, valanced and fringed around with
- party-coloured worsted bobs, stood at the bed’s head, opposite to the
- side where my father’s head reclined. --My uncle _Toby_ sat him down in
- it.
- Before an affliction is digested--consolation ever comes too soon; --and
- after it is digested--it comes too late: so that you see, madam, there
- is but a mark between these two, as fine almost as a hair, for a
- comforter to take aim at: my uncle _Toby_ was always either on this
- side, or on that of it, and would often say, he believed in his heart he
- could as soon hit the longitude; for this reason, when he sat down in
- the chair, he drew the curtain a little forwards, and having a tear at
- every one’s service----he pull’d out a cambrick handkerchief----gave a
- low sigh----but held his peace.
- CHAPTER XXX
- ----“_All is not gain that is got into the purse._” --So that
- notwithstanding my father had the happiness of reading the oddest books
- in the universe, and had moreover, in himself, the oddest way of
- thinking that ever man in it was bless’d with, yet it had this drawback
- upon him after all------that it laid him open to some of the oddest and
- most whimsical distresses; of which this particular one, which he sunk
- under at present, is as strong an example as can be given.
- No doubt, the breaking down of the bridge of a child’s nose, by the edge
- of a pair of forceps--however scientifically applied--would vex any man
- in the world, who was at so much pains in begetting a child, as my
- father was--yet it will not account for the extravagance of his
- affliction, nor will it justify the unchristian manner he abandoned and
- surrendered him self up to.
- To explain this, I must leave him upon the bed for half an hour--and my
- uncle _Toby_ in his old fringed chair sitting beside him.
- CHAPTER XXXI
- ----I think it a very unreasonable demand--cried my great-grandfather,
- twisting up the paper, and throwing it upon the table. ----By this
- account, madam, you have but two thousand pounds fortune, and not a
- shilling more--and you insist upon having three hundred pounds a year
- jointure for it.------
- --“Because,” replied my great-grandmother, “you have little or no nose,
- Sir.”--
- Now before I venture to make use of the word _Nose_ a second time--to
- avoid all confusion in what will be said upon it, in this interesting
- part of my story, it may not be amiss to explain my own meaning, and
- define, with all possible exactness and precision, what I would
- willingly be understood to mean by the term: being of opinion, that ’tis
- owing to the negligence and perverseness of writers in despising this
- precaution, and to nothing else----that all the polemical writings in
- divinity are not as clear and demonstrative as those upon _a Will o’ the
- Wisp_, or any other sound part of philosophy, and natural pursuit; in
- order to which, what have you to do, before you set out, unless you
- intend to go puzzling on to the day of judgment----but to give the world
- a good definition, and stand to it, of the main word you have most
- occasion for----changing it, Sir, as you would a guinea, into small
- coin? --which done--let the father of confusion puzzle you, if he can;
- or put a different idea either into your head, or your reader’s head, if
- he knows how.
- In books of strict morality and close reasoning, such as this I am
- engaged in--the neglect is inexcusable; and Heaven is witness, how the
- world has revenged itself upon me for leaving so many openings to
- equivocal strictures--and for depending so much as I have done, all
- along, upon the cleanliness of my readers’ imaginations.
- ----Here are two senses, cried _Eugenius_, as we walk’d along, pointing
- with the forefinger of his right hand to the word _Crevice_, in the one
- hundred and seventy-eighth page of the first volume of this book of
- books; ------here are two senses--quoth he --And here are two roads,
- replied I, turning short upon him----a dirty and a clean one----which
- shall we take? --The clean, by all means, replied _Eugenius_.
- _Eugenius_, said I, stepping before him, and laying my hand upon his
- breast----to define--is to distrust. ----Thus I triumph’d over
- _Eugenius_; but I triumph’d over him as I always do, like a fool.
- ----’Tis my comfort, however, I am not an obstinate one: therefore
- I define a nose as follows--intreating only beforehand, and beseeching
- my readers, both male and female, of what age, complexion, and condition
- soever, for the love of God and their own souls, to guard against the
- temptations and suggestions of the devil, and suffer him by no art or
- wile to put any other ideas into their minds, than what I put into my
- definition --For by the word _Nose_, throughout all this long chapter of
- noses, and in every other part of my work, where the word _Nose_
- occurs --I declare, by that word I mean a nose, and nothing more, or
- less.
- CHAPTER XXXII
- ----“Because,” quoth my great-grandmother, repeating the words again--
- “you have little or no nose, Sir.”------
- S’death! cried my great-grandfather, clapping his hand upon his nose,
- --’tis not so small as that comes to; ----’tis a full inch longer than
- my father’s. --Now, my great-grandfather’s nose was for all the world
- like unto the noses of all the men, women, and children, whom
- _Pantagruel_ found dwelling upon the island of ENNASIN. ------By the
- way, if you would know the strange way of getting a-kin amongst so
- flat-nosed a people----you must read the book; ----find it out yourself,
- you never can.----
- --’Twas shaped, Sir, like an ace of clubs.
- --’Tis a full inch, continued my grandfather, pressing up the ridge of
- his nose with his finger and thumb; and repeating his assertion----’tis
- a full inch longer, madam, than my father’s ----You must mean your
- uncle’s, replied my great-grandmother.
- ------My great-grandfather was convinced. --He untwisted the paper, and
- signed the article.
- CHAPTER XXXIII
- ----What an unconscionable jointure, my dear, do we pay out of this
- small estate of ours, quoth my grandmother to my grandfather.
- My father, replied my grandfather, had no more nose, my dear, saving the
- mark, than there is upon the back of my hand.
- --Now, you must know, that my great-grandmother outlived my grandfather
- twelve years; so that my father had the jointure to pay, a hundred and
- fifty pounds half-yearly--(on _Michaelmas_ and _Lady-day_), --during all
- that time.
- No man discharged pecuniary obligations with a better grace than my
- father. ------And as far as a hundred pounds went, he would fling it
- upon the table, guinea by guinea, with that spirited jerk of an honest
- welcome, which generous souls, and generous souls only, are able to
- fling down money: but as soon as ever he enter’d upon the odd fifty--he
- generally gave a loud _Hem!_ rubb’d the side of his nose leisurely with
- the flat part of his fore finger----inserted his hand cautiously betwixt
- his head and the cawl of his wig--look’d at both sides of every guinea
- as he parted with it----and seldom could get to the end of the fifty
- pounds, without pulling out his handkerchief, and wiping his temples.
- Defend me, gracious Heaven! from those persecuting spirits who make no
- allowances for these workings within us. --Never --O never may I lay
- down in their tents, who cannot relax the engine, and feel pity for the
- force of education, and the prevalence of opinions long derived from
- ancestors!
- For three generations at least this _tenet_ in favour of long noses had
- gradually been taking root in our family. ------TRADITION was all along
- on its side, and INTEREST was every half-year stepping in to strengthen
- it; so that the whimsicality of my father’s brain was far from having
- the whole honour of this, as it had of almost all his other strange
- notions. --For in a great measure he might be said to have suck’d this
- in with his mother’s milk. He did his part however. ----If education
- planted the mistake (in case it was one) my father watered it, and
- ripened it to perfection.
- He would often declare, in speaking his thoughts upon the subject, that
- he did not conceive how the greatest family in _England_ could stand it
- out against an uninterrupted succession of six or seven short noses.
- --And for the contrary reason, he would generally add, That it must be
- one of the greatest problems in civil life, where the same number of
- long and jolly noses, following one another in a direct line, did not
- raise and hoist it up into the best vacancies in the kingdom. ------He
- would often boast that the _Shandy_ family rank’d very high in King
- _Harry_ the VIIIth’s time, but owed its rise to no state engine--he
- would say--but to that only; ----but that, like other families, he would
- add----it had felt the turn of the wheel, and had never recovered the
- blow of my great-grandfather’s nose. ----It was an ace of clubs indeed,
- he would cry, shaking his head--and as vile a one for an unfortunate
- family as ever turn’d up trumps.
- ------Fair and softly, gentle reader! ------where is thy fancy carrying
- thee? ----If there is truth in man, by my great-grandfather’s nose,
- I mean the external organ of smelling, or that part of man which stands
- prominent in his face----and which painters say, in good jolly noses and
- well-proportioned faces, should comprehend a full third----that is,
- measured downwards from the setting on of the hair.----
- ----What a life of it has an author, at this pass!
- CHAPTER XXXIV
- It is a singular blessing, that nature has form’d the mind of man with
- the same happy backwardness and renitency against conviction, which is
- observed in old dogs-- “of not learning new tricks.”
- What a shuttlecock of a fellow would the greatest philosopher that ever
- existed be whisk’d into at once, did he read such books, and observe
- such facts, and think such thoughts, as would eternally be making him
- change sides!
- Now, my father, as I told you last year, detested all this --He pick’d up
- an opinion, Sir, as a man in a state of nature picks up an apple. --It
- becomes his own--and if he is a man of spirit, he would lose his life
- rather than give it up.
- I am aware that _Didius_, the great civilian, will contest this point;
- and cry out against me, Whence comes this man’s right to this apple? _ex
- confesso_, he will say--things were in a state of nature --The apple, as
- much _Frank’s_ apple as _John’s_. Pray, Mr. _Shandy_, what patent has he
- to shew for it? and how did it begin to be his? was it, when he set his
- heart upon it? or when he gathered it? or when he chew’d it? or when he
- roasted it? or when he peel’d, or when he brought it home? or when he
- digested? --or when he----? ----For ’tis plain, Sir, if the first
- picking up of the apple, made it not his--that no subsequent act could.
- Brother _Didius_, _Tribonius_ will answer--(now _Tribonius_ the civilian
- and church lawyer’s beard being three inches and a half and three
- eighths longer than _Didius_ his beard --I’m glad he takes up the cudgels
- for me, so I give myself no farther trouble about the answer). --Brother
- _Didius_, _Tribonius_ will say, it is a decreed case, as you may find it
- in the fragments of _Gregorius_ and _Hermogines’s_ codes, and in all the
- codes from _Justinian’s_ down to the codes of _Louis_ and _Des
- Eaux_ --That the sweat of a man’s brows, and the exsudations of a man’s
- brains, are as much a man’s own property as the breeches upon his
- backside; --which said exsudations, &c., being dropp’d upon the said
- apple by the labour of finding it, and picking it up; and being moreover
- indissolubly wasted, and as indissolubly annex’d, by the picker up, to
- the thing pick’d up, carried home, roasted, peel’d, eaten, digested, and
- so on; ----’tis evident that the gatherer of the apple, in so doing, has
- mix’d up something which was his own, with the apple which was not his
- own, by which means he has acquired a property; --or, in other words,
- the apple is _John’s_ apple.
- By the same learned chain of reasoning my father stood up for all his
- opinions; he had spared no pains in picking them up, and the more they
- lay out of the common way, the better still was his title. ----No mortal
- claimed them; they had cost him moreover as much labour in cooking and
- digesting as in the case above, so that they might well and truly be
- said to be of his own goods and chattles. --Accordingly he held fast by
- ’em, both by teeth and claws--would fly to whatever he could lay his
- hands on--and, in a word, would intrench and fortify them round with as
- many circumvallations and breast-works, as my uncle _Toby_ would a
- citadel.
- There was one plaguy rub in the way of this----the scarcity of materials
- to make anything of a defence with, in case of a smart attack; inasmuch
- as few men of great genius had exercised their parts in writing books
- upon the subject of great noses: by the trotting of my lean horse, the
- thing is incredible! and I am quite lost in my understanding, when I am
- considering what a treasure of precious time and talents together has
- been wasted upon worse subjects--and how many millions of books in all
- languages, and in all possible types and bindings, have been fabricated
- upon points not half so much tending to the unity and peace-making of
- the world. What was to be had, however, he set the greater store by; and
- though my father would oft-times sport with my uncle _Toby’s_
- library--which, by the bye, was ridiculous enough--yet at the very same
- time he did it, he collected every book and treatise which had been
- systematically wrote upon noses, with as much care as my honest uncle
- _Toby_ had done those upon military architecture. ----’Tis true, a much
- less table would have held them--but that was not thy transgression, my
- dear uncle.--
- Here----but why here----rather than in any other part of my story ----I
- am not able to tell: ------but here it is------my heart stops me to pay
- to thee, my dear uncle _Toby_, once for all, the tribute I owe thy
- goodness. ----Here let me thrust my chair aside, and kneel down upon the
- ground, whilst I am pouring forth the warmest sentiment of love for
- thee, and veneration for the excellency of thy character, that ever
- virtue and nature kindled in a nephew’s bosom. ----Peace and comfort
- rest for evermore upon thy head! --Thou enviedst no man’s
- comforts----insultedst no man’s opinions ----Thou blackenedst no man’s
- character--devouredst no man’s bread: gently, with faithful _Trim_
- behind thee, didst thou amble round the little circle of thy pleasures,
- jostling no creature in thy way: --for each one’s sorrow thou hadst a
- tear, --for each man’s need, thou hadst a shilling.
- Whilst I am worth one, to pay a weeder--thy path from thy door to thy
- bowling-green shall never be grown up. ----Whilst there is a rood and a
- half of land in the _Shandy_ family, thy fortifications, my dear uncle
- _Toby_, shall never be demolish’d.
- CHAPTER XXXV
- My father’s collection was not great, but to make amends, it was
- curious; and consequently he was some time in making it; he had the
- great good fortune however, to set off well, in getting _Bruscambille’s_
- prologue upon long noses, almost for nothing--for he gave no more for
- _Bruscambille_ than three half-crowns; owing indeed to the strong fancy
- which the stall-man saw my father had for the book the moment he laid
- his hands upon it. ----There are not three _Bruscambilles_ in
- _Christendom_--said the stall-man, except what are chain’d up in the
- libraries of the curious. My father flung down the money as quick as
- lightning----took _Bruscambille_ into his bosom----hied home from
- _Piccadilly_ to _Coleman_-street with it, as he would have hied home
- with a treasure, without taking his hand once off from _Bruscambille_
- all the way.
- To those who do not yet know of which gender _Bruscambille_
- is------inasmuch as a prologue upon long noses might easily be done by
- either------’twill be no objection against the simile--to say, That when
- my father got home, he solaced himself with _Bruscambille_ after the
- manner in which, ’tis ten to one, your worship solaced yourself with
- your first mistress------that is, from morning even unto night: which,
- by the bye, how delightful soever it may prove to the inamorato--is of
- little or no entertainment at all to by-standers. ----Take notice, I go
- no farther with the simile--my father’s eye was greater than his
- appetite--his zeal greater than his knowledge--he cool’d--his affections
- became divided----he got hold of _Prignitz_--purchased _Scroderus_,
- _Andrea Paræus_, _Bouchet’s_ Evening Conferences, and above all, the
- great and learned _Hafen Slawkenbergius_; of which, as I shall have much
- to say by and by --I will say nothing now.
- CHAPTER XXXVI
- Of all the tracts my father was at the pains to procure and study in
- support of his hypothesis, there was not any one wherein he felt a more
- cruel disappointment at first, than in the celebrated dialogue between
- _Pamphagus_ and _Cocles_, written by the chaste pen of the great and
- venerable _Erasmus_, upon the various uses and seasonable applications
- of long noses. ------Now don’t let Satan, my dear girl, in this chapter,
- take advantage of any one spot of rising ground to get astride of your
- imagination, if you can any ways help it; or if he is so nimble as to
- slip on--let me beg of you, like an unback’d filly, _to frisk it, to
- squirt it, to jump it, to rear it, to bound it--and to kick it, with
- long kicks and short kicks_, till, like _Tickletoby’s_ mare, you break
- a strap or a crupper and throw his worship into the dirt. --You need
- not kill him.--
- --And pray who was _Tickletoby’s_ mare? --’tis just as discreditable and
- unscholarlike a question, Sir, as to have asked what year (_ab. urb.
- con._) the second Punic war broke out. --Who was _Tickletoby’s_ mare?
- ----Read, read, read, read, my unlearned reader! read--or by the
- knowledge of the great saint _Paraleipomenon_ --I tell you before-hand,
- you had better throw down the book at once; for without _much reading_,
- by which your reverence knows I mean _much knowledge_, you will no more
- be able to penetrate the moral of the next marbled page (motly emblem of
- my work!) than the world with all its sagacity has been able to unravel
- the many opinions, transactions, and truths which still lie mystically
- hid under the dark veil of the black one.
- [Illustration]
- CHAPTER XXXVII
- “_Nihil me pœnitet hujus nasi_,” quoth _Pamphagus_; ----that is-- “My
- nose has been the making of me.” ----------“_Nec est cur pœniteat_,”
- replies _Cocles_; that is, “How the duce should such a nose fail?”
- The doctrine, you see, was laid down by _Erasmus_, as my father wished
- it, with the utmost plainness; but my father’s disappointment was, in
- finding nothing more from so able a pen, but the bare fact itself;
- without any of that speculative subtilty or ambidexterity of
- argumentation upon it, which Heaven had bestow’d upon man on purpose to
- investigate truth, and fight for her on all sides. ----My father pish’d
- and pugh’d at first most terribly------’tis worth something to have a
- good name. As the dialogue was of _Erasmus_, my father soon came to
- himself, and read it over and over again with great application,
- studying every word and every syllable of it thro’ and thro’ in its most
- strict and literal interpretation--he could still make nothing of it,
- that way. Mayhap there is more meant, than is said in it, quoth my
- father. ----Learned men, brother _Toby_, don’t write dialogues upon long
- noses for nothing. ------I’ll study the mystick and the allegorick
- sense----here is some room to turn a man’s self in, brother.
- My father read on. ------Now I find it needful to inform your reverences
- and worships, that besides the many nautical uses of long noses
- enumerated by _Erasmus_, the dialogist affirmeth that a long nose is not
- without its domestic conveniencies also; for that in a case of
- distress--and for want of a pair of bellows, it will do excellently
- well, _ad ixcitandum focum_ (to stir up the fire).
- Nature had been prodigal in her gifts to my father beyond measure, and
- had sown the seeds of verbal criticism as deep within him, as she had
- done the seeds of all other knowledge------so that he had got out his
- penknife, and was trying experiments upon the sentence, to see if he
- could not scratch some better sense into it. ----I’ve got within a
- single letter, brother _Toby_, cried my father, of _Erasmus_ his mystic
- meaning. --You are near enough, brother, replied my uncle, in all
- conscience. ------Pshaw! cried my father, scratching on ----I might as
- well be seven miles off. --I’ve done it--said my father, snapping his
- fingers --See, my dear brother _Toby_, how I have mended the sense.
- ----But you have marr’d a word, replied my uncle _Toby_. ----My father
- put on his spectacles----bit his lip------and tore out the leaf in a
- passion.
- CHAPTER XXXVIII
- _O Slawkenbergius!_ thou faithful analyzer of my _Disgrazias_--thou sad
- foreteller of so many of the whips and short turns which in one stage or
- other of my life have come slap upon me from the shortness of my nose,
- and no other cause, that I am conscious of. --Tell me, _Slawkenbergius!_
- what secret impulse was it? what intonation of voice? whence came it?
- how did it sound in thy ears? ----art thou sure thou heard’st it?
- ----which first cried out to thee------go------go, _Slawkenbergius!_
- dedicate the labours of thy life----neglect thy pastimes------call forth
- all the powers and faculties of thy nature----macerate thyself in the
- service of mankind, and write a grand FOLIO for them, upon the subject
- of their noses.
- How the communication was conveyed into _Slawkenbergius’s_
- sensorium----so that _Slawkenbergius_ should know whose finger touch’d
- the key--and whose hand it was that blew the bellows----as _Hafen
- Slawkenbergius_ has been dead and laid in his grave above fourscore and
- ten years------we can only raise conjectures.
- _Slawkenbergius_ was play’d upon, for aught I know, like one of
- _Whitefield’s_ disciples----that is, with such a distinct intelligence,
- Sir, of which of the two _masters_ it was that had been practising upon
- his _instrument_------as to make all reasoning upon it needless.
- ------For in the account which _Hafen Slawkenbergius_ gives the world of
- his motives and occasions for writing, and spending so many years of his
- life upon this one work--towards the end of his prolegomena, which by
- the bye should have come first----but the bookbinder has most
- injudiciously placed it betwixt the analytical contents of the book, and
- the book itself--he informs his reader, that ever since he had arrived
- at the age of discernment, and was able to sit down coolly, and consider
- within himself the true state and condition of man, and distinguish the
- main end and design of his being; ----or--to shorten my translation, for
- _Slawkenbergius’s_ book is in _Latin_, and not a little prolix in this
- passage--ever since I understood, quoth _Slawkenbergius_, any
- thing----or rather _what was what_----and could perceive that the point
- of long noses had been too loosely handled by all who had gone before;
- ----have I, _Slawkenbergius_, felt a strong impulse, with a mighty and
- unresistible call within me, to gird up myself to this undertaking.
- And to do justice to _Slawkenbergius_, he has entered the list with a
- stronger lance, and taken a much larger career in it than any one man
- who had ever entered it before him----and indeed, in many respects,
- deserves to be _en-nich’d_ as a prototype for all writers, of voluminous
- works at least, to model their books by----for he has taken in, Sir, the
- whole subject--examined every part of it _dialectically_------then
- brought it into full day; dilucidating it with all the light which
- either the collision of his own natural parts could strike--or the
- profoundest knowledge of the sciences had impowered him to cast upon
- it--collating, collecting, and compiling------begging, borrowing, and
- stealing, as he went along, all that had been wrote or wrangled
- thereupon in the schools and porticos of the learned: so that
- _Slawkenbergius_ his book may properly be considered, not only as a
- model--but as a thorough-stitched DIGEST and regular institute of
- _noses_, comprehending in it all that is or can be needful to be known
- about them.
- For this cause it is that I forbear to speak of so many (otherwise)
- valuable books and treatises of my father’s collecting, wrote either,
- plump upon noses----or collaterally touching them; ------such for
- instance as _Prignitz_, now lying upon the table before me, who with
- infinite learning, and from the most candid and scholar-like examination
- of above four thousand different skulls, in upwards of twenty
- charnel-houses in _Silesia_, which he had rummaged------has informed us,
- that the mensuration and configuration of the osseous or bony parts of
- human noses, in any _given_ tract of country, except _Crim Tartary_,
- where they are all crush’d down by the thumb, so that no judgment can be
- formed upon them--are much nearer alike, than the world imagines; --the
- difference amongst them being, he says, a mere trifle, not worth taking
- notice of; ----but that the size and jollity of every individual nose,
- and by which one nose ranks above another, and bears a higher price, is
- owing to the cartilaginous and muscular parts of it, into whose ducts
- and sinuses the blood and animal spirits being impell’d and driven by
- the warmth and force of the imagination, which is but a step from it
- (bating the case of idiots, whom _Prignitz_, who had lived many years in
- _Turky_, supposes under the more immediate tutelage of Heaven)--it so
- happens, and ever must, says _Prignitz_, that the excellency of the nose
- is in a direct arithmetical proportion to the excellency of the wearer’s
- fancy.
- It is for the same reason, that is, because ’tis all comprehended in
- _Slawkenbergius_, that I say nothing likewise of _Scroderus_ (_Andrea_)
- who, all the world knows, set himself to oppugn _Prignitz_ with great
- violence--proving it in his own way, first _logically_, and then by a
- series of stubborn facts, “That so far was _Prignitz_ from the truth, in
- affirming that the fancy begat the nose, that on the contrary--the nose
- begat the fancy.”
- --The learned suspected _Scroderus_ of an indecent sophism in this--and
- _Prignitz_ cried out aloud in the dispute, that _Scroderus_ had shifted
- the idea upon him----but _Scroderus_ went on, maintaining his thesis.
- My father was just balancing within himself, which of the two sides he
- should take in this affair; when _Ambrose Paræus_ decided it in a
- moment, and by overthrowing the systems, both of _Prignitz_ and
- _Scroderus_, drove my father out of both sides of the controversy at
- once.
- Be witness------
- I don’t acquaint the learned reader--in saying it, I mention it only to
- shew the learned, I know the fact myself------
- That this _Ambrose Paræus_ was chief surgeon and nose-mender to
- _Francis_ the ninth of _France_, and in high credit with him and the two
- preceding, or succeeding kings (I know not which)--and that, except in
- the slip he made in his story of _Taliacotius’s_ noses, and his manner
- of setting them on--he was esteemed by the whole college of physicians
- at that time, as more knowing in matters of noses, than any one who had
- ever taken them in hand.
- Now _Ambrose Paræus_ convinced my father, that the true and efficient
- cause of what had engaged so much the attention of the world, and upon
- which _Prignitz_ and _Scroderus_ had wasted so much learning and fine
- parts----was neither this nor that----but that the length and goodness
- of the nose was owing simply to the softness and flaccidity in the
- nurse’s breast------as the flatness and shortness of _puisne_ noses was
- to the firmness and elastic repulsion of the same organ of nutrition in
- the hale and lively--which, tho’ happy for the woman, was the undoing of
- the child, inasmuch as his nose was so snubb’d, so rebuff’d, so rebated,
- and so refrigerated thereby, as never to arrive _ad mensuram suam
- legitimam_; ----but that in case of the flaccidity and softness of the
- nurse or mother’s breast--by sinking into it, quoth _Paræus_, as into so
- much butter, the nose was comforted, nourish’d, plump’d up, refresh’d,
- refocillated, and set a growing for ever.
- I have but two things to observe of _Paræus_; first, That he proves and
- explains all this with the utmost chastity and decorum of expression:
- --for which may his soul for ever rest in peace!
- And, secondly, that besides the systems of _Prignitz_ and _Scroderus_,
- which _Ambrose Paræus_ his hypothesis effectually overthrew--it
- overthrew at the same time the system of peace and harmony of our
- family; and for three days together, not only embroiled matters between
- my father and my mother, but turn’d likewise the whole house and
- everything in it, except my uncle _Toby_, quite upside down.
- Such a ridiculous tale of a dispute between a man and his wife, never
- surely in any age or country got vent through the key-hole of a
- street-door.
- My mother, you must know------but I have fifty things more necessary to
- let you know first ----I have a hundred difficulties which I have
- promised to clear up, and a thousand distresses and domestick
- misadventures crowding in upon me thick and threefold, one upon the neck
- of another. A cow broke in (to-morrow morning) to my uncle _Toby’s_
- fortifications, and eat up two rations and a half of dried grass,
- tearing up the sods with it, which faced his horn-work and covered way.
- ----_Trim_ insists upon being tried by a court-martial--the cow to be
- shot--_Slop_ to be _crucifix’d_--myself to be _tristram’d_ and at my
- very baptism made a martyr of; ----poor unhappy devils that we all are!
- ----I want swaddling------but there is no time to be lost in
- exclamations ------I have left my father lying across his bed, and my
- uncle _Toby_ in his old fringed chair, sitting beside him, and promised
- I would go back to them in half an hour; and five-and-thirty minutes are
- laps’d already. ------Of all the perplexities a mortal author was ever
- seen in----this certainly is the greatest, for I have _Hafen
- Slawkenbergius’s_ folio, Sir, to finish----a dialogue between my father
- and my uncle _Toby_, upon the solution of _Prignitz_, _Scroderus_,
- _Ambrose Paræus_, _Ponocrates_, and _Grangousier_ to relate--a tale out
- of _Slawkenbergius_ to translate, and all this in five minutes less than
- no time at all; ------such a head! --would to Heaven my enemies only saw
- the inside of it!
- CHAPTER XXXIX
- There was not any one scene more entertaining in our family--and to do
- it justice in this point; ----and I here put off my cap and lay it upon
- the table close beside my ink-horn, on purpose to make my declaration to
- the world concerning this one article the more solemn----that I believe
- in my soul (unless my love and partiality to my understanding blinds me)
- the hand of the supreme Maker and first Designer of all things never
- made or put a family together (in that period at least of it which I
- have sat down to write the story of)----where the characters of it were
- cast or contrasted with so dramatick a felicity as ours was, for this
- end; or in which the capacities of affording such exquisite scenes, and
- the powers of shifting them perpetually from morning to night, were
- lodged and intrusted with so unlimited a confidence, as in the SHANDY
- FAMILY.
- Not any one of these was more diverting, I say, in this whimsical
- theatre of ours----than what frequently arose out of this self-same
- chapter of long noses------especially when my father’s imagination was
- heated with the enquiry, and nothing would serve him but to heat my
- uncle _Toby’s_ too.
- My uncle _Toby_ would give my father all possible fair play in this
- attempt; and with infinite patience would sit smoaking his pipe for
- whole hours together, whilst my father was practising upon his head, and
- trying every accessible avenue to drive _Prignitz_ and _Scroderus’s_
- solutions into it.
- Whether they were above my uncle _Toby’s_ reason------or contrary to
- it------or that his brain was like _damp_ timber, and no spark could
- possibly take hold----or that it was so full of saps, mines, blinds,
- curtins, and such military disqualifications to his seeing clearly into
- _Prignitz_ and _Scroderus’s_ doctrines ----I say not--let
- schoolmen--scullions, anatomists, and engineers, fight for it among
- themselves----
- ’Twas some misfortune, I make no doubt, in this affair, that my father
- had every word of it to translate for the benefit of my uncle _Toby_,
- and render out of _Slawkenbergius’s_ _Latin_, of which, as he was no
- great master, his translation was not always of the purest----and
- generally least so where ’twas most wanted. --This naturally open’d a
- door to a second misfortune; ----that in the warmer paroxysms of his
- zeal to open my uncle _Toby’s_ eyes------my father’s ideas ran on as
- much faster than the translation, as the translation outmoved my uncle
- _Toby’s_------ neither the one or the other added much to the
- perspicuity of my father’s lecture.
- CHAPTER XL
- The gift of ratiocination and making syllogisms ----I mean in man--for in
- superior classes of being, such as angels and spirits----’tis all done,
- may it please your worships, as they tell me, by INTUITION; --and beings
- inferior, as your worships all know----syllogize by their noses: though
- there is an island swimming in the sea (though not altogether at its
- ease) whose inhabitants, if my intelligence deceives me not, are so
- wonderfully gifted, as to syllogize after the same fashion, and
- oft-times to make very well out too: ------but that’s neither here nor
- there------
- The gift of doing it as it should be, amongst us, or--the great and
- principal act of ratiocination in man, as logicians tell us, is the
- finding out the agreement or disagreement of two ideas one with another,
- by the intervention of a third (called the _medius terminus_); just as a
- man, as _Locke_ well observes, by a yard, finds two men’s
- nine-pin-alleys to be of the same length, which could not be brought
- together, to measure their equality, by _juxta-position_.
- Had the same great reasoner looked on, as my father illustrated his
- systems of noses, and observed my uncle _Toby’s_ deportment--what great
- attention he gave to every word--and as oft as he took his pipe from his
- mouth, with what wonderful seriousness he contemplated the length of
- it----surveying it transversely as he held it betwixt his finger and his
- thumb------then fore-right------then this way, and then that, in all its
- possible directions and foreshortenings------he would have concluded my
- uncle _Toby_ had got hold of the _medius terminus_, and was syllogizing
- and measuring with it the truth of each hypothesis of long noses, in
- order, as my father laid them before him. This, by the bye, was more
- than my father wanted----his aim in all the pains he was at in these
- philosophick lectures--was to enable my uncle _Toby_ not to
- _discuss_----but _comprehend_----to _hold_ the grains and scruples of
- learning----not to _weigh_ them. ----My uncle _Toby_, as you will read
- in the next chapter, did neither the one or the other.
- CHAPTER XLI
- ’Tis a pity, cried my father one winter’s night, after a three hours’
- painful translation of _Slawkenbergius_----’tis a pity, cried my father,
- putting my mother’s thread-paper into the book for a mark, as he
- spoke----that truth, brother _Toby_, should shut herself up in such
- impregnable fastnesses, and be so obstinate as not to surrender herself
- sometimes up upon the closest siege.----
- Now it happened then, as indeed it had often done before, that my uncle
- _Toby’s_ fancy, during the time of my father’s explanation of _Prignitz_
- to him------having nothing to stay it there, had taken a short flight to
- the bowling-green! ------his body might as well have taken a turn there
- too--so that with all the semblance of a deep school-man intent upon the
- _medius terminus_------my uncle _Toby_ was in fact as ignorant of the
- whole lecture, and all its pros and cons, as if my father had been
- translating _Hafen Slawkenbergius_ from the _Latin_ tongue into the
- _Cherokee_. But the word _siege_, like a talismanic power, in my
- father’s metaphor, wafting back my uncle _Toby’s_ fancy, quick as a note
- could follow the touch--he open’d his ears----and my father observing
- that he took his pipe out of his mouth, and shuffled his chair nearer
- the table, as with a desire to profit--my father with great pleasure
- began his sentence again----changing only the plan, and dropping the
- metaphor of the siege of it, to keep clear of some dangers my father
- apprehended from it.
- ’Tis a pity, said my father, that truth can only be on one side, brother
- _Toby_------considering what ingenuity these learned men have all shewn
- in their solutions of noses. ----Can noses be dissolved? replied my
- uncle _Toby_.
- ------My father thrust back his chair------rose up--put on his
- hat------took four long strides to the door------jerked it
- open----thrust his head half way out----shut the door again----took no
- notice of the bad hinge----returned to the table--pluck’d my mother’s
- thread-paper out of _Slawkenbergius’s_ book------went hastily to his
- bureau--walked slowly back--twisted my mother’s thread-paper about his
- thumb--unbutton’d his waistcoat--threw my mother’s thread-paper into the
- fire----bit her sattin pin-cushion in two, fill’d his mouth with
- bran--confounded it; --but mark! --the oath of confusion was levell’d at
- my uncle _Toby’s_ brain--which was e’en confused enough already----the
- curse came charged only with the bran--the bran, may it please your
- honours, was no more than powder to the ball.
- ’Twas well my father’s passions lasted not long; for so long as they did
- last, they led him a busy life on’t; and it is one of the most
- unaccountable problems that ever I met with in my observations of human
- nature, that nothing should prove my father’s mettle so much, or make
- his passions go off so like gunpowder, as the unexpected strokes his
- science met with from the quaint simplicity of my uncle _Toby’s_
- questions. ----Had ten dozen of hornets stung him behind in so many
- different places all at one time--he could not have exerted more
- mechanical functions in fewer seconds------or started half so much, as
- with one single _quære_ of three words unseasonably popping in full upon
- him in his hobby-horsical career.
- ’Twas all one to my uncle _Toby_------he smoaked his pipe on with
- unvaried composure----his heart never intended offence to his
- brother--and as his head could seldom find out where the sting of it
- lay----he always gave my father the credit of cooling by himself. ----He
- was five minutes and thirty-five seconds about it in the present case.
- By all that’s good! said my father, swearing, as he came to himself, and
- taking the oath out of _Ernulphus’s_ digest of curses----(though to do
- my father justice it was a fault (as he told Dr. _Slop_ in the affair of
- _Ernulphus_) which he as seldom committed as any man upon earth) ------By
- all that’s good and great! brother _Toby_, said my father, if it was not
- for the aids of philosophy, which befriend one so much as they do--you
- would put a man beside all temper. ----Why, by the _solutions_ of noses,
- of which I was telling you, I meant, as you might have known, had you
- favoured me with one grain of attention, the various accounts which
- learned men of different kinds of knowledge have given the world of the
- causes of short and long noses. ----There is no cause but one, replied
- my uncle _Toby_----why one man’s nose is longer than another’s, but
- because that God pleases to have it so. ----That is _Grangousier’s_
- solution, said my father. --’Tis he, continued my uncle _Toby_, looking
- up, and not regarding my father’s interruption, who makes us all, and
- frames and puts us together in such forms and proportions, and for such
- ends, as is agreeable to his infinite wisdom. ----’Tis a pious account,
- cried my father, but not philosophical----there is more religion in it
- than sound science. ’Twas no inconsistent part of my uncle _Toby’s_
- character----that he feared God, and reverenced religion. ----So the
- moment my father finished his remark----my uncle _Toby_ fell a whistling
- _Lillabullero_ with more zeal (though more out of tune) than usual.--
- What is become of my wife’s thread-paper?
- CHAPTER XLII
- No matter--as an appendage to seamstressy, the thread-paper might be of
- some consequence to my mother--of none to my father, as a mark in
- _Slawkenbergius_. _Slawkenbergius_ in every page of him was a rich
- treasure of inexhaustible knowledge to my father--he could not open him
- amiss; and he would often say in closing the book, that if all the arts
- and sciences in the world, with the books which treated of them, were
- lost--should the wisdom and policies of governments, he would say,
- through disuse, ever happen to be forgot, and all that statesmen had
- wrote or caused to be written, upon the strong or the weak sides of
- courts and kingdoms, should they be forgot also--and _Slawkenbergius_
- only left----there would be enough in him in all conscience, he would
- say, to set the world a-going again. A treasure therefore was he indeed!
- an institute of all that was necessary to be known of noses, and
- everything else--at _matin_, noon, and vespers was _Hafen
- Slawkenbergius_ his recreation and delight: ’twas for ever in his
- hands----you would have sworn, Sir, it had been a canon’s
- prayer-book--so worn, so glazed, so contrited and attrited was it with
- fingers and with thumbs in all its parts, from one end even unto the
- other.
- I am not such a bigot to _Slawkenbergius_ as my father; ----there is a
- fund in him, no doubt: but in my opinion, the best, I don’t say the most
- profitable, but the most amusing part of _Hafen Slawkenbergius_, is his
- tales------and, considering he was a _German_, many of them told not
- without fancy: ------these take up his second book, containing nearly
- one half of his folio, and are comprehended in ten decads, each decad
- containing ten tales ------Philosophy is not built upon tales; and
- therefore ’twas certainly wrong in _Slawkenbergius_ to send them into
- the world by that name! ----there are a few of them in his eighth,
- ninth, and tenth decads, which I own seem rather playful and sportive,
- than speculative--but in general they are to be looked upon by the
- learned as a detail of so many independent facts, all of them turning
- round somehow or other upon the main hinges of his subject, and
- collected by him with great fidelity, and added to his work as so many
- illustrations upon the doctrines of noses.
- As we have leisure enough upon our hands----if you give me leave, madam,
- I’ll tell you the ninth tale of his tenth decad.
- [Transcriber’s Note:
- Like the Excommunication, the following section was printed on facing
- pages. For this e-text it is given in consecutive paragraphs, with the
- Latin text inset.]
- BOOK IV
- SLAWKENBERGII FABELLA[4.1]
- SLAWKENBERGIUS’S TALE
- _Vespera quâdam frigidulâ, posteriori in parte mensis _Augusti_,
- peregrinus, mulo fusco colore insidens, manticâ a tergo, paucis
- indusiis, binis calceis, braccisque sericis coccineis repleta,
- _Argentoratum_ ingressus est._
- It was one cool refreshing evening, at the close of a very sultry day,
- in the latter end of the month of _August_, when a stranger, mounted
- upon a dark mule, with a small cloak-bag behind him, containing a few
- shirts, a pair of shoes, and a crimson-sattin pair of breeches, entered
- the town of _Strasburg_.
- _Militi eum percontanti, quum portas intraret dixit, se apud
- Nasorum promontorium fuisse, Francofurtum proficisci, et
- Argentoratum, transitu ad fines Sarmatiæ mensis intervallo,
- reversurum._
- He told the centinel, who questioned him as he entered the gates, that
- he had been at the Promontory of NOSES--was going on to
- _Frankfort_----and should be back again at _Strasburg_ that day month,
- in his way to the borders of _Crim Tartary_.
- _Miles peregrini in faciem suspexit ----Dî boni, nova forma nasi!_
- The centinel looked up into the stranger’s face----he never saw such a
- Nose in his life!
- _At multum mihi profuit, inquit peregrinus, carpum amento extrahens,
- e quo pependit acinaces: Loculo manum inseruit; et magnâ cum
- urbanitate, pilei parte anteriore tactâ manu sinistrâ, ut extendit
- dextram, militi florinum dedit et processit._
- --I have made a very good venture of it, quoth the stranger--so slipping
- his wrist out of the loop of a black ribbon, to which a short scymetar
- was hung, he put his hand into his pocket, and with great courtesy
- touching the fore part of his cap with his left hand, as he extended his
- right----he put a florin into the centinel’s hand, and passed on.
- _Dolet mihi, ait miles, tympanistam nanum et valgum alloquens, virum
- adeo urbanum vaginam perdidisse: itinerari haud poterit nudâ
- acinaci; neque vaginam toto _Argentorato_, habilem
- inveniet. ------Nullam unquam habui, respondit peregrinus
- respiciens------seque comiter inclinans--hoc more gesto, nudam
- acinacem elevans, mulo lentò progrediente, ut nasum tueri possim._
- It grieves me, said the centinel, speaking to a little dwarfish
- bandy-legg’d drummer, that so courteous a soul should have lost his
- scabbard------he cannot travel without one to his scymetar, and will not
- be able to get a scabbard to fit it in all _Strasburg_. ----I never had
- one, replied the stranger, looking back to the centinel, and putting his
- hand up to his cap as he spoke ----I carry it, continued he,
- thus----holding up his naked scymetar, his mule moving on slowly all the
- time--on purpose to defend my nose.
- _Non immerito, benigne peregrine, respondit miles._
- It is well worth it, gentle stranger, replied the centinel.
- _Nihili æstimo, ait ille tympanista, e pergamenâ factitius est._
- ----’Tis not worth a single stiver, said the bandy-legg’d
- drummer----’tis a nose of parchment.
- _Prout christianus sum, inquit miles, nasus ille, ni sexties major
- sit, meo esset conformis._
- As I am a true catholic--except that it is six times as big--’tis a
- nose, said the centinel, like my own.
- _Crepitare audivi ait tympanista._
- --I heard it crackle, said the drummer.
- _Mehercule! sanguinem emisit, respondit miles._
- By dunder, said the centinel, I saw it bleed.
- _Miseret me, inquit tympanista, qui non ambo tetigimus!_
- What a pity, cried the bandy-legg’d drummer, we did not both touch it!
- _Eodem temporis puncto, quo hæc res argumentata fuit inter militem
- et tympanistam, disceptabatur ibidem tubicine et uxore suâ qui tunc
- accesserunt, et peregrino prætereunte, restiterunt._
- At the very time that this dispute was maintaining by the centinel and
- the drummer--was the same point debating betwixt a trumpeter and a
- trumpeter’s wife, who were just then coming up, and had stopped to see
- the stranger pass by.
- _Quantus nasus! æque longus est, ait tubicina, ac tuba._
- _Benedicity!_ ------What a nose! ’tis as long, said the trumpeter’s wife,
- as a trumpet.
- _Et ex eodem metallo, ait tubicen, velut sternutamento audias._
- And of the same metal, said the trumpeter, as you hear by its sneezing.
- _Tantum abest, respondit illa, quod fistulam dulcedine vincit._
- ’Tis as soft as a flute, said she.
- _Æneus est, ait tubicen._
- --’Tis brass, said the trumpeter.
- _Nequaquam, respondit uxor._
- --’Tis a pudding’s end, said his wife.
- _Rursum affirmo, ait tubicen, quod æneus est._
- I tell thee again, said the trumpeter, ’tis a brazen nose.
- _Rem penitus explorabo; prius, enim digito tangam, ait uxor, quam
- dormivero._
- I’ll know the bottom of it, said the trumpeter’s wife, for I will touch
- it with my finger before I sleep.
- _Mulus peregrini gradu lento progressus est, ut unumquodque verbum
- controversiæ, non tantum inter militem et tympanistam, verum etiam
- inter tubicinem et uxorem ejus, audiret._
- The stranger’s mule moved on at so slow a rate, that he heard every word
- of the dispute, not only betwixt the centinel and the drummer, but
- betwixt the trumpeter and trumpeter’s wife.
- _Nequaquam, ait ille, in muli collum fræna demittens, et manibus
- ambabus in pectus positis, (mulo lentè progrediente) nequaquam, ait
- ille respiciens, non necesse est ut res isthæc dilucidata foret.
- Minime gentium! meus nasus nunquam tangetur, dum spiritus hos reget
- artus --Ad quid agendum? ait uxor burgomagistri._
- No! said he, dropping his reins upon his mule’s neck, and laying both
- his hands upon his breast, the one over the other, in a saint-like
- position (his mule going on easily all the time) No! said he, looking
- up --I am not such a debtor to the world----slandered and disappointed as
- I have been--as to give it that conviction----no! said he, my nose shall
- never be touched whilst Heaven gives me strength ----To do what? said a
- burgomaster’s wife.
- _Peregrinus illi non respondit. Votum faciebat tunc temporis sancto
- Nicolao; quo facto, in sinum dextrum inserens, e quâ negligenter
- pependit acinaces, lento gradu processit per plateam Argentorati
- latam quæ ad diversorium templo ex adversum ducit._
- The stranger took no notice of the burgomaster’s wife------he was making
- a vow to _Saint Nicolas_; which done, having uncrossed his arms with the
- same solemnity with which he crossed them, he took up the reins of his
- bridle with his left hand, and putting his right hand into his bosom,
- with his scymetar hanging loosely to the wrist of it, he rode on, as
- slowly as one foot of the mule could follow another, thro’ the principal
- streets of _Strasburg_, till chance brought him to the great inn in the
- market-place over against the church.
- _Peregrinus mulo descendens stabulo includi, et manticam inferri
- jussit: quâ apertâ et coccineis sericis femoralibus extractis cum
- argenteo laciniato Περιζώματα, his sese induit, statimque, acinaci
- in manu, ad forum deambulavit._
- The moment the stranger alighted, he ordered his mule to be led into the
- stable, and his cloak-bag to be brought in; then opening, and taking out
- of it his crimson-sattin breeches, with a silver-fringed--(appendage to
- them, which I dare not translate)--he put his breeches, with his fringed
- codpiece on, and forthwith, with his short scymetar in his hand, walked
- out on to the grand parade.
- _Quod ubi peregrinus esset ingressus, uxorem tubicinis obviam euntem
- aspicit; illico cursum flectit, metuens ne nasus suus exploraretur,
- atque ad diversorium regressus est--exuit se vestibus; braccas
- coccineas sericas manticæ imposuit mulumque educi jussit._
- The stranger had just taken three turns upon the parade, when he
- perceived the trumpeter’s wife at the opposite side of it--so turning
- short, in pain lest his nose should be attempted, he instantly went back
- to his inn--undressed himself, packed up his crimson-sattin breeches,
- &c., in his cloak-bag, and called for his mule.
- _Francofurtum proficiscor, ait ille, et Argentoratum quatuor abhinc
- hebdomadis revertar._
- I am going forwards, said the stranger, for _Frankfort_----and shall be
- back at _Strasburg_ this day month.
- _Bene curasti hoc jumentum? (ait) muli faciem manu demulcens--me,
- manticamque mean, plus sexcentis mille passibus portavit._
- I hope, continued the stranger, stroking down the face of his mule with
- his left hand as he was going to mount it, that you have been kind to
- this faithful slave of mine--it has carried me and my cloak-bag,
- continued he, tapping the mule’s back, above six hundred leagues.
- _Longa via est! respondet hospes, nisi plurimum esset
- negoti. --Enimvero, ait peregrinus, a Nasorum promontorio redii, et
- nasum speciosissimum, egregiosissimumque quem unquam quisquam
- sortitus est, acquisivi._
- ----’Tis a long journey, Sir, replied the master of the inn----unless a
- man has great business. ----Tut! tut! said the stranger, I have been at
- the Promontory of Noses; and have got me one of the goodliest, thank
- Heaven, that ever fell to a single man’s lot.
- _Dum peregrinus hanc miram rationem de seipso reddit, hospes et uxor
- ejus, oculis intentis, peregrini nasum contemplantur ----Per sanctos
- sanctasque omnes, ait hospitis uxor, nasis duodecim maximis in toto
- Argentorato major est! --estne, ait illa mariti in aurem insusurrans,
- nonne est nasus prægrandis?_
- Whilst the stranger was giving this odd account of himself, the master
- of the inn and his wife kept both their eyes fixed full upon the
- stranger’s nose ----By saint _Radagunda_, said the inn-keeper’s wife to
- herself, there is more of it than in any dozen of the largest noses put
- together in all _Strasburg!_ is it not, said she, whispering her husband
- in his ear, is it not a noble nose?
- _Dolus inest, anime mî, ait hospes--nasus est falsus._
- ’Tis an imposture, my dear, said the master of the inn----’tis a false
- nose.
- _Verus est, respondit uxor----_
- ’Tis a true nose, said his wife.
- _Ex abiete factus est, ait ille, terebinthinum olet------_
- ’Tis made of fir-tree, said he, I smell the turpentine.------
- _Carbunculus inest, ait uxor._
- There’s a pimple on it, said she.
- _Mortuus est nasus, respondit hospes._
- ’Tis a dead nose, replied the inn-keeper.
- _Vivus est ait illa, --et si ipsa vivam tangam._
- ’Tis a live nose, and if I am alive myself, said the inn-keeper’s wife,
- I will touch it.
- _Votum feci sancto Nicolao, ait peregrinus, nasum meum intactum fore
- usque ad --Quodnam tempus? illico respondit illa._
- I have made a vow to saint _Nicolas_ this day, said the stranger, that
- my nose shall not be touched till --Here the stranger, suspending his
- voice, looked up. ------Till when? said she hastily.
- _Minimo tangetur, inquit ille (manibus in pectus compositis) usque
- ad illam horam ------Quam horam? ait illa ------Nullam, respondit
- peregrinus, donec pervenio ad --Quem locum, --obsecro? ait
- illa ----Peregrinus nil respondens mulo conscenso discessit._
- It never shall be touched, said he, clasping his hands and bringing them
- close to his breast, till that hour --What hour? cried the inn-keeper’s
- wife. --Never! --never! said the stranger, never till I am got --For
- Heaven’s sake, into what place? said she ------The stranger rode away
- without saying a word.
- The stranger had not got half a league on his way towards _Frankfort_
- before all the city of _Strasburg_ was in an uproar about his nose. The
- _Compline_ bells were just ringing to call the _Strasburgers_ to their
- devotions, and shut up the duties of the day in prayer: --no soul in all
- _Strasburg_ heard ’em--the city was like a swarm of bees------men,
- women, and children (the _Compline_ bells tinkling all the time) flying
- here and there--in at one door, out at another----this way and that
- way--long ways and cross ways--up one street, down another street----in
- at this alley, out of that------did you see it? did you see it? did you
- see it? O! did you see it? ------who saw it? who did see it? for mercy’s
- sake, who saw it?
- Alack o’day! I was at vespers! --I was washing, I was starching, I was
- scouring, I was quilting ----God help me! I never saw it ----I never
- touch’d it! ----would I had been a centinel, a bandy-legg’d drummer,
- a trumpeter, a trumpeter’s wife, was the general cry and lamentation in
- every street and corner of _Strasburg_.
- Whilst all this confusion and disorder triumphed throughout the great
- city of _Strasburg_, was the courteous stranger going on as gently upon
- his mule in his way to _Frankfort_, as if he had no concern at all in
- the affair------talking all the way he rode in broken sentences,
- sometimes to his mule--sometimes to himself--sometimes to his Julia.
- O Julia, my lovely Julia! --nay, I cannot stop to let thee bite that
- thistle----that ever the suspected tongue of a rival should have robbed
- me of enjoyment when I was upon the point of tasting it.----
- ----Pugh! --’tis nothing but a thistle--never mind it----thou shalt have
- a better supper at night.
- ----Banish’d from my country----my friends----from thee.----
- Poor devil, thou’rt sadly tired with thy journey! ----come--get on a
- little faster--there’s nothing in my cloak-bag but two shirts----a
- crimson-sattin pair of breeches, and a fringed ----Dear Julia.
- ----But why to _Frankfort_--is it that there is a hand unfelt, which
- secretly is conducting me through these meanders and unsuspected tracts?
- ----Stumbling! by saint _Nicolas!_ every step--why, at this rate we
- shall be all night in getting in------
- ----To happiness----or am I to be the sport of fortune and slander--
- destined to be driven forth unconvicted----unheard----untouch’d----if
- so, why did I not stay at _Strasburg_, where justice--but I had sworn!
- Come, thou shalt drink--to _St. Nicolas_ --O Julia! ------What dost thou
- prick up thy ears at? ----’tis nothing but a man, &c.
- The stranger rode on communing in this manner with his mule and
- Julia--till he arrived at his inn, where, as soon as he arrived, he
- alighted------saw his mule, as he had promised it, taken good care
- of----took off his cloak-bag, with his crimson-sattin breeches, &c., in
- it--called for an omelet to his supper, went to his bed about twelve
- o’clock, and in five minutes fell fast asleep.
- It was about the same hour when the tumult in _Strasburg_ being abated
- for that night, --the _Strasburgers_ had all got quietly into their
- beds--but not like the stranger, for the rest either of their minds or
- bodies; queen _Mab_, like an elf as she was, had taken the stranger’s
- nose, and without reduction of its bulk, had that night been at the
- pains of slitting and dividing it into as many noses of different cuts
- and fashions, as there were heads in _Strasburg_ to hold them. The
- abbess of _Quedlingberg_, who with the four great dignitaries of her
- chapter, the prioress, the deaness, the sub-chantress, and senior
- canoness, had that week come to _Strasburg_ to consult the university
- upon a case of conscience relating to their placket-holes------was ill
- all the night.
- The courteous stranger’s nose had got perched upon the top of the pineal
- gland of her brain, and made such rousing work in the fancies of the
- four great dignitaries of her chapter, they could not get a wink of
- sleep the whole night thro’ for it----there was no keeping a limb still
- amongst them----in short, they got up like so many ghosts.
- The penitentiaries of the third order of saint _Francis_----the nuns
- of mount _Calvary_----the _Præmonstratenses_----the _Clunienses_[4.2]
- ----the _Carthusians_, and all the severer orders of nuns who lay that
- night in blankets or hair-cloth, were still in a worse condition than
- the abbess of _Quedlingberg_--by tumbling and tossing, and tossing and
- tumbling from one side of their beds to the other the whole night
- long----the several sisterhoods had scratch’d and maul’d themselves all
- to death----they got out of their beds almost flay’d alive--everybody
- thought saint _Antony_ had visited them for probation with his fire----
- they had never once, in short, shut their eyes the whole night long from
- vespers to matins.
- The nuns of saint _Ursula_ acted the wisest--they never attempted to go
- to bed at all.
- The dean of _Strasburg_, the prebendaries, the capitulars and
- domiciliars (capitularly assembled in the morning to consider the case
- of butter’d buns) all wished they had followed the nuns of saint
- _Ursula’s_ example.------
- In the hurry and confusion everything had been in the night before, the
- bakers had all forgot to lay their leaven--there were no butter’d buns
- to be had for breakfast in all _Strasburg_--the whole close of the
- cathedral was in one eternal commotion----such a cause of restlessness
- and disquietude, and such a zealous inquiry into the cause of that
- restlessness, had never happened in _Strasburg_, since _Martin Luther_,
- with his doctrines, had turned the city upside down.
- If the stranger’s nose took this liberty of thrusting himself thus into
- the dishes[4.3] of religious orders, &c., what a carnival did his nose
- make of it, in those of the laity! --’tis more than my pen, worn to the
- stump as it is, has power to describe; tho’ I acknowledge, (_cries
- _Slawkenbergius_, with more gaiety of thought than I could have expected
- from him_) that there is many a good simile now subsisting in the world
- which might give my countrymen some idea of it; but at the close of such
- a folio as this, wrote for their sakes, and in which I have spent the
- greatest part of my life----tho’ I own to them the simile is in being,
- yet would it not be unreasonable in them to expect I should have either
- time or inclination to search for it? Let it suffice to say, that the
- riot and disorder it occasioned in the _Strasburgers’_ fantasies was so
- general--such an overpowering mastership had it got of all the faculties
- of the _Strasburgers’_ minds--so many strange things, with equal
- confidence on all sides, and with equal eloquence in all places, were
- spoken and sworn to concerning it, that turned the whole stream of all
- discourse and wonder towards it--every soul, good and bad--rich and
- poor--learned and unlearned----doctor and student----mistress and
- maid----gentle and simple----nun’s flesh and woman’s flesh, in
- _Strasburg_ spent their time in hearing tidings about it--every eye in
- _Strasburg_ languished to see it----every finger----every thumb in
- _Strasburg_ burned to touch it.
- Now what might add, if anything may be thought necessary to add, to so
- vehement a desire--was this, that the centinel, the bandy-legg’d
- drummer, the trumpeter, the trumpeter’s wife, the burgomaster’s widow,
- the master of the inn, and the master of the inn’s wife, how widely
- soever they all differed every one from another in their testimonies and
- description of the stranger’s nose--they all agreed together in two
- points--namely, that he was gone to _Frankfort_, and would not return to
- _Strasburg_ till that day month; and secondly, whether his nose was true
- or false, that the stranger himself was one of the most perfect paragons
- of beauty--the finest-made man--the most genteel! --the most generous of
- his purse--the most courteous in his carriage that had ever entered the
- gates of _Strasburg_--that as he rode, with scymetar slung loosely to
- his wrist, thro’ the streets--and walked with his crimson-sattin
- breeches across the parade--’twas with so sweet an air of careless
- modesty, and so manly withal----as would have put the heart in jeopardy
- (had his nose not stood in his way) of every virgin who had cast her
- eyes upon him.
- I call not upon that heart which is a stranger to the throbs and
- yearnings of curiosity, so excited, to justify the abbess of
- _Quedlingberg_, the prioress, the deaness, and sub-chantress, for
- sending at noon-day for the trumpeter’s wife: she went through the
- streets of _Strasburg_ with her husband’s trumpet in her hand, ----the
- best apparatus the straitness of the time would allow her, for the
- illustration of her theory--she staid no longer than three days.
- The centinel and bandy-legg’d drummer! ----nothing on this side of old
- _Athens_ could equal them! they read their lectures under the city-gates
- to comers and goers, with all the pomp of a _Chrysippus_ and a _Crantor_
- in their porticos.
- The master of the inn, with his ostler on his left-hand, read his also
- in the same stile--under the portico or gateway of his stable-yard--his
- wife, hers more privately in a back room: all flocked to their lectures;
- not promiscuously--but to this or that, as is ever the way, as faith and
- credulity marshal’d them----in a word, each _Strasburger_ came crouding
- for intelligence----and every _Strasburger_ had the intelligence he
- wanted.
- ’Tis worth remarking, for the benefit of all demonstrators in natural
- philosophy, &c., that as soon as the trumpeter’s wife had finished the
- abbess of _Quedlingberg’s_ private lecture, and had begun to read in
- public, which she did upon a stool in the middle of the great parade,
- ----she incommoded the other demonstrators mainly, by gaining
- incontinently the most fashionable part of the city of _Strasburg_ for
- her auditory ----But when a demonstrator in philosophy (cries
- _Slawkenbergius_) has a _trumpet_ for an apparatus, pray what rival in
- science can pretend to be heard besides him?
- Whilst the unlearned, thro’ these conduits of intelligence, were all
- busied in getting down to the bottom of the well, where TRUTH keeps her
- little court------were the learned in their way as busy in pumping her
- up thro’ the conduits of dialect induction----they concerned themselves
- not with facts------they reasoned------
- Not one profession had thrown more light upon this subject than the
- Faculty--had not all their disputes about it run into the affair of
- _Wens_ and œdematous swellings, they could not keep clear of them for
- their bloods and souls------the stranger’s nose had nothing to do either
- with wens or œdematous swellings.
- It was demonstrated however very satisfactorily, that such a ponderous
- mass of heterogeneous matter could not be congested and conglomerated to
- the nose, whilst the infant was _in Utero_, without destroying the
- statical balance of the fœtus, and throwing it plump upon its head nine
- months before the time.------
- ----The opponents granted the theory----they denied the consequences.
- And if a suitable provision of veins, arteries, &c., said they, was not
- laid in, for the due nourishment of such a nose, in the very first
- stamina and rudiments of its formation, before it came into the world
- (bating the case of Wens) it could not regularly grow and be sustained
- afterwards.
- This was all answered by a dissertation upon nutriment, and the effect
- which nutriment had in extending the vessels, and in the increase and
- prolongation of the muscular parts of the greatest growth and expansion
- imaginable --In the triumph of which theory, they went so far as to
- affirm, that there was no cause in nature, why a nose might not grow to
- the size of the man himself.
- The respondents satisfied the world this event could never happen to
- them so long as a man had but one stomach and one pair of lungs ----For
- the stomach, said they, being the only organ destined for the reception
- of food, and turning it into chyle--and the lungs the only engine of
- sanguification--it could possibly work off no more, than what the
- appetite brought it: or admitting the possibility of a man’s overloading
- his stomach, nature had set bounds however to his lungs--the engine was
- of a determined size and strength, and could elaborate but a certain
- quantity in a given time------that is, it could produce just as much
- blood as was sufficient for one single man, and no more; so that, if
- there was as much nose as man----they proved a mortification must
- necessarily ensue; and forasmuch as there could not be a support for
- both, that the nose must either fall off from the man, or the man
- inevitably fall off from his nose.
- Nature accommodates herself to these emergencies, cried the
- opponents--else what do you say to the case of a whole stomach--a whole
- pair of lungs, and but _half_ a man, when both his legs have been
- unfortunately shot off?
- He dies of a plethora, said they--or must spit blood, and in a fortnight
- or three weeks go off in a consumption.------
- ----It happens otherwise--replied the opponents.----
- It ought not, said they.
- The more curious and intimate inquirers after nature and her doings,
- though they went hand in hand a good way together, yet they all divided
- about the nose at last, almost as much as the Faculty itself.
- They amicably laid it down, that there was a just and geometrical
- arrangement and proportion of the several parts of the human frame to
- its several destinations, offices, and functions which could not be
- transgressed but within certain limits--that nature, though she
- sported----she sported within a certain circle; --and they could not
- agree about the diameter of it.
- The logicians stuck much closer to the point before them than any of the
- classes of the literati; ------they began and ended with the word Nose;
- and had it not been for a _petitio principii_, which one of the ablest
- of them ran his head against in the beginning of the combat, the whole
- controversy had been settled at once.
- A nose, argued the logician, cannot bleed without blood--and not only
- blood--but blood circulating in it to supply the phænomenon with a
- succession of drops--(a stream being but a quicker succession of drops,
- that is included, said he). ----Now death, continued the logician, being
- nothing but the stagnation of the blood----
- I deny the definition ----Death is the separation of the soul from the
- body, said his antagonist ----Then we don’t agree about our weapons,
- said the logician --Then there is an end of the dispute, replied the
- antagonist.
- The civilians were still more concise: what they offered being more in
- the nature of a decree----than a dispute.
- Such a monstrous nose, said they, had it been a true nose, could not
- possibly have been suffered in civil society----and if false--to impose
- upon society with such false signs and tokens, was a still greater
- violation of its rights, and must have had still less mercy shewn it.
- The only objection to this was, that if it proved anything, it proved
- the stranger’s nose was neither true nor false.
- This left room for the controversy to go on. It was maintained by the
- advocates of the ecclesiastic court, that there was nothing to inhibit a
- decree, since the stranger _ex mero motu_ had confessed he had been at
- the Promontory of Noses, and had got one of the goodliest, &c. &c.
- ------To this it was answered, it was impossible there should be such a
- place as the Promontory of Noses, and the learned be ignorant where it
- lay. The commissary of the bishop of _Strasburg_ undertook the
- advocates, explained this matter in a treatise upon proverbial phrases,
- shewing them, that the Promontory of Noses was a mere allegorick
- expression, importing no more than that nature had given him a long
- nose: in proof of which, with great learning, he cited the underwritten
- authorities,[4.4] which had decided the point incontestably, had it not
- appeared that a dispute about some franchises of dean and chapter-lands
- had been determined by it nineteen years before.
- It happened ----I must not say unluckily for Truth, because they were
- giving her a lift another way in so doing; that the two universities of
- _Strasburg_----the _Lutheran_, founded in the year 1538 by _Jacobus
- Surmis_, counsellor of the senate, ----and the _Popish_, founded by
- _Leopold_, arch-duke of _Austria_, were, during all this time, employing
- the whole depth of their knowledge (except just what the affair of the
- abbess of _Quedlingberg’s_ placket-holes required)----in determining the
- point of _Martin Luther’s_ damnation.
- The _Popish_ doctors had undertaken to demonstrate _à priori_, that from
- the necessary influence of the planets on the twenty-second day of
- _October_ 1483------when the moon was in the twelfth house, _Jupiter_,
- _Mars_, and _Venus_ in the third, the _Sun_, _Saturn_, and _Mercury_,
- all got together in the fourth--that he must in course, and unavoidably,
- be a damn’d man--and that his doctrines, by a direct corollary, must be
- damn’d doctrines too.
- By inspection into his horoscope, where five planets were in coition all
- at once with Scorpio[4.5] (in reading this my father would always shake
- his head) in the ninth house, which the _Arabians_ allotted to
- religion--it appeared that _Martin Luther_ did not care one stiver about
- the matter------and that from the horoscope directed to the conjunction
- of _Mars_--they made it plain likewise he must die cursing and
- blaspheming----with the blast of which his soul (being steep’d in guilt)
- sailed before the wind, in the lake of hell-fire.
- The little objection of the _Lutheran_ doctors to this, was, that it
- must certainly be the soul of another man, born _Oct._ 22, 83, which was
- forced to sail down before the wind in that manner--inasmuch as it
- appeared from the register of _Islaben_ in the county of _Mansfelt_,
- that _Luther_ was not born in the year 1483, but in 84; and not on the
- 22d day of _October_, but on the 10th of _November_, the eve of
- _Martinmas_ day, from whence he had the name of _Martin_.
- [----I must break off my translation for a moment; for if I did not,
- I know I should no more be able to shut my eyes in bed, than the abbess
- of _Quedlingberg_ ----It is to tell the reader, that my father never
- read this passage of _Slawkenbergius_ to my uncle _Toby_, but with
- triumph------not over my uncle _Toby_, for he never opposed him in
- it----but over the whole world.
- --Now you see, brother _Toby_, he would say, looking up, “that christian
- names are not such indifferent things;” ------had _Luther_ here been
- called by any other name but Martin, he would have been damn’d to all
- eternity ------Not that I look upon _Martin_, he would add, as a good
- name----far from it----’tis something better than a neutral, and but a
- little----yet little as it is, you see it was of some service to him.
- My father knew the weakness of this prop to his hypothesis, as well as
- the best logician could shew him----yet so strange is the weakness of
- man at the same time, as it fell in his way, he could not for his life
- but make use of it; and it was certainly for this reason, that though
- there are many stories in _Hafen Slawkenbergius’s_ Decads full as
- entertaining as this I am translating, yet there is not one amongst them
- which my father read over with half the delight------it flattered two of
- his strangest hypotheses together----his NAMES and his NOSES. ----I will
- be bold to say, he might have read all the books in the _Alexandrian_
- Library, had not fate taken other care of them, and not have met with a
- book or passage in one, which hit two such nails as these upon the head
- at one stroke.]
- The two universities of _Strasburg_ were hard tugging at this affair of
- _Luther’s_ navigation. The Protestant doctors had demonstrated, that he
- had not sailed right before the wind, as the Popish doctors had
- pretended; and as every one knew there was no sailing full in the teeth
- of it--they were going to settle, in case he had sailed, how many points
- he was off; whether _Martin_ had doubled the cape, or had fallen upon a
- lee-shore; and no doubt, as it was an enquiry of much edification, at
- least to those who understood this sort of NAVIGATION, they had gone on
- with it in spite of the size of the stranger’s nose, had not the size of
- the stranger’s nose drawn off the attention of the world from what they
- were about----it was their business to follow.
- The abbess of _Quedlingberg_ and her four dignitaries was no stop; for
- the enormity of the stranger’s nose running full as much in their
- fancies as their case of conscience----the affair of their placket-holes
- kept cold--in a word, the printers were ordered to distribute their
- types----all controversies dropp’d.
- ’Twas a square cap with a silver tassel upon the crown of it--to a
- nut-shell--to have guessed on which side of the nose the two
- universities would split.
- ’Tis above reason, cried the doctors on one side.
- ’Tis below reason, cried the others.
- ’Tis faith, cried one.
- ’Tis a fiddle-stick, said the other.
- ’Tis possible, cried the one.
- ’Tis impossible, said the other.
- God’s power is infinite, cried the Nosarians, he can do anything.
- He can do nothing, replied the Antinosarians, which implies
- contradictions.
- He can make matter think, said the Nosarians.
- As certainly as you can make a velvet cap out of a sow’s ear, replied
- the Antinosarians.
- He cannot make two and two five, replied the Popish doctors. ----’Tis
- false, said their other opponents.----
- Infinite power is infinite power, said the doctors who maintained the
- _reality_ of the nose. --It extends only to all possible things, replied
- the _Lutherans_.
- By God in heaven, cried the Popish doctors, he can make a nose, if he
- thinks fit, as big as the steeple of _Strasburg_.
- Now the steeple of _Strasburg_ being the biggest and the tallest
- church-steeple to be seen in the whole world, the Antinosarians denied
- that a nose of 575 geometrical feet in length could be worn, at least by
- a middle-siz’d man ----The Popish doctors swore it could --The _Lutheran_
- doctors said No; --it could not.
- This at once started a new dispute, which they pursued a great way, upon
- the extent and limitation of the moral and natural attributes of
- God --That controversy led them naturally into _Thomas Aquinas_, and
- _Thomas Aquinas_ to the devil.
- The stranger’s nose was no more heard of in the dispute--it just served
- as a frigate to launch them into the gulph of school-divinity----and
- then they all sailed before the wind.
- Heat is in proportion to the want of true knowledge.
- The controversy about the attributes, &c., instead of cooling, on the
- contrary had inflamed the _Strasburgers’_ imaginations to a most
- inordinate degree ----The less they understood of the matter, the greater
- was their wonder about it--they were left in all the distresses of
- desire unsatisfied----saw their doctors, the _Parchmentarians_, the
- _Brassarians_, the _Turpentarians_, on one side--the Popish doctors on
- the other, like _Pantagruel_ and his companions in quest of the oracle
- of the bottle, all embarked out of sight.
- ----The poor _Strasburgers_ left upon the beach!
- ----What was to be done? --No delay--the uproar increased----every one
- in disorder----the city gates set open.----
- Unfortunate _Strasburgers!_ was there in the storehouse of
- nature------was there in the lumber-rooms of learning------was there in
- the great arsenal of chance, one single engine left undrawn forth to
- torture your curiosities, and stretch your desires, which was not
- pointed by the hand of Fate to play upon your hearts? ----I dip not my
- pen into my ink to excuse the surrender of yourselves--’tis to write
- your panegyrick. Shew me a city so macerated with expectation----who
- neither eat, or drank, or slept, or prayed, or hearkened to the calls
- either of religion or nature for seven-and-twenty days together, who
- could have held out one day longer.
- On the twenty-eighth the courteous stranger had promised to return to
- _Strasburg_.
- Seven thousand coaches (_Slawkenbergius_ must certainly have made some
- mistake in his numerical characters) 7000 coaches----15,000 single-horse
- chairs--20,000 waggons, crowded as full as they could all hold with
- senators, counsellors, syndicks--beguines, widows, wives, virgins,
- canons, concubines, all in their coaches --The abbess of _Quedlingberg_,
- with the prioress, the deaness and sub-chantress, leading the procession
- in one coach, and the dean of _Strasburg_, with the four great
- dignitaries of his chapter, on her left-hand--the rest following
- higglety-pigglety as they could; some on horseback----some on
- foot----some led----some driven----some down the _Rhine_----some this
- way----some that----all set out at sun-rise to meet the courteous
- stranger on the road.
- Haste we now towards the catastrophe of my tale ------I say _Catastrophe_
- (cries _Slawkenbergius_) inasmuch as a tale, with parts rightly
- disposed, not only rejoiceth (_gaudet_) in the _Catastrophe_ and
- _Peripetia_ of a DRAMA, but rejoiceth moreover in all the essential and
- integrant parts of it----it has its _Protasis_, _Epitasis_,
- _Catastasis_, its _Catastrophe_ or _Peripetia_ growing one out of the
- other in it, in the order _Aristotle_ first planted them----without
- which a tale had better never be told at all, says _Slawkenbergius_, but
- be kept to a man’s self.
- In all my ten tales, in all my ten decads, have I _Slawkenbergius_ tied
- down every tale of them as tightly to this rule, as I have done this of
- the stranger and his nose.
- ----From his first parley with the sentinel, to his leaving the city of
- _Strasburg_, after pulling off his crimson-sattin pair of breeches, is
- the _Protasis_ or first entrance----where the characters of the _Personæ
- Dramatis_ are just touched in, and the subject slightly begun.
- The _Epitasis_, wherein the action is more fully entered upon and
- heightened, till it arrives at its state or height called the
- _Catastasis_, and which usually takes up the 2d and 3d act, is included
- within that busy period of my tale, betwixt the first night’s uproar
- about the nose, to the conclusion of the trumpeter’s wife’s lectures
- upon it in the middle of the grand parade: and from the first embarking
- of the learned in the dispute--to the doctors finally sailing away, and
- leaving the _Strasburgers_ upon the beach in distress, is the
- _Catastasis_ or the ripening of the incidents and passions for their
- bursting forth in the fifth act.
- This commences with the setting out of the _Strasburgers_ in the
- _Frankfort_ road, and terminates in unwinding the labyrinth and bringing
- the hero out of a state of agitation (as _Aristotle_ calls it) to a
- state of rest and quietness.
- This, says _Hafen Slawkenbergius_, constitutes the _Catastrophe_ or
- _Peripetia_ of my tale--and that is the part of it I am going to relate.
- We left the stranger behind the curtain asleep----he enters now upon the
- stage.
- --What dost thou prick up thy ears at? --’tis nothing but a man upon a
- horse----was the last word the stranger uttered to his mule. It was not
- proper then to tell the reader, that the mule took his master’s word for
- it; and without any more _ifs_ or _ands_, let the traveller and his
- horse pass by.
- The traveller was hastening with all diligence to get to _Strasburg_
- that night. What a fool am I, said the traveller to himself, when he had
- rode about a league farther, to think of getting into _Strasburg_ this
- night. --_Strasburg!_----the great _Strasburg!_----_Strasburg_, the
- capital of all _Alsatia!_ _Strasburg_, an imperial city! _Strasburg_, a
- sovereign state! _Strasburg_, garrisoned with five thousand of the best
- troops in all the world! --Alas! if I was at the gates of _Strasburg_
- this moment, I could not gain admittance into it for a ducat--nay a
- ducat and half--’tis too much----better go back to the last inn I have
- passed----than lie I know not where----or give I know not what. The
- traveller, as he made these reflections in his mind, turned his horse’s
- head about, and three minutes after the stranger had been conducted into
- his chamber, he arrived at the same inn.
- ------We have bacon in the house, said the host, and bread------and till
- eleven o’clock this night had three eggs in it----but a stranger, who
- arrived an hour ago, has had them dressed into an omelet, and we have
- nothing.------
- Alas! said the traveller, harassed as I am, I want nothing but a bed.
- ------I have one as soft as is in _Alsatia_, said the host.
- ----The stranger, continued he, should have slept in it, for ’tis my
- best bed, but upon the score of his nose. --------He has got a
- defluxion, said the traveller. ----Not that I know, cried the host.
- ----But ’tis a camp-bed, and _Jacinta_, said he, looking towards the
- maid, imagined there was not room in it to turn his nose in. ------Why
- so? cried the traveller, starting back. --It is so long a nose, replied
- the host. ----The traveller fixed his eyes upon _Jacinta_, then upon the
- ground--kneeled upon his right knee--had just got his hand laid upon his
- breast ------Trifle not with my anxiety, said he, rising up again.
- ----’Tis no trifle, said _Jacinta_, ’tis the most glorious nose! ----The
- traveller fell upon his knee again--laid his hand upon his breast--then,
- said he, looking up to heaven, thou hast conducted me to the end of my
- pilgrimage. --’Tis _Diego_.
- The traveller was the brother of the _Julia_, so often invoked that
- night by the stranger as he rode from _Strasburg_ upon his mule; and was
- come, on her part, in quest of him. He had accompanied his sister from
- _Valadolid_ across the _Pyrenean_ mountains through _France_, and had
- many an entangled skein to wind off in pursuit of him through the many
- meanders and abrupt turnings of a lover’s thorny tracks.
- ----_Julia_ had sunk under it------and had not been able to go a step
- farther than to _Lyons_, where, with the many disquietudes of a tender
- heart, which all talk of----but few feel--she sicken’d, but had just
- strength to write a letter to _Diego_; and having conjured her brother
- never to see her face till he had found him out, and put the letter into
- his hands, _Julia_ took to her bed.
- _Fernandez_ (for that was her brother’s name)----tho’ the camp-bed was
- as soft as any one in _Alsace_, yet he could not shut his eyes in it.
- ----As soon as it was day he rose, and hearing _Diego_ was risen too, he
- entered his chamber, and discharged his sister’s commission.
- The letter was as follows:
- “Seig. DIEGO,
- “Whether my suspicions of your nose were justly excited or not------’tis
- not now to inquire--it is enough I have not had firmness to put them to
- farther tryal.
- “How could I know so little of myself, when I sent my _Duenna_ to forbid
- your coming more under my lattice? or how could I know so little of you,
- _Diego_, as to imagine you would not have staid one day in _Valadolid_
- to have given ease to my doubts? --Was I to be abandoned, _Diego_,
- because I was deceived? or was it kind to take me at my word, whether my
- suspicions were just or no, and leave me, as you did, a prey to much
- uncertainty and sorrow?
- “In what manner _Julia_ has resented this----my brother, when he puts
- this letter into your hands, will tell you; He will tell you in how few
- moments she repented of the rash message she had sent you----in what
- frantic haste she flew to her lattice, and how many days and nights
- together she leaned immoveably upon her elbow, looking through it
- towards the way which _Diego_ was wont to come.
- “He will tell you, when she heard of your departure--how her spirits
- deserted her----how her heart sicken’d----how piteously she
- mourned----how low she hung her head. O _Diego!_ how many weary steps
- has my brother’s pity led me by the hand languishing to trace out yours;
- how far has desire carried me beyond strength----and how oft have I
- fainted by the way, and sunk into his arms, with only power to cry
- out --O my _Diego!_
- “If the gentleness of your carriage has not belied your heart, you will
- fly to me, almost as fast as you fled from me--haste as you will----you
- will arrive but to see me expire. ------’Tis a bitter draught, _Diego_,
- but oh! ’tis embitter’d still more by dying _un_--------”
- She could proceed no farther.
- _Slawkenbergius_ supposes the word intended was _unconvinced_, but her
- strength would not enable her to finish her letter.
- The heart of the courteous _Diego_ overflowed as he read the
- letter------he ordered his mule forthwith and _Fernandez’s_ horse to be
- saddled; and as no vent in prose is equal to that of poetry in such
- conflicts----chance, which as often directs us to remedies as to
- _diseases_, having thrown a piece of charcoal into the window----_Diego_
- availed himself of it, and whilst the hostler was getting ready his
- mule, he eased his mind against the wall as follows.
- ODE
- _Harsh and untuneful are the notes of love,
- Unless my _Julia_ strikes the key,
- Her hand alone can touch the part,
- Whose dulcet move-
- ment charms the heart,
- And governs all the man with sympathetick sway._
- 2d
- O Julia!
- The lines were very natural----for they were nothing at all to the
- purpose, says _Slawkenbergius_, and ’tis a pity there were no more of
- them; but whether it was that Seig. _Diego_ was slow in composing
- verses--or the hostler quick in saddling mules----is not averred;
- certain it was, that _Diego’s_ mule and _Fernandez’s_ horse were ready
- at the door of the inn, before _Diego_ was ready for his second stanza;
- so without staying to finish his ode, they both mounted, sallied forth,
- passed the _Rhine_, traversed _Alsace_, shaped their course towards
- _Lyons_, and before the _Strasburgers_ and the abbess of _Quedlingberg_
- had set out on their cavalcade, had _Fernandez_, _Diego_, and his
- _Julia_, crossed the _Pyrenean_ mountains, and got safe to _Valadolid_.
- ’Tis needless to inform the geographical reader, that when _Diego_ was
- in _Spain_, it was not possible to meet the courteous stranger in the
- _Frankfort_ road; it is enough to say, that of all restless desires,
- curiosity being the strongest----the _Strasburgers_ felt the full force
- of it; and that for three days and nights they were tossed to and fro in
- the _Frankfort_ road, with the tempestuous fury of this passion, before
- they could submit to return home. ----When alas! an event was prepared
- for them, of all other, the most grievous that could befal a free
- people.
- As this revolution of the _Strasburgers’_ affairs is often spoken of,
- and little understood, I will, in ten words, says _Slawkenbergius_, give
- the world an explanation of it, and with it put an end to my tale.
- Every body knows of the grand system of Universal Monarchy, wrote by
- order of Mons. _Colbert_, and put in manuscript into the hands of
- _Lewis_ the fourteenth, in the year 1664.
- ’Tis as well known, that one branch out of many of that system, was the
- getting possession of _Strasburg_, to favour an entrance at all times
- into _Suabia_, in order to disturb the quiet of _Germany_----and that in
- consequence of this plan, _Strasburg_ unhappily fell at length into
- their hands.
- It is the lot of a few to trace out the true springs of this and such
- like revolutions --The vulgar look too high for them --Statesmen look
- too low ----Truth (for once) lies in the middle.
- What a fatal thing is the popular pride of a free city! cries one
- historian --The _Strasburgers_ deemed it a diminution of their freedom
- to receive an imperial garrison----so fell a prey to a _French_ one.
- The fate, says another, of the _Strasburgers_, may be a warning to all
- free people to save their money. ------They anticipated their
- revenues----brought themselves under taxes, exhausted their strength,
- and in the end became so weak a people, they had not strength to keep
- their gates shut, and so the _French_ pushed them open.
- Alas! alas! cries _Slawkenbergius_, ’twas not the _French_, ----’twas
- CURIOSITY pushed them open ------The _French_ indeed, who are ever upon
- the catch, when they saw the _Strasburgers_, men, women, and children,
- all marched out to follow the stranger’s nose----each man followed his
- own, and marched in.
- Trade and manufactures have decayed and gradually grown down ever
- since--but not from any cause which commercial heads have assigned; for
- it is owing to this only, that Noses have ever so run in their heads,
- that the _Strasburgers_ could not follow their business.
- Alas! alas! cries _Slawkenbergius_, making an exclamation--it is not the
- first----and I fear will not be the last fortress that has been either
- won----or lost by NOSES.
- The End Of
- _Slawkenbergius’s_ TALE
- [Footnote 4.1: As _Hafen Slawkenbergius de Nasis_ is extremely
- scarce, it may not be unacceptable to the learned reader to see
- the specimen of a few pages of his original; I will make no
- reflection upon it, but that his story-telling Latin is much
- more concise than his philosophic--and, I think, has more of
- Latinity in it.]
- [Footnote 4.2: _Hafen Slawkenbergius_ means the Benedictine nuns
- of _Cluny_, founded in the year 940, by _Odo_, abbé de _Cluny_.]
- [Footnote 4.3: Mr. _Shandy’s_ compliments to orators----is very
- sensible that _Slawkenbergius_ has here changed his
- metaphor------which he is very guilty of: ----that as a
- translator, Mr. _Shandy_ has all along done what he could to
- make him stick to it--but that here ’twas impossible.]
- [Footnote 4.4: Nonnulli ex nostratibus eadem loquendi formulâ
- utun. Quinimo & Logistæ & Canonistæ ----Vid. Parce Barne Jas in
- d. L. Provincial. Constitut. de conjec. vid. Vol. Lib. 4. Titul.
- 1. n. 7. quâ etiam in re conspir. Om de Promontorio Nas.
- Tichmak. ff. d. tit. 3. fol. 189. passim. Vid. Glos. de
- contrahend. empt, &c. necnon J. Scrudr, in cap. § refut. per
- totum. Cum his cons. Rever. J. Tubal, Sentent. & Prov. cap. 9.
- ff. 11, 12. obiter. V. & Librum, cui Tit. de Terris & Phras.
- Belg. ad finem, cum comment, N. Bardy Belg. Vid. Scrip.
- Argentotarens. de Antiq. Ecc. in Episc. Archiv. fid coll. per
- Von Jacobum Koinshoven Folio Argent. 1583. præcip. ad finem.
- Quibus add. Rebuff in L. obvenire de Signif. Nom. ff. fol. & de
- jure Gent. & Civil. de protib. aliena feud. per federa, test.
- Joha. Luxius in prolegom, quem velim videas, de Analy. Cap. 1,
- 2, 3. Vid. Idea.]
- [Footnote 4.5: Hæc mira, satisque horrenda. Planetarum coitio
- sub Scorpio Asterismo in nona cœli statione, quam Arabes
- religioni deputabant efficit _Martinum Lutherum_ sacrilegum
- hereticum, Christianæ religionis hostem acerrimum atque
- prophanum, ex horoscopi directione ad Martis coitum,
- religiosissimus obiit, ejus Anima scelestissima ad infernos
- navigavit--ab Alecto, Tisiphone & Megara flagellis igneis
- cruciata perenniter.
- ----Lucas Gaurieus in Tractatu astrologico de præteritis
- multorum hominum accidentibus per genituras examinatis.]
- CHAPTER I
- With all this learning upon Noses running perpetually in my father’s
- fancy----with so many family prejudices--and ten decads of such tales
- running on for ever along with them----how was it possible with such
- exquisite----was it a true nose? ----That a man with such exquisite
- feelings as my father had, could bear the shock at all below
- stairs----or indeed above stairs, in any other posture, but the very
- posture I have described?
- ----Throw yourself down upon the bed, a dozen times----taking care only
- to place a looking-glass first in a chair on one side of it, before you
- do it --But was the stranger’s nose a true nose, or was it a false one?
- To tell that before-hand, madam, would be to do injury to one of the
- best tales in the Christian-world; and that is the tenth of the tenth
- decad, which immediately follows this.
- This tale, cried _Slawkenbergius_, somewhat exultingly, has been
- reserved by me for the concluding tale of my whole work; knowing right
- well, that when I shall have told it, and my reader shall have read it
- thro’--’twould be even high time for both of us to shut up the book;
- inasmuch, continues _Slawkenbergius_, as I know of no tale which could
- possibly ever go down after it.
- ’Tis a tale indeed!
- This sets out with the first interview in the inn at _Lyons_, when
- _Fernandez_ left the courteous stranger and his sister _Julia_ alone in
- her chamber, and is over-written
- _THE INTRICACIES_
- of
- _Diego_ and _Julia_
- Heavens! thou art a strange creature, _Slawkenbergius!_ what a whimsical
- view of the involutions of the heart of woman hast thou opened! how this
- can ever be translated, and yet if this specimen of _Slawkenbergius’s_
- tales, and the exquisitiveness of his moral, should please the
- world--translated shall a couple of volumes be. ------Else, how this can
- ever be translated into good _English_, I have no sort of conception.
- --There seems in some passages to want a sixth sense to do it rightly.
- ----What can he mean by the lambent pupilability of slow, low, dry chat,
- five notes below the natural tone----which you know, madam, is little
- more than a whisper? The moment I pronounced the words, I could perceive
- an attempt towards a vibration in the strings, about the region of the
- heart. ------The brain made no acknowledgment. ----There’s often no good
- understanding betwixt ’em --I felt as if I understood it. ----I had no
- ideas. ----The movement could not be without cause. --I’m lost. I can
- make nothing of it--unless, may it please your worships, the voice, in
- that case being little more than a whisper, unavoidably forces the eyes
- to approach not only within six inches of each other--but to look into
- the pupils--is not that dangerous? ----But it can’t be avoided--for to
- look up to the ceiling, in that case the two chins unavoidably
- meet----and to look down into each other’s lap, the foreheads come to
- immediate contact, which at once puts an end to the conference ----I mean
- to the sentimental part of it. ----What is left, madam, is not worth
- stooping for.
- CHAPTER II
- My father lay stretched across the bed as still as if the hand of death
- had pushed him down, for a full hour and a half before he began to play
- upon the floor with the toe of that foot which hung over the bed-side;
- my uncle _Toby’s_ heart was a pound lighter for it. ------In a few
- moments, his left-hand, the knuckles of which had all the time reclined
- upon the handle of the chamber-pot, came to its feeling--he thrust it a
- little more within the valance--drew up his hand, when he had done, into
- his bosom--gave a hem! My good uncle _Toby_, with infinite pleasure,
- answered it; and full gladly would have ingrafted a sentence of
- consolation upon the opening it afforded: but having no talents, as I
- said, that way, and fearing moreover that he might set out with
- something which might make a bad matter worse, he contented himself with
- resting his chin placidly upon the cross of his crutch.
- Now whether the compression shortened my uncle _Toby’s_ face into a more
- pleasurable oval--or that the philanthropy of his heart, in seeing his
- brother beginning to emerge out of the sea of his afflictions, had
- braced up his muscles----so that the compression upon his chin only
- doubled the benignity which was there before, is not hard to decide.
- ----My father, in turning his eyes, was struck with such a gleam of
- sunshine in his face, as melted down the sullenness of his grief in a
- moment.
- He broke silence as follows.
- CHAPTER III
- Did ever man, brother _Toby_, cried my father, raising himself upon his
- elbow, and turning himself round to the opposite side of the bed, where
- my uncle _Toby_ was sitting in his old fringed chair, with his chin
- resting upon his crutch----did ever a poor unfortunate man, brother
- _Toby_, cried my father, receive so many lashes? ----The most I ever saw
- given, quoth my uncle _Toby_ (ringing the bell at the bed’s head for
- _Trim_) was to a grenadier, I think in _Mackay’s_ regiment.
- ------Had my uncle _Toby_ shot a bullet through my father’s heart, he
- could not have fallen down with his nose upon the quilt more suddenly.
- Bless me! said my uncle _Toby_.
- CHAPTER IV
- Was it _Mackay’s_ regiment, quoth my uncle _Toby_, where the poor
- grenadier was so unmercifully whipp’d at _Bruges_ about the ducats? --O
- Christ! he was innocent! cried _Trim_, with a deep sigh. --And he was
- whipp’d, may it please your honour, almost to death’s door. --They had
- better have shot him outright, as he begg’d, and he had gone directly to
- heaven, for he was as innocent as your honour. ------I thank thee,
- _Trim_, quoth my uncle _Toby_. ----I never think of his, continued
- _Trim_, and my poor brother _Tom’s_ misfortunes, for we were all three
- school-fellows, but I cry like a coward. ----Tears are no proof of
- cowardice, _Trim_. --I drop them oft-times myself, cried my uncle
- _Toby_. ----I know your honour does, replied _Trim_, and so am not
- ashamed of it myself. --But to think, may it please your honour,
- continued _Trim_, a tear stealing into the corner of his eye as he
- spoke--to think of two virtuous lads with hearts as warm in their
- bodies, and as honest as God could make them--the children of honest
- people, going forth with gallant spirits to seek their fortunes in the
- world--and fall into such evils! --poor _Tom!_ to be tortured upon a
- rack for nothing--but marrying a Jew’s widow who sold sausages--honest
- _Dick Johnson’s_ soul to be scourged out of his body, for the ducats
- another man put into his knapsack! --O! --these are misfortunes, cried
- _Trim_, --pulling out his handkerchief--these are misfortunes, may it
- please your honour, worth lying down and crying over.
- --My father could not help blushing.
- ’Twould be a pity, _Trim_, quoth my uncle _Toby_, thou shouldst ever
- feel sorrow of thy own--thou feelest it so tenderly for others.
- --Alack-o-day, replied the corporal, brightening up his face------your
- honour knows I have neither wife or child ----I can have no sorrows in
- this world. ----My father could not help smiling. --As few as any man,
- _Trim_, replied my uncle _Toby_; nor can I see how a fellow of thy light
- heart can suffer, but from the distress of poverty in thy old age--when
- thou art passed all services, _Trim_--and hast outlived thy friends.
- ----An’ please your honour, never fear, replied _Trim_, chearily.
- ----But I would have thee never fear, _Trim_, replied my uncle _Toby_,
- and therefore, continued my uncle _Toby_, throwing down his crutch, and
- getting up upon his legs as he uttered the word _therefore_--in
- recompence, _Trim_, of thy long fidelity to me, and that goodness of thy
- heart I have had such proofs of--whilst thy master is worth a
- shilling----thou shalt never ask elsewhere, _Trim_, for a penny. _Trim_
- attempted to thank my uncle _Toby_--but had not power----tears trickled
- down his cheeks faster than he could wipe them off --He laid his hands
- upon his breast----made a bow to the ground, and shut the door.
- ----I have left _Trim_ my bowling-green, cried my uncle _Toby_. ----My
- father smiled. ------I have left him moreover a pension, continued my
- uncle _Toby_. ----My father looked grave.
- CHAPTER V
- Is this a fit time, said my father to himself, to talk of PENSIONS and
- GRENADIERS?
- CHAPTER VI
- When my uncle _Toby_ first mentioned the grenadier, my father, I said,
- fell down with his nose flat to the quilt, and as suddenly as if my
- uncle _Toby_ had shot him; but it was not added that every other limb
- and member of my father instantly relapsed with his nose into the same
- precise attitude in which he lay first described; so that when corporal
- _Trim_ left the room, and my father found himself disposed to rise off
- the bed--he had all the little preparatory movements to run over again,
- before he could do it. Attitudes are nothing, madam----’tis the
- transition from one attitude to another----like the preparation and
- resolution of the discord into harmony, which is all in all.
- For which reason my father played the same jig over again with his toe
- upon the floor----pushed the chamber-pot still a little farther within
- the valance--gave a hem--raised himself up upon his elbow--and was just
- beginning to address himself to my uncle _Toby_--when recollecting the
- unsuccessfulness of his first effort in that attitude----he got upon his
- legs, and in making the third turn across the room, he stopped short
- before my uncle _Toby_: and laying the three first fingers of his
- right-hand in the palm of his left, and stooping a little, he addressed
- himself to my uncle _Toby_ as follows:
- CHAPTER VII
- When I reflect, brother _Toby_, upon MAN; and take a view of that dark
- side of him which represents his life as open to so many causes of
- trouble--when I consider, brother _Toby_, how oft we eat the bread of
- affliction, and that we are born to it, as to the portion of our
- inheritance ------I was born to nothing, quoth my uncle _Toby_,
- interrupting my father--but my commission. Zooks! said my father, did
- not my uncle leave you a hundred and twenty pounds a year? ------What
- could I have done without it? replied my uncle _Toby_ ------That’s
- another concern, said my father testily --But I say, _Toby_, when one
- runs over the catalogue of all the cross-reckonings and sorrowful
- _Items_ with which the heart of man is overcharged, ’tis wonderful by
- what hidden resources the mind is enabled to stand out, and bear itself
- up, as it does, against the impositions laid upon our nature. ------’Tis
- by the assistance of Almighty God, cried my uncle _Toby_, looking up,
- and pressing the palms of his hands close together----’tis not from our
- own strength, brother _Shandy_----a centinel in a wooden centry-box
- might as well pretend to stand it out against a detachment of fifty men.
- ----We are upheld by the grace and the assistance of the best of Beings.
- ----That is cutting the knot, said my father, instead of untying it.
- ----But give me leave to lead you, brother _Toby_, a little deeper into
- the mystery.
- With all my heart, replied my uncle _Toby_.
- My father instantly exchanged the attitude he was in, for that in which
- _Socrates_ is so finely painted by _Raffael_ in his school of _Athens_;
- which your connoisseurship knows is so exquisitely imagined, that even
- the particular manner of the reasoning of _Socrates_ is expressed by
- it--for he holds the forefinger of his left hand between the forefinger
- and the thumb of his right, and seems as if he was saying to the
- libertine he is reclaiming------ “_You grant me_ this----and this: and
- this, and this, I don’t ask of you--they follow of themselves in
- course.”
- So stood my father, holding fast his forefinger betwixt his finger and
- his thumb, and reasoning with my uncle _Toby_ as he sat in his old
- fringed chair, valanced around with party-coloured worsted bobs ----O
- _Garrick!_--what a rich scene of this would thy exquisite powers make!
- and how gladly would I write such another to avail myself of thy
- immortality, and secure my own behind it.
- CHAPTER VIII
- Though man is of all others the most curious vehicle, said my father,
- yet at the same time ’tis of so slight a frame, and so totteringly put
- together, that the sudden jerks and hard jostlings it unavoidably meets
- with in this rugged journey, would overset and tear it to pieces a dozen
- times a day----was it not, brother _Toby_, that there is a secret spring
- within us. --Which spring, said my uncle _Toby_, I take to be Religion.
- --Will that set my child’s nose on? cried my father, letting go his
- finger, and striking one hand against the other. ----It makes everything
- straight for us, answered my uncle _Toby_. ----Figuratively speaking,
- dear _Toby_, it may, for aught I know, said my father; but the spring I
- am speaking of, is that great and elastic power within us of
- counterbalancing evil, which, like a secret spring in a well-ordered
- machine, though it can’t prevent the shock----at least it imposes upon
- our sense of it.
- Now, my dear brother, said my father, replacing his forefinger, as he
- was coming closer to the point----had my child arrived safe into the
- world, unmartyr’d in that precious part of him--fanciful and extravagant
- as I may appear to the world in my opinion of christian names, and of
- that magic bias which good or bad names irresistibly impress upon our
- characters and conducts --Heaven is witness! that in the warmest
- transports of my wishes for the prosperity of my child, I never once
- wished to crown his head with more glory and honour than what GEORGE or
- EDWARD would have spread around it.
- But alas! continued my father, as the greatest evil has befallen
- him ----I must counteract and undo it with the greatest good.
- He shall be christened _Trismegistus_, brother.
- I wish it may answer----replied my uncle _Toby_, rising up.
- CHAPTER IX
- What a chapter of chances, said my father, turning himself about upon
- the first landing, as he and my uncle _Toby_ were going downstairs--what
- a long chapter of chances do the events of this world lay open to us!
- Take pen and ink in hand, brother _Toby_, and calculate it fairly ----I
- know no more of calculation than this balluster, said my uncle _Toby_
- (striking short of it with his crutch, and hitting my father a desperate
- blow souse upon his shin-bone)----’Twas a hundred to one--cried my uncle
- _Toby_ --I thought, quoth my father (rubbing his shin), you had known
- nothing of calculations, brother _Toby_. ’Tis a mere chance, said my
- uncle _Toby_. ------Then it adds one to the chapter----replied my
- father.
- The double success of my father’s repartees tickled off the pain of his
- shin at once--it was well it so fell out--(chance! again)--or the world
- to this day had never known the subject of my father’s calculation----to
- guess it--there was no chance ----What a lucky chapter of chances has
- this turned out! for it has saved me the trouble of writing one express,
- and in truth I have enough already upon my hands without it. --Have not
- I promised the world a chapter of knots? two chapters upon the right and
- the wrong end of a woman? a chapter upon whiskers? a chapter upon
- wishes? ----a chapter of noses? --No, I have done that--a chapter upon
- my uncle _Toby’s_ modesty? to say nothing of a chapter upon chapters,
- which I will finish before I sleep--by my great-grandfather’s whiskers,
- I shall never get half of ’em through this year.
- Take pen and ink in hand, and calculate it fairly, brother _Toby_, said
- my father, and it will turn out a million to one, that of all the parts
- of the body, the edge of the forceps should have the ill luck just to
- fall upon and break down that one part, which should break down the
- fortunes of our house with it.
- It might have been worse, replied my uncle _Toby_. ----I don’t
- comprehend, said my father. ------Suppose the hip had presented, replied
- my uncle _Toby_, as Dr. _Slop_ foreboded.
- My father reflected half a minute--looked down----touched the middle of
- his forehead slightly with his finger------
- --True, said he.
- CHAPTER X
- Is it not a shame to make two chapters of what passed in going down one
- pair of stairs? for we are got no farther yet than to the first landing,
- and there are fifteen more steps down to the bottom; and for aught I
- know, as my father and my uncle _Toby_ are in a talking humour, there
- may be as many chapters as steps: ----let that be as it will, Sir, I can
- no more help it than my destiny: --A sudden impulse comes across
- me----drop the curtain, _Shandy_ ----I drop it --Strike a line here
- across the paper, _Tristram_ --I strike it--and hey for a new chapter.
- The deuce of any other rule have I to govern myself by in this
- affair--and if I had one--as I do all things out of all rule --I would
- twist it and tear it to pieces, and throw it into the fire when I had
- done --Am I warm? I am, and the cause demands it----a pretty story! is a
- man to follow rules------or rules to follow him?
- Now this, you must know, being my chapter upon chapters, which I
- promised to write before I went to sleep, I thought it meet to ease my
- conscience entirely before I laid down, by telling the world all I knew
- about the matter at once: Is not this ten times better than to set out
- dogmatically with a sententious parade of wisdom, and telling the world
- a story of a roasted horse----that chapters relieve the mind--that they
- assist--or impose upon the imagination--and that in a work of this
- dramatic cast they are as necessary as the shifting of scenes----with
- fifty other cold conceits, enough to extinguish the fire which roasted
- him? --O! but to understand this, which is a puff at the fire of
- _Diana’s_ temple--you must read _Longinus_--read away--if you are not a
- jot the wiser by reading him the first time over--never fear--read him
- again--_Avicenna_ and _Licetus_ read _Aristotle’s_ metaphysicks forty
- times through apiece, and never understood a single word. --But mark the
- consequence--_Avicenna_ turned out a desperate writer at all kinds of
- writing--for he wrote books _de omni scribili_; and for _Licetus_
- (_Fortunio_) though all the world knows he was born a fœtus,[4.6] of no
- more than five inches and a half in length, yet he grew to that
- astonishing height in literature, as to write a book with a
- title as long as himself------the learned know I mean his
- _Gonopsychanthropologia_, upon the origin of the human soul.
- So much for my chapter upon chapters, which I hold to be the best
- chapter in my whole work; and take my word, whoever reads it, is full as
- well employed, as in picking straws.
- [Footnote 4.6: _Ce Fœtus_ n’étoit pas plus grand que la paume de
- la main; mais son pere l’ayant éxaminé en qualité de Médecin, &
- ayant trouvé que c’etoit quâlque chose de plus qu’un Embryon, le
- fit transporter tout vivant à Rapallo, ou il le fit voir à
- Jerôme Bardi & à d’autres Médecins du lieu. On trouva qu’il ne
- lui manquoit rien d’essentiel à la vie; & son pere pour faire
- voir un essai de son experience, entreprit d’achever l’ouvrage
- de la Nature, & de travailler à la formation de l’Enfant avec le
- même artifice que celui dont on se sert pour faire écclorre les
- Poulets en Egypte. Il instruisit une Nourisse de tout ce qu’elle
- avoit à faire, & ayant fait mettre son fils dans un pour
- proprement accommodé, il reussit à l’élever & à lui faire
- prendre ses accroissemens necessaires, par l’uniformité d’une
- chaleur étrangere mesurée éxactement sur les dégrés d’un
- Thermométre, ou d’un autre instrument équivalent. (Vide Mich.
- Giustinian, ne gli Scritt. Liguri à Cart. 223. 488.)
- On auroit toujours été très satisfait de l’industrie d’un pere
- si experimenté dans l’Art de la Generation, quand il n’auroit pû
- prolonger la vie à son fils que pour quelques mois, ou pour peu
- d’années.
- Mais quand on se represente que l’Enfant a vecu près de
- quatre-vingts ans, & qu’il a composé quatre-vingts Ouvrages
- differents tous fruits d’une longue lecture--il faut convenir
- que tout ce qui est incroyable n’est pas toujours faux, & que la
- _Vraisemblance n’est pas toujours du côté de la Verité_.
- Il n’avoit que dix neuf ans lorsqu’il composa
- Gonopsychanthropologia de Origine Animæ humanæ.
- (Les Enfans celebres, revûs & corrigés par M. de la Monnoye de
- l’Academie Françoise.)]
- CHAPTER XI
- We shall bring all things to rights, said my father, setting his foot
- upon the first step from the landing. --This _Trismegistus_, continued
- my father, drawing his leg back and turning to my uncle _Toby_----was
- the greatest (_Toby_) of all earthly beings--he was the greatest
- king----the greatest law-giver----the greatest philosopher----and the
- greatest priest----and engineer--said my uncle _Toby_.
- ------In course, said my father.
- CHAPTER XII
- --And how does your mistress? cried my father, taking the same step over
- again from the landing, and calling to _Susannah_, whom he saw passing
- by the foot of the stairs with a huge pincushion in her hand--how does
- your mistress? As well, said _Susannah_, tripping by, but without
- looking up, as can be expected. --What a fool am I! said my father,
- drawing his leg back again--let things be as they will, brother _Toby_,
- ’tis ever the precise answer ----And how is the child, pray? ----No
- answer. And where is Dr. _Slop?_ added my father, raising his voice
- aloud, and looking over the ballusters--_Susannah_ was out of hearing.
- Of all the riddles of a married life, said my father, crossing the
- landing in order to set his back against the wall, whilst he propounded
- it to my uncle _Toby_----of all the puzzling riddles, said he, in a
- marriage state, ----of which you may trust me, brother _Toby_, there are
- more asses loads than all _Job’s_ stock of asses could have
- carried----there is not one that has more intricacies in it than
- this--that from the very moment the mistress of the house is brought to
- bed, every female in it, from my lady’s gentlewoman down to the
- cinder-wench, becomes an inch taller for it; and give themselves more
- airs upon that single inch, than all their other inches put together.
- I think rather, replied my uncle _Toby_, that ’tis we who sink an inch
- lower. --If I meet but a woman with child --I do it. --’Tis a heavy tax
- upon that half of our fellow-creatures, brother _Shandy_, said my uncle
- _Toby_--’Tis a piteous burden upon ’em, continued he, shaking his
- head --Yes, yes, ’tis a painful thing--said my father, shaking his head
- too----but certainly since shaking of heads came into fashion, never did
- two heads shake together, in concert, from two such different springs.
- God bless } ’em all------said my uncle _Toby_ and my
- Deuce take } father, each to himself.
- CHAPTER XIII
- Holla! ----you, chairman! ----here’s sixpence----do step into that
- bookseller’s shop, and call me a _day-tall_ critick. I am very willing
- to give any one of ’em a crown to help me with his tackling, to get my
- father and my uncle _Toby_ off the stairs, and to put them to bed.
- --’Tis even high time; for except a short nap, which they both got
- whilst _Trim_ was boring the jack-boots--and which, by the bye, did my
- father no sort of good, upon the score of the bad hinge--they have not
- else shut their eyes, since nine hours before the time that Dr. _Slop_
- was led into the back parlour in that dirty pickle by _Obadiah_.
- Was every day of my life to be as busy a day as this--and to take
- up --Truce.
- I will not finish that sentence till I have made an observation upon the
- strange state of affairs between the reader and myself, just as things
- stand at present--an observation never applicable before to any one
- biographical writer since the creation of the world, but to myself--and
- I believe, will never hold good to any other, until its final
- destruction--and therefore, for the very novelty of it alone, it must be
- worth your worships attending to.
- I am this month one whole year older than I was this time twelve-month;
- and having got, as you perceive, almost into the middle of my fourth
- volume[4.7]--and no farther than to my first day’s life--’tis
- demonstrative that I have three hundred and sixty-four days more life to
- write just now, than when I first set out; so that instead of advancing,
- as a common writer, in my work with what I have been doing at it--on the
- contrary, I am just thrown so many volumes back--was every day of my
- life to be as busy a day as this --And why not? ----and the transactions
- and opinions of it to take up as much description --And for what reason
- should they be cut short? as at this rate I should just live 364 times
- faster than I should write --It must follow, an’ please your worships,
- that the more I write, the more I shall have to write--and consequently,
- the more your worships read, the more your worships will have to read.
- Will this be good for your worships’ eyes?
- It will do well for mine; and, was it not that my OPINIONS will be the
- death of me, I perceive I shall lead a fine life of it out of this
- self-same life of mine; or, in other words, shall lead a couple of fine
- lives together.
- As for the proposal of twelve volumes a year, or a volume a month, it no
- way alters my prospect--write as I will, and rush as I may into the
- middle of things, as _Horace_ advises --I shall never overtake myself
- whipp’d and driven to the last pinch; at the worst I shall have one day
- the start of my pen--and one day is enough for two volumes----and two
- volumes will be enough for one year.--
- Heaven prosper the manufacturers of paper under this propitious reign,
- which is now opened to us----as I trust its providence will prosper
- everything else in it that is taken in hand.----
- As for the propagation of Geese --I give myself no concern --Nature is
- all bountiful --I shall never want tools to work with.
- --So then, friend! you have got my father and my uncle _Toby_ off the
- stairs, and seen them to bed? ------And how did you manage it? ----You
- dropp’d a curtain at the stair-foot --I thought you had no other way for
- it ------Here’s a crown for your trouble.
- [Footnote 4.7: According to the original Editions.]
- CHAPTER XIV
- --Then reach me my breeches off the chair, said my father to _Susannah_.
- ----There is not a moment’s time to dress you, Sir, cried
- _Susannah_--the child is as black in the face as my ----As your what?
- said my father, for like all orators, he was a dear searcher into
- comparisons. --Bless me, Sir, said _Susannah_, the child’s in a fit.
- --And where’s Mr. _Yorick?_ --Never where he should be, said _Susannah_,
- but his curate’s in the dressing-room, with the child upon his arm,
- waiting for the name--and my mistress bid me run as fast as I could to
- know, as captain _Shandy_ is the godfather, whether it should not be
- called after him.
- Were one sure, said my father to himself, scratching his eyebrow, that
- the child was expiring, one might as well compliment my brother _Toby_
- as not--and it would be a pity, in such a case, to throw away so great a
- name as _Trismegistus_ upon him----but he may recover.
- No, no, ----said my father to _Susannah_, I’ll get up ------There is no
- time, cried _Susannah_, the child’s as black as my shoe. _Trismegistus_,
- said my father ------But stay--thou art a leaky vessel, _Susannah_, added
- my father; canst thou carry _Trismegistus_ in thy head, the length of
- the gallery without scattering? ------Can I? cried _Susannah_, shutting
- the door in a huff. ----If she can, I’ll be shot, said my father,
- bouncing out of bed in the dark, and groping for his breeches.
- _Susannah_ ran with all speed along the gallery.
- My father made all possible speed to find his breeches.
- _Susannah_ got the start, and kept it--’Tis _Tris_--something, cried
- _Susannah_ --There is no christian-name in the world, said the curate,
- beginning with _Tris_--but _Tristram_. Then ’tis _Tristram-gistus_,
- quoth _Susannah_.
- ----There is no _gistus_ to it, noodle! --’tis my own name, replied the
- curate, dipping his hand, as he spoke, into the bason--_Tristram!_ said
- he, &c. &c. &c. &c., so _Tristram_ was I called, and _Tristram_ shall I
- be to the day of my death.
- My father followed _Susannah_, with his night-gown across his arm, with
- nothing more than his breeches on, fastened through haste with but a
- single button, and that button through haste thrust only half into the
- button-hole.
- ----She has not forgot the name? cried my father, half opening the door.
- ----No, no, said the curate, with a tone of intelligence. ----And the
- child is better, cried _Susannah_. ----And how does your mistress? As
- well, said _Susannah_, as can be expected. --Pish! said my father, the
- button of his breeches slipping out of the button-hole --So that whether
- the interjection was levelled at _Susannah_, or the button-hole--whether
- Pish was an interjection of contempt or an interjection of modesty, is a
- doubt, and must be a doubt till I shall have time to write the three
- following favourite chapters, that is, my chapter of _chamber-maids_, my
- chapter of _pishes_, and my chapter of _button-holes_.
- All the light I am able to give the reader at present is this, that the
- moment my father cried Pish! he whisk’d himself about--and with his
- breeches held up by one hand, and his night-gown thrown across the arm
- of the other, he turned along the gallery to bed, something slower than
- he came.
- CHAPTER XV
- I wish I could write a chapter upon sleep.
- A fitter occasion could never have presented itself, than what this
- moment offers, when all the curtains of the family are drawn--the
- candles put out--and no creature’s eyes are open but a single one, for
- the other has been shut these twenty years, of my mother’s nurse.
- It is a fine subject!
- And yet, as fine as it is, I would undertake to write a dozen chapters
- upon button-holes, both quicker and with more fame, than a single
- chapter upon this.
- Button-holes! there is something lively in the very idea of
- ’em----and trust me, when I get amongst ’em ----You gentry with great
- beards----look as grave as you will ------I’ll make merry work with my
- button-holes --I shall have ’em all to myself--’tis a maiden subject
- --I shall run foul of no man’s wisdom or fine sayings in it.
- But for sleep ----I know I shall make nothing of it before I begin
- --I am no dab at your fine sayings in the first place--and in the next,
- I cannot for my soul set a grave face upon a bad matter, and tell the
- world--’tis the refuge of the unfortunate--the enfranchisement of
- the prisoner--the downy lap of the hopeless, the weary, and the
- broken-hearted; nor could I set out with a lye in my mouth, by
- affirming, that of all the soft and delicious functions of our nature,
- by which the great Author of it, in his bounty, has been pleased to
- recompense the sufferings wherewith his justice and his good pleasure
- has wearied us----that this is the chiefest (I know pleasures worth ten
- of it); or what a happiness it is to man, when the anxieties and
- passions of the day are over, and he lies down upon his back, that his
- soul shall be so seated within him, that whichever way she turns her
- eyes, the heavens shall look calm and sweet above her--no desire--or
- fear--or doubt that troubles the air, nor any difficulty past, present,
- or to come, that the imagination may not pass over without offence, in
- that sweet secession.
- “God’s blessing,” said _Sancho Pança_, “be upon the man who first
- invented this self-same thing called sleep--it covers a man all over
- like a cloak.” Now there is more to me in this, and it speaks warmer to
- my heart and affections, than all the dissertations squeez’d out of the
- heads of the learned together upon the subject.
- --Not that I altogether disapprove of what _Montaigne_ advances upon
- it--’tis admirable in its way--(I quote by memory).
- The world enjoys other pleasures, says he, as they do that of sleep,
- without tasting or feeling it as it slips and passes by. --We should
- study and ruminate upon it, in order to render proper thanks to him who
- grants it to us. --For this end I cause myself to be disturbed in my
- sleep, that I may the better and more sensibly relish it. ----And yet I
- see few, says he again, who live with less sleep, when need requires; my
- body is capable of a firm, but not of a violent and sudden agitation --I
- evade of late all violent exercises ----I am never weary with
- walking----but from my youth, I never liked to ride upon pavements.
- I love to lie hard and alone, and even without my wife ----This last word
- may stagger the faith of the world----but remember, “La Vraisemblance
- (as _Bayle_ says in the affair of _Liceti_) n’est pas toujours du Côté
- de la Verité.” And so much for sleep.
- CHAPTER XVI
- If my wife will but venture him--brother _Toby_, _Trismegistus_ shall be
- dress’d and brought down to us, whilst you and I are getting our
- breakfasts together.------
- ----Go, tell _Susannah_, _Obadiah_, to step here.
- She is run upstairs, answered _Obadiah_, this very instant, sobbing and
- crying, and wringing her hands as if her heart would break.
- We shall have a rare month of it, said my father, turning his head from
- _Obadiah_, and looking wistfully in my uncle _Toby’s_ face for some
- time--we shall have a devilish month of it, brother _Toby_, said my
- father, setting his arms a-kimbo, and shaking his head; fire, water,
- women, wind--brother _Toby!_--’Tis some misfortune, quoth my uncle
- _Toby_. ----That it is, cried my father--to have so many jarring
- elements breaking loose, and riding triumph in every corner of a
- gentleman’s house --Little boots it to the peace of a family, brother
- _Toby_, that you and I possess ourselves, and sit here silent and
- unmoved----whilst such a storm is whistling over our heads.------
- And what’s the matter, _Susannah?_ They have called the child
- _Tristram_----and my mistress is just got out of an hysterick fit about
- it ----No----’tis not my fault, said _Susannah_ --I told him it was
- _Tristram-gistus_.
- ----Make tea for yourself, brother _Toby_, said my father, taking down
- his hat----but how different from the sallies and agitations of voice
- and members which a common reader would imagine!
- --For he spake in the sweetest modulation--and took down his hat with
- the genteelest movement of limbs, that ever affliction harmonized and
- attuned together.
- ----Go to the bowling-green for corporal _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_,
- speaking to _Obadiah_, as soon as my father left the room.
- CHAPTER XVII
- When the misfortune of my NOSE fell so heavily upon my father’s head;
- --the reader remembers that he walked instantly up stairs, and cast
- himself down upon his bed; and from hence, unless he has a great insight
- into human nature, he will be apt to expect a rotation of the same
- ascending and descending movements from him, upon his misfortune of my
- NAME; ----no.
- The different weight, dear Sir----nay even the different package of two
- vexations of the same weight----makes a very wide difference in our
- manner of bearing and getting through with them. ----It is not half an
- hour ago, when (in the great hurry and precipitation of a poor devil’s
- writing for daily bread) I threw a fair sheet, which I had just
- finished, and carefully wrote out, slap into the fire, instead of the
- foul one.
- Instantly I snatch’d off my wig, and threw it perpendicularly, with all
- imaginable violence, up to the top of the room--indeed I caught it as it
- fell----but there was an end of the matter; nor do I think anything else
- in _Nature_ would have given such immediate ease: She, dear Goddess, by
- an instantaneous impulse, in all _provoking cases_, determines us to a
- sally of this or that member--or else she thrusts us into this or that
- place or posture of body, we know not why ----But mark, madam, we live
- amongst riddles and mysteries----the most obvious things, which come in
- our way, have dark sides, which the quickest sight cannot penetrate
- into; and even the clearest and most exalted understandings amongst us
- find ourselves puzzled and at a loss in almost every cranny of nature’s
- works: so that this, like a thousand other things, falls out for us in a
- way, which tho’ we cannot reason upon it--yet we find the good of it,
- may it please your reverences and your worships----and that’s enough for
- us.
- Now, my father could not lie down with this affliction for his
- life----nor could he carry it up stairs like the other--he walked
- composedly out with it to the fish-pond.
- Had my father leaned his head upon his hand, and reasoned an hour which
- way to have gone------reason, with all her force, could not have
- directed him to anything like it: there is something, Sir, in
- fish-ponds----but what it is, I leave to system-builders and
- fish-pond-diggers betwixt ’em to find out--but there is something, under
- the first disorderly transport of the humours, so unaccountably
- becalming in an orderly and a sober walk towards one of them, that I
- have often wondered that neither _Pythagoras_, nor _Plato_, nor _Solon_,
- nor _Lycurgus_, nor _Mahomet_, nor any one of your noted lawgivers, ever
- gave order about them.
- CHAPTER XVIII
- Your honour, said _Trim_, shutting the parlour-door before he began to
- speak, has heard, I imagine, of this unlucky accident ----O yes, _Trim_,
- said my uncle _Toby_, and it gives me great concern. --I am heartily
- concerned too, but I hope your honour, replied _Trim_, will do me the
- justice to believe, that it was not in the least owing to me. ----To
- thee--_Trim?_ --cried my uncle _Toby_, looking kindly in his
- face------’twas _Susannah’s_ and the curate’s folly betwixt them.
- ------What business could they have together, an’ please your honour, in
- the garden? ----In the gallery thou meanest, replied my uncle _Toby_.
- _Trim_ found he was upon a wrong scent, and stopped short with a low
- bow ----Two misfortunes, quoth the corporal to himself, are twice as many
- at least as are needful to be talked over at one time; ----the mischief
- the cow has done in breaking into the fortifications, may be told his
- honour hereafter. ----_Trim’s_ casuistry and address, under the cover of
- his low bow, prevented all suspicion in my uncle _Toby_, so he went on
- with what he had to say to _Trim_ as follows:
- ------For my own part, _Trim_, though I can see little or no difference
- betwixt my nephew’s being called _Tristram_ or _Trismegistus_--yet as
- the thing sits so near my brother’s heart, _Trim_ ------I would freely
- have given a hundred pounds rather than it should have happened. ----A
- hundred pounds, an’ please your honour! replied _Trim_, ----I would not
- give a cherry-stone to boot. ----Nor would I, _Trim_, upon my own
- account, quoth my uncle _Toby_, --------but my brother, whom there is no
- arguing with in this case--maintains that a great deal more depends,
- _Trim_, upon christian-names, than what ignorant people imagine----for
- he says there never was a great or heroic action performed since the
- world began by one called _Tristram_--nay, he will have it, _Trim_, that
- a man can neither be learned, or wise, or brave. ----’Tis all fancy, an’
- please your honour --I fought just as well, replied the corporal, when
- the regiment called me _Trim_, as when they called me _James Butler_.
- ----And for my own part, said my uncle _Toby_, though I should blush to
- boast of myself, _Trim_----yet had my name been _Alexander_, I could
- have done no more at _Namur_ than my duty. --Bless your honour! cried
- _Trim_, advancing three steps as he spoke, does a man think of his
- christian-name when he goes upon the attack? ------Or when he stands in
- the trench, _Trim?_ cried my uncle _Toby_, looking firm. ----Or when he
- enters a breach? said _Trim_, pushing in between two chairs. ----Or
- forces the lines? cried my uncle, rising up, and pushing his crutch like
- a pike. ----Or facing a platoon? cried _Trim_, presenting his stick like
- a fire-lock. ----Or when he marches up the glacis? cried my uncle
- _Toby_, looking warm and setting his foot upon his stool.------
- CHAPTER XIX
- My father was returned from his walk to the fish-pond----and opened the
- parlour-door in the very height of the attack, just as my uncle _Toby_
- was marching up the glacis----_Trim_ recovered his arms----never was my
- uncle _Toby_ caught in riding at such a desperate rate in his life!
- Alas! my uncle _Toby!_ had not a weightier matter called forth all the
- ready eloquence of my father--how hadst thou then and thy poor
- HOBBY-HORSE too been insulted!
- My father hung up his hat with the same air he took it down; and after
- giving a slight look at the disorder of the room, he took hold of one of
- the chairs which had formed the corporal’s breach, and placing it
- over-against my uncle _Toby_, he sat down in it, and as soon as the
- tea-things were taken away, and the door shut, he broke out in a
- lamentation as follows.
- MY FATHER’S LAMENTATION
- It is in vain longer, said my father, addressing himself as much to
- _Ernulphus’s_ curse, which was laid upon the corner of the
- chimney-piece----as to my uncle _Toby_ who sat under it----it is in vain
- longer, said my father, in the most querulous monotony imaginable, to
- struggle as I have done against this most uncomfortable of human
- persuasions ----I see it plainly, that either for my own sins, brother
- _Toby_, or the sins and follies of the _Shandy_ family, Heaven has
- thought fit to draw forth the heaviest of its artillery against me; and
- that the prosperity of my child is the point upon which the whole force
- of it is directed to play. ------Such a thing would batter the whole
- universe about our ears, brother _Shandy_, said my uncle _Toby_--if it
- was so --Unhappy _Tristram_: child of wrath! child of decrepitude!
- interruption! mistake! and discontent! What one misfortune or disaster
- in the book of embryotic evils, that could unmechanize thy frame, or
- entangle thy filaments! which has not fallen upon thy head, or ever thou
- camest into the world----what evils in thy passage into it! ------what
- evils since! ----produced into being, in the decline of thy father’s
- days----when the powers of his imagination and of his body were waxing
- feeble----when radical heat and radical moisture, the elements which
- should have temper’d thine, were drying up; and nothing left to found
- thy stamina in, but negations--’tis pitiful------brother _Toby_, at the
- best, and called out for all the little helps that care and attention on
- both sides could give it. But how were we defeated! You know the event,
- brother _Toby_----’tis too melancholy a one to be repeated now----when
- the few animal spirits I was worth in the world, and with which memory,
- fancy, and quick parts should have been convey’d------were all
- dispersed, confused, confounded, scattered, and sent to the
- devil.
- ------
- Here then was the time to have put a stop to this persecution against
- him; ------and tried an experiment at least------whether calmness and
- serenity of mind in your sister, with a due attention, brother _Toby_,
- to her evacuations and repletions------and the rest of her non-naturals,
- might not, in a course of nine months gestation, have set all things to
- rights. ------My child was bereft of these! ------What a teazing life
- did she lead herself, and consequently her fœtus too, with that
- nonsensical anxiety of hers about lying-in in town? I thought my sister
- submitted with the greatest patience, replied my uncle _Toby_ --------I
- never heard her utter one fretful word about it. ------She fumed
- inwardly, cried my father; and that, let me tell you, brother, was ten
- times worse for the child--and then! what battles did she fight with me,
- and what perpetual storms about the midwife. ------There she gave vent,
- said my uncle _Toby_. ------Vent! cried my father, looking up.
- But what was all this, my dear _Toby_, to the injuries done us by my
- child’s coming head foremost into the world, when all I wished, in this
- general wreck of his frame, was to have saved this little casket
- unbroke, unrifled.------
- With all my precautions, how was my system turned topside-turvy in the
- womb with my child! his head exposed to the hand of violence, and a
- pressure of 470 pounds avoirdupois weight acting so perpendicularly upon
- its apex--that at this hour ’tis ninety _per Cent._ insurance, that the
- fine net-work of the intellectual web be not rent and torn to a thousand
- tatters.
- ----Still we could have done. ----Fool, coxcomb, puppy----give him but a
- NOSE ----Cripple, Dwarf, Driveller, Goosecap------(shape him as you will)
- the door of fortune stands open--_O Licetus!_ _Licetus!_ had I been
- blest with a fœtus five inches long and a half, like thee --Fate might
- have done her worst.
- Still, brother _Toby_, there was one cast of the dye left for our child
- after all--_O Tristram!_ _Tristram!_ _Tristram!_
- We will send for Mr. _Yorick_, said my uncle _Toby_.
- ----You may send for whom you will, replied my father.
- CHAPTER XX
- What a rate have I gone on at, curvetting and frisking it away, two up
- and two down for four volumes[4.8] together, without looking once
- behind, or even on one side of me, to see whom I trod upon! --I’ll tread
- upon no one----quoth I to myself when I mounted ------I’ll take a good
- rattling gallop; but I’ll not hurt the poorest jackass upon the road.
- ----So off I set----up one lane------down another, through this
- turnpike----over that, as if the arch-jockey of jockeys had got behind
- me.
- Now ride at this rate with what good intention and resolution you
- may----’tis a million to one you’ll do some one a mischief, if not
- yourself ------He’s flung--he’s off--he’s lost his hat--he’s
- down------he’ll break his neck----see! ----if he has not galloped full
- among the scaffolding of the undertaking criticks! ----he’ll knock his
- brains out against some of their posts--he’s bounced out! --look--he’s
- now riding like a mad-cap full tilt through a whole crowd of painters,
- fiddlers, poets, biographers, physicians, lawyers, logicians, players,
- schoolmen, churchmen, statesmen, soldiers, casuists, connoisseurs,
- prelates, popes, and engineers. --Don’t fear, said I --I’ll not hurt the
- poorest jack-ass upon the king’s highway. --But your horse throws dirt;
- see you’ve splash’d a bishop. ----I hope in God, ’twas only _Ernulphus_,
- said I. ------But you have squirted full in the faces of Mess. _Le
- Moyne_, _De Romigny_, and _De Marcilly_, doctors of the _Sorbonne_.
- ------That was last year, replied I. --But you have trod this moment
- upon a king. ----Kings have bad times on’t, said I, to be trod upon by
- such people as me.
- You have done it, replied my accuser.
- I deny it, quoth I, and so have got off, and here am I standing with my
- bridle in one hand, and with my cap in the other, to tell my story.
- ------And what is it? You shall hear in the next chapter.
- [Footnote 4.8: According to the original Editions.]
- CHAPTER XXI
- As _Francis_ the first of _France_ was one winterly night warming
- himself over the embers of a wood fire, and talking with his first
- minister of sundry things for the good of the state[4.9] --It would not
- be amiss, said the king, stirring up the embers with his cane, if this
- good understanding betwixt ourselves and _Switzerland_ was a little
- strengthened. --There is no end, Sire, replied the minister, in giving
- money to these people--they would swallow up the treasury of _France_.
- --Poo! poo! answered the king--there are more ways, Mons. _le Premier_,
- of bribing states, besides that of giving money --I’ll pay _Switzerland_
- the honour of standing godfather for my next child. ----Your majesty,
- said the minister, in so doing, would have all the grammarians in
- _Europe_ upon your back; ----_Switzerland_, as a republick, being a
- female, can in no construction be godfather. --She may be godmother,
- replied _Francis_ hastily--so announce my intentions by a courier
- to-morrow morning.
- I am astonished, said _Francis_ the First, (that day fortnight) speaking
- to his minister as he entered the closet, that we have had no answer
- from _Switzerland_. ----Sire, I wait upon you this moment, said Mons.
- _le Premier_, to lay before you my dispatches upon that business. --They
- take it kindly, said the king. --They do, Sire, replied the minister,
- and have the highest sense of the honour your majesty has done
- them----but the republick, as godmother, claims her right, in this case,
- of naming the child.
- In all reason, quoth the king----she will christen him _Francis_, or
- _Henry_, or _Lewis_, or some name that she knows will be agreeable to
- us. Your majesty is deceived, replied the minister ----I have this hour
- received a dispatch from our resident, with the determination of the
- republick on that point also. ----And what name has the republick fixed
- upon for the Dauphin? ----_Shadrach_, _Meshech_, _Abed-nego_, replied
- the minister. --By Saint _Peter’s_ girdle, I will have nothing to do
- with the _Swiss_, cried _Francis_ the First, pulling up his breeches and
- walking hastily across the floor.
- Your majesty, replied the minister calmly, cannot bring yourself off.
- We’ll pay them in money------said the king.
- Sire, there are not sixty thousand crowns in the treasury, answered the
- minister. ----I’ll pawn the best jewel in my crown, quoth _Francis_ the
- First.
- Your honour stands pawn’d already in this matter, answered Monsieur _le
- Premier_.
- Then, Mons. _le Premier_, said the king, by------we’ll go to war with
- ’em.
- [Footnote 4.9: Vide Menagiana, Vol. I.]
- CHAPTER XXII
- Albeit, gentle reader, I have lusted earnestly, and endeavoured
- carefully (according to the measure of such a slender skill as God has
- vouchsafed me, and as convenient leisure from other occasions of needful
- profit and healthful pastime have permitted) that these little books
- which I here put into thy hands, might stand instead of many bigger
- books--yet have I carried myself towards thee in such fanciful guise of
- careless disport, that right sore am I ashamed now to intreat thy lenity
- seriously------in beseeching thee to believe it of me, that in the story
- of my father and his christian-names --I have no thoughts of treading
- upon _Francis_ the First----nor in the affair of the nose--upon
- _Francis_ the Ninth--nor in the character of my uncle _Toby_----of
- characterizing the militiating spirits of my country--the wound upon his
- groin, is a wound to every comparison of that kind--nor by _Trim_--that
- I meant the duke of _Ormond_----or that my book is wrote against
- predestination, or free-will, or taxes --If ’tis wrote against any thing,
- ----’tis wrote, an’ please your worships, against the spleen! in order,
- by a more frequent and a more convulsive elevation and depression of the
- diaphragm, and the succussations of the intercostal and abdominal
- muscles in laughter, to drive the _gall_ and other _bitter juices_ from
- the gallbladder, liver, and sweet-bread of his majesty’s subjects, with
- all the inimicitious passions which belong to them, down into their
- duodenums.
- CHAPTER XXIII
- --But can the thing be undone, _Yorick?_ said my father--for in my
- opinion, continued he, it cannot. I am a vile canonist, replied
- _Yorick_--but of all evils, holding suspense to be the most tormenting,
- we shall at least know the worst of this matter. I hate these great
- dinners----said my father --The size of the dinner is not the point,
- answered _Yorick_----we want, Mr. _Shandy_, to dive into the bottom of
- this doubt, whether the name can be changed or not--and as the beards of
- so many commissaries, officials, advocates, proctors, registers, and of
- the most eminent of our school-divines, and others, are all to meet in
- the middle of one table, and _Didius_ has so pressingly invited you--who
- in your distress would miss such an occasion? All that is requisite,
- continued _Yorick_, is to apprize _Didius_, and let him manage a
- conversation after dinner so as to introduce the subject. --Then my
- brother _Toby_, cried my father, clapping his two hands together, shall
- go with us.
- ----Let my old tye-wig, quoth my uncle _Toby_, and my laced regimentals,
- be hung to the fire all night, _Trim_.
- CHAPTER XXV
- --No doubt, Sir, --there is a whole chapter wanting here--and a chasm of
- ten pages made in the book by it--but the bookbinder is neither a fool,
- or a knave, or a puppy--nor is the book a jot more imperfect (at least
- upon that score)----but, on the contrary, the book is more perfect and
- complete by wanting the chapter, than having it, as I shall demonstrate
- to your reverences in this manner. --I question first, by the bye,
- whether the same experiment might not be made as successfully upon
- sundry other chapters------but there is no end, an’ please your
- reverences, in trying experiments upon chapters------we have had enough
- of it ----So there’s an end of that matter.
- But before I begin my demonstration, let me only tell you, that the
- chapter which I have torn out, and which otherwise you would all have
- been reading just now, instead of this----was the description of my
- father’s, my uncle _Toby’s_, _Trim’s_, and _Obadiah’s_ setting out and
- journeying to the visitation at ****.
- We’ll go in the coach, said my father --Prithee, have the arms been
- altered, _Obadiah?_ --It would have made my story much better to have
- begun with telling you, that at the time my mother’s arms were added to
- the _Shandy’s_, when the coach was re-painted upon my father’s marriage,
- it had so fallen out, that the coach-painter, whether by performing all
- his works with the left-hand, like _Turpilius_ the _Roman_, or _Hans
- Holbein_ of _Basil_----or whether ’twas more from the blunder of his
- head than hand----or whether, lastly, it was from the sinister turn
- which every thing relating to our family was apt to take----it so fell
- out, however, to our reproach, that instead of the _bend-dexter_, which
- since _Harry_ the Eighth’s reign was honestly our due------a
- _bend-sinister_, by some of these fatalities, had been drawn quite
- across the field of the _Shandy_ arms. ’Tis scarce credible that the
- mind of so wise a man as my father was, could be so much incommoded with
- so small a matter. The word coach--let it be whose it would--or
- coach-man, or coach-horse, or coach-hire, could never be named in the
- family, but he constantly complained of carrying this vile mark of
- illegitimacy upon the door of his own; he never once was able to step
- into the coach, or out of it, without turning round to take a view of
- the arms, and making a vow at the same time, that it was the last time
- he would ever set his foot in it again, till the _bend-sinister_ was
- taken out--but like the affair of the hinge, it was one of the many
- things which the _Destinies_ had set down in their books ever to be
- grumbled at (and in wiser families than ours)----but never to be mended.
- --Has the _bend-sinister_ been brush’d out, I say? said my father.
- ----There has been nothing brush’d out, Sir, answered _Obadiah_, but the
- lining. We’ll go o’horseback, said my father, turning to _Yorick_.
- ----Of all things in the world, except politicks, the clergy know the
- least of heraldry, said _Yorick_. --No matter for that, cried my
- father ----I should be sorry to appear with a blot in my escutcheon
- before them. --Never mind the _bend-sinister_, said my uncle _Toby_,
- putting on his tye-wig. ----No, indeed, said my father--you may go with
- my aunt _Dinah_ to a visitation with a _bend-sinister_, if you think
- fit --My poor uncle _Toby_ blush’d. My father was vexed at himself.
- ------No----my dear brother _Toby_, said my father, changing his
- tone----but the damp of the coach-lining about my loins, may give me the
- sciatica again, as it did _December_, _January_, and _February_ last
- _winter_--so if you please you shall ride my wife’s pad----and as you
- are to preach, _Yorick_, you had better make the best of your way
- before----and leave me to take care of my brother _Toby_, and to follow
- at our own rates.
- Now the chapter I was obliged to tear out, was the description of this
- cavalcade, in which Corporal _Trim_ and _Obadiah_, upon two coach-horses
- a-breast, led the way as slow as a patrole----whilst my uncle _Toby_, in
- his laced regimentals and tye-wig, kept his rank with my father, in deep
- roads and dissertations alternately upon the advantage of learning and
- arms, as each could get the start.
- --But the painting of this journey, upon reviewing it, appears to be so
- much above the stile and manner of anything else I have been able to
- paint in this book, that it could not have remained in it, without
- depreciating every other scene; and destroying at the same time that
- necessary equipoise and balance, (whether of good or bad) betwixt
- chapter and chapter, from whence the just proportions and harmony of the
- whole work results. For my own part, I am but just set up in the
- business, so know little about it--but, in my opinion, to write a book
- is for all the world like humming a song--but in tune with yourself,
- madam, ’tis no matter how high or how low you take it.
- --This is the reason, may it please your reverences, that some of the
- lowest and flattest compositions pass off very well----(as _Yorick_ told
- my uncle _Toby_ one night) by siege. ----My uncle _Toby_ looked brisk at
- the sound of the word _siege_, but could make neither head or tail of
- it.
- I’m to preach at court next Sunday, said _Homenas_----run over my
- notes----so I humm’d over doctor _Homenas’s_ notes--the modulation’s
- very well----’twill do, _Homenas_, if it holds on at this rate----so on
- I humm’d----and a tolerable tune I thought it was; and to this hour, may
- it please your reverences, had never found out how low, how flat, how
- spiritless and jejune it was, but that all of a sudden, up started an
- air in the middle of it, so fine, so rich, so heavenly, --it carried my
- soul up with it into the other world; now had I (as _Montaigne_
- complained in a parallel accident)--had I found the declivity easy, or
- the ascent accessible------certes I had been outwitted. ------Your
- notes, _Homenas_, I should have said, are good notes; ----but it was so
- perpendicular a precipice------so wholly cut off from the rest of the
- work, that by the first note I humm’d I found myself flying into the
- other world, and from thence discovered the vale from whence I came, so
- deep, so low, and dismal, that I shall never have the heart to descend
- into it again.
- [-->] A dwarf who brings a standard along with him to measure his own
- size--take my word, is a dwarf in more articles than one. --And so much
- for tearing out of chapters.
- CHAPTER XXVI
- ----See if he is not cutting it into slips, and giving them about him to
- light their pipes! ----’Tis abominable, answered _Didius_; it should not
- go unnoticed, said doctor _Kysarcius_------ [-->] he was of the
- _Kysarcii_ of the Low Countries.
- Methinks, said _Didius_, half rising from his chair, in order to remove
- a bottle and a tall decanter, which stood in a direct line betwixt him
- and _Yorick_----you might have spared this sarcastic stroke, and have
- hit upon a more proper place, Mr. _Yorick_--or at least upon a more
- proper occasion to have shewn your contempt of what we have been about:
- If the sermon is of no better worth than to light pipes with----’twas
- certainly, Sir, not good enough to be preached before so learned a body;
- and if ’twas good enough to be preached before so learned a
- body----’twas certainly, Sir, too good to light their pipes with
- afterwards.
- ----I have got him fast hung up, quoth _Didius_ to himself, upon one of
- the two horns of my dilemma----let him get off as he can.
- I have undergone such unspeakable torments, in bringing forth this
- sermon, quoth _Yorick_, upon this occasion------that I declare,
- _Didius_, I would suffer martyrdom--and if it was possible my horse with
- me, a thousand times over, before I would sit down and make such
- another: I was delivered of it at the wrong end of me----it came from my
- head instead of my heart------and it is for the pain it gave me, both in
- the writing and preaching of it, that I revenge myself of it, in this
- manner --To preach, to shew the extent of our reading, or the subtleties
- of our wit--to parade in the eyes of the vulgar with the beggarly
- accounts of a little learning, tinsel’d over with a few words which
- glitter, but convey little light and less warmth----is a dishonest use
- of the poor single half hour in a week which is put into our hands--’Tis
- not preaching the gospel--but ourselves ----For my own part, continued
- _Yorick_, I had rather direct five words point-blank to the heart.--
- As _Yorick_ pronounced the word _point-blank_, my uncle _Toby_ rose up
- to say something upon projectiles----when a single word and no more
- uttered from the opposite side of the table drew every one’s ears
- towards it--a word of all others in the dictionary the last in that
- place to be expected--a word I am ashamed to write--yet must be
- written----must be read--illegal--uncanonical--guess ten thousand
- guesses, multiplied into themselves--rack--torture your invention for
- ever, you’re where you was --------In short, I’ll tell it in the next
- chapter.
- CHAPTER XXVII
- Zounds! -------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
- ------------Z------ds! cried _Phutatorius_, partly to himself----and yet
- high enough to be heard--and what seemed odd, ’twas uttered in a
- construction of look, and in a tone of voice, somewhat between that of a
- man in amazement and one in bodily pain.
- One or two who had very nice ears, and could distinguish the expression
- and mixture of the two tones as plainly as a _third_ or a _fifth_, or
- any other chord in musick--were the most puzzled and perplexed with
- it--the concord was good in itself--but then ’twas quite out of the key,
- and no way applicable to the subject started; ----so that with all their
- knowledge, they could not tell what in the world to make of it.
- Others who knew nothing of musical expression, and merely lent their
- ears to the plain import of the _word_, imagined that _Phutatorius_, who
- was somewhat of a cholerick spirit, was just going to snatch the cudgels
- out of _Didius’s_ hands, in order to bemaul _Yorick_ to some
- purpose--and that the desperate monosyllable Z------ds was the exordium
- to an oration, which, as they judged from the sample, presaged but a
- rough kind of handling of him; so that my uncle _Toby’s_ good-nature
- felt a pang for what _Yorick_ was about to undergo. But seeing
- _Phutatorius_ stop short, without any attempt or desire to go on--a
- third party began to suppose, that it was no more than an involuntary
- respiration, casually forming itself into the shape of a twelve-penny
- oath--without the sin or substance of one.
- Others, and especially one or two who sat next him, looked upon it on
- the contrary as a real and substantial oath, propensly formed against
- _Yorick_, to whom he was known to bear no good liking--which said oath,
- as my father philosophized upon it, actually lay fretting and fuming at
- that very time in the upper regions of _Phutatorius’s_ purtenance; and
- so was naturally, and according to the due course of things, first
- squeezed out by the sudden influx of blood which was driven into the
- right ventricle of _Phutatorius’s_ heart, by the stroke of surprize
- which so strange a theory of preaching had excited.
- How finely we argue upon mistaken facts!
- There was not a soul busied in all these various reasonings upon the
- monosyllable which _Phutatorius_ uttered----who did not take this for
- granted, proceeding upon it as from an axiom, namely, that
- _Phutatorius’s_ mind was intent upon the subject of debate which was
- arising between _Didius_ and _Yorick_; and indeed as he looked first
- towards the one and then towards the other, with the air of a man
- listening to what was going forwards--who would not have thought the
- same? But the truth was, that _Phutatorius_ knew not one word or one
- syllable of what was passing--but his whole thoughts and attention were
- taken up with a transaction which was going forwards at that very
- instant within the precincts of his own _Galligaskins_, and in a part of
- them, where of all others he stood most interested to watch accidents:
- So that notwithstanding he looked with all the attention in the world,
- and had gradually skrewed up every nerve and muscle in his face, to the
- utmost pitch the instrument would bear, in order, as it was thought, to
- give a sharp reply to _Yorick_, who sat over-against him----yet, I say,
- was _Yorick_ never once in any one domicile of _Phutatorius’s_
- brain----but the true cause of his exclamation lay at least a yard
- below.
- This I will endeavour to explain to you with all imaginable decency.
- You must be informed then, that _Gastripheres_, who had taken a turn
- into the kitchen a little before dinner, to see how things went
- on--observing a wicker-basket of fine chesnuts standing upon the
- dresser, had ordered that a hundred or two of them might be roasted and
- sent in, as soon as dinner was over---- _Gastripheres_ inforcing his
- orders about them, that _Didius_, but _Phutatorius_ especially, were
- particularly fond of ’em.
- About two minutes before the time that my uncle _Toby_ interrupted
- _Yorick’s_ harangue--_Gastripheres’s_ chesnuts were brought in--and as
- _Phutatorius’s_ fondness for ’em was uppermost in the waiter’s head, he
- laid them directly before _Phutatorius_, wrapt up hot in a clean damask
- napkin.
- Now whether it was physically impossible, with half a dozen hands all
- thrust into the napkin at a time--but that some one chesnut, of more
- life and rotundity than the rest, must be put in motion--it so fell out,
- however, that one was actually sent rolling off the table; and as
- _Phutatorius_ sat straddling under----it fell perpendicularly into that
- particular aperture of _Phutatorius’s_ breeches, for which, to the shame
- and indelicacy of our language be it spoke, there is no chaste word
- throughout all _Johnson’s_ dictionary----let it suffice to say----it was
- that particular aperture which, in all good societies, the laws of
- decorum do strictly require, like the temple of _Janus_ (in peace at
- least) to be universally shut up.
- The neglect of this punctilio in _Phutatorius_ (which by the bye should
- be a warning to all mankind) had opened a door to this accident.----
- Accident I call it, in compliance to a received mode of
- speaking------but in no opposition to the opinion either of _Acrites_ or
- _Mythogeras_ in this matter; I know they were both prepossessed and
- fully persuaded of it--and are so to this hour, That there was nothing
- of accident in the whole event----but that the chesnut’s taking that
- particular course and in a manner of its own accord--and then falling
- with all its heat directly into that one particular place, and no
- other----was a real judgment upon _Phutatorius_, for that filthy and
- obscene treatise _de Concubinis retinendis_, which _Phutatorius_ had
- published about twenty years ago----and was that identical week going to
- give the world a second edition of.
- It is not my business to dip my pen in this controversy----much
- undoubtedly may be wrote on both sides of the question--all that
- concerns me as an historian, is to represent the matter of fact, and
- render it credible to the reader, that the hiatus in _Phutatorius’s_
- breeches was sufficiently wide to receive the chesnut; ----and that the
- chesnut, somehow or other, did fall perpendicularly and piping hot into
- it, without _Phutatorius’s_ perceiving it, or any one else at that time.
- The genial warmth which the chesnut imparted, was not undelectable for
- the first twenty or five-and-twenty seconds----and did no more than
- gently solicit _Phutatorius’s_ attention towards the part: ------But the
- heat gradually increasing, and in a few seconds more getting beyond the
- point of all sober pleasure, and then advancing with all speed into the
- regions of pain, the soul of _Phutatorius_, together with all his ideas,
- his thoughts, his attention, his imagination, judgment, resolution,
- deliberation, ratiocination, memory, fancy, with ten battalions of
- animal spirits, all tumultuously crowded down, through different defiles
- and circuits, to the place of danger, leaving all his upper regions, as
- you may imagine, as empty as my purse.
- With the best intelligence which all these messengers could bring him
- back, _Phutatorius_ was not able to dive into the secret of what was
- going forwards below, nor could he make any kind of conjecture, what the
- devil was the matter with it: However, as he knew not what the true
- cause might turn out, he deemed it most prudent, in the situation he was
- in at present, to bear it, if possible, like a Stoick; which, with the
- help of some wry faces and compursions of the mouth, he had certainly
- accomplished, had his imagination continued neuter; ----but the sallies
- of the imagination are ungovernable in things of this kind--a thought
- instantly darted into his mind, that tho’ the anguish had the sensation
- of glowing heat--it might, notwithstanding that, be a bite as well as a
- burn; and if so, that possibly a _Newt_ or an _Asker_, or some such
- detested reptile, had crept up, and was fastening his teeth----the
- horrid idea of which, with a fresh glow of pain arising that instant
- from the chesnut, seized _Phutatorius_ with a sudden panick, and in the
- first terrifying disorder of the passion, it threw him, as it has done
- the best generals upon earth, quite off his guard: ----the effect of
- which was this, that he leapt incontinently up, uttering as he rose that
- interjection of surprise so much descanted upon, with the aposiopestic
- break after it, marked thus, Z------ds--which, though not strictly
- canonical, was still as little as any man could have said upon the
- occasion; ------and which, by the bye, whether canonical or not,
- _Phutatorius_ could no more help than he could the cause of it.
- Though this has taken up some time in the narrative, it took up little
- more time in the transaction, than just to allow for _Phutatorius_ to
- draw forth the chesnut, and throw it down with violence upon the
- floor--and for _Yorick_ to rise from his chair, and pick the chesnut up.
- It is curious to observe the triumph of slight incidents over the mind:
- ----What incredible weight they have in forming and governing our
- opinions, both of men and things----that trifles, light as air, shall
- waft a belief into the soul, and plant it so immoveably within
- it----that _Euclid’s_ demonstrations, could they be brought to batter it
- in breach, should not all have power to overthrow it.
- _Yorick_, I said, picked up the chesnut which _Phutatorius’s_ wrath had
- flung down----the action was trifling ----I am ashamed to account for
- it--he did it, for no reason, but that he thought the chesnut not a jot
- worse for the adventure--and that he held a good chesnut worth stooping
- for. ------But this incident, trifling as it was, wrought differently in
- _Phutatorius’s_ head: He considered this act of _Yorick’s_ in getting
- off his chair and picking up the chesnut, as a plain acknowledgment in
- him, that the chesnut was originally his--and in course, that it must
- have been the owner of the chesnut, and no one else, who could have
- played him such a prank with it: What greatly confirmed him in this
- opinion, was this, that the table being parallelogramical and very
- narrow, it afforded a fair opportunity for _Yorick_, who sat directly
- over against _Phutatorius_, of slipping the chesnut in----and
- consequently that he did it. The look of something more than suspicion,
- which _Phutatorius_ cast full upon _Yorick_ as these thoughts arose, too
- evidently spoke his opinion----and as _Phutatorius_ was naturally
- supposed to know more of the matter than any person besides, his opinion
- at once became the general one; ----and for a reason very different from
- any which have been yet given----in a little time it was put out of all
- manner of dispute.
- When great or unexpected events fall out upon the stage of this
- sublunary world----the mind of man, which is an inquisitive kind of
- substance, naturally takes a flight behind the scenes to see what is the
- cause and first spring of them. --The search was not long in this
- instance.
- It was well known that _Yorick_ had never a good opinion of the treatise
- which _Phutatorius_ had wrote _de Concubinis retinendis_, as a thing
- which he feared had done hurt in the world----and ’twas easily found
- out, that there was a mystical meaning in _Yorick’s_ prank--and that his
- chucking the chesnut hot into _Phutatorius’s_ ***----*****, was a
- sarcastical fling at his book--the doctrines of which, they said, had
- enflamed many an honest man in the same place.
- This conceit awaken’d _Somnolentus_----made _Agelastes_ smile----and if
- you can recollect the precise look and air of a man’s face intent in
- finding out a riddle------it threw _Gastripheres’s_ into that form--and
- in short was thought by many to be a master-stroke of arch-wit.
- This, as the reader has seen from one end to the other, was as
- groundless as the dreams of philosophy: _Yorick_, no doubt, as
- _Shakespeare_ said of his ancestor------ “_was a man of jest_,” but it
- was temper’d with something which withheld him from that, and many other
- ungracious pranks, of which he as undeservedly bore the blame; --but it
- was his misfortune all his life long to bear the imputation of saying
- and doing a thousand things, of which (unless my esteem blinds me) his
- nature was incapable. All I blame him for----or rather, all I blame and
- alternately like him for, was that singularity of his temper, which
- would never suffer him to take pains to set a story right with the
- world, however in his power. In every ill usage of that sort, he acted
- precisely as in the affair of his lean horse----he could have explained
- it to his honour, but his spirit was above it; and besides, he ever
- looked upon the inventor, the propagator and believer of an illiberal
- report alike so injurious to him--he could not stoop to tell his story
- to them--and so trusted to time and truth to do it for him.
- This heroic cast produced him inconveniences in many respects--in the
- present it was followed by the fixed resentment of _Phutatorius_, who,
- as _Yorick_ had just made an end of his chesnut, rose up from his chair
- a second time, to let him know it--which indeed he did with a smile;
- saying only--that he would endeavour not to forget the obligation.
- But you must mark and carefully separate and distinguish these two
- things in your mind.
- ----The smile was for the company.
- ----The threat was for _Yorick_.
- CHAPTER XXVIII
- --Can you tell me, quoth _Phutatorius_, speaking to _Gastripheres_ who
- sat next to him----for one would not apply to a surgeon in so foolish an
- affair----can you tell me, _Gastripheres_, what is best to take out the
- fire? ----Ask _Eugenius_, said _Gastripheres_. ----That greatly depends,
- said _Eugenius_, pretending ignorance of the adventure, upon the nature
- of the part ----If it is a tender part, and a part which can conveniently
- be wrapt up ------It is both the one and the other, replied
- _Phutatorius_, laying his hand as he spoke, with an emphatical nod of
- his head, upon the part in question, and lifting up his right leg at the
- same time to ease and ventilate it. ------If that is the case, said
- _Eugenius_, I would advise you, _Phutatorius_, not to tamper with it by
- any means; but if you will send to the next printer, and trust your cure
- to such a simple thing as a soft sheet of paper just come off the
- press--you need do nothing more than twist it round. --The damp paper,
- quoth _Yorick_ (who sat next to his friend _Eugenius_) though I know it
- has a refreshing coolness in it--yet I presume is no more than the
- vehicle--and that the oil and lamp-black with which the paper is so
- strongly impregnated, does the business. --Right, said _Eugenius_, and
- is, of any outward application I would venture to recommend, the most
- anodyne and safe.
- Was it my case, said _Gastripheres_, as the main thing is the oil and
- lamp-black, I should spread them thick upon a rag, and clap it on
- directly. ------That would make a very devil of it, replied _Yorick_.
- ----And besides, added _Eugenius_, it would not answer the intention,
- which is the extreme neatness and elegance of the prescription, which
- the Faculty hold to be half in half; ----for consider, if the type is a
- very small one (which it should be) the sanative particles, which come
- into contact in this form, have the advantage of being spread so
- infinitely thin, and with such a mathematical equality (fresh paragraphs
- and large capitals excepted) as no art or management of the spatula can
- come up to. ------It falls out very luckily, replied _Phutatorius_, that
- the second edition of my treatise _de Concubinis retinendis_ is at this
- instant in the press. ------You may take any leaf of it, said
- _Eugenius_------no matter which. ----Provided, quoth _Yorick_, there is
- no bawdry in it.------
- They are just now, replied _Phutatorius_, printing off the ninth
- chapter----which is the last chapter but one in the book. ----Pray what
- is the title of that chapter? said _Yorick_; making a respectful bow to
- _Phutatorius_ as he spoke. ------I think, answered _Phutatorius_, ’tis
- that _de re concubinariâ_.
- For Heaven’s sake keep out of that chapter, quoth _Yorick_.
- ----By all means--added _Eugenius_.
- CHAPTER XXIX
- --Now, quoth _Didius_, rising up, and laying his right hand with his
- fingers spread upon his breast----had such a blunder about a
- christian-name happened before the Reformation ------[It happened the
- day before yesterday, quoth my uncle _Toby_ to himself] and when baptism
- was administer’d in _Latin_ --[’Twas all in _English_, said my
- uncle]------ many things might have coincided with it, and upon the
- authority of sundry decreed cases, to have pronounced the baptism null,
- with a power of giving the child a new name --Had a priest, for instance,
- which was no uncommon thing, through ignorance of the _Latin_ tongue,
- baptized a child of Tom-o’Stiles, _in nomine patriæ & filia & spiritum
- sanctos_--the baptism was held null. ----I beg your pardon, replied
- _Kysarcius_----in that case, as the mistake was only the _terminations_,
- the baptism was valid----and to have rendered it null, the blunder of
- the priest should have fallen upon the first syllable of each
- noun------and not, as in your case, upon the last.
- My father delighted in subtleties of this kind, and listen’d with
- infinite attention.
- _Gastripheres_, for example, continued _Kysarcius_, baptizes a child of
- _John Stradling’s_ in _Gomine_ gatris, &c., &c., instead of _in Nomine_
- patris, &c. ----Is this a baptism? No--say the ablest canonists; in as
- much as the radix of each word is hereby torn up, and the sense and
- meaning of them removed and changed quite to another object; for
- _Gomine_ does not signify a name, nor _gatris_ a father. --What do they
- signify? said my uncle _Toby_. --Nothing at all------quoth _Yorick_.
- ----Ergo, such a baptism is null, said _Kysarcius_.----
- In course, answered _Yorick_, in a tone two parts jest and one part
- earnest.----
- But in the case cited, continued _Kysarcius_, where _patriæ_ is put for
- _patris_, _filia_ for _filii_, and so on----as it is a fault only in the
- declension, and the roots of the words continue untouch’d, the
- inflections of their branches either this way or that, does not in any
- sort hinder the baptism, inasmuch as the same sense continues in the
- words as before. ----But then, said _Didius_, the intention of the
- priest’s pronouncing them grammatically must have been proved to have
- gone along with it. ------------Right, answered _Kysarcius_; and of
- this, brother _Didius_, we have an instance in a decree of the decretals
- of Pope _Leo_ the IIId. ----But my brother’s child, cried my uncle
- _Toby_, has nothing to do with the Pope------’tis the plain child of a
- Protestant gentleman, christen’d _Tristram_ against the wills and wishes
- both of his father and mother, and all who are a-kin to it.----
- If the wills and wishes, said _Kysarcius_, interrupting my uncle _Toby_,
- of those only who stand related to Mr. _Shandy’s_ child, were to have
- weight in this matter, Mrs. _Shandy_, of all people, has the least to do
- in it. ----My uncle _Toby_ lay’d down his pipe, and my father drew his
- chair still closer to the table, to hear the conclusion of so strange an
- introduction.
- ----It has not only been a question, Captain _Shandy_, amongst the[4.10]
- best lawyers and civilians in this land, continued _Kysarcius_,
- “_Whether the mother be of kin to her child_,” --but, after much
- dispassionate enquiry and jactitation of the arguments on all sides--it
- has been abjudged for the negative--namely, “_That the mother is not of
- kin to her child_.”[4.11] My father instantly clapp’d his hand upon my
- uncle _Toby’s_ mouth, under colour of whispering in his ear; --the truth
- was, he was alarmed for _Lillabullero_--and having a great desire to
- hear more of so curious an argument--he begg’d my uncle _Toby_, for
- Heaven’s sake, not to disappoint him in it. --My uncle _Toby_ gave a
- nod--resumed his pipe, and contenting himself with whistling
- _Lillabullero_ inwardly----_Kysarcius_, _Didius_, and _Triptolemus_ went
- on with the discourse as follows.
- This determination, continued _Kysarcius_, how contrary soever it may
- seem to run to the stream of vulgar ideas, yet had reason strongly on
- its side; and has been put out of all manner of dispute from the famous
- case, known commonly by the name of the Duke of _Suffolk’s_ case.
- ------It is cited in _Brook_, said _Triptolemus_ ------And taken notice
- of by Lord _Coke_, added _Didius_. --And you may find it in _Swinburn_
- on Testaments, said _Kysarcius_.
- The case, Mr. _Shandy_, was this.
- In the reign of _Edward_ the Sixth, _Charles_ duke of _Suffolk_ having
- issue a son by one venter, and a daughter by another venter, made his
- last will, wherein he devised goods to his son, and died; after whose
- death the son died also----but without will, without wife, and without
- child--his mother and his sister by the father’s side (for she was born
- of the former venter) then living. The mother took the administration of
- her son’s goods, according to the statute of the 21st of _Harry_ the
- Eighth, whereby it is enacted, That in case any person die intestate the
- administration of his goods shall be committed to the next of kin.
- The administration being thus (surreptitiously) granted to the mother,
- the sister by the father’s side commenced a suit before the
- Ecclesiastical Judge, alledging, 1st, That she herself was next of kin;
- and 2dly, That the mother was not of kin at all to the party deceased;
- and therefore prayed the court, that the administration granted to the
- mother might be revoked, and be committed unto her, as next of kin to
- the deceased, by force of the said statute.
- Hereupon, as it was a great cause, and much depending upon its
- issue--and many causes of great property likely to be decided in times
- to come, by the precedent to be then made----the most learned, as well
- in the laws of this realm, as in the civil law, were consulted together,
- whether the mother was of kin to her son, or no. --Whereunto not only
- the temporal lawyers----but the church lawyers--the juris-consulti--the
- juris-prudentes--the civilians--the advocates--the commissaries--the
- judges of the consistory and prerogative courts of _Canterbury_ and
- _York_, with the master of the faculties, were all unanimously of
- opinion, That the mother was not of[4.12] kin to her child.----
- And what said the duchess of _Suffolk_ to it? said my uncle _Toby_.
- The unexpectedness of my uncle _Toby’s_ question, confounded _Kysarcius_
- more than the ablest advocate ----He stopp’d a full minute, looking in
- my uncle _Toby’s_ face without replying----and in that single minute
- _Triptolemus_ put by him, and took the lead as follows.
- ’Tis a ground and principle in the law, said _Triptolemus_, that things
- do not ascend, but descend in it; and I make no doubt ’tis for this
- cause, that however true it is, that the child may be of the blood and
- seed of its parents----that the parents, nevertheless, are not of the
- blood and seed of it; inasmuch as the parents are not begot by the
- child, but the child by the parents --For so they write, _Liberi sunt de
- sanguine patris & matris, sed pater & mater non sunt de sanguine
- liberorum_.
- ----But this, _Triptolemus_, cried _Didius_, proves too much--for from
- this authority cited it would follow, not only what indeed is granted on
- all sides, that the mother is not of kin to her child--but the father
- likewise. ----It is held, said _Triptolemus_, the better opinion;
- because the father, the mother, and the child, though they be three
- persons, yet are they but (_una caro_[4.13]) one flesh; and consequently
- no degree of kindred----or any method of acquiring one _in nature_.
- ----There you push the argument again too far, cried _Didius_----for
- there is no prohibition _in nature_, though there is in the Levitical
- law----but that a man may beget a child upon his grandmother----in which
- case, supposing the issue a daughter, she would stand in relation both
- of ----But who ever thought, cried _Kysarcius_, of lying with his
- grandmother? ------The young gentleman, replied _Yorick_, whom _Selden_
- speaks of----who not only thought of it, but justified his intention to
- his father by the argument drawn from the law of retaliation. --“You
- lay, Sir, with my mother,” said the lad-- “why may not I lie with
- yours?” ----’Tis the _Argumentum commune_, added _Yorick_. ----’Tis as
- good, replied _Eugenius_, taking down his hat, as they deserve.
- The company broke up.
- [Footnote 4.10: Vide Swinburn on Testaments, Part 7, §8.]
- [Footnote 4.11: Vide Brook, Abridg. Tit. Administr. N. 47.]
- [Footnote 4.12: Mater non numeratur inter consanguineos, Bald.
- in ult. C. de Verb. signific.]
- [Footnote 4.13: Vide Brook, Abridg. tit. Administr. N. 47.]
- CHAPTER XXX
- --And pray, said my uncle _Toby_, leaning upon _Yorick_, as he and my
- father were helping him leisurely down the stairs----don’t be terrified,
- madam, this stair-case conversation is not so long as the last ----And
- pray, _Yorick_, said my uncle _Toby_, which way is this said affair of
- _Tristram_ at length settled by these learned men? Very satisfactorily,
- replied _Yorick_; no mortal, Sir, has any concern with it----for Mrs.
- _Shandy_ the mother is nothing at all a-kin to him----and as the
- mother’s is the surest side ----Mr. _Shandy_, in course, is still less
- than nothing ------In short, he is not as much a-kin to him, Sir, as I
- am.----
- ----That may well be, said my father, shaking his head.
- ----Let the learned say what they will, there must certainly, quoth my
- uncle _Toby_, have been some sort of consanguinity betwixt the duchess
- of _Suffolk_ and her son.
- The vulgar are of the same opinion, quoth _Yorick_, to this hour.
- CHAPTER XXXI
- Though my father was hugely tickled with the subtleties of these learned
- discourses------’twas still but like the anointing of a broken
- bone ------The moment he got home, the weight of his afflictions returned
- upon him but so much the heavier, as is ever the case when the staff we
- lean on slips from under us. --He became pensive--walked frequently
- forth to the fish-pond--let down one loop of his hat----sigh’d
- often----forbore to snap--and, as the hasty sparks of temper, which
- occasion snapping, so much assist perspiration and digestion, as
- _Hippocrates_ tells us--he had certainly fallen ill with the extinction
- of them, had not his thoughts been critically drawn off, and his health
- rescued by a fresh train of disquietudes left him, with a legacy of a
- thousand pounds, by my aunt _Dinah_.
- My father had scarce read the letter, when taking the thing by the right
- end, he instantly began to plague and puzzle his head how to lay it out
- mostly to the honour of his family. --A hundred-and-fifty odd projects
- took possession of his brains by turns--he would do this, and that, and
- t’other --He would go to _Rome_----he would go to law----he would buy
- stock----he would buy _John Hobson’s_ farm--he would new fore-front his
- house, and add a new wing to make it even ----There was a fine water-mill
- on this side, and he would build a wind-mill on the other side of the
- river in full view to answer it --But above all things in the world, he
- would inclose the great _Ox-moor_, and send out my brother _Bobby_
- immediately upon his travels.
- But as the sum was _finite_, and consequently could not do
- everything----and in truth very few of these to any purpose--of all the
- projects which offered themselves upon this occasion, the two last
- seemed to make the deepest impression; and he would infallibly have
- determined upon both at once, but for the small inconvenience hinted at
- above, which absolutely put him under a necessity of deciding in favour
- either of the one or the other.
- This was not altogether so easy to be done; for though ’tis certain my
- father had long before set his heart upon this necessary part of my
- brother’s education, and like a prudent man had actually determined to
- carry it into execution, with the first money that returned from the
- second creation of actions in the _Missisippi_-scheme, in which he was
- an adventurer----yet the _Ox-moor_, which was a fine, large, whinny,
- undrained, unimproved common, belonging to the _Shandy_-estate, had
- almost as old a claim upon him: he had long and affectionately set his
- heart upon turning it likewise to some account.
- But having never hitherto been pressed with such a conjuncture of
- things, as made it necessary to settle either the priority or justice of
- their claims----like a wise man he had refrained entering into any nice
- or critical examination about them: so that upon the dismission of every
- other project at this crisis------the two old projects, the OX-MOOR and
- my BROTHER, divided him again; and so equal a match were they for each
- other, as to become the occasion of no small contest in the old
- gentleman’s mind--which of the two should be set o’going first.
- ----People may laugh as they will--but the case was this.
- It had ever been the custom of the family, and by length of time was
- almost become a matter of common right, that the eldest son of it should
- have free ingress, egress, and regress into foreign parts before
- marriage--not only for the sake of bettering his own private parts, by
- the benefit of exercise and change of so much air--but simply for the
- mere delectation of his fancy, by the feather put into his cap, of
- having been abroad--_tantum valet_, my father would say, _quantum
- sonat_.
- Now as this was a reasonable, and in course a most christian
- indulgence----to deprive him of it, without why or wherefore----and
- thereby make an example of him, as the first _Shandy_ unwhirl’d about
- _Europe_ in a post-chaise, and only because he was a heavy lad----would
- be using him ten times worse than a Turk.
- On the other hand, the case of the _Ox-moor_ was full as hard.
- Exclusive of the original purchase-money, which was eight hundred
- pounds----it had cost the family eight hundred pounds more in a law-suit
- about fifteen years before--besides the Lord knows what trouble and
- vexation.
- It had been moreover in possession of the _Shandy_-family ever since the
- middle of the last century; and though it lay full in view before the
- house, bounded on one extremity by the water-mill, and on the other by
- the projected wind-mill, spoken of above--and for all these reasons
- seemed to have the fairest title of any part of the estate to the care
- and protection of the family--yet by an unaccountable fatality, common
- to men, as well as the ground they tread on----it had all along most
- shamefully been overlook’d; and to speak the truth of it, had suffered
- so much by it, that it would have made any man’s heart have bled
- (_Obadiah_ said) who understood the value of the land, to have rode over
- it, and only seen the condition it was in.
- However, as neither the purchasing this tract of ground----nor indeed
- the placing of it where it lay, were either of them, properly speaking,
- of my father’s doing----he had never thought himself any way concerned
- in the affair------till the fifteen years before, when the breaking out
- of that cursed law-suit mentioned above (and which had arose about its
- boundaries)------which being altogether my father’s own act and deed, it
- naturally awakened every other argument in its favour, and upon summing
- them all up together, he saw, not merely in interest, but in honour, he
- was bound to do something for it----and that now or never was the time.
- I think there must certainly have been a mixture of ill-luck in it, that
- the reasons on both sides should happen to be so equally balanced by
- each other; for though my father weigh’d them in all humours and
- conditions------spent many an anxious hour in the most profound and
- abstracted meditation upon what was best to be done--reading books of
- farming one day------books of travels another----laying aside all
- passion whatever--viewing the arguments on both sides in all their
- lights and circumstances--communing every day with my uncle
- _Toby_--arguing with _Yorick_, and talking over the whole affair of the
- _Ox-moor_ with _Obadiah_------yet nothing in all that time appeared so
- strongly in behalf of the one, which was not either strictly applicable
- to the other, or at least so far counterbalanced by some consideration
- of equal weight, as to keep the scales even.
- For to be sure, with proper helps, and in the hands of some people, tho’
- the _Ox-moor_ would undoubtedly have made a different appearance in the
- world from what it did, or ever could do in the condition it lay----yet
- every tittle of this was true, with regard to my brother _Bobby_----let
- _Obadiah_ say what he would.------
- In point of interest----the contest, I own, at first sight, did not
- appear so undecisive betwixt them; for whenever my father took pen and
- ink in hand, and set about calculating the simple expence of paring and
- burning, and fencing in the _Ox-moor_ &c. &c. --with the certain profit
- it would bring him in return----the latter turned out so prodigiously in
- his way of working the account, that you would have sworn the _Ox-moor_
- would have carried all before it. For it was plain he should reap a
- hundred lasts of rape, at twenty pounds a last, the very first
- year----besides an excellent crop of wheat the year following----and the
- year after that, to speak within bounds, a hundred----but in all
- likelihood, a hundred and fifty------if not two hundred quarters of
- pease and beans----besides potatoes without end. ----But then, to think
- he was all this while breeding up my brother, like a hog to eat
- them----knocked all on the head again, and generally left the old
- gentleman in such a state of suspence----that, as he often declared to
- my uncle _Toby_----he knew no more than his heels what to do.
- No body, but he who has felt it, can conceive what a plaguing thing it
- is to have a man’s mind torn asunder by two projects of equal strength,
- both obstinately pulling in a contrary direction at the same time: for
- to say nothing of the havock, which by a certain consequence is
- unavoidably made by it all over the finer system of the nerves, which
- you know convey the animal spirits and more subtle juices from the heart
- to the head, and so on----it is not to be told in what a degree such a
- wayward kind of friction works upon the more gross and solid parts,
- wasting the fat and impairing the strength of a man every time as it
- goes backwards and forwards.
- My father had certainly sunk under this evil, as certainly as he had
- done under that of my CHRISTIAN NAME----had he not been rescued out of
- it, as he was out of that, by a fresh evil------the misfortune of my
- brother _Bobby’s_ death.
- What is the life of man! Is it not to shift from side to side?
- ------from sorrow to sorrow? ------to button up one cause of
- vexation------and unbutton another?
- CHAPTER XXXII
- From this moment I am to be considered as heir-apparent to the _Shandy_
- family----and it is from this point properly, that the story of my LIFE
- and my OPINIONS sets out. With all my hurry and precipitation, I have
- but been clearing the ground to raise the building----and such a
- building do I foresee it will turn out, as never was planned, and as
- never was executed since _Adam_. In less than five minutes I shall have
- thrown my pen into the fire, and the little drop of thick ink which is
- left remaining at the bottom of my ink-horn, after it --I have but half
- a score things to do in the time ----I have a thing to name----a thing
- to lament----a thing to hope----a thing to promise, and a thing to
- threaten --I have a thing to suppose--a thing to declare----a thing to
- conceal----a thing to choose, and a thing to pray for ------This chapter,
- therefore, I _name_ the chapter of THINGS------and my next chapter to
- it, that is, the first chapter of my next volume, if I live, shall be my
- chapter upon WHISKERS, in order to keep up some sort of connection in my
- works.
- The thing I lament is, that things have crowded in so thick upon me,
- that I have not been able to get into that part of my work, towards
- which I have all the way looked forwards, with so much earnest desire;
- and that is the Campaigns, but especially the amours of my uncle _Toby_,
- the events of which are of so singular a nature, and so Cervantick a
- cast, that if I can so manage it, as to convey but the same impressions
- to every other brain, which the occurrences themselves excite in my
- own --I will answer for it the book shall make its way in the world,
- much better than its master has done before it. ----Oh _Tristram!_
- _Tristram!_ can this but be once brought about----the credit, which will
- attend thee as an author, shall counterbalance the many evils which have
- befallen thee as a man----thou wilt feast upon the one----when thou hast
- lost all sense and remembrance of the other!----
- No wonder I itch so much as I do, to get at these amours --They are the
- choicest morsel of my whole story! and when I do get at ’em----assure
- yourselves, good folks--(nor do I value whose squeamish stomach takes
- offence at it) I shall not be at all nice in the choice of my words!
- ----and that’s the thing I have to _declare_. ------I shall never get
- all through in five minutes, that I fear----and the thing I _hope_ is,
- that your worships and reverences are not offended--if you are, depend
- upon’t I’ll give you something, my good gentry, next year to be offended
- at----that’s my dear _Jenny’s_ way--but who my _Jenny_ is--and which is
- the right and which the wrong end of a woman, is the thing to be
- _concealed_--it shall be told you in the next chapter but one to my
- chapter of Button-holes----and not one chapter before.
- And now that you have just got to the end of these[4.14] four
- volumes----the thing I have to _ask_ is, how you feel your heads? my own
- akes dismally! ------as for your healths, I know, they are much better.
- --True _Shandeism_, think what you will against it, opens the heart and
- lungs, and like all those affections which partake of its nature, it
- forces the blood and other vital fluids of the body to run freely
- through its channels, makes the wheel of life run long and chearfully
- round.
- Was I left, like _Sancho Panca_, to choose my kingdom, it should not be
- maritime--or a kingdom of blacks to make a penny of; --no, it should be
- a kingdom of hearty laughing subjects: And as the bilious and more
- saturnine passions, by creating disorders in the blood and humours, have
- as bad an influence, I see, upon the body politick as body
- natural----and as nothing but a habit of virtue can fully govern those
- passions, and subject them to reason ------I should add to my
- prayer--that God would give my subjects grace to be as WISE as they were
- MERRY; and then should I be the happiest monarch, and they the happiest
- people under heaven.
- And so, with this moral for the present, may it please your worships and
- your reverences, I take my leave of you till this time twelve-month,
- when, (unless this vile cough kills me in the meantime) I’ll have
- another pluck at your beards, and lay open a story to the world you
- little dream of.
- [Footnote 4.14: According to the original Editions.]
- THE LIFE AND OPINIONS
- OF
- TRISTRAM SHANDY
- GENTLEMAN
- Dixero si quid fortè jocosius, hoc mihi juris
- Cum venia dabis. ---- HOR.
- --Si quis calumnietur levius esse quam decet theologum, aut
- mordacius quam deceat Christianum--non Ego, sed Democritus dixit. --
- ERASMUS.
- Si quis Clericus, aut Monachus, verba joculatoria, risum moventia,
- sciebat, anathema esto. -- SECOND COUNCIL OF CARTHAGE.
- TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE
- JOHN,
- LORD VISCOUNT SPENCER
- MY LORD,
- I humbly beg leave to offer you these two Volumes;[D.1] they are the
- best my talents, with such bad health as I have, could produce: --had
- Providence granted me a larger stock of either, they had been a much
- more proper present to your Lordship.
- I beg your Lordship will forgive me, if, at the same time I dedicate
- this work to you, I join Lady SPENCER, in the liberty I take of
- inscribing the story of _Le Fever_ to her name; for which I have no
- other motive, which my heart has informed me of, but that the story is a
- humane one.
- I am,
- MY LORD,
- Your Lordship’s most devoted
- and most humble Servant,
- LAUR. STERNE.
- [Footnote D.1: Volumes V. and VI. in the first Edition.]
- BOOK V
- CHAPTER I
- If it had not been for those two mettlesome tits, and that madcap of a
- postillion who drove them from Stilton to Stamford, the thought had
- never entered my head. He flew like lightning----there was a slope of
- three miles and a half----we scarce touched the ground----the motion was
- most rapid----most impetuous------’twas communicated to my brain--my
- heart partook of it---- “By the great God of day,” said I, looking
- towards the sun, and thrusting my arm out of the fore-window of the
- chaise, as I made my vow, “I will lock up my study-door the moment I get
- home, and throw the key of it ninety feet below the surface of the
- earth, into the draw-well at the back of my house.”
- The London waggon confirmed me in my resolution; it hung tottering upon
- the hill, scarce progressive, drag’d--drag’d up by eight _heavy
- beasts_-- “by main strength! ----quoth I, nodding----but your betters
- draw the same way----and something of everybody’s! ----O rare!”
- Tell me, ye learned, shall we for ever be adding so much to the
- _bulk_--so little to the _stock?_
- Shall we for ever make new books, as apothecaries make new mixtures, by
- pouring only out of one vessel into another?
- Are we for ever to be twisting, and untwisting the same rope? for ever
- in the same track--for ever at the same pace?
- Shall we be destined to the days of eternity, on holy-days, as well as
- working-days, to be shewing the _relicks of learning_, as monks do the
- relicks of their saints--without working one--one single miracle with
- them?
- Who made Man, with powers which dart him from earth to heaven in a
- moment--that great, that most excellent, and most noble creature of the
- world--the _miracle_ of nature, as Zoroaster in his book περι φύσεως
- called him--the SHEKINAH of the divine presence, as Chrysostom----the
- _image_ of God, as Moses----the _ray_ of divinity, as Plato--the
- _marvel_ of _marvels_, as Aristotle--to go sneaking on at this
- pitiful--pimping--pettifogging rate?
- I scorn to be as abusive as Horace upon the occasion------but if there
- is no catachresis in the wish, and no sin in it, I wish from my soul,
- that every imitator in _Great Britain_, _France_, and _Ireland_, had the
- farcy for his pains; and that there was a good farcical house, large
- enough to hold--aye--and sublimate them, _shag rag and bob-tail_, male
- and female, all together: and this leads me to the affair of
- _Whiskers_----but, by what chain of ideas --I leave as a legacy in
- _mort-main_ to Prudes and Tartufs, to enjoy and make the most of.
- UPON WHISKERS
- I’m sorry I made it----’twas as inconsiderate a promise as ever entered
- a man’s head ----A chapter upon whiskers! alas! the world will not bear
- it--’tis a delicate world----but I knew not of what mettle it was
- made--nor had I ever seen the underwritten fragment; otherwise, as
- surely as noses are noses, and whiskers are whiskers still (let the
- world say what it will to the contrary); so surely would I have steered
- clear of this dangerous chapter.
- THE FRAGMENT
- * * * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * * * ------You are
- half asleep, my good lady, said the old gentleman, taking hold of the
- old lady’s hand, and giving it a gentle squeeze, as he pronounced the
- word _Whiskers_----shall we change the subject? By no means, replied the
- old lady --I like your account of those matters; so throwing a thin gauze
- handkerchief over her head, and leaning it back upon the chair with her
- face turned towards him, and advancing her two feet as she reclined
- herself ----I desire, continued she, you will go on.
- The old gentleman went on as follows: ------Whiskers! cried the queen of
- _Navarre_, dropping her knotting ball, as _La Fosseuse_ uttered the
- word ----Whiskers, madam, said _La Fosseuse_, pinning the ball to the
- queen’s apron, and making a courtesy as she repeated it.
- _La Fosseuse’s_ voice was naturally soft and low, yet ’twas an
- articulate voice: and every letter of the word _Whiskers_ fell
- distinctly upon the queen of _Navarre’s_ ear --Whiskers! cried the
- queen, laying a greater stress upon the word, and as if she had still
- distrusted her ears ----Whiskers! replied _La Fosseuse_, repeating the
- word a third time ----There is not a cavalier, madam, of his age in
- _Navarre_, continued the maid of honour, pressing the page’s interest
- upon the queen, that has so gallant a pair ----Of what? cried _Margaret_,
- smiling --Of whiskers, said _La Fosseuse_, with infinite modesty.
- The word _Whiskers_ still stood its ground, and continued to be made use
- of in most of the best companies throughout the little kingdom of
- _Navarre_, notwithstanding the indiscreet use which _La Fosseuse_ had
- made of it: the truth was, _La Fosseuse_ had pronounced the word, not
- only before the queen, but upon sundry other occasions at court, with an
- accent which always implied something of a mystery --And as the court of
- _Margaret_, as all the world knows, was at that time a mixture of
- gallantry and devotion----and whiskers being as applicable to the one,
- as the other, the word naturally stood its ground----it gain’d full as
- much as it lost; that is, the clergy were for it----the laity were
- against it----and for the women, ----_they_ were divided.
- The excellency of the figure and mien of the young Sieur _De Croix_, was
- at that time beginning to draw the attention of the maids of honour
- towards the terrace before the palace gate, where the guard was mounted.
- The lady _De Baussiere_ fell deeply in love with him, ----_La
- Battarelle_ did the same--it was the finest weather for it, that ever
- was remembered in _Navarre_----_La Guyol_, _La Maronette_, _La
- Sabatiere_, fell in love with the Sieur _De Croix_ also----_La Rebours_
- and _La Fosseuse_ knew better----_De Croix_ had failed in an attempt to
- recommend himself to _La Rebours_; and _La Rebours_ and _La Fosseuse_
- were inseparable.
- The queen of _Navarre_ was sitting with her ladies in the painted
- bow-window, facing the gate of the second court, as _De Croix_ passed
- through it --He is handsome, said the Lady _Baussiere_. ----He has a
- good mien, said _La Battarelle_ ----He is finely shaped, said _La Guyol_
- --I never saw an officer of the horse-guards in my life, said _La
- Maronette_, with two such legs ----Or who stood so well upon them, said
- _La Sabatiere_ ------But he has no whiskers, cried _La Fosseuse_ ----Not
- a pile, said _La Rebours_.
- The queen went directly to her oratory, musing all the way, as she
- walked through the gallery, upon the subject; turning it this way and
- that way in her fancy--_Ave Maria!_------what can _La Fosseuse_ mean?
- said she, kneeling down upon the cushion.
- _La Guyol_, _La Battarelle_, _La Maronette_, _La Sabatiere_, retired
- instantly to their chambers ------Whiskers! said all four of them to
- themselves, as they bolted their doors on the inside.
- The Lady _Carnavallette_ was counting her beads with both hands,
- unsuspected, under her farthingal----from St. _Antony_ down to St.
- _Ursula_ inclusive, not a saint passed through her fingers without
- whiskers; St. _Francis_, St. _Dominick_, St. _Bennet_, St. _Basil_, St.
- _Bridget_, had all whiskers.
- The Lady _Baussiere_ had got into a wilderness of conceits, with
- moralizing too intricately upon _La Fosseuse’s_ text ----She mounted her
- palfrey, her page followed her----the host passed by--the Lady
- _Baussiere_ rode on.
- One denier, cried the order of mercy--one single denier, in behalf of a
- thousand patient captives, whose eyes look towards heaven and you for
- their redemption.
- ----The Lady _Baussiere_ rode on.
- Pity the unhappy, said a devout, venerable, hoary-headed man, meekly
- holding up a box, begirt with iron, in his withered hands ----I beg for
- the unfortunate--good my Lady, ’tis for a prison--for an hospital--’tis
- for an old man--a poor man undone by shipwreck, by suretyship, by
- fire ----I call God and all his angels to witness----’tis to clothe the
- naked----to feed the hungry----’tis to comfort the sick and the
- broken-hearted.
- The Lady _Baussiere_ rode on.
- A decayed kinsman bowed himself to the ground.
- ----The Lady _Baussiere_ rode on.
- He ran begging bare-headed on one side of her palfrey, conjuring her by
- the former bonds of friendship, alliance, consanguinity, etc.
- ----Cousin, aunt, sister, mother, ----for virtue’s sake, for your own,
- for mine, for Christ’s sake, remember me----pity me.
- ----The Lady _Baussiere_ rode on.
- Take hold of my whiskers, said the Lady _Baussiere_ ----The page took
- hold of her palfrey. She dismounted at the end of the terrace.
- There are some trains of certain ideas which leave prints of themselves
- about our eyes and eye-brows; and there is a consciousness of it,
- somewhere about the heart, which serves but to make these etchings the
- stronger--we see, spell, and put them together without a dictionary.
- Ha, ha! he, hee! cried _La Guyol_ and _La Sabatiere_, looking close at
- each other’s prints ----Ho, ho! cried _La Battarelle_ and _Maronette_,
- doing the same: --Whist! cried one--st, st, --said a second--hush, quoth
- a third--poo, poo, replied a fourth--gramercy! cried the Lady
- _Carnavallette_; ----’twas she who bewhisker’d St. _Bridget_.
- _La Fosseuse_ drew her bodkin from the knot of her hair, and having
- traced the outline of a small whisker, with the blunt end of it, upon
- one side of her upper lip, put it into _La Rebours’_ hand--_La Rebours_
- shook her head.
- The Lady _Baussiere_ coughed thrice into the inside of her muff--_La
- Guyol_ smiled --Fy, said the Lady _Baussiere_. The queen of _Navarre_
- touched her eye with the tip of her fore-finger--as much as to say,
- I understand you all.
- ’Twas plain to the whole court the word was ruined: _La Fosseuse_ had
- given it a wound, and it was not the better for passing through all
- these defiles ----It made a faint stand, however, for a few months, by
- the expiration of which, the Sieur _De Croix_, finding it high time to
- leave _Navarre_ for want of whiskers----the word in course became
- indecent, and (after a few efforts) absolutely unfit for use.
- The best word, in the best language of the best world, must have
- suffered under such combinations. ------The curate of _d’Estella_ wrote
- a book against them, setting forth the dangers of accessory ideas, and
- warning the _Navarois_ against them.
- Does not all the world know, said the curate _d’Estella_ at the
- conclusion of his work, that Noses ran the same fate some centuries ago
- in most parts of _Europe_, which Whiskers have now done in the kingdom
- of _Navarre?_ --The evil indeed spread no farther then--but have not
- beds and bolsters, and nightcaps and chamber-pots stood upon the brink
- of destruction ever since? Are not trouse, and placket-holes, and
- pump-handles--and spigots and faucets, in danger still from the same
- association? ----Chastity, by nature, the gentlest of all
- affections--give it but its head----’tis like a ramping and a roaring
- lion.
- The drift of the curate _d’Estella’s_ argument was not understood.
- --They ran the scent the wrong way. --The world bridled his ass at the
- tail. --And when the _extremes_ of DELICACY, and the _beginnings_ of
- CONCUPISCENCE, hold their next provincial chapter together, they may
- decree that bawdy also.
- CHAPTER II
- When my father received the letter which brought him the melancholy
- account of my brother _Bobby’s_ death, he was busy calculating the
- expence of his riding post from _Calais_ to _Paris_, and so on to
- _Lyons_.
- ’Twas a most inauspicious journey; my father having had every foot of it
- to travel over again, and his calculation to begin afresh, when he had
- almost got to the end of it, by _Obadiah’s_ opening the door to acquaint
- him the family was out of yeast--and to ask whether he might not take
- the great coach-horse early in the morning and ride in search of some.
- --With all my heart, _Obadiah_, said my father (pursuing his
- journey)--take the coach-horse, and welcome. ----But he wants a shoe,
- poor creature! said _Obadiah_. ----Poor creature! said my uncle _Toby_,
- vibrating the note back again, like a string in unison. Then ride the
- _Scotch_ horse, quoth my father hastily. --He cannot bear a saddle upon
- his back, quoth _Obadiah_, for the whole world. ----The devil’s in that
- horse; then take PATRIOT, cried my father, and shut the door.
- ----PATRIOT is sold, said _Obadiah_. Here’s for you! cried my father,
- making a pause, and looking in my uncle _Toby’s_ face, as if the thing
- had not been a matter of fact. --Your worship ordered me to sell him
- last _April_, said _Obadiah_. --Then go on foot for your pains, cried my
- father ----I had much rather walk than ride, said _Obadiah_, shutting
- the door.
- What plagues, cried my father, going on with his calculation. ----But
- the waters are out, said _Obadiah_, --opening the door again.
- Till that moment, my father, who had a map of _Sanson’s_, and a book of
- the post-roads before him, had kept his hand upon the head of his
- compasses, with one foot of them fixed upon _Nevers_, the last stage he
- had paid for--purposing to go on from that point with his journey and
- calculation, as soon as _Obadiah_ quitted the room: but this second
- attack of _Obadiah’s_, in opening the door and laying the whole country
- under water, was too much. ----He let go his compasses--or rather with a
- mixed motion between accident and anger, he threw them upon the table;
- and then there was nothing for him to do, but to return back to _Calais_
- (like many others) as wise as he had set out.
- When the letter was brought into the parlour, which contained the news
- of my brother’s death, my father had got forwards again upon his journey
- to within a stride of the compasses of the very same stage of _Nevers_.
- ----By your leave, Mons. _Sanson_, cried my father, striking the point
- of his compasses through _Nevers_ into the table--and nodding to my
- uncle _Toby_ to see what was in the letter--twice of one night, is too
- much for an _English_ gentleman and his son, Mons. _Sanson_, to be
- turned back from so lousy a town as _Nevers_ --What think’st thou,
- _Toby?_ added my father in a sprightly tone. ----Unless it be a garrison
- town, said my uncle _Toby_----for then ----I shall be a fool, said my
- father, smiling to himself, as long as I live. --So giving a second
- nod--and keeping his compasses still upon _Nevers_ with one hand, and
- holding his book of the post-roads in the other--half calculating and
- half listening, he leaned forwards upon the table with both elbows, as
- my uncle _Toby_ hummed over the letter.
- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
- ---- ---- ---- --he’s gone! said my uncle _Toby_. ----Where ----Who?
- cried my father. ----My nephew, said my uncle _Toby_. ----What--without
- leave--without money--without governor? cried my father in amazement.
- No: ----he is dead, my dear brother, quoth my uncle _Toby_. --Without
- being ill? cried my father again. --I dare say not, said my uncle
- _Toby_, in a low voice, and fetching a deep sigh from the bottom of his
- heart, he has been ill enough, poor lad! I’ll answer for him----for he
- is dead.
- When _Agrippina_ was told of her son’s death, _Tacitus_ informs us,
- that, not being able to moderate the violence of her passions, she
- abruptly broke off her work. --My father stuck his compasses into
- _Nevers_, but so much the faster. --What contrarieties! his, indeed, was
- matter of calculation! --_Agrippina’s_ must have been quite a different
- affair; who else could pretend to reason from history?
- How my father went on, in my opinion, deserves a chapter to itself.--
- CHAPTER III
- ---- ----And a chapter it shall have, and a devil of a one too--so look
- to yourselves.
- ’Tis either _Plato_, or _Plutarch_, or _Seneca_, or _Xenophon_, or
- _Epictetus_, or _Theophrastus_, or _Lucian_--or some one perhaps of
- later date--either _Cardan_, or _Budæus_, or _Petrarch_, or _Stella_--or
- possibly it may be some divine or father of the church, St. _Austin_, or
- St. _Cyprian_, or _Barnard_, who affirms that it is an irresistible and
- natural passion to weep for the loss of our friends or children--and
- _Seneca_ (I’m positive) tells us somewhere, that such griefs evacuate
- themselves best by that particular channel --And accordingly we find,
- that _David_ wept for his son _Absalom_--_Adrian_ for his
- _Antinous_--_Niobe_ for her children, and that _Apollodorus_ and _Crito_
- both shed tears for _Socrates_ before his death.
- My father managed his affliction otherwise; and indeed differently from
- most men either ancient or modern; for he neither wept it away, as the
- _Hebrews_ and the _Romans_--or slept it off, as the _Laplanders_--or
- hanged it, as the _English_, or drowned it, as the _Germans_--nor did he
- curse it, or damn it, or excommunicate it, or rhyme it, or lillabullero
- it.----
- ----He got rid of it, however.
- Will your worships give me leave to squeeze in a story between these two
- pages?
- When _Tully_ was bereft of his dear daughter _Tullia_, at first he laid
- it to his heart, --he listened to the voice of nature, and modulated his
- own unto it. --O my _Tullia!_ my daughter! my child! --still, still,
- still, --’twas O my _Tullia!_--my _Tullia!_ Methinks I see my _Tullia_,
- I hear my _Tullia_, I talk with my _Tullia_. --But as soon as he began
- to look into the stores of philosophy, and consider how many excellent
- things might be said upon the occasion--nobody upon earth can conceive,
- says the great orator, how happy, how joyful it made me.
- My father was as proud of his eloquence as MARCUS TULLIUS CICERO could
- be for his life, and, for aught I am convinced of to the contrary at
- present, with as much reason: it was indeed his strength--and his
- weakness too. ----His strength--for he was by nature eloquent; and his
- weakness--for he was hourly a dupe to it; and, provided an occasion in
- life would but permit him to shew his talents, or say either a wise
- thing, a witty, or a shrewd one--(bating the case of a systematic
- misfortune)--he had all he wanted. --A blessing which tied up my
- father’s tongue, and a misfortune which let it loose with a good grace,
- were pretty equal: sometimes, indeed, the misfortune was the better of
- the two; for instance, where the pleasure of the harangue was as _ten_,
- and the pain of the misfortune but as _five_--my father gained half in
- half, and consequently was as well again off, as if it had never
- befallen him.
- This clue will unravel what otherwise would seem very inconsistent in my
- father’s domestic character; and it is this, that, in the provocations
- arising from the neglects and blunders of servants, or other mishaps
- unavoidable in a family, his anger or rather the duration of it,
- eternally ran counter to all conjecture.
- My father had a favourite little mare, which he had consigned over to a
- most beautiful Arabian horse, in order to have a pad out of her for his
- own riding: he was sanguine in all his projects; so talked about his pad
- every day with as absolute a security, as if it had been reared, broke,
- --and bridled and saddled at his door ready for mounting. By some
- neglect or other in _Obadiah_, it so fell out, that my father’s
- expectations were answered with nothing better than a mule, and as ugly
- a beast of the kind as ever was produced.
- My mother and my uncle _Toby_ expected my father would be the death of
- _Obadiah_--and that there never would be an end of the disaster. ----See
- here! you rascal, cried my father, pointing to the mule, what you have
- done! ----It was not me, said _Obadiah_. ----How do I know that? replied
- my father.
- Triumph swam in my father’s eyes, at the repartee--the _Attic_ salt
- brought water into them--and so _Obadiah_ heard no more about it.
- Now let us go back to my brother’s death.
- Philosophy has a fine saying for everything. --For _Death_ it has an
- entire set; the misery was, they all at once rushed into my father’s
- head, that ’twas difficult to string them together, so as to make
- anything of a consistent show out of them. --He took them as they came.
- “’Tis an inevitable chance--the first statute in _Magna Charta_--it is
- an everlasting act of parliament, my dear brother, ----_All must die._
- “If my son could not have died, it had been matter of wonder, --not that
- he is dead.
- “Monarchs and princes dance in the same ring with us.
- “--_To die_, is the great debt and tribute due unto nature: tombs and
- monuments, which should perpetuate our memories, pay it themselves; and
- the proudest pyramid of them all, which wealth and science have erected,
- has lost its apex, and stands obtruncated in the traveller’s horizon.”
- (My father found he got great ease, and went on)-- “Kingdoms and
- provinces, and towns and cities, have they not their periods? and when
- those principles and powers, which at first cemented and put them
- together, have performed their several evolutions, they fall back.”
- --Brother _Shandy_, said my uncle _Toby_, laying down his pipe at the
- word _evolutions_ --Revolutions, I meant, quoth my father, --by heaven!
- I meant revolutions, brother _Toby_--evolutions is nonsense. ----’Tis
- not nonsense, --said my uncle _Toby_. ----But is it not nonsense to
- break the thread of such a discourse upon such an occasion? cried my
- father--do not--dear _Toby_, continued he, taking him by the hand, do
- not--do not, I beseech thee, interrupt me at this crisis. ----My uncle
- _Toby_ put his pipe into his mouth.
- “Where is _Troy_ and _Mycenæ_, and _Thebes_ and _Delos_, and
- _Persepolis_ and _Agrigentum?_” --continued my father, taking up his
- book of post-cards, which he had laid down. --“What is become, brother
- _Toby_, of _Nineveh_ and _Babylon_, of _Cizicum_ and _Mitylenæ?_ The
- fairest towns that ever the sun rose upon, are now no more; the names
- only are left, and those (for many of them are wrong spelt) are falling
- themselves by piece-meals to decay, and in length of time will be
- forgotten, and involved with everything in a perpetual night: the world
- itself, brother _Toby_, must--must come to an end.
- “Returning out of _Asia_, when I sailed from _Ægina_ towards _Megara_,”
- (_when can this have been? thought my uncle Toby_) “I began to view the
- country round about. _Ægina_ was behind me, _Megara_ was before,
- _Pyræus_ on the right hand, _Corinth_ on the left. --What flourishing
- towns now prostrate upon the earth! Alas! alas! said I to myself, that
- man should disturb his soul for the loss of a child, when so much as
- this lies awfully buried in his presence ----Remember, said I to myself
- again--remember thou art a man.”--
- Now my uncle _Toby_ knew not that this last paragraph was an extract of
- _Servius Sulpicius’s_ consolatory letter to _Tully_. --He had as little
- skill, honest man, in the fragments, as he had in the whole pieces of
- antiquity. --And as my father, whilst he was concerned in the _Turkey_
- trade, had been three or four different times in the _Levant_, in one of
- which he had staid a whole year and an half at _Zant_, my uncle _Toby_
- naturally concluded, that, in some one of these periods, he had taken a
- trip across the _Archipelago_ into _Asia_; and that all this sailing
- affair with _Ægina_ behind, and _Megara_ before, and _Pyræus_ on the
- right hand, &c., &c., was nothing more than the true course of my
- father’s voyage and reflections. --’Twas certainly in his _manner_, and
- many an undertaking critic would have built two stories higher upon
- worse foundations. --And pray, brother, quoth my uncle _Toby_, laying
- the end of his pipe upon my father’s hand in a kindly way of
- interruption--but waiting till he finished the account--what year of our
- Lord was this? --’Twas no year of our Lord, replied my father. --That’s
- impossible, cried my uncle _Toby_. --Simpleton! said my father, --’twas
- forty years before Christ was born.
- My uncle _Toby_ had but two things for it; either to suppose his brother
- to be the wandering _Jew_, or that his misfortunes had disordered his
- brain. --“May the Lord God of heaven and earth protect him and restore
- him,” said my uncle _Toby_, praying silently for my father, and with
- tears in his eyes.
- --My father placed the tears to a proper account, and went on with his
- harangue with great spirit.
- “There is not such great odds, brother _Toby_, betwixt good and evil, as
- the world imagines”----(this way of setting off, by the bye, was not
- likely to cure my uncle _Toby’s_ suspicions.)---- “Labour, sorrow,
- grief, sickness, want, and woe, are the sauces of life.” --Much good may
- it do them--said my uncle _Toby_ to himself.------
- “My son is dead! --so much the better; --’tis a shame in such a tempest
- to have but one anchor.”
- “But he is gone for ever from us! --be it so. He is got from under the
- hands of his barber before he was bald--he is but risen from a feast
- before he was surfeited--from a banquet before he had got drunken.”
- “The _Thracians_ wept when a child was born”--(and we were very near it,
- quoth my uncle _Toby_)-- “and feasted and made merry when a man went out
- of the world; and with reason. ----Death opens the gate of fame, and
- shuts the gate of envy after it, --it unlooses the chain of the captive,
- and puts the bondsman’s task into another man’s hands.”
- “Shew me the man, who knows what life is, who dreads it, and I’ll shew
- thee a prisoner who dreads his liberty.”
- Is it not better, my dear brother _Toby_, (for mark--our appetites are
- but diseases)--is it not better not to hunger at all, than to eat? --not
- to thirst, than to take physic to cure it?
- Is it not better to be freed from cares and agues, from love and
- melancholy, and the other hot and cold fits of life, than, like a galled
- traveller, who comes weary to his inn, to be bound to begin his journey
- afresh?
- There is no terrour, brother _Toby_, in its looks, but what it borrows
- from groans and convulsions--and the blowing of noses and the wiping
- away of tears with the bottoms of curtains, in a dying man’s room.
- --Strip it of these, what is it? --’Tis better in battle than in bed,
- said my uncle _Toby_. --Take away its herses, its mutes, and its
- mourning, --its plumes, scutcheons, and other mechanic aids --What is
- it? ----_Better in battle!_ continued my father, smiling, for he had
- absolutely forgot my brother _Bobby_--’tis terrible no way--for
- consider, brother _Toby_, --when we _are_--death is _not_; --and when
- death _is_--we are _not_. My uncle _Toby_ laid down his pipe to consider
- the proposition; my father’s eloquence was too rapid to stay for any
- man--away it went, --and hurried my uncle _Toby’s_ ideas along with
- it.----
- For this reason, continued my father, ’tis worthy to recollect how
- little alteration, in great men, the approaches of death have made.
- --_Vespasian_ died in a jest upon his close-stool--_Galba_ with a
- sentence--_Septimus Severus_ in a dispatch--_Tiberius_ in dissimulation,
- and _Cæsar Augustus_ in a compliment. --I hope ’twas a sincere
- one--quoth my uncle _Toby_.
- --’Twas to his wife, --said my father.
- CHAPTER IV
- ----And lastly--for all the choice anecdotes which history can produce
- of this matter, continued my father, --this, like the gilded dome which
- covers in the fabric--crowns all.--
- ’Tis of _Cornelius Gattus_, the prætor--which, I dare say, brother
- _Toby_, you have read, --I dare say I have not, replied my uncle. ----He
- died, said my father, as *************** --And if it was with his wife,
- said my uncle _Toby_--there could be no hurt in it --That’s more than I
- know--replied my father.
- CHAPTER V
- My mother was going very gingerly in the dark along the passage which
- led to the parlour, as my uncle _Toby_ pronounced the word _wife_.
- --’Tis a shrill penetrating sound of itself, and _Obadiah_ had helped it
- by leaving the door a little a-jar, so that my mother heard enough of it
- to imagine herself the subject of the conversation; so laying the edge
- of her finger across her two lips--holding in her breath, and bending
- her head a little downwards, with a twist of her neck--(not towards the
- door, but from it, by which means her ear was brought to the chink)--she
- listened with all her powers: ----the listening slave, with the Goddess
- of Silence at his back, could not have given a finer thought for an
- intaglio.
- In this attitude I am determined to let her stand for five minutes: till
- I bring up the affairs of the kitchen (as _Rapin_ does those of the
- church) to the same period.
- CHAPTER VI
- Though in one sense, our family was certainly a simple machine, as it
- consisted of a few wheels; yet there was thus much to be said for it,
- that these wheels were set in motion by so many different springs, and
- acted one upon the other from such a variety of strange principles and
- impulses----that though it was a simple machine, it had all the honour
- and advantages of a complex one, ----and a number of as odd movements
- within it, as ever were beheld in the inside of a _Dutch_ silk-mill.
- Amongst these there was one, I am going to speak of, in which, perhaps,
- it was not altogether so singular, as in many others; and it was this,
- that whatever motion, debate, harangue, dialogue, project, or
- dissertation, was going forwards in the parlour, there was generally
- another at the same time, and upon the same subject, running parallel
- along with it in the kitchen.
- Now to bring this about, whenever an extraordinary message, or letter,
- was delivered in the parlour--or a discourse suspended till a servant
- went out--or the lines of discontent were observed to hang upon the
- brows of my father or mother--or, in short, when anything was supposed
- to be upon the tapis worth knowing or listening to, ’twas the rule to
- leave the door, not absolutely shut, but somewhat a-jar--as it stands
- just now, --which, under covert of the bad hinge (and that possibly
- might be one of the many reasons why it was never mended), it was not
- difficult to manage; by which means, in all these cases, a passage was
- generally left, not indeed as wide as the _Dardanelles_, but wide
- enough, for all that, to carry on as much of this wind-ward trade, as
- was sufficient to save my father the trouble of governing his house;
- --my mother at this moment stands profiting by it. --_Obadiah_ did the
- same thing, as soon as he had left the letter upon the table which
- brought the news of my brother’s death, so that before my father had
- well got over his surprise, and entered upon this harangue, --had _Trim_
- got upon his legs, to speak his sentiments upon the subject.
- A curious observer of nature, had he been worth the inventory of all
- Job’s stock--though by the by, _your curious observers are seldom worth
- a groat_--would have given the half of it, to have heard Corporal _Trim_
- and my father, two orators so contrasted by nature and education,
- haranguing over the same bier.
- My father--a man of deep reading--prompt memory--with _Cato_, and
- _Seneca_, and _Epictetus_, at his fingers ends.--
- The corporal--with nothing--to remember--of no deeper reading than his
- muster-roll--or greater names at his fingers end, than the contents of
- it.
- The one proceeding from period to period, by metaphor and allusion, and
- striking the fancy as he went along (as men of wit and fancy do) with
- the entertainment and pleasantry of his pictures and images.
- The other, without wit or antithesis, or point, or turn, this way or
- that; but leaving the images on one side, and the picture on the other,
- going straight forwards as nature could lead him, to the heart.
- O _Trim!_ would to heaven thou had’st a better historian! --would thy
- historian had a better pair of breeches! ----O ye critics! will nothing
- melt you?
- CHAPTER VII
- ------My young master in _London_ is dead! said _Obadiah_.--
- ------A green sattin night-gown of my mother’s which had been twice
- scoured, was the first idea which _Obadiah’s_ exclamation brought into
- _Susannah’s_ head. --Well might _Locke_ write a chapter upon the
- imperfection of words. --Then, quoth _Susannah_, we must all go into
- mourning. --But note a second time: the word _mourning_, notwithstanding
- _Susannah_ made use of it herself--failed also of doing its office; it
- excited not one single idea, tinged either with grey or black, --all was
- green. ----The green sattin night-gown hung there still.
- --O! ’twill be the death of my poor mistress, cried _Susannah_. --My
- mother’s whole wardrobe followed. --What a procession! her red damask,
- --her orange tawney, --her white and yellow lutestrings, --her brown
- taffata, --her bone-laced caps, her bed-gowns, and comfortable
- under-petticoats. --Not a rag was left behind. --“_No, --she will never
- look up again_,” said _Susannah_.
- We had a fat, foolish scullion--my father, I think, kept her for her
- simplicity; --she had been all autumn struggling with a dropsy. --He is
- dead, said _Obadiah_, --he is certainly dead! --So am not I, said the
- foolish scullion.
- ----Here is sad news, _Trim_, cried _Susannah_, wiping her eyes as
- _Trim_ stepp’d into the kitchen, --master _Bobby_ is dead and
- _buried_--the funeral was an interpolation of _Susannah’s_--we shall
- have all to go into mourning, said _Susannah_.
- I hope not, said _Trim_. --You hope not! cried _Susannah_ earnestly.
- --The mourning ran not in _Trim’s_ head, whatever it did in
- _Susannah’s_. --I hope--said _Trim_, explaining himself, I hope in God
- the news is not true. --I heard the letter read with my own ears,
- answered _Obadiah_; and we shall have a terrible piece of work of it in
- stubbing the Ox-moor. --Oh! he’s dead, said _Susannah_. --As sure, said
- the scullion, as I’m alive.
- I lament for him from my heart and my soul, said _Trim_, fetching a
- sigh. --Poor creature! --poor boy! --poor gentleman.
- --He was alive last _Whitsontide!_ said the coachman. --_Whitsontide!_
- alas! cried _Trim_, extending his right arm, and falling instantly into
- the same attitude in which he read the sermon, --what is _Whitsontide_,
- _Jonathan_ (for that was the coachman’s name), or _Shrovetide_, or any
- tide or time past, to this? Are we not here now, continued the corporal
- (striking the end of his stick perpendicularly upon the floor, so as to
- give an idea of health and stability)--and are we not--(dropping his hat
- upon the ground) gone! in a moment! --’Twas infinitely striking!
- _Susannah_ burst into a flood of tears. --We are not stocks and stones.
- --_Jonathan_, _Obadiah_, the cook-maid, all melted. --The foolish fat
- scullion herself, who was scouring a fish-kettle upon her knees, was
- rous’d with it. --The whole kitchen crowded about the corporal.
- Now, as I perceive plainly, that the preservation of our constitution in
- church and state, --and possibly the preservation of the whole world--or
- what is the same thing, the distribution and balance of its property and
- power, may in time to come depend greatly upon the right understanding
- of this stroke of the corporal’s eloquence --I do demand your
- attention--your worships and reverences, for any ten pages together,
- take them where you will in any other part of the work, shall sleep for
- it at your ease.
- I said, “we were not stocks and stones”--’tis very well. I should have
- added, nor are we angels, I wish we were, --but men clothed with bodies,
- and governed by our imaginations; --and what a junketing piece of work
- of it there is, betwixt these and our seven senses, especially some of
- them, for my own part, I own it, I am ashamed to confess. Let it suffice
- to affirm, that of all the senses, the eye (for I absolutely deny the
- touch, though most of your _Barbati_, I know, are for it) has the
- quickest commerce with the soul, --gives a smarter stroke, and leaves
- something more inexpressible upon the fancy, than words can either
- convey--or sometimes, get rid of.
- --I’ve gone a little about--no matter, ’tis for health--let us only
- carry it back in our mind to the mortality of _Trim’s_ hat. --“Are we
- not here now, --and gone in a moment?” --There was nothing in the
- sentence--’twas one of your self-evident truths we have the advantage of
- hearing every day; and if _Trim_ had not trusted more to his hat than
- his head--he had made nothing at all of it.
- ------“Are we not here now;” continued the corporal, “and are we
- not”--(dropping his hat plump upon the ground--and pausing, before he
- pronounced the word)-- “gone! in a moment?” The descent of the hat was
- as if a heavy lump of clay had been kneeded into the crown of it.
- ----Nothing could have expressed the sentiment of mortality, of which it
- was the type and fore-runner, like it, --his hand seemed to vanish from
- under it, --it fell dead, --the corporal’s eye fixed upon it, as upon a
- corpse, --and _Susannah_ burst into a flood of tears.
- Now --Ten thousand, and ten thousand times ten thousand (for matter and
- motion are infinite) are the ways by which a hat may be dropped upon the
- ground, without any effect. ----Had he flung it, or thrown it, or cast
- it, or skimmed it, or squirted it, or let it slip or fall in any
- possible direction under heaven, --or in the best direction that could
- be given to it, --had he dropped it like a goose--like a puppy--like an
- ass--or in doing it, or even after he had done, had he looked like a
- fool--like a ninny--like a nincompoop--it had fail’d, and the effect
- upon the heart had been lost.
- Ye who govern this mighty world and its mighty concerns with the
- _engines_ of eloquence, --who heat it, and cool it, and melt it, and
- mollify it, ----and then harden it again to _your purpose_----
- Ye who wind and turn the passions with this great windlass, and, having
- done it, lead the owners of them, whither ye think meet--
- Ye, lastly, who drive----and why not, Ye also who are driven, like
- turkeys to market with a stick and a red clout--meditate--meditate,
- I beseech you, upon _Trim’s_ hat.
- CHAPTER VIII
- Stay ----I have a small account to settle with the reader before _Trim_
- can go on with his harangue. --It shall be done in two minutes.
- Amongst many other book-debts, all of which I shall discharge in due
- time, --I own myself a debtor to the world for two items, --a chapter
- upon _chamber-maids and button-holes_, which, in the former part of my
- work, I promised and fully intended to pay off this year: but some of
- your worships and reverences telling me, that the two subjects,
- especially so connected together, might endanger the morals of the
- world, --I pray the chapter upon chamber-maids and button-holes may be
- forgiven me, --and that they will accept of the last chapter in lieu of
- it; which is nothing, an’t please your reverences, but a chapter of
- _chamber-maids, green gowns, and old hats_.
- _Trim_ took his off the ground, --put it upon his head, --and then went
- on with his oration upon death, in manner and form following.
- CHAPTER IX
- ------To us, _Jonathan_, who know not what want or care is--who live
- here in the service of two of the best of masters--(bating in my own
- case his majesty King _William_ the Third, whom I had the honour to
- serve both in _Ireland_ and _Flanders_) --I own it, that from
- _Whitsontide_ to within three weeks of _Christmas_, --’tis not
- long--’tis like nothing; --but to those, _Jonathan_, who know what death
- is, and what havock and destruction he can make, before a man can well
- wheel about--’tis like a whole age. --O _Jonathan!_ ’twould make a
- good-natured man’s heart bleed, to consider, continued the corporal
- (standing perpendicularly), how low many a brave and upright fellow has
- been laid since that time! --And trust me, _Susy_, added the corporal,
- turning to _Susannah_, whose eyes were swimming in water, --before that
- time comes round again, --many a bright eye will be dim. --_Susannah_
- placed it to the right side of the page--she wept--but she court’sied
- too. --Are we not, continued _Trim_, looking still at _Susannah_ --are
- we not like a flower of the field--a tear of pride stole in betwixt
- every two tears of humiliation--else no tongue could have described
- _Susannah’s_ affliction--is not all flesh grass? --’Tis clay, --’tis
- dirt. --They all looked directly at the scullion, --the scullion had
- just been scouring a fish-kettle. --It was not fair.----
- --What is the finest face that ever man looked at! --I could hear _Trim_
- talk so for ever, cried _Susannah_, --what is it! (_Susannah_ laid her
- hand upon _Trim’s_ shoulder)--but corruption? ----_Susannah_ took it
- off.
- Now I love you for this--and ’tis this delicious mixture within you
- which makes you dear creatures what you are--and he who hates you for
- it------all I can say of the matter is --That he has either a pumpkin
- for his head--or a pippin for his heart, --and whenever he is dissected
- ’twill be found so.
- CHAPTER X
- Whether _Susannah_, by taking her hand too suddenly from off the
- corporal’s shoulder (by the whisking about of her passions)----broke a
- little the chain of his reflexions----
- Or whether the corporal began to be suspicious, he had got into the
- doctor’s quarters, and was talking more like the chaplain than
- himself------
- Or whether - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Or
- whether----for in all such cases a man of invention and parts may with
- pleasure fill a couple of pages with suppositions----which of all these
- was the cause, let the curious physiologist, or the curious anybody
- determine----’tis certain, at least, the corporal went on thus with his
- harangue.
- For my own part, I declare it, that out of doors, I value not death at
- all: --not this ... added the corporal, snapping his fingers, --but with
- an air which no one but the corporal could have given to the sentiment.
- --In battle, I value death not this . . . and let him not take me
- cowardly, like poor _Joe Gibbins_, in scouring his gun --What is he?
- A pull of a trigger--a push of a bayonet an inch this way or that--makes
- the difference. --Look along the line--to the right--see! _Jack’s_ down!
- well, --’tis worth a regiment of horse to him. --No--’tis _Dick_. Then
- _Jack’s_ no worse. --Never mind which, --we pass on, --in hot pursuit
- the wound itself which brings him is not felt, --the best way is to
- stand up to him, --the man who flies, is in ten times more danger than
- the man who marches up into his jaws. --I’ve look’d him, added the
- corporal, an hundred times in the face, --and know what he is. --He’s
- nothing, _Obadiah_, at all in the field. --But he’s very frightful in a
- house, quoth _Obadiah_. ----I never mind it myself, said _Jonathan_,
- upon a coach-box. --It must, in my opinion, be most natural in bed,
- replied _Susannah_. --And could I escape him by creeping into the worst
- calf’s skin that ever was made into a knapsack, I would do it
- there--said _Trim_--but that is nature.
- ----Nature is nature, said _Jonathan_. --And that is the reason, cried
- _Susannah_, I so much pity my mistress. --She will never get the better
- of it. --Now I pity the captain the most of any one in the family,
- answered _Trim_. ----Madam will get ease of heart in weeping, --and the
- Squire in talking about it, --but my poor master will keep it all in
- silence to himself, --I shall hear him sigh in his bed for a whole month
- together, as he did for lieutenant _Le Fever_. --An’ please your honour,
- do not sigh so piteously, I would say to him as I laid besides him.
- I cannot help it, _Trim_, my master would say, ----’tis so melancholy an
- accident --I cannot get it off my heart. --Your honour fears not death
- yourself. --I hope, _Trim_, I fear nothing, he would say, but the doing
- a wrong thing. ----Well, he would add, whatever betides, I will take
- care of _Le Fever’s_ boy. --And with that, like a quieting draught, his
- honour would fall asleep.
- I like to hear _Trim’s_ stories about the captain, said _Susannah_. --He
- is a kindly-hearted gentleman, said _Obadiah_, as ever lived. --Aye, and
- as brave a one too, said the corporal, as ever stept before a platoon.
- --There never was a better officer in the king’s army, --or a better man
- in God’s world; for he would march up to the mouth of a cannon, though
- he saw the lighted match at the very touch-hole, --and yet, for all
- that, he has a heart as soft as a child for other people. ----He would
- not hurt a chicken. ----I would sooner, quoth _Jonathan_, drive such a
- gentleman for seven pounds a year--than some for eight. --Thank thee,
- _Jonathan!_ for thy twenty shillings, --as much, _Jonathan_, said the
- corporal, shaking him by the hand, as if thou hadst put the money into
- my own pocket. ----I would serve him to the day of my death out of love.
- He is a friend and a brother to me, --and could I be sure my poor
- brother _Tom_ was dead, --continued the corporal, taking out his
- handkerchief, --was I worth ten thousand pounds, I would leave every
- shilling of it to the captain. ----_Trim_ could not refrain from tears
- at this testamentary proof he gave of his affection to his master.
- ----The whole kitchen was affected. --Do tell us the story of the poor
- lieutenant, said _Susannah_. ----With all my heart, answered the
- corporal.
- _Susannah_, the cook, _Jonathan_, _Obadiah_, and corporal _Trim_, formed
- a circle about the fire; and as soon as the scullion had shut the
- kitchen door, --the corporal begun.
- CHAPTER XI
- I am a _Turk_ if I had not as much forgot my mother, as if Nature had
- plaistered me up, and set me down naked upon the banks of the river
- _Nile_, without one. ----Your most obedient servant, Madam --I’ve cost
- you a great deal of trouble, --I wish it may answer; --but you have left
- a crack in my back, --and here’s a great piece fallen off here before,
- --and what must I do with this foot? ----I shall never reach _England_
- with it.
- For my own part, I never wonder at any thing; --and so often has my
- judgment deceived me in my life, that I always suspect it, right or
- wrong, --at least I am seldom hot upon cold subjects. For all this,
- I reverence truth as much as any body; and when it has slipped us, if a
- man will but take me by the hand, and go quietly and search for it, as
- for a thing we have both lost, and can neither of us do well without,
- --I’ll go to the world’s end with him: ----But I hate disputes, --and
- therefore (bating religious points, or such as touch society) I would
- almost subscribe to any thing which does not choak me in the first
- passage, rather than be drawn into one. ----But I cannot bear
- suffocation, ----and bad smells worst of all. ----For which reasons,
- I resolved from the beginning, That if ever the army of martyrs was to
- be augmented, --or a new one raised, --I would have no hand in it, one
- way or t’other.
- CHAPTER XII
- ----But to return to my mother.
- My uncle _Toby’s_ opinion, Madam, “that there could be no harm in
- _Cornelius Gallus_, the _Roman_ prætor’s lying with his wife;” ----or
- rather the last word of that opinion, --(for it was all my mother heard
- of it) caught hold of her by the weak part of the whole sex: ----You
- shall not mistake me, --I mean her curiosity, --she instantly concluded
- herself the subject of the conversation, and with that prepossession
- upon her fancy, you will readily conceive every word my father said, was
- accommodated either to herself, or her family concerns.
- ----Pray, Madam, in what street does the lady live, who would not have
- done the same?
- From the strange mode of _Cornelius’s_ death, my father had made a
- transition to that of _Socrates_, and was giving my uncle _Toby_ an
- abstract of his pleading before his judges; ----’twas irresistible:
- ----not the oration of _Socrates_, --but my father’s temptation to it.
- ----He had wrote the Life of _Socrates_[5.1] himself the year before he
- left off trade, which, I fear, was the means of hastening him out of it;
- ----so that no one was able to set out with so full a sail, and in so
- swelling a tide of heroic loftiness upon the occasion, as my father was.
- Not a period in _Socrates’s_ oration, which closed with a shorter word
- than _transmigration_, or _annihilation_, --or a worse thought in the
- middle of it than _to be--or not to be_, --the entering upon a new and
- untried state of things, --or, upon a long, a profound and peaceful
- sleep, without dreams, without disturbance? ----_That we and our
- children were born to die, --but neither of us born to be slaves_.
- ----No--there I mistake; that was part of _Eleazer’s_ oration, as
- recorded by _Josephus_ (_de Bell. Judaic._)----_Eleazer_ owns he had it
- from the philosophers of _India_; in all likelihood _Alexander_ the
- Great, in his irruption into _India_, after he had over-run _Persia_,
- amongst the many things he stole, --stole that sentiment also; by which
- means it was carried, if not all the way by himself (for we all know he
- died at _Babylon_), at least by some of his maroders, into _Greece_,
- --from _Greece_ it got to _Rome_, --from _Rome_ to _France_, --and from
- _France_ to _England_: ----So things come round.----
- By land carriage, I can conceive no other way.----
- By water the sentiment might easily have come down the _Ganges_ into the
- _Sinus Gangeticus_, or _Bay of Bengal_, and so into the _Indian Sea_;
- and following the course of trade (the way from _India_ by the _Cape of
- Good Hope_ being then unknown), might be carried with other drugs and
- spices up the _Red Sea_ to _Joddah_, the port of _Mekka_, or else to
- _Tor_ or _Sues_, towns at the bottom of the gulf; and from thence by
- karrawans to _Coptos_, but three days’ journey distant, so down the
- _Nile_ directly to _Alexandria_, where the SENTIMENT would be landed at
- the very foot of the great stair-case of the _Alexandrian_ library,
- ----and from that store-house it would be fetched. ------Bless me! what
- a trade was driven by the learned in those days!
- [Footnote 5.1: This book my father would never consent to
- publish; ’tis in manuscript, with some other tracts of his, in
- the family, all, or most of which will be printed in due time.]
- CHAPTER XIII
- ----Now my father had a way, a little like that of _Job’s_ (in case
- there ever was such a man----if not, there’s an end of the matter.----
- Though, by the bye, because your learned men find some difficulty in
- fixing the precise æra in which so great a man lived; --whether, for
- instance, before or after the patriarchs, &c. ----to vote, therefore,
- that he never lived _at all_, is a little cruel, --’tis not doing as
- they would be done by, --happen that as it may) ----My father, I say,
- had a way, when things went extremely wrong with him, especially upon
- the first sally of his impatience, --of wondering why he was begot,
- --wishing himself dead; --sometimes worse: ----And when the provocation
- ran high, and grief touched his lips with more than ordinary
- powers --Sir, you scarce could have distinguished him from _Socrates_
- himself. ----Every word would breathe the sentiments of a soul
- disdaining life, and careless about all its issues; for which reason,
- though my mother was a woman of no deep reading, yet the abstract of
- _Socrates’s_ oration, which my father was giving my uncle _Toby_, was
- not altogether new to her. --She listened to it with composed
- intelligence, and would have done so to the end of the chapter, had not
- my father plunged (which he had no occasion to have done) into that part
- of the pleading where the great philosopher reckons up his connections,
- his alliances, and children; but renounces a security to be so won by
- working upon the passions of his judges. --“I have friends --I have
- relations, --I have three desolate children,” --says _Socrates_.--
- ----Then, cried my mother, opening the door, ----you have one more, Mr.
- _Shandy_, than I know of.
- By heaven! I have one less, --said my father, getting up and walking out
- of the room.
- CHAPTER XIV
- ----They are _Socrates’s_ children, said my uncle _Toby_. He has been
- dead a hundred years ago, replied my mother.
- My uncle _Toby_ was no chronologer--so not caring to advance one step
- but upon safe ground, he laid down his pipe deliberately upon the table,
- and rising up, and taking my mother most kindly by the hand, without
- saying another word, either good or bad, to her, he led her out after my
- father, that he might finish the ecclaircissement himself.
- CHAPTER XV
- Had this volume been a farce, which, unless every one’s life and
- opinions are to be looked upon as a farce as well as mine, I see no
- reason to suppose--the last chapter, Sir, had finished the first act of
- it, and then this chapter must have set off thus.
- Ptr..r..r..ing--twing--twang--prut--trut----’tis a cursed bad fiddle.
- --Do you know whether my fiddle’s in tune or no? --trut..prut.. --They
- should be _fifths_. ----’Tis wickedly strung--tr...a.e.i.o.u.-twang.
- --The bridge is a mile too high, and the sound post absolutely down,
- --else--trut . . prut--hark! ’tis not so bad a tone. --Diddle diddle,
- diddle diddle, diddle diddle, dum. There is nothing in playing before
- good judges, --but there’s a man there--no--not him with the bundle
- under his arm--the grave man in black. --’Sdeath! not the gentleman with
- the sword on. --Sir, I had rather play a _Caprichio_ to _Calliope_
- herself, than draw my bow across my fiddle before that very man; and yet
- I’ll stake my _Cremona_ to a _Jew’s_ trump, which is the greatest
- musical odds that ever were laid, that I will this moment stop three
- hundred and fifty leagues out of tune upon my fiddle, without punishing
- one single nerve that belongs to him --Twaddle diddle, tweddle diddle,
- --twiddle diddle, ----twoddle diddle, --twuddle diddle, ----prut
- trut--krish--krash--krush. --I’ve undone you, Sir, --but you see he’s no
- worse, --and was _Apollo_ to take his fiddle after me, he can make him
- no better.
- Diddle diddle, diddle diddle, diddle diddle--hum--dum--drum.
- --Your worships and your reverences love music--and God has made you all
- with good ears--and some of you play delightfully yourselves--trut-prut,
- --prut-trut.
- O! there is--whom I could sit and hear whole days, --whose talents lie
- in making what he fiddles to be felt, --who inspires me with his joys
- and hopes, and puts the most hidden springs of my heart into motion.
- --If you would borrow five guineas of me, Sir, --which is generally ten
- guineas more than I have to spare--or you Messrs. Apothecary and Taylor,
- want your bills paying, --that’s your time.
- CHAPTER XVI
- The first thing which entered my father’s head, after affairs were a
- little settled in the family, and _Susannah_ had got possession of my
- mother’s green sattin night-gown, --was to sit down coolly, after the
- example of _Xenophon_, and write a TRISTRA-pædia, or system of education
- for me; collecting first for that purpose his own scattered thoughts,
- counsels, and notions; and binding them together, so as to form an
- INSTITUTE for the government of my childhood and adolescence. I was my
- father’s last stake--he had lost my brother _Bobby_ entirely, --he had
- lost, by his own computation, full three-fourths of me--that is, he had
- been unfortunate in his three first great casts for me--my geniture,
- nose, and name, --there was but this one left; and accordingly my father
- gave himself up to it with as much devotion as ever my uncle _Toby_ had
- done to his doctrine of projectils. --The difference between them was,
- that my uncle _Toby_ drew his whole knowledge of projectils from
- _Nicholas Tartaglia_ --My father spun his, every thread of it, out of
- his own brain, --or reeled and cross-twisted what all other spinners and
- spinsters had spun before him, that ’twas pretty near the same torture
- to him.
- In about three years, or something more, my father had got advanced
- almost into the middle of his work. --Like all other writers, he met
- with disappointments. --He imagined he should be able to bring whatever
- he had to say, into so small a compass, that when it was finished and
- bound, it might be rolled up in my mother’s hussive. --Matter grows
- under our hands. --Let no man say, --“Come --I’ll write a duodecimo.”
- My father gave himself up to it, however, with the most painful
- diligence, proceeding step by step in every line, with the same kind of
- caution and circumspection (though I cannot say upon quite so religious
- a principle) as was used by _John de la Casse_, the lord archbishop of
- _Benevento_, in compassing his _Galatea_; in which his Grace of
- _Benevento_ spent near forty years of his life; and when the thing came
- out, it was not of above half the size or the thickness of a _Rider’s_
- Almanack. --How the holy man managed the affair, unless he spent the
- greatest part of his time in combing his whiskers, or playing at
- _primero_ with his chaplain, --would pose any mortal not let into the
- true secret; --and therefore ’tis worth explaining to the world, was it
- only for the encouragement of those few in it, who write not so much to
- be fed--as to be famous.
- I own had _John de la Casse_, the archbishop of _Benevento_, for whose
- memory (notwithstanding his _Galatea_) I retain the highest veneration,
- --had he been, Sir, a slender clerk--of dull wit--slow parts--costive
- head, and so forth, --he and his _Galatea_ might have jogged on together
- to the age of _Methuselah_ for me, --the phænomenon had not been worth a
- parenthesis.--
- But the reverse of this was the truth: _John de la Casse_ was a genius
- of fine parts and fertile fancy; and yet with all these advantages of
- nature, which should have pricked him forwards with his _Galatea_, he
- lay under an impuissance at the same time of advancing above a line and
- a half in the compass of a whole summer’s day: this disability in his
- Grace arose from an opinion he was afflicted with, --which opinion was
- this, --_viz._ that whenever a Christian was writing a book (not for his
- private amusement, but) where his intent and purpose was, _bonâ fide_,
- to print and publish it to the world, his first thoughts were always the
- temptations of the evil one. --This was the state of ordinary writers:
- but when a personage of venerable character and high station, either in
- church or state, once turned author, --he maintained, that from the very
- moment he took pen in hand--all the devils in hell broke out of their
- holes to cajole him. --’Twas Term-time with them, --every thought, first
- and last, was captious; --how specious and good soever, --’twas all one;
- --in whatever form or colour it presented itself to the imagination,
- --’twas still a stroke of one or other of ’em levell’d at him, and was
- to be fenced off. --So that the life of a writer, whatever he might
- fancy to the contrary, was not so much a state of _composition_, as a
- state of _warfare_; and his probation in it, precisely that of any other
- man militant upon earth, --both depending alike, not half so much upon
- the degrees of his WIT--as his RESISTANCE.
- My father was hugely pleased with this theory of _John de la Casse_,
- archbishop of _Benevento_; and (had it not cramped him a little in his
- creed) I believe would have given ten of the best acres in the _Shandy_
- estate, to have been the broacher of it. --How far my father actually
- believed in the devil, will be seen, when I come to speak of my father’s
- religious notions, in the progress of this work: ’tis enough to say
- here, as he could not have the honour of it, in the literal sense of the
- doctrine--he took up with the allegory of it; and would often say,
- especially when his pen was a little retrograde, there was as much good
- meaning, truth, and knowledge, couched under the veil of _John de la
- Casse’s_ parabolical representation, --as was to be found in any one
- poetic fiction or mystic record of antiquity. --Prejudice of education,
- he would say, _is the devil_, --and the multitudes of them which we suck
- in with our mother’s milk--_are the devil and all_. ----We are haunted
- with them, brother _Toby_, in all our lucubrations and researches; and
- was a man fool enough to submit tamely to what they obtruded upon him,
- --what would his book be? Nothing, --he would add, throwing his pen away
- with a vengeance, --nothing but a farrago of the clack of nurses, and of
- the nonsense of the old women (of both sexes) throughout the kingdom.
- This is the best account I am determined to give of the slow progress my
- father made in his _Tristra-pædia_; at which (as I said) he was three
- years, and something more, indefatigably at work, and, at last, had
- scarce completed, by his own reckoning, one half of his undertaking: the
- misfortune was, that I was all that time totally neglected and abandoned
- to my mother: and what was almost as bad, by the very delay, the first
- part of the work, upon which my father had spent the most of his pains,
- was rendered entirely useless, ----every day a page or two became of no
- consequence.----
- ----Certainly it was ordained as a scourge upon the pride of human
- wisdom, That the wisest of us all should thus outwit ourselves, and
- eternally forego our purposes, in the intemperate act of pursuing them.
- In short, my father was so long in all his acts of resistance, --or in
- other words, --he advanced so very slow with his work, and I began to
- live and get forwards at such a rate, that if an event had not happened,
- ----which, when we get to it, if it can be told with decency, shall not
- be concealed a moment from the reader ----I verily believe, I had put by
- my father, and left him drawing a sun-dial, for no better purpose than
- to be buried underground.
- CHAPTER XVII
- ----’Twas nothing, --I did not lose two drops of blood by it----
- ----’twas not worth calling in a surgeon, had he lived next door to
- us----thousands suffer by choice, what I did by accident. ----Doctor
- _Slop_ made ten times more of it, than there was occasion: ----some men
- rise, by the art of hanging great weights upon small wires, --and I am
- this day (_August_ the 10th, 1761) paying part of the price of this
- man’s reputation. ----O ’twould provoke a stone, to see how things are
- carried on in this world! ----The chamber-maid had left no ******* ***
- under the bed: ----Cannot you contrive, master, quoth _Susannah_,
- lifting up the sash with one hand, as she spoke, and helping me up into
- the window-seat with the other, --cannot you manage, my dear, for a
- single time, to **** *** ** *** ******?
- I was five years old. ----_Susannah_ did not consider that nothing was
- well hung in our family, ----so slap came the sash down like lightning
- upon us; --Nothing is left, --cried _Susannah_, --nothing is left--for
- me, but to run my country.----
- My uncle _Toby’s_ house was a much kinder sanctuary; and so _Susannah_
- fled to it.
- CHAPTER XVIII
- When _Susannah_ told the corporal the misadventure of the sash, with all
- the circumstances which attended the _murder_ of me, --(as she
- called it)-- the blood forsook his cheeks, --all accessaries in murder
- being principals, --_Trim’s_ conscience told him he was as much to blame
- as _Susannah_, --and if the doctrine had been true, my uncle _Toby_ had
- as much of the bloodshed to answer for to heaven, as either of ’em; --so
- that neither reason or instinct, separate or together, could possibly
- have guided _Susannah’s_ steps to so proper an asylum. It is in vain to
- leave this to the Reader’s imagination: --to form any kind of hypothesis
- that will render these propositions feasible, he must cudgel his brains
- sore, --and to do it without, --he must have such brains as no reader
- ever had before him. ----Why should I put them either to trial or to
- torture? ’Tis my own affair: I’ll explain it myself.
- CHAPTER XIX
- ’Tis a pity, _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_, resting with his hand upon
- the corporal’s shoulder, as they both stood surveying their works,
- --that we have not a couple of field-pieces to mount in the gorge of
- that new redoubt; ----’twould secure the lines all along there, and make
- the attack on that side quite complete: ----get me a couple cast,
- _Trim_.
- Your honour shall have them, replied _Trim_, before to-morrow morning.
- It was the joy of _Trim’s_ heart, --nor was his fertile head ever at a
- loss for expedients in doing it, to supply my uncle _Toby_ in his
- campaigns, with whatever his fancy called for; had it been his last
- crown, he would have sate down and hammered it into a paderero, to have
- prevented a single wish in his Master. The corporal had already, --what
- with cutting off the ends of my uncle _Toby’s_ spouts--hacking and
- chiseling up the sides of his leaden gutters, --melting down his pewter
- shaving-bason, --and going at last, like _Lewis_ the Fourteenth, on to
- the top of the church, for spare ends, &c. ----he had that very campaign
- brought no less than eight new battering cannons, besides three
- demi-culverins, into the field; my uncle _Toby’s_ demand for two more
- pieces for the redoubt, had set the corporal at work again; and no
- better resource offering, he had taken the two leaden weights from the
- nursery window: and as the sash pullies, when the lead was gone, were of
- no kind of use, he had taken them away also, to make a couple of wheels
- for one of their carriages.
- He had dismantled every sash-window in my uncle _Toby’s_ house long
- before, in the very same way, --though not always in the same order; for
- sometimes the pullies have been wanted, and not the lead, --so then he
- began with the pullies, --and the pullies being picked out, then the
- lead became useless, --and so the lead went to pot too.
- ----A great MORAL might be picked handsomely out of this, but I have not
- time--’tis enough to say, wherever the demolition began, ’twas equally
- fatal to the sash window.
- CHAPTER XX
- The corporal had not taken his measures so badly in this stroke of
- artilleryship, but that he might have kept the matter entirely to
- himself, and left _Susannah_ to have sustained the whole weight of the
- attack, as she could; --true courage is not content with coming off so.
- ----The corporal, whether as general or comptroller of the train,
- --’twas no matter, ----had done that, without which, as he imagined, the
- misfortune could never have happened, --_at least in_ Susannah’s
- _hands_; ----How would your honours have behaved? ----He determined at
- once, not to take shelter behind _Susannah_, --but to give it; and with
- this resolution upon his mind, he marched upright into the parlour, to
- lay the whole _manœuvre_ before my uncle _Toby_.
- My uncle _Toby_ had just then been giving _Yorick_ an account of the
- battle of _Steenkirk_, and of the strange conduct of count _Solmes_ in
- ordering the foot to halt, and the horse to march where it could not
- act; which was directly contrary to the king’s commands, and proved the
- loss of the day.
- There are incidents in some families so pat to the purpose of what is
- going to follow, --they are scarce exceeded by the invention of a
- dramatic writer; --I mean of ancient days.------
- _Trim_, by the help of his forefinger, laid flat upon the table, and the
- edge of his hand striking across it at right angles, made a shift to
- tell his story so, that priests and virgins might have listened to it;
- --and the story being told, --the dialogue went on as follows.
- CHAPTER XXI
- ----I would be picquetted to death, cried the corporal, as he concluded
- _Susannah’s_ story, before I would suffer the woman to come to any harm,
- --’twas my fault, an’ please your honour, --not hers.
- Corporal _Trim_, replied my uncle _Toby_, putting on his hat which lay
- upon the table, ----if anything can be said to be a fault, when the
- service absolutely requires it should be done, --’tis I certainly who
- deserve the blame, ----you obeyed your orders.
- Had count _Solmes_, _Trim_, done the same at the battle of _Steenkirk_,
- said _Yorick_, drolling a little upon the corporal, who had been run
- over by a dragoon in the retreat, ----he had saved thee; ----Saved!
- cried _Trim_, interrupting _Yorick_, and finishing the sentence for him
- after his own fashion, ----he had saved five battalions, an’ please your
- reverence, every soul of them: ----there was _Cutts’s_--continued the
- corporal, clapping the forefinger of his right hand upon the thumb of
- his left, and counting round his hand, ----there was _Cutts’s_,
- ----_Mackay’s_, ----_Angus’s_, ----_Graham’s_, ----and _Leven’s_, all
- cut to pieces; ----and so had the _English_ life-guards too, had it not
- been for some regiments upon the right, who marched up boldly to their
- relief, and received the enemy’s fire in their faces, before any one of
- their own platoons discharged a musket, ----they’ll go to heaven for it,
- --added _Trim_. --_Trim_ is right, said my uncle _Toby_, nodding to
- _Yorick_, ----he’s perfectly right. What signified his marching the
- horse, continued the corporal, where the ground was so straight, that
- the _French_ had such a nation of hedges, and copses, and ditches, and
- fell’d trees laid this way and that to cover them; (as they always
- have). ----Count _Solmes_ should have sent us, ----we would have fired
- muzzle to muzzle with them for their lives. ----There was nothing to be
- done for the horse: ----he had his foot shot off however for his pains,
- continued the corporal, the very next campaign at _Landen_. --Poor
- _Trim_ got his wound there, quoth my uncle _Toby_. ----’Twas owing, an’
- please your honour, entirely to count _Solmes_, ----had he drubb’d them
- soundly at _Steenkirk_, they would not have fought us at _Landen_.
- ----Possibly not, ----_Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_; ----though if they
- have the advantage of a wood, or you give them a moment’s time to
- intrench themselves, they are a nation which will pop and pop for ever
- at you. ----There is no way but to march coolly up to them, ----receive
- their fire, and fall in upon them, pell-mell ----Ding dong, added _Trim_.
- ----Horse and foot, said my uncle _Toby_. ----Helter skelter, said
- _Trim_. ----Right and left, cried my uncle _Toby_. ----Blood an’ ounds,
- shouted the corporal; ----the battle raged, ----_Yorick_ drew his chair
- a little to one side for safety, and after a moment’s pause, my uncle
- _Toby_ sinking his voice a note, --resumed the discourse as follows.
- CHAPTER XXII
- King _William_, said my uncle _Toby_, addressing himself to _Yorick_,
- was so terribly provoked at count _Solmes_ for disobeying his orders,
- that he would not suffer him to come into his presence for many months
- after. ----I fear, answered _Yorick_, the squire will be as much
- provoked at the corporal, as the King at the count. ----But ’twould be
- singularly hard in this case, continued he, if corporal _Trim_, who has
- behaved so diametrically opposite to count _Solmes_, should have the
- fate to be rewarded with the same disgrace: ----too oft in this world,
- do things take that train. ----I would spring a mine, cried my uncle
- _Toby_, rising up, ----and blow up my fortifications, and my house with
- them, and we would perish under their ruins, ere I would stand by and
- see it. ----_Trim_ directed a slight, ----but a grateful bow towards his
- master, ----and so the chapter ends.
- CHAPTER XXIII
- ----Then, _Yorick_, replied my uncle _Toby_, you and I will lead the way
- abreast, ----and do you, corporal, follow a few paces behind us. ----And
- _Susannah_, an’ please your honour, said _Trim_, shall be put in the
- rear. ----’Twas an excellent disposition, --and in this order, without
- either drums beating, or colours flying, they marched slowly from my
- uncle _Toby’s_ house to _Shandy-hall_.
- ----I wish, said _Trim_, as they entered the door, --instead of the sash
- weights, I had cut off the church spout, as I once thought to have done.
- --You have cut off spouts enow, replied _Yorick_.----
- CHAPTER XXIV
- As many pictures as have been given of my father, how like him soever in
- different airs and attitudes, --not one, or all of them, can ever help
- the reader to any kind of preconception of how my father would think,
- speak, or act, upon any untried occasion or occurrence of life. --There
- was that infinitude of oddities in him, and of chances along with it, by
- which handle he would take a thing, --it baffled, Sir, all calculations.
- ----The truth was, his road lay so very far on one side, from that
- wherein most men travelled, --that every object before him presented a
- face and section of itself to his eye, altogether different from the
- plan and elevation of it seen by the rest of mankind. --In other words,
- ’twas a different object, and in course was differently considered:
- This is the true reason, that my dear _Jenny_ and I, as well as all the
- world besides us, have such eternal squabbles about nothing. --She looks
- at her outside, --I, at her in--. How is it possible we should agree
- about her value?
- CHAPTER XXV
- ’Tis a point settled, --and I mention it for the comfort of
- _Confucius_,[5.2] who is apt to get entangled in telling a plain
- story--that provided he keeps along the line of his story, --he may go
- backwards and forwards as he will, --’tis still held to be no
- digression.
- This being premised, I take the benefit of the _act of going backwards_
- myself.
- [Footnote 5.2: Mr. _Shandy_ is supposed to mean ******** ***
- Esq.; member for ******, ----and not the _Chinese_ Legislator.]
- CHAPTER XXVI
- Fifty thousand pannier loads of devils--(not of the Archbishop of
- _Benevento’s_, --I mean of _Rabelais’s_ devils) with their tails chopped
- off by their rumps, could not have made so diabolical a scream of it, as
- I did--when the accident befel me: it summoned up my mother instantly
- into the nursery, --so that _Susannah_ had but just time to make her
- escape down the back stairs, as my mother came up the fore.
- Now, though I was old enough to have told the story myself, --and young
- enough, I hope, to have done it without malignity; yet _Susannah_, in
- passing by the kitchen, for fear of accidents, had left it in shorthand
- with the cook--the cook had told it with a commentary to _Jonathan_, and
- _Jonathan_ to _Obadiah_; so that by the time my father had rung the bell
- half a dozen times, to know what was the matter above, --was _Obadiah_
- enabled to give him a particular account of it, just as it had happened.
- --I thought as much, said my father, tucking up his night-gown; --and so
- walked up stairs.
- One would imagine from this----(though for my own part I somewhat
- question it)--that my father, before that time, had actually wrote that
- remarkable character in the _Tristra-pædia_, which to me is the most
- original and entertaining one in the whole book; --and that is the
- _chapter upon sash-windows_, with a bitter _Philippick_ at the end of
- it, upon the forgetfulness of chamber-maids. --I have but two reasons
- for thinking otherwise.
- First, Had the matter been taken into consideration, before the event
- happened, my father certainly would have nailed up the sash window for
- good an’ all; --which, considering with what difficulty he composed
- books, --he might have done with ten times less trouble, than he could
- have wrote the chapter: this argument I foresee holds good against his
- writing a chapter, even after the event; but ’tis obviated under the
- second reason, which I have the honour to offer to the world in support
- of my opinion, that my father did not write the chapter upon
- sash-windows and chamber-pots, at the time supposed, --and it is this.
- ----That, in order to render the _Tristra-pædia_ complete, --I wrote the
- chapter myself.
- CHAPTER XXVII
- My father put on his spectacles--looked, --took them off, --put them
- into the case--all in less than a statutable minute; and without opening
- his lips, turned about and walked precipitately down stairs: my mother
- imagined he had stepped down for lint and basilicon; but seeing him
- return with a couple of folios under his arm, and _Obadiah_ following
- him with a large reading-desk, she took it for granted ’twas an herbal,
- and so drew him a chair to the bedside, that he might consult upon the
- case at his ease.
- ----If it be but right done, --said my father, turning to the
- _Section--de sede vel subjecto circumcisionis_, ----for he had brought
- up _Spenser de Legibus Hebræorum Ritualibus_--and _Maimonides_, in order
- to confront and examine us altogether.--
- ----If it be but right done, quoth he: --only tell us, cried my mother,
- interrupting him, what herbs? ----For that, replied my father, you must
- send for Dr. _Slop_.
- My mother went down, and my father went on, reading the section as
- follows,
- * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * *
- * * * * ------Very well, --said my father,
- * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * *
- * * --nay, if it has that convenience----and so without
- stopping a moment to settle it first in his mind, whether the _Jews_ had
- it from the _Egyptians_, or the _Egyptians_ from the _Jews_, --he rose
- up, and rubbing his forehead two or three times across with the palm of
- his hand, in the manner we rub out the footsteps of care, when evil has
- trod lighter upon us than we foreboded, --he shut the book, and walked
- down stairs. --Nay, said he, mentioning the name of a different great
- nation upon every step as he set his foot upon it--if the EGYPTIANS,
- --the SYRIANS, --the PHOENICIANS, --the ARABIANS, --the CAPPADOCIANS,
- ----if the COLCHI, and TROGLODYTES did it----if SOLON and PYTHAGORAS
- submitted, --what is TRISTRAM? ----Who am I, that I should fret or fume
- one moment about the matter?
- CHAPTER XXVIII
- Dear _Yorick_, said my father, smiling (for _Yorick_ had broke his rank
- with my uncle _Toby_ in coming through the narrow entry, and so had
- stept first into the parlour)--this _Tristram_ of ours, I find, comes
- very hardly by all his religious rites. --Never was the son of _Jew_,
- _Christian_, _Turk_, or _Infidel_ initiated into them in so oblique and
- slovenly a manner. --But he is no worse, I trust, said _Yorick_. --There
- has been certainly, continued my father, the deuce and all to do in some
- part or other of the ecliptic, when this offspring of mine was formed.
- --That, you are a better judge of than I, replied _Yorick_.
- --Astrologers, quoth my father, know better than us both: --the trine
- and sextil aspects have jumped awry, --or the opposite of their
- ascendants have not hit it, as they should, --or the lords of the
- genitures (as they call them) have been at _bo-peep_, --or something has
- been wrong above, or below with us.
- ’Tis possible, answered _Yorick_. --But is the child, cried my uncle
- _Toby_, the worse? --The _Troglodytes_ say not, replied my father. And
- your theologists, _Yorick_, tell us --Theologically? said _Yorick_, --or
- speaking after the manner of apothecaries?[5.3]--statesmen?[5.4]--or
- washer-women?[5.5]
- ----I’m not sure, replied my father, --but they tell us, brother _Toby_,
- he’s the better for it. ----Provided, said _Yorick_, you travel him into
- _Egypt_. ----Of that, answered my father, he will have the advantage,
- when he sees the _Pyramids_.----
- Now every word of this, quoth my uncle _Toby_, is _Arabick_ to me. ----I
- wish, said _Yorick_, ’twas so, to half the world.
- ----ILUS,[5.6] continued my father, circumcised his whole army one
- morning. --Not without a court martial? cried my uncle _Toby_.
- ----Though the learned, continued he, taking no notice of my uncle
- _Toby’s_ remark, but turning to _Yorick_, --are greatly divided still
- who _Ilus_ was; --some say _Saturn_; --some the Supreme Being; --others,
- no more than a brigadier general under _Pharaoh-neco_. ----Let him be
- who he will, said my uncle _Toby_, I know not by what article of war he
- could justify it.
- The controvertists, answered my father, assign two-and-twenty different
- reasons for it: --others, indeed, who have drawn their pens on the
- opposite side of the question, have shewn the world the futility of the
- greatest part of them. --But then again, our best polemic divines --I
- wish there was not a polemic divine, said _Yorick_, in the kingdom;
- --one ounce of practical divinity--is worth a painted ship-load of all
- their reverences have imported these fifty years. --Pray, Mr. _Yorick_,
- quoth my uncle _Toby_, --do tell me what a polemic divine is? ----The
- best description, captain _Shandy_, I have ever read, is of a couple of
- ’em, replied _Yorick_, in the account of the battle fought single hands
- betwixt _Gymnast_ and captain _Tripet_; which I have in my pocket. ----I
- beg I may hear it, quoth my uncle _Toby_ earnestly. --You shall, said
- _Yorick_. --And as the corporal is waiting for me at the door, --and I
- know the description of a battle will do the poor fellow more good than
- his supper, --I beg, brother, you’ll give him leave to come in. --With
- all my soul, said my father. ----_Trim_ came in, erect and happy as an
- emperor; and having shut the door, _Yorick_ took a book from his
- right-hand coat-pocket, and read, or pretended to read, as follows.
- [Footnote 5.3: Χαλεπῆς νόσου, καὶ δυσιάτου ἀπαλλαγὴν, ἣν ἄνθρακα
- καλοῦσιν. --PHILO.]
- [Footnote 5.4: Τὰ τεμνόμενα τῶν ἐθνῶν τολυγονώτατα, καὶ
- πολυανθρωπότατα εἶναι.]
- [Footnote 5.5: Καθαριότητος εἵνεκεν. --BOCHART.]
- [Footnote 5.6: Ὁ Ἶλος, τὰ αἰδοῖα περιτέμνεται, ταὐτὸ ποιῆσαι καὶ
- τοὺς ἅμ’ αυτῷ συμμάχους καταναγκάσας. --SANCHUNIATHO.]
- CHAPTER XXIX
- ----“which words being heard by all the soldiers which were there,
- divers of them being inwardly terrified, did shrink back and make room
- for the assailant: all this did _Gymnast_ very well remark and consider;
- and therefore, making as if he would have alighted from off his horse,
- as he was poising himself on the mounting side, he most nimbly (with his
- short sword by his thigh) shifting his feet in the stirrup, and
- performing the stirrup-leather feat, whereby, after the inclining of his
- body downwards, he forthwith launched himself aloft into the air, and
- placed both his feet together upon the saddle, standing upright, with
- his back turned towards his horse’s head, --Now (said he) my case goes
- forward. Then suddenly in the same posture wherein he was, he fetched a
- gambol upon one foot, and turning to the left-hand, failed not to carry
- his body perfectly round, just into his former position, without missing
- one jot. ----Ha! said _Tripet_, I will not do that at this time, --and
- not without cause. Well, said _Gymnast_, I have failed, --I will undo
- this leap; then with a marvellous strength and agility, turning towards
- the right-hand, he fetched another frisking gambol as before; which
- done, he set his right-hand thumb upon the bow of the saddle, raised
- himself up, and sprung into the air, poising and upholding his whole
- weight upon the muscle and nerve of the said thumb, and so turned and
- whirled himself about three times: at the fourth, reversing his body,
- and overturning it upside down, and foreside back, without _touching
- anything_, he brought himself betwixt the horse’s two ears, and then
- giving himself a jerking swing, he seated himself upon the crupper----”
- (This can’t be fighting, said my uncle _Toby_. ----The corporal shook
- his head at it. ----Have patience, said _Yorick_.)
- “Then (_Tripet_) pass’d his right leg over his saddle, and placed
- himself _en croup_. --But, said he, ’twere better for me to get into the
- saddle; then putting the thumbs of both hands upon the crupper before
- him, and thereupon leaning himself, as upon the only supporters of his
- body, he incontinently turned heels over head in the air, and strait
- found himself betwixt the bow of the saddle in a tolerable seat; then
- springing into the air with a summerset, he turned him about like a
- wind-mill, and made above a hundred frisks, turns, and demi-pommadas.”
- --Good God! cried _Trim_, losing all patience, --one home thrust of a
- bayonet is worth it all. ----I think so too, replied _Yorick_.----
- I am of a contrary opinion, quoth my father.
- CHAPTER XXX
- ----No, --I think I have advanced nothing, replied my father, making
- answer to a question which _Yorick_ had taken the liberty to put to him,
- --I have advanced nothing in the _Tristra-pædia_, but what is as clear
- as any one proposition in _Euclid_. --Reach me, _Trim_, that book from
- off the scrutoir: ----it has oft-times been in my mind, continued my
- father, to have read it over both to you, _Yorick_, and to my brother
- _Toby_, and I think it a little unfriendly in myself, in not having done
- it long ago: ----shall we have a short chapter or two now, --and a
- chapter or two hereafter, as occasions serve; and so on, till we get
- through the whole? My uncle _Toby_ and _Yorick_ made the obeisance which
- was proper; and the corporal, though he was not included in the
- compliment, laid his hand upon his breast, and made his bow at the same
- time. ----The company smiled. _Trim_, quoth my father, has paid the full
- price for staying out the _entertainment_. ----He did not seem to relish
- the play, replied _Yorick_. ----’Twas a Tom-fool-battle, an’ please your
- reverence, of captain _Tripet’s_ and that other officer, making so many
- summersets, as they advanced; ----the _French_ come on capering now and
- then in that way, --but not quite so much.
- My uncle _Toby_ never felt the consciousness of his existence with more
- complacency than what the corporal’s, and his own reflections, made him
- do at that moment; ----he lighted his pipe, ----_Yorick_ drew his chair
- closer to the table, --_Trim_ snuff’d the candle, --my father stirr’d up
- the fire, --took up the book, --cough’d twice, and begun.
- CHAPTER XXXI
- The first thirty pages, said my father, turning over the leaves, --are a
- little dry; and as they are not closely connected with the subject,
- ----for the present we’ll pass them by: ’tis a prefatory introduction,
- continued my father, or an introductory preface (for I am not determined
- which name to give it) upon political or civil government; the
- foundation of which being laid in the first conjunction betwixt male and
- female, for procreation of the species ----I was insensibly led into it.
- ----’Twas natural, said _Yorick_.
- The original of society, continued my father, I’m satisfied is, what
- _Politian_ tells us, _i.e._, merely conjugal; and nothing more than the
- getting together of one man and one woman; --to which, (according to
- _Hesiod_) the philosopher adds a servant: ----but supposing in the first
- beginning there were no men servants born----he lays the foundation of
- it, in a man, --a woman--and a bull. ----I believe ’tis an ox, quoth
- _Yorick_, quoting the passage (οἶκον μὲν πρώτιστα, γυναῖκα τε, βοῦν τ’
- ἀροτῆρα). ----A bull must have given more trouble than his head was
- worth. ----But there is a better reason still, said my father (dipping
- his pen into his ink); for the ox being the most patient of animals, and
- the most useful withal in tilling the ground for their nourishment,
- --was the properest instrument, and emblem too, for the new joined
- couple, that the creation could have associated with them. --And there
- is a stronger reason, added my uncle _Toby_, than them all for the ox.
- --My father had not power to take his pen out of his ink-horn, till he
- had heard my uncle _Toby’s_ reason. --For when the ground was tilled,
- said my uncle _Toby_, and made worth inclosing, then they began to
- secure it by walls and ditches, which was the origin of fortification.
- ----True, true, dear _Toby_, cried my father, striking out the bull, and
- putting the ox in his place.
- My father gave _Trim_ a nod, to snuff the candle, and resumed his
- discourse.
- ----I enter upon this speculation, said my father carelessly, and half
- shutting the book, as he went on, merely to shew the foundation of the
- natural relation between a father and his child; the right and
- jurisdiction over whom he acquires these several ways--
- 1st, by marriage.
- 2d, by adoption.
- 3d, by legitimation.
- And 4th, by procreation; all which I consider in their order.
- I lay a slight stress upon one of them, replied _Yorick_----the act,
- especially where it ends there, in my opinion lays as little obligation
- upon the child, as it conveys power to the father. --You are wrong,
- --said my father argutely, and for this plain reason * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * * --I own, added my
- father, that the offspring, upon this account, is not so under the power
- and jurisdiction of the mother. --But the reason, replied _Yorick_,
- equally holds good for her. ----She is under authority herself, said my
- father: --and besides, continued my father, nodding his head, and laying
- his finger upon the side of his nose, as he assigned his reason, --_she
- is not the principal agent, _Yorick_._ --In what, quoth my uncle _Toby?_
- stopping his pipe. --Though by all means, added my father (not attending
- to my uncle _Toby_) “_The son ought to pay her respect_,” as you may
- read, _Yorick_, at large in the first book of the Institutes of
- _Justinian_, at the eleventh title and the tenth section, --I can read
- it as well, replied _Yorick_, in the Catechism.
- CHAPTER XXXII
- Trim can repeat every word of it by heart, quoth my uncle _Toby_.
- --Pugh! said my father, not caring to be interrupted with _Trim’s_
- saying his Catechism. He can, upon my honour, replied my uncle _Toby_.
- --Ask him, Mr. _Yorick_, any question you please.----
- --The fifth Commandment, _Trim_--said _Yorick_, speaking mildly, and
- with a gentle nod, as to a modest Catechumen. The corporal stood silent.
- --You don’t ask him right, said my uncle _Toby_, raising his voice, and
- giving it rapidly like the word of command: ----The fifth--------cried
- my uncle _Toby_. --I must begin with the first, an’ please your honour,
- said the corporal.----
- --_Yorick_ could not forbear smiling. --Your reverence does not
- consider, said the corporal, shouldering his stick like a musket, and
- marching into the middle of the room, to illustrate his position, --that
- ’tis exactly the same thing, as doing one’s exercise in the field.--
- “_Join your right-hand to your firelock_,” cried the corporal, giving
- the word of command, and performing the motion.--
- “_Poise your firelock_,” cried the corporal, doing the duty still both
- of adjutant and private man.
- “_Rest your firelock_;” --one motion, an’ please your reverence, you see
- leads into another. --If his honour will begin but with the _first_--
- THE FIRST--cried my uncle _Toby_, setting his hand upon his side--
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * *
- THE SECOND--cried my uncle _Toby_, waving his tobacco-pipe, as he would
- have done his sword at the head of a regiment. --The corporal went
- through his _manual_ with exactness! and having _honoured his father and
- mother_, made a low bow, and fell back to the side of the room.
- Everything in this world, said my father, is big with jest, --and has
- wit in it, and instruction too, --if we can but find it out.
- --Here is the _scaffold work_ of INSTRUCTION, its true point of folly,
- without the BUILDING behind it.
- --Here is the glass for pedagogues, preceptors, tutors, governors,
- gerund-grinders, and bear-leaders, to view themselves in, in their true
- dimensions.--
- Oh! there is a husk and shell, _Yorick_, which grows up with learning,
- which their unskilfulness knows not how to fling away!
- --SCIENCES MAY BE LEARNED BY ROTE, BUT WISDOM NOT.
- _Yorick_ thought my father inspired. --I will enter into obligations
- this moment, said my father, to lay out all my aunt _Dinah’s_ legacy in
- charitable uses (of which, by the bye, my father had no high opinion),
- if the corporal has any one determinate idea annexed to any one word he
- has repeated. --Prythee, _Trim_, quoth my father, turning round to him,
- --What dost thou mean, by “_honouring thy father and mother?_”
- Allowing them, an’ please your honour, three half-pence a day out of my
- pay, when they grow old. --And didst thou do that, _Trim?_ said
- _Yorick_. --He did indeed, replied my uncle _Toby_. --Then, _Trim_, said
- _Yorick_, springing out of his chair, and taking the corporal by the
- hand, thou art the best commentator upon that part of the _Decalogue_;
- and I honour thee more for it, corporal _Trim_, than if thou hadst had a
- hand in the _Talmud_ itself.
- CHAPTER XXXIII
- O blessed health! cried my father, making an exclamation, as he turned
- over the leaves to the next chapter, thou art above all gold and
- treasure; ’tis thou who enlargest the soul, --and openest all its powers
- to receive instruction and to relish virtue. --He that has thee, has
- little more to wish for; --and he that is so wretched as to want thee,
- --wants everything with thee.
- I have concentrated all that can be said upon this important head, said
- my father, into a very little room, therefore we’ll read the chapter
- quite through.
- My father read as follows:
- “The whole secret of health depending upon the due contention for
- mastery betwixt the radical heat and the radical moisture” --You have
- proved that matter of fact, I suppose, above, said _Yorick_.
- Sufficiently, replied my father.
- In saying this, my father shut the book, --not as if he resolved to read
- no more of it, for he kept his forefinger in the chapter: ----nor
- pettishly, --for he shut the book slowly; his thumb resting, when he had
- done it, upon the upper-side of the cover, as his three fingers
- supported the lower side of it, without the least compressive
- violence.----
- I have demonstrated the truth of that point, quoth my father, nodding to
- _Yorick_, most sufficiently in the preceding chapter.
- Now could the man in the moon be told, that a man in the earth had wrote
- a chapter, sufficiently demonstrating, That the secret of all health
- depended upon the due contention for mastery betwixt the _radical heat_
- and the _radical moisture_, --and that he had managed the point so well,
- that there was not one single word wet or dry upon radical heat or
- radical moisture, throughout the whole chapter, --or a single syllable
- in it, _pro_ or _con_, directly or indirectly, upon the contention
- betwixt these two powers in any part of the animal œconomy----
- “O thou eternal Maker of all beings!” --he would cry, striking his
- breast with his right hand (in case he had one)-- “Thou whose power and
- goodness can enlarge the faculties of thy creatures to this infinite
- degree of excellence and perfection, --What have we MOONITES done?”
- CHAPTER XXXIV
- With two strokes, the one at _Hippocrates_, the other at Lord _Verulam_,
- did my father achieve it.
- The stroke at the prince of physicians, with which he began, was no more
- than a short insult upon his sorrowful complaint of the _Ars longa_,
- --and _Vita brevis_. ----Life short, cried my father, --and the art of
- healing tedious! And who are we to thank for both the one and the other,
- but the ignorance of quacks themselves, --and the stage-loads of
- chymical nostrums, and peripatetic lumber, with which, in all ages, they
- have first flatter’d the world, and at last deceived it?
- ----O my lord _Verulam!_ cried my father, turning from _Hippocrates_,
- and making his second stroke at him, as the principal of
- nostrum-mongers, and the fittest to be made an example of to the rest,
- ----What shall I say to thee, my great lord _Verulam?_ What shall I say
- to thy internal spirit, --thy opium, --thy salt-petre, ----thy greasy
- unctions, --thy daily purges, --thy nightly clysters, and succedaneums?
- ----My father was never at a loss what to say to any man, upon any
- subject; and had the least occasion for the exordium of any man
- breathing: how he dealt with his lordship’s opinion, ----you shall see;
- ----but when --I know not; ----we must first see what his lordship’s
- opinion was.
- CHAPTER XXXV
- “The two great causes, which conspire with each other to shorten life,
- says lord _Verulam_, are first----
- “The internal spirit, which, like a gentle flame, wastes the body down
- to death: --And secondly, the external air, that parches the body up to
- ashes: --which two enemies attacking us on both sides of our bodies
- together, at length destroy our organs, and render them unfit to carry
- on the functions of life.”
- This being the state of the case, the road to Longevity was plain;
- nothing more being required, says his lordship, but to repair the waste
- committed by the internal spirit, by making the substance of it more
- thick and dense, by a regular course of opiates on one side, and by
- refrigerating the heat of it on the other, by three grains and a half of
- salt-petre every morning before you got up.----
- Still this frame of ours was left exposed to the inimical assaults of
- the air without; --but this was fenced off again by a course of greasy
- unctions, which so fully saturated the pores of the skin, that no
- spicula could enter; ----nor could any one get out. ----This put a stop
- to all perspiration, sensible and insensible, which being the cause of
- so many scurvy distempers--a course of clysters was requisite to carry
- off redundant humours, --and render the system complete.
- What my father had to say to my lord of _Verulam’s_ opiates, his
- salt-petre, and greasy unctions and clysters, you shall read, --but not
- to-day--or to-morrow: time presses upon me, --my reader is impatient --I
- must get forwards. ----You shall read the chapter at your leisure
- (if you chuse it), as soon as ever the _Tristra-pædia_ is
- published.----
- Sufficeth it at present, to say, my father levelled the hypothesis with
- the ground, and in doing that, the learned know, he built up and
- established his own.----
- CHAPTER XXXVI
- The whole secret of health, said my father, beginning the sentence
- again, depending evidently upon the due contention betwixt the radical
- heat and radical moisture within us; --the least imaginable skill had
- been sufficient to have maintained it, had not the schoolmen confounded
- the talk, merely (as _Van Helmont_, the famous chymist, has proved) by
- all along mistaking the radical moisture for the tallow and fat of
- animal bodies.
- Now the radical moisture is not the tallow or fat of animals, but an
- oily and balsamous substance; for the fat and tallow, as also the phlegm
- or watery parts, are cold; whereas the oily and balsamous parts are of a
- lively heat and spirit, which accounts for the observation of
- _Aristotle_, “_Quod omne animal post coitum est _triste_._”
- Now it is certain, that the radical heat lives in the radical moisture,
- but whether _vice versâ_, is a doubt: however, when the one decays, the
- other decays also; and then is produced, either an unnatural heat, which
- causes an unnatural dryness----or an unnatural moisture, which causes
- dropsies. ----So that if a child, as he grows up, can but be taught to
- avoid running into fire or water, as either of ’em threaten his
- destruction, ----’twill be all that is needful to be done upon that
- head.----
- CHAPTER XXXVII
- The description of the siege of _Jericho_ itself, could not have engaged
- the attention of my uncle _Toby_ more powerfully than the last chapter;
- --his eyes were fixed upon my father throughout it; --he never mentioned
- radical heat and radical moisture, but my uncle _Toby_ took his pipe out
- of his mouth, and shook his head; and as soon as the chapter was
- finished, he beckoned to the corporal to come close to his chair,
- to ask him the following question, --_aside_. ---- * *
- * * * * * * * It was at
- the siege of _Limerick_, an’ please your honour, replied the corporal,
- making a bow.
- The poor fellow and I, quoth my uncle _Toby_, addressing himself to my
- father, were scarce able to crawl out of our tents, at the time the
- siege of _Limerick_ was raised, upon the very account you mention.
- ----Now what can have got into that precious noddle of thine, my dear
- brother _Toby?_ cried my father, mentally. ----By Heaven! continued he,
- communing still with himself, it would puzzle an _Œdipus_ to bring it in
- point.----
- I believe, an’ please your honour, quoth the corporal, that if it had
- not been for the quantity of brandy we set fire to every night, and the
- claret and cinnamon with which I plyed your honour off; --And the
- geneva, _Trim_, added my uncle _Toby_, which did us more good than
- all ----I verily believe, continued the corporal, we had both, an’ please
- your honour, left our lives in the trenches, and been buried in them
- too. ----The noblest grave, corporal! cried my uncle _Toby_, his eyes
- sparkling as he spoke, that a soldier could wish to lie down in. ----But
- a pitiful death for him! an’ please your honour, replied the corporal.
- All this was as much _Arabick_ to my father, as the rites of the
- _Colchi_ and _Troglodites_ had been before to my uncle _Toby_; my father
- could not determine whether he was to frown or to smile.----
- My uncle _Toby_, turning to _Yorick_, resumed the case at _Limerick_,
- more intelligibly than he had begun it, --and so settled the point for
- my father at once.
- CHAPTER XXXVIII
- It was undoubtedly, said my uncle _Toby_, a great happiness for myself
- and the corporal, that we had all along a burning fever, attended with a
- most raging thirst, during the whole five-and-twenty days the flux was
- upon us in the camp; otherwise what my brother calls the radical
- moisture, must, as I conceive it, inevitably have got the better. ----My
- father drew in his lungs top-full of air, and looking up, blew it forth
- again, as slowly as he possibly could.----
- ------It was Heaven’s mercy to us, continued my uncle _Toby_, which put
- it into the corporal’s head to maintain that due contention betwixt the
- radical heat and the radical moisture, by reinforcing the fever, as he
- did all along, with hot wine and spices; whereby the corporal kept up
- (as it were) a continual firing, so that the radical heat stood its
- ground from the beginning to the end, and was a fair match for the
- moisture, terrible as it was. ----Upon my honour, added my uncle _Toby_,
- you might have heard the contention within our bodies, brother _Shandy_,
- twenty toises. --If there was no firing, said _Yorick_.
- Well--said my father, with a full aspiration, and pausing a while after
- the word --Was I a judge, and the laws of the country which made me one
- permitted it, I would condemn some of the worst malefactors, provided
- they had had their clergy-------- ----_Yorick_, foreseeing the sentence
- was likely to end with no sort of mercy, laid his hand upon my father’s
- breast, and begged he would respite it for a few minutes, till he asked
- the corporal a question. ----Prithee, _Trim_, said _Yorick_, without
- staying for my father’s leave, --tell us honestly--what is thy opinion
- concerning this self-same radical heat and radical moisture?
- With humble submission to his honour’s better judgment, quoth the
- corporal, making a bow to my uncle _Toby_ --Speak thy opinion freely,
- corporal, said my uncle _Toby_. --The poor fellow is my servant, --not
- my slave, --added my uncle _Toby_, turning to my father.----
- The corporal put his hat under his left arm, and with his stick hanging
- upon the wrist of it, by a black thong split into a tassel about the
- knot, he marched up to the ground where he had performed his catechism;
- then touching his under-jaw with the thumb and fingers of his right-hand
- before he opened his mouth, ----he delivered his notion thus.
- CHAPTER XXXIX
- Just as the corporal was humming, to begin--in waddled Dr. _Slop_.
- --’Tis not two-pence matter--the corporal shall go on in the next
- chapter, let who will come in.----
- Well, my good doctor, cried my father sportively, for the transitions of
- his passions were unaccountably sudden, --and what has this whelp of
- mine to say to the matter?
- Had my father been asking after the amputation of the tail of a
- puppy-dog--he could not have done it in a more careless air: the system
- which Dr. _Slop_ had laid down, to treat the accident by, no way allowed
- of such a mode of enquiry. --He sat down.
- Pray, Sir, quoth my uncle _Toby_, in a manner which could not go
- unanswered, --in what condition is the boy? --’Twill end in a
- _phimosis_, replied Dr. _Slop_.
- I am no wiser than I was, quoth my uncle _Toby_--returning his pipe into
- his mouth. ----Then let the corporal go on, said my father, with his
- medical lecture. --The corporal made a bow to his old friend, Dr.
- _Slop_, and then delivered his opinion concerning radical heat and
- radical moisture, in the following words.
- CHAPTER XL
- The city of _Limerick_, the siege of which was begun under his majesty
- king _William_ himself, the year after I went into the army--lies, an’
- please your honours, in the middle of a devilish wet, swampy country.
- --’Tis quite surrounded, said my uncle _Toby_, with the _Shannon_, and
- is, by its situation, one of the strongest fortified places in
- _Ireland_.----
- I think this is a new fashion, quoth Dr. _Slop_, of beginning a medical
- lecture. --’Tis all true, answered _Trim_. --Then I wish the faculty
- would follow the cut of it, said _Yorick_. --’Tis all cut through, an’
- please your reverence, said the corporal, with drains and bogs; and
- besides, there was such a quantity of rain fell during the siege, the
- whole country was like a puddle, --’twas that, and nothing else, which
- brought on the flux, and which had like to have killed both his honour
- and myself; now there was no such thing, after the first ten days,
- continued the corporal, for a soldier to lie dry in his tent, without
- cutting a ditch round it, to draw off the water; --nor was that enough,
- for those who could afford it, as his honour could, without setting fire
- every night to a pewter dish full of brandy, which took off the damp of
- the air, and made the inside of the tent as warm as a stove.------
- And what conclusion dost thou draw, corporal _Trim_, cried my father,
- from all these premises?
- I infer, an’ please your worship, replied _Trim_, that the radical
- moisture is nothing in the world but ditch-water--and that the radical
- heat, of those who can go to the expence of it, is burnt brandy, --the
- radical heat and moisture of a private man, an’ please your honour, is
- nothing but ditch-water--and a dram of geneva----and give us but enough
- of it, with a pipe of tobacco, to give us spirits, and drive away the
- vapours--we know not what it is to fear death.
- I am at a loss, Captain _Shandy_, quoth Dr. _Slop_, to determine in
- which branch of learning your servant shines most, whether in physiology
- or divinity. --_Slop_ had not forgot _Trim’s_ comment upon the
- sermon.--
- It is but an hour ago, replied _Yorick_, since the corporal was examined
- in the latter, and pass’d muster with great honour.----
- The radical heat and moisture, quoth Dr. _Slop_, turning to my father,
- you must know, is the basis and foundation of our being--as the root of
- a tree is the source and principle of its vegetation. --It is inherent
- in the seeds of all animals, and may be preserved sundry ways, but
- principally in my opinion by _consubstantials_, _impriments_, and
- _occludents_. ----Now this poor fellow, continued Dr. _Slop_, pointing
- to the corporal, has had the misfortune to have heard some superficial
- empiric discourse upon this nice point. ----That he has, --said my
- father. ----Very likely, said my uncle. --I’m sure of it--quoth
- _Yorick_.----
- CHAPTER XLI
- Doctor _Slop_ being called out to look at a cataplasm he had ordered, it
- gave my father an opportunity of going on with another chapter in the
- _Tristra-pædia_. ----Come! cheer up, my lads; I’ll shew you
- land------for when we have tugged through that chapter, the book shall
- not be opened again this twelve-month. --Huzza!--
- CHAPTER XLII
- ----Five years with a bib under his chin;
- Four years in travelling from Christ-cross-row to _Malachi_;
- A year and a half in learning to write his own name;
- Seven long years and more τυπτω-ing it, at Greek and Latin;
- Four years at his _probations_ and his _negations_--the fine statue
- still lying in the middle of the marble block, --and nothing done, but
- his tools sharpened to hew it out! --’Tis a piteous delay! --Was not the
- great _Julius Scaliger_ within an ace of never getting his tools
- sharpened at all? ------Forty-four years old was he before he could
- manage his Greek; --and _Peter Damianus_, lord bishop of _Ostia_, as all
- the world knows, could not so much as read, when he was of man’s estate.
- --And _Baldus_ himself, as eminent as he turned out after, entered upon
- the law so late in life, that everybody imagined he intended to be an
- advocate in the other world: no wonder, when _Eudamidas_, the son of
- _Archidamas_, heard _Xenocrates_ at seventy-five disputing about
- _wisdom_, that he asked gravely, --_If the old man be yet disputing and
- enquiring concerning wisdom, --what time will he have to make use of
- it?_
- _Yorick_ listened to my father with great attention; there was a
- seasoning of wisdom unaccountably mixed up with his strangest whims, and
- he had sometimes such illuminations in the darkest of his eclipses, as
- almost atoned for them: --be wary, Sir, when you imitate him.
- I am convinced, _Yorick_, continued my father, half reading and half
- discoursing, that there is a North-west passage to the intellectual
- world; and that the soul of man has shorter ways of going to work, in
- furnishing itself with knowledge and instruction, than we generally take
- with it. ----But, alack! all fields have not a river or a spring running
- besides them; --every child, _Yorick_, has not a parent to point it out.
- ----The whole entirely depends, added my father, in a low voice, upon
- the _auxiliary verbs_, Mr. _Yorick_.
- Had _Yorick_ trod upon _Virgil’s_ snake, he could not have looked more
- surprised. --I am surprised too, cried my father, observing it, --and I
- reckon it as one of the greatest calamities which ever befel the
- republic of letters, That those who have been entrusted with the
- education of our children, and whose business it was to open their
- minds, and stock them early with ideas, in order to set the imagination
- loose upon them, have made so little use of the auxiliary verbs in doing
- it, as they have done ----So that, except _Raymond Lullius_, and the
- elder _Pelegrini_, the last of which arrived to such perfection in the
- use of ’em, with his topics, that, in a few lessons, he could teach a
- young gentleman to discourse with plausibility upon any subject, _pro_
- and _con_, and to say and write all that could be spoken or written
- concerning it, without blotting a word, to the admiration of all who
- beheld him. --I should be glad, said _Yorick_, interrupting my father,
- to be made to comprehend this matter. You shall, said my father.
- The highest stretch of improvement a single word is capable of, is a
- high metaphor, ----for which, in my opinion, the idea is generally the
- worse, and not the better; ----but be that as it may, --when the mind
- has done that with it--there is an end, --the mind and the idea are at
- rest, --until a second idea enters; ----and so on.
- Now the use of the _Auxiliaries_ is, at once to set the soul a-going by
- herself upon the materials as they are brought her; and by the
- versability of this great engine, round which they are twisted, to open
- new tracts of enquiry, and make every idea engender millions.
- You excite my curiosity greatly, said _Yorick_.
- For my own part, quoth my uncle _Toby_, I have given it up. ----The
- _Danes_, an’ please your honour, quoth the corporal, who were on the
- left at the siege of _Limerick_, were all auxiliaries. ----And very good
- ones, said my uncle _Toby_. --But the auxiliaries, _Trim_, my brother is
- talking about, --I conceive to be different things.----
- ----You do? said my father, rising up.
- CHAPTER XLIII
- My father took a single turn across the room, then sat down, and
- finished the chapter.
- The verbs auxiliary we are concerned in here, continued my father, are,
- _am_; _was_; _have_; _had_; _do_; _did_; _make_; _made_; _suffer_;
- _shall_; _should_; _will_; _would_; _can_; _could_; _owe_; _ought_;
- _used_; or _is wont_. --And these varied with tenses, _present_, _past_,
- _future_, and conjugated with the verb _see_, --or with these questions
- added to them; --_Is it?_ _Was it?_ _Will it be?_ _Would it be?_ _May it
- be?_ _Might it be?_ And these again put negatively, _Is it not?_ _Was it
- not?_ _Ought it not?_ --Or affirmatively, --_It is_; _It was_; _It ought
- to be_. Or chronologically, --_Has it been always?_ _Lately?_ _How long
- ago?_ --Or hypothetically, --_If it was?_ _If it was not?_ What would
- follow? ----If the _French_ should beat the _English?_ If the _Sun_ go
- out of the _Zodiac?_
- Now, by the right use and application of these, continued my father, in
- which a child’s memory should be exercised, there is no one idea can
- enter his brain, how barren soever, but a magazine of conceptions and
- conclusions may be drawn forth from it. ----Didst thou ever see a white
- bear? cried my father, turning his head round to _Trim_, who stood at
- the back of his chair: --No, an’ please your honour, replied the
- corporal. ----But thou couldst discourse about one, _Trim_, said my
- father, in case of need? --How is it possible, brother, quoth my uncle
- _Toby_, if the corporal never saw one? ----’Tis the fact I want, replied
- my father, --and the possibility of it is as follows.
- A WHITE BEAR! Very well. Have I ever seen one? Might I ever have seen
- one? Am I ever to see one? Ought I ever to have seen one? Or can I ever
- see one?
- Would I had seen a white bear! (for how can I imagine it?)
- If I should see a white bear, what would I say? If I should never see a
- white bear, what then?
- If I never have, can, must, or shall see a white bear alive; have I ever
- seen the skin of one? Did I ever see one painted? --described? Have I
- never dreamed of one?
- Did my father, mother, uncle, aunt, brothers or sisters, ever see a
- white bear? What would they give? How would they behave? How would the
- white bear have behaved? Is he wild? Tame? Terrible? Rough? Smooth?
- --Is the white bear worth seeing?--
- --Is there no sin in it?--
- Is it better than a BLACK ONE?
- BOOK VI
- CHAPTER I
- ----We’ll not stop two moments, my dear Sir, --only, as we have got
- through these five volumes,[6.1] (do, Sir, sit down upon a set----they
- are better than nothing) let us just look back upon the country we have
- pass’d through.----
- ----What a wilderness has it been! and what a mercy that we have not
- both of us been lost, or devoured by wild beasts in it!
- Did you think the world itself, Sir, had contained such a number of Jack
- Asses? ----How they view’d and review’d us as we passed over the rivulet
- at the bottom of that little valley! ----and when we climbed over that
- hill, and were just getting out of sight--good God! what a braying did
- they all set up together!
- ----Prithee, shepherd! who keeps all those Jack Asses? * * *
- ----Heaven be their comforter ----What! are they never curried? ----Are
- they never taken in in winter? ----Bray bray--bray. Bray on, --the world
- is deeply your debtor; ----louder still--that’s nothing: --in good
- sooth, you are ill-used: ----Was I a Jack Asse, I solemnly declare,
- I would bray in G-fol-re-ut from morning, even unto night.
- [Footnote 6.1: In the first edition, the sixth volume began with
- this chapter.]
- CHAPTER II
- When my father had danced his white bear backwards and forwards through
- half a dozen pages, he closed the book for good an’ all, --and in a kind
- of triumph redelivered it into _Trim’s_ hand, with a nod to lay it upon
- the ’scrutoire, where he found it. ----_Tristram_, said he, shall be
- made to conjugate every word in the dictionary, backwards and forwards
- the same way; ----every word, _Yorick_, by this means, you see, is
- converted into a thesis or an hypothesis; --every thesis and hypothesis
- have an offspring of propositions; --and each proposition has its own
- consequences and conclusions; every one of which leads the mind on
- again, into fresh tracks of enquiries and doubtings. ----The force of
- this engine, added my father, is incredible in opening a child’s head.
- ----’Tis enough, brother _Shandy_, cried my uncle _Toby_, to burst it
- into a thousand splinters.----
- I presume, said _Yorick_, smiling, --it must be owing to this, ----(for
- let logicians say what they will, it is not to be accounted for
- sufficiently from the bare use of the ten predicaments) ----That the
- famous _Vincent Quirino_, amongst the many other astonishing feats of
- his childhood, of which the Cardinal _Bembo_ has given the world so
- exact a story, --should be able to paste up in the public schools at
- _Rome_, so early as in the eighth year of his age, no less than four
- thousand five hundred and fifty different theses, upon the most abstruse
- points of the most abstruse theology; --and to defend and maintain them
- in such sort, as to cramp and dumbfound his opponents. ----What is that,
- cried my father, to what is told us of _Alphonsus Tostatus_, who, almost
- in his nurse’s arms, learned all the sciences and liberal arts without
- being taught any one of them? ----What shall we say of the great
- _Piereskius?_ --That’s the very man, cried my uncle _Toby_, I once told
- you of, brother _Shandy_, who walked a matter of five hundred miles,
- reckoning from _Paris_ to _Shevling_, and from _Shevling_ back again,
- merely to see _Stevinus’s_ flying chariot. ----He was a very great man!
- added my uncle _Toby_ (meaning _Stevinus_) --He was so, brother _Toby_,
- said my father (meaning _Piereskius_)----and had multiplied his ideas so
- fast, and increased his knowledge to such a prodigious stock, that, if
- we may give credit to an anecdote concerning him, which we cannot
- withhold here, without shaking the authority of all anecdotes
- whatever--at seven years of age, his father committed entirely to his
- care the education of his younger brother, a boy of five years old,
- --with the sole management of all his concerns. --Was the father as wise
- as the son? quoth my uncle _Toby_: --I should think not, said _Yorick_:
- --But what are these, continued my father--(breaking out in a kind of
- enthusiasm)--what are these, to those prodigies of childhood in
- _Grotius_, _Scioppius_, _Heinsius_, _Politian_, _Pascal_, _Joseph
- Scaliger_, _Ferdinand de Cordouè_, and others--some of which left off
- their _substantial forms_ at nine years old, or sooner, and went on
- reasoning without them; --others went through their classics at seven;
- --wrote tragedies at eight; --_Ferdinand de Cordouè_ was so wise at
- nine, --’twas thought the Devil was in him; --and at _Venice_ gave such
- proofs of his knowledge and goodness, that the monks imagined he was
- _Antichrist_, or nothing. ----Others were masters of fourteen languages
- at ten, --finished the course of their rhetoric, poetry, logic, and
- ethics, at eleven, --put forth their commentaries upon _Servius_ and
- _Martianus Capella_ at twelve, --and at thirteen received their degrees
- in philosophy, laws, and divinity: ----But you forget the great
- _Lipsius_, quoth _Yorick_, who composed a work[6.2] the day he was born:
- ----They should have wiped it up, said my uncle _Toby_, and said no more
- about it.
- [Footnote 6.2: Nous aurions quelque interêt, says _Baillet_, de
- montrer qu’il n’a rien de ridicule s’il étoit veritable, au
- moins dans le sens énigmatique que _Nicius Erythræus_ a tâché de
- lui donner. Cet auteur dit que pour comprendre comme _Lipse_, il
- a pû composer un ouvrage le premier jour de sa vie, il faut
- s’imaginer, que ce premier jour n’est pas celui de sa naissance
- charnelle, mais celui au quel il a commencé d’user de la raison;
- il veut que ç’ait été à l’âge de _neuf_ ans; et il nous veut
- persuader que ce fut en cet âge, que _Lipse_ fit un poëme. ----Le
- tour est ingénieux, &c. &c.]
- CHAPTER III
- When the cataplasm was ready, a scruple of _decorum_ had unseasonably
- rose up in _Susannah’s_ conscience about holding the candle, whilst
- _Slop_ tied it on; _Slop_ had not treated _Susannah’s_ distemper with
- anodynes, --and so a quarrel had ensued betwixt them.
- ----Oh! oh! ----said _Slop_, casting a glance of undue freedom in
- _Susannah’s_ face, as she declined the office; ----then, I think I know
- you, madam ----You know me, Sir! cried _Susannah_ fastidiously, and with
- a toss of her head, levelled evidently, not at his profession, but at
- the doctor himself, ----you know me! cried _Susannah_ again. ----Doctor
- _Slop_ clapped his finger and his thumb instantly upon his nostrils;
- ----_Susannah’s_ spleen was ready to burst at it; ----’Tis false, said
- _Susannah_. --Come, come, Mrs. Modesty, said _Slop_, not a little elated
- with the success of his last thrust, ----If you won’t hold the candle,
- and look--you may hold it and shut your eyes: --That’s one of your
- popish shifts, cried _Susannah_: --’Tis better, said _Slop_, with a nod,
- than no shift at all, young woman; ----I defy you, Sir, cried
- _Susannah_, pulling her shift sleeve below her elbow.
- It was almost impossible for two persons to assist each other in a
- surgical case with a more splenetic cordiality.
- _Slop_ snatched up the cataplasm, ----_Susannah_ snatched up the candle;
- ----a little this way, said _Slop_; _Susannah_ looking one way, and
- rowing another, instantly set fire to _Slop’s_ wig, which being somewhat
- bushy and unctuous withal, was burnt out before it was well kindled.
- ------You impudent whore! cried _Slop_, --(for what is passion, but a
- wild beast?)--you impudent whore, cried _Slop_, getting upright, with
- the cataplasm in his hand; ----I never was the destruction of anybody’s
- nose, said _Susannah_, --which is more than you can say: ----Is it?
- cried _Slop_, throwing the cataplasm in her face; ----Yes, it is, cried
- _Susannah_, returning the compliment with what was left in the pan.
- CHAPTER IV
- Doctor _Slop_ and _Susannah_ filed cross-bills against each other in the
- parlour; which done, as the cataplasm had failed, they retired into the
- kitchen to prepare a fomentation for me; --and whilst that was doing, my
- father determined the point as you will read.
- CHAPTER V
- You see ’tis high time, said my father, addressing himself equally to my
- uncle _Toby_ and _Yorick_, to take this young creature out of these
- women’s hands, and put him into those of a private governor. _Marcus
- Antoninus_ provided fourteen governors all at once to superintend his
- son _Commodus’s_ education, --and in six weeks he cashiered five of
- them; --I know very well, continued my father, that _Commodus’s_ mother
- was in love with a gladiator at the time of her conception, which
- accounts for a great many of _Commodus’s_ cruelties when he became
- emperor; --but still I am of opinion, that those five whom _Antoninus_
- dismissed, did _Commodus’s_ temper, in that short time, more hurt than
- the other nine were able to rectify all their lives long.
- Now as I consider the person who is to be about my son, as the mirror in
- which he is to view himself from morning to night, and by which he is to
- adjust his looks, his carriage, and perhaps the inmost sentiments of his
- heart; --I would have one, _Yorick_, if possible, polished at all
- points, fit for my child to look into. ----This is very good sense,
- quoth my uncle _Toby_ to himself.
- ----There is, continued my father, a certain mien and motion of the body
- and all its parts, both in acting and speaking, which argues a man _well
- within_; and I am not at all surprised that _Gregory_ of _Nazianzum_,
- upon observing the hasty and untoward gestures of _Julian_, should
- foretel he would one day become an apostate; ----or that St. _Ambrose_
- should turn his _Amanuensis_ out of doors, because of an indecent motion
- of his head, which went backwards and forwards like a flail; ----or that
- _Democritus_ should conceive _Protagoras_ to be a scholar, from seeing
- him bind up a faggot, and thrusting, as he did it, the small twigs
- inwards. ----There are a thousand unnoticed openings, continued my
- father, which let a penetrating eye at once into a man’s soul; and I
- maintain it, added he, that a man of sense does not lay down his hat in
- coming into a room, --or take it up in going out of it, but something
- escapes, which discovers him.
- It is for these reasons, continued my father, that the governor I make
- choice of shall neither[6.3] lisp, or squint, or wink, or talk loud, or
- look fierce, or foolish; ----or bite his lips, or grind his teeth, or
- speak through his nose, or pick it, or blow it with his fingers.----
- He shall neither walk fast, --or slow, or fold his arms, --for that is
- laziness; --or hang them down, --for that is folly; or hide them in his
- pocket, for that is nonsense.----
- He shall neither strike, or pinch, or tickle, --or bite, or cut his
- nails, or hawk, or spit, or snift, or drum with his feet or fingers in
- company; ----nor (according to _Erasmus_) shall he speak to any one in
- making water, --nor shall he point to carrion or excrement. ----Now this
- is all nonsense again, quoth my uncle _Toby_ to himself.----
- I will have him, continued my father, chearful, faceté, jovial; at the
- same time, prudent, attentive to business, vigilant, acute, argute,
- inventive, quick in resolving doubts and speculative questions; ----he
- shall be wise, and judicious, and learned: ----And why not humble, and
- moderate, and gentle-tempered, and good? said _Yorick_: ----And why not,
- cried my uncle _Toby_, free, and generous, and bountiful, and brave?
- ----He shall, my dear _Toby_, replied my father, getting up and shaking
- him by the hand. --Then, brother _Shandy_, answered my uncle _Toby_,
- raising himself off the chair, and laying down his pipe to take hold of
- my father’s other hand, --I humbly beg I may recommend poor _Le Fever’s_
- son to you; ----a tear of joy of the first water sparkled in my uncle
- _Toby’s_ eye, and another, the fellow to it, in the corporal’s, as the
- proposition was made; ----you will see why when you read _Le Fever’s_
- story: ----fool that I was! nor can I recollect (nor perhaps you)
- without turning back to the place, what it was that hindered me from
- letting the corporal tell it in his own words; --but the occasion is
- lost, --I must tell it now in my own.
- [Footnote 6.3: Vid. _Pellegrina_.]
- CHAPTER VI
- THE STORY OF LE FEVER
- It was some time in the summer of that year in which _Dendermond_ was
- taken by the allies, --which was about seven years before my father came
- into the country, --and about as many, after the time, that my uncle
- _Toby_ and _Trim_ had privately decamped from my father’s house in town,
- in order to lay some of the finest sieges to some of the finest
- fortified cities in _Europe_----when my uncle _Toby_ was one evening
- getting his supper, with _Trim_ sitting behind him at a small sideboard,
- --I say, sitting--for in consideration of the corporal’s lame knee
- (which sometimes gave him exquisite pain)--when my uncle _Toby_ dined or
- supped alone, he would never suffer the corporal to stand; and the poor
- fellow’s veneration for his master was such, that, with a proper
- artillery, my uncle _Toby_ could have taken _Dendermond_ itself, with
- less trouble than he was able to gain this point over him; for many a
- time when my uncle _Toby_ supposed the corporal’s leg was at rest, he
- would look back, and detect him standing behind him with the most
- dutiful respect: this bred more little squabbles betwixt them, than all
- other causes for five-and-twenty years together --But this is neither
- here nor there--why do I mention it? ----Ask my pen, --it governs me,
- --I govern not it.
- He was one evening sitting thus at his supper, when the landlord of a
- little inn in the village came into the parlour, with an empty phial in
- his hand, to beg a glass or two of sack; ’Tis for a poor gentleman, --I
- think, of the army, said the landlord, who has been taken ill at my
- house four days ago, and has never held up his head since, or had a
- desire to taste anything, till just now, that he has a fancy for a glass
- of sack and a thin toast, ----_I think_, says he, taking his hand from
- his forehead, _it would comfort me_.
- ----If I could neither beg, borrow, or buy such a thing--added the
- landlord, --I would almost steal it for the poor gentleman, he is so
- ill. ----I hope in God he will still mend, continued he, --we are all of
- us concerned for him.
- Thou art a good-natured soul, I will answer for thee, cried my uncle
- _Toby_; and thou shalt drink the poor gentleman’s health in a glass of
- sack thyself, --and take a couple of bottles with my service, and tell
- him he is heartily welcome to them, and to a dozen more if they will do
- him good.
- Though I am persuaded, said my uncle _Toby_, as the landlord shut the
- door, he is a very compassionate fellow--_Trim_, --yet I cannot help
- entertaining a high opinion of his guest too; there must be something
- more than common in him, that in so short a time should win so much upon
- the affections of his host; ----And of his whole family, added the
- corporal, for they are all concerned for him. ----Step after him, said
- my uncle _Toby_, --do, _Trim_, --and ask if he knows his name.
- ----I have quite forgot it truly, said the landlord, coming back into
- the parlour with the corporal, --but I can ask his son again: ----Has he
- a son with him then? said my uncle _Toby_. --A boy, replied the
- landlord, of about eleven or twelve years of age; --but the poor
- creature has tasted almost as little as his father; he does nothing but
- mourn and lament for him night and day: ----He has not stirred from the
- bed-side these two days.
- My uncle _Toby_ laid down his knife and fork, and thrust his plate from
- before him, as the landlord gave him the account; and _Trim_, without
- being ordered, took away, without saying one word, and in a few minutes
- after brought him his pipe and tobacco.
- ----Stay in the room a little, said my uncle _Toby_.
- _Trim!_----said my uncle _Toby_, after he lighted his pipe, and smoak’d
- about a dozen whiffs. ----_Trim_ came in front of his master, and made
- his bow; --my uncle _Toby_ smoak’d on, and said no more. ----Corporal!
- said my uncle _Toby_----the corporal made his bow. ----My uncle _Toby_
- proceeded no farther, but finished his pipe.
- _Trim!_ said my uncle _Toby_, I have a project in my head, as it is a
- bad night, of wrapping myself up warm in my roquelaure, and paying a
- visit to this poor gentleman. ----Your honour’s roquelaure, replied the
- corporal, has not once been had on, since the night before your honour
- received your wound, when we mounted guard in the trenches before the
- gate of St. _Nicolas_; ----and besides, it is so cold and rainy a night,
- that what with the roquelaure, and what with the weather, ’twill be
- enough to give your honour your death, and bring on your honour’s
- torment in your groin. I fear so, replied my uncle _Toby_; but I am not
- at rest in my mind, _Trim_, since the account the landlord has given me.
- ----I wish I had not known so much of this affair, --added my uncle
- _Toby_, --or that I had known more of it: ----How shall we manage it?
- Leave it, an’t please your honour, to me, quoth the corporal; ----I’ll
- take my hat and stick and go to the house and reconnoitre, and act
- accordingly; and I will bring your honour a full account in an hour.
- ----Thou shalt go, _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_, and here’s a shilling
- for thee to drink with his servant. ----I shall get it all out of him,
- said the corporal, shutting the door.
- My uncle _Toby_ filled his second pipe; and had it not been, that he now
- and then wandered from the point, with considering whether it was not
- full as well to have the curtain of the tenaille a straight line, as a
- crooked one, --he might be said to have thought of nothing else but poor
- _Le Fever_ and his boy the whole time he smoaked it.
- CHAPTER VII
- THE STORY OF LE FEVER CONTINUED
- It was not till my uncle _Toby_ had knocked the ashes out of his third
- pipe, that corporal _Trim_ returned from the inn, and gave him the
- following account.
- I despaired, at first, said the corporal, of being able to bring back
- your honour any kind of intelligence concerning the poor sick
- lieutenant --Is he in the army, then? said my uncle _Toby_ ----He is,
- said the corporal ----And in what regiment? said my uncle _Toby_
- ----I’ll tell your honour, replied the corporal, everything straight
- forwards, as I learnt it. --Then, _Trim_, I’ll fill another pipe, said
- my uncle _Toby_, and not interrupt thee till thou hast done; so sit down
- at thy ease, _Trim_, in the window-seat, and begin thy story again. The
- corporal made his old bow, which generally spoke as plain as a bow could
- speak it--_Your honour is good_: ----And having done that, he sat down,
- as he was ordered, --and began the story to my uncle _Toby_ over again
- in pretty near the same words.
- I despaired at first, said the corporal, of being able to bring back any
- intelligence to your honour, about the lieutenant and his son; for when
- I asked where his servant was, from whom I made myself sure of knowing
- everything which was proper to be asked, --That’s a right distinction,
- _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_ --I was answered, an’ please your honour,
- that he had no servant with him; ----that he had come to the inn with
- hired horses, which, upon finding himself unable to proceed (to join,
- I suppose, the regiment), he had dismissed the morning after he came.
- --If I get better, my dear, said he, as he gave his purse to his son to
- pay the man, --we can hire horses from hence. ----But alas! the poor
- gentleman will never get from hence, said the landlady to me, --for I
- heard the death-watch all night long; ----and when he dies, the youth,
- his son, will certainly die with him, for he is broken-hearted already.
- I was hearing this account, continued the corporal, when the youth came
- into the kitchen, to order the thin toast the landlord spoke of; ----but
- I will do it for my father myself, said the youth. ----Pray let me save
- you the trouble, young gentleman, said I, taking up a fork for the
- purpose, and offering him my chair to sit down upon by the fire, whilst
- I did it. ----I believe, Sir, said he, very modestly, I can please him
- best myself. ----I am sure, said I, his honour will not like the toast
- the worse for being toasted by an old soldier. ----The youth took hold
- of my hand, and instantly burst into tears. ----Poor youth! said my
- uncle _Toby_, --he has been bred up from an infant in the army, and the
- name of a soldier, _Trim_, sounded in his ears like the name of a
- friend; --I wish I had him here.
- ----I never, in the longest march, said the corporal, had so great a
- mind to my dinner, as I had to cry with him for company: --What could be
- the matter with me, an’ please your honour? Nothing in the world,
- _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_, blowing his nose, --but that thou art a
- good-natured fellow.
- When I gave him the toast, continued the corporal, I thought it was
- proper to tell him I was captain _Shandy’s_ servant, and that your
- honour (though a stranger) was extremely concerned for his father; --and
- that if there was any thing in your house or cellar----(And thou
- might’st have added my purse too, said my uncle _Toby_)----he was
- heartily welcome to it: ----He made a very low bow (which was meant to
- your honour), but no answer--for his heart was full--so he went up
- stairs with the toast; --I warrant you, my dear, said I, as I opened the
- kitchen-door, your father will be well again. ----Mr. _Yorick’s_ curate
- was smoaking a pipe by the kitchen fire, --but said not a word good or
- bad to comfort the youth. ----I thought it wrong; added the
- corporal ----I think so too, said my uncle _Toby_.
- When the lieutenant had taken his glass of sack and toast, he felt
- himself a little revived, and sent down into the kitchen, to let me
- know, that in about ten minutes he should be glad if I would step up
- stairs. ----I believe, said the landlord, he is going to say his
- prayers, ----for there was a book laid upon the chair by his bed-side,
- and as I shut the door, I saw his son take up a cushion.----
- I thought, said the curate, that you gentlemen of the army, Mr. _Trim_,
- never said your prayers at all. ----I heard the poor gentleman say his
- prayers last night, said the landlady, very devoutly, and with my own
- ears, or I could not have believed it. ----Are you sure of it? replied
- the curate. ----A soldier, an’ please your reverence, said I, prays as
- often (of his own accord) as a parson; ----and when he is fighting for
- his king, and for his own life, and for his honour too, he has the most
- reason to pray to God of any one in the whole world----’Twas well said
- of thee, _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_. ----But when a soldier, said I,
- an’ please your reverence, has been standing for twelve hours together
- in the trenches, up to his knees in cold water, --or engaged, said I,
- for months together in long and dangerous marches; --harassed, perhaps,
- in his rear to-day; --harassing others to-morrow; --detached here;
- --countermanded there; --resting this night out upon his arms; --beat up
- in his shirt the next; --benumbed in his joints; --perhaps without straw
- in his tent to kneel on; --must say his prayers _how_ and _when_ he can.
- --I believe, said I, --for I was piqued, quoth the corporal, for the
- reputation of the army, --I believe, an’ please your reverence, said I,
- that when a soldier gets time to pray, --he prays as heartily as a
- parson, --though not with all his fuss and hypocrisy. ----Thou shouldst
- not have said that, _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_, --for God only knows
- who is a hypocrite, and who is not: ----At the great and general review
- of us all, corporal, at the day of judgment (and not till then)--it will
- be seen who has done their duties in this world, --and who has not; and
- we shall be advanced, _Trim_, accordingly. ----I hope we shall, said
- _Trim_. ----It is in the Scripture, said my uncle _Toby_; and I will
- shew it thee to-morrow: --In the mean time we may depend upon it,
- _Trim_, for our comfort, said my uncle _Toby_, that God Almighty is so
- good and just a governor of the world, that if we have but done our
- duties in it, --it will never be enquired into, whether we have done
- them in a red coat or a black one: ----I hope not, said the
- corporal ----But go on, _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_, with thy story.
- When I went up, continued the corporal, into the lieutenant’s room,
- which I did not do till the expiration of the ten minutes, --he was
- lying in his bed with his head raised upon his hand, with his elbow upon
- the pillow, and a clean white cambrick handkerchief beside it: ----The
- youth was just stooping down to take up the cushion, upon which I
- supposed he had been kneeling, --the book was laid upon the bed, --and,
- as he rose, in taking up the cushion with one hand, he reached out his
- other to take it away at the same time. ----Let it remain there, my
- dear, said the lieutenant.
- He did not offer to speak to me, till I had walked up close to his
- bed-side: --If you are captain _Shandy’s_ servant, said he, you must
- present my thanks to your master, with my little boy’s thanks along with
- them, for his courtesy to me; --if he was of _Leven’s_--said the
- lieutenant. --I told him your honour was --Then, said he, I served three
- campaigns with him in _Flanders_, and remember him, --but ’tis most
- likely, as I had not the honour of any acquaintance with him, that he
- knows nothing of me. ----You will tell him, however, that the person his
- good-nature has laid under obligations to him, is one _Le Fever_, a
- lieutenant in _Angus’s_----but he knows me not, --said he, a second
- time, musing; ----possibly he may my story--added he--pray tell the
- captain, I was the ensign at _Breda_, whose wife was most unfortunately
- killed with a musket-shot, as she lay in my arms in my tent. ----I
- remember the story, an’t please your honour, said I, very well. ----Do
- you so? said he, wiping his eyes with his handkerchief, --then well may
- I. --In saying this, he drew a little ring out of his bosom, which
- seemed tied with a black ribband about his neck, and kiss’d it
- twice ----Here, _Billy_, said he, ----the boy flew across the room to the
- bed-side, --and falling down upon his knee, took the ring in his hand,
- and kissed it too, --then kissed his father, and sat down upon the bed
- and wept.
- I wish, said my uncle _Toby_, with a deep sigh, --I wish, _Trim_, I was
- asleep.
- Your honour, replied the corporal, is too much concerned; --shall I pour
- your honour out a glass of sack to your pipe? ----Do, _Trim_, said my
- uncle _Toby_.
- I remember, said my uncle _Toby_, sighing again, the story of the ensign
- and his wife, with a circumstance his modesty omitted; --and
- particularly well that he, as well as she, upon some account or other
- (I forget what) was universally pitied by the whole regiment; --but
- finish the story thou art upon: --’Tis finished already, said the
- corporal, --for I could stay no longer, --so wished his honour a good
- night; young _Le Fever_ rose from off the bed, and saw me to the bottom
- of the stairs; and as we went down together, told me, they had come from
- _Ireland_, and were on their route to join the regiment in _Flanders_.
- ----But alas! said the corporal, --the lieutenant’s last day’s march is
- over. --Then what is to become of his poor boy? cried my uncle _Toby_.
- CHAPTER VIII
- THE STORY OF LE FEVER CONTINUED
- It was to my uncle _Toby’s_ eternal honour, ----though I tell it only
- for the sake of those, who, when coop’d in betwixt a natural and a
- positive law, know not, for their souls, which way in the world to turn
- themselves ----That notwithstanding my uncle _Toby_ was warmly engaged
- at that time in carrying on the siege of _Dendermond_, parallel with the
- allies, who pressed theirs on so vigorously, that they scarce allowed
- him time to get his dinner----that nevertheless he gave up _Dendermond_,
- though he had already made a lodgment upon the counterscarp; --and bent
- his whole thoughts towards the private distresses at the inn; and except
- that he ordered the garden gate to be bolted up, by which he might be
- said to have turned the siege of _Dendermond_ into a blockade, --he left
- _Dendermond_ to itself--to be relieved or not by the _French_ king, as
- the _French_ king thought good; and only considered how he himself
- should relieve the poor lieutenant and his son.
- ----That kind BEING, who is a friend to the friendless, shall recompence
- thee for this.
- Thou hast left this matter short, said my uncle _Toby_ to the corporal,
- as he was putting him to bed, ----and I will tell thee in what, _Trim_.
- ----In the first place, when thou madest an offer of my services to _Le
- Fever_, ----as sickness and travelling are both expensive, and thou
- knowest he was but a poor lieutenant, with a son to subsist as well as
- himself out of his pay, --that thou didst not make an offer to him of my
- purse; because, had he stood in need, thou knowest, _Trim_, he had been
- as welcome to it as myself. ----Your honour knows, said the corporal,
- I had no orders; ----True, quoth my uncle _Toby_, --thou didst very
- right, _Trim_, as a soldier, --but certainly very wrong as a man.
- In the second place, for which, indeed, thou hast the same excuse,
- continued my uncle _Toby_, ----when thou offeredst him whatever was in
- my house, ----thou shouldst have offered him my house too: ----A sick
- brother officer should have the best quarters, _Trim_, and if we had him
- with us, --we could tend and look to him: ----Thou art an excellent
- nurse thyself, _Trim_, --and what with thy care of him, and the old
- woman’s, and his boy’s, and mine together, we might recruit him again at
- once, and set him upon his legs.------
- ----In a fortnight or three weeks, added my uncle _Toby_, smiling,
- ----he might march. ----He will never march; an’ please your honour, in
- this world, said the corporal: ----He will march; said my uncle _Toby_,
- rising up, from the side of the bed, with one shoe off: ----An’ please
- your honour, said the corporal, he will never march but to his grave:
- ----He shall march, cried my uncle _Toby_, marching the foot which had a
- shoe on, though without advancing an inch, --he shall march to his
- regiment. ----He cannot stand it, said the corporal; ----He shall be
- supported, said my uncle _Toby_; ----He’ll drop at last, said the
- corporal, and what will become of his boy? ----He shall not drop, said
- my uncle _Toby_, firmly. ----A-well-o’-day, --do what we can for him,
- said _Trim_, maintaining his point, --the poor soul will die: ----He
- shall not die, by G--, cried my uncle _Toby_.
- --The ACCUSING SPIRIT, which flew up to heaven’s chancery with the oath,
- blush’d as he gave it in; --and the RECORDING ANGEL, as he wrote it
- down, dropp’d a tear upon the word, and blotted it out for ever.
- CHAPTER IX
- ----My uncle _Toby_ went to his bureau, --put his purse into his
- breeches pocket, and having ordered the corporal to go early in the
- morning for a physician, --he went to bed, and fell asleep.
- CHAPTER X
- THE STORY OF LE FEVER CONTINUED
- The sun looked bright the morning after, to every eye in the village but
- _Le Fever’s_ and his afflicted son’s; the hand of death press’d heavy
- upon his eye-lids, ----and hardly could the wheel at the cistern turn
- round its circle, --when my uncle _Toby_, who had rose up an hour before
- his wonted time, entered the lieutenant’s room, and without preface or
- apology, sat himself down upon the chair by the bed-side, and,
- independently of all modes and customs, opened the curtain in the manner
- an old friend and brother officer would have done it, and asked him how
- he did, --how he had rested in the night, --what was his complaint,
- --where was his pain, --and what he could do to help him: ----and
- without giving him time to answer any one of the enquiries, went on, and
- told him of the little plan which he had been concerting with the
- corporal the night before for him.----
- ----You shall go home directly, _Le Fever_, said my uncle _Toby_, to my
- house, --and we’ll send for a doctor to see what’s the matter, --and
- we’ll have an apothecary, --and the corporal shall be your nurse;
- ----and I’ll be your servant, _Le Fever_.
- There was a frankness in my uncle _Toby_, --not the _effect_ of
- familiarity, --but the _cause_ of it, --which let you at once into his
- soul, and shewed you the goodness of his nature; to this, there was
- something in his looks, and voice, and manner, superadded, which
- eternally beckoned to the unfortunate to come and take shelter under
- him; so that before my uncle _Toby_ had half finished the kind offers he
- was making to the father, had the son insensibly pressed up close to his
- knees, and had taken hold of the breast of his coat, and was pulling it
- towards him. ----The blood and spirits of _Le Fever_, which were waxing
- cold and slow within him, and were retreating to their last citadel, the
- heart--rallied back, --the film forsook his eyes for a moment, --he
- looked up wishfully in my uncle _Toby’s_ face, --then cast a look upon
- his boy, ----and that _ligament_, fine as it was, --was never
- broken.------
- Nature instantly ebb’d again, --the film returned to its place, ----the
- pulse fluttered----stopp’d----went on----throbb’d----stopp’d
- again----moved----stopp’d----shall I go on? ----No.
- CHAPTER XI
- I am so impatient to return to my own story, that what remains of young
- _Le Fever’s_, that is, from this turn of his fortune, to the time my
- uncle _Toby_ recommended him for my preceptor, shall be told in a very
- few words in the next chapter. --All that is necessary to be added to
- this chapter is as follows.--
- That my uncle _Toby_, with young _Le Fever_ in his hand, attended the
- poor lieutenant, as chief mourners, to his grave.
- That the governor of _Dendermond_ paid his obsequies all military
- honours, --and that _Yorick_, not to be behind-hand--paid him all
- ecclesiastic--for he buried him in his chancel: --And it appears
- likewise, he preached a funeral sermon over him ----I say it _appears_,
- --for it was _Yorick’s_ custom, which I suppose a general one with those
- of his profession, on the first leaf of every sermon which he composed,
- to chronicle down the time, the place, and the occasion of its being
- preached: to this, he was ever wont to add some short comment or
- stricture upon the sermon itself, seldom, indeed, much to its credit:
- --For instance, _This sermon upon the Jewish dispensation --I don’t like
- it at all; --Though I own there is a world of WATER-LANDISH knowledge in
- it, --but ’tis all tritical, and most tritically put together.
- ------This is but a flimsy kind of a composition; what was in my head
- when I made it?_
- ----N. B. _The excellency of this text is, that it will suit any sermon,
- --and of this sermon, ----that it will suit any text. ------_
- _ ----For this sermon I shall be hanged, --for I have stolen the greatest
- part of it. Doctor _Paidagunes_ found me out. [-->] Set a thief to catch
- a thief. ------_
- On the back of half a dozen I find written, _So, so_, and no more----and
- upon a couple _Moderato_; by which, as far as one may gather from
- _Altieri’s_ _Italian_ dictionary, --but mostly from the authority of a
- piece of green whipcord, which seemed to have been the unravelling of
- _Yorick’s_ whip-lash, with which he has left us the two sermons marked
- _Moderato_, and the half dozen of _So, so_, tied fast together in one
- bundle by themselves, --one may safely suppose he meant pretty near the
- same thing.
- There is but one difficulty in the way of this conjecture, which is
- this, that the _moderato’s_ are five times better than the _so, so’s_;
- --show ten times more knowledge of the human heart; --have seventy times
- more wit and spirit in them; --(and, to rise properly in my
- climax)--discovered a thousand times more genius; --and to crown all,
- are infinitely more entertaining than those tied up with them: --for
- which reason, whene’er _Yorick’s_ _dramatic_ sermons are offered to the
- world, though I shall admit but one out of the whole number of the _so,
- so’s_, I shall, nevertheless, adventure to print the two _moderato’s_
- without any sort of scruple.
- What _Yorick_ could mean by the words _lentamente_, --_tenutè_,
- --_grave_, --and sometimes _adagio_, --as applied to _theological_
- compositions, and with which he has characterised some of these sermons,
- I dare not venture to guess. ----I am more puzzled still upon finding
- _a l’octava alta!_ upon one; ----_Con strepito_ upon the back of
- another; ----_Siciliana_ upon a third; ----_Alla capella_ upon a fourth;
- ----_Con l’arco_ upon this; ----_Senza l’arco_ upon that. ----All I know
- is, that they are musical terms, and have a meaning; ----and as he was a
- musical man, I will make no doubt, but that by some quaint application
- of such metaphors to the compositions in hand, they impressed very
- distinct ideas of their several characters upon his fancy, --whatever
- they may do upon that of others.
- Amongst these, there is that particular sermon which has unaccountably
- led me into this digression ----The funeral sermon upon poor _Le Fever_,
- wrote out very fairly, as if from a hasty copy. --I take notice of it
- the more, because it seems to have been his favourite composition ----It
- is upon mortality; and is tied lengthways and cross-ways with a yarn
- thrum, and then rolled up and twisted round with a half-sheet of dirty
- blue paper, which seems to have been once the cast cover of a general
- review, which to this day smells horribly of horse drugs. ----Whether
- these marks of humiliation were designed, --I something doubt;
- ----because at the end of the sermon (and not at the beginning
- of it)--very different from his way of treating the rest, he had
- wrote----
- Bravo!
- ----Though not very offensively, ----for it is at two inches, at least,
- and a half’s distance from, and below the concluding line of the sermon,
- at the very extremity of the page, and in that right hand corner of it,
- which, you know, is generally covered with your thumb; and, to do it
- justice, it is wrote besides with a crow’s quill so faintly in a small
- _Italian_ hand, as scarce to solicit the eye towards the place, whether
- your thumb is there or not, --so that from the _manner of it_, it stands
- half excused; and being wrote moreover with very pale ink, diluted
- almost to nothing, --’tis more like a _ritratto_ of the shadow of
- vanity, than of VANITY herself--of the two; resembling rather a faint
- thought of transient applause, secretly stirring up in the heart of the
- composer; than a gross mark of it, coarsely obtruded upon the world.
- With all these extenuations, I am aware, that in publishing this, I do
- no service to _Yorick’s_ character as a modest man; --but all men have
- their failings! and what lessens this still farther, and almost wipes it
- away, is this; that the word was struck through sometime afterwards
- (as appears from a different tint of the ink) with a line quite across
- it in this manner, [BRAVO]----as if he had retracted, or was ashamed of
- the opinion he had once entertained of it.
- These short characters of his sermons were always written, excepting in
- this one instance, upon the first leaf of his sermon, which served as a
- cover to it; and usually upon the inside of it, which was turned towards
- the text; --but at the end of his discourse, where, perhaps, he had five
- or six pages, and sometimes, perhaps, a whole score to turn himself in,
- --he took a large circuit, and, indeed, a much more mettlesome one; --as
- if he had snatched the occasion of unlacing himself with a few more
- frolicksome strokes at vice, than the straitness of the pulpit allowed.
- --These, though hussar-like, they skirmish lightly and out of all order,
- are still auxiliaries on the side of virtue; --tell me then, Mynheer
- Vander Blonederdondergewdenstronke, why they should not be printed
- together?
- CHAPTER XII
- When my uncle _Toby_ had turned everything into money, and settled all
- accounts betwixt the agent of the regiment and _Le Fever_, and betwixt
- _Le Fever_ and all mankind, ----there remained nothing more in my uncle
- _Toby’s_ hands, than an old regimental coat and a sword; so that my
- uncle _Toby_ found little or no opposition from the world in taking
- administration. The coat my uncle _Toby_ gave the corporal; ----Wear it,
- _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_, as long as it will hold together, for the
- sake of the poor lieutenant ----And this, ----said my uncle _Toby_,
- taking up the sword in his hand, and drawing it out of the scabbard as
- he spoke----and this, _Le Fever_, I’ll save for thee, --’tis all the
- fortune, continued my uncle _Toby_, hanging it up upon a crook, and
- pointing to it, --’tis all the fortune, my dear _Le Fever_, which God
- has left thee; but if he has given thee a heart to fight thy way with it
- in the world, --and thou doest it like a man of honour, --’tis enough
- for us.
- As soon as my uncle _Toby_ had laid a foundation, and taught him to
- inscribe a regular polygon in a circle, he sent him to a public school,
- where, excepting _Whitsontide_ and _Christmas_, at which times the
- corporal was punctually dispatched for him, --he remained to the spring
- of the year, seventeen; when the stories of the emperor’s sending his
- army into _Hungary_ against the _Turks_, kindling a spark of fire in his
- bosom, he left his _Greek_ and _Latin_ without leave, and throwing
- himself upon his knees before my uncle _Toby_, begged his father’s
- sword, and my uncle _Toby’s_ leave along with it, to go and try his
- fortune under _Eugene_. --Twice did my uncle _Toby_ forget his wound and
- cry out, _Le Fever!_ I will go with thee, and thou shalt fight beside
- me ----And twice he laid his hand upon his groin, and hung down his head
- in sorrow and disconsolation.----
- My uncle _Toby_ took down the sword from the crook, where it had hung
- untouched ever since the lieutenant’s death, and delivered it to the
- corporal to brighten up; ----and having detained _Le Fever_ a single
- fortnight to equip him, and contract for his passage to _Leghorn_, --he
- put the sword into his hand. ----If thou art brave, _Le Fever_, said my
- uncle _Toby_, this will not fail thee, ----but Fortune, said he (musing
- a little), ----Fortune may ----And if she does, --added my uncle _Toby_,
- embracing him, come back again to me, _Le Fever_, and we will shape thee
- another course.
- The greatest injury could not have oppressed the heart of _Le Fever_
- more than my uncle _Toby’s_ paternal kindness; ----he parted from my
- uncle _Toby_, as the best of sons from the best of fathers----both
- dropped tears----and as my uncle _Toby_ gave him his last kiss, he
- slipped sixty guineas, tied up in an old purse of his father’s, in which
- was his mother’s ring, into his hand,---- and bid God bless him.
- CHAPTER XIII
- Le Fever got up to the Imperial army just time enough to try what metal
- his sword was made of, at the defeat of the _Turks_ before _Belgrade_;
- but a series of unmerited mischances had pursued him from that moment,
- and trod close upon his heels for four years together after; he had
- withstood these buffetings to the last, till sickness overtook him at
- _Marseilles_, from whence he wrote my uncle _Toby_ word, he had lost his
- time, his services, his health, and, in short, everything but his sword;
- ----and was waiting for the first ship to return back to him.
- As this letter came to hand about six weeks before _Susannah’s_
- accident, _Le Fever_ was hourly expected; and was uppermost in my uncle
- _Toby’s_ mind all the time my father was giving him and _Yorick_ a
- description of what kind of a person he would chuse for a preceptor to
- me: but as my uncle _Toby_ thought my father at first somewhat fanciful
- in the accomplishments he required, he forebore mentioning _Le Fever’s_
- name, ----till the character, by _Yorick’s_ interposition, ending
- unexpectedly, in one, who should be gentle-tempered, and generous, and
- good, it impressed the image of _Le Fever_, and his interest, upon my
- uncle _Toby_ so forcibly, he rose instantly off his chair; and laying
- down his pipe, in order to take hold of both my father’s hands ----I beg,
- brother _Shandy_, said my uncle _Toby_, I may recommend poor _Le
- Fever’s_ son to you ----I beseech you do, added _Yorick_ ----He has a
- good heart, said my uncle _Toby_ ----And a brave one too, an’ please
- your honour, said the corporal.
- ----The best hearts, _Trim_, are ever the bravest, replied my uncle
- _Toby_. ----And the greatest cowards, an’ please your honour, in our
- regiment, were the greatest rascals in it. ----There was serjeant
- _Kumber_, and ensign------
- ----We’ll talk of them, said my father, another time.
- CHAPTER XIV
- What a jovial and a merry world would this be, may it please your
- worships, but for that inextricable labyrinth of debts, cares, woes,
- want, grief, discontent, melancholy, large jointures, impositions, and
- lies!
- Doctor _Slop_, like a son of a w----, as my father called him for it,
- --to exalt himself, --debased me to death, --and made ten thousand times
- more of _Susannah’s_ accident, than there was any grounds for; so that
- in a week’s time, or less, it was in everybody’s mouth, _That poor
- Master Shandy_ * * * * * *
- * * entirely. --And FAME, who loves to double everything, --in
- three days more, had sworn, positively she saw it, --and all the world,
- as usual, gave credit to her evidence---- “That the nursery window had
- not only * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * ;----but that * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * ’s also.”
- Could the world have been sued like a BODY-CORPORATE, --my father had
- brought an action upon the case, and trounced it sufficiently; but to
- fall foul of individuals about it----as every soul who had mentioned the
- affair, did it with the greatest pity imaginable; ----’twas like flying
- in the very face of his best friends: ----And yet to acquiesce under the
- report, in silence--was to acknowledge it openly, --at least in the
- opinion of one half of the world; and to make a bustle again, in
- contradicting it, --was to confirm it as strongly in the opinion of the
- other half.------
- ----Was ever poor devil of a country gentleman so hampered? said my
- father.
- I would shew him publickly, said my uncle _Toby_, at the market cross.
- ----’Twill have no effect, said my father.
- CHAPTER XV
- ----I’ll put him, however, into breeches, said my father, --let the
- world say what it will.
- CHAPTER XVI
- There are a thousand resolutions, Sir, both in church and state, as well
- as in matters, Madam, of a more private concern; --which though they
- have carried all the appearance in the world of being taken, and entered
- upon in a hasty, hare-brained, and unadvised manner, were,
- notwithstanding this (and could you or I have got into the cabinet, or
- stood behind the curtain, we should have found it was so), weighed,
- poized, and perpended----argued upon--canvassed through----entered into,
- and examined on all sides with so much coolness, that the GODDESS of
- COOLNESS herself (I do not take upon me to prove her existence) could
- neither have wished it, or done it better.
- Of the number of these was my father’s resolution of putting me into
- breeches; which, though determined at once, --in a kind of huff, and a
- defiance of all mankind, had, nevertheless, been _pro’d_ and _conn’d_,
- and judicially talked over betwixt him and my mother about a month
- before, in two several _beds of justice_, which my father had held for
- that purpose. I shall explain the nature of these beds of justice in my
- next chapter; and in the chapter following that, you shall step with me,
- Madam, behind the curtain, only to hear in what kind of manner my father
- and my mother debated between themselves, this affair of the breeches,
- --from which you may form an idea, how they debated all lesser matters.
- CHAPTER XVII
- The ancient _Goths_ of _Germany_, who (the learned _Cluverius_ is
- positive) were first seated in the country between the _Vistula_ and the
- _Oder_, and who afterwards incorporated the _Herculi_, the _Bugians_,
- and some other _Vandallick_ clans to ’em--had all of them a wise custom
- of debating everything of importance to their state, twice; that is,
- --once drunk, and once sober: ----Drunk, --that their councils might not
- want vigour; ----and sober--that they might not want discretion.
- Now my father being entirely a water-drinker, --was a long time
- gravelled almost to death, in turning this as much to his advantage, as
- he did every other thing which the ancients did or said; and it was not
- till the seventh year of his marriage, after a thousand fruitless
- experiments and devices, that he hit upon an expedient which answered
- the purpose; ----and that was, when any difficult and momentous point
- was to be settled in the family, which required great sobriety, and
- great spirit too, in its determination, ----he fixed and set apart the
- first _Sunday_ night in the month, and the _Saturday_ night which
- immediately preceded it, to argue it over, in bed, with my mother: By
- which contrivance, if you consider, Sir, with yourself, * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * * *
- These my father, humorously enough, called his _beds of justice_;
- ----for from the two different counsels taken in these two different
- humours, a middle one was generally found out which touched the point of
- wisdom as well, as if he had got drunk and sober a hundred times.
- It must not be made a secret of to the world, that this answers full as
- well in literary discussions, as either in military or conjugal; but it
- is not every author that can try the experiment as the _Goths_ and
- _Vandals_ did it----or, if he can, may it be always for his body’s
- health; and to do it, as my father did it, --am I sure it would be
- always for his soul’s.
- My way is this:----
- In all nice and ticklish discussions--(of which, heaven knows, there are
- but too many in my book), --where I find I cannot take a step without
- the danger of having either their worships or their reverences upon my
- back ----I write one-half _full_, --and t’other _fasting_; ----or write
- it all full, --and correct it fasting: ----or write it fasting, --and
- correct it full, for they all come to the same thing: ----So that with a
- less variation from my father’s plan, than my father’s from the
- _Gothick_ ----I feel myself upon a par with him in his first bed of
- justice, --and no way inferior to him in his second. ----These different
- and almost irreconcileable effects, flow uniformly from the wise and
- wonderful mechanism of nature, --of which, --be her’s the honour.
- ----All that we can do, is to turn and work the machine to the
- improvement and better manufactory of the arts and sciences.----
- Now, when I write full, --I write as if I was never to write fasting
- again as long as I live; ----that is, I write free from the cares as
- well as the terrors of the world. ----I count not the number of my
- scars, --nor does my fancy go forth into dark entries and bye-corners to
- antedate my stabs. ----In a word, my pen takes its course; and I write
- on as much from the fulness of my heart, as my stomach.----
- But when, an’ please your honours, I indite fasting, ’tis a different
- history. ----I pay the world all possible attention and respect, --and
- have as great a share (whilst it lasts) of that under-strapping virtue
- of discretion as the best of you. ----So that betwixt both, I write a
- careless kind of a civil, nonsensical, good-humoured _Shandean_ book,
- which will do all your hearts good------
- ----And all your heads too, --provided you understand it.
- CHAPTER XVIII
- We should begin, said my father, turning himself half round in bed, and
- shifting his pillow a little towards my mother’s, as he opened the
- debate ----We should begin to think, Mrs. _Shandy_, of putting this boy
- into breeches.----
- We should so, --said my mother. ----We defer it, my dear, quoth my
- father, shamefully.------
- I think we do, Mr. _Shandy_, --said my mother.
- ----Not but the child looks extremely well, said my father, in his vests
- and tunicks.------
- ------He does look very well in them, --replied my mother.------
- ----And for that reason it would be almost a sin, added my father, to
- take him out of ’em.----
- ----It would so, --said my mother: ----But indeed he is growing a very
- tall lad, --rejoined my father.
- ----He is very tall for his age, indeed, --said my mother.----
- ----I can not (making two syllables of it) imagine, quoth my father, who
- the deuce he takes after.----
- I cannot conceive, for my life, --said my mother.----
- Humph! ----said my father.
- (The dialogue ceased for a moment.)
- ----I am very short myself, --continued my father gravely.
- You are very short, Mr. _Shandy_, --said my mother.
- Humph! quoth my father to himself, a second time: in muttering which, he
- plucked his pillow a little further from my mother’s--and turning about
- again, there was an end of the debate for three minutes and a half.
- ----When he gets these breeches made, cried my father in a higher tone,
- he’ll look like a beast in ’em.
- He will be very awkward in them at first, replied my mother.----
- ----And ’twill be lucky, if that’s the worst on’t, added my father.
- It will be very lucky, answered my mother.
- I suppose, replied my father, --making some pause first, --he’ll be
- exactly like other people’s children.----
- Exactly, said my mother.------
- ----Though I shall be sorry for that, added my father: and so the debate
- stopp’d again.
- ----They should be of leather, said my father, turning him about
- again.--
- They will last him, said my mother, the longest.
- But he can have no linings to ’em, replied my father.------
- He cannot, said my mother.
- ’Twere better to have them of fustian, quoth my father.
- Nothing can be better, quoth my mother.------
- --Except dimity, --replied my father: ----’Tis best of all, --replied my
- mother.
- ----One must not give him his death, however, --interrupted my father.
- By no means, said my mother: ----and so the dialogue stood still again.
- I am resolved, however, quoth my father, breaking silence the fourth
- time, he shall have no pockets in them.--
- ----There is no occasion for any, said my mother.------
- I mean in his coat and waistcoat, --cried my father.
- ----I mean so too, --replied my mother.
- ----Though if he gets a gig or top ----Poor souls! it is a crown and a
- sceptre to them, --they should have where to secure it.------
- Order it as you please, Mr. _Shandy_, replied my mother.------
- ----But don’t you think it right? added my father, pressing the point
- home to her.
- Perfectly, said my mother, if it pleases you, Mr. _Shandy_.------
- ----There’s for you! cried my father, losing temper ----Pleases me!
- ----You never will distinguish, Mrs. _Shandy_, nor shall I ever teach
- you to do it, betwixt a point of pleasure and a point of convenience.
- ----This was on the _Sunday_ night: ----and further this chapter sayeth
- not.
- CHAPTER XIX
- After my father had debated the affair of the breeches with my mother,
- --he consulted _Albertus Rubenius_ upon it; and _Albertus Rubenius_ used
- my father ten times worse in the consultation (if possible) than even my
- father had used my mother: For as _Rubenius_ had wrote a quarto
- _express_, _De re Vestiaria Veterum_, --it was _Rubenius’s_ business to
- have given my father some lights. --On the contrary, my father might as
- well have thought of extracting the seven cardinal virtues out of a long
- beard, --as of extracting a single word out of _Rubenius_ upon the
- subject.
- Upon every other article of ancient dress, _Rubenius_ was very
- communicative to my father; --gave him a full and satisfactory account
- of
- The Toga, or loose gown.
- The Chlamys.
- The Ephod.
- The Tunica, or Jacket.
- The Synthesis.
- The Pænula.
- The Lacema, with its Cucullus.
- The Paludamentum.
- The Prætexta.
- The Sagum, or soldier’s jerkin.
- The Trabea: of which, according to _Suetonius_, there were three
- kinds.--
- ----But what are all these to the breeches? said my father.
- _Rubenius_ threw him down upon the counter all kinds of shoes which had
- been in fashion with the _Romans_.------
- There was,
- The open shoe.
- The close shoe.
- The slip shoe.
- The wooden shoe.
- The soc.
- The buskin.
- And The military shoe with hobnails in it, which _Juvenal_
- takes notice of.
- There were, The clogs.
- The pattins.
- The pantoufles.
- The brogues.
- The sandals, with latchets to them.
- There was, The felt shoe.
- The linen shoe.
- The laced shoe.
- The braided shoe.
- The calceus incisus.
- And The calceus rostratus.
- _Rubenius_ shewed my father how well they all fitted, --in what manner
- they laced on, --with what points, straps, thongs, latchets, ribbands,
- jaggs, and ends.------
- ----But I want to be informed about the breeches, said my father.
- _Albertus Rubenius_ informed my father that the _Romans_ manufactured
- stuffs of various fabrics, ----some plain, --some striped, --others
- diapered throughout the whole contexture of the wool, with silk and
- gold ----That linen did not begin to be in common use till towards the
- declension of the empire, when the _Egyptians_ coming to settle amongst
- them, brought it into vogue.
- ----That persons of quality and fortune distinguished themselves by the
- fineness and whiteness of their clothes; which colour (next to purple,
- which was appropriated to the great offices) they most affected, and
- wore on their birthdays and public rejoicings. ----That it appeared from
- the best historians of those times, that they frequently sent their
- clothes to the fuller, to be clean’d and whitened: ----but that the
- inferior people, to avoid that expence, generally wore brown clothes,
- and of a something coarser texture, --till towards the beginning of
- _Augustus’s_ reign, when the slave dressed like his master, and almost
- every distinction of habiliment was lost, but the _Latus Clavus_.
- And what was the _Latus Clavus?_ said my father.
- _Rubenius_ told him, that the point was still litigating amongst the
- learned: ----That _Egnatius_, _Sigonius_, _Bossius Ticinensis_,
- _Bayfius_, _Budæus_, _Salmasius_, _Lipsius_, _Lazius_, _Isaac Casaubon_,
- and _Joseph Scaliger_, all differed from each other, --and he from them:
- That some took it to be the button, --some the coat itself, --others
- only the colour of it: --That the great _Bayfius_, in his Wardrobe of
- the Ancients, chap. 12--honestly said, he knew not what it was,
- --whether a tibula, --a stud, --a button, --a loop, --a buckle, --or
- clasps and keepers.------
- ----My father lost the horse, but not the saddle ----They are _hooks and
- eyes_, said my father----and with hooks and eyes he ordered my breeches
- to be made.
- CHAPTER XX
- We are now going to enter upon a new scene of events.------
- ----Leave we then the breeches in the taylor’s hands, with my father
- standing over him with his cane, reading him as he sat at work a lecture
- upon the _latus clavus_, and pointing to the precise part of the
- waistband, where he was determined to have it sewed on.----
- Leave we my mother--(truest of all the _Pococurantes_ of her
- sex!)--careless about it, as about everything else in the world which
- concerned her; --that is, --indifferent whether it was done this way or
- that, --provided it was but done at all.----
- Leave we _Slop_ likewise to the full profits of all my dishonours.------
- Leave we poor _Le Fever_ to recover, and get home from _Marseilles_ as
- he can. ----And last of all, --because the hardest of all----
- Let us leave, if possible, _myself_: ----But ’tis impossible, --I must
- go along with you to the end of the work.
- CHAPTER XXI
- If the reader has not a clear conception of the rood and the half of
- ground which lay at the bottom of my uncle _Toby’s_ kitchen-garden, and
- which was the scene of so many of his delicious hours, --the fault is
- not in me, --but in his imagination; --for I am sure I gave him so
- minute a description, I was almost ashamed of it.
- When FATE was looking forwards one afternoon, into the great
- transactions of future times, --and recollected for what purposes this
- little plot, by a decree fast bound down in iron, had been destined,
- ---she gave a nod to NATURE, --’twas enough --Nature threw half a spade
- full of her kindliest compost upon it, with just so _much_ clay in it,
- as to retain the forms of angles and indentings, --and so _little_ of it
- too, as not to cling to the spade, and render works of so much glory,
- nasty in foul weather.
- My uncle _Toby_ came down, as the reader has been informed, with plans
- along with him, of almost every fortified town in _Italy_ and
- _Flanders_; so let the Duke of _Marlborough_, or the allies, have set
- down before what town they pleased, my uncle _Toby_ was prepared for
- them.
- His way, which was the simplest one in the world, was this; as soon as
- ever a town was invested--(but sooner when the design was known) to take
- the plan of it (let it be what town it would), and enlarge it upon a
- scale to the exact size of his bowling-green; upon the surface of which,
- by means of a large role of packthread, and a number of small piquets
- driven into the ground, at the several angles and redans, he transferred
- the lines from his paper; then taking the profile of the place, with its
- works, to determine the depths and slopes of the ditches, --the talus of
- the glacis, and the precise height of the several banquets, parapets,
- &c. --he set the corporal to work----and sweetly went it on: ----The
- nature of the soil, --the nature of the work itself, --and above all,
- the good-nature of my uncle _Toby_ sitting by from morning to night, and
- chatting kindly with the corporal upon past-done deeds, --left LABOUR
- little else but the ceremony of the name.
- When the place was finished in this manner, and put into a proper
- posture of defence, --it was invested, --and my uncle _Toby_ and the
- corporal began to run their first parallel. ----I beg I may not be
- interrupted in my story, by being told, _That the first parallel should
- be at least three hundred toises distant from the main body of the
- place, --and that I have not left a single inch for it_; ------for my
- uncle _Toby_ took the liberty of incroaching upon his kitchen-garden,
- for the sake of enlarging his works on the bowling-green, and for that
- reason generally ran his first and second parallels betwixt two rows of
- his cabbages and his cauliflowers; the conveniences and inconveniences
- of which will be considered at large in the history of my uncle _Toby’s_
- and the corporal’s campaigns, of which, this I’m now writing is but a
- sketch, and will be finished, if I conjecture right, in three pages (but
- there is no guessing) ----The campaigns themselves will take up as many
- books; and therefore I apprehend it would be hanging too great a weight
- of one kind of matter in so flimsy a performance as this, to rhapsodize
- them, as I once intended, into the body of the work----surely they had
- better be printed apart, ----we’ll consider the affair----so take the
- following sketch of them in the meantime.
- CHAPTER XXII
- When the town, with its works, was finished, my uncle _Toby_ and the
- corporal began to run their first parallel----not at random, or any
- how----but from the same points and distances the allies had begun to
- run theirs; and regulating their approaches and attacks, by the accounts
- my uncle _Toby_ received from the daily papers, --they went on, during
- the whole siege, step by step with the allies.
- When the duke of _Marlborough_ made a lodgment, ----my uncle _Toby_ made
- a lodgment too, ----And when the face of a bastion was battered down, or
- a defence ruined, --the corporal took his mattock and did as much, --and
- so on; ----gaining ground, and making themselves masters of the works
- one after another, till the town fell into their hands.
- To one who took pleasure in the happy state of others, --there could not
- have been a greater sight in the world, than, on a post-morning, in
- which a practicable breach had been made by the duke of _Marlborough_,
- in the main body of the place, --to have stood behind the horn-beam
- hedge, and observed the spirit with which my uncle _Toby_, with _Trim_
- behind him, sallied forth; ----the one with the _Gazette_ in his hand,
- --the other with a spade on his shoulder to execute the contents.
- ----What an honest triumph in my uncle _Toby’s_ looks as he marched up
- to the ramparts! What intense pleasure swimming in his eye as he stood
- over the corporal, reading the paragraph ten times over to him, as he
- was at work, lest, peradventure, he should make the breach an inch too
- wide, --or leave it an inch too narrow. ----But when the _chamade_ was
- beat, and the corporal helped my uncle up it, and followed with the
- colours in his hand, to fix them upon the ramparts --Heaven! Earth! Sea!
- ----but what avails apostrophes? ----with all your elements, wet or dry,
- ye never compounded so intoxicating a draught.
- In this track of happiness for many years, without one interruption to
- it, except now and then when the wind continued to blow due west for a
- week or ten days together, which detained the _Flanders_ mail, and kept
- them so long in torture, --but still ’twas the torture of the
- happy ----In this track, I say, did my uncle _Toby_ and _Trim_ move for
- many years, every year of which, and sometimes every month, from the
- invention of either the one or the other of them, adding some new
- conceit or quirk of improvement to their operations, which always opened
- fresh springs of delight in carrying them on.
- The first year’s campaign was carried on from beginning to end, in the
- plain and simple method I’ve related.
- In the second year, in which my uncle _Toby_ took _Liege_ and
- _Ruremond_, he thought he might afford the expence of four handsome
- draw-bridges, of two of which I have given an exact description in the
- former part of my work.
- At the latter end of the same year he added a couple of gates with
- portcullises: ----These last were converted afterwards into orgues, as
- the better thing; and during the winter of the same year, my uncle
- _Toby_, instead of a new suit of clothes, which he always had at
- _Christmas_, treated himself with a handsome sentry-box, to stand at the
- corner of the bowling-green, betwixt which point and the foot of the
- glacis, there was left a little kind of an esplanade for him and the
- corporal to confer and hold councils of war upon.
- ----The sentry-box was in case of rain.
- All these were painted white three times over the ensuing spring, which
- enabled my uncle _Toby_ to take the field with great splendour.
- My father would often say to _Yorick_, that if any mortal in the whole
- universe had done such a thing, except his brother _Toby_, it would have
- been looked upon by the world as one of the most refined satires upon
- the parade and prancing manner in which _Lewis_ XIV. from the beginning
- of the war, but particularly that very year, had taken the field ----But
- ’tis not my brother _Toby’s_ nature, kind soul! my father would add, to
- insult any one.
- ----But let us go on.
- CHAPTER XXIII
- I must observe, that although in the first year’s campaign, the word
- _town_ is often mentioned, --yet there was no town at that time within
- the polygon; that addition was not made till the summer following the
- spring in which the bridges and sentry-box were painted, which was the
- third year of my uncle _Toby’s_ campaigns, --when upon his taking
- _Amberg_, _Bonn_, and _Rhinberg_, and _Huy_ and _Limbourg_, one after
- another, a thought came into the corporal’s head, that to talk of taking
- so many towns, _without one TOWN to shew for it_, --was a very
- nonsensical way of going to work, and so proposed to my uncle _Toby_,
- that they should have a little model of a town built for them, --to be
- run up together of slit deals, and then painted, and clapped within the
- interior polygon to serve for all.
- My uncle _Toby_ felt the good of the project instantly, and instantly
- agreed to it, but with the addition of two singular improvements, of
- which he was almost as proud as if he had been the original inventor of
- the project itself.
- The one was, to have the town built exactly in the style of those of
- which it was most likely to be the representative: ----with grated
- windows, and the gable ends of the houses, facing the streets, &c. &c.
- --as those in _Ghent_ and _Bruges_, and the rest of the towns in
- _Brabant_ and _Flanders_.
- The other was, not to have the houses run up together, as the corporal
- proposed, but to have every house independent, to hook on, or off, so as
- to form into the plan of whatever town they pleased. This was put
- directly into hand, and many and many a look of mutual congratulation
- was exchanged between my uncle _Toby_ and the corporal, as the carpenter
- did the work.
- ----It answered prodigiously the next summer----the town was a perfect
- _Proteus_ ----It was _Landen_, and _Trerebach_, and _Santvliet_, and
- _Drusen_, and _Hagenau_, --and then it was _Ostend_ and _Menin_, and
- _Aeth_ and _Dendermond_.
- ----Surely never did any TOWN act so many parts, since _Sodom_ and
- _Gomorah_, as my uncle _Toby’s_ town did.
- In the fourth year, my uncle _Toby_ thinking a town looked foolishly
- without a church, added a very fine one with a steeple. ----_Trim_ was
- for having bells in it; ----my uncle _Toby_ said, the metal had better
- be cast into cannon.
- This led the way the next campaign for half a dozen brass field-pieces,
- to be planted three and three on each side of my uncle _Toby’s_
- sentry-box; and in a short time, these led the way for a train of
- somewhat larger, --and so on--(as must always be the case in
- hobby-horsical affairs) from pieces of half an inch bore, till it came
- at last to my father’s jack boots.
- The next year, which was that in which _Lisle_ was besieged, and at the
- close of which both _Ghent_ and _Bruges_ fell into our hands, --my uncle
- _Toby_ was sadly put to it for _proper_ ammunition; ----I say proper
- ammunition----because his great artillery would not bear powder; and
- ’twas well for the _Shandy_ family they would not ----For so full were
- the papers, from the beginning to the end of the siege, of the incessant
- firings kept up by the besiegers, ----and so heated was my uncle
- _Toby’s_ imagination with the accounts of them, that he had infallibly
- shot away all his estate.
- SOMETHING therefore was wanting as a _succedaneum_, especially in one or
- two of the more violent paroxysms of the siege, to keep up something
- like a continual firing in the imagination, ----and this _something_,
- the corporal, whose principal strength lay in invention, supplied by an
- entire new system of battering of his own, --without which, this had
- been objected to by military critics, to the end of the world, as one of
- the great _desiderata_ of my uncle _Toby’s_ apparatus.
- This will not be explained the worse, for setting off, as I generally
- do, at a little distance from the subject.
- CHAPTER XXIV
- With two or three other trinkets, small in themselves, but of great
- regard, which poor _Tom_, the corporal’s unfortunate brother, had sent
- him over, with the account of his marriage with the _Jew’s_
- widow----there was
- A _Montero_-cap and two _Turkish_ tobacco-pipes.
- The _Montero_-cap I shall describe by and bye. ----The _Turkish_
- tobacco-pipes had nothing particular in them, they were fitted up and
- ornamented as usual, with flexible tubes of _Morocco_ leather and gold
- wire, and mounted at their ends, the one of them with ivory, --the other
- with black ebony, tipp’d with silver.
- My father, who saw all things in lights different from the rest of the
- world, would say to the corporal, that he ought to look upon these two
- presents more as tokens of his brother’s nicety, than his affection.
- ----_Tom_ did not care, _Trim_, he would say, to put on the cap, or to
- smoke in the tobacco-pipe of a _Jew_. ----God bless your honour, the
- corporal would say, (giving a strong reason to the contrary)--how can
- that be?
- The Montero-cap was scarlet, of a superfine _Spanish_ cloth, dyed in
- grain, and mounted all round with fur, except about four inches in the
- front, which was faced with a light blue, slightly embroidered, --and
- seemed to have been the property of a _Portuguese_ quartermaster, not of
- foot, but of horse, as the word denotes.
- The corporal was not a little proud of it, as well for its own sake, as
- the sake of the giver, so seldom or never put it on but upon GALA-days;
- and yet never was a Montero-cap put to so many uses; for in all
- controverted points, whether military or culinary, provided the corporal
- was sure he was in the right, --it was either his _oath_, --his _wager_,
- --or his _gift_.
- ----’Twas his gift in the present case.
- I’ll be bound, said the corporal, speaking to himself, to _give_ away my
- Montero-cap to the first beggar who comes to the door, if I do not
- manage this matter to his honour’s satisfaction.
- The completion was no further off than the very next morning; which was
- that of the storm of the counterscarp betwixt the _Lower Deule_, to the
- right, and the gate _St. Andrew_, --and on the left, between St.
- _Magdalen’s_ and the river.
- As this was the most memorable attack in the whole war, --the most
- gallant and obstinate on both sides, --and I must add the most bloody
- too, for it cost the allies themselves that morning above eleven hundred
- men, --my uncle _Toby_ prepared himself for it with a more than ordinary
- solemnity.
- The eve which preceded, as my uncle _Toby_ went to bed, he ordered his
- ramallie wig, which had laid inside out for many years in the corner of
- an old compaigning trunk, which stood by his bedside, to be taken out
- and laid upon the lid of it, ready for the morning; --and the very first
- thing he did in his shirt, when he had stepped out of bed, my uncle
- _Toby_, after he had turned the rough side outwards, --put it on:
- ----This done, he proceeded next to his breeches, and having buttoned
- the waistband, he forthwith buckled on his sword-belt, and had got his
- sword half way in, --when he considered he should want shaving, and that
- it would be very inconvenient doing it with his sword on, --so took it
- off: ----In assaying to put on his regimental coat and waistcoat, my
- uncle _Toby_ found the same objection in his wig, --so that went off
- too: --So that what with one thing and what with another, as always
- falls out when a man is in the most haste, --’twas ten o’clock, which
- was half an hour later than his usual time, before my uncle _Toby_
- sallied out.
- CHAPTER XXV
- My uncle _Toby_ had scarce turned the corner of his yew hedge, which
- separated his kitchen-garden from his bowling-green, when he perceived
- the corporal had begun the attack without him.------
- Let me stop and give you a picture of the corporal’s apparatus; and of
- the corporal himself in the height of his attack, just as it struck my
- uncle _Toby_, as he turned towards the sentry-box, where the corporal
- was at work, ----for in nature there is not such another, ----nor can
- any combination of all that is grotesque and whimsical in her works
- produce its equal.
- The corporal------
- ----Tread lightly on his ashes, ye men of genius, ----for he was your
- kinsman:
- Weed his grave clean, ye men of goodness, --for he was your brother.
- --Oh corporal! had I thee, but now, --now, that I am able to give thee a
- dinner and protection, --how would I cherish thee! thou should’st wear
- thy Montero-cap every hour of the day, and every day of the week, --and
- when it was worn out, I would purchase thee a couple like it: ----But
- alas! alas! alas! now that I can do this in spite of their
- reverences--the occasion is lost--for thou art gone; --thy genius fled
- up to the stars from whence it came; --and that warm heart of thine,
- with all its generous and open vessels, compressed into a _clod of the
- valley!_
- ----But what----what is this, to that future and dreaded page, where I
- look towards the velvet pall, decorated with the military ensigns of thy
- master--the first--the foremost of created beings; ----where, I shall
- see thee, faithful servant! laying his sword and scabbard with a
- trembling hand across his coffin, and then returning pale as ashes to
- the door, to take his mourning horse by the bridle, to follow his
- hearse, as he directed thee; ----where--all my father’s systems shall be
- baffled by his sorrows; and, in spite of his philosophy, I shall behold
- him, as he inspects the lackered plate, twice taking his spectacles from
- off his nose, to wipe away the dew which nature has shed upon
- them ----When I see him cast in the rosemary with an air of
- disconsolation, which cries through my ears, ----O _Toby!_ in what
- corner of the world shall I seek thy fellow?
- ----Gracious powers! which erst have opened the lips of the dumb in his
- distress, and made the tongue of the stammerer speak plain----when I
- shall arrive at this dreaded page, deal not with me, then, with a
- stinted hand.
- CHAPTER XXVI
- The corporal, who the night before had resolved in his mind to supply
- the grand _desideratum_, of keeping up something like an incessant
- firing upon the enemy during the heat of the attack, --had no further
- idea in his fancy at that time, than a contrivance of smoking tobacco
- against the town, out of one of my uncle _Toby’s_ six field-pieces,
- which were planted on each side of his sentry-box; the means of
- effecting which occurring to his fancy at the time same, though he had
- pledged his cap, he thought it in no danger from the miscarriage of his
- projects.
- Upon turning it this way, and that, a little in his mind, he soon began
- to find out, that by means of his two _Turkish_ tobacco-pipes, with the
- supplement of three smaller tubes of wash-leather at each of their lower
- ends, to be tagg’d by the same number of tin-pipes fitted to the
- touch-holes, and sealed with clay next the cannon, and then tied
- hermetically with waxed silk at their several insertions into the
- _Morocco_ tube, --he should be able to fire the six field-pieces all
- together, and with the same ease as to fire one.------
- ----Let no man say from what taggs and jaggs hints may not be cut out
- for the advancement of human knowledge. Let no man, who has read my
- father’s first and second _beds of justice_, ever rise up and say again,
- from collision of what kinds of bodies light may or may not be struck
- out, to carry the arts and sciences up to perfection. ----Heaven! thou
- knowest how I love them; ----thou knowest the secrets of my heart, and
- that I would this moment give my shirt ----Thou art a fool, _Shandy_,
- says _Eugenius_, for thou hast but a dozen in the world, --and ’twill
- break thy set.----
- No matter for that, _Eugenius_; I would give the shirt off my back to be
- burned into tinder, were it only to satisfy one feverish enquirer, how
- many sparks at one good stroke, a good flint and steel could strike into
- the tail of it. ----Think ye not that in striking these _in_, --he
- might, peradventure, strike something _out?_ as sure as a gun.----
- ----But this project, by the bye.
- The corporal sat up the best part of the night, in bringing _his_ to
- perfection; and having made a sufficient proof of his cannon, with
- charging them to the top with tobacco, --he went with contentment to
- bed.
- CHAPTER XXVII
- The corporal had slipped out about ten minutes before my uncle _Toby_,
- in order to fix his apparatus, and just give the enemy a shot or two
- before my uncle _Toby_ came.
- He had drawn the six field-pieces for this end, all close up together in
- front of my uncle _Toby’s_ sentry-box, leaving only an interval of about
- a yard and a half betwixt the three, on the right and left, for the
- convenience of charging, &c. --and the sake possibly of two batteries,
- which he might think double the honour of one.
- In the rear and facing this opening, with his back to the door of the
- sentry-box, for fear of being flanked, had the corporal wisely taken his
- post: ----He held the ivory pipe, appertaining to the battery on the
- right, betwixt the finger and thumb of his right hand, --and the ebony
- pipe tipp’d with silver, which appertained to the battery on the left,
- betwixt the finger and thumb of the other----and with his right knee
- fixed firm upon the ground, as if in the front rank of his platoon, was
- the corporal with his Montero-cap upon his head, furiously playing off
- his two cross batteries at the same time against the counter-guard,
- which faced the counter-scarp, where the attack was to be made that
- morning. His first intention, as I said, was no more than giving the
- enemy a single puff or two; --but the pleasure of the _puffs_, as well
- as the _puffing_, had insensibly got hold of the corporal, and drawn him
- on from puff to puff, into the very height of the attack, by the time my
- uncle _Toby_ joined him.
- ’Twas well for my father, that my uncle _Toby_ had not his will to make
- that day.
- CHAPTER XXVIII
- My uncle _Toby_ took the ivory pipe out of the corporal’s hand, --looked
- at it for half a minute, and returned it.
- In less than two minutes, my uncle _Toby_ took the pipe from the
- corporal again, and raised it half way to his mouth----then hastily gave
- it back a second time.
- The corporal redoubled the attack, ----my uncle _Toby_ smiled, ----then
- looked grave, ----then smiled for a moment, ----then looked serious for
- a long time; ----Give me hold of the ivory pipe, _Trim_, said my uncle
- _Toby_----my uncle _Toby_ put it to his lips, ----drew it back directly,
- --gave a peep over the horn-beam hedge; ----never did my uncle _Toby’s_
- mouth water so much for a pipe in his life. ----My uncle _Toby_ retired
- into the sentry-box with the pipe in his hand.------
- ----Dear uncle _Toby!_ don’t go into the sentry-box with the pipe,
- --there’s no trusting a man’s self with such a thing in such a corner.
- CHAPTER XXIX
- I beg the reader will assist me here, to wheel off my uncle _Toby’s_
- ordnance behind the scenes, ----to remove his sentry-box, and clear the
- theatre, _if possible_, of horn-works and half moons, and get the rest
- of his military apparatus out of the way; ----that done, my dear friend
- _Garrick_, we’ll snuff the candles bright, --sweep the stage with a new
- broom, --draw up the curtain, and exhibit my uncle _Toby_ dressed in a
- new character, throughout which the world can have no idea how he will
- act: and yet, if pity be a-kin to love, --and bravery no alien to it,
- you have seen enough of my uncle _Toby_ in these, to trace these family
- likenesses betwixt the two passions (in case there is one) to your
- heart’s content.
- Vain science! thou assistest us in no case of this kind--and thou
- puzzlest us in every one.
- There was, Madam, in my uncle _Toby_, a singleness of heart which misled
- him so far out of the little serpentine tracks in which things of this
- nature usually go on; you can--you can have no conception of it: with
- this, there was a plainness and simplicity of thinking, with such an
- unmistrusting ignorance of the plies and foldings of the heart of woman;
- ----and so naked and defenceless did he stand before you (when a siege
- was out of his head), that you might have stood behind any one of your
- serpentine walks, and shot my uncle _Toby_ ten times in a day, through
- his liver, if nine times in a day, Madam, had not served your purpose.
- With all this, Madam, --and what confounded everything as much on the
- other hand, my uncle _Toby_ had that unparalleled modesty of nature I
- once told you of, and which, by the bye, stood eternal sentry upon his
- feelings, that you might as soon ----But where am I going? these
- reflections crowd in upon me ten pages at least too soon, and take up
- that time, which I ought to bestow upon facts.
- CHAPTER XXX
- Of the few legitimate sons of _Adam_ whose breasts never felt what the
- sting of love was, --(maintaining first, all mysogynists to be
- bastards)--the greatest heroes of ancient and modern story have carried
- off amongst them nine parts in ten of the honour; and I wish for their
- sakes I had the key of my study, out of my draw-well, only for five
- minutes, to tell you their names--recollect them I cannot--so be content
- to accept of these, for the present, in their stead.------
- There was the great king _Aldrovandus_, and _Bosphorus_, and
- _Cappadocius_, and _Dardanus_, and _Pontus_, and _Asius_, ----to say
- nothing of the iron-hearted _Charles_ the XIIth, whom the Countess of
- K***** herself could make nothing of. ----There was _Babylonicus_, and
- _Mediterraneus_, and _Polixenes_, and _Persicus_, and _Prusicus_, not
- one of whom (except _Cappadocius_ and _Pontus_, who were both a little
- suspected) ever once bowed down his breast to the goddess ----The truth
- is, they had all of them something else to do--and so had my uncle
- _Toby_--till Fate--till Fate I say, envying his name the glory of being
- handed down to posterity with _Aldrovandus’s_ and the rest, --she basely
- patched up the peace of _Utrecht_.
- ----Believe me, Sirs, ’twas the worst deed she did that year.
- CHAPTER XXXI
- Amongst the many ill consequences of the treaty of _Utrecht_, it was
- within a point of giving my uncle _Toby_ a surfeit of sieges; and though
- he recovered his appetite afterwards, yet _Calais_ itself left not a
- deeper scar in _Mary’s_ heart, than _Utrecht_ upon my uncle _Toby’s_. To
- the end of his life he never could hear _Utrecht_ mentioned upon any
- account whatever, --or so much as read an article of news extracted out
- of the _Utrecht Gazette_, without fetching a sigh, as if his heart would
- break in twain.
- My father, who was a great MOTIVE-MONGER, and consequently a very
- dangerous person for a man to sit by, either laughing or crying, --for
- he generally knew your motive for doing both, much better than you knew
- it yourself--would always console my uncle _Toby_ upon these occasions,
- in a way, which shewed plainly, he imagined my uncle _Toby_ grieved for
- nothing in the whole affair, so much as the loss of his _hobby-horse_.
- ----Never mind, brother _Toby_, he would say, --by God’s blessing we
- shall have another war break out again some of these days; and when it
- does, --the belligerent powers, if they would hang themselves, cannot
- keep us out of play. ----I defy ’em, my dear _Toby_, he would add, to
- take countries without taking towns, ----or towns without sieges.
- My uncle _Toby_ never took this back-stroke of my father’s at his
- hobby-horse kindly. ----He thought the stroke ungenerous; and the more
- so, because in striking the horse he hit the rider too, and in the most
- dishonourable part a blow could fall; so that upon these occasions, he
- always laid down his pipe upon the table with more fire to defend
- himself than common.
- I told the reader, this time two years, that my uncle _Toby_ was not
- eloquent; and in the very same page gave an instance to the contrary:
- ----I repeat the observation, and a fact which contradicts it again.
- --He was not eloquent, --it was not easy to my uncle _Toby_ to make long
- harangues, --and he hated florid ones; but there were occasions where
- the stream overflowed the man, and ran so counter to its usual course,
- that in some parts my uncle _Toby_, for a time, was at least equal to
- _Tertullus_----but in others, in my own opinion, infinitely above him.
- My father was so highly pleased with one of these apologetical orations
- of my uncle _Toby’s_, which he had delivered one evening before him and
- _Yorick_, that he wrote it down before he went to bed.
- I have had the good fortune to meet with it amongst my father’s papers,
- with here and there an insertion of his own, betwixt two crooks, thus
- [ ], and is endorsed,
- MY BROTHER TOBY’S JUSTIFICATION OF HIS OWN PRINCIPLES AND CONDUCT IN
- WISHING TO CONTINUE THE WAR
- I may safely say, I have read over this apologetical oration of my uncle
- _Toby’s_ a hundred times, and think it so fine a model of defence, --and
- shows so sweet a temperament of gallantry and good principles in him,
- that I give it the world, word for word (interlineations and all), as I
- find it.
- CHAPTER XXXII
- MY UNCLE TOBY’S APOLOGETICAL ORATION
- I am not insensible, brother _Shandy_, that when a man whose profession
- is arms, wishes, as I have done, for war, --it has an ill aspect to the
- world; ----and that, how just and right soever his motives and
- intentions may be, --he stands in an uneasy posture in vindicating
- himself from private views in doing it.
- For this cause, if a soldier is a prudent man, which he may be without
- being a jot the less brave, he will be sure not to utter his wish in the
- hearing of an enemy; for say what he will, an enemy will not believe
- him. ----He will be cautious of doing it even to a friend, --lest he may
- suffer in his esteem: ----But if his heart is overcharged, and a secret
- sigh for arms must have its vent, he will reserve it for the ear of a
- brother, who knows his character to the bottom, and what his true
- notions, dispositions, and principles of honour are: What, I _hope_, I
- have been in all these, brother _Shandy_, would be unbecoming in me to
- say: ----much worse, I know, have I been than I ought, --and something
- worse, perhaps, than I think: But such as I am, you, my dear brother
- _Shandy_, who have sucked the same breasts with me, --and with whom I
- have been brought up from my cradle, --and from whose knowledge, from
- the first hours of our boyish pastimes, down to this, I have concealed
- no one action of my life, and scarce a thought in it ----Such as I am,
- brother, you must by this time know me, with all my vices, and with all
- my weaknesses too, whether of my age, my temper, my passions, or my
- understanding.
- Tell me then, my dear brother _Shandy_, upon which of them it is, that
- when I condemned the peace of _Utrecht_, and grieved the war was not
- carried on with vigour a little longer, you should think your brother
- did it upon unworthy views; or that in wishing for war, he should be bad
- enough to wish more of his fellow-creatures slain, --more slaves made,
- and more families driven from their peaceful habitations, merely for his
- own pleasure: ----Tell me, brother _Shandy_, upon what one deed of mine
- do you ground it? [_The devil a deed do I know of, dear _Toby_, but one
- for a hundred pounds, which I lent thee to carry on these cursed
- sieges._]
- If, when I was a school-boy, I could not hear a drum beat, but my heart
- beat with it--was it my fault? Did I plant the propensity there? ----Did
- I sound the alarm within, or Nature?
- When _Guy_, Earl of _Warwick_, and _Parismus_ and _Parismenus_, and
- _Valentine_ and _Orson_, and the _Seven Champions of England_, were
- handed around the school, --were they not all purchased with my own
- pocket-money? Was that selfish, brother _Shandy?_ When we read over the
- siege of _Troy_, which lasted ten years and eight months, ----though
- with such a train of artillery as we had at _Namur_, the town might have
- been carried in a week--was I not as much concerned for the destruction
- of the _Greeks_ and _Trojans_ as any boy of the whole school? Had I not
- three strokes of a ferula given me, two on my right hand, and one on my
- left, for calling _Helena_ a bitch for it? Did any one of you shed more
- tears for _Hector?_ And when king _Priam_ came to the camp to beg his
- body, and returned weeping back to _Troy_ without it, --you know,
- brother, I could not eat my dinner.------
- ----Did that bespeak me cruel? Or because, brother _Shandy_, my blood
- flew out into the camp, and my heart panted for war, --was it a proof it
- could not ache for the distresses of war too?
- O brother! ’tis one thing for a soldier to gather laurels, --and ’tis
- another to scatter cypress. ----[_Who told thee, my dear _Toby_, that
- cypress was used by the antients on mournful occasions?_]
- ----’Tis one thing, brother _Shandy_, for a soldier to hazard his own
- life--to leap first down into the trench, where he is sure to be cut in
- pieces: ----’Tis one thing, from public spirit and a thirst of glory, to
- enter the breach the first man, --To stand in the foremost rank, and
- march bravely on with drums and trumpets, and colours flying about his
- ears: ----’Tis one thing, I say, brother _Shandy_, to do this, --and
- ’tis another thing to reflect on the miseries of war; --to view the
- desolations of whole countries, and consider the intolerable fatigues
- and hardships which the soldier himself, the instrument who works them,
- is forced (for sixpence a day, if he can get it) to undergo.
- Need I be told, dear _Yorick_, as I was by you, in _Le Fever’s_ funeral
- sermon, _That so soft and gentle a creature, born to love, to mercy, and
- kindness, as man is, was not shaped for this?_ ----But why did you not
- add, _Yorick_, --if not by NATURE--that he is so by NECESSITY? ----For
- what is war? what is it, _Yorick_, when fought as ours has been, upon
- principles of _liberty_, and upon principles of _honour_----what is it,
- but the getting together of quiet and harmless people, with their swords
- in their hands, to keep the ambitious and the turbulent within bounds?
- And heaven is my witness, brother _Shandy_, that the pleasure I have
- taken in these things, --and that infinite delight, in particular, which
- has attended my sieges in my bowling-green, has arose within me, and I
- hope in the corporal too, from the consciousness we both had, that in
- carrying them on, we were answering the great ends of our creation.
- CHAPTER XXXIII
- I told the Christian reader ----I say _Christian_----hoping he is
- one----and if he is not, I am sorry for it----and only beg he will
- consider the matter with himself, and not lay the blame entirely upon
- this book----
- I told him, Sir----for in good truth, when a man is telling a story in
- the strange way I do mine, he is obliged continually to be going
- backwards and forwards to keep all tight together in the reader’s
- fancy----which, for my own part, if I did not take heed to do more than
- at first, there is so much unfixed and equivocal matter starting up,
- with so many breaks and gaps in it, --and so little service do the stars
- afford, which, nevertheless, I hang up in some of the darkest passages,
- knowing that the world is apt to lose its way, with all the lights the
- sun itself at noon-day can give it----and now you see, I am lost
- myself!------
- ----But ’tis my father’s fault; and whenever my brains come to be
- dissected, you will perceive, without spectacles, that he has left a
- large uneven thread, as you sometimes see in an unsaleable piece of
- cambrick, running along the whole length of the web, and so untowardly,
- you cannot so much as cut out a * *, (here I hang up a couple of lights
- again)----or a fillet, or a thumb-stall, but it is seen or felt.------
- _Quanto id diligentius in liberis procreandis cavendum_, sayeth
- _Cardan_. All which being considered, and that you see ’tis morally
- impracticable for me to wind this round to where I set out------
- I begin the chapter over again.
- CHAPTER XXXIV
- I told the Christian reader in the beginning of the chapter which
- preceded my uncle _Toby’s_ apologetical oration, --though in a different
- trope from what I should make use of now, That the peace of _Utrecht_
- was within an ace of creating the same shyness betwixt my uncle _Toby_
- and his hobby-horse, as it did betwixt the queen and the rest of the
- confederating powers.
- There is an indignant way in which a man sometimes dismounts his horse,
- which as good as says to him, “I’ll go afoot, Sir, all the days of my
- life, before I would ride a single mile upon your back again.” Now my
- uncle _Toby_ could not be said to dismount his horse in this manner; for
- in strictness of language, he could not be said to dismount his horse at
- all----his horse rather flung him----and somewhat _viciously_, which
- made my uncle _Toby_ take it ten times more unkindly. Let this matter be
- settled by state-jockies as they like. ----It created, I say, a sort of
- shyness betwixt my uncle _Toby_ and his hobby-horse. ----He had no
- occasion for him from the month of _March_ to _November_, which was the
- summer after the articles were signed, except it was now and then to
- take a short ride out, just to see that the fortifications and harbour
- of _Dunkirk_ were demolished, according to stipulation.
- The _French_ were so backwards all that summer in setting about that
- affair, and Monsieur _Tugghe_, the Deputy from the magistrates of
- _Dunkirk_, presented so many affecting petitions to the queen,
- --beseeching her majesty to cause only her thunder-bolts to fall upon
- the martial works, which might have incurred her displeasure, --but to
- spare--to spare the mole, for the mole’s sake; which, in its naked
- situation, could be no more than an object of pity----and the queen (who
- was but a woman) being of a pitiful disposition, --and her ministers
- also, they not wishing in their hearts to have the town dismantled, for
- these private reasons, * * * *
- * * * * * * * ----
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * ; so that the whole went heavily on with my uncle
- _Toby_; insomuch, that it was not within three full months, after he and
- the corporal had constructed the town, and put it in a condition to be
- destroyed, that the several commandants, commissaries, deputies,
- negociators, and intendants, would permit him to set about it. ----Fatal
- interval of inactivity!
- The corporal was for beginning the demolition, by making a breach in the
- ramparts, or main fortifications of the town ----No, --that will never
- do, corporal, said my uncle _Toby_, for in going that way to work with
- the town, the _English_ garrison will not be safe in it an hour; because
- if the _French_ are treacherous ----They are as treacherous as devils,
- an’ please your honour, said the corporal ----It gives me concern always
- when I hear it, _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_, --for they don’t want
- personal bravery; and if a breach is made in the ramparts, they may
- enter it, and make themselves masters of the place when they please:
- ----Let them enter it, said the corporal, lifting up his pioneer’s spade
- in both his hands, as if he was going to lay about him with it, --let
- them enter, an’ please your honour, if they dare. ----In cases like
- this, corporal, said my uncle _Toby_, slipping his right hand down to
- the middle of his cane, and holding it afterwards truncheon-wise with
- his forefinger extended, ----’tis no part of the consideration of a
- commandant, what the enemy dare, --or what they dare not do; he must act
- with prudence. We will begin with the outworks both towards the sea and
- the land, and particularly with fort _Louis_, the most distant of them
- all, and demolish it first, --and the rest, one by one, both on our
- right and left, as we retreat towards the town; ----then we’ll demolish
- the mole, --next fill up the harbour, --then retire into the citadel,
- and blow it up into the air: and having done that, corporal, we’ll
- embark for _England_. ----We are there, quoth the corporal, recollecting
- himself ----Very true, said my uncle _Toby_--looking at the church.
- CHAPTER XXXV
- A delusive, delicious consultation or two of this kind, betwixt my uncle
- _Toby_ and _Trim_, upon the demolition of _Dunkirk_, --for a moment
- rallied back the ideas of those pleasures, which were slipping from
- under him: ----still--still all went on heavily----the magic left the
- mind the weaker --STILLNESS, with SILENCE at her back, entered the
- solitary parlour, and drew their gauzy mantle over my uncle _Toby’s_
- head; ----and LISTLESSNESS, with her lax fibre and undirected eye, sat
- quietly down beside him in his arm-chair. ----No longer _Amberg_ and
- _Rhinberg_, and _Limbourg_, and _Huy_, and _Bonn_, in one year, --and
- the prospect of _Landen_, and _Trerebach_, and _Drusen_, and
- _Dendermond_, the next, --hurried on the blood: --No longer did saps,
- and mines, and blinds, and gabions, and palisadoes, keep out this fair
- enemy of man’s repose: ----No more could my uncle _Toby_, after passing
- the _French_ lines, as he eat his egg at supper, from thence break into
- the heart of _France_, --cross over the _Oyes_, and with all _Picardie_
- open behind him, march up to the gates of _Paris_, and fall asleep with
- nothing but ideas of glory: ----No more was he to dream he had fixed the
- royal standard upon the tower of the _Bastile_, and awake with it
- streaming in his head.
- ----Softer visions, --gentler vibrations stole sweetly in upon his
- slumbers; --the trumpet of war fell out of his hands, --he took up the
- lute, sweet instrument! of all others the most delicate! the most
- difficult! ----how wilt thou touch it, my dear uncle _Toby?_
- CHAPTER XXXVI
- Now, because I have once or twice said, in my inconsiderate way of
- talking, That I was confident the following memoirs of my uncle _Toby’s_
- courtship of widow _Wadman_, whenever I got time to write them, would
- turn out one of the most complete systems, both of the elementary and
- practical part of love and love-making, that ever was addressed to the
- world----are you to imagine from thence, that I shall set out with a
- description of _what love is?_ whether part God and part Devil, as
- _Plotinus_ will have it----
- ----Or by a more critical equation, and supposing the whole of love to
- be as ten----to determine with _Ficinus_, “_How many parts of it--the
- one, --and how many the other_;” --or whether it is _all of it one great
- Devil_, from head to tail, as _Plato_ has taken upon him to pronounce;
- concerning which conceit of his, I shall not offer my opinion: --but my
- opinion of _Plato_ is this; that he appears, from this instance, to have
- been a man of much the same temper and way of reasoning with doctor
- _Baynyard_, who being a great enemy to blisters, as imagining that half
- a dozen of ’em at once, would draw a man as surely to his grave, as a
- herse and six--rashly concluded, that the Devil himself was nothing in
- the world, but one great bouncing _Canthari[di]s_.------
- I have nothing to say to people who allow themselves this monstrous
- liberty in arguing, but what _Nazianzen_ cried out (_that is,
- polemically_) to _Philagrius_----
- “Εὖγε!” _O rare! ’tis fine reasoning, Sir, indeed!_-- “ὅτι φιλοσοφεῖς ἐν
- Πάθεσι”--_and most nobly do you aim at truth, when you philosophize
- about it in your moods and passions._
- Nor is it to be imagined, for the same reason, I should stop to inquire,
- whether love is a disease, ----or embroil myself with _Rhasis_ and
- _Dioscorides_, whether the seat of it is in the brain or liver;
- --because this would lead me on, to an examination of the two very
- opposite manners, in which patients have been treated----the one, of
- _Aætius_, who always begun with a cooling clyster of hempseed and
- bruised cucumbers; --and followed on with thin potations of
- water-lillies and purslane--to which he added a pinch of snuff of the
- herb _Hanea_; --and where _Aætius_ durst venture it, --his topaz-ring.
- ----The other, that of _Gordonius_, who (in his cap. 15. _de Amore_)
- directs they should be thrashed, “_ad putorem usque_,” ----till they
- stink again.
- These are disquisitions, which my father, who had laid in a great stock
- of knowledge of this kind, will be very busy with in the progress of my
- uncle _Toby’s_ affairs: I must anticipate thus much, That from his
- theories of love, (with which, by the way, he contrived to crucify my
- uncle _Toby’s_ mind, almost as much as his amours themselves)--he took a
- single step into practice; --and by means of a camphorated cerecloth,
- which he found means to impose upon the taylor for buckram, whilst he
- was making my uncle _Toby_ a new pair of breeches, he produced
- _Gordonius’s_ effect upon my uncle _Toby_ without the disgrace.
- What changes this produced, will be read in its proper place: all that
- is needful to be added to the anecdote, is this ----That whatever effect
- it had upon my uncle _Toby_, ----it had a vile effect upon the house;
- ----and if my uncle _Toby_ had not smoaked it down as he did, it might
- have had a vile effect upon my father too.
- CHAPTER XXXVII
- ----’Twill come out of itself by and bye. ----All I contend for is, that
- I am not obliged to set out with a definition of what love is; and so
- long as I can go on with my story intelligibly, with the help of the
- word itself, without any other idea to it, than what I have in common
- with the rest of the world, why should I differ from it a moment before
- the time? ----When I can get on no further, ----and find myself
- entangled on all sides of this mystic labyrinth, --my Opinion will then
- come in, in course, --and lead me out.
- At present, I hope I shall be sufficiently understood, in telling the
- reader, my uncle _Toby_ _fell in love_:
- --Not that the phrase is at all to my liking: for to say a man is
- _fallen_ in love, --or that he is _deeply_ in love, --or up to the ears
- in love, --and sometimes even _over head and ears in it_, --carries an
- idiomatical kind of implication, that love is a thing _below_ a man:
- --this is recurring again to _Plato’s_ opinion, which, with all his
- divinityship, --I hold to be damnable and heretical: --and so much for
- that.
- Let love therefore be what it will, --my uncle _Toby_ fell into it.
- ----And possibly, gentle reader, with such a temptation--so wouldst
- thou: For never did thy eyes behold, or thy concupiscence covet anything
- in this world, more concupiscible than widow _Wadman_.
- CHAPTER XXXVIII
- To conceive this right, --call for pen and ink--here’s paper ready to
- your hand. ----Sit down, Sir, paint her to your own mind----as like your
- mistress as you can----as unlike your wife as your conscience will let
- you--’tis all one to me----please but your own fancy in it.
- *
- *
- *
- *
- *
- *
- ------Was ever any thing in Nature so sweet! --so exquisite!
- ----Then, dear Sir, how could my uncle _Toby_ resist it?
- Thrice happy book! thou wilt have one page, at least, within thy covers,
- which MALICE will not blacken, and which IGNORANCE cannot misrepresent.
- CHAPTER XXXIX
- As _Susannah_ was informed by an express from Mrs. _Bridget_, of my
- uncle _Toby’s_ falling in love with her mistress fifteen days before it
- happened, --the contents of which express, _Susannah_ communicated to my
- mother the next day, --it has just given me an opportunity of entering
- upon my uncle _Toby’s_ amours a fortnight before their existence.
- I have an article of news to tell you, Mr. _Shandy_, quoth my mother,
- which will surprise you greatly.----
- Now my father was then holding one of his second beds of justice, and
- was musing within himself about the hardships of matrimony, as my mother
- broke silence.------
- “----My brother _Toby_, quoth she, is going to be married to Mrs.
- _Wadman_.”
- ----Then he will never, quoth my father, be able to lie _diagonally_ in
- his bed again as long as he lives.
- It was a consuming vexation to my father, that my mother never asked the
- meaning of a thing she did not understand.
- ----That she is not a woman of science, my father would say--is her
- misfortune--but she might ask a question.--
- My mother never did. ----In short, she went out of the world at last
- without knowing whether it turned _round_, or stood _still_. ----My
- father had officiously told her above a thousand times which way it was,
- --but she always forgot.
- For these reasons, a discourse seldom went on much further betwixt them,
- than a proposition, --a reply, and a rejoinder; at the end of which, it
- generally took breath for a few minutes (as in the affair of the
- breeches), and then went on again.
- If he marries, ’twill be the worse for us, --quoth my mother.
- Not a cherry-stone, said my father, --he may as well batter away his
- means upon that, as any thing else.
- ----To be sure, said my mother: so here ended the proposition, --the
- reply, --and the rejoinder, I told you of.
- It will be some amusement to him, too, ----said my father.
- A very great one, answered my mother, if he should have children.----
- ----Lord have mercy upon me, --said my father to himself----
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * *
- CHAPTER XL
- I am now beginning to get fairly into my work; and by the help of a
- vegetable diet, with a few of the cold seeds, I make no doubt but I
- shall be able to go on with my uncle _Toby’s_ story, and my own, in a
- tolerable strait line. Now,
- [Illustration:
- _Inv. T. S._ _Scul. T. S._]
- These were the four lines I moved in through my first, second, third,
- and fourth volumes.[6.4] --In the fifth volume I have been very good,
- ----the precise line I have described in it being this:
- [Illustration]
- By which it appears, that except at the curve, marked A, where I took a
- trip to _Navarre_, --and the indented curve _B_, which is the short
- airing when I was there with the Lady _Baussiere_ and her page, --I have
- not taken the least frisk of a digression, till _John de la Casse’s_
- devils led me the round you see marked D. --for as for _c c c c c_ they
- are nothing but parentheses, and the common _ins_ and _outs_ incident to
- the lives of the greatest ministers of state; and when compared with
- what men have done, --or with my own transgressions at the letters
- A B D--they vanish into nothing.
- In this last volume I have done better still--for from the end of _Le
- Fever’s_ episode, to the beginning of my uncle _Toby’s_ campaigns, --I
- have scarce stepped a yard out of my way.
- If I mend at this rate, it is not impossible----by the good leave of his
- grace of _Benevento’s_ devils----but I may arrive hereafter at the
- excellency of going on even thus:
- [Illustration (full-width line)]
- which is a line drawn as straight as I could draw it, by a
- writing-master’s ruler (borrowed for that purpose), turning neither to
- the right hand or to the left.
- This _right line_, --the path-way for Christians to walk in! say
- divines----
- ----The emblem of moral rectitude! says _Cicero_----
- ----The _best line!_ say cabbage planters----is the shortest line, says
- _Archimedes_, which can be drawn from one given point to another.----
- I wish your ladyships would lay this matter to heart, in your next
- birth-day suits!
- ----What a journey!
- Pray can you tell me, --that is, without anger, before I write my
- chapter upon straight lines----by what mistake----who told them so----or
- how it has come to pass, that your men of wit and genius have all along
- confounded this line, with the line of GRAVITATION?
- [Footnote 6.4: Alluding to the first edition.]
- BOOK VII
- CHAPTER I
- No ----I think, I said, I would write two volumes every year, provided
- the vile cough which then tormented me, and which to this hour I dread
- worse than the devil, would but give me leave--and in another
- place--(but where, I can’t recollect now) speaking of my book as a
- _machine_, and laying my pen and ruler down cross-wise upon the table,
- in order to gain the greater credit to it --I swore it should be kept a
- going at that rate these forty years, if it pleased but the fountain of
- life to bless me so long with health and good spirits.
- Now as for my spirits, little have I to lay to their charge--nay so very
- little (unless the mounting me upon a long stick and playing the fool
- with me nineteen hours out of the twenty-four, be accusations) that on
- the contrary, I have much--much to thank ’em for: cheerily have ye made
- me tread the path of life with all the burthens of it (except its cares)
- upon my back; in no one moment of my existence, that I remember, have ye
- once deserted me, or tinged the objects which came in my way, either
- with sable, or with a sickly green; in dangers ye gilded my horizon with
- hope, and when DEATH himself knocked at my door--ye bad him come again;
- and in so gay a tone of careless indifference did ye do it, that he
- doubted of his commission----
- “--There must certainly be some mistake in this matter,” quoth he.
- Now there is nothing in this world I abominate worse, than to be
- interrupted in a story----and I was that moment telling _Eugenius_ a
- most tawdry one in my way, of a nun who fancied herself a shell-fish,
- and of a monk damn’d for eating a muscle, and was shewing him the
- grounds and justice of the procedure----
- “--Did ever so grave a personage get into so vile a scrape?” quoth
- Death. Thou hast had a narrow escape, _Tristram_, said _Eugenius_,
- taking hold of my hand as I finished my story----
- But there is no _living_, _Eugenius_, replied I, at this rate; for as
- this _son of a whore_ has found out my lodgings----
- --You call him rightly, said _Eugenius_, --for by sin, we are told, he
- enter’d the world ----I care not which way he enter’d, quoth I, provided
- he be not in such a hurry to take me out with him--for I have forty
- volumes to write, and forty thousand things to say and do which no body
- in the world will say and do for me, except thyself; and as thou seest
- he has got me by the throat (for _Eugenius_ could scarce hear me speak
- across the table), and that I am no match for him in the open field, had
- I not better, whilst these few scatter’d spirits remain, and these two
- spider legs of mine (holding one of them up to him) are able to support
- me--had I not better, _Eugenius_, fly for my life? ’Tis my advice, my
- dear _Tristram_, said _Eugenius_ --Then by heaven! I will lead him a
- dance he little thinks of----for I will gallop, quoth I, without looking
- once behind me, to the banks of the _Garonne_; and if I hear him
- clattering at my heels ----I’ll scamper away to mount _Vesuvius_----from
- thence to _Joppa_, and from _Joppa_ to the world’s end; where, if he
- follows me, I pray God he may break his neck----
- --He runs more risk _there_, said _Eugenius_, than thou.
- _Eugenius’s_ wit and affection brought blood into the cheek from whence
- it had been some months banish’d----’twas a vile moment to bid adieu in;
- he led me to my chaise----_Allons!_ said I; the postboy gave a crack
- with his whip----off I went like a cannon, and in half a dozen bounds
- got into _Dover_.
- CHAPTER II
- Now hang it! quoth I, as I look’d towards the _French_ coast--a man
- should know something of his own country too, before he goes
- abroad----and I never gave a peep into _Rochester_ church, or took
- notice of the dock of _Chatham_, or visited St. _Thomas_ at
- _Canterbury_, though they all three laid in my way----
- --But mine, indeed, is a particular case----
- So without arguing the matter further with _Thomas o’ Becket_, or any
- one else --I skip’d into the boat, and in five minutes we got under
- sail, and scudded away like the wind.
- Pray, captain, quoth I, as I was going down into the cabin, is a man
- never overtaken by _Death_ in this passage?
- Why, there is not time for a man to be sick in it, replied he ----What a
- cursed lyar! for I am sick as a horse, quoth I, already----what a brain!
- ----upside down! ----hey-day! the cells are broke loose one into
- another, and the blood, and the lymph, and the nervous juices, with the
- fix’d and volatile salts, are all jumbled into one mass----good G--!
- everything turns round in it like a thousand whirlpools ----I’d give a
- shilling to know if I shan’t write the clearer for it----
- Sick! sick! sick! sick!----
- --When shall we get to land? captain--they have hearts like stones ----O
- I am deadly sick! ----reach me that thing, boy----’tis the most
- discomfiting sickness ----I wish I was at the bottom --Madam! how is it
- with you? Undone! undone! un ----O! undone! sir ----What the first time?
- ----No, ’tis the second, third, sixth, tenth time, sir, ----hey-day!
- --what a trampling over head! --hollo! cabin boy! what’s the matter?--
- The wind chopp’d about! s’Death! --then I shall meet him full in the
- face.
- What luck! --’tis chopp’d about again, master ----O the devil chop it----
- Captain, quoth she, for heaven’s sake, let us get ashore.
- CHAPTER III
- It is a great inconvenience to a man in a haste, that there are three
- distinct roads between _Calais_ and _Paris_, in behalf of which there is
- so much to be said by the several deputies from the towns which lie
- along them, that half a day is easily lost in settling which you’ll
- take.
- First, the road by _Lisle_ and _Arras_, which is the most about----but
- most interesting and instructing.
- The second, that by _Amiens_, which you may go, if you would see
- _Chantilly_----
- And that by _Beauvais_, which you may go, if you will.
- For this reason a great many chuse to go by _Beauvais_.
- CHAPTER IV
- “Now before I quit _Calais_,” a travel-writer would say, “it would not
- be amiss to give some account of it.” --Now I think it very much
- amiss--that a man cannot go quietly through a town and let it alone,
- when it does not meddle with him, but that he must be turning about and
- drawing his pen at every kennel he crosses over, merely o’ my conscience
- for the sake of drawing it; because, if we may judge from what has been
- wrote of these things, by all who have _wrote and gallop’d_--or who have
- _gallop’d and wrote_, which is a different way still; or who, for more
- expedition than the rest, have _wrote galloping_, which is the way I do
- at present----from the great _Addison_, who did it with his satchel of
- school books hanging at his a--, and galling his beast’s crupper at
- every stroke--there is not a gallopper of us all who might not have gone
- on ambling quietly in his own ground (in case he had any), and have
- wrote all he had to write, dryshod, as well as not.
- For my own part, as heaven is my judge, and to which I shall ever make
- my last appeal --I know no more of _Calais_ (except the little my barber
- told me of it as he was whetting his razor), than I do this moment of
- _Grand Cairo_; for it was dusky in the evening when I landed, and dark
- as pitch in the morning when I set out, and yet by merely knowing what
- is what, and by drawing this from that in one part of the town, and by
- spelling and putting this and that together in another --I would lay any
- travelling odds, that I this moment write a chapter upon _Calais_ as
- long as my arm; and with so distinct and satisfactory a detail of every
- item, which is worth a stranger’s curiosity in the town--that you would
- take me for the town-clerk of _Calais_ itself--and where, sir, would be
- the wonder? was not _Democritus_, who laughed ten times more than
- I--town-clerk of _Abdera?_ and was not (I forget his name) who had more
- discretion than us both, town-clerk of _Ephesus?_ ----it should be
- penn’d moreover, sir, with so much knowledge and good sense, and truth,
- and precision----
- --Nay--if you don’t believe me, you may read the chapter for your pains.
- CHAPTER V
- _Calais_, _Calatium_, _Calusium_, _Calesium_.
- This town, if we may trust its archives, the authority of which I see no
- reason to call in question in this place--was _once_ no more than a
- small village belonging to one of the first Counts de _Guignes_; and as
- it boasts at present of no less than fourteen thousand inhabitants,
- exclusive of four hundred and twenty distinct families in the _basse
- ville_, or suburbs----it must have grown up by little and little,
- I suppose, to its present size.
- Though there are four convents, there is but one parochial church in the
- whole town; I had not an opportunity of taking its exact dimensions, but
- it is pretty easy to make a tolerable conjecture of ’em--for as there
- are fourteen thousand inhabitants in the town, if the church holds them
- all it must be considerably large--and if it will not--’tis a very great
- pity they have not another--it is built in form of a cross, and
- dedicated to the Virgin _Mary_; the steeple, which has a spire to it, is
- placed in the middle of the church, and stands upon four pillars elegant
- and light enough, but sufficiently strong at the same time--it is
- decorated with eleven altars, most of which are rather fine than
- beautiful. The great altar is a masterpiece in its kind; ’tis of white
- marble, and, as I was told, near sixty feet high--had it been much
- higher, it had been as high as mount _Calvary_ itself--therefore,
- I suppose it must be high enough in all conscience.
- There was nothing struck me more than the great _Square_; tho’ I cannot
- say ’tis either well paved or well built; but ’tis in the heart of the
- town, and most of the streets, especially those in that quarter, all
- terminate in it; could there have been a fountain in all _Calais_, which
- it seems there cannot, as such an object would have been a great
- ornament, it is not to be doubted, but that the inhabitants would have
- had it in the very centre of this square, --not that it is properly a
- square, --because ’tis forty feet longer from east to west, than from
- north to south; so that the _French_ in general have more reason on
- their side in calling them _Places_ than _Squares_, which, strictly
- speaking, to be sure, they are not.
- The town-house seems to be but a sorry building, and not to be kept in
- the best repair; otherwise it had been a second great ornament to this
- place; it answers however its destination, and serves very well for the
- reception of the magistrates, who assemble in it from time to time; so
- that ’tis presumable, justice is regularly distributed.
- I have heard much of it, but there is nothing at all curious in the
- _Courgain_; ’tis a distinct quarter of the town, inhabited solely by
- sailors and fishermen; it consists of a number of small streets, neatly
- built and mostly of brick; ’tis extremely populous, but as that may be
- accounted for, from the principles of their diet, --there is nothing
- curious in that neither. ----A traveller may see it to satisfy
- himself--he must not omit however taking notice of _La Tour de Guet_,
- upon any account; ’tis so called from its particular destination,
- because in war it serves to discover and give notice of the enemies
- which approach the place, either by sea or land; ----but ’tis monstrous
- high, and catches the eye so continually, you cannot avoid taking notice
- of it if you would.
- It was a singular disappointment to me, that I could not have permission
- to take an exact survey of the fortifications, which are the strongest
- in the world, and which, from first to last, that is, from the time they
- were set about by _Philip_ of _France_, Count of _Boulogne_, to the
- present war, wherein many reparations were made, have cost (as I learned
- afterwards from an engineer in _Gascony_)--above a hundred millions of
- livres. It is very remarkable, that at the _Tête de Gravelenes_, and
- where the town is naturally the weakest, they have expended the most
- money; so that the out-works stretch a great way into the campaign, and
- consequently occupy a large tract of ground --However, after all that is
- _said_ and _done_, it must be acknowledged that _Calais_ was never upon
- any account so considerable from itself, as from its situation, and that
- easy entrance which it gave our ancestors, upon all occasions, into
- _France_: it was not without its inconveniences also; being no less
- troublesome to the _English_ in those times, than _Dunkirk_ has been to
- us, in ours; so that it was deservedly looked upon as the key to both
- kingdoms, which no doubt is the reason that there have arisen so many
- contentions who should keep it: of these, the siege of _Calais_, or
- rather the blockade (for it was shut up both by land and sea), was the
- most memorable, as it withstood the efforts of _Edward_ the Third a
- whole year, and was not terminated at last but by famine and extreme
- misery; the gallantry of _Eustace de St. Pierre_, who first offered
- himself a victim for his fellow-citizens, has rank’d his name with
- heroes. As it will not take up above fifty pages, it would be injustice
- to the reader, not to give him a minute account of that romantic
- transaction, as well as of the siege itself, in _Rapin’s_ own words:
- CHAPTER VI
- ----But courage! gentle reader! ----I scorn it----’tis enough to have
- thee in my power----but to make use of the advantage which the fortune
- of the pen has now gained over thee, would be too much ----No----! by
- that all-powerful fire which warms the visionary brain, and lights the
- spirits through unwordly tracts! ere I would force a helpless creature
- upon this hard service, and make thee pay, poor soul! for fifty pages,
- which I have no right to sell thee, ----naked as I am, I would browse
- upon the mountains, and smile that the north wind brought me neither my
- tent or my supper.
- --So put on, my brave boy! and make the best of thy way to _Boulogne_.
- CHAPTER VII
- ----Boulogne! ----hah! ----so we are all got together----debtors and
- sinners before heaven; a jolly set of us--but I can’t stay and quaff it
- off with you --I’m pursued myself like a hundred devils, and shall be
- overtaken, before I can well change horses: ----for heaven’s sake, make
- haste----’Tis for high-treason, quoth a very little man, whispering as
- low as he could to a very tall man, that stood next him ----Or else for
- murder; quoth the tall man ----Well thrown, _Size-ace!_ quoth I. No;
- quoth a third, the gentleman has been committing----.
- _Ah! ma chere fille!_ said I, as she tripp’d by from her matins--you
- look as rosy as the morning (for the sun was rising, and it made the
- compliment the more gracious) --No; it can’t be that, quoth a
- fourth----(she made a curt’sy to me --I kiss’d my hand) ’tis debt,
- continued he: ’Tis certainly for debt; quoth a fifth; I would not pay
- that gentleman’s debts, quoth _Ace_, for a thousand pounds; nor would I,
- quoth _Size_, for six times the sum --Well thrown, _Size-ace_, again!
- quoth I; --but I have no debt but the debt of NATURE, and I want but
- patience of her, and I will pay her every farthing I owe her ----How can
- you be so hard-hearted, MADAM, to arrest a poor traveller going along
- without molestation to any one upon his lawful occasions? do stop that
- death-looking, long-striding scoundrel of a scare-sinner, who is posting
- after me----he never would have followed me but for you----if it be but
- for a stage or two, just to give me start of him, I beseech you,
- madam----do, dear lady----
- ----Now, in troth, ’tis a great pity, quoth mine _Irish_ host, that all
- this good courtship should be lost; for the young gentlewoman has been
- after going out of hearing of it all along.----
- ----Simpleton! quoth I.
- ----So you have nothing _else_ in _Boulogne_ worth seeing?
- --By Jasus! there is the finest SEMINARY for the HUMANITIES----
- --There cannot be a finer; quoth I.
- CHAPTER VIII
- When the precipitancy of a man’s wishes hurries on his ideas ninety
- times faster than the vehicle he rides in--woe be to truth! and woe be
- to the vehicle and its tackling (let ’em be made of what stuff you will)
- upon which he breathes forth the disappointment of his soul!
- As I never give general characters either of men or things in choler,
- “_the most haste the worst speed_,” was all the reflection I made upon
- the affair, the first time it happen’d; --the second, third, fourth, and
- fifth time, I confined it respectively to those times, and accordingly
- blamed only the second, third, fourth, and fifth post-boy for it,
- without carrying my reflections further; but the event continuing to
- befal me from the fifth, to the sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, and tenth
- time, and without one exception, I then could not avoid making a
- national reflection of it, which I do in these words;
- _That something is always wrong in a French post-chaise, upon first
- setting out._
- Or the proposition may stand thus:
- _A French postilion has always to alight before he has got three hundred
- yards out of town._
- What’s wrong now? ----Diable! ----a rope’s broke! ----a knot has slipt!
- ----a staple’s drawn! ----a bolt’s to whittle! ----a tag, a rag, a jag,
- a strap, a buckle, or a buckle’s tongue, want altering.
- Now true as all this is, I never think myself impowered to excommunicate
- thereupon either the post-chaise, or its driver----nor do I take it into
- my head to swear by the living G--, I would rather go a-foot ten
- thousand times----or that I will be damn’d, if ever I get into
- another----but I take the matter coolly before me, and consider, that
- some tag, or rag, or jag, or bolt, or buckle, or buckle’s tongue, will
- ever be a wanting, or want altering, travel where I will--so I never
- chaff, but take the good and the bad as they fall in my road, and get
- on: ----Do so, my lad! said I; he had lost five minutes already, in
- alighting in order to get at a luncheon of black bread, which he had
- cramm’d into the chaise-pocket, and was remounted, and going leisurely
- on, to relish it the better ----Get on, my lad, said I, briskly--but in
- the most persuasive tone imaginable, for I jingled a four-and-twenty
- sous piece against the glass, taking care to hold the flat side towards
- him, as he look’d back: the dog grinn’d intelligence from his right ear
- to his left, and behind his sooty muzzle discovered such a pearly row of
- teeth, that _Sovereignty_ would have pawn’d her jewels for them.----
- Just heaven! {What masticators! --
- {What bread!--
- and so as he finished the last mouthful of it, we entered the town of
- _Montreuil_.
- CHAPTER IX
- There is not a town in all _France_, which, in my opinion, looks better
- in the map, than MONTREUIL; ----I own, it does not look so well in the
- book of post-roads; but when you come to see it--to be sure it looks
- most pitifully.
- There is one thing, however, in it at present very handsome; and that
- is, the inn-keeper’s daughter: She has been eighteen months at _Amiens_,
- and six at _Paris_, in going through her classes; so knits, and sews,
- and dances, and does the little coquetries very well.----
- --A slut! in running them over within these five minutes that I have
- stood looking at her, she has let fall at least a dozen loops in a white
- thread stocking----yes, yes --I see, you cunning gipsy! --’tis long and
- taper--you need not pin it to your knee--and that ’tis your own--and
- fits you exactly.----
- ----That Nature should have told this creature a word about a _statue’s
- thumb!_
- --But as this sample is worth all their thumbs----besides, I have her
- thumbs and fingers in at the bargain, if they can be any guide to me,
- --and as _Janatone_ withal (for that is her name) stands so well for a
- drawing----may I never draw more, or rather may I draw like a
- draught-horse, by main strength all the days of my life, --if I do not
- draw her in all her proportions, and with as determined a pencil, as if
- I had her in the wettest drapery.----
- --But your worships chuse rather that I give you the length, breadth,
- and perpendicular height of the great parish-church, or drawing of the
- façade of the abbey of Saint _Austerberte_ which has been transported
- from _Artois_ hither--everything is just I suppose as the masons and
- carpenters left them, --and if the belief in _Christ_ continues so long,
- will be so these fifty years to come--so your worships and reverences
- may all measure them at your leisures----but he who measures thee,
- _Janatone_, must do it now--thou carriest the principles of change
- within thy frame; and considering the chances of a transitory life,
- I would not answer for thee a moment; ere twice twelve months are passed
- and gone, thou mayest grow out like a pumpkin, and lose thy shapes----or
- thou mayest go off like a flower, and lose thy beauty--nay, thou mayest
- go off like a hussy--and lose thyself. --I would not answer for my aunt
- _Dinah_, was she alive----’faith, scarce for her picture----were it but
- painted by _Reynolds_--
- But if I go on with my drawing, after naming that son of _Apollo_, I’ll
- be shot----
- So you must e’en be content with the original; which, if the evening is
- fine in passing thro’ _Montreuil_, you will see at your chaise-door, as
- you change horses: but unless you have as bad a reason for haste as I
- have--you had better stop: ----She has a little of the _devote_: but
- that, sir, is a terce to a nine in your favour------
- --L--help me! I could not count a single point: so had been piqued and
- repiqued, and capotted to the devil.
- CHAPTER X
- All which being considered, and that Death moreover might be much nearer
- me than I imagined ----I wish I was at _Abbeville_, quoth I, were it
- only to see how they card and spin----so off we set.
- [7.1]_de Montreuil à Nampont - poste et demi_
- _de Nampont_ à Bernay - - - poste
- de Bernay à Nouvion - - - poste
- de Nouvion à ABBEVILLE - - poste
- ----but the carders and spinners were all gone to bed.
- [Footnote 7.1: Vid. Book of French post roads, page 36, edition
- of 1762.]
- CHAPTER XI
- What a vast advantage is travelling! only it heats one; but there is a
- remedy for that, which you may pick out of the next chapter.
- CHAPTER XII
- Was I in a condition to stipulate with Death, as I am this moment with
- my apothecary, how and where I will take his clyster ----I should
- certainly declare against submitting to it before my friends; and
- therefore I never seriously think upon the mode and manner of this great
- catastrophe, which generally takes up and torments my thoughts as much
- as the catastrophe itself; but I constantly draw the curtain across it
- with this wish, that the Disposer of all things may so order it, that it
- happen not to me in my own house----but rather in some decent inn----at
- home, I know it, ----the concern of my friends, and the last services of
- wiping my brows, and smoothing my pillow, which the quivering hand of
- pale affection shall pay me, will so crucify my soul; that I shall die
- of a distemper which my physician is not aware of: but in an inn, the
- few cold offices I wanted, would be purchased with a few guineas, and
- paid me with an undisturbed, but punctual attention----but mark. This
- inn should not be the inn at _Abbeville_----if there was not another inn
- in the universe, I would strike that inn out of the capitulation: so
- Let the horses be in the chaise exactly by four in the morning ----Yes,
- by four, Sir, ----or by _Genevieve!_ I’ll raise a clatter in the house
- shall wake the dead.
- CHAPTER XIII
- “_Make them like unto a wheel_,” is a bitter sarcasm, as all the learned
- know, against the _grand tour_, and that restless spirit for making it,
- which _David_ prophetically foresaw would haunt the children of men in
- the latter days; and therefore, as thinketh the great bishop _Hall_,
- ’tis one of the severest imprecations which _David_ ever utter’d against
- the enemies of the Lord--and, as if he had said, “I wish them no worse
- luck than always to be rolling about” --So much motion, continues he
- (for he was very corpulent)--is so much unquietness; and so much of
- rest, by the same analogy, is so much of heaven.
- Now, I (being very thin) think differently; and that so much of motion,
- is so much of life, and so much of joy----and that to stand still, or
- get on but slowly, is death and the devil----
- Hollo! Ho! ----the whole world’s asleep! ----bring out the
- horses----grease the wheels--tie on the mail----and drive a nail into
- that moulding ----I’ll not lose a moment----
- Now the wheel we are talking of, and _whereinto_ (but not _whereunto_,
- for that would make an Ixion’s wheel of it) he curseth his enemies,
- according to the bishop’s habit of body, should certainly be a
- post-chaise wheel, whether they were set up in _Palestine_ at that time
- or not----and my wheel, for the contrary reasons, must as certainly be a
- cart-wheel groaning round its revolution once in an age; and of which
- sort, were I to turn commentator, I should make no scruple to affirm,
- they had great store in that hilly country.
- I love the Pythagoreans (much more than ever I dare tell my dear
- _Jenny_) for their “χωρισμὸν ἀπὸ τοῦ Σώματος, εἰς τὸ καλῶς
- φιλοσοφεῖν”---- [their] “_getting out of the body, in order to think
- well_.” No man thinks right, whilst he is in it; blinded as he must be,
- with his congenial humours, and drawn differently aside, as the bishop
- and myself have been, with too lax or too tense a fibre ----REASON is,
- half of it, SENSE; and the measure of heaven itself is but the measure
- of our present appetites and concoctions----
- ----But which of the two, in the present case, do you think to be mostly
- in the wrong?
- You, certainly: quoth she, to disturb a whole family so early.
- CHAPTER XIV
- ----But she did not know I was under a vow not to shave my beard till I
- got to _Paris_; ----yet I hate to make mysteries of nothing; ----’tis
- the cold cautiousness of one of those little souls from which _Lessius_
- (_lib._ 13, _de moribus divinis, cap._ 24) hath made his estimate,
- wherein he setteth forth, That one _Dutch_ mile, cubically multiplied,
- will allow room enough, and to spare, for eight hundred thousand
- millions, which he supposes to be as great a number of souls (counting
- from the fall of _Adam_) as can possibly be damn’d to the end of the
- world.
- From what he has made this second estimate----unless from the parental
- goodness of God --I don’t know --I am much more at a loss what could be
- in _Franciscus Ribbera’s_ head, who pretends that no less a space than
- one of two hundred _Italian_ miles multiplied into itself, will be
- sufficient to hold the like number----he certainly must have gone upon
- some of the old _Roman_ souls, of which he had read, without reflecting
- how much, by a gradual and most tabid decline, in the course of eighteen
- hundred years, they must unavoidably have shrunk so as to have come,
- when he wrote, almost to nothing.
- In _Lessius’s_ time, who seems the cooler man, they were as little as
- can be imagined----
- ----We find them less _now_----
- And next winter we shall find them less again; so that if we go on from
- little to less, and from less to nothing, I hesitate not one moment to
- affirm, that in half a century, at this rate, we shall have no souls at
- all; which being the period beyond which I doubt likewise of the
- existence of the Christian faith, ’twill be one advantage that both of
- ’em will be exactly worn out together.
- Blessed _Jupiter!_ and blessed every other heathen god and goddess! for
- now ye will all come into play again, and with _Priapus_ at your
- tails----what jovial times! ----but where am I? and into what a
- delicious riot of things am I rushing? I ----I who must be cut short in
- the midst of my days, and taste no more of ’em than what I borrow from
- my imagination----peace to thee, generous fool! and let me go on.
- CHAPTER XV
- ------“So hating, I say, to make mysteries of _nothing_” ----I intrusted
- it with the post-boy, as soon as ever I got off the stones; he gave a
- crack with his whip to balance the compliment; and with the thill-horse
- trotting, and a sort of an up and a down of the other, we danced it
- along to _Ailly au clochers_, famed in days of yore for the finest
- chimes in the world; but we danced through it without music--the chimes
- being greatly out of order--(as in truth they were through all
- _France_).
- And so making all possible speed, from
- _Ailly au clochers_, I got to _Hixcourt_,
- from _Hixcourt_, I got to _Pequignay_, and
- from _Pequignay_, I got to AMIENS,
- concerning which town I have nothing to inform you, but what I have
- informed you once before----and that was--that _Janatone_ went there to
- school.
- CHAPTER XVI
- In the whole catalogue of those whiffling vexations which come puffing
- across a man’s canvass, there is not one of a more teasing and
- tormenting nature, than this particular one which I am going to
- describe----and for which (unless you travel with an avance-courier,
- which numbers do in order to prevent it)----there is no help: and it is
- this.
- That be you in never so kindly a propensity to sleep----tho’ you are
- passing perhaps through the finest country--upon the best roads, and in
- the easiest carriage for doing it in the world----nay, was you sure you
- could sleep fifty miles straight forwards, without once opening your
- eyes--nay, what is more, was you as demonstratively satisfied as you can
- be of any truth in _Euclid_, that you should upon all accounts be full
- as well asleep as awake----nay, perhaps better ----Yet the incessant
- returns of paying for the horses at every stage, ----with the necessity
- thereupon of putting your hand into your pocket, and counting out from
- thence three livres fifteen sous (sous by sous), puts an end to so much
- of the project, that you cannot execute above six miles of it
- (or supposing it is a post and a half, that is but nine)----were it to
- save your soul from destruction.
- --I’ll be even with ’em, quoth I, for I’ll put the precise sum into a
- piece of paper, and hold it ready in my hand all the way: “Now I shall
- have nothing to do,” said I (composing myself to rest), “but to drop
- this gently into the post-boy’s hat, and not say a word.” ----Then there
- wants two sous more to drink----or there is a twelve sous piece of
- _Louis_ XIV. which will not pass--or a livre and some odd liards to be
- brought over from the last stage, which Monsieur had forgot; which
- altercations (as a man cannot dispute very well asleep) rouse him: still
- is sweet sleep retrievable; and still might the flesh weigh down the
- spirit, and recover itself of these blows--but then, by heaven! you have
- paid but for a single post--whereas ’tis a post and a half; and this
- obliges you to pull out your book of post-roads, the print of which is
- so very small, it forces you to open your eyes, whether you will or no:
- Then Monsieur _le Curé_ offers you a pinch of snuff----or a poor soldier
- shews you his leg----or a shaveling his box----or the priestess of the
- cistern will water your wheels----they do not want it----but she swears
- by her _priesthood_ (throwing it back) that they do: ----then you have
- all these points to argue, or consider over in your mind; in doing of
- which, the rational powers get so thoroughly awakened----you may get ’em
- to sleep again as you can.
- It was entirely owing to one of these misfortunes, or I had pass’d clean
- by the stables of _Chantilly_----
- ----But the postilion first affirming, and then persisting in it to my
- face, that there was no mark upon the two sous piece, I open’d my eyes
- to be convinced--and seeing the mark upon it as plain as my nose --I
- leap’d out of the chaise in a passion, and so saw everything at
- _Chantilly_ in spite. ----I tried it but for three posts and a half, but
- believe ’tis the best principle in the world to travel speedily upon;
- for as few objects look very inviting in that mood--you have little or
- nothing to stop you; by which means it was that I passed through St.
- _Dennis_, without turning my head so much as on one side towards the
- Abby----
- ----Richness of their treasury! stuff and nonsense! ----bating their
- jewels, which are all false, I would not give three sous for any one
- thing in it, but _Jaidas’s lantern_----nor for that either, only as it
- grows dark, it might be of use.
- CHAPTER XVII
- Crack, crack----crack, crack----crack, crack----so this is _Paris!_
- quoth I (continuing in the same mood)--and this is _Paris!_----humph!
- ----_Paris!_ cried I, repeating the name the third time----
- The first, the finest, the most brilliant----
- The streets however are nasty.
- But it looks, I suppose, better than it smells----crack, crack----crack,
- crack----what a fuss thou makest! --as if it concerned the good people
- to be informed, that a man with pale face and clad in black, had the
- honour to be driven into _Paris_ at nine o’clock at night, by a
- postilion in a tawny yellow jerkin, turned up with red calamanco--crack,
- crack----crack, crack----crack, crack, ----I wish thy whip----
- ----But ’tis the spirit of thy nation; so crack--crack on.
- Ha! ----and no one gives the wall! ----but in the SCHOOL of URBANITY
- herself, if the walls are besh-t--how can you do otherwise?
- And prithee when do they light the lamps? What? --never in the summer
- months! ----Ho! ’tis the time of sallads. ----O rare! sallad and
- soup--soup and sallad--sallad and soup, _encore_----
- ----’Tis _too much_ for sinners.
- Now I cannot bear the barbarity of it; how can that unconscionable
- coachman talk so much bawdy to that lean horse? don’t you see, friend,
- the streets are so villainously narrow, that there is not room in all
- _Paris_ to turn a wheelbarrow? In the grandest city of the whole world,
- it would not have been amiss, if they had been left a thought wider;
- nay, were it only so much in every single street, as that a man might
- know (was it only for satisfaction) on which side of it he was walking.
- One--two--three--four--five--six--seven--eight--nine--ten. --Ten cook’s
- shops! and twice the number of barbers! and all within three minutes
- driving! one would think that all the cooks in the world, on some great
- merry-meeting with the barbers, by joint consent had said --Come, let us
- all go live at _Paris_: the _French_ love good eating----they are all
- _gourmands_----we shall rank high; if their god is their belly----their
- cooks must be gentlemen: and forasmuch as _the periwig maketh the man_,
- and the periwig-maker maketh the periwig--_ergo_, would the barbers say,
- we shall rank higher still--we shall be above you all--we shall be
- _Capitouls_[7.2] at least--_pardi!_ we shall all wear swords----
- --And so, one would swear (that is, by candle light, --but there is no
- depending upon it) they continue to do, to this day.
- [Footnote 7.2: Chief Magistrate in Toulouse, &c. &c. &c.]
- CHAPTER XVIII
- The _French_ are certainly misunderstood: ----but whether the fault is
- theirs, in not sufficiently explaining themselves; or speaking with that
- exact limitation and precision which one would expect on a point of such
- importance, and which, moreover, is so likely to be contested by
- us----or whether the fault may not be altogether on our side, in not
- understanding their language always so critically as to know “what they
- would be at” ----I shall not decide; but ’tis evident to me, when they
- affirm, “_That they who have seen _Paris_, have seen everything_,” they
- must mean to speak of those who have seen it by day-light.
- As for candle-light --I give it up ----I have said before, there was no
- depending upon it--and I repeat it again; but not because the lights and
- shades are too sharp--or the tints confounded--or that there is neither
- beauty or keeping, &c. . . . for that’s not truth--but it is an
- uncertain light in this respect, That in all the five hundred grand
- Hôtels, which they number up to you in _Paris_--and the five hundred
- good things, at a modest computation (for ’tis only allowing one good
- thing to a Hôtel), which by candle-light are best to be _seen_, _felt_,
- _heard_, and _understood_ (which, by the bye, is a quotation from
- _Lilly_)----the devil a one of us out of fifty, can get our heads fairly
- thrust in amongst them.
- This is no part of the _French_ computation: ’tis simply this,
- That by the last survey taken in the year one thousand seven hundred and
- sixteen, since which time there have been considerable argumentations,
- _Paris_ doth contain nine hundred streets; (viz.)
- In the quarter called the _City_--there are fifty-three streets.
- In St. _James_ of the Shambles, fifty-five streets.
- In St. _Oportune_, thirty-four streets.
- In the quarter of the _Louvre_, twenty-five streets.
- In the _Palace Royal_, or St. _Honorius_, forty-nine streets.
- In _Mont. Martyr_, forty-one streets.
- In St. _Eustace_, twenty-nine streets.
- In the _Halles_, twenty-seven streets.
- In St. _Dennis_, fifty-five streets.
- In St. _Martin_, fifty-four streets.
- In St. _Paul_, or the _Mortellerie_, twenty-seven streets.
- The _Greve_, thirty-eight streets.
- In St. _Avoy_, or the _Verrerie_, nineteen streets.
- In the _Marais_, or the _Temple_, fifty-two streets.
- In St. _Antony’s_, sixty-eight streets.
- In the _Place Maubert_, eighty-one streets.
- In St. _Bennet_, sixty streets.
- In St. _Andrews de Arcs_, fifty-one streets.
- In the quarter of the _Luxembourg_, sixty-two streets.
- And in that of St. Germain, fifty-five streets, into any of which you
- may walk; and that when you have seen them with all that belongs to
- them, fairly by day-light--their gates, their bridges, their squares,
- their statues - - - and have crusaded it moreover, through all their
- parish-churches, by no means omitting St. _Roche_ and _Sulpice_ - - -
- and to crown all, have taken a walk to the four palaces, which you may
- see, either with or without the statues and pictures, just as you
- chuse--
- ----Then you will have seen----
- ----but, ’tis what no one needeth to tell you, for you will read of it
- yourself upon the portico of the _Louvre_, in these words,
- [7.3]EARTH NO SUCH FOLKS! --NO FOLKS E’ER SUCH A TOWN
- AS PARIS IS! --SING, DERRY, DERRY, DOWN.
- The _French_ have a _gay_ way of treating everything that is Great; and
- that is all can be said upon it.
- [Footnote 7.3:
- Non orbis gentem, non urbem gens habet ullam
- --------ulla parem.]
- CHAPTER XIX
- In mentioning the word _gay_ (as in the close of the last chapter) it
- puts one (_i.e._ an author) in mind of the word _spleen_----especially
- if he has anything to say upon it: not that by any analysis--or that
- from any table of interest or genealogy, there appears much more ground
- of alliance betwixt them, than betwixt light and darkness, or any two of
- the most unfriendly opposites in nature----only ’tis an undercraft of
- authors to keep up a good understanding amongst words, as politicians do
- amongst men--not knowing how near they may be under a necessity of
- placing them to each other----which point being now gain’d, and that I
- may place mine exactly to my mind, I write it down here--
- SPLEEN
- This, upon leaving _Chantilly_, I declared to be the best principle in
- the world to travel speedily upon; but I gave it only as matter of
- opinion. I still continue in the same sentiments--only I had not then
- experience enough of its working to add this, that though you do get on
- at a tearing rate, yet you get on but uneasily to yourself at the same
- time; for which reason I here quit it entirely, and for ever, and ’tis
- heartily at any one’s service--it has spoiled me the digestion of a good
- supper, and brought on a bilious diarrhœa, which has brought me back
- again to my first principle on which I set out----and with which I shall
- now scamper it away to the banks of the _Garonne_--
- ----No; ----I cannot stop a moment to give you the character of the
- people--their genius----their manners--their customs--their
- laws----their religion--their government--their manufactures--their
- commerce--their finances, with all the resources and hidden springs
- which sustain them: qualified as I may be, by spending three days and
- two nights amongst them, and during all that time making these things
- the entire subject of my enquiries and reflections----
- Still--still I must away----the roads are paved--the posts are
- short--the days are long--’tis no more than noon --I shall be at
- _Fontainbleau_ before the king----
- --Was he going there? not that I know----
- CHAPTER XX
- Now I hate to hear a person, especially if he be a traveller, complain
- that we do not get on so fast in _France_ as we do in _England_; whereas
- we get on much faster, _consideratis considerandis_; thereby always
- meaning, that if you weigh their vehicles with the mountains of baggage
- which you lay both before and behind upon them--and then consider their
- puny horses, with the very little they give them--’tis a wonder they get
- on at all: their suffering is most unchristian, and ’tis evident
- thereupon to me, that a _French_ post-horse would not know what in the
- world to do, was it not for the two words ****** and ****** in which
- there is as much sustenance, as if you gave him a peck of corn: now as
- these words cost nothing, I long from my soul to tell the reader what
- they are; but here is the question--they must be told him plainly, and
- with the most distinct articulation, or it will answer no end--and yet
- to do it in that plain way--though their reverences may laugh at it in
- the bed-chamber--fell well I wot, they will abuse it in the parlour: for
- which cause, I have been volving and revolving in my fancy some time,
- but to no purpose, by what clean device or facette contrivance I might
- so modulate them, that whilst I satisfy _that ear_ which the reader
- chuses to _lend_ me --I might not dissatisfy the other which he keeps to
- himself.
- ----My ink burns my finger to try----and when I have----’twill have a
- worse consequence----it will burn (I fear) my paper.
- ----No; ----I dare not----
- But if you wish to know how the _abbess_ of _Andoüillets_ and a novice
- of her convent got over the difficulty (only first wishing myself all
- imaginable success) --I’ll tell you without the least scruple.
- CHAPTER XXI
- The abbess of _Andoüillets_, which, if you look into the large set of
- provincial maps now publishing at _Paris_, you will find situated
- amongst the hills which divide _Burgundy_ from _Savoy_, being in danger
- of an _Anchylosis_ or stiff joint (the _sinovia_ of her knee becoming
- hard by long matins), and having tried every remedy----first, prayers
- and thanksgiving; then invocations to all the saints in heaven
- promiscuously----then particularly to every saint who had ever had a
- stiff leg, before her----then touching it with all the reliques of the
- convent, principally with the thigh-bone of the man of _Lystra_, who had
- been impotent from his youth----then wrapping it up in her veil when she
- went to bed--then cross-wise her rosary--then bringing in to her aid the
- secular arm, and anointing it with oils and hot fat of animals----then
- treating it with emollient and resolving fomentations----then with
- poultices of marsh-mallows, mallows, bonus Henricus, white lillies and
- fenugreek--then taking the woods, I mean the smoak of ’em, holding her
- scapulary across her lap----then decoctions of wild chicory,
- water-cresses, chervil, sweet cecily and cochlearia----and nothing all
- this while answering, was prevailed on at last to try the hot baths of
- _Bourbon_----so having first obtain’d leave of the visitor-general to
- take care of her existence--she ordered all to be got ready for her
- journey: a novice of the convent of about seventeen, who had been
- troubled with a whitloe in her middle finger, by sticking it constantly
- into the abbess’s cast poultices, &c. --had gained such an interest,
- that overlooking a sciatical old nun, who might have been set up for
- ever by the hot-baths of _Bourbon_, _Margarita_, the little novice, was
- elected as the companion of the journey.
- An old calesh, belonging to the abbesse, lined with green frize, was
- ordered to be drawn out into the sun--the gardener of the convent being
- chosen muleteer--led out the two old mules, to clip the hair from the
- rump-ends of their tails, whilst a couple of lay-sisters were busied,
- the one in darning the lining, and the other in sewing on the shreads of
- yellow binding, which the teeth of time had unravelled----the
- under-gardener dress’d the muleteer’s hat in hot wine-lees----and a
- taylor sat musically at it, in a shed over-against the convent, in
- assorting four dozen of bells for the harness, whistling to each bell,
- as he tied it on with a thong.----
- ----The carpenter and the smith of _Andoüillets_ held a council of
- wheels; and by seven, the morning after, all look’d spruce, and was
- ready at the gate of the convent for the hot-baths of _Bourbon_--two
- rows of the unfortunate stood ready there an hour before.
- The abbess of _Andoüillets_, supported by _Margarita_ the novice,
- advanced slowly to the calesh, both clad in white, with their black
- rosaries hanging at their breasts----
- ----There was a simple solemnity in the contrast: they entered the
- calesh; and nuns in the same uniform, sweet emblem of innocence, each
- occupied a window, and as the abbess and _Margarita_ look’d up--each
- (the sciatical poor nun excepted)--each stream’d out the end of her veil
- in the air--then kiss’d the lilly hand which let it go: the good abbess
- and _Margarita_ laid their hands saint-wise upon their breasts--look’d
- up to heaven--then to them--and look’d “God bless you, dear sisters.”
- I declare I am interested in this story, and wish I had been there.
- The gardener, whom I shall now call the muleteer, was a little, hearty,
- broad-set, good-natured, chattering, toping kind of a fellow, who
- troubled his head very little with the _hows_ and _whens_ of life; so
- had mortgaged a month of his conventical wages in a borrachio, or
- leathern cask of wine, which he had disposed behind the calesh, with a
- large russet-coloured riding-coat over it, to guard it from the sun; and
- as the weather was hot, and he not a niggard of his labours, walking ten
- times more than he rode--he found more occasions than those of nature,
- to fall back to the rear of his carriage; till by frequent coming and
- going, it had so happen’d, that all his wine had leak’d out at the
- _legal_ vent of the borrachio, before one half of the journey was
- finish’d.
- Man is a creature born to habitudes. The day had been sultry--the
- evening was delicious--the wine was generous--the _Burgundian_ hill on
- which it grew was steep--a little tempting bush over the door of a cool
- cottage at the foot of it, hung vibrating in full harmony with the
- passions--a gentle air rustled distinctly through the leaves--
- “Come--come, thirsty muleteer--come in.”
- --The muleteer was a son of _Adam_; I need not say a word more. He gave
- the mules, each of ’em, a sound lash, and looking in the abbess’s and
- _Margarita’s_ faces (as he did it)--as much as to say “here I am”--he
- gave a second good crack--as much as to say to his mules, “get on”----so
- slinking behind, he enter’d the little inn at the foot of the hill.
- The muleteer, as I told you, was a little, joyous, chirping fellow, who
- thought not of to-morrow, nor of what had gone before, or what was to
- follow it, provided he got but his scantling of Burgundy, and a little
- chit-chat along with it; so entering into a long conversation, as how he
- was chief gardener to the convent of _Andoüillets_, &c. &c., and out of
- friendship for the abbess and Mademoiselle _Margarita_, who was only in
- her noviciate, he had come along with them from the confines of _Savoy_,
- &c. &c. --and as how she had got a white swelling by her devotions--and
- what a nation of herbs he had procured to mollify her humours, &c. &c.,
- and that if the waters of _Bourbon_ did not mend that leg--she might as
- well be lame of both--&c. &c. &c. --He so contrived his story, as
- absolutely to forget the heroine of it--and with her the little novice,
- and what was a more ticklish point to be forgot than both--the two
- mules; who being creatures that take advantage of the world, inasmuch as
- their parents took it of them--and they not being in a condition to
- return the obligation _downwards_ (as men and women and beasts
- are)--they do it side-ways, and long-ways, and back-ways--and up hill,
- and down hill, and which way they can. ------Philosophers, with all
- their ethicks, have never considered this rightly--how should the poor
- muleteer, then in his cups, consider it at all? he did not in the
- least--’tis time we do; let us leave him then in the vortex of his
- element, the happiest and most thoughtless of mortal men----and for a
- moment let us look after the mules, the abbess, and _Margarita_.
- By virtue of the muleteer’s two last strokes the mules had gone quietly
- on, following their own consciences up the hill, till they had conquer’d
- about one half of it; when the elder of them, a shrewd crafty old devil,
- at the turn of an angle, giving a side glance, and no muleteer behind
- them----
- By my fig! said she, swearing, I’ll go no further ----And if I do,
- replied the other, they shall make a drum of my hide.----
- And so with one consent they stopp’d thus----
- CHAPTER XXII
- ----Get on with you, said the abbess.
- ----Wh - - - - ysh----ysh----cried _Margarita_.
- Sh - - - a----suh - u----shu - - u--sh - - aw----shaw’d the abbess.
- ----Whu--v--w----whew--w--w--whuv’d _Margarita_ pursing up her sweet
- lips betwixt a hoot and a whistle.
- Thump--thump--thump--obstreperated the abbess of _Andoüillets_ with the
- end of her gold-headed cane against the bottom of the calesh----
- The old mule let a f--
- CHAPTER XXIII
- We are ruin’d and undone, my child, said the abbess to _Margarita_,
- ----we shall be here all night----we shall be plunder’d----we shall be
- ravish’d----
- ----We shall be ravish’d, said _Margarita_, as sure as a gun.
- _Sancta Maria!_ cried the abbess (forgetting the _O!_)--why was I
- govern’d by this wicked stiff joint? why did I leave the convent of
- _Andoüillets?_ and why didst thou not suffer thy servant to go
- unpolluted to her tomb?
- O my finger! my finger! cried the novice, catching fire at the word
- _servant_--why was I not content to put it here, or there, any where
- rather than be in this strait?
- Strait! said the abbess.
- Strait----said the novice; for terror had struck their understandings----
- the one knew not what she said----the other what she answer’d.
- O my virginity! virginity! cried the abbess.
- ----inity! ----inity! said the novice, sobbing.
- CHAPTER XXIV
- My dear mother, quoth the novice, coming a little to herself, ----there
- are two certain words, which I have been told will force any horse, or
- ass, or mule, to go up a hill whether he will or no; be he never so
- obstinate or ill-will’d, the moment he hears them utter’d, he obeys.
- They are words magic! cried the abbess in the utmost horror --No; replied
- _Margarita_ calmly--but they are words sinful --What are they? quoth the
- abbess, interrupting her: They are sinful in the first degree, answered
- _Margarita_, --they are mortal--and if we are ravish’d and die
- unabsolved of them, we shall both----but you may pronounce them to me,
- quoth the abbess of _Andoüillets_ ----They cannot, my dear mother, said
- the novice, be pronounced at all; they will make all the blood in one’s
- body fly up into one’s face --But you may whisper them in my ear, quoth
- the abbess.
- Heaven! hadst thou no guardian angel to delegate to the inn at the
- bottom of the hill? was there no generous and friendly spirit
- unemployed----no agent in nature, by some monitory shivering, creeping
- along the artery which led to his heart, to rouse the muleteer from his
- banquet? ----no sweet minstrelsy to bring back the fair idea of the
- abbess and _Margarita_, with their black rosaries!
- Rouse! rouse! ----but ’tis too late--the horrid words are pronounced
- this moment----
- ----and how to tell them --Ye, who can speak of everything existing,
- with unpolluted lips, instruct me----guide me----
- CHAPTER XXV
- All sins whatever, quoth the abbess, turning casuist in the distress
- they were under, are held by the confessor of our convent to be either
- mortal or venial: there is no further division. Now a venial sin being
- the slightest and least of all sins--being halved--by taking either only
- the half of it, and leaving the rest--or, by taking it all, and amicably
- halving it betwixt yourself and another person--in course becomes
- diluted into no sin at all.
- Now I see no sin in saying, _bou_, _bou_, _bou_, _bou_, _bou_, a hundred
- times together; nor is there any turpitude in pronouncing the syllable
- _ger_, _ger_, _ger_, _ger_, _ger_, were it from our matins to our
- vespers: Therefore, my dear daughter, continued the abbess of
- _Andoüillets_ --I will say _bou_, and thou shalt say _ger_; and then
- alternately, as there is no more sin in _fou_ than in _bou_ --Thou shalt
- say _fou_--and I will come in (like fa, sol, la, re, mi, ut, at our
- complines) with _ter_. And accordingly the abbess, giving the pitch
- note, set off thus:
- Abbess, } Bou - - bou - - bou - -
- _Margarita_, } ----ger, - - ger, - - ger.
- _Margarita_, } Fou - - fou - - fou - -
- Abbess, } ----ter, - - ter, - - ter.
- The two mules acknowledged the notes by a mutual lash of their tails;
- but it went no further----’Twill answer by an’ by, said the novice.
- Abbess } Bou- bou- bou- bou- bou- bou-
- _Margarita_, } --ger, ger, ger, ger, ger, ger.
- Quicker still, cried _Margarita_.
- Fou, fou, fou, fou, fou, fou, fou, fou, fou.
- Quicker still, cried _Margarita_.
- Bou, bou, bou, bou, bou, bou, bou, bou, bou,
- Quicker still --God preserve me; said the abbess --They do not understand
- us, cried _Margarita_ --But the Devil does, said the abbess of
- _Andoüillets_.
- CHAPTER XXVI
- What a tract of country have I run! --how many degrees nearer to the
- warm sun am I advanced, and how many fair and goodly cities have I seen,
- during the time you have been reading, and reflecting, Madam, upon this
- story! There’s FONTAINBLEAU, and SENS, and JOIGNY, and AUXERRE, and
- DIJON the capital of _Burgundy_, and CHALLON, and _Mâcon_ the capital of
- the _Mâconese_, and a score more upon the road to LYONS----and now I
- have run them over ----I might as well talk to you of so many market
- towns in the moon, as tell you one word about them: it will be this
- chapter at the least, if not both this and the next entirely lost, do
- what I will----
- ----Why, ’tis a strange story! _Tristram._
- ----Alas! Madam, had it been upon some
- melancholy lecture of the cross--the peace of meekness, or the
- contentment of resignation ----I had not been incommoded: or had I
- thought of writing it upon the purer abstractions of the soul, and that
- food of wisdom and holiness and contemplation, upon which the spirit of
- man (when separated from the body) is to subsist for ever ----You would
- have come with a better appetite from it----
- ----I wish I never had wrote it: but as I never blot anything out----let
- us use some honest means to get it out of our heads directly.
- ----Pray reach me my fool’s cap ----I fear you sit upon it, Madam----
- ’tis under the cushion ----I’ll put it on----
- Bless me! you have had it upon your head this half hour. ----There then
- let it stay, with a
- Fa-ra diddle di
- and a fa-ri diddle d
- and a high-dum--dye-dum
- fiddle - - - dumb - c.
- And now, Madam, we may venture, I hope, a little to go on.
- CHAPTER XXVII
- ----All you need say of _Fontainbleau_ (in case you are ask’d) is, that
- it stands about forty miles (south _something_) from _Paris_, in the
- middle of a large forest ----That there is something great in it ----That
- the king goes there once every two or three years, with his whole court,
- for the pleasure of the chase--and that, during that carnival of
- sporting, any _English_ gentleman of fashion (you need not forget
- yourself) may be accommodated with a nag or two, to partake of the
- sport, taking care only not to out-gallop the king----
- Though there are two reasons why you need not talk loud of this to every
- one.
- First, Because ’twill make the said nags the harder to be got; and
- Secondly, ’Tis not a word of it true. ----_Allons!_
- As for SENS----you may dispatch--in a word------ “_’Tis an
- archiepiscopal see_.”
- ----For JOIGNY--the less, I think, one says of it the better.
- But for AUXERRE --I could go on for ever: for in my _grand tour_ through
- _Europe_, in which, after all, my father (not caring to trust me with
- any one) attended me himself, with my uncle _Toby_, and _Trim_, and
- _Obadiah_, and indeed most of the family, except my mother, who being
- taken up with a project of knitting my father a pair of large worsted
- breeches--(the thing is common sense)--and she not caring to be put out
- of her way, she staid at home, at SHANDY HALL, to keep things right
- during the expedition; in which, I say, my father stopping us two days
- at _Auxerre_, and his researches being ever of such a nature, that they
- would have found fruit even in a desert----he has left me enough to say
- upon AUXERRE: in short, wherever my father went----but ’twas more
- remarkably so, in this journey through _France_ and _Italy_, than in any
- other stages of his life----his road seemed to lie so much on one side
- of that, wherein all other travellers have gone before him--he saw kings
- and courts and silks of all colours, in such strange lights----and his
- remarks and reasonings upon the characters, the manners, and customs, of
- the countries we pass’d over, were so opposite to those of all other
- mortal men, particularly those of my uncle _Toby_ and _Trim_--(to say
- nothing of myself)--and to crown all--the occurrences and scrapes which
- we were perpetually meeting and getting into, in consequence of his
- systems and opiniatry--they were of so odd, so mix’d and tragi-comical a
- contexture --That the whole put together, it appears of so different a
- shade and tint from any tour of _Europe_, which was ever executed--that
- I will venture to pronounce--the fault must be mine and mine only--if it
- be not read by all travellers and travel-readers, till travelling is no
- more, --or which comes to the same point--till the world, finally, takes
- it into its head to stand still.----
- ----But this rich bale is not to be open’d now; except a small thread or
- two of it, merely to unravel the mystery of my father’s stay at AUXERRE.
- ----As I have mentioned it--’tis too slight to be kept suspended; and
- when ’tis wove in, there is an end of it.
- We’ll go, brother _Toby_, said my father, whilst dinner is coddling--to
- the abby of Saint _Germain_, if it be only to see these bodies, of which
- Monsieur _Sequier_ has given such a recommendation. ----I’ll go see any
- body, quoth my uncle _Toby_; for he was all compliance through every
- step of the journey ----Defend me! said my father--they are all
- mummies ----Then one need not shave; quoth my uncle _Toby_ ----Shave!
- no--cried my father--’twill be more like relations to go with our beards
- on --So out we sallied, the corporal lending his master his arm, and
- bringing up the rear, to the abby of Saint _Germain_.
- Everything is very fine, and very rich, and very superb, and very
- magnificent, said my father, addressing himself to the sacristan, who
- was a younger brother of the order of _Benedictines_--but our curiosity
- has led us to see the bodies, of which Monsieur _Sequier_ has given the
- world so exact a description. --The sacristan made a bow, and lighting a
- torch first, which he had always in the vestry ready for the purpose; he
- led us into the tomb of St. _Heribald_ ----This, said the sacristan,
- laying his hand upon the tomb, was a renowned prince of the house of
- _Bavaria_, who under the successive reigns of _Charlemagne_, _Louis le
- Debonnair_, and _Charles the Bald_, bore a great sway in the government,
- and had a principal hand in bringing everything into order and
- discipline----
- Then he has been as great, said my uncle, in the field, as in the
- cabinet ----I dare say he has been a gallant soldier ----He was a
- monk--said the sacristan.
- My uncle _Toby_ and _Trim_ sought comfort in each other’s faces--but
- found it not: my father clapped both his hands upon his cod-piece, which
- was a way he had when anything hugely tickled him: for though he hated a
- monk and the very smell of a monk worse than all the devils in
- hell----yet the shot hitting my uncle _Toby_ and _Trim_ so much harder
- than him, ’twas a relative triumph; and put him into the gayest humour
- in the world.
- ----And pray what do you call this gentleman? quoth my father, rather
- sportingly: This tomb, said the young _Benedictine_, looking downwards,
- contains the bones of Saint MAXIMA, who came from _Ravenna_ on purpose
- to touch the body----
- ----Of Saint MAXIMUS, said my father, popping in with his saint before
- him, --they were two of the greatest saints in the whole martyrology,
- added my father ----Excuse me, said the sacristan--------’twas to touch
- the bones of Saint _Germain_, the builder of the abby ----And what did
- she get by it? said my uncle _Toby_ ----What does any woman get by it?
- said my father ----MARTYRDOME; replied the young _Benedictine_, making a
- bow down to the ground, and uttering the word with so humble but
- decisive a cadence, it disarmed my father for a moment. ’Tis supposed,
- continued the _Benedictine_, that St. _Maxima_ has lain in this tomb
- four hundred years, and two hundred before her canonization----’Tis but
- a slow rise, brother _Toby_, quoth my father, in this self-same army of
- martyrs. ----A desperate slow one, an’ please your honour, said _Trim_,
- unless one could purchase ----I should rather sell out entirely, quoth
- my uncle _Toby_ ----I am pretty much of your opinion, brother _Toby_,
- said my father.
- ----Poor St. _Maxima!_ said my uncle _Toby_ low to himself, as we turn’d
- from her tomb: She was one of the fairest and most beautiful ladies
- either of _Italy_ or _France_, continued the sacristan ----But who the
- duce has got lain down here, besides her? quoth my father, pointing with
- his cane to a large tomb as we walked on ----It is Saint _Optat_, Sir,
- answered the sacristan ----And properly is Saint _Optat_ plac’d! said my
- father: And what is Saint _Optat’s_ story? continued he. Saint _Optat_,
- replied the sacristan, was a bishop----
- ----I thought so, by heaven! cried my father, interrupting him ----Saint
- _Optat!_----how should Saint _Optat_ fail? so snatching out his
- pocket-book, and the young _Benedictine_ holding him the torch as he
- wrote, he set it down as a new prop to his system of Christian names,
- and I will be bold to say, so disinterested was he in the search of
- truth, that had he found a treasure in Saint _Optat’s_ tomb, it would
- not have made him half so rich: ’Twas as successful a short visit as
- ever was paid to the dead; and so highly was his fancy pleas’d with all
- that had passed in it, --that he determined at once to stay another day
- in _Auxerre_.
- --I’ll see the rest of these good gentry to-morrow, said my father, as
- we cross’d over the square --And while you are paying that visit, brother
- _Shandy_, quoth my uncle _Toby_--the corporal and I will mount the
- ramparts.
- CHAPTER XXVIII
- ----Now this is the most puzzled skein of all----for in this last
- chapter, as far at least as it has help’d me through _Auxerre_, I have
- been getting forwards in two different journies together, and with the
- same dash of the pen--for I have got entirely out of _Auxerre_ in this
- journey which I am writing now, and I am got half way out of _Auxerre_
- in that which I shall write hereafter ----There is but a certain degree
- of perfection in everything; and by pushing at something beyond that,
- I have brought myself into such a situation, as no traveller ever stood
- before me; for I am this moment walking across the market-place of
- _Auxerre_ with my father and my uncle _Toby_, in our way back to
- dinner----and I am this moment also entering _Lyons_ with my post-chaise
- broke into a thousand pieces--and I am moreover this moment in a
- handsome pavillion built by _Pringello_,[7.4] upon the banks of the
- _Garonne_, which Mons. _Sligniac_ has lent me, and where I now sit
- rhapsodising all these affairs.
- ----Let me collect myself, and pursue my journey.
- [Footnote 7.4: The same Don _Pringello_, the celebrated
- _Spanish_ architect, of whom my cousin _Antony_ has made such
- honourable mention in a scholium to the Tale inscribed to his
- name. --Vid. p. 129, small edit.]
- CHAPTER XXIX
- I am glad of it, said I, settling the account with myself, as I walk’d
- into _Lyons_----my chaise being all laid higgledy-piggledy with my
- baggage in a cart, which was moving slowly before me ----I am heartily
- glad, said I, that ’tis all broke to pieces; for now I can go directly
- by water to _Avignon_, which will carry me on a hundred and twenty miles
- of my journey, and not cost me seven livres----and from thence,
- continued I, bringing forwards the account, I can hire a couple of
- mules--or asses, if I like (for nobody knows me) and cross the plains of
- _Languedoc_ for almost nothing ----I shall gain four hundred livres by
- the misfortune clear into my purse: and pleasure! worth--worth double
- the money by it. With what velocity, continued I, clapping my two hands
- together, shall I fly down the rapid _Rhone_, with the VIVARES on my
- right hand, and DAUPHINY on my left, scarce seeing the ancient cities of
- VIENNE, _Valence_, and _Vivieres_. What a flame will it rekindle in the
- lamp, to snatch a blushing grape from the _Hermitage_ and _Côte roti_,
- as I shoot by the foot of them! and what a fresh spring in the blood! to
- behold upon the banks advancing and retiring, the castles of romance,
- whence courteous knights have whilome rescued the distress’d----and see
- vertiginous, the rocks, the mountains, the cataracts, and all the hurry
- which Nature is in with all her great works about her.
- As I went on thus, methought my chaise, the wreck of which look’d
- stately enough at the first, insensibly grew less and less in its size;
- the freshness of the painting was no more--the gilding lost its
- lustre--and the whole affair appeared so poor in my eyes--so sorry! --so
- contemptible! and, in a word, so much worse than the abbess of
- _Andoüillets’_ itself--that I was just opening my mouth to give it to
- the devil--when a pert vamping chaise-undertaker, stepping nimbly across
- the street, demanded if Monsieur would have his chaise refitted ----No,
- no, said I, shaking my head sideways --Would Monsieur chuse to sell it?
- rejoined the undertaker. --With all my soul, said I--the iron work is
- worth forty livres--and the glasses worth forty more--and the leather
- you may take to live on.
- What a mine of wealth, quoth I, as he counted me the money, has this
- post-chaise brought me in? And this is my usual method of book-keeping,
- at least with the disasters of life--making a penny of every one of ’em
- as they happen to me----
- ----Do, my dear _Jenny_, tell the world for me, how I behaved under one,
- the most oppressive of its kind, which could befal me as a man, proud as
- he ought to be of his manhood----
- ’Tis enough, saidst thou, coming close up to me, as I stood with my
- garters in my hand, reflecting upon what had _not_ pass’d----’Tis
- enough, _Tristram_, and I am satisfied, saidst thou, whispering these
- words in my ear, **** ** **** *** ******; --**** ** **----any other man
- would have sunk down to the center----
- ----Everything is good for something, quoth I.
- ----I’ll go into _Wales_ for six weeks, and drink goat’s whey--and I’ll
- gain seven years longer life for the accident. For which reason I think
- myself inexcusable, for blaming fortune so often as I have done, for
- pelting me all my life long, like an ungracious duchess, as I call’d
- her, with so many small evils: surely, if I have any cause to be angry
- with her, ’tis that she has not sent me great ones--a score of good
- cursed, bouncing losses, would have been as good as a pension to me.
- ----One of a hundred a year, or so, is all I wish --I would not be at
- the plague of paying land-tax for a larger.
- CHAPTER XXX
- To those who call vexations, VEXATIONS, as knowing what they are, there
- could not be a greater, than to be the best part of a day at _Lyons_,
- the most opulent and flourishing city in _France_, enriched with the
- most fragments of antiquity--and not be able to see it. To be withheld
- upon _any_ account, must be a vexation; but to be withheld _by_ a
- vexation----must certainly be, what philosophy justly calls
- VEXATION
- upon
- VEXATION.
- I had got my two dishes of milk coffee (which by the bye is excellently
- good for a consumption, but you must boil the milk and coffee
- together--otherwise ’tis only coffee and milk)--and as it was no more
- than eight in the morning, and the boat did not go off till noon, I had
- time to see enough of _Lyons_ to tire the patience of all the friends I
- had in the world with it. I will take a walk to the cathedral, said I,
- looking at my list, and see the wonderful mechanism of this great clock
- of _Lippius_ of _Basil_, in the first place----
- Now, of all things in the world, I understand the least of
- mechanism ----I have neither genius, or taste, or fancy--and have a brain
- so entirely unapt for everything of that kind, that I solemnly declare I
- was never yet able to comprehend the principles of motion of a squirrel
- cage, or a common knife-grinder’s wheel--tho’ I have many an hour of my
- life look’d up with great devotion at the one--and stood by with as much
- patience as any christian ever could do, at the other----
- I’ll go see the surprising movements of this great clock, said I, the
- very first thing I do: and then I will pay a visit to the great library
- of the Jesuits, and procure, if possible, a sight of the thirty volumes
- of the general history of _China_, wrote (not in the _Tartarean_, but)
- in the _Chinese_ language, and in the _Chinese_ character too.
- Now I almost know as little of the _Chinese_ language, as I do of the
- mechanism of _Lippius’s_ clock-work; so, why these should have jostled
- themselves into the two first articles of my list ----I leave to the
- curious as a problem of Nature. I own it looks like one of her
- ladyship’s obliquities; and they who court her, are interested in
- finding out her humour as much as I.
- When these curiosities are seen, quoth I, half addressing myself to my
- _valet de place_, who stood behind me----’twill be no hurt if we go to
- the church of St. _Irenæus_, and see the pillar to which _Christ_ was
- tied----and after that, the house where _Pontius Pilate_ lived----’Twas
- at the next town, said the _valet de place_--at _Vienne_; I am glad of
- it, said I, rising briskly from my chair, and walking across the room
- with strides twice as long as my usual pace---- “for so much the sooner
- shall I be at the _Tomb of the two lovers_.”
- What was the cause of this movement, and why I took such long strides in
- uttering this ----I might leave to the curious too; but as no principle
- of clock-work is concerned in it----’twill be as well for the reader if
- I explain it myself.
- CHAPTER XXXI
- O there is a sweet æra in the life of man, when (the brain being tender
- and fibrillous, and more like pap than anything else)----a story read of
- two fond lovers, separated from each other by cruel parents, and by
- still more cruel destiny----
- _Amandus_ ----He
- _Amanda_ ----She----
- each ignorant of the other’s course,
- He----east
- She----west
- _Amandus_ taken captive by the _Turks_, and carried to the emperor of
- _Morocco’s_ court, where the princess of _Morocco_ falling in love with
- him, keeps him twenty years in prison for the love of his _Amanda_.----
- She--(_Amanda_) all the time wandering barefoot, and with dishevell’d
- hair, o’er rocks and mountains, enquiring for _Amandus!_----_Amandus!
- Amandus!_--making every hill and valley to echo back his name----
- _Amandus! Amandus!_
- at every town and city, sitting down forlorn at the gate ----Has
- _Amandus!_--has my _Amandus_ enter’d? ----till, ----going round, and
- round, and round the world----chance unexpected bringing them at the
- same moment of the night, though by different ways, to the gate of
- _Lyons_, their native city, and each in well-known accents calling out
- aloud,
- Is _Amandus_ }
- Is my _Amanda_ } still alive?
- they fly into each other’s arms, and both drop down dead for joy.
- There is a soft æra in every gentle mortal’s life, where such a story
- affords more _pabulum_ to the brain, than all the _Frusts_, and
- _Crusts_, and _Rusts_ of antiquity, which travellers can cook up for it.
- ----’Twas all that stuck on the right side of the cullender in my own,
- of what _Spon_ and others, in their accounts of _Lyons_, had _strained_
- into it; and finding, moreover, in some Itinerary, but in what God
- knows ----That sacred to the fidelity of _Amandus_ and _Amanda_, a tomb
- was built without the gates, where, to this hour, lovers called upon
- them to attest their truths ----I never could get into a scrape of that
- kind in my life, but this _tomb of the lovers_ would, somehow or other,
- come in at the close----nay such a kind of empire had it establish’d
- over me, that I could seldom think or speak of _Lyons_--and sometimes
- not so much as see even a _Lyons-waistcoat_, but this remnant of
- antiquity would present itself to my fancy; and I have often said in my
- wild way of running on----tho’ I fear with some irreverence---- “I
- thought this shrine (neglected as it was) as valuable as that of
- _Mecca_, and so little short, except in wealth, of the _Santa Casa_
- itself, that some time or other, I would go a pilgrimage (though I had
- no other business at _Lyons_) on purpose to pay it a visit.”
- In my list, therefore, of _Videnda_ at _Lyons_, this, tho’ _last_, --was
- not, you see, _least_; so taking a dozen or two of longer strides than
- usual across my room, just whilst it passed my brain, I walked down
- calmly into the _Basse Cour_, in order to sally forth; and having called
- for my bill--as it was uncertain whether I should return to my inn,
- I had paid it----had moreover given the maid ten sous, and was just
- receiving the dernier compliments of Monsieur _Le Blanc_, for a pleasant
- voyage down the _Rhône_----when I was stopped at the gate----
- CHAPTER XXXII
- ----’Twas by a poor ass, who had just turned in with a couple of large
- panniers upon his back, to collect eleemosynary turnip-tops and
- cabbage-leaves; and stood dubious, with his two fore-feet on the inside
- of the threshold, and with his two hinder feet towards the street, as
- not knowing very well whether he was to go in or no.
- Now, ’tis an animal (be in what hurry I may) I cannot bear to
- strike----there is a patient endurance of sufferings, wrote so
- unaffectedly in his looks and carriage, which pleads so mightily for
- him, that it always disarms me; and to that degree, that I do not like
- to speak unkindly to him: on the contrary, meet him where I
- will--whether in town or country--in cart or under panniers--whether in
- liberty or bondage ----I have ever something civil to say to him on my
- part; and as one word begets another (if he has as little to do
- as I) ----I generally fall into conversation with him; and surely never
- is my imagination so busy as in framing his responses from the etchings
- of his countenance--and where those carry me not deep enough----in
- flying from my own heart into his, and seeing what is natural for an ass
- to think--as well as a man, upon the occasion. In truth, it is the only
- creature of all the classes of beings below me, with whom I can do this:
- for parrots, jackdaws, &c. ----I never exchange a word with them----nor
- with the apes, &c., for pretty near the same reason; they act by rote,
- as the others speak by it, and equally make me silent: nay my dog and my
- cat, though I value them both----(and for my dog he would speak if he
- could)--yet somehow or other, they neither of them possess the talents
- for conversation ----I can make nothing of a discourse with them, beyond
- the _proposition_, the _reply_, and _rejoinder_, which terminated my
- father’s and my mother’s conversations, in his beds of justice----and
- those utter’d----there’s an end of the dialogue----
- --But with an ass, I can commune for ever.
- Come, _Honesty!_ said I, ----seeing it was impracticable to pass betwixt
- him and the gate----art thou for coming in, or going out?
- The ass twisted his head round to look up the street----
- Well--replied I--we’ll wait a minute for thy driver:
- ----He turned his head thoughtful about, and looked wistfully the
- opposite way----
- I understand thee perfectly, answered I ----If thou takest a wrong step
- in this affair, he will cudgel thee to death ----Well! a minute is but a
- minute, and if it saves a fellow-creature a drubbing, it shall not be
- set down as ill spent.
- He was eating the stem of an artichoke as this discourse went on, and in
- the little peevish contentions of nature betwixt hunger and
- unsavouriness, had dropt it out of his mouth half a dozen times, and
- pick’d it up again ----God help thee, _Jack!_ said I, thou hast a bitter
- breakfast on’t--and many a bitter day’s labour, --and many a bitter
- blow, I fear, for its wages----’tis all--all bitterness to thee,
- whatever life is to others. ----And now thy mouth, if one knew the truth
- of it, is as bitter, I dare say, as soot--(for he had cast aside the
- stem) and thou hast not a friend perhaps in all this world, that will
- give thee a macaroon. ----In saying this, I pull’d out a paper of ’em,
- which I had just purchased, and gave him one--and at this moment that I
- am telling it, my heart smites me, that there was more of pleasantry in
- the conceit, of seeing _how_ an ass would eat a macaroon----than of
- benevolence in giving him one, which presided in the act.
- When the ass had eaten his macaroon, I press’d him to come in--the poor
- beast was heavy loaded----his legs seem’d to tremble under him----he
- hung rather backwards, and as I pull’d at his halter, it broke short in
- my hand----he look’d up pensive in my face-- “Don’t thrash me with
- it--but if you will, you may” ----If I do, said I, I’ll be d----d.
- The word was but one-half of it pronounced, like the abbess of
- _Andoüillets’_--(so there was no sin in it)--when a person coming in,
- let fall a thundering bastinado upon the poor devil’s crupper, which put
- an end to the ceremony.
- _Out upon it!_
- cried I----but the interjection was equivocal----and, I think, wrong
- placed too--for the end of an osier which had started out from the
- contexture of the ass’s pannier, had caught hold of my breeches pocket,
- as he rush’d by me, and rent it in the most disastrous direction you can
- imagine----so that the
- _Out upon it!_ in my opinion, should have come in here----but this I
- leave to be settled by
- THE
- REVIEWERS
- OF
- MY BREECHES,
- which I have brought over along with me for that purpose.
- CHAPTER XXXIII
- When all was set to rights, I came down stairs again into the _basse
- cour_ with my _valet de place_, in order to sally out towards the tomb
- of the two lovers, &c. --and was a second time stopp’d at the
- gate----not by the ass--but by the person who struck him; and who, by
- that time, had taken possession (as is not uncommon after a defeat) of
- the very spot of ground where the ass stood.
- It was a commissary sent to me from the post-office, with a rescript in
- his hand for the payment of some six livres odd sous.
- Upon what account? said I. ----’Tis upon the part of the king, replied
- the commissary, heaving up both his shoulders----
- ----My good friend, quoth I----as sure as I am I--and you are you----
- ----And who are you? said he. ------Don’t puzzle me; said I.
- CHAPTER XXXIV
- ----But it is an indubitable verity, continued I, addressing myself to
- the commissary, changing only the form of my asseveration----that I owe
- the king of _France_ nothing but my good-will; for he is a very honest
- man, and I wish him all health and pastime in the world----
- _Pardonnez moi_--replied the commissary, you are indebted to him six
- livres four sous, for the next post from hence to St. _Fons_, in your
- route to _Avignon_--which being a post royal, you pay double for the
- horses and postillion--otherwise ’twould have amounted to no more than
- three livres two sous----
- ----But I don’t go by land; said I.
- ----You may if you please; replied the commissary----
- Your most obedient servant----said I, making him a low bow----
- The commissary, with all the sincerity of grave good breeding--made me
- one, as low again. ----I never was more disconcerted with a bow in my
- life.
- ----The devil take the serious character of these people! quoth
- I--(aside) they understand no more of IRONY than this----
- The comparison was standing close by with his panniers--but something
- seal’d up my lips --I could not pronounce the name--
- Sir, said I, collecting myself--it is not my intention to take post----
- --But you may--said he, persisting in his first reply--you may take post
- if you chuse----
- --And I may take salt to my pickled herring, said I, if I chuse----
- --But I do not chuse--
- --But you must pay for it, whether you do or no.
- Aye! for the salt; said I (I know)----
- --And for the post too; added he. Defend me! cried I----
- I travel by water --I am going down the _Rhône_ this very afternoon--my
- baggage is in the boat--and I have actually paid nine livres for my
- passage----
- _C’est tout egal_--’tis all one; said he.
- _Bon Dieu!_ what, pay for the way I go! and for the way I do _not_ go!
- ----_C’est tout egal_; replied the commissary----
- ----The devil it is! said I--but I will go to ten thousand Bastiles
- first----
- _O England! England!_ thou land of liberty, and climate of good sense,
- thou tenderest of mothers--and gentlest of nurses, cried I, kneeling
- upon one knee, as I was beginning my apostrophe.
- When the director of Madam _Le Blanc’s_ conscience coming in at that
- instant, and seeing a person in black, with a face as pale as ashes, at
- his devotions--looking still paler by the contrast and distress of his
- drapery--ask’d, if I stood in want of the aids of the church----
- I go by WATER--said I--and here’s another will be for making me pay for
- going by OIL.
- CHAPTER XXXV
- As I perceived the commissary of the post-office would have his six
- livres four sous, I had nothing else for it, but to say some smart thing
- upon the occasion, worth the money:
- And so I set off thus:----
- ----And pray, Mr. Commissary, by what law of courtesy is a defenceless
- stranger to be used just the reverse from what you use a _Frenchman_ in
- this matter?
- By no means; said he.
- Excuse me; said I--for you have begun, Sir, with first tearing off my
- breeches--and now you want my pocket----
- Whereas--had you first taken my pocket, as you do with your own
- people--and then left me bare a--’d after --I had been a beast to have
- complain’d----
- As it is----
- ----’Tis contrary to the _law of nature_.
- ----’Tis contrary to _reason_.
- ----’Tis contrary to the GOSPEL.
- But not to this----said he--putting a printed paper into my hand,
- PAR LE ROY.
- ------’Tis a pithy prolegomenon, quoth I--and so read on
- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --------
- ----By all which it appears, quoth I, having read it over, a little too
- rapidly, that if a man sets out in a post-chaise from _Paris_--he must
- go on travelling in one, all the days of his life--or pay for it.
- --Excuse me, said the commissary, the spirit of the ordinance is
- this --That if you set out with an intention of running post from _Paris_
- to _Avignon_, &c., you shall not change that intention or mode of
- travelling, without first satisfying the fermiers for two posts further
- than the place you repent at--and ’tis founded, continued he, upon this,
- that the REVENUES are not to fall short through your _fickleness_----
- ----O by heavens! cried I--if fickleness is taxable in _France_--we have
- nothing to do but to make the best peace with you we can----
- AND SO THE PEACE WAS MADE;
- ----And if it is a bad one--as _Tristram Shandy_ laid the corner-stone
- of it--nobody but _Tristram Shandy_ ought to be hanged.
- CHAPTER XXXVI
- Though I was sensible I had said as many clever things to the commissary
- as came to six livres four sous, yet I was determined to note down the
- imposition amongst my remarks before I retired from the place; so
- putting my hand into my coat-pocket for my remarks--(which, by the bye,
- may be a caution to travellers to take a little more care of _their_
- remarks for the future) “my remarks were _stolen_” ----Never did sorry
- traveller make such a pother and racket about his remarks as I did about
- mine, upon the occasion.
- Heaven! earth! sea! fire! cried I, calling in everything to my aid but
- what I should ------My remarks are stolen! --what shall I do? ----Mr.
- Commissary! pray did I drop any remarks, as I stood besides you?------
- You dropp’d a good many very singular ones; replied he ----Pugh! said I,
- those were but a few, not worth above six livres two sous--but these are
- a large parcel ----He shook his head ----Monsieur _Le Blanc!_ Madam _Le
- Blanc!_ did you see any papers of mine? --you maid of the house! run up
- stairs--_François!_ run up after her----
- --I must have my remarks----they were the best remarks, cried I, that
- ever were made--the wisest--the wittiest --What shall I do? --which way
- shall I turn myself?
- _Sancho Pança_, when he lost his ass’s FURNITURE, did not exclaim more
- bitterly.
- CHAPTER XXXVII
- When the first transport was over, and the registers of the brain were
- beginning to get a little out of the confusion into which this jumble of
- cross accidents had cast them--it then presently occurr’d to me, that I
- had left my remarks in the pocket of the chaise--and that in selling my
- chaise, I had sold my remarks along with it, to the chaise-vamper.
- I leave this void space that the reader may swear
- into it any oath that he is most accustomed to ----For my own part, if
- ever I swore a _whole_ oath into a vacancy in my life, I think it was
- into that----*********, said I--and so my remarks through _France_,
- which were as full of wit, as an egg is full of meat, and as well worth
- four hundred guineas, as the said egg is worth a penny--have I been
- selling here to a chaise-vamper--for four _Louis d’Ors_--and giving him
- a post-chaise (by heaven) worth six into the bargain; had it been to
- _Dodsley_, or _Becket_, or any creditable bookseller, who was either
- leaving off business, and wanted a post-chaise--or who was beginning
- it--and wanted my remarks, and two or three guineas along with them
- --I could have borne it----but to a chaise-vamper! --shew me to him this
- moment, _François_, --said I --The valet de place put on his hat, and
- led the way--and I pull’d off mine, as I pass’d the commissary, and
- followed him.
- CHAPTER XXXVIII
- When we arrived at the Chaise-vamper’s House, Both the House and the
- shop were shut up; it was the eighth of _September_, the nativity of the
- blessed Virgin _Mary_, mother of God--
- ----Tantarra-ra-tan-tivi----the whole world was gone out a
- May-poling--frisking here--capering there----nobody cared a button for
- me or my remarks; so I sat me down upon a bench by the door,
- philosophating upon my condition: by a better fate than usually attends
- me, I had not waited half an hour, when the mistress came in to take the
- papilliotes from off her hair, before she went to the May-poles----
- The _French_ women, by the bye, love May-poles, _à la folie_--that is,
- as much as their matins----give ’em but a May-pole, whether in _May_,
- _June_, _July_, or _September_--they never count the times----down it
- goes----’tis meat, drink, washing, and lodging to ’em----and had we but
- the policy, an’ please your worships (as wood is a little scarce in
- _France_), to send them but plenty of May-poles----
- The women would set them up; and when they had done, they would dance
- round them (and the men for company) till they were all blind.
- The wife of the chaise-vamper stepp’d in, I told you, to take the
- papilliotes from off her hair----the toilet stands still for no
- man----so she jerk’d off her cap, to begin with them as she open’d the
- door, in doing which, one of them fell upon the ground ----I instantly
- saw it was my own writing----
- O Seigneur! cried I--you have got all my remarks upon your head, Madam!
- ----_J’en suis bien mortifiée_, said she----’tis well, thinks I, they
- have stuck there--for could they have gone deeper, they would have made
- such confusion in a _French_ woman’s noddle --She had better have gone
- with it unfrizled, to the day of eternity.
- _Tenez_--said she--so without any idea of the nature of my suffering,
- she took them from her curls, and put them gravely one by one into my
- hat----one was twisted this way----another twisted that----ey! by my
- faith; and when they are published, quoth I,----
- They will be worse twisted still.
- CHAPTER XXXIX
- And now for _Lippius’s_ clock! said I, with the air of a man, who had
- got thro’ all his difficulties----nothing can prevent us seeing that,
- and the _Chinese_ history, &c., except the time, said _François_----for
- ’tis almost eleven --Then we must speed the faster, said I, striding it
- away to the cathedral.
- I cannot say, in my heart, that it gave me any concern in being told by
- one of the minor canons, as I was entering the west door, --That
- _Lippius’s_ great clock was all out of joints, and had not gone for some
- years ----It will give me the more time, thought I, to peruse the
- _Chinese_ history; and besides I shall be able to give the world a
- better account of the clock in its decay, than I could have done in its
- flourishing condition----
- ----And so away I posted to the college of the Jesuits.
- Now it is with the project of getting a peep at the history of _China_
- in _Chinese_ characters--as with many others I could mention, which
- strike the fancy only at a distance; for as I came nearer and nearer to
- the point--my blood cool’d--the freak gradually went off, till at length
- I would not have given a cherrystone to have it gratified ------The truth
- was, my time was short, and my heart was at the Tomb of the Lovers ----I
- wish to God, said I, as I got the rapper in my hand, that the key of the
- library may be but lost; it fell out as well------
- _For all the JESUITS had got the cholic_--and to that degree, as never
- was known in the memory of the oldest practitioner.
- CHAPTER XL
- As I knew the geography of the Tomb of the Lovers, as well as if I had
- lived twenty years in _Lyons_, namely, that it was upon the turning of
- my right hand, just without the gate, leading to the _Fauxbourg de
- Vaise_ ----I dispatched _François_ to the boat, that I might pay the
- homage I so long ow’d it, without a witness of my weakness --I walk’d
- with all imaginable joy towards the place----when I saw the gate which
- intercepted the tomb, my heart glowed within me----
- --Tender and faithful spirits! cried I, addressing myself to _Amandus_
- and _Amanda_--long--long have I tarried to drop this tear upon your
- tomb ------I come ------I come------
- When I came--there was no tomb to drop it upon.
- What would I have given for my uncle _Toby_, to have whistled
- Lillabullero!
- CHAPTER XLI
- No matter how, or in what mood--but I flew from the tomb of the
- lovers--or rather I did not fly _from_ it--(for there was no such thing
- existing) and just got time enough to the boat to save my passage; --and
- ere I had sailed a hundred yards, the _Rhône_ and the _Saôn_ met
- together, and carried me down merrily betwixt them.
- But I have described this voyage down the _Rhône_, before I made it----
- ----So now I am at _Avignon_, and as there is nothing to see but the old
- house, in which the duke of _Ormond_ resided, and nothing to stop me but
- a short remark upon the place, in three minutes you will see me crossing
- the bridge upon a mule, with _François_ upon a horse with my portmanteau
- behind him, and the owner of both, striding the way before us, with a
- long gun upon his shoulder, and a sword under his arm, lest peradventure
- we should run away with his cattle. Had you seen my breeches in entering
- _Avignon_, ----Though you’d have seen them better, I think, as I
- mounted--you would not have thought the precaution amiss, or found in
- your heart to have taken it in dudgeon; for my own part, I took it most
- kindly; and determined to make him a present of them, when we got to the
- end of our journey, for the trouble they had put him to, of arming
- himself at all points against them.
- Before I go further, let me get rid of my remark upon _Avignon_, which
- is this: That I think it wrong, merely because a man’s hat has been
- blown off his head by chance the first night he comes to _Avignon_,
- ----that he should therefore say, “_Avignon_ is more subject to high
- winds than any town in all _France_:” for which reason I laid no stress
- upon the accident till I had enquired of the master of the inn about it,
- who telling me seriously it was so----and hearing, moreover, the
- windiness of _Avignon_ spoke of in the country about as a proverb ----I
- set it down, merely to ask the learned what can be the cause----the
- consequence I saw--for they are all Dukes, Marquisses, and Counts,
- there----the duce a Baron, in all _Avignon_----so that there is scarce
- any talking to them on a windy day.
- Prithee, friend, said I, take hold of my mule for a moment----for I
- wanted to pull off one of my jack-boots, which hurt my heel--the man was
- standing quite idle at the door of the inn, and as I had taken it into
- my head, he was someway concerned about the house or stable, I put the
- bridle into his hand--so begun with the boot: --when I had finished the
- affair, I turned about to take the mule from the man, and thank him----
- ------But _Monsieur le Marquis_ had walked in----
- CHAPTER XLII
- I had now the whole south of _France_, from the banks of the _Rhône_ to
- those of the _Garonne_, to traverse upon my mule at my own leisure--_at
- my own leisure_----for I had left Death, the Lord knows----and He
- only--how far behind me---- “I have followed many a man thro’ _France_,
- quoth he--but never at this mettlesome rate.” ----Still he followed,
- ----and still I fled him----but I fled him chearfully----still he
- pursued----but, like one who pursued his prey without hope----as he
- lagg’d, every step he lost, soften’d his looks----why should I fly him
- at this rate?
- So notwithstanding all the commissary of the post-office had said,
- I changed the _mode_ of my travelling once more; and, after so
- precipitate and rattling a course as I had run, I flattered my fancy
- with thinking of my mule, and that I should traverse the rich plains of
- _Languedoc_ upon his back, as slowly as foot could fall.
- There is nothing more pleasing to a traveller----or more terrible to
- travel-writers, than a large rich plain; especially if it is without
- great rivers or bridges; and presents nothing to the eye, but one
- unvaried picture of plenty: for after they have once told you, that ’tis
- delicious! or delightful! (as the case happens)--that the soil was
- grateful, and that nature pours out all her abundance, &c. . . . they
- have then a large plain upon their hands, which they know not what to do
- with--and which is of little or no use to them but to carry them to some
- town; and that town, perhaps of little more, but a new place to start
- from to the next plain----and so on.
- --This is most terrible work; judge if I don’t manage my plains better.
- CHAPTER XLIII
- I had not gone above two leagues and a half, before the man with his gun
- began to look at his priming.
- I had three several times loiter’d _terribly_ behind; half a mile at
- least every time; once, in deep conference with a drum-maker, who was
- making drums for the fairs of _Baucaira_ and _Tarascone_ --I did not
- understand the principles----
- The second time, I cannot so properly say, I stopp’d----for meeting a
- couple of _Franciscans_ straitened more for time than myself, and not
- being able to get to the bottom of what I was about ----I had turn’d back
- with them----
- The third, was an affair of trade with a gossip, for a hand-basket of
- _Provence_ figs for four sous; this would have been transacted at once;
- but for a case of conscience at the close of it; for when the figs were
- paid for, it turn’d out, that there were two dozen of eggs cover’d over
- with vine-leaves at the bottom of the basket--as I had no intention of
- buying eggs --I made no sort of claim of them--as for the space they had
- occupied--what signified it? I had figs enow for my money----
- --But it was my intention to have the basket--it was the gossip’s
- intention to keep it, without which, she could do nothing with her
- eggs----and unless I had the basket, I could do as little with my figs,
- which were too ripe already, and most of ’em burst at the side: this
- brought on a short contention, which terminated in sundry proposals,
- what we should both do----
- ----How we disposed of our eggs and figs, I defy you, or the Devil
- himself, had he not been there (which I am persuaded he was), to form
- the least probable conjecture: You will read the whole of it------not
- this year, for I am hastening to the story of my uncle _Toby’s_
- amours--but you will read it in the collection of those which have arose
- out of the journey across this plain--and which, therefore, I call my
- PLAIN STORIES.
- How far my pen has been fatigued, like those of other travellers, in
- this journey of it, over so barren a track--the world must judge--but
- the traces of it, which are now all set o’ vibrating together this
- moment, tell me ’tis the most fruitful and busy period of my life; for
- as I had made no convention with my man with the gun, as to time--by
- stopping and talking to every soul I met, who was not in a full
- trot--joining all parties before me--waiting for every soul
- behind--hailing all those who were coming through cross-roads--arresting
- all kinds of beggars, pilgrims, fiddlers, friars----not passing by a
- woman in a mulberry-tree without commending her legs, and tempting her
- into conversation with a pinch of snuff ------In short, by seizing every
- handle, of what size or shape soever, which chance held out to me in
- this journey --I turned my _plain_ into a _city_ --I was always in
- company, and with great variety too; and as my mule loved society as
- much as myself, and had some proposals always on his part to offer to
- every beast he met --I am confident we could have passed through
- _Pall-Mall_, or St. _James’s_-Street for a month together, with fewer
- adventures--and seen less of human nature.
- O! there is that sprightly frankness, which at once unpins every plait
- of a _Languedocian’s_ dress--that whatever is beneath it, it looks so
- like the simplicity which poets sing of in better days --I will delude
- my fancy, and believe it is so.
- ’Twas in the road betwixt _Nismes_ and _Lunel_, where there is the best
- _Muscatto_ wine in all _France_, and which by the bye belongs to the
- honest canons of MONTPELLIER--and foul befal the man who has drank it at
- their table, who grudges them a drop of it.
- ----The sun was set--they had done their work; the nymphs had tied up
- their hair afresh--and the swains were preparing for a carousal----my
- mule made a dead point----’Tis the fife and tabourin, said I ----I’m
- frighten’d to death, quoth he ----They are running at the ring of
- pleasure, said I, giving him a prick ----By saint _Boogar_, and all the
- saints at the backside of the door of purgatory, said he--(making the
- same resolution with the abbesse of _Andoüillets_) I’ll not go a step
- further------’Tis very well, sir, said I ----I never will argue a point
- with one of your family, as long as I live; so leaping off his back, and
- kicking off one boot into this ditch, and t’other into that --I’ll take
- a dance, said I--so stay you here.
- A sun-burnt daughter of Labour rose up from the groupe to meet me, as I
- advanced towards them; her hair, which was a dark chesnut approaching
- rather to a black, was tied up in a knot, all but a single tress.
- We want a cavalier, said she, holding out both her hands, as if to offer
- them --And a cavalier ye shall have; said I, taking hold of both of them.
- Hadst thou, _Nannette_, been array’d like a dutchesse!
- ----But that cursed slit in thy petticoat!
- _Nannette_ cared not for it.
- We could not have done without you, said she, letting go one hand, with
- self-taught politeness, leading me up with the other.
- A lame youth, whom _Apollo_ had recompensed with a pipe, and to which he
- had added a tabourin of his own accord, ran sweetly over the prelude, as
- he sat upon the bank ----Tie me up this tress instantly, said _Nannette_,
- putting a piece of string into my hand --It taught me to forget I was a
- stranger ----The whole knot fell down ----We had been seven years
- acquainted.
- The youth struck the note upon the tabourin--his pipe followed, and off
- we bounded---- “the duce take that slit!”
- The sister of the youth, who had stolen her voice from heaven, sung
- alternately with her brother----’twas a _Gascoigne_ roundelay.
- VIVA LA JOIA!
- FIDON LA TRISTESSA!
- The nymphs join’d in unison, and their swains an octave below them----
- I would have given a crown to have it sew’d up--_Nannette_ would not
- have given a SOUS--_Viva la joia!_ was in her lips--_Viva la joia!_ was
- in her eyes. A transient spark of amity shot across the space betwixt
- us ----She look’d amiable! ----Why could I not live, and end my days
- thus? Just Disposer of our joys and sorrows, cried I, why could not a
- man sit down in the lap of content here----and dance, and sing, and say
- his prayers, and go to heaven with this nut-brown maid? Capriciously did
- she bend her head on one side, and dance up insidious ----Then ’tis time
- to dance off, quoth I; so changing only partners and tunes, I danced it
- away from _Lunel_ to _Montpellier_----from thence to _Pesçnas_,
- _Beziers_ ----I danced it along through _Narbonne_, _Carcasson_, and
- _Castle Naudairy_, till at last I danced myself into _Perdrillo’s_
- pavillion, where pulling out a paper of black lines, that I might go on
- straight forwards, without digression or parenthesis, in my uncle
- _Toby’s_ amours----
- I begun thus----
- BOOK VIII
- CHAPTER I
- ----But softly----for in these sportive plains, and under this genial
- sun, where at this instant all flesh is running out piping, fiddling,
- and dancing to the vintage, and every step that’s taken, the judgment is
- surprised by the imagination, I defy, notwithstanding all that has been
- said upon _straight lines_[8.1] in sundry pages of my book --I defy the
- best cabbage planter that ever existed, whether he plants backwards or
- forwards, it makes little difference in the account (except that he will
- have more to answer for in the one case than in the other) --I defy him
- to go on coolly, critically, and canonically, planting his cabbages one
- by one, in straight lines, and stoical distances, especially if slits in
- petticoats are unsew’d up--without ever and anon straddling out, or
- sidling into some bastardly digression ----In _Freeze-land_, _Fog-land_,
- and some other lands I wot of--it may be done----
- But in this clear climate of fantasy and perspiration, where every idea,
- sensible and insensible, gets vent--in this land, my dear _Eugenius_--in
- this fertile land of chivalry and romance, where I now sit, unskrewing
- my ink-horn to write my uncle _Toby’s_ amours, and with all the meanders
- of JULIA’S track in quest of her DIEGO, in full view of my study
- window--if thou comest not and takest me by the hand----
- What a work it is likely to turn out!
- Let us begin it.
- [Footnote 8.1: Vid. pp. 347-348.] [[Book VI, Chapter XL]]
- CHAPTER II
- It is with LOVE as with CUCKOLDOM----
- But now I am talking of beginning a book, and have long had a thing upon
- my mind to be imparted to the reader, which, if not imparted now, can
- never be imparted to him as long as I live (whereas the COMPARISON may
- be imparted to him any hour in the day) ----I’ll just mention it, and
- begin in good earnest.
- The thing is this.
- That of all the several ways of beginning a book which are now in
- practice throughout the known world, I am confident my own way of doing
- it is the best ----I’m sure it is the most religious----for I begin with
- writing the first sentence----and trusting to Almighty God for the
- second.
- ’Twould cure an author for ever of the fuss and folly of opening his
- street-door, and calling in his neighbours and friends, and kinsfolk,
- with the devil and all his imps, with their hammers and engines, &c.,
- only to observe how one sentence of mine follows another, and how the
- plan follows the whole.
- I wish you saw me half starting out of my chair, with what confidence,
- as I grasp the elbow of it, I look up----catching the idea, even
- sometimes before it half way reaches me----
- I believe in my conscience I intercept many a thought which heaven
- intended for another man.
- _Pope_ and his Portrait[8.2] are fools to me----no martyr is ever so
- full of faith or fire ----I wish I could say of good works too----but I
- have no
- Zeal or Anger----or
- Anger or Zeal----
- And till gods and men agree together to call it by the same name----the
- errantest TARTUFFE, in science--in politics--or in religion, shall never
- kindle a spark within me, or have a worse word, or a more unkind
- greeting, than what he will read in the next chapter.
- [Footnote 8.2: Vid. _Pope’s_ Portrait.]
- CHAPTER III
- ----Bonjour! ----good morrow! ----so you have got your cloak on betimes!
- ----but ’tis a cold morning, and you judge the matter rightly----’tis
- better to be well mounted, than go o’ foot----and obstructions in the
- glands are dangerous ----And how goes it with thy concubine--thy wife,
- --and thy little ones o’ both sides? and when did you hear from the old
- gentleman and lady--your sister, aunt, uncle, and cousins ----I hope they
- have got better of their colds, coughs, claps, toothaches, fevers,
- stranguries, sciaticas, swellings, and sore eyes.
- ----What a devil of an apothecary! to take so much blood--give such a
- vile purge--puke--poultice--plaister--night-draught--clyster--blister?
- ----And why so many grains of calomel? santa Maria! and such a dose of
- opium! periclitating, pardi! the whole family of ye, from head to
- tail ----By my great-aunt _Dinah’s_ old black velvet mask! I think there
- was no occasion for it.
- Now this being a little bald about the chin, by frequently putting off
- and on, _before_ she was got with child by the coachman--not one of our
- family would wear it after. To cover the MASK afresh, was more than the
- mask was worth----and to wear a mask which was bald, or which could be
- half seen through, was as bad as having no mask at all----
- This is the reason, may it please your reverences, that in all our
- numerous family, for these four generations, we count no more than one
- archbishop, a _Welch_ judge, some three or four aldermen, and a single
- mountebank----
- In the sixteenth century, we boast of no less than a dozen alchymists.
- CHAPTER IV
- “It is with Love as with Cuckoldom”----the suffering party is at least
- the _third_, but generally the last in the house who knows anything
- about the matter: this comes, as all the world knows, from having half a
- dozen words for one thing; and so long, as what in this vessel of the
- human frame, is _Love_--may be _Hatred_, in that----_Sentiment_ half a
- yard higher----and _Nonsense_----------no, Madam, --not there ----I mean
- at the part I am now pointing to with my forefinger----how can we help
- ourselves?
- Of all mortal, and immortal men too, if you please, who ever
- soliloquized upon this mystic subject, my uncle _Toby_ was the worst
- fitted, to have push’d his researches, thro’ such a contention of
- feelings; and he had infallibly let them all run on, as we do worse
- matters, to see what they would turn out----had not _Bridget’s_
- pre-notification of them to _Susannah_, and _Susannah’s_ repeated
- manifestoes thereupon to all the world, made it necessary for my uncle
- _Toby_ to look into the affair.
- CHAPTER V
- Why weavers, gardeners, and gladiators--or a man with a pined leg
- (proceeding from some ailment in the _foot_)--should ever have had some
- tender nymph breaking her heart in secret for them, are points well and
- duly settled and accounted for by ancient and modern physiologists.
- A water-drinker, provided he is a profess’d one, and does it without
- fraud or covin, is precisely in the same predicament: not that, at first
- sight, there is any consequence, or show of logic in it, “That a rill of
- cold water dribbling through my inward parts, should light up a torch in
- my _Jenny’s_--”
- ----The proposition does not strike one; on the contrary, it seems to
- run opposite to the natural workings of causes and effects----
- But it shews the weakness and imbecility of human reason.
- ----“And in perfect good health with it?”
- --The most perfect, --Madam, that friendship herself could wish me----
- “And drink nothing! --nothing but water?”
- --Impetuous fluid! the moment thou pressest against the flood-gates of
- the brain----see how they give way!----
- In swims CURIOSITY, beckoning to her damsels to follow--they dive into
- the centre of the current----
- FANCY sits musing upon the bank, and with her eyes following the stream,
- turns straws and bulrushes into masts and bowsprits ----And DESIRE, with
- vest held up to the knee in one hand, snatches at them, as they swim by
- her with the other----
- O ye water-drinkers! is it then by this delusive fountain, that ye
- have so often governed and turn’d this world about like a mill-wheel--
- grinding the faces of the impotent--bepowdering their ribs--bepeppering
- their noses, and changing sometimes even the very frame and face of
- nature----
- If I was you, quoth _Yorick_, I would drink more water, _Eugenius_
- --And, if I was you, _Yorick_, replied _Eugenius_, so would I.
- Which shews they had both read _Longinus_----
- For my own part, I am resolved never to read any book but my own, as
- long as I live.
- CHAPTER VI
- I wish my uncle _Toby_ had been a water-drinker; for then the thing had
- been accounted for, That the first moment Widow _Wadman_ saw him, she
- felt something stirring within her in his favour --Something!
- --something.
- --Something perhaps more than friendship--less than love--something--no
- matter what--no matter where --I would not give a single hair off my
- mule’s tail, and be obliged to pluck it off myself (indeed the villain
- has not many to spare, and is not a little vicious into the bargain), to
- be let by your worships into the secret----
- But the truth is, my uncle _Toby_ was not a water-drinker; he drank it
- neither pure nor mix’d, or any how, or any where, except fortuitously
- upon some advanced posts, where better liquor was not to be had----or
- during the time he was under cure; when the surgeon telling him it would
- extend the fibres, and bring them sooner into contact----my uncle _Toby_
- drank it for quietness sake.
- Now as all the world knows, that no effect in nature can be produced
- without a cause, and as it is as well known, that my uncle _Toby_ was
- neither a weaver--a gardener, or a gladiator----unless as a captain, you
- will needs have him one--but then he was only a captain of foot--and
- besides, the whole is an equivocation ----There is nothing left for us to
- suppose, but that my uncle _Toby’s_ leg----but that will avail us little
- in the present hypothesis, unless it had proceeded from some ailment _in
- the foot_--whereas his leg was not emaciated from any disorder in his
- foot--for my uncle _Toby’s_ leg was not emaciated at all. It was a
- little stiff and awkward, from a total disuse of it, for the three years
- he lay confined at my father’s house in town; but it was plump and
- muscular, and in all other respects as good and promising a leg as the
- other.
- I declare, I do not recollect any one opinion or passage of my life,
- where my understanding was more at a loss to make ends meet, and torture
- the chapter I had been writing, to the service of the chapter following
- it, than in the present case: one would think I took a pleasure in
- running into difficulties of this kind, merely to make fresh experiments
- of getting out of ’em ----Inconsiderate soul that thou art! What! are not
- the unavoidable distresses with which, as an author and a man, thou art
- hemm’d in on every side of thee----are they, _Tristram_, not sufficient,
- but thou must entangle thyself still more?
- Is it not enough that thou art in debt, and that thou hast ten
- cart-loads of thy fifth and sixth volumes[8.3] still--still unsold, and
- art almost at thy wit’s ends, how to get them off thy hands?
- To this hour art thou not tormented with the vile asthma that thou
- gattest in skating against the wind in _Flanders?_ and is it but two
- months ago, that in a fit of laughter, on seeing a cardinal make water
- like a quirister (with both hands) thou brakest a vessel in thy lungs,
- whereby, in two hours, thou lost as many quarts of blood; and hadst thou
- lost as much more, did not the faculty tell thee------it would have
- amounted to a gallon?------
- [Footnote 8.3: Alluding to the first edition.]
- CHAPTER VII
- ----But for heaven’s sake, let us not talk of quarts or gallons----let
- us take the story straight before us; it is so nice and intricate a one,
- it will scarce bear the transposition of a single tittle; and, somehow
- or other, you have got me thrust almost into the middle of it--
- --I beg we may take more care.
- CHAPTER VIII
- My uncle _Toby_ and the corporal had posted down with so much heat and
- precipitation, to take possession of the spot of ground we have so often
- spoke of, in order to open their campaign as early as the rest of the
- allies; that they had forgot one of the most necessary articles of the
- whole affair; it was neither a pioneer’s spade, a pickax, or a shovel--
- --It was a bed to lie on: so that as _Shandy-Hall_ was at that time
- unfurnished; and the little inn where poor _Le Fever_ died, not yet
- built; my uncle _Toby_ was constrained to accept of a bed at Mrs.
- _Wadman’s_, for a night or two, till corporal _Trim_ (who to the
- character of an excellent valet, groom, cook, sempster, surgeon, and
- engineer, superadded that of an excellent upholsterer too), with the
- help of a carpenter and a couple of taylors, constructed one in my uncle
- _Toby’s_ house.
- A daughter of _Eve_, for such was widow _Wadman_, and ’tis all the
- character I intend to give of her--
- --“_That she was a perfect woman_--” had better be fifty leagues off--or
- in her warm bed--or playing with a case-knife--or anything you
- please--than make a man the object of her attention, when the house and
- all the furniture is her own.
- There is nothing in it out of doors and in broad day-light, where a
- woman has a power, physically speaking, of viewing a man in more lights
- than one--but here, for her soul, she can see him in no light without
- mixing something of her own goods and chattels along with him----till by
- reiterated acts of such combination, he gets foisted into her
- inventory----
- --And then good night.
- But this is not matter of SYSTEM; for I have delivered that above----nor
- is it matter of BREVIARY----for I make no man’s creed but my own----nor
- matter of FACT----at least that I know of; but ’tis matter copulative
- and introductory to what follows.
- CHAPTER IX
- I do not speak it with regard to the coarseness or cleanness of them--or
- the strength of their gussets----but pray do not night-shifts differ
- from day-shifts as much in this particular, as in anything else in the
- world; That they so far exceed the others in length, that when you are
- laid down in them, they fall almost as much below the feet, as the
- day-shifts fall short of them?
- Widow _Wadman’s_ night-shifts (as was the mode I suppose in King
- _William’s_ and Queen _Anne’s_ reigns) were cut however after this
- fashion; and if the fashion is changed (for in _Italy_ they are come to
- nothing)----so much the worse for the public; they were two _Flemish_
- ells and a half in length; so that allowing a moderate woman two ells,
- she had half an ell to spare, to do what she would with.
- Now from one little indulgence gained after another, in the many bleak
- and decemberly nights of a seven years widowhood, things had insensibly
- come to this pass, and for the two last years had got establish’d into
- one of the ordinances of the bed-chamber --That as soon as Mrs. _Wadman_
- was put to bed, and had got her legs stretched down to the bottom of it,
- of which she always gave _Bridget_ notice--_Bridget_, with all suitable
- decorum, having first open’d the bed-cloaths at the feet, took hold of
- the half-ell of cloth we are speaking of, and having gently, and with
- both her hands, drawn it downwards to its furthest extension, and then
- contracted it again side-long by four or five even plaits, she took a
- large corking pin out of her sleeve, and with the point directed towards
- her, pinn’d the plaits all fast together a little above the hem; which
- done, she tuck’d all in tight at the feet, and wish’d her mistress a
- good night.
- This was constant, and without any other variation than this; that on
- shivering and tempestuous nights, when _Bridget_ untuck’d the feet of
- the bed, &c., to do this----she consulted no thermometer but that of her
- own passions; and so performed it standing--kneeling--or squatting,
- according to the different degrees of faith, hope, and charity, she was
- in, and bore towards her mistress that night. In every other respect,
- the _etiquette_ was sacred, and might have vied with the most mechanical
- one of the most inflexible bed-chamber in _Christendom_.
- The first night, as soon as the corporal had conducted my uncle _Toby_
- upstairs, which was about ten ----Mrs. _Wadman_ threw herself into her
- arm-chair, and crossing her left knee with her right, which formed a
- resting-place for her elbow, she reclin’d her cheek upon the palm of her
- hand, and leaning forwards ruminated till midnight upon both sides of
- the question.
- The second night she went to her bureau, and having ordered _Bridget_ to
- bring her up a couple of fresh candles and leave them upon the table,
- she took out her marriage-settlement, and read it over with great
- devotion: and the third night (which was the last of my uncle _Toby’s_
- stay) when _Bridget_ had pull’d down the night-shift, and was assaying
- to stick in the corking pin----
- ----With a kick of both heels at once, but at the same time the most
- natural kick that could be kick’d in her situation----for supposing * *
- * * * * * * * to be the sun in its meridian, it was a north-east
- kick----she kick’d the pin out of her fingers----the _etiquette_ which
- hung upon it, down----down it fell to the ground, and was shiver’d into
- a thousand atoms.
- From all which it was plain that widow _Wadman_ was in love with my
- uncle _Toby_.
- CHAPTER X
- My uncle _Toby’s_ head at that time was full of other matters, so that
- it was not till the demolition of _Dunkirk_, when all the other
- civilities of _Europe_ were settled, that he found leisure to return
- this.
- This made an armistice (that is, speaking with regard to my uncle
- _Toby_--but with respect to Mrs. _Wadman_, a vacancy)--of almost eleven
- years. But in all cases of this nature, as it is the second blow, happen
- at what distance of time it will, which makes the fray ----I chuse for
- that reason to call these the amours of my uncle _Toby_ with Mrs.
- _Wadman_, rather than the amours of Mrs. _Wadman_ with my uncle _Toby_.
- This is not a distinction without a difference.
- It is not like the affair of _an old hat cock’d_----and _a cock’d old
- hat_, about which your reverences have so often been at odds with one
- another----but there is a difference here in the nature of things----
- And let me tell you, gentry, a wide one too.
- CHAPTER XI
- Now as widow _Wadman_ did love my uncle _Toby_----and my uncle _Toby_
- did not love widow _Wadman_, there was nothing for widow _Wadman_ to do,
- but to go on and love my uncle _Toby_----or let it alone.
- Widow _Wadman_ would do neither the one or the other.
- ----Gracious heaven! ----but I forget I am a little of her temper
- myself; for whenever it so falls out, which it sometimes does about the
- equinoxes, that an earthly goddess is so much this, and that, and
- t’other, that I cannot eat my breakfast for her----and that she careth
- not three halfpence whether I eat my breakfast or no----
- ----Curse on her! and so I send her to _Tartary_, and from _Tartary_ to
- _Terra del Fuogo_, and so on to the devil: in short, there is not an
- infernal nitch where I do not take her divinityship and stick it.
- But as the heart is tender, and the passions in these tides ebb and flow
- ten times in a minute, I instantly bring her back again; and as I do all
- things in extremes, I place her in the very centre of the milky-way----
- Brightest of stars! thou wilt shed thy influence upon some one------
- ----The duce take her and her influence too----for at that word I lose
- all patience----much good may it do him! ----By all that is hirsute and
- gashly! I cry, taking off my furr’d cap, and twisting it round my
- finger ----I would not give sixpence for a dozen such!
- ----But ’tis an excellent cap too (putting it upon my head, and pressing
- it close to my ears)--and warm--and soft; especially if you stroke it
- the right way--but alas! that will never be my luck----(so here my
- philosophy is shipwreck’d again).
- ----No; I shall never have a finger in the pye (so here I break my
- metaphor)----
- Crust and Crumb
- Inside and out
- Top and bottom ----I detest it, I hate it, I repudiate it ----I’m sick
- at the sight of it----
- ’Tis all pepper,
- garlick,
- staragen,
- salt, and
- devil’s dung----by the great arch-cook of cooks, who does
- nothing, I think, from morning to night, but sit down by the fire-side
- and invent inflammatory dishes for us, I would not touch it for the
- world----
- ----_O Tristram! Tristram!_ cried _Jenny_.
- _O Jenny! Jenny!_ replied I, and so went on with the twelfth chapter.
- CHAPTER XII
- ----“Not touch it for the world,” did I say----
- Lord, how I have heated my imagination with this metaphor!
- CHAPTER XIII
- Which shows, let your reverences and worships say what you will of it
- (for as for _thinking_----all who do think--think pretty much alike both
- upon it and other matters) ----Love is certainly, at least alphabetically
- speaking, one of the most
- A gitating
- B ewitching
- C onfounded
- D evilish affairs of life--the most
- E xtravagant
- F utilitous
- G alligaskinish
- H andy-dandyish
- I racundulous (there is no K to it) and
- L yrical of all human passions: at the same time, the most
- M isgiving
- N innyhammering
- O bstipating
- P ragmatical
- S tridulous
- R idiculous--though by the bye the R should have gone first --But in
- short ’tis of such a nature, as my father once told my uncle _Toby_ upon
- the close of a long dissertation upon the subject---- “You can scarce,”
- said he, “combine two ideas together upon it, brother _Toby_, without an
- hypallage” ----What’s that? cried my uncle _Toby_.
- The cart before the horse, replied my father----
- ----And what is he to do there? cried my uncle _Toby_----
- Nothing, quoth my father, but to get in----or let it alone.
- Now widow _Wadman_, as I told you before, would do neither the one or
- the other.
- She stood however ready harnessed and caparisoned at all points, to
- watch accidents.
- CHAPTER XIV
- The Fates, who certainly all foreknew of these amours of widow _Wadman_
- and my uncle _Toby_, had, from the first creation of matter and motion
- (and with more courtesy than they usually do things of this kind),
- established such a chain of causes and effects hanging so fast to one
- another, that it was scarce possible for my uncle _Toby_ to have dwelt
- in any other house in the world, or to have occupied any other garden in
- _Christendom_, but the very house and garden which join’d and laid
- parallel to Mrs. _Wadman’s_; this, with the advantage of a thickset
- arbour in Mrs. _Wadman’s_ garden, but planted in the hedge-row of my
- uncle _Toby’s_, put all the occasions into her hands which
- Love-militancy wanted; she could observe my uncle _Toby’s_ motions, and
- was mistress likewise of his councils of war; and as his unsuspecting
- heart had given leave to the corporal, through the mediation of
- _Bridget_, to make her a wicker-gate of communication to enlarge her
- walks, it enabled her to carry on her approaches to the very door of the
- sentry-box; and sometimes out of gratitude, to make an attack, and
- endeavour to blow my uncle _Toby_ up in the very sentry-box itself.
- CHAPTER XV
- It is a great pity----but ’tis certain from every day’s observation of
- man, that he may be set on fire like a candle, at either end--provided
- there is a sufficient wick standing out; if there is not--there’s an end
- of the affair; and if there is--by lighting it at the bottom, as the
- flame in that case has the misfortune generally to put out
- itself--there’s an end of the affair again.
- For my part, could I always have the ordering of it which way I would be
- burnt myself--for I cannot bear the thoughts of being burnt like a
- beast --I would oblige a housewife constantly to light me at the top; for
- then I should burn down decently to the socket; that is, from my head to
- my heart, from my heart to my liver, from my liver to my bowels, and so
- on by the meseraick veins and arteries, through all the turns and
- lateral insertions of the intestines and their tunicles to the blind
- gut----
- ----I beseech you, doctor _Slop_, quoth my uncle _Toby_, interrupting
- him as he mentioned the _blind gut_, in a discourse with my father the
- night my mother was brought to bed of me ----I beseech you, quoth my
- uncle _Toby_, to tell me which is the blind gut; for, old as I am, I vow
- I do not know to this day where it lies.
- The _blind gut_, answered doctor _Slop_, lies betwixt the _Ilion_ and
- _Colon_----
- In a man? said my father.
- ----’Tis precisely the same, cried doctor _Slop_, in a woman.----
- That’s more than I know; quoth my father.
- CHAPTER XVI
- ----And so to make sure of both systems, Mrs. _Wadman_ predetermined to
- light my uncle _Toby_ neither at this end or that; but, like a
- prodigal’s candle, to light him, if possible, at both ends at once.
- Now, through all the lumber rooms of military furniture, including both
- of horse and foot, from the great arsenal of _Venice_ to the _Tower_ of
- _London_ (exclusive), if Mrs. _Wadman_ had been rummaging for seven
- years together, and with _Bridget_ to help her, she could not have found
- any one _blind_ or _mantelet_ so fit for her purpose, as that which the
- expediency of my uncle _Toby’s_ affairs had fix’d up ready to her hands.
- I believe I have not told you----but I don’t know----possibly I
- have----be it as it will, ’tis one of the number of those many things,
- which a man had better do over again, than dispute about it --That
- whatever town or fortress the corporal was at work upon, during the
- course of their campaign, my uncle _Toby_ always took care, on the
- inside of his sentry-box, which was towards his left hand, to have a
- plan of the place, fasten’d up with two or three pins at the top, but
- loose at the bottom, for the conveniency of holding it up to the eye,
- &c. . . . as occasions required; so that when an attack was resolved
- upon, Mrs. _Wadman_ had nothing more to do, when she had got advanced to
- the door of the sentry-box, but to extend her right hand; and edging in
- her left foot at the same movement, to take hold of the map or plan, or
- upright, or whatever it was, and with out-stretched neck meeting it half
- way, --to advance it towards her; on which my uncle _Toby’s_ passions
- were sure to catch fire----for he would instantly take hold of the other
- corner of the map in his left hand, and with the end of his pipe in the
- other, begin an explanation.
- When the attack was advanced to this point; ----the world will naturally
- enter into the reasons of Mrs. _Wadman’s_ next stroke of
- generalship----which was, to take my uncle _Toby’s_ tobacco-pipe out of
- his hand as soon as she possibly could; which, under one pretence or
- other, but generally that of pointing more distinctly at some redoubt or
- breastwork in the map, she would effect before my uncle _Toby_ (poor
- soul!) had well march’d above half a dozen toises with it.
- --It obliged my uncle _Toby_ to make use of his forefinger.
- The difference it made in the attack was this; That in going upon it, as
- in the first case, with the end of her forefinger against the end of my
- uncle _Toby’s_ tobacco-pipe, she might have travelled with it, along the
- lines, from _Dan_ to _Beersheba_, had my uncle _Toby’s_ lines reach’d so
- far, without any effect: For as there was no arterial or vital heat in
- the end of the tobacco-pipe, it could excite no sentiment----it could
- neither give fire by pulsation----or receive it by sympathy----’twas
- nothing but smoke.
- Whereas, in following my uncle _Toby’s_ forefinger with hers, close
- thro’ all the little turns and indentings of his works--pressing
- sometimes against the side of it----then treading upon its nail----then
- tripping it up----then touching it here----then there, and so on----it
- set something at least in motion.
- This, tho’ slight skirmishing, and at a distance from the main body, yet
- drew on the rest; for here, the map usually falling with the back of it,
- close to the side of the sentry-box, my uncle _Toby_, in the simplicity
- of his soul, would lay his hand flat upon it, in order to go on with his
- explanation; and Mrs. _Wadman_, by a manœuvre as quick as thought, would
- as certainly place her’s close beside it; this at once opened a
- communication, large enough for any sentiment to pass or repass, which a
- person skill’d in the elementary and practical part of love-making, has
- occasion for----
- By bringing up her forefinger parallel (as before) to my uncle
- _Toby’s_----it unavoidably brought the thumb into action----and the
- forefinger and thumb being once engaged, as naturally brought in the
- whole hand. Thine, dear uncle _Toby!_ was never now in its right
- place ----Mrs. _Wadman_ had it ever to take up, or, with the gentlest
- pushings, protrusions, and equivocal compressions, that a hand to be
- removed is capable of receiving----to get it press’d a hair breadth of
- one side out of her way.
- Whilst this was doing, how could she forget to make him sensible, that
- it was her leg (and no one’s else) at the bottom of the sentry-box,
- which slightly press’d against the calf of his ----So that my uncle
- _Toby_ being thus attacked and sore push’d on both his wings----was it a
- wonder, if now and then, it put his centre into disorder?----
- ----The duce take it! said my uncle _Toby_.
- CHAPTER XVII
- These attacks of Mrs. _Wadman_, you will readily conceive to be of
- different kinds; varying from each other, like the attacks which history
- is full of, and from the same reasons. A general looker-on would scarce
- allow them to be attacks at all----or if he did, would confound them all
- together----but I write not to them: it will be time enough to be a
- little more exact in my descriptions of them, as I come up to them,
- which will not be for some chapters; having nothing more to add in this,
- but that in a bundle of original papers and drawings which my father
- took care to roll up by themselves, there is a plan of _Bouchain_ in
- perfect preservation (and shall be kept so, whilst I have power to
- preserve anything), upon the lower corner of which, on the right hand
- side, there is still remaining the marks of a snuffy finger and thumb,
- which there is all the reason in the world to imagine, were Mrs.
- _Wadman’s_; for the opposite side of the margin, which I suppose to have
- been my uncle _Toby’s_, is absolutely clean: This seems an authenticated
- record of one of these attacks; for there are vestigia of the two
- punctures partly grown up, but still visible on the opposite corner of
- the map, which are unquestionably the very holes, through which it has
- been pricked up in the sentry-box----
- By all that is priestly! I value this precious relick, with its
- _stigmata_ and _pricks_, more than all the relicks of the _Romish_
- church----always excepting, when I am writing upon these matters, the
- pricks which entered the flesh of St. _Radagunda_ in the desert, which
- in your road from FESSE to CLUNY, the nuns of that name will shew you
- for love.
- CHAPTER XVIII
- I think, an’ please your honour, quoth _Trim_, the fortifications are
- quite destroyed----and the bason is upon a level with the mole ----I
- think so too; replied my uncle _Toby_ with a sigh half suppress’d----but
- step into the parlour, _Trim_, for the stipulation----it lies upon the
- table.
- It has lain there these six weeks, replied the corporal, till this very
- morning that the old woman kindled the fire with it--
- ----Then, said my uncle _Toby_, there is no further occasion for our
- services. The more, an’ please your honour, the pity, said the corporal;
- in uttering which he cast his spade into the wheel-barrow, which was
- beside him, with an air the most expressive of disconsolation that can
- be imagined, and was heavily turning about to look for his pickax, his
- pioneer’s shovel, his picquets, and other little military stores, in
- order to carry them off the field----when a heigh-ho! from the
- sentry-box, which being made of thin slit deal, reverberated the sound
- more sorrowfully to his ear, forbad him.
- ----No; said the corporal to himself, I’ll do it before his honour rises
- to-morrow morning; so taking his spade out of the wheel-barrow again,
- with a little earth in it, as if to level something at the foot of the
- glacis----but with a real intent to approach nearer to his master, in
- order to divert him----he loosen’d a sod or two----pared their edges
- with his spade, and having given them a gentle blow or two with the back
- of it, he sat himself down close by my uncle _Toby’s_ feet, and began as
- follows.
- CHAPTER XIX
- It was a thousand pities----though I believe, an’ please your honour,
- I am going to say but a foolish kind of a thing for a soldier----
- A soldier, cried my uncle _Toby_, interrupting the corporal, is no more
- exempt from saying a foolish thing, _Trim_, than a man of letters ----But
- not so often, an’ please your honour, replied the corporal ----My uncle
- _Toby_ gave a nod.
- It was a thousand pities then, said the corporal, casting his eye upon
- _Dunkirk_, and the mole, as _Servius Sulpicius_, in returning out of
- _Asia_ (when he sailed from _Ægina_ towards _Megara_), did upon
- _Corinth_ and _Pyreus_----
- --“It was a thousand pities, an’ please your honour, to destroy these
- works----and a thousand pities to have let them stood.”----
- ----Thou art right, _Trim_, in both cases; said my uncle _Toby_.
- ----This, continued the corporal, is the reason, that from the beginning
- of their demolition to the end ----I have never once whistled, or sung,
- or laugh’d, or cry’d, or talk’d of past done deeds, or told your honour
- one story good or bad----
- ----Thou hast many excellencies, _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_, and I
- hold it not the least of them, as thou happenest to be a story-teller,
- that of the number thou hast told me, either to amuse me in my painful
- hours, or divert me in my grave ones--thou hast seldom told me a bad
- one----
- ----Because, an’ please your honour, except one of a _King of Bohemia
- and his seven castles_, --they are all true; for they are about
- myself----
- I do not like the subject the worse, _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_, on
- that score: But prithee what is this story? thou hast excited my
- curiosity.
- I’ll tell it your honour, quoth the corporal, directly --Provided, said
- my uncle _Toby_, looking earnestly towards _Dunkirk_ and the mole
- again----provided it is not a merry one; to such, _Trim_, a man should
- ever bring one half of the entertainment along with him; and the
- disposition I am in at present would wrong both thee, _Trim_, and thy
- story ----It is not a merry one by any means, replied the corporal --Nor
- would I have it altogether a grave one, added my uncle _Toby_ ----It is
- neither the one nor the other, replied the corporal, but will suit your
- honour exactly ----Then I’ll thank thee for it with all my heart, cried
- my uncle _Toby_; so prithee begin it, _Trim_.
- The corporal made his reverence; and though it is not so easy a matter
- as the world imagines, to pull off a lank _Montero_-cap with grace----or
- a whit less difficult, in my conceptions, when a man is sitting squat
- upon the ground, to make a bow so teeming with respect as the corporal
- was wont; yet by suffering the palm of his right hand, which was towards
- his master, to slip backwards upon the grass, a little beyond his body,
- in order to allow it the greater sweep----and by an unforced
- compression, at the same time, of his cap with the thumb and the two
- forefingers of his left, by which the diameter of the cap became
- reduced, so that it might be said, rather to be insensibly
- squeez’d--than pull’d off with a flatus----the corporal acquitted
- himself of both in a better manner than the posture of his affairs
- promised; and having hemmed twice, to find in what key his story would
- best go, and best suit his master’s humour, --he exchanged a single look
- of kindness with him, and set off thus.
- THE STORY OF THE KING OF BOHEMIA AND HIS SEVEN CASTLES
- There was a certain king of Bo - - he------
- As the corporal was entering the confines of _Bohemia_, my uncle _Toby_
- obliged him to halt for a single moment; he had set out bare-headed,
- having, since he pull’d off his _Montero_-cap in the latter end of the
- last chapter, left it lying beside him on the ground.
- ----The eye of Goodness espieth all things----so that before the
- corporal had well got through the first five words of his story, had my
- uncle _Toby_ twice touch’d his _Montero_-cap with the end of his cane,
- interrogatively----as much as to say, Why don’t you put it on, _Trim?_
- _Trim_ took it up with the most respectful slowness, and casting a
- glance of humiliation as he did it, upon the embroidery of the
- fore-part, which being dismally tarnish’d and fray’d moreover in some of
- the principal leaves and boldest parts of the pattern, he lay’d it down
- again between his two feet, in order to moralise upon the subject.
- ----’Tis every word of it but too true, cried my uncle _Toby_, that thou
- art about to observe----
- “_Nothing in this world, Trim, is made to last for ever._”
- ----But when tokens, dear _Tom_, of thy love and remembrance wear out,
- said _Trim_, what shall we say?
- There is no occasion, _Trim_, quoth my uncle _Toby_, to say anything
- else; and was a man to puzzle his brains till Doom’s day, I believe,
- _Trim_, it would be impossible.
- The corporal, perceiving my uncle _Toby_ was in the right, and that it
- would be in vain for the wit of man to think of extracting a purer moral
- from his cap, without further attempting it, he put it on; and passing
- his hand across his forehead to rub out a pensive wrinkle, which the
- text and the doctrine between them had engender’d, he return’d, with the
- same look and tone of voice, to his story of the king of _Bohemia_ and
- his seven castles.
- THE STORY OF THE KING OF BOHEMIA AND HIS SEVEN CASTLES, CONTINUED
- There was a certain king of _Bohemia_, but in whose reign, except his
- own, I am not able to inform your honour----
- I do not desire it of thee, _Trim_, by any means, cried my uncle _Toby_.
- ----It was a little before the time, an’ please your honour, when giants
- were beginning to leave off breeding: --but in what year of our Lord
- that was----
- I would not give a halfpenny to know, said my uncle _Toby_.
- ----Only, an’ please your honour, it makes a story look the better in
- the face----
- ----’Tis thy own, _Trim_, so ornament it after thy own fashion; and take
- any date, continued my uncle _Toby_, looking pleasantly upon him--take
- any date in the whole world thou chusest, and put it to--thou art
- heartily welcome----
- The corporal bowed; for of every century, and of every year of that
- century, from the first creation of the world down to _Noah’s_ flood;
- and from _Noah’s_ flood to the birth of _Abraham_; through all the
- pilgrimages of the patriarchs, to the departure of the _Israelites_ out
- of _Egypt_----and throughout all the Dynasties, Olympiads, Urbeconditas,
- and other memorable epochas of the different nations of the world, down
- to the coming of Christ, and from thence to the very moment in which the
- corporal was telling his story----had my uncle _Toby_ subjected this
- vast empire of time and all its abysses at his feet; but as MODESTY
- scarce touches with a finger what LIBERALITY offers her with both hands
- open--the corporal contented himself with the very _worst year_ of the
- whole bunch; which, to prevent your honours of the Majority and
- Minority from tearing the very flesh off your bones in contestation,
- ‘Whether that year is not always the last cast-year of the last
- cast-almanack’ ----I tell you plainly it was; but from a different
- reason than you wot of----
- ----It was the year next him----which being, the year of our Lord
- seventeen hundred and twelve, when the Duke of _Ormond_ was playing the
- devil in _Flanders_----the corporal took it, and set out with it afresh
- on his expedition to _Bohemia_.
- THE STORY OF THE KING OF BOHEMIA AND HIS SEVEN CASTLES, CONTINUED
- In the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and twelve, there
- was, an’ please your honour----
- ----To tell thee truly, _Trim_, quoth my uncle _Toby_, any other date
- would have pleased me much better, not only on account of the sad stain
- upon our history that year, in marching off our troops, and refusing to
- cover the siege of _Quesnoi_, though _Fagel_ was carrying on the works
- with such incredible vigour--but likewise on the score, _Trim_, of thy
- own story; because if there are--and which, from what thou hast dropt,
- I partly suspect to be the fact--if there are giants in it----
- There is but one, an’ please your honour----
- ----’Tis as bad as twenty, replied my uncle _Toby_----thou should’st
- have carried him back some seven or eight hundred years out of harm’s
- way, both of critics and other people: and therefore I would advise
- thee, if ever thou tellest it again----
- ----If I live, an’ please your honour, but once to get through it,
- I will never tell it again, quoth _Trim_, either to man, woman, or
- child ----Poo--poo! said my uncle _Toby_--but with accents of such sweet
- encouragement did he utter it, that the corporal went on with his story
- with more alacrity than ever.
- THE STORY OF THE KING OF BOHEMIA AND HIS SEVEN CASTLES, CONTINUED
- There was, an’ please your honour, said the corporal, raising his voice
- and rubbing the palms of his two hands cheerily together as he begun,
- a certain king of _Bohemia_----
- ----Leave out the date entirely, _Trim_, quoth my uncle _Toby_, leaning
- forwards, and laying his hand gently upon the corporal’s shoulder to
- temper the interruption--leave it out entirely, _Trim_; a story passes
- very well without these niceties, unless one is pretty sure of
- ’em ----Sure of ’em! said the corporal, shaking his head----
- Right; answered my uncle _Toby_, it is not easy, _Trim_, for one, bred
- up as thou and I have been to arms, who seldom looks further forward
- than to the end of his musket, or backwards beyond his knapsack, to know
- much about this matter ----God bless your honour! said the corporal, won
- by the _manner_ of my uncle _Toby’s_ reasoning, as much as by the
- reasoning itself, he has something else to do; if not on action, or a
- march, or upon duty in his garrison--he has his firelock, an’ please
- your honour, to furbish--his accoutrements to take care of--his
- regimentals to mend--himself to shave and keep clean, so as to appear
- always like what he is upon the parade; what business, added the
- corporal triumphantly, has a soldier, an’ please your honour, to know
- anything at all of _geography?_
- ----Thou would’st have said _chronology_, _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_;
- for as for geography, ’tis of absolute use to him; he must be acquainted
- intimately with every country and its boundaries where his profession
- carries him; he should know every town and city, and village and hamlet,
- with the canals, the roads, and hollow ways which lead up to them; there
- is not a river or a rivulet he passes, _Trim_, but he should be able at
- first sight to tell thee what is its name--in what mountains it takes
- its rise--what is its course--how far it is navigable--where
- fordable--where not; he should know the fertility of every valley, as
- well as the hind who ploughs it; and be able to describe, or, if it is
- required, to give thee an exact map of all the plains and defiles, the
- forts, the acclivities, the woods and morasses, thro’ and by which his
- army is to march; he should know their produce, their plants, their
- minerals, their waters, their animals, their seasons, their climates,
- their heats and cold, their inhabitants, their customs, their language,
- their policy, and even their religion.
- Is it else to be conceived, corporal, continued my uncle _Toby_, rising
- up in his sentry-box, as he began to warm in this part of his
- discourse--how _Marlborough_ could have marched his army from the banks
- of the _Maes_ to _Belburg_; from _Belburg_ to _Kerpenord_--(here the
- corporal could sit no longer) from _Kerpenord_, _Trim_, to _Kalsaken_;
- from _Kalsaken_ to _Newdorf_; from _Newdorf_ to _Landenbourg_; from
- _Landenbourg_ to _Mildenheim_; from _Mildenheim_ to _Elchingen_; from
- _Elchingen_ to _Gingen_; from _Gingen_ to _Balmerchoffen_; from
- _Balmerchoffen_ to _Skellenburg_, where he broke in upon the enemy’s
- works; forced his passage over the _Danube_; cross’d the _Lech_--push’d
- on his troops into the heart of the empire, marching at the head of them
- through _Fribourg_, _Hokenwert_, and _Schonevelt_, to the plains of
- _Blenheim_ and _Hochstet?_ ----Great as he was, corporal, he could not
- have advanced a step, or made one single day’s march without the aids of
- _Geography_. ----As for _Chronology_, I own, _Trim_, continued my uncle
- _Toby_, sitting down again coolly in his sentry-box, that of all others,
- it seems a science which the soldier might best spare, was it not for
- the lights which that science must one day give him, in determining the
- invention of powder; the furious execution of which, renversing
- everything like thunder before it, has become a new æra to us of
- military improvements, changing so totally the nature of attacks and
- defences both by sea and land, and awakening so much art and skill in
- doing it, that the world cannot be too exact in ascertaining the precise
- time of its discovery, or too inquisitive in knowing what great man was
- the discoverer, and what occasions gave birth to it.
- I am far from controverting, continued my uncle _Toby_, what historians
- agree in, that in the year of our Lord 1380, under the reign of
- _Wencelaus_, son of _Charles_ the Fourth----a certain priest, whose name
- was _Schwartz_, show’d the use of powder to the _Venetians_, in their
- wars against the _Genoese_; but ’tis certain he was not the first;
- because if we are to believe Don _Pedro_, the bishop of _Leon_ --How came
- priests and bishops, an’ please your honour, to trouble their heads so
- much about gunpowder? God knows, said my uncle _Toby_----his providence
- brings good out of everything--and he avers, in his chronicle of King
- _Alphonsus_, who reduced _Toledo_, That in the year 1343, which was full
- thirty-seven years before that time, the secret of powder was well
- known, and employed with success, both by Moors and Christians, not only
- in their sea-combats, at that period, but in many of their most
- memorable sieges in _Spain_ and _Barbary_ --And all the world knows, that
- Friar _Bacon_ had wrote expressly about it, and had generously given the
- world a receipt to make it by, above a hundred and fifty years before
- even _Schwartz_ was born --And that the _Chinese_, added my uncle _Toby_,
- embarrass us, and all accounts of it, still more, by boasting of the
- invention some hundreds of years even before him----
- --They are a pack of liars, I believe, cried _Trim_----
- ----They are somehow or other deceived, said my uncle _Toby_, in this
- matter, as is plain to me from the present miserable state of military
- architecture amongst them; which consists of nothing more than a fossé
- with a brick wall without flanks--and for what they gave us as a bastion
- at each angle of it, ’tis so barbarously constructed, that it looks for
- all the world ------------Like one of my seven castles, an’ please your
- honour, quoth _Trim_.
- My uncle _Toby_, tho’ in the utmost distress for a comparison, most
- courteously refused _Trim’s_ offer--till _Trim_ telling him, he had half
- a dozen more in _Bohemia_, which he knew not how to get off his
- hands----my uncle _Toby_ was so touch’d with the pleasantry of heart of
- the corporal----that he discontinued his dissertation upon
- gunpowder----and begged the corporal forthwith to go on with his story
- of the King of _Bohemia_ and his seven castles.
- THE STORY OF THE KING OF BOHEMIA AND HIS SEVEN CASTLES, CONTINUED
- This _unfortunate_ King of _Bohemia_, said _Trim_, ----Was he
- unfortunate, then? cried my uncle _Toby_, for he had been so wrapt up in
- his dissertation upon gunpowder, and other military affairs, that tho’
- he had desired the corporal to go on, yet the many interruptions he had
- given, dwelt not so strong upon his fancy as to account for the
- epithet ----Was he _unfortunate_, then, _Trim?_ said my uncle _Toby_,
- pathetically ----The corporal, wishing first the _word_ and all its
- synonimas at the devil, forthwith began to run back in his mind, the
- principal events in the King of _Bohemia’s_ story; from every one of
- which, it appearing that he was the most fortunate man that ever existed
- in the world----it put the corporal to a stand: for not caring to
- retract his epithet----and less to explain it----and least of all, to
- twist his tale (like men of lore) to serve a system----he looked up in
- my uncle _Toby’s_ face for assistance----but seeing it was the very
- thing my uncle _Toby_ sat in expectation of himself----after a hum and a
- haw, he went on------
- The King of _Bohemia_, an’ please your honour, replied the corporal, was
- _unfortunate_, as thus ----That taking great pleasure and delight in
- navigation and all sort of sea affairs----and there _happening_
- throughout the whole kingdom of _Bohemia_, to be no seaport town
- whatever----
- How the duce should there--_Trim?_ cried my uncle _Toby_; for _Bohemia_
- being totally inland, it could have happen’d no otherwise ----It might,
- said _Trim_, if it had pleased God----
- My uncle _Toby_ never spoke of the being and natural attributes of God,
- but with diffidence and hesitation----
- ----I believe not, replied my uncle _Toby_, after some pause----for
- being inland, as I said, and having _Silesia_ and _Moravia_ to the east;
- _Lusatia_ and _Upper Saxony_ to the north; _Franconia_ to the west;
- _Bavaria_ to the south; _Bohemia_ could not have been propell’d to the
- sea without ceasing to be _Bohemia_----nor could the sea, on the other
- hand, have come up to _Bohemia_, without overflowing a great part of
- _Germany_, and destroying millions of unfortunate inhabitants who could
- make no defence against it ----Scandalous! cried _Trim_ --Which would
- bespeak, added my uncle _Toby_, mildly, such a want of compassion in him
- who is the father of it----that, I think, _Trim_----the thing could have
- happen’d no way.
- The corporal made the bow of unfeigned conviction; and went on.
- Now the King of _Bohemia_ with his queen and courtiers _happening_ one
- fine summer’s evening to walk out ----Aye! there the word _happening_ is
- right, _Trim_, cried my uncle _Toby_; for the King of _Bohemia_ and his
- queen might have walk’d out or let it alone: ----’twas a matter of
- contingency, which might happen, or not, just as chance ordered it.
- King _William_ was of an opinion, an’ please your honour, quoth _Trim_,
- that everything was predestined for us in this world; insomuch, that he
- would often say to his soldiers, that “every ball had its billet.” He
- was a great man, said my uncle _Toby_ ----And I believe, continued
- _Trim_, to this day, that the shot which disabled me at the battle of
- _Landen_, was pointed at my knee for no other purpose, but to take me
- out of his service, and place me in your honour’s, where I should be
- taken so much better care of in my old age ----It shall never, _Trim_,
- be construed otherwise, said my uncle _Toby_.
- The heart, both of the master and the man, were alike subject to sudden
- overflowings; ----a short silence ensued.
- Besides, said the corporal, resuming the discourse--but in a gayer
- accent----if it had not been for that single shot, I had never, an’
- please your honour, been in love------
- So, thou wast once in love, _Trim!_ said my uncle _Toby_, smiling----
- Souse! replied the corporal--over head and ears! an’ please your honour.
- Prithee when? where? --and how came it to pass? ----I never heard one
- word of it before; quoth my uncle _Toby_: ----I dare say, answered
- _Trim_, that every drummer and serjeant’s son in the regiment knew of
- it ----It’s high time I should----said my uncle _Toby_.
- Your honour remembers with concern, said the corporal, the total rout
- and confusion of our camp and army at the affair of _Landen_; every one
- was left to shift for himself; and if it had not been for the regiments
- of _Wyndham_, _Lumley_, and _Galway_, which covered the retreat over the
- bridge of _Neerspeeken_, the king himself could scarce have gained
- it----he was press’d hard, as your honour knows, on every side of
- him----
- Gallant mortal! cried my uncle _Toby_, caught up with enthusiasm--this
- moment, now that all is lost, I see him galloping across me, corporal,
- to the left, to bring up the remains of the English horse along with him
- to support the right, and tear the laurel from _Luxembourg’s_ brows, if
- yet ’tis possible ----I see him with the knot of his scarfe just shot
- off, infusing fresh spirits into poor _Galway’s_ regiment--riding along
- the line--then wheeling about, and charging _Conti_ at the head of
- it ----Brave! brave, by heaven! cried my uncle _Toby_--he deserves a
- crown ----As richly, as a thief a halter; shouted _Trim_.
- My uncle _Toby_ knew the corporal’s loyalty; --otherwise the comparison
- was not at all to his mind----it did not altogether strike the
- corporal’s fancy when he had made it----but it could not be
- recall’d----so he had nothing to do, but proceed.
- As the number of wounded was prodigious, and no one had time to think of
- anything but his own safety --Though _Talmash_, said my uncle _Toby_,
- brought off the foot with great prudence ----But I was left upon the
- field, said the corporal. Thou wast so; poor fellow! replied my uncle
- _Toby_ ----So that it was noon the next day, continued the corporal,
- before I was exchanged, and put into a cart with thirteen or fourteen
- more, in order to be convey’d to our hospital.
- There is no part of the body, an’ please your honour, where a wound
- occasions more intolerable anguish than upon the knee----
- Except the groin; said my uncle _Toby_. An’ please your honour, replied
- the corporal, the knee, in my opinion, must certainly be the most acute,
- there being so many tendons and what-d’ye-call-’ems all about it.
- It is for that reason, quoth my uncle _Toby_, that the groin is
- infinitely more sensible----there being not only as many tendons and
- what-d’ye-call-’ems (for I know their names as little as thou
- dost)----about it----but moreover * * *----
- Mrs. _Wadman_, who had been all the time in her arbour--instantly
- stopp’d her breath--unpinn’d her mob at the chin, and stood up upon one
- leg----
- The dispute was maintained with amicable and equal force betwixt my
- uncle _Toby_ and _Trim_ for some time; till _Trim_ at length
- recollecting that he had often cried at his master’s sufferings, but
- never shed a tear at his own--was for giving up the point, which my
- uncle _Toby_ would not allow----’Tis a proof of nothing, _Trim_, said
- he, but the generosity of thy temper----
- So that whether the pain of a wound in the groin (cæteris paribus) is
- greater than the pain of a wound in the knee----or
- Whether the pain of a wound in the knee is not greater than the pain of
- a wound in the groin----are points which to this day remain unsettled.
- CHAPTER XX
- The anguish of my knee, continued the corporal, was excessive in itself;
- and the uneasiness of the cart, with the roughness of the roads, which
- were terribly cut up--making bad still worse--every step was death to
- me: so that with the loss of blood, and the want of care-taking of me,
- and a fever I felt coming on besides----(Poor soul! said my uncle
- _Toby_)----all together, an’ please your honour, was more than I could
- sustain.
- I was telling my sufferings to a young woman at a peasant’s house, where
- our cart, which was the last of the line, had halted; they had help’d me
- in, and the young woman had taken a cordial out of her pocket and
- dropp’d it upon some sugar, and seeing it had cheer’d me, she had given
- it me a second and a third time ----So I was telling her, an’ please your
- honour, the anguish I was in, and was saying it was so intolerable to
- me, that I had much rather lie down upon the bed, turning my face
- towards one which was in the corner of the room--and die, than go
- on----when, upon her attempting to lead me to it, I fainted away in her
- arms. She was a good soul! as your honour, said the corporal, wiping his
- eyes, will hear.
- I thought _love_ had been a joyous thing, quoth my uncle _Toby_.
- ’Tis the most serious thing, an’ please your honour (sometimes), that is
- in the world.
- By the persuasion of the young woman, continued the corporal, the cart
- with the wounded men set off without me: she had assured them I should
- expire immediately if I was put into the cart. So when I came to
- myself ----I found myself in a still quiet cottage, with no one but the
- young woman, and the peasant and his wife. I was laid across the bed in
- the corner of the room, with my wounded leg upon a chair, and the young
- woman beside me, holding the corner of her handkerchief dipp’d in
- vinegar to my nose with one hand, and rubbing my temples with the other.
- I took her at first for the daughter of the peasant (for it was no
- inn)--so had offer’d her a little purse with eighteen florins, which my
- poor brother _Tom_ (here _Trim_ wip’d his eyes) had sent me as a token,
- by a recruit, just before he set out for _Lisbon_.----
- ----I never told your honour that piteous story yet----here _Trim_ wiped
- his eyes a third time.
- The young woman call’d the old man and his wife into the room, to show
- them the money, in order to gain me credit for a bed and what little
- necessaries I should want, till I should be in a condition to be got to
- the hospital ----Come then! said she, tying up the little purse --I’ll
- be your banker--but as that office alone will not keep me employ’d, I’ll
- be your nurse too.
- I thought by her manner of speaking this, as well as by her dress, which
- I then began to consider more attentively----that the young woman could
- not be the daughter of the peasant.
- She was in black down to her toes, with her hair conceal’d under a
- cambric border, laid close to her forehead: she was one of those kind of
- nuns, an’ please your honour, of which, your honour knows, there are a
- good many in _Flanders_, which they let go loose ----By thy description,
- _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_, I dare say she was a young _Beguine_, of
- which there are none to be found anywhere but in the _Spanish
- Netherlands_--except at _Amsterdam_----they differ from nuns in this,
- that they can quit their cloister if they choose to marry; they visit
- and take care of the sick by profession ----I had rather, for my own
- part, they did it out of good-nature.
- ----She often told me, quoth _Trim_, she did it for the love of
- Christ --I did not like it. ----I believe, _Trim_, we are both wrong,
- said my uncle _Toby_--we’ll ask Mr. _Yorick_ about it to-night at my
- brother _Shandy’s_----so put me in mind; added my uncle _Toby_.
- The young _Beguine_, continued the corporal, had scarce given herself
- time to tell me “she would be my nurse,” when she hastily turned about
- to begin the office of one, and prepare something for me----and in a
- short time--though I thought it a long one--she came back with flannels,
- &c. &c., and having fomented my knee soundly for a couple of hours, &c.,
- and made me a thin bason of gruel for my supper--she wish’d me rest, and
- promised to be with me early in the morning. ----She wished me, an’
- please your honour, what was not to be had. My fever ran very high that
- night--her figure made sad disturbance within me --I was every moment
- cutting the world in two--to give her half of it--and every moment was I
- crying, That I had nothing but a knapsack and eighteen florins to share
- with her ----The whole night long was the fair _Beguine_, like an angel,
- close by my bedside, holding back the curtain and offering me
- cordials--and I was only awakened from my dream by her coming there at
- the hour promised, and giving them in reality. In truth, she was scarce
- ever from me; and so accustomed was I to receive life from her hands,
- that my heart sickened, and I lost colour when she left the room: and
- yet, continued the corporal (making one of the strangest reflections
- upon it in the world)----
- ----“_It was not love_”----for during the three weeks she was almost
- constantly with me, fomenting my knee with her hand, night and day --I
- can honestly say, an’ please your honour--that * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * * * * * once.
- That was very odd, _Trim_, quoth my uncle _Toby_.
- I think so too--said Mrs. _Wadman_.
- It never did, said the corporal.
- CHAPTER XXI
- ----But ’tis no marvel, continued the corporal--seeing my uncle _Toby_
- musing upon it--for Love, an’ please your honour, is exactly like war,
- in this; that a soldier, though he has escaped three weeks complete o’
- _Saturday_ night, --may nevertheless be shot through his heart on
- _Sunday_ morning----_It happened so here_, an’ please your honour, with
- this difference only--that it was on _Sunday_ in the afternoon, when I
- fell in love all at once with a sisserara ----It burst upon me, an’
- please your honour, like a bomb----scarce giving me time to say, “God
- bless me.”
- I thought, _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_, a man never fell in love so
- very suddenly.
- Yes, an’ please your honour, if he is in the way of it----replied
- _Trim_.
- I prithee, quoth my uncle _Toby_, inform me how this matter happened.
- ----With all pleasure, said the corporal, making a bow.
- CHAPTER XXII
- I had escaped, continued the corporal, all that time from falling in
- love, and had gone on to the end of the chapter, had it not been
- predestined otherwise----there is no resisting our fate.
- It was on a _Sunday_, in the afternoon, as I told your honour.
- The old man and his wife had walked out----
- Everything was still and hush as midnight about the house----
- There was not so much as a duck or a duckling about the yard----
- ----When the fair _Beguine_ came in to see me.
- My wound was then in a fair way of doing well----the inflammation had
- been gone off for some time, but it was succeeded with an itching both
- above and below my knee, so insufferable, that I had not shut my eyes
- the whole night for it.
- Let me see it, said she, kneeling down upon the ground parallel to my
- knee, and laying her hand upon the part below it----it only wants
- rubbing a little, said the _Beguine_; so covering it with the
- bed-clothes, she began with the forefinger of her right hand to rub
- under my knee, guiding her forefinger backwards and forwards by the edge
- of the _flannel_ which kept on the dressing.
- In five or six minutes I felt slightly the end of her second finger--and
- presently it was laid flat with the other, and she continued rubbing in
- that way round and round for a good while; it then came into my head,
- that I should fall in love --I blush’d when I saw how white a hand she
- had --I shall never, an’ please your honour, behold another hand so
- white whilst I live----
- ----Not in that place; said my uncle _Toby_----
- Though it was the most serious despair in nature to the corporal--he
- could not forbear smiling.
- The young _Beguine_, continued the corporal, perceiving it was of great
- service to me--from rubbing for some time, with two fingers--proceeded
- to rub at length, with three--till by little and little she brought down
- the fourth, and then rubb’d with her whole hand: I will never say
- another word, an’ please your honour, upon hands again--but it was
- softer than sattin--
- ----Prithee, _Trim_, commend it as much as thou wilt, said my uncle
- _Toby_; I shall hear thy story with the more delight ----The corporal
- thank’d his master most unfeignedly; but having nothing to say upon the
- _Beguine’s_ hand but the same over again----he proceeded to the effects
- of it.
- The fair _Beguine_, said the corporal, continued rubbing with her whole
- hand under my knee--till I fear’d her zeal would weary her---- “I would
- do a thousand times more,” said she, “for the love of Christ” ----In
- saying which, she pass’d her hand across the flannel, to the part above
- my knee, which I had equally complain’d of, and rubb’d it also.
- I perceived, then, I was beginning to be in love----
- As she continued rub-rub-rubbing --I felt it spread from under her hand,
- an’ please your honour, to every part of my frame.----
- The more she rubb’d, and the longer strokes she took----the more the
- fire kindled in my veins----till at length, by two or three strokes
- longer than the rest----my passion rose to the highest pitch ----I seiz’d
- her hand----
- ----And then thou clapped’st it to thy lips, _Trim_, said my uncle
- _Toby_----and madest a speech.
- Whether the corporal’s amour terminated precisely in the way my uncle
- _Toby_ described it, is not material; it is enough that it contained in
- it the essence of all the love romances which ever have been wrote since
- the beginning of the world.
- CHAPTER XXIII
- As soon as the corporal had finished the story of his amour--or rather
- my uncle _Toby_ for him --Mrs. _Wadman_ silently sallied forth from her
- arbour, replaced the pin in her mob, pass’d the wicker-gate, and
- advanced slowly towards my uncle _Toby’s_ sentry-box: the disposition
- which _Trim_ had made in my uncle _Toby’s_ mind, was too favourable a
- crisis to be let slipp’d----
- ----The attack was determin’d upon: it was facilitated still more by my
- uncle _Toby’s_ having ordered the corporal to wheel off the pioneer’s
- shovel, the spade, the pick-axe, the picquets, and other military stores
- which lay scatter’d upon the ground where _Dunkirk_ stood--the corporal
- had march’d--the field was clear.
- Now, consider, sir, what nonsense it is, either in fighting, or writing,
- or anything else (whether in rhyme to it, or not) which a man has
- occasion to do--to act by plan: for if ever Plan, independent of all
- circumstances, deserved registering in letters of gold (I mean in the
- archives of _Gotham_)--it was certainly the PLAN of Mrs. _Wadman’s_
- attack of my uncle _Toby_ in his sentry-box, BY PLAN ----Now the plan
- hanging up in it at this juncture, being the Plan of _Dunkirk_--and the
- tale of _Dunkirk_ a tale of relaxation, it opposed every impression she
- could make: and besides, could she have gone upon it--the manœuvre of
- fingers and hands in the attack of the sentry-box, was so outdone by
- that of the fair _Beguine’s_, in _Trim’s_ story--that just then, that
- particular attack, however successful before--became the most heartless
- attack that could be made----
- O! let woman alone for this. Mrs. _Wadman_ had scarce open’d the
- wicket-gate, when her genius sported with the change of circumstances.
- ----She formed a new attack in a moment.
- CHAPTER XXIV
- ----I am half distracted, captain _Shandy_, said Mrs. _Wadman_, holding
- up her cambrick handkerchief to her left eye, as she approach’d the door
- of my uncle _Toby’s_ sentry-box----a mote----or sand----or
- something ----I know not what, has got into this eye of mine----do look
- into it--it is not in the white--
- In saying which, Mrs. _Wadman_ edged herself close in beside my uncle
- _Toby_, and squeezing herself down upon the corner of his bench, she
- gave him an opportunity of doing it without rising up ----Do look into
- it--said she.
- Honest soul! thou didst look into it with as much innocency of heart, as
- ever child look’d into a raree-shew-box; and ’twere as much a sin to
- have hurt thee.
- ----If a man will be peeping of his own accord into things of that
- nature ----I’ve nothing to say to it----
- My uncle _Toby_ never did: and I will answer for him, that he would have
- sat quietly upon a sofa from _June_ to _January_ (which, you know, takes
- in both the hot and cold months), with an eye as fine as the
- _Thracian_[8.4] _Rodope’s_ beside him, without being able to tell,
- whether it was a black or blue one.
- The difficulty was to get my uncle _Toby_ to look at one at all.
- ’Tis surmounted. And
- I see him yonder with his pipe pendulous in his hand, and the ashes
- falling out of it--looking--and looking--then rubbing his eyes--and
- looking again, with twice the good-nature that ever _Gallileo_ look’d
- for a spot in the sun.
- ----In vain! for by all the powers which animate the organ ----Widow
- _Wadman’s_ left eye shines this moment as lucid as her right----there is
- neither mote, or sand, or dust, or chaff, or speck, or particle of opake
- matter floating in it --There is nothing, my dear paternal uncle! but
- one lambent delicious fire, furtively shooting out from every part of
- it, in all directions, into thine----
- ----If thou lookest, uncle _Toby_, in search of this mote one moment
- longer----thou art undone.
- [Footnote 8.4: _Rodope Thracia_ tam inevitabili fascino
- instructa, tam exactè oculus intuens attraxit, ut si in illam
- quis incidisset, fieri non posset, quin caperetur. ----I know
- not who.]
- CHAPTER XXV
- An eye is for all the world exactly like a cannon, in this respect; That
- it is not so much the eye or the cannon, in themselves, as it is the
- carriage of the eye----and the carriage of the cannon, by which both the
- one and the other are enabled to do so much execution. I don’t think the
- comparison a bad one; However, as ’tis made and placed at the head of
- the chapter, as much for use as ornament, all I desire in return is,
- that whenever I speak of Mrs. _Wadman’s_ eyes (except once in the next
- period), that you keep it in your fancy.
- I protest, Madam, said my uncle _Toby_, I can see nothing whatever in
- your eye.
- It is not in the white; said Mrs. _Wadman_: my uncle _Toby_ look’d with
- might and main into the pupil----
- Now of all the eyes which ever were created----from your own, Madam, up
- to those of _Venus_ herself, which certainly were as venereal a pair of
- eyes as ever stood in a head----there never was an eye of them all, so
- fitted to rob my uncle _Toby_ of his repose, as the very eye, at which
- he was looking----it was not, Madam, a rolling eye----a romping or a
- wanton one--nor was it an eye sparkling--petulant or imperious--of high
- claims and terrifying exactions, which would have curdled at once that
- milk of human nature, of which my uncle _Toby_ was made up----but ’twas
- an eye full of gentle salutations----and soft responses----speaking----
- not like the trumpet stop of some ill-made organ, in which many an eye
- I talk to, holds coarse converse----but whispering soft----like the
- last low accent of an expiring saint---- “How can you live comfortless,
- captain _Shandy_, and alone, without a bosom to lean your head on----or
- trust your cares to?”
- It was an eye----
- But I shall be in love with it myself, if I say another word about it.
- ----It did my uncle _Toby’s_ business.
- CHAPTER XXVI
- There is nothing shews the character of my father and my uncle _Toby_,
- in a more entertaining light, than their different manner of deportment,
- under the same accident----for I call not love a misfortune, from a
- persuasion, that a man’s heart is ever the better for it ----Great God!
- what must my uncle _Toby’s_ have been, when ’twas all benignity without
- it.
- My father, as appears from many of his papers, was very subject to this
- passion, before he married----but from a little subacid kind of drollish
- impatience in his nature, whenever it befell him, he would never submit
- to it like a christian; but would pish, and huff, and bounce, and kick,
- and play the Devil, and write the bitterest Philippicks against the eye
- that ever man wrote----there is one in verse upon somebody’s eye or
- other, that for two or three nights together, had put him by his rest;
- which in his first transport of resentment against it, he begins thus:
- “A Devil ’tis----and mischief such doth work
- As never yet did _Pagan_, _Jew_, or _Turk_.”[8.5]
- In short, during the whole paroxism, my father was all abuse and foul
- language, approaching rather towards malediction----only he did not do
- it with as much method as _Ernulphus_----he was too impetuous; nor with
- _Ernulphus’s_ policy----for tho’ my father, with the most intolerant
- spirit, would curse both this and that, and every thing under heaven,
- which was either aiding or abetting to his love----yet never concluded
- his chapter of curses upon it, without cursing himself in at the
- bargain, as one of the most egregious fools and coxcombs, he would say,
- that ever was let loose in the world.
- My uncle _Toby_, on the contrary, took it like a lamb----sat still and
- let the poison work in his veins without resistance----in the sharpest
- exacerbations of his wound (like that on his groin) he never dropt one
- fretful or discontented word----he blamed neither heaven nor earth----or
- thought or spoke an injurious thing of any body, or any part of it; he
- sat solitary and pensive with his pipe----looking at his lame
- leg----then whiffing out a sentimental heigh ho! which mixing with the
- smoke, incommoded no one mortal.
- He took it like a lamb ----I say.
- In truth he had mistook it at first; for having taken a ride with my
- father, that very morning, to save if possible a beautiful wood, which
- the dean and chapter were hewing down to give to the poor;[8.6] which
- said wood being in full view of my uncle _Toby’s_ house, and of singular
- service to him in his description of the battle of _Wynnendale_--by
- trotting on too hastily to save it----upon an uneasy saddle----worse
- horse, &c. &c. . . it had so happened, that the serous part of the blood
- had got betwixt the two skins, in the nethermost part of my uncle
- _Toby_----the first shootings of which (as my uncle _Toby_ had no
- experience of love) he had taken for a part of the passion--till the
- blister breaking in the one case--and the other remaining--my uncle
- _Toby_ was presently convinced, that his wound was not a skin-deep
- wound----but that it had gone to his heart.
- [Footnote 8.5: This will be printed with my father’s Life of
- _Socrates_, &c. &c.]
- [Footnote 8.6: Mr. _Shandy_ must mean the poor _in spirit_;
- inasmuch as they divided the money amongst themselves.]
- CHAPTER XXVII
- The world is ashamed of being virtuous ----My uncle _Toby_ knew little
- of the world; and therefore when he felt he was in love with widow
- _Wadman_, he had no conception that the thing was any more to be made a
- mystery of, than if Mrs. _Wadman_ had given him a cut with a gap’d knife
- across his finger: Had it been otherwise----yet as he ever look’d upon
- _Trim_ as a humble friend; and saw fresh reasons every day of his life,
- to treat him as such----it would have made no variation in the manner in
- which he informed him of the affair.
- “I am in love, corporal!” quoth my uncle _Toby_.
- CHAPTER XXVIII
- In love! ----said the corporal--your honour was very well the day before
- yesterday, when I was telling your honour the story of the King of
- _Bohemia_--_Bohemia!_ said my uncle _Toby_ - - - - musing a long time
- - - - What became of that story, _Trim?_
- --We lost it, an’ please your honour, somehow betwixt us--but your
- honour was as free from love then, as I am----’twas just whilst thou
- went’st off with the wheel-barrow----with Mrs. _Wadman_, quoth my uncle
- _Toby_ ----She has left a ball here--added my uncle _Toby_--pointing to
- his breast----
- ----She can no more, an’ please your honour, stand a siege, than she can
- fly--cried the corporal----
- ----But as we are neighbours, _Trim_, --the best way I think is to let
- her know it civilly first--quoth my uncle _Toby_.
- Now if I might presume, said the corporal, to differ from your
- honour----
- --Why else do I talk to thee, _Trim?_ said my uncle _Toby_, mildly----
- --Then I would begin, an’ please your honour, with making a good
- thundering attack upon her, in return--and telling her civilly
- afterwards--for if she knows anything of your honour’s being in love,
- before hand ----L--d help her! --she knows no more at present of it,
- _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_--than the child unborn------
- Precious souls!------
- Mrs. _Wadman_ had told it, with all its circumstances, to Mrs. _Bridget_
- twenty-four hours before; and was at that very moment sitting in council
- with her, touching some slight misgivings with regard to the issue of
- the affairs, which the Devil, who never lies dead in a ditch, had put
- into her head--before he would allow half time, to get quietly through
- her _Te Deum_.
- I am terribly afraid, said widow _Wadman_, in case I should marry him,
- _Bridget_--that the poor captain will not enjoy his health, with the
- monstrous wound upon his groin----
- It may not, Madam, be so very large, replied _Bridget_, as you
- think----and I believe, besides, added she--that ’tis dried up----
- ----I could like to know--merely for his sake, said Mrs. _Wadman_----
- --We’ll know the long and the broad of it, in ten days--answered Mrs.
- _Bridget_, for whilst the captain is paying his addresses to you --I’m
- confident Mr. _Trim_ will be for making love to me--and I’ll let him as
- much as he will--added _Bridget_--to get it all out of him----
- The measures were taken at once----and my uncle _Toby_ and the corporal
- went on with theirs.
- Now, quoth the corporal, setting his left hand a-kimbo, and giving such
- a flourish with his right, as just promised success--and no more----if
- your honour will give me leave to lay down the plan of this attack----
- ----Thou wilt please me by it, _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_,
- exceedingly--and as I foresee thou must act in it as my _aid de camp_,
- here’s a crown, corporal, to begin with, to steep thy commission.
- Then, an’ please your honour, said the corporal (making a bow first for
- his commission)--we will begin with getting your honour’s laced cloaths
- out of the great campaign-trunk, to be well air’d, and have the blue and
- gold taken up at the sleeves--and I’ll put your white ramallie-wig fresh
- into pipes--and send for a taylor, to have your honour’s thin scarlet
- breeches turn’d----
- --I had better take the red plush ones, quoth my uncle _Toby_ ----They
- will be too clumsy--said the corporal.
- CHAPTER XXIX
- ----Thou wilt get a brush and a little chalk to my sword----’Twill be
- only in your honour’s way, replied _Trim_.
- CHAPTER XXX
- ----But your honour’s two razors shall be new set--and I will get my
- _Montero_-cap furbish’d up, and put on poor lieutenant _Le Fever’s_
- regimental coat, which your honour gave me to wear for his sake--and as
- soon as your honour is clean shaved--and has got your clean shirt on,
- with your blue and gold, or your fine scarlet----sometimes one and
- sometimes t’other--and everything is ready for the attack--we’ll march
- up boldly, as if ’twas to the face of a bastion; and whilst your honour
- engages Mrs. _Wadman_ in the parlour, to the right ----I’ll attack Mrs.
- _Bridget_ in the kitchen, to the left; and having seiz’d the pass, I’ll
- answer for it, said the corporal, snapping his fingers over his
- head--that the day is our own.
- I wish I may but manage it right; said my uncle _Toby_--but I declare,
- corporal, I had rather march up to the very edge of a trench----
- --A woman is quite a different thing--said the corporal.
- --I suppose so, quoth my uncle _Toby_.
- CHAPTER XXXI
- If anything in this world, which my father said, could have provoked my
- uncle _Toby_, during the time he was in love, it was the perverse use my
- father was always making of an expression of _Hilarion_ the hermit; who,
- in speaking of his abstinence, his watchings, flagellations, and other
- instrumental parts of his religion--would say--tho’ with more
- facetiousness than became an hermit-- “That they were the means he used,
- to make his _ass_ (meaning his body) leave off kicking.”
- It pleased my father well; it was not only a laconick way of
- expressing----but of libelling, at the same time, the desires and
- appetites of the lower part of us; so that for many years of my father’s
- life, ’twas his constant mode of expression--he never used the word
- _passions_ once--but _ass_ always instead of them ----So that he might
- be said truly, to have been upon the bones, or the back of his own ass,
- or else of some other man’s, during all that time.
- I must here observe to you the difference betwixt
- My father’s ass
- and my hobby-horse--in order to keep characters as separate as may be,
- in our fancies as we go along.
- For my hobby-horse, if you recollect a little, is no way a vicious
- beast; he has scarce one hair or lineament of the ass about him----’Tis
- the sporting little filly-folly which carries you out for the present
- hour--a maggot, a butterfly, a picture, a fiddlestick--an uncle _Toby’s_
- siege--or an _anything_, which a man makes a shift to get a-stride on,
- to canter it away from the cares and solicitudes of life--’Tis as useful
- a beast as is in the whole creation--nor do I really see how the world
- would do without it----
- ----But for my father’s ass------oh! mount him--mount him--mount
- him--(that’s three times, is it not?)--mount him not: --’tis a beast
- concupiscent--and foul befal the man, who does not hinder him from
- kicking.
- CHAPTER XXXII
- Well! dear brother _Toby_, said my father, upon his first seeing him
- after he fell in love--and how goes it with your ASSE?
- Now my uncle _Toby_ thinking more of the _part_ where he had had the
- blister, than of _Hilarion’s_ metaphor--and our preconceptions having
- (you know) as great a power over the sounds of words as the shapes of
- things, he had imagined, that my father, who was not very ceremonious in
- his choice of words, had enquired after the part by its proper name; so
- notwithstanding my mother, doctor _Slop_, and Mr. _Yorick_, were sitting
- in the parlour, he thought it rather civil to conform to the term my
- father had made use of than not. When a man is hemm’d in by two
- indecorums, and must commit one of ’em --I always observe--let him chuse
- which he will, the world will blame him--so I should not be astonished
- if it blames my uncle _Toby_.
- My A--e, quoth my uncle _Toby_, is much better--brother _Shandy_ --My
- father had formed great expectations from his Asse in this onset; and
- would have brought him on again; but doctor _Slop_ setting up an
- intemperate laugh--and my mother crying out L-- bless us! --it drove my
- father’s Asse off the field--and the laugh then becoming general--there
- was no bringing him back to the charge, for some time----
- And so the discourse went on without him.
- Everybody, said my mother, says you are in love, brother _Toby_, --and
- we hope it is true.
- I am as much in love, sister, I believe, replied my uncle _Toby_, as any
- man usually is ----Humph! said my father----and when did you know it?
- quoth my mother----
- ----When the blister broke; replied my uncle _Toby_.
- My uncle _Toby’s_ reply put my father into good temper--so he charg’d o’
- foot.
- CHAPTER XXXIII
- As the ancients agree, brother _Toby_, said my father, that there are
- two different and distinct kinds of _love_, according to the different
- parts which are affected by it--the Brain or Liver ----I think when a
- man is in love, it behoves him a little to consider which of the two he
- is fallen into.
- What signifies it, brother _Shandy_, replied my uncle _Toby_, which of
- the two it is, provided it will but make a man marry, and love his wife,
- and get a few children?
- ----A few children! cried my father, rising out of his chair, and
- looking full in my mother’s face, as he forced his way betwixt her’s and
- doctor _Slop’s_--a few children! cried my father, repeating my uncle
- _Toby’s_ words as he walk’d to and fro----
- ----Not, my dear brother _Toby_, cried my father, recovering himself all
- at once, and coming close up to the back of my uncle _Toby’s_ chair--not
- that I should be sorry hadst thou a score--on the contrary, I should
- rejoice--and be as kind, _Toby_, to every one of them as a father--
- My uncle _Toby_ stole his hand unperceived behind his chair, to give my
- father’s a squeeze----
- ----Nay, moreover, continued he, keeping hold of my uncle _Toby’s_
- hand--so much dost thou possess, my dear _Toby_, of the milk of human
- nature, and so little of its asperities--’tis piteous the world is not
- peopled by creatures which resemble thee; and was I an _Asiatic_
- monarch, added my father, heating himself with his new project --I would
- oblige thee, provided it would not impair thy strength--or dry up thy
- radical moisture too fast--or weaken thy memory or fancy, brother
- _Toby_, which these gymnics inordinately taken are apt to do--else, dear
- _Toby_, I would procure thee the most beautiful women in my empire, and
- I would oblige thee, _nolens, volens_, to beget for me one subject every
- _month_----
- As my father pronounced the last word of the sentence--my mother took a
- pinch of snuff.
- Now I would not, quoth my uncle _Toby_, get a child, _nolens, volens_,
- that is, whether I would or no, to please the greatest prince upon
- earth----
- ----And ’twould be cruel in me, brother _Toby_, to compel thee; said my
- father--but ’tis a case put to show thee, that it is not thy begetting a
- child--in case thou should’st be able--but the system of Love and
- Marriage thou goest upon, which I would set thee right in----
- There is at least, said _Yorick_, a great deal of reason and plain sense
- in captain _Shandy’s_ opinion of love; and ’tis amongst the ill-spent
- hours of my life, which I have to answer for, that I have read so many
- flourishing poets and rhetoricians in my time, from whom I never could
- extract so much----
- I wish, _Yorick_, said my father, you had read _Plato_; for there you
- would have learnt that there are two LOVES --I know there were two
- RELIGIONS, replied _Yorick_, amongst the ancients----one--for the
- vulgar, and another for the learned; --but I think ONE LOVE might have
- served both of them very well--
- It could not; replied my father--and for the same reasons: for of these
- Loves, according to _Ficinus’s_ comment upon _Velasius_, the one is
- rational----
- ----the other is _natural_----
- the first ancient----without mother----where _Venus_ had nothing to do:
- the second, begotten of _Jupiter_ and _Dione_--
- ----Pray, brother, quoth my uncle _Toby_, what has a man who believes in
- God to do with this? My father could not stop to answer, for fear of
- breaking the thread of his discourse----
- This latter, continued he, partakes wholly of the nature of _Venus_.
- The first, which is the golden chain let down from heaven, excites to
- love heroic, which comprehends in it, and excites to the desire of
- philosophy and truth----the second, excites to _desire_, simply----
- ----I think the procreation of children as beneficial to the world, said
- _Yorick_, as the finding out of the longitude----
- ----To be sure, said my mother, _love_ keeps peace in the world----
- ----In the _house_--my dear, I own--
- ----It replenishes the earth; said my mother----
- But it keeps heaven empty--my dear; replied my father.
- ----’Tis Virginity, cried _Slop_, triumphantly, which fills paradise.
- Well push’d, nun! quoth my father.
- CHAPTER XXXIV
- My father had such a skirmishing, cutting kind of a slashing way with
- him, in his disputations, thrusting and ripping, and giving every one a
- stroke to remember him by in his turn--that if there were twenty people
- in company--in less than half an hour he was sure to have every one of
- ’em against him.
- What did not a little contribute to leave him thus without an ally, was,
- that if there was any one post more untenable than the rest, he would be
- sure to throw himself into it; and to do him justice, when he was once
- there, he would defend it so gallantly, that ’twould have been a
- concern, either to a brave man or a good-natured one, to have seen him
- driven out.
- _Yorick_, for this reason, though he would often attack him--yet could
- never bear to do it with all his force.
- Doctor _Slop’s_ VIRGINITY, in the close of the last chapter, had got him
- for once on the right side of the rampart; and he was beginning to blow
- up all the convents in _Christendom_ about _Slop’s_ ears, when corporal
- _Trim_ came into the parlour to inform my uncle _Toby_, that his thin
- scarlet breeches, in which the attack was to be made upon Mrs. _Wadman_,
- would not do; for that the taylor, in ripping them up, in order to turn
- them, had found they had been turn’d before ----Then turn them again,
- brother, said my father, rapidly, for there will be many a turning of
- ’em yet before all’s done in the affair ----They are as rotten as dirt,
- said the corporal ----Then by all means, said my father, bespeak a new
- pair, brother----for though I know, continued my father, turning himself
- to the company, that widow _Wadman_ has been deeply in love with my
- brother _Toby_ for many years, and has used every art and circumvention
- of woman to outwit him into the same passion, yet now that she has
- caught him----her fever will be pass’d its height----
- ----She has gain’d her point.
- In this case, continued my father, which _Plato_, I am persuaded, never
- thought of ----Love, you see, is not so much a SENTIMENT as a SITUATION,
- into which a man enters, as my brother _Toby_ would do, into a
- _corps_----no matter whether he loves the service or no----being once in
- it--he acts as if he did; and takes every step to shew himself a man of
- prowesse.
- The hypothesis, like the rest of my father’s, was plausible enough, and
- my uncle _Toby_ had but a single word to object to it--in which _Trim_
- stood ready to second him----but my father had not drawn his
- conclusion----
- For this reason, continued my father (stating the case over
- again)--notwithstanding all the world knows, that Mrs. _Wadman_
- _affects_ my brother _Toby_--and my brother _Toby_ contrariwise
- _affects_ Mrs. _Wadman_, and no obstacle in nature to forbid the music
- striking up this very night, yet will I answer for it, that this
- self-same tune will not be play’d this twelvemonth.
- We have taken our measures badly, quoth my uncle _Toby_, looking up
- interrogatively in _Trim’s_ face.
- I would lay my _Montero_-cap, said _Trim_ ----Now _Trim’s_ _Montero_-cap,
- as I once told you, was his constant wager; and having furbish’d it up
- that very night, in order to go upon the attack--it made the odds look
- more considerable ----I would lay, an’ please your honour, my
- _Montero_-cap to a shilling--was it proper, continued _Trim_ (making a
- bow), to offer a wager before your honours----
- ----There is nothing improper in it, said my father--’tis a mode of
- expression; for in saying thou would’st lay thy _Montero_-cap to a
- shilling--all thou meanest is this--that thou believest--
- ----Now, What do’st thou believe?
- That widow _Wadman_, an’ please your worship, cannot hold it out ten
- days----
- And whence, cried _Slop_, jeeringly, hast thou all this knowledge of
- woman, friend?
- By falling in love with a popish clergywoman; said _Trim_.
- ’Twas a _Beguine_, said my uncle _Toby_.
- Doctor _Slop_ was too much in wrath to listen to the distinction; and my
- father taking that very crisis to fall in helter-skelter upon the whole
- order of Nuns and _Beguines_, a set of silly, fusty, baggages----_Slop_
- could not stand it----and my uncle _Toby_ having some measures to take
- about his breeches--and _Yorick_ about his fourth general division--in
- order for their several attacks next day--the company broke up: and my
- father being left alone, and having half an hour upon his hands betwixt
- that and bed-time; he called for pen, ink, and paper, and wrote my uncle
- _Toby_ the following letter of instructions:
- MY DEAR BROTHER _Toby_,
- What I am going to say to thee is upon the nature of women, and of
- love-making to them; and perhaps it is as well for thee--tho’ not so
- well for me--that thou hast occasion for a letter of instructions upon
- that head, and that I am able to write it to thee.
- Had it been the good pleasure of him who disposes of our lots--and thou
- no sufferer by the knowledge, I had been well content that thou
- should’st have dipp’d the pen this moment into the ink, instead of
- myself; but that not being the case ------------Mrs. _Shandy_ being now
- close beside me, preparing for bed ----I have thrown together without
- order, and just as they have come into my mind, such hints and documents
- as I deem may be of use to thee; intending, in this, to give thee a
- token of my love; not doubting, my dear _Toby_, of the manner in which
- it will be accepted.
- In the first place, with regard to all which concerns religion in the
- affair----though I perceive from a glow in my cheek, that I blush as I
- begin to speak to thee upon the subject, as well knowing,
- notwithstanding thy unaffected secrecy, how few of its offices thou
- neglectest--yet I would remind thee of one (during the continuance of
- thy courtship) in a particular manner, which I would not have omitted;
- and that is, never to go forth upon the enterprize, whether it be in the
- morning or the afternoon, without first recommending thyself to the
- protection of Almighty God, that he may defend thee from the evil one.
- Shave the whole top of thy crown clean once at least every four or five
- days, but oftener if convenient; lest in taking off thy wig before her,
- thro’ absence of mind, she should be able to discover how much has been
- cut away by Time----how much by _Trim_.
- --’Twere better to keep ideas of baldness out of her fancy.
- Always carry it in thy mind, and act upon it as a sure maxim, _Toby_----
- “_That women are timid:_” And ’tis well they are----else there would be
- no dealing with them.
- Let not thy breeches be too tight, or hang too loose about thy thighs,
- like the trunk-hose of our ancestors.
- ----A just medium prevents all conclusions.
- Whatever thou hast to say, be it more or less, forget not to utter it in
- a low soft tone of voice. Silence, and whatever approaches it, weaves
- dreams of midnight secrecy into the brain: For this cause, if thou canst
- help it, never throw down the tongs and poker.
- Avoid all kinds of pleasantry and facetiousness in thy discourse with
- her, and do whatever lies in thy power at the same time, to keep from
- her all books and writings which tend thereto: there are some devotional
- tracts, which if thou canst entice her to read over--it will be well:
- but suffer her not to look into _Rabelais_, or _Scarron_, or _Don
- Quixote_----
- ----They are all books which excite laughter; and thou knowest, dear
- _Toby_, that there is no passion so serious as lust.
- Stick a pin in the bosom of thy shirt, before thou enterest her parlour.
- And if thou art permitted to sit upon the same sopha with her, and she
- gives thee occasion to lay thy hand upon hers--beware of taking
- it----thou canst not lay thy hand on hers, but she will feel the temper
- of thine. Leave that and as many other things as thou canst, quite
- undetermined; by so doing, thou wilt have her curiosity on thy side; and
- if she is not conquered by that, and thy ASSE continues still kicking,
- which there is great reason to suppose ----Thou must begin, with first
- losing a few ounces of blood below the ears, according to the practice
- of the ancient _Scythians_, who cured the most intemperate fits of the
- appetite by that means.
- _Avicenna_, after this, is for having the part anointed with the syrup
- of hellebore, using proper evacuations and purges----and I believe
- rightly. But thou must eat little or no goat’s flesh, nor red
- deer----nor even foal’s flesh by any means; and carefully
- abstain----that is, as much as thou canst, from peacocks, cranes, coots,
- didappers, and water-hens----
- As for thy drink --I need not tell thee, it must be the infusion of
- VERVAIN and the herb HANEA, of which _Ælian_ relates such effects--but
- if thy stomach palls with it--discontinue it from time to time, taking
- cucumbers, melons, purslane, water-lillies, woodbine, and lettice, in
- the stead of them.
- There is nothing further for thee, which occurs to me at present----
- ----Unless the breaking out of a fresh war ----So wishing everything,
- dear _Toby_, for the best,
- I rest thy affectionate brother,
- WALTER SHANDY.
- CHAPTER XXXV
- Whilst my father was writing his letter of instructions, my uncle _Toby_
- and the corporal were busy in preparing everything for the attack. As
- the turning of the thin scarlet breeches was laid aside (at least for
- the present), there was nothing which should put it off beyond the next
- morning; so accordingly it was resolved upon, for eleven o’clock.
- Come, my dear, said my father to my mother--’twill be but like a brother
- and sister, if you and I take a walk down to my brother _Toby’s_----to
- countenance him in this attack of his.
- My uncle _Toby_ and the corporal had been accoutred both some time, when
- my father and mother enter’d, and the clock striking eleven, were that
- moment in motion to sally forth--but the account of this is worth more
- than to be wove into the fag end of the eighth[8.7] volume of such a
- work as this. ----My father had no time but to put the letter of
- instructions into my uncle _Toby’s_ coat-pocket----and join with my
- mother in wishing his attack prosperous.
- I could like, said my mother, to look through the key-hole out of
- curiosity ----Call it by its right name, my dear, quoth my father--
- _And look through the key-hole_ as long as you will.
- [Footnote 8.7: Alluding to the first edition.]
- THE LIFE AND OPINIONS
- OF
- TRISTRAM SHANDY
- GENTLEMAN
- Non enim excursus hic ejus, sed opus ipsum est.
- PLIN. Lib. v. Epist. 6.
- Si quid urbaniusculè lusum a nobis, per Musas et Charitas et omnium
- poëtarum Numina, Oro te, ne me malè capias.
- A DEDICATION
- TO A GREAT MAN
- Having, _a priori_, intended to dedicate _The Amours of my Uncle
- Toby_ to Mr. *** ----I see more reasons, _a posteriori_, for doing it
- to Lord *******.
- I should lament from my soul, if this exposed me to the jealousy of
- their Reverences; because _a posteriori_, in Court-latin, signifies
- the kissing hands for preferment--or anything else--in order to get
- it.
- My opinion of Lord ******* is neither better nor worse, than it was
- of Mr. ***. Honours, like impressions upon coin, may give an ideal
- and local value to a bit of base metal; but Gold and Silver will
- pass all the world over without any other recommendation than their
- own weight.
- The same good-will that made me think of offering up half an hour’s
- amusement to Mr. *** when out of place--operates more forcibly at
- present, as half an hour’s amusement will be more serviceable and
- refreshing after labour and sorrow, than after a philosophical
- repast.
- Nothing is so perfectly _amusement_ as a total change of ideas; no
- ideas are so totally different as those of Ministers, and innocent
- Lovers: for which reason, when I come to talk of Statesmen and
- Patriots, and set such marks upon them as will prevent confusion and
- mistakes concerning them for the future --I propose to dedicate that
- Volume to some gentle Shepherd,
- Whose thoughts proud Science never taught to stray,
- Far as the Statesman’s walk or Patriot-way;
- Yet _simple Nature_ to his hopes had given
- Out of a cloud-capp’d head a humbler heaven;
- Some _untam’d_ World in depths of wood embraced--
- Some happier Island in the watry-waste--
- And where admitted to that equal sky,
- His _faithful Dog_ should bear him company.
- In a word, by thus introducing an entire new set of objects to his
- Imagination, I shall unavoidably give a _Diversion_ to his
- passionate and love-sick Contemplations. In the meantime,
- I am
- THE AUTHOR.
- BOOK IX
- CHAPTER I
- I call all the powers of time and chance, which severally check us in
- our careers in this world, to bear me witness, that I could never yet
- get fairly to my uncle _Toby’s_ amours, till this very moment, that my
- mother’s _curiosity_, as she stated the affair, ----or a different
- impulse in her, as my father would have it----wished her to take a peep
- at them through the key-hole.
- “Call it, my dear, by its right name, quoth my father, and look through
- the key-hole as long as you will.”
- Nothing but the fermentation of that little subacid humour, which I have
- often spoken of, in my father’s habit, could have vented such an
- insinuation----he was however frank and generous in his nature, and at
- all times open to conviction; so that he had scarce got to the last word
- of this ungracious retort, when his conscience smote him.
- My mother was then conjugally swinging with her left arm twisted under
- his right, in such wise, that the inside of her hand rested upon the
- back of his--she raised her fingers, and let them fall--it could scarce
- be call’d a tap; or if it was a tap---- ’twould have puzzled a casuist
- to say, whether ’twas a tap of remonstrance, or a tap of confession:
- my father, who was all sensibilities from head to foot, class’d it
- right --Conscience redoubled her blow--he turn’d his face suddenly the
- other way, and my mother supposing his body was about to turn with it in
- order to move homewards, by a cross movement of her right leg, keeping
- her left as its centre, brought herself so far in front, that as he
- turned his head, he met her eye ------Confusion again! he saw a thousand
- reasons to wipe out the reproach, and as many to reproach himself----a
- thin, blue, chill, pellucid chrystal with all its humours so at rest,
- the least mote or speck of desire might have been seen, at the bottom of
- it, had it existed----it did not----and how I happen to be so lewd
- myself, particularly a little before the vernal and autumnal
- equinoxes ----Heaven above knows ----My mother----madam----was so at no
- time, either by nature, by institution, or example.
- A temperate current of blood ran orderly through her veins in all months
- of the year, and in all critical moments both of the day and night
- alike; nor did she superinduce the least heat into her humours from the
- manual effervescencies of devotional tracts, which having little or no
- meaning in them, nature is oft-times obliged to find one ----And as for
- my father’s example! ’twas so far from being either aiding or abetting
- thereunto, that ’twas the whole business of his life to keep all fancies
- of that kind out of her head ----Nature had done her part, to have spared
- him this trouble; and what was not a little inconsistent, my father knew
- it ----And here am I sitting, this 12th day of _August_ 1766, in a purple
- jerkin and yellow pair of slippers, without either wig or cap on, a most
- tragicomical completion of his prediction, “That I should neither think,
- nor act like any other man’s child, upon that very account.”
- The mistake in my father, was in attacking my mother’s motive, instead
- of the act itself; for certainly key-holes were made for other purposes;
- and considering the act, as an act which interfered with a true
- proposition, and denied a key-hole to be what it was------it became a
- violation of nature; and was so far, you see, criminal.
- It is for this reason, an’ please your Reverences, That key-holes are
- the occasions of more sin and wickedness, than all other holes in this
- world put together.
- ------which leads me to my uncle _Toby’s_ amours.
- CHAPTER II
- Though the corporal had been as good as his word in putting my uncle
- _Toby’s_ great ramallie-wig into pipes, yet the time was too short to
- produce any great effects from it: it had lain many years squeezed up in
- the corner of his old campaign trunk; and as bad forms are not so easy
- to be got the better of, and the use of candle-ends not so well
- understood, it was not so pliable a business as one would have wished.
- The corporal with cheary eye and both arms extended, had fallen back
- perpendicular from it a score times, to inspire it, if possible, with a
- better air----had SPLEEN given a look at it, ’twould have cost her
- ladyship a smile----it curl’d everywhere but where the corporal would
- have it; and where a buckle or two, in his opinion, would have done it
- honour, he could as soon have raised the dead.
- Such it was----or rather such would it have seem’d upon any other brow;
- but the sweet look of goodness which sat upon my uncle _Toby’s_,
- assimilated everything around it so sovereignly to itself, and Nature
- had moreover wrote GENTLEMAN with so fair a hand in every line of his
- countenance, that even his tarnish’d gold-laced hat and huge cockade of
- flimsy taffeta became him; and though not worth a button in themselves,
- yet the moment my uncle _Toby_ put them on, they became serious objects,
- and altogether seem’d to have been picked up by the hand of Science to
- set him off to advantage.
- Nothing in this world could have co-operated more powerfully towards
- this, than my uncle _Toby’s_ blue and gold----_had not Quantity in some
- measure been necessary to Grace_: in a period of fifteen or sixteen
- years since they had been made, by a total inactivity in my uncle
- _Toby’s_ life, for he seldom went further than the bowling-green--his
- blue and gold had become so miserably too strait for him, that it was
- with the utmost difficulty the corporal was able to get him into them;
- the taking them up at the sleeves, was of no advantage. ----They were
- laced however down the back, and at the seams of the sides, &c., in the
- mode of King _William’s_ reign; and to shorten all description, they
- shone so bright against the sun that morning, and had so metallick and
- doughty an air with them, that had my uncle _Toby_ thought of attacking
- in armour, nothing could have so well imposed upon his imagination.
- As for the thin scarlet breeches, they had been unripp’d by the taylor
- between the legs, and left at _sixes and sevens_----
- ----Yes, Madam, ----but let us govern our fancies. It is enough they
- were held impracticable the night before, and as there was no
- alternative in my uncle _Toby’s_ wardrobe, he sallied forth in the red
- plush.
- The corporal had array’d himself in poor _Le Fever’s_ regimental coat;
- and with his hair tuck’d up under his _Montero_-cap, which he had
- furbish’d up for the occasion, march’d three paces distant from his
- master: a whiff of military pride had puff’d out his shirt at the wrist;
- and upon that in a black leather thong clipp’d into a tassel beyond the
- knot, hung the corporal’s stick ----My uncle _Toby_ carried his cane
- like a pike.
- ----It looks well at least; quoth my father to himself.
- CHAPTER III
- My uncle _Toby_ turn’d his head more than once behind him, to see how he
- was supported by the corporal; and the corporal as oft as he did it,
- gave a slight flourish with his stick--but not vapouringly; and with the
- sweetest accent of most respectful encouragement, bid his honour “never
- fear.”
- Now my uncle _Toby_ did fear; and grievously too; he knew not (as my
- father had reproach’d him) so much as the right end of a Woman from the
- wrong, and therefore was never altogether at his ease near any one of
- them----unless in sorrow or distress; then infinite was his pity; nor
- would the most courteous knight of romance have gone further, at least
- upon one leg, to have wiped away a tear from a woman’s eye; and yet
- excepting once that he was beguiled into it by Mrs. _Wadman_, he had
- never looked stedfastly into one; and would often tell my father in the
- simplicity of his heart, that it was almost (if not about) as bad as
- talking bawdy.----
- ----And suppose it is? my father would say.
- CHAPTER IV
- She cannot, quoth my uncle _Toby_, halting, when they had march’d up to
- within twenty paces of Mrs. _Wadman’s_ door--she cannot, corporal, take
- it amiss.----
- ----She will take it, an’ please your honour, said the corporal, just as
- the _Jew’s_ widow at _Lisbon_ took it of my brother _Tom_.----
- ----And how was that? quoth my uncle _Toby_, facing quite about to the
- corporal.
- Your honour, replied the corporal, knows of _Tom’s_ misfortunes; but
- this affair has nothing to do with them any further than this, That if
- _Tom_ had not married the widow----or had it pleased God after their
- marriage, that they had but put pork into their sausages, the honest
- soul had never been taken out of his warm bed, and dragg’d to the
- inquisition----’Tis a cursed place--added the corporal, shaking his
- head, --when once a poor creature is in, he is in, an’ please your
- honour, for ever.
- ’Tis very true; said my uncle _Toby_, looking gravely at Mrs. _Wadman’s_
- house, as he spoke.
- Nothing, continued the corporal, can be so sad as confinement for
- life--or so sweet, an’ please your honour, as liberty.
- Nothing, _Trim_----said my uncle _Toby_, musing----
- Whilst a man is free, --cried the corporal, giving a flourish with his
- stick thus----
- [Illustration]
- A thousand of my father’s most subtle syllogisms could not have said
- more for celibacy.
- My uncle _Toby_ look’d earnestly towards his cottage and his
- bowling-green.
- The corporal had unwarily conjured up the Spirit of calculation with his
- wand; and he had nothing to do, but to conjure him down again with his
- story, and in this form of Exorcism, most un-ecclesiastically did the
- corporal do it.
- CHAPTER V
- As _Tom’s_ place, an’ please your honour, was easy--and the weather
- warm--it put him upon thinking seriously of settling himself in the
- world; and as it fell out about that time, that a _Jew_ who kept a
- sausage shop in the same street, had the ill luck to die of a strangury,
- and leave his widow in possession of a rousing trade----_Tom_ thought
- (as everybody in _Lisbon_ was doing the best he could devise for
- himself) there could be no harm in offering her his service to carry it
- on: so without any introduction to the widow, except that of buying a
- pound of sausages at her shop--_Tom_ set out--counting the matter thus
- within himself, as he walk’d along; that let the worst come of it that
- could, he should at least get a pound of sausages for their worth--but,
- if things went well, he should be set up; inasmuch as he should get not
- only a pound of sausages--but a wife and--a sausage shop, an’ please
- your honour, into the bargain.
- Every servant in the family, from high to low, wish’d _Tom_ success; and
- I can fancy, an’ please your honour, I see him this moment with his
- white dimity waistcoat and breeches, and hat a little o’ one side,
- passing jollily along the street, swinging his stick, with a smile and a
- chearful word for everybody he met: ----But alas! _Tom!_ thou smilest no
- more, cried the corporal, looking on one side of him upon the ground, as
- if he apostrophised him in his dungeon.
- Poor fellow! said my uncle _Toby_, feelingly.
- He was an honest, light-hearted lad, an’ please your honour, as ever
- blood warm’d----
- ----Then he resembled thee, _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_, rapidly.
- The corporal blush’d down to his fingers ends--a tear of sentimental
- bashfulness--another of gratitude to my uncle _Toby_--and a tear of
- sorrow for his brother’s misfortunes, started into his eye, and ran
- sweetly down his cheek together; my uncle _Toby’s_ kindled as one lamp
- does at another; and taking hold of the breast of _Trim’s_ coat (which
- had been that of _Le Fever’s_) as if to ease his lame leg, but in
- reality to gratify a finer feeling----he stood silent for a minute and a
- half; at the end of which he took his hand away, and the corporal making
- a bow, went on with his story of his brother and the _Jew’s_ widow.
- CHAPTER VI
- When _Tom_, an’ please your honour, got to the shop, there was nobody in
- it, but a poor negro girl, with a bunch of white feathers slightly tied
- to the end of a long cane, flapping away flies--not killing them.
- ----’Tis a pretty picture! said my uncle _Toby_--she had suffered
- persecution, _Trim_, and had learnt mercy----
- ----She was good, an’ please your honour, from nature, as well as from
- hardships; and there are circumstances in the story of that poor
- friendless slut, that would melt a heart of stone, said _Trim_; and some
- dismal winter’s evening, when your honour is in the humour, they shall
- be told you with the rest of _Tom’s_ story, for it makes a part of
- it----
- Then do not forget, _Trim_, said my uncle _Toby_.
- A negro has a soul? an’ please your honour, said the corporal
- (doubtingly).
- I am not much versed, corporal, quoth my uncle _Toby_, in things of that
- kind; but I suppose, God would not leave him without one, any more than
- thee or me----
- ----It would be putting one sadly over the head of another, quoth the
- corporal.
- It would so; said my uncle _Toby_. Why then, an’ please your honour, is
- a black wench to be used worse than a white one?
- I can give no reason, said my uncle _Toby_------
- ----Only, cried the corporal, shaking his head, because she has no one
- to stand up for her----
- ----’Tis that very thing, _Trim_, quoth my uncle _Toby_, ----which
- recommends her to protection----and her brethren with her; ’tis the
- fortune of war which has put the whip into our hands _now_----where it
- may be hereafter, heaven knows! ----but be it where it will, the brave,
- _Trim!_ will not use it unkindly.
- ----God forbid, said the corporal.
- Amen, responded my uncle _Toby_, laying his hand upon his heart.
- The corporal returned to his story, and went on----but with an
- embarrassment in doing it, which here and there a reader in this world
- will not be able to comprehend; for by the many sudden transitions all
- along, from one kind and cordial passion to another, in getting thus far
- on his way, he had lost the sportable key of his voice, which gave sense
- and spirit to his tale: he attempted twice to resume it, but could not
- please himself; so giving a stout hem! to rally back the retreating
- spirits, and aiding nature at the same time with his left arm a-kimbo on
- one side, and with his right a little extended, supporting her on the
- other--the corporal got as near the note as he could; and in that
- attitude, continued his story.
- CHAPTER VII
- As _Tom_, an’ please your honour, had no business at that time with the
- _Moorish_ girl, he passed on into the room beyond, to talk to the
- _Jew’s_ widow about love----and this pound of sausages; and being, as I
- have told your honour, an open cheary-hearted lad, with his character
- wrote in his looks and carriage, he took a chair, and without much
- apology, but with great civility at the same time, placed it close to
- her at the table, and sat down.
- There is nothing so awkward, as courting a woman, an’ please your
- honour, whilst she is making sausages ----So _Tom_ began a discourse
- upon them; first, gravely, ----“as how they were made----with what meats,
- herbs, and spices” --Then a little gayly, --as, “With what skins----and
- if they never burst ----Whether the largest were not the best?” ----and
- so on--taking care only as he went along, to season what he had to say
- upon sausages, rather under than over; ----that he might have room to
- act in----
- It was owing to the neglect of that very precaution, said my uncle
- _Toby_, laying his hand upon _Trim’s_ shoulder, that Count _De la Motte_
- lost the battle of _Wynendale_: he pressed too speedily into the wood;
- which if he had not done, _Lisle_ had not fallen into our hands, nor
- _Ghent_ and _Bruges_, which both followed her example; it was so late in
- the year, continued my uncle _Toby_, and so terrible a season came on,
- that if things had not fallen out as they did, our troops must have
- perish’d in the open field.----
- ----Why, therefore, may not battles, an’ please your honour, as well as
- marriages, be made in heaven? --My uncle _Toby_ mused----
- Religion inclined him to say one thing, and his high idea of military
- skill tempted him to say another; so not being able to frame a reply
- exactly to his mind----my uncle _Toby_ said nothing at all; and the
- corporal finished his story.
- As _Tom_ perceived, an’ please your honour, that he gained ground, and
- that all he had said upon the subject of sausages was kindly taken, he
- went on to help her a little in making them. ----First, by taking hold
- of the ring of the sausage whilst she stroked the forced meat down with
- her hand----then by cutting the strings into proper lengths, and holding
- them in his hand, whilst she took them out one by one----then, by
- putting them across her mouth, that she might take them out as she
- wanted them----and so on from little to more, till at last he adventured
- to tie the sausage himself, whilst she held the snout.----
- ----Now a widow, an’ please your honour, always chuses a second husband
- as unlike the first as she can: so the affair was more than half settled
- in her mind before _Tom_ mentioned it.
- She made a feint however of defending herself, by snatching up a
- sausage: ----_Tom_ instantly laid hold of another------
- But seeing _Tom’s_ had more gristle in it------
- She signed the capitulation----and _Tom_ sealed it; and there was an end
- of the matter.
- CHAPTER VIII
- All womankind, continued _Trim_, (commenting upon his story) from the
- highest to the lowest, an’ please your honour, love jokes; the
- difficulty is to know how they chuse to have them cut; and there is no
- knowing that, but by trying, as we do with our artillery in the field,
- by raising or letting down their breeches, till we hit the mark.----
- ----I like the comparison, said my uncle _Toby_, better than the thing
- itself----
- ----Because your honour, quoth the corporal, loves glory, more than
- pleasure.
- I hope, _Trim_, answered my uncle _Toby_, I love mankind more than
- either; and as the knowledge of arms tends so apparently to the good and
- quiet of the world----and particularly that branch of it which we have
- practised together in our bowling-green, has no object but to shorten
- the strides of AMBITION, and intrench the lives and fortunes of the
- _few_, from the plunderings of the _many_----whenever that drum beats in
- our ears, I trust, corporal, we shall neither of us want so much
- humanity and fellow-feeling, as to face about and march.
- In pronouncing this, my uncle _Toby_ faced about, and march’d firmly as
- at the head of his company----and the faithful corporal, shouldering his
- stick, and striking his hand upon his coat-skirt as he took his first
- step----march’d close behind him down the avenue.
- ----Now what can their two noddles be about? cried my father to my
- mother----by all that’s strange, they are besieging Mrs. _Wadman_ in
- form, and are marching round her house to mark out the lines of
- circumvallation.
- I dare say, quoth my mother ------------But stop, dear Sir----for what
- my mother dared to say upon the occasion----and what my father did say
- upon it----with her replies and his rejoinders, shall be read, perused,
- paraphrased, commented, and descanted upon--or to say it all in a word,
- shall be thumb’d over by Posterity in a chapter apart ----I say, by
- Posterity--and care not, if I repeat the word again--for what has this
- book done more than the Legation of _Moses_, or the Tale of a Tub, that
- it may not swim down the gutter of Time along with them?
- I will not argue the matter: Time wastes too fast: every letter I trace
- tells me with what rapidity Life follows my pen; the days and hours of
- it, more precious, my dear _Jenny!_ than the rubies about thy neck, are
- flying over our heads like light clouds of a windy day, never to return
- more----everything presses on----whilst thou art twisting that lock,
- ----see! it grows grey; and every time I kiss thy hand to bid adieu, and
- every absence which follows it, are preludes to that eternal separation
- which we are shortly to make.----
- ----Heaven have mercy upon us both!
- CHAPTER IX
- Now, for what the world thinks of that ejaculation ----I would not give
- a groat.
- CHAPTER X
- My mother had gone with her left arm twisted in my father’s right, till
- they had got to the fatal angle of the old garden wall, where Doctor
- _Slop_ was overthrown by _Obadiah_ on the coach-horse: as this was
- directly opposite to the front of Mrs. _Wadman’s_ house, when my father
- came to it, he gave a look across; and seeing my uncle _Toby_ and the
- corporal within ten paces of the door, he turn’d about---- “Let us just
- stop a moment, quoth my father, and see with what ceremonies my brother
- _Toby_ and his man _Trim_ make their first entry----it will not detain
- us, added my father, a single minute:” ----No matter, if it be ten
- minutes, quoth my mother.
- ----It will not detain us half one; said my father.
- The corporal was just then setting in with the story of his brother
- _Tom_ and the _Jew’s_ widow: the story went on--and on----it had
- episodes in it----it came back, and went on----and on again; there was
- no end of it----the reader found it very long----
- ----G-- help my father! he pish’d fifty times at every new attitude, and
- gave the corporal’s stick, with all its flourishings and dangling, to as
- many devils as chose to accept of them.
- When issues of events like these my father is waiting for, are hanging
- in the scales of fate, the mind has the advantage of changing the
- principle of expectation three times, without which it would not have
- power to see it out.
- Curiosity governs the _first moment_; and the second moment is all
- œconomy to justify the expence of the first----and for the third,
- fourth, fifth, and sixth moments, and so on to the day of judgment--’tis
- a point of HONOUR.
- I need not be told, that the ethic writers have assigned this all to
- Patience; but that VIRTUE, methinks, has extent of dominion sufficient
- of her own, and enough to do in it, without invading the few dismantled
- castles which HONOUR has left him upon the earth.
- My father stood it out as well as he could with these three auxiliaries
- to the end of _Trim’s_ story; and from thence to the end of my uncle
- _Toby’s_ panegyrick upon arms, in the chapter following it; when seeing,
- that instead of marching up to Mrs. _Wadman’s_ door, they both faced
- about and march’d down the avenue diametrically opposite to his
- expectation--he broke out at once with that little subacid soreness of
- humour which, in certain situations, distinguished his character from
- that of all other men.
- CHAPTER XI
- ----“Now what can their two noddles be about?” cried my father - - &c.
- - - - -
- I dare say, said my mother, they are making fortifications----
- ------Not on Mrs. _Wadman’s_ premises! cried my father, stepping
- back----
- I suppose not: quoth my mother.
- I wish, said my father, raising his voice, the whole science of
- fortification at the devil, with all its trumpery of saps, mines,
- blinds, gabions, fausse-brays and cuvetts------
- ----They are foolish things----said my mother.
- Now she had a way, which, by the bye, I would this moment give away my
- purple jerkin, and my yellow slippers into the bargain, if some of your
- reverences would imitate--and that was, never to refuse her assent and
- consent to any proposition my father laid before her, merely because she
- did not understand it, or had no ideas of the principal word or term of
- art, upon which the tenet or proposition rolled. She contented herself
- with doing all that her godfathers and godmothers promised for her--but
- no more; and so would go on using a hard word twenty years together--and
- replying to it too, if it was a verb, in all its moods and tenses,
- without giving herself any trouble to enquire about it.
- This was an eternal source of misery to my father, and broke the neck,
- at the first setting out, of more good dialogues between them, than
- could have done the most petulant contradiction----the few which
- survived were the better for the _cuvetts_----
- --“They are foolish things;” said my mother.
- ----Particularly the _cuvetts_; replied my father.
- ’Tis enough--he tasted the sweet of triumph--and went on.
- --Not that they are, properly speaking, Mrs. _Wadman’s_ premises, said
- my father, partly correcting himself--because she is but tenant for
- life----
- ----That makes a great difference--said my mother----
- --In a fool’s head, replied my father----
- Unless she should happen to have a child--said my mother--
- ----But she must persuade my brother _Toby_ first to get her one--
- ----To be sure, Mr. _Shandy_, quoth my mother.
- ----Though if it comes to persuasion--said my father --Lord have mercy
- upon them.
- Amen: said my mother, _piano_.
- Amen: cried my father, _fortissimè_.
- Amen: said my mother again----but with such a sighing cadence of
- personal pity at the end of it, as discomfited every fibre about my
- father--he instantly took out his almanack; but before he could untie
- it, _Yorick’s_ congregation coming out of church, became a full answer
- to one half of his business with it--and my mother telling him it was a
- sacrament day--left him as little in doubt, as to the other part --He
- put his almanack into his pocket.
- The first Lord of the Treasury thinking of _ways and means_, could not
- have returned home with a more embarrassed look.
- CHAPTER XII
- Upon looking back from the end of the last chapter, and surveying the
- texture of what has been wrote, it is necessary, that upon this page and
- the three following, a good quantity of heterogeneous matter be inserted
- to keep up that just balance betwixt wisdom and folly, without which a
- book would not hold together a single year: nor is it a poor creeping
- digression (which but for the name of, a man might continue as well
- going on in the king’s highway) which will do the business----no; if it
- is to be a digression, it must be a good frisky one, and upon a frisky
- subject too, where neither the horse or his rider are to be caught, but
- by rebound.
- The only difficulty, is raising powers suitable to the nature of the
- service: FANCY is capricious --WIT must not be searched for--and
- PLEASANTRY (good-natured slut as she is) will not come in at a call, was
- an empire to be laid at her feet.
- ----The best way for a man is to say his prayers----
- Only if it puts him in mind of his infirmities and defects as well
- ghostly as bodily--for that purpose, he will find himself rather worse
- after he has said them than before--for other purposes, better.
- For my own part, there is not a way either moral or mechanical under
- heaven that I could think of, which I have not taken with myself in this
- case: sometimes by addressing myself directly to the soul herself, and
- arguing the point over and over again with her upon the extent of her
- own faculties----
- ----I never could make them an inch the wider----
- Then by changing my system, and trying what could be made of it upon the
- body, by temperance, soberness, and chastity: These are good, quoth I,
- in themselves--they are good, absolutely; --they are good, relatively;
- --they are good for health--they are good for happiness in this
- world--they are good for happiness in the next----
- In short, they were good for everything but the thing wanted; and there
- they were good for nothing, but to leave the soul just as heaven made
- it: as for the theological virtues of faith and hope, they give it
- courage; but then that snivelling virtue of Meekness (as my father would
- always call it) takes it quite away again, so you are exactly where you
- started.
- Now in all common and ordinary cases, there is nothing which I have
- found to answer so well as this----
- ----Certainly, if there is any dependence upon Logic, and that I am not
- blinded by self-love, there must be something of true genius about me,
- merely upon this symptom of it, that I do not know what envy is: for
- never do I hit upon any invention or device which tendeth to the
- furtherance of good writing, but I instantly make it public; willing
- that all mankind should write as well as myself.
- ----Which they certainly will, when they think as little.
- CHAPTER XIII
- Now in ordinary cases, that is, when I am only stupid, and the thoughts
- rise heavily and pass gummous through my pen----
- Or that I am got, I know not how, into a cold unmetaphorical vein of
- infamous writing, and cannot take a plumb-lift out of it _for my soul_;
- so must be obliged to go on writing like a _Dutch_ commentator to the
- end of the chapter, unless something be done----
- ----I never stand conferring with pen and ink one moment; for if a pinch
- of snuff, or a stride or two across the room will not do the business
- for me --I take a razor at once; and having tried the edge of it upon
- the palm of my hand, without further ceremony, except that of first
- lathering my beard, I shave it off; taking care only if I do leave a
- hair, that it be not a grey one: this done, I change my shirt--put on a
- better coat--send for my last wig--put my topaz ring upon my finger; and
- in a word, dress myself from one end to the other of me, after my best
- fashion.
- Now the devil in hell must be in it, if this does not do: for consider,
- Sir, as every man chuses to be present at the shaving of his own beard
- (though there is no rule without an exception), and unavoidably sits
- over-against himself the whole time it is doing, in case he has a hand
- in it--the Situation, like all others, has notions of her own to put
- into the brain.----
- ----I maintain it, the conceits of a rough-bearded man, are seven years
- more terse and juvenile for one single operation; and if they did not
- run a risk of being quite shaved away, might be carried up by continual
- shavings, to the highest pitch of sublimity --How _Homer_ could write
- with so long a beard, I don’t know----and as it makes against my
- hypothesis, I as little care ----But let us return to the Toilet.
- _Ludovicus Sorbonensis_ makes this entirely an affair of the body
- (ἐξωτερικὴ πρᾶξις) as he calls it----but he is deceived: the soul and
- body are joint-sharers in everything they get: A man cannot dress, but
- his ideas get cloath’d at the same time; and if he dresses like a
- gentleman, every one of them stands presented to his imagination,
- genteelized along with him--so that he has nothing to do, but take his
- pen, and write like himself.
- For this cause, when your honours and reverences would know whether I
- writ clean and fit to be read, you will be able to judge full as well by
- looking into my Laundress’s bill, as my book: there was one single month
- in which I can make it appear, that I dirtied one and thirty shirts with
- clean writing; and after all, was more abus’d, cursed, criticis’d, and
- confounded, and had more mystic heads shaken at me, for what I had wrote
- in that one month, than in all the other months of that year put
- together.
- ----But their honours and reverences had not seen my bills.
- CHAPTER XIV
- As I never had any intention of beginning the Digression I am making all
- this preparation for, till I come to the 15th chapter ----I have this
- chapter to put to whatever use I think proper ----I have twenty this
- moment ready for it ----I could write my chapter of Button-holes in
- it----
- Or my chapter of _Pishes_, which should follow them----
- Or my chapter of _Knots_, in case their reverences have done with
- them----they might lead me into mischief: the safest way is to follow
- the track of the learned, and raise objections against what I have been
- writing, tho’ I declare beforehand, I know no more than my heels how to
- answer them.
- And first, it may be said, there is a pelting kind of _thersitical_
- satire, as black as the very ink ’tis wrote with----(and by the bye,
- whoever says so, is indebted to the muster-master general of the
- _Grecian_ army, for suffering the name of so ugly and foul-mouth’d a man
- as _Thersites_ to continue upon his roll----for it has furnish’d him
- with an epithet)----in these productions he will urge, all the personal
- washings and scrubbings upon earth do a sinking genius no sort of
- good----but just the contrary, inasmuch as the dirtier the fellow is,
- the better generally he succeeds in it.
- To this, I have no other answer----at least ready----but that the
- Archbishop of _Benevento_ wrote his _nasty_ Romance of the _Galatea_, as
- all the world knows, in a purple coat, waistcoat, and purple pair of
- breeches; and that the penance set him of writing a commentary upon the
- book of the _Revelations_, as severe as it was look’d upon by one part
- of the world, was far from being deem’d so by the other, upon the single
- account of that _Investment_.
- Another objection, to all this remedy, is its want of universality;
- forasmuch as the shaving part of it, upon which so much stress is laid,
- by an unalterable law of nature excludes one half of the species
- entirely from its use: all I can say is, that female writers, whether of
- _England_, or of _France_, must e’en go without it------
- As for the _Spanish_ ladies ----I am in no sort of distress----
- CHAPTER XV
- The fifteenth chapter is come at last; and brings nothing with it but a
- sad signature of “How our pleasures slip from under us in this world!”
- For in talking of my digression ----I declare before heaven I have made
- it! What a strange creature is mortal man! said she.
- ’Tis very true, said I----but ’twere better to get all these things out
- of our heads, and return to my uncle _Toby_.
- CHAPTER XVI
- When my uncle _Toby_ and the corporal had marched down to the bottom of
- the avenue, they recollected their business lay the other way; so they
- faced about and marched up straight to Mrs. _Wadman’s_ door.
- I warrant your honour; said the corporal, touching his _Montero_-cap
- with his hand, as he passed him in order to give a knock at the
- door ----My uncle _Toby_, contrary to his invariable way of treating his
- faithful servant, said nothing good or bad: the truth was, he had not
- altogether marshal’d his ideas; he wish’d for another conference, and as
- the corporal was mounting up the three steps before the door--he hem’d
- twice--a portion of my uncle _Toby’s_ most modest spirits fled, at each
- expulsion, towards the corporal; he stood with the rapper of the door
- suspended for a full minute in his hand, he scarce knew why. _Bridget_
- stood perdue within, with her finger and her thumb upon the latch,
- benumb’d with expectation; and Mrs. _Wadman_, with an eye ready to be
- deflowered again, sat breathless behind the window-curtain of her
- bed-chamber, watching their approach.
- _Trim!_ said my uncle _Toby_----but as he articulated the word, the
- minute expired, and _Trim_ let fall the rapper.
- My uncle _Toby_ perceiving that all hopes of a conference were knock’d
- on the head by it------whistled Lillabullero.
- CHAPTER XVII
- As Mrs. _Bridget’s_ finger and thumb were upon the latch, the corporal
- did not knock as oft as perchance your honour’s taylor ----I might have
- taken my example something nearer home; for I owe mine, some five and
- twenty pounds at least, and wonder at the man’s patience----
- ----But this is nothing at all to the world: only ’tis a cursed thing to
- be in debt, and there seems to be a fatality in the exchequers of some
- poor princes, particularly those of our house, which no Economy can bind
- down in irons: for my own part, I’m persuaded there is not any one
- prince, prelate, pope, or potentate, great or small upon earth, more
- desirous in his heart of keeping straight with the world than I am----
- or who takes more likely means for it. I never give above half a
- guinea----or walk with boots----or cheapen tooth-picks----or lay out a
- shilling upon a band-box the year round; and for the six months I’m in
- the country, I’m upon so small a scale, that with all the good temper in
- the world, I outdo _Rousseau_, a bar length------for I keep neither man
- or boy, or horse, or cow, or dog, or cat, or anything that can eat or
- drink, except a thin poor piece of a Vestal (to keep my fire in), and
- who has generally as bad an appetite as myself----but if you think this
- makes a philosopher of me ----I would not my good people! give a rush
- for your judgments.
- True philosophy----but there is no treating the subject whilst my uncle
- is whistling Lillabullero.
- ----Let us go into the house.
- CHAPTER XVIII
- *
- *
- *
- *
- *
- *
- CHAPTER XIX
- *
- *
- *
- *
- *
- *
- CHAPTER XX
- ------ * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * *.------
- ----You shall see the very place, Madam; said my uncle _Toby_.
- Mrs. _Wadman_ blush’d----look’d towards the door----turn’d
- pale----blush’d slightly again----recover’d her natural
- colour----blush’d worse than ever; which, for the sake of the unlearned
- reader, I translate thus----
- “_L--d! I cannot look at it----
- What would the world say if I look’d at it?
- I should drop down, if I look’d at it--
- I wish I could look at it----
- There can be no sin in looking at it.
- ----I will look at it._”
- Whilst all this was running through Mrs. _Wadman’s_ imagination, my
- uncle _Toby_ had risen from the sopha, and got to the other side of the
- parlour door, to give _Trim_ an order about it in the passage----
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * ----I believe it is in the garret, said my uncle _Toby_
- ----I saw it there, an’ please your honour, this morning, answered
- _Trim_ ----Then prithee, step directly for it, _Trim_, said my uncle
- _Toby_, and bring it into the parlour.
- The corporal did not approve of the orders, but most chearfully obeyed
- them. The first was not an act of his will--the second was; so he put on
- his _Montero_-cap, and went as fast as his lame knee would let him. My
- uncle _Toby_ returned into the parlour, and sat himself down again upon
- the sopha.
- ----You shall lay your finger upon the place--said my uncle _Toby_.
- ----I will not touch it, however, quoth Mrs. _Wadman_ to herself.
- This requires a second translation: --it shews what little knowledge is
- got by mere words--we must go up to the first springs.
- Now in order to clear up the mist which hangs upon these three pages,
- I must endeavour to be as clear as possible myself.
- Rub your hands thrice across your foreheads--blow your noses--cleanse
- your emunctories--sneeze, my good people! ----God bless you----
- Now give me all the help you can.
- CHAPTER XXI
- As there are fifty different ends (counting all ends in----as well civil
- as religious) for which a woman takes a husband, she first sets about
- and carefully weighs, then separates and distinguishes in her mind,
- which of all that number of ends is hers: then by discourse, enquiry,
- argumentation, and inference, she investigates and finds out whether she
- has got hold of the right one----and if she has----then, by pulling it
- gently this way and that way, she further forms a judgment, whether it
- will not break in the drawing.
- The imagery under which _Slawkenbergius_ impresses this upon the
- reader’s fancy, in the beginning of his third Decad, is so ludicrous,
- that the honour I bear the sex, will not suffer me to quote
- it----otherwise it is not destitute of humour.
- “She first, saith _Slawkenbergius_, stops the asse, and holding his
- halter in her left hand (lest he should get away) she thrusts her right
- hand into the very bottom of his pannier to search for it --For what?
- --you’ll not know the sooner, quoth _Slawkenbergius_, for interrupting
- me----
- “I have nothing, good Lady, but empty bottles;” says the asse.
- “I’m loaded with tripes;” says the second.
- ----And thou art little better, quoth she to the third; for nothing is
- there in thy panniers but trunk-hose and pantofles--and so to the fourth
- and fifth, going on one by one through the whole string, till coming to
- the asse which carries it, she turns the pannier upside down, looks at
- it--considers it--samples it--measures it--stretches it--wets it--dries
- it--then takes her teeth both to the warp and weft of it.
- ----Of what? for the love of Christ!
- I am determined, answered _Slawkenbergius_, that all the powers upon
- earth shall never wring that secret from my breast.
- CHAPTER XXII
- We live in a world beset on all sides with mysteries and riddles--and so
- ’tis no matter----else it seems strange, that Nature, who makes
- everything so well to answer its destination, and seldom or never errs,
- unless for pastime, in giving such forms and aptitudes to whatever
- passes through her hands, that whether she designs for the plough, the
- caravan, the cart--or whatever other creature she models, be it but an
- asse’s foal, you are sure to have the thing you wanted; and yet at the
- same time should so eternally bungle it as she does, in making so simple
- a thing as a married man.
- Whether it is in the choice of the clay----or that it is frequently
- spoiled in the baking; by an excess of which a husband may turn out too
- crusty (you know) on one hand----or not enough so, through defect of
- heat, on the other----or whether this great Artificer is not so
- attentive to the little Platonic exigences _of that part_ of the
- species, for whose use she is fabricating _this_----or that her Ladyship
- sometimes scarce knows what sort of a husband will do ----I know not: we
- will discourse about it after supper.
- It is enough, that neither the observation itself, or the reasoning upon
- it, are at all to the purpose----but rather against it; since with
- regard to my uncle _Toby’s_ fitness for the marriage state, nothing was
- ever better: she had formed him of the best and kindliest clay----had
- temper’d it with her own milk, and breathed into it the sweetest
- spirit----she had made him all gentle, generous, and humane----she had
- filled his heart with trust and confidence, and disposed every passage
- which led to it, for the communication of the tenderest offices----she
- had moreover considered the other causes for which matrimony was
- ordained----
- And accordingly * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * *.
- The DONATION was not defeated by my uncle _Toby’s_ wound.
- Now this last article was somewhat apocryphal; and the Devil, who is the
- great disturber of our faiths in this world, had raised scruples in Mrs.
- _Wadman’s_ brain about it; and like a true devil as he was, had done his
- own work at the same time, by turning my uncle _Toby’s_ Virtue thereupon
- into nothing but _empty bottles_, _tripes_, _trunk-hose_, and
- _pantofles_.
- CHAPTER XXIII
- Mrs. _Bridget_ had pawn’d all the little stock of honour a poor
- chambermaid was worth in the world, that she would get to the bottom of
- the affair in ten days; and it was built upon one of the most
- concessible _postulata_ in nature: namely, that whilst my uncle _Toby_
- was making love to her mistress, the corporal could find nothing better
- to do, than make love to her---- “_And I’ll let him as much as he will_,
- said _Bridget_, _to get it out of him_.”
- Friendship has two garments; an outer and an under one. _Bridget_ was
- serving her mistress’s interests in the one--and doing the thing which
- most pleased herself in the other; so had as many stakes depending upon
- my uncle _Toby’s_ wound, as the Devil himself ----Mrs. _Wadman_ had but
- one--and as it possibly might be her last (without discouraging Mrs.
- _Bridget_, or discrediting her talents) was determined to play her cards
- herself.
- She wanted not encouragement: a child might have look’d into his
- hand----there was such a plainness and simplicity in his playing out
- what trumps he had----with such an unmistrusting ignorance of the
- _ten-ace_----and so naked and defenceless did he sit upon the same sopha
- with widow _Wadman_, that a generous heart would have wept to have won
- the game of him.
- Let us drop the metaphor.
- CHAPTER XXIV
- ----And the story too--if you please: for though I have all along been
- hastening towards this part of it, with so much earnest desire, as well
- knowing it to be the choicest morsel of what I had to offer to the
- world, yet now that I am got to it, any one is welcome to take my pen,
- and go on with the story for me that will --I see the difficulties of
- the descriptions I’m going to give--and feel my want of powers.
- It is one comfort at least to me, that I lost some fourscore ounces of
- blood this week in a most uncritical fever which attacked me at the
- beginning of this chapter; so that I have still some hopes remaining, it
- may be more in the serous or globular parts of the blood, than in the
- subtile _aura_ of the brain----be it which it will--an Invocation can do
- no hurt----and I leave the affair entirely to the _invoked_, to inspire
- or to inject me according as he sees good.
- THE INVOCATION
- Gentle Spirit of sweetest humour, who erst did sit upon the easy pen of
- my beloved CERVANTES; Thou who glided’st daily through his lattice, and
- turned’st the twilight of his prison into noonday brightness by thy
- presence----tinged’st his little urn of water with heaven-sent nectar,
- and all the time he wrote of _Sancho_ and his master, didst cast thy
- mystic mantle o’er his wither’d stump,[9.1] and wide extended it to all
- the evils of his life------
- ----Turn in hither, I beseech thee! ----behold these breeches! ----they
- are all I have in the world----that piteous rent was given them at
- _Lyons_------
- My shirts! see what a deadly schism has happen’d amongst ’em--for the
- laps are in _Lombardy_, and the rest of ’em here --I never had but six,
- and a cunning gypsey of a laundress at _Milan_ cut me off the
- _fore_-laps of five --To do her justice, she did it with some
- consideration--for I was returning out of _Italy_.
- And yet, notwithstanding all this, and a pistol tinderbox which was
- moreover filch’d from me at _Sienna_, and twice that I pay’d five Pauls
- for two hard eggs, once at _Raddicoffini_, and a second time at
- _Capua_ --I do not think a journey through _France_ and _Italy_, provided
- a man keeps his temper all the way, so bad a thing as some people would
- make you believe: there must be _ups_ and _downs_, or how the duce
- should we get into vallies where Nature spreads so many tables of
- entertainment. --’Tis nonsense to imagine they will lend you their
- voitures to be shaken to pieces for nothing; and unless you pay twelve
- sous for greasing your wheels, how should the poor peasant get butter to
- his bread? --We really expect too much--and for the livre or two above
- par for your suppers and bed--at the most they are but one shilling and
- ninepence halfpenny----who would embroil their philosophy for it? for
- heaven’s and for your own sake, pay it----pay it with both hands open,
- rather than leave _Disappointment_ sitting drooping upon the eye of your
- fair Hostess and her Damsels in the gateway, at your departure----and
- besides, my dear Sir, you get a sisterly kiss of each of ’em worth a
- pound----at least I did----
- ----For my uncle _Toby’s_ amours running all the way in my head, they
- had the same effect upon me as if they had been my own ----I was in the
- most perfect state of bounty and good-will; and felt the kindliest
- harmony vibrating within me, with every oscillation of the chaise alike;
- so that whether the roads were rough or smooth, it made no difference;
- everything I saw or had to do with, touch’d upon some secret spring
- either of sentiment or rapture.
- ----They were the sweetest notes I ever heard; and I instantly let down
- the fore-glass to hear them more distinctly----’Tis _Maria_; said the
- postillion, observing I was listening ----Poor _Maria_, continued he
- (leaning his body on one side to let me see her, for he was in a line
- betwixt us), is sitting upon a bank playing her vespers upon her pipe,
- with her little goat beside her.
- The young fellow utter’d this with an accent and a look so perfectly in
- tune to a feeling heart, that I instantly made a vow, I would give him a
- four-and-twenty sous piece, when I got to _Moulins_----
- ------And who is _poor Maria?_ said I.
- The love and piety of all the villages around us; said the
- postillion----it is but three years ago, that the sun did not shine upon
- so fair, so quick-witted and amiable a maid; and better fate did _Maria_
- deserve, than to have her Banns forbid, by the intrigues of the curate
- of the parish who published them----
- He was going on, when _Maria_, who had made a short pause, put the pipe
- to her mouth, and began the air again----they were the same notes;
- ----yet were ten times sweeter: It is the evening service to the Virgin,
- said the young man----but who has taught her to play it--or how she came
- by her pipe, no one knows; we think that heaven has assisted her in
- both; for ever since she has been unsettled in her mind, it seems her
- only consolation----she has never once had the pipe out of her hand, but
- plays that _service_ upon it almost night and day.
- The postillion delivered this with so much discretion and natural
- eloquence, that I could not help decyphering something in his face above
- his condition, and should have sifted out his history, had not poor
- _Maria_ taken such full possession of me.
- We had got up by this time almost to the bank where _Maria_ was sitting:
- she was in a thin white jacket, with her hair, all but two tresses,
- drawn up into a silk-net, with a few olive leaves twisted a little
- fantastically on one side----she was beautiful; and if ever I felt the
- full force of an honest heart-ache, it was the moment I saw her----
- ----God help her! poor damsel! above a hundred masses, said the
- postillion, have been said in the several parish churches and convents
- around, for her, ----but without effect; we have still hopes, as she is
- sensible for short intervals, that the Virgin at last will restore her
- to herself; but her parents, who know her best, are hopeless upon that
- score, and think her senses are lost for ever.
- As the postillion spoke this, MARIA made a cadence so melancholy, so
- tender and querulous, that I sprung out of the chaise to help her, and
- found myself sitting betwixt her and her goat before I relapsed from my
- enthusiasm.
- MARIA look’d wistfully for some time at me, and then at her goat----and
- then at me----and then at her goat again, and so on, alternately----
- ----Well, _Maria_, said I softly ----What resemblance do you find?
- I do entreat the candid reader to believe me, that it was from the
- humblest conviction of what a _Beast_ man is, ----that I asked the
- question; and that I would not have let fallen an unseasonable
- pleasantry in the venerable presence of Misery, to be entitled to all
- the wit that ever _Rabelais_ scatter’d----and yet I own my heart smote
- me, and that I so smarted at the very idea of it, that I swore I would
- set up for Wisdom, and utter grave sentences the rest of my days----and
- never----never attempt again to commit mirth with man, woman, or child,
- the longest day I had to live.
- As for writing nonsense to them ----I believe, there was a reserve--but
- that I leave to the world.
- Adieu, _Maria!_--adieu, poor hapless damsel! ----some time, but not
- _now_, I may hear thy sorrows from thy own lips----but I was deceived;
- for that moment she took her pipe and told me such a tale of woe with
- it, that I rose up, and with broken and irregular steps walk’d softly to
- my chaise.
- ------What an excellent inn at _Moulins!_
- [Footnote 9.1: He lost his hand at the battle of _Lepanto_.]
- CHAPTER XXV
- When we have got to the end of this chapter (but not before) we must all
- turn back to the two blank chapters, on the account of which my honour
- has lain bleeding this half hour ----I stop it, by pulling off one of my
- yellow slippers and throwing it with all my violence to the opposite
- side of my room, with a declaration at the heel of it----
- ----That whatever resemblance it may bear to half the chapters which are
- written in the world, or for aught I know may be now writing in it--that
- it was as casual as the foam of _Zeuxis_ his horse; besides, I look upon
- a chapter which has _only nothing in it_, with respect; and considering
- what worse things there are in the world ----That it is no way a proper
- subject for satire------
- ----Why then was it left so? And here without staying for my reply,
- shall I be called as many blockheads, numsculs, doddypoles, dunderheads,
- ninny-hammers, goosecaps, joltheads, nincompoops, and sh- -t-a-beds----
- and other unsavoury appellations, as ever the cake-bakers of _Lernè_
- cast in the teeth of King _Garangantan’s_ shepherds ----And I’ll let
- them do it, as _Bridget_ said, as much as they please; for how was it
- possible they should foresee the necessity I was under of writing the
- 25th chapter of my book, before the 18th, &c.?
- ------So I don’t take it amiss ----All I wish is, that it may be a lesson
- to the world, “_to let people tell their stories their own way_.”
- THE EIGHTEENTH CHAPTER
- As Mrs. _Bridget_ opened the door before the corporal had well given the
- rap, the interval betwixt that and my uncle _Toby’s_ introduction into
- the parlour, was so short, that Mrs. _Wadman_ had but just time to get
- from behind the curtain----lay a Bible upon the table, and advance a
- step or two towards the door to receive him.
- My uncle _Toby_ saluted Mrs. _Wadman_, after the manner in which women
- were saluted by men in the year of our Lord God one thousand seven
- hundred and thirteen----then facing about, he march’d up abreast with
- her to the sopha, and in three plain words----though not before he was
- sat down----nor after he was sat down----but as he was sitting down,
- told her, “_he was in love_”----so that my uncle _Toby_ strained himself
- more in the declaration than he needed.
- Mrs. _Wadman_ naturally looked down, upon a slit she had been darning up
- in her apron, in expectation every moment, that my uncle _Toby_ would go
- on; but having no talents for amplification, and Love moreover of all
- others being a subject of which he was the least a master ----When he
- had told Mrs. _Wadman_ once that he loved her, he let it alone, and left
- the matter to work after its own way.
- My father was always in raptures with this system of my uncle _Toby’s_,
- as he falsely called it, and would often say, that could his brother
- _Toby_ to his process have added but a pipe of tobacco----he had
- wherewithal to have found his way, if there was faith in a _Spanish_
- proverb, towards the hearts of half the women upon the globe.
- My uncle _Toby_ never understood what my father meant; nor will I
- presume to extract more from it, than a condemnation of an error which
- the bulk of the world lie under----but the _French_ every one of ’em to
- a man, who believe in it, almost, as much as the REAL PRESENCE, “_That
- talking of love, is making it_.”
- ------I would as soon set about making a black-pudding by the same
- receipt.
- Let us go on: Mrs. _Wadman_ sat in expectation my uncle _Toby_ would do
- so, to almost the first pulsation of that minute, wherein silence on one
- side or the other, generally becomes indecent: so edging herself a
- little more towards him, and raising up her eyes, sub-blushing, as she
- did it----she took up the gauntlet----or the discourse (if you like it
- better) and communed with my uncle _Toby_, thus:
- The cares and disquietudes of the marriage state, quoth Mrs. _Wadman_,
- are very great. I suppose so--said my uncle _Toby_: and therefore when a
- person, continued Mrs. _Wadman_, is so much at his ease as you are--so
- happy, captain _Shandy_, in yourself, your friends and your
- amusements --I wonder, what reasons can incline you to the state------
- ----They are written, quoth my uncle _Toby_, in the Common-Prayer Book.
- Thus far my uncle _Toby_ went on warily, and kept within his depth,
- leaving Mrs. _Wadman_ to sail upon the gulph as she pleased.
- ----As for children--said Mrs. _Wadman_--though a principal end perhaps
- of the institution, and the natural wish, I suppose, of every
- parent--yet do not we all find, they are certain sorrows, and very
- uncertain comforts? and what is there, dear sir, to pay one for the
- heart-aches--what compensation for the many tender and disquieting
- apprehensions of a suffering and defenceless mother who brings them into
- life? I declare, said my uncle _Toby_, smit with pity, I know of none;
- unless it be the pleasure which it has pleased God----
- A fiddlestick! quoth she.
- CHAPTER THE NINETEENTH
- Now there are such an infinitude of notes, tunes, cants, chants, airs,
- looks, and accents with which the word _fiddlestick_ may be pronounced
- in all such causes as this, every one of ’em impressing a sense and
- meaning as different from the other, as _dirt_ from _cleanliness_ --That
- Casuists (for it is an affair of conscience on that score) reckon up no
- less than fourteen thousand in which you may do either right or wrong.
- Mrs. _Wadman_ hit upon the _fiddlestick_, which summoned up all my uncle
- _Toby’s_ modest blood into his cheeks--so feeling within himself that he
- had somehow or other got beyond his depth, he stopt short; and without
- entering further either into the pains or pleasures of matrimony, he
- laid his hand upon his heart, and made an offer to take them as they
- were, and share them along with her.
- When my uncle _Toby_ had said this, he did not care to say it again; so
- casting his eye upon the Bible which Mrs. _Wadman_ had laid upon the
- table, he took it up; and popping, dear soul! upon a passage in it, of
- all others the most interesting to him--which was the siege of
- _Jericho_--he set himself to read it over--leaving his proposal of
- marriage, as he had done his declaration of love, to work with her after
- its own way. Now it wrought neither as an astringent or a loosener; nor
- like opium, or bark, or mercury, or buckthorn, or any one drug which
- nature had bestowed upon the world--in short, it work’d not at all in
- her; and the cause of that was, that there was something working there
- before ----Babbler that I am! I have anticipated what it was a dozen
- times; but there is fire still in the subject----allons.
- CHAPTER XXVI
- It is natural for a perfect stranger who is going from _London_ to
- _Edinburgh_, to enquire before he sets out, how many miles to _York_;
- which is about the half way----nor does anybody wonder, if he goes on
- and asks about the corporation, &c.--
- It was just as natural for Mrs. _Wadman_, whose first husband was all
- his time afflicted with a Sciatica, to wish to know how far from the hip
- to the groin; and how far she was likely to suffer more or less in her
- feelings, in the one case than in the other.
- She had accordingly read _Drake’s_ anatomy from one end to the other.
- She had peeped into _Wharton_ upon the brain, and borrowed[9.2] _Graaf_
- upon the bones and muscles; but could make nothing of it.
- She had reason’d likewise from her own powers----laid down
- theorems----drawn consequences, and come to no conclusion.
- To clear up all, she had twice asked Doctor _Slop_, “if poor captain
- _Shandy_ was ever likely to recover of his wound----?”
- ----He is recovered, Doctor _Slop_ would say----
- What! quite?
- Quite: madam----
- But what do you mean by a recovery? Mrs. _Wadman_ would say.
- Doctor _Slop_ was the worst man alive at definitions; and so Mrs.
- _Wadman_ could get no knowledge: in short, there was no way to extract
- it, but from my uncle _Toby_ himself.
- There is an accent of humanity in an enquiry of this kind which lulls
- SUSPICION to rest----and I am half persuaded the serpent got pretty near
- it, in his discourse with Eve; for the propensity in the sex to be
- deceived could not be so great, that she should have boldness to hold
- chat with the devil, without it ----But there is an accent of
- humanity----how shall I describe it? --’tis an accent which covers the
- part with a garment, and gives the enquirer a right to be as particular
- with it, as your body-surgeon.
- “----Was it without remission?--
- “----Was it more tolerable in bed?
- “----Could he lie on both sides alike with it?
- “--Was he able to mount a horse?
- “--Was motion bad for it?” _et cætera_, were so tenderly spoke to, and
- so directed towards my uncle _Toby’s_ heart, that every item of them
- sunk ten times deeper into it than the evils themselves----but when Mrs.
- _Wadman_ went round about by _Namur_ to get at my uncle _Toby’s_ groin;
- and engaged him to attack the point of the advanced counterscarp, and
- _pêle mêle_ with the _Dutch_ to take the counterguard of St. _Roch_
- sword in hand--and then with tender notes playing upon his ear, led him
- all bleeding by the hand out of the trench, wiping her eye, as he was
- carried to his tent ----Heaven! Earth! Sea! --all was lifted up--the
- springs of nature rose above their levels--an angel of mercy sat besides
- him on the sopha--his heart glow’d with fire--and had he been worth a
- thousand, he had lost every heart of them to Mrs. _Wadman_.
- --And whereabouts, dear Sir, quoth Mrs. _Wadman_, a little
- categorically, did you receive this sad blow? ----In asking this
- question, Mrs. _Wadman_ gave a slight glance towards the waistband of my
- uncle _Toby’s_ red plush breeches, expecting naturally, as the shortest
- reply to it, that my uncle _Toby_ would lay his forefinger upon the
- place ----It fell out otherwise----for my uncle _Toby_ having got his
- wound before the gate of St. _Nicolas_, in one of the traverses of the
- trench opposite to the salient angle of the demibastion of St. _Roch_;
- he could at any time stick a pin upon the identical spot of ground where
- he was standing when the stone struck him: this struck instantly upon my
- uncle _Toby’s_ sensorium----and with it, struck his large map of the
- town and citadel of _Namur_ and its environs, which he had purchased and
- pasted down upon a board, by the corporal’s aid, during his long
- illness----it had lain with other military lumber in the garret ever
- since, and accordingly the corporal was detached into the garret to
- fetch it.
- My uncle _Toby_ measured off thirty toises, with Mrs. _Wadman’s_
- scissars, from the returning angle before the gate of St. _Nicolas_; and
- with such a virgin modesty laid her finger upon the place, that the
- goddess of Decency, if then in being--if not, ’twas her shade--shook her
- head, and with a finger wavering across her eyes--forbid her to explain
- the mistake.
- Unhappy Mrs. _Wadman!_
- ----For nothing can make this chapter go off with spirit but an
- apostrophe to thee----but my heart tells me, that in such a crisis an
- apostrophe is but an insult in disguise, and ere I would offer one to a
- woman in distress--let the chapter go to the devil; provided any damn’d
- critic _in keeping_ will be but at the trouble to take it with him.
- [Footnote 9.2: This must be a mistake in Mr. _Shandy_; for
- _Graaf_ wrote upon the pancreatick juice, and the parts of
- generation.]
- CHAPTER XXVII
- My uncle _Toby’s_ Map is carried down into the kitchen.
- CHAPTER XXVIII
- ----And here is the _Maes_--and this is the _Sambre_; said the corporal,
- pointing with his right hand extended a little towards the map and his
- left upon Mrs. _Bridget’s_ shoulder----but not the shoulder next
- him--and this, said he, is the town of _Namur_--and this the
- citadel--and there lay the _French_--and here lay his honour and
- myself----and in this cursed trench, Mrs. _Bridget_, quoth the corporal,
- taking her by the hand, did he receive the wound which crush’d him so
- miserably _here_. ----In pronouncing which, he slightly press’d the back
- of her hand towards the part he felt for----and let it fall.
- We thought, Mr. _Trim_, it had been more in the middle, ----said Mrs.
- _Bridget_----
- That would have undone us for ever--said the corporal.
- ----And left my poor mistress undone too, said _Bridget_.
- The corporal made no reply to the repartee, but by giving Mrs. _Bridget_
- a kiss.
- Come--come--said _Bridget_--holding the palm of her left hand parallel
- to the plane of the horizon, and sliding the fingers of the other over
- it, in a way which could not have been done, had there been the least
- wart or protuberance----’Tis every syllable of it false, cried the
- corporal, before she had half finished the sentence----
- --I know it to be fact, said _Bridget_, from credible witnesses.
- ------Upon my honour, said the corporal, laying his hand upon his heart
- and blushing, as he spoke, with honest resentment--’tis a story, Mrs.
- _Bridget_, as false as hell ----Not, said _Bridget_, interrupting him,
- that either I or my mistress care a halfpenny about it, whether ’tis so
- or no------only that when one is married, one would chuse to have such a
- thing by one at least----
- It was somewhat unfortunate for Mrs. _Bridget_, that she had begun the
- attack with her manual exercise; for the corporal instantly *
- * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * * * * * * *
- * * * *.
- CHAPTER XXIX
- It was like the momentary contest in the moist eye-lids of an _April_
- morning, “Whether _Bridget_ should laugh or cry.”
- She snatched up a rolling-pin----’twas ten to one, she had laugh’d----
- She laid it down----she cried; and had one single tear of ’em but tasted
- of bitterness, full sorrowful would the corporal’s heart have been that
- he had used the argument; but the corporal understood the sex, a _quart
- major to a terce_ at least, better than my uncle _Toby_, and accordingly
- he assailed Mrs. _Bridget_ after this manner.
- I know, Mrs. _Bridget_, said the corporal, giving her a most respectful
- kiss, that thou art good and modest by nature, and art withal so
- generous a girl in thyself, that, if I know thee rightly, thou would’st
- not wound an insect, much less the honour of so gallant and worthy a
- soul as my master, wast thou sure to be made a countess of----but thou
- hast been set on, and deluded, dear _Bridget_, as is often a woman’s
- case, “to please others more than themselves----”
- _Bridget’s_ eyes poured down at the sensations the corporal excited.
- ----Tell me----tell me, then, my dear _Bridget_, continued the corporal,
- taking hold of her hand, which hung down dead by her side, ----and,
- giving a second kiss----whose suspicion has misled thee?
- _Bridget_ sobb’d a sob or two----then open’d her eyes----the corporal
- wiped ’em with the bottom of her apron----she then open’d her heart and
- told him all.
- CHAPTER XXX
- My uncle _Toby_ and the corporal had gone on separately with their
- operations the greatest part of the campaign, and as effectually cut off
- from all communication of what either the one or the other had been
- doing, as if they had been separated from each other by the _Maes_ or
- the _Sambre_.
- My uncle _Toby_, on his side, had presented himself every afternoon in
- his red and silver, and blue and gold alternately, and sustained an
- infinity of attacks in them, without knowing them to be attacks--and so
- had nothing to communicate----
- The corporal, on his side, in taking _Bridget_, by it had gain’d
- considerable advantages----and consequently had much to
- communicate----but what were the advantages----as well as what was the
- manner by which he had seiz’d them, required so nice an historian, that
- the corporal durst not venture upon it; and as sensible as he was of
- glory, would rather have been contented to have gone bareheaded and
- without laurels for ever, than torture his master’s modesty for a single
- moment----
- ----Best of honest and gallant servants! ----But I have apostrophiz’d
- thee, _Trim!_ once before----and could I apotheosize thee also (that is
- to say) with good company ----I would do it _without ceremony_ in the
- very next page.
- CHAPTER XXXI
- Now my uncle _Toby_ had one evening laid down his pipe upon the table,
- and was counting over to himself upon his finger ends (beginning at his
- thumb) all Mrs. _Wadman’s_ perfections one by one; and happening two or
- three times together, either by omitting some, or counting others twice
- over, to puzzle himself sadly before he could get beyond his middle
- finger ----Prithee, _Trim!_ said he, taking up his pipe again, ----bring
- me a pen and ink: _Trim_ brought paper also.
- Take a full sheet----_Trim!_ said my uncle _Toby_, making a sign with
- his pipe at the same time to take a chair and sit down close by him at
- the table. The corporal obeyed----placed the paper directly before
- him----took a pen, and dipp’d it in the ink.
- --She has a thousand virtues, _Trim!_ said my uncle _Toby_----
- Am I to set them down, an’ please your honour? quoth the corporal.
- ----But they must be taken in their ranks, replied my uncle _Toby_; for
- of them all, _Trim_, that which wins me most, and which is a security
- for all the rest, is the compassionate turn and singular humanity of her
- character --I protest, added my uncle _Toby_, looking up, as he protested
- it, towards the top of the ceiling ----That was I her brother, _Trim_, a
- thousand fold, she could not make more constant or more tender enquiries
- after my sufferings----though now no more.
- The corporal made no reply to my uncle _Toby’s_ protestation, but by a
- short cough--he dipp’d the pen a second time into the inkhorn; and my
- uncle _Toby_, pointing with the end of his pipe as close to the top of
- the sheet at the left hand corner of it, as he could get it----the
- corporal wrote down the word HUMANITY - - - - thus.
- Prithee, corporal, said my uncle _Toby_, as soon as _Trim_ had done
- it------how often does Mrs. _Bridget_ enquire after the wound on the cap
- of thy knee, which thou received’st at the battle of _Landen?_
- She never, an’ please your honour, enquires after it at all.
- That, corporal, said my uncle _Toby_, with all the triumph the goodness
- of his nature would permit ----That shews the difference in the character
- of the mistress and maid----had the fortune of war allotted the same
- mischance to me, Mrs. _Wadman_ would have enquired into every
- circumstance relating to it a hundred times ----She would have enquired,
- an’ please your honour, ten times as often about your honour’s
- groin ----The pain, _Trim_, is equally excruciating, ----and Compassion
- has as much to do with the one as the other----
- ----God bless your honour! cried the corporal----what has a woman’s
- compassion to do with a wound upon the cap of a man’s knee? had your
- honour’s been shot into ten thousand splinters at the affair of
- _Landen_, Mrs. _Wadman_ would have troubled her head as little about it
- as _Bridget_; because, added the corporal, lowering his voice, and
- speaking very distinctly, as he assigned his reason----
- “The knee is such a distance from the main body----whereas the groin,
- your honour knows, is upon the very _curtain_ of the _place_.”
- My uncle _Toby_ gave a long whistle----but in a note which could scarce
- be heard across the table.
- The corporal had advanced too far to retire----in three words he told
- the rest----
- My uncle _Toby_ laid down his pipe as gently upon the fender, as if it
- had been spun from the unravellings of a spider’s web----
- ------Let us go to my brother _Shandy’s_, said he.
- CHAPTER XXXII
- There will be just time, whilst my uncle _Toby_ and _Trim_ are walking
- to my father’s, to inform you that Mrs. _Wadman_ had, some moons before
- this, made a confident of my mother; and that Mrs. _Bridget_, who had
- the burden of her own, as well as her mistress’s secret to carry, had
- got happily delivered of both to _Susannah_ behind the garden-wall.
- As for my mother, she saw nothing at all in it, to make the least bustle
- about----but _Susannah_ was sufficient by herself for all the ends and
- purposes you could possibly have, in exporting a family secret; for she
- instantly imparted it by signs to _Jonathan_----and _Jonathan_ by tokens
- to the cook as she was basting a loin of mutton; the cook sold it with
- some kitchen-fat to the postillion for a groat, who truck’d it with the
- dairy maid for something of about the same value----and though whisper’d
- in the hay-loft, FAME caught the notes with her brazen trumpet, and
- sounded them upon the house-top --In a word, not an old woman in the
- village or five miles round, who did not understand the difficulties of
- my uncle _Toby’s_ siege, and what were the secret articles which had
- delayed the surrender.----
- My father, whose way was to force every event in nature into an
- hypothesis, by which means never man crucified TRUTH at the rate he
- did----had but just heard of the report as my uncle _Toby_ set out; and
- catching fire suddenly at the trespass done his brother by it, was
- demonstrating to _Yorick_, notwithstanding my mother was sitting
- by----not only, “That the devil was in women, and that the whole of the
- affair was lust;” but that every evil and disorder in the world, of what
- kind or nature soever, from the first fall of _Adam_, down to my uncle
- _Toby’s_ (inclusive), was owing one way or other to the same unruly
- appetite.
- _Yorick_ was just bringing my father’s hypothesis to some temper, when
- my uncle _Toby_ entering the room with marks of infinite benevolence and
- forgiveness in his looks, my father’s eloquence rekindled against the
- passion----and as he was not very nice in the choice of his words when
- he was wroth----as soon as my uncle _Toby_ was seated by the fire, and
- had filled his pipe, my father broke out in this manner.
- CHAPTER XXXIII
- ----That provision should be made for continuing the race of so great,
- so exalted and godlike a Being as man --I am far from denying--but
- philosophy speaks freely of everything; and therefore I still think and
- do maintain it to be a pity, that it should be done by means of a
- passion which bends down the faculties, and turns all the wisdom,
- contemplations, and operations of the soul backwards----a passion, my
- dear, continued my father, addressing himself to my mother, which
- couples and equals wise men with fools, and makes us come out of our
- caverns and hiding-places more like satyrs and four-footed beasts than
- men.
- I know it will be said, continued my father (availing himself of the
- _Prolepsis_), that in itself, and simply taken----like hunger, or
- thirst, or sleep----’tis an affair neither good or bad--or shameful or
- otherwise. ----Why then did the delicacy of _Diogenes_ and _Plato_ so
- recalcitrate against it? and wherefore, when we go about to make and
- plant a man, do we put out the candle? and for what reason is it, that
- all the parts thereof--the congredients--the preparations--the
- instruments, and whatever serves thereto, are so held as to be conveyed
- to a cleanly mind by no language, translation, or periphrasis whatever?
- ----The act of killing and destroying a man, continued my father,
- raising his voice--and turning to my uncle _Toby_--you see, is
- glorious--and the weapons by which we do it are honourable ----We
- march with them upon our shoulders ----We strut with them by our
- sides ----We gild them ----We carve them ----We in-lay them ----We
- enrich them ----Nay, if it be but a _scoundrel_ cannon, we cast an
- ornament upon the breach of it.--
- ----My uncle _Toby_ laid down his pipe to intercede for a better
- epithet----and _Yorick_ was rising up to batter the whole hypothesis to
- pieces----
- ----When _Obadiah_ broke into the middle of the room with a complaint,
- which cried out for an immediate hearing.
- The case was this:
- My father, whether by ancient custom of the manor, or as impropriator of
- the great tythes, was obliged to keep a Bull for the service of the
- Parish, and _Obadiah_ had led his cow upon a _pop-visit_ to him one day
- or other the preceding summer ----I say, one day or other--because as
- chance would have it, it was the day on which he was married to my
- father’s housemaid----so one was a reckoning to the other. Therefore
- when _Obadiah’s_ wife was brought to bed--_Obadiah_ thanked God----
- ----Now, said _Obadiah_, I shall have a calf: so _Obadiah_ went daily to
- visit his cow.
- She’ll calve on _Monday_--on _Tuesday_--on _Wednesday_ at the
- farthest----
- The cow did not calve----no--she’ll not calve till next week----the cow
- put it off terribly----till at the end of the sixth week _Obadiah’s_
- suspicions (like a good man’s) fell upon the Bull.
- Now the parish being very large, my father’s Bull, to speak the truth of
- him, was no way equal to the department; he had, however, got himself,
- somehow or other, thrust into employment--and as he went through the
- business with a grave face, my father had a high opinion of him.
- ----Most of the townsmen, an’ please your worship, quoth _Obadiah_,
- believe that ’tis all the Bull’s fault----
- ----But may not a cow be barren? replied my father, turning to Doctor
- _Slop_.
- It never happens: said Dr. _Slop_, but the man’s wife may have come
- before her time naturally enough ----Prithee has the child hair upon his
- head? --added Dr. _Slop_------
- ----It is as hairy as I am; said _Obadiah_. ----_Obadiah_ had not been
- shaved for three weeks ----Wheu - - u - - - - u - - - - - - - - cried my
- father; beginning the sentence with an exclamatory whistle----and so,
- brother _Toby_, this poor Bull of mine, who is as good a Bull as ever
- p--ss’d, and might have done for _Europa_ herself in purer times----had
- he but two legs less, might have been driven into Doctors Commons and
- lost his character----which to a Town Bull, brother _Toby_, is the very
- same thing as his life------
- L--d! said my mother, what is all this story about?----
- A COCK and a BULL, said _Yorick_ ----And one of the best of its kind,
- I ever heard.
- [Decorative Text:
- The
- Temple Press
- LETCHWORTH
- ENGLAND]
- * * * * *
- * * * *
- * * * * *
- Errors and Inconsistencies
- Inconsistent capitalization of “Christian” or “christian” is unchanged.
- Intentional anomalies:
- BOOK IV: CHAPTER XXV:
- --No doubt, Sir, --there is a whole chapter wanting here ...
- [the text skips 10 pages (from 146 to 156 in this edition, with
- a corresponding skip in signature numbers) and one chapter]
- in this manner, [BRAVO]
- [printed with a line through the word, as described]
- please but your own fancy in it. // ------Was ever any thing
- [these lines are separated by a blank page]
- I leave this void space [printed with ⅓ line left blank]
- BOOK IX: CHAPTER XVIII, CHAPTER XVIII
- [each chapter heading is at the top of a blank page]
- Typographical Errors corrected by transcriber:
- this amiable turn of mind [or mind]
- with what good intention and resolution you may [you way]
- and a tolerable tune I thought it was [I though]
- a dwarf in more articles than one. [drawf]
- EARTH NO SUCH FOLKS! [N O SUCH]
- the sun in its meridian [meridan]
- for doing it to Lord *******. [too]
- towards the top of the ceiling [cieling; _the word occurs elsewhere
- with “ei”_]
- Unchanged Forms:
- [Editor’s Introduction]
- All but a quarter of a century had passed
- [“all but” appears to mean “almost”, i.e. from 1736 to 1759]
- [Primary Text]
- If thou art not too busy with CANDID [error for Candide?]
- [Illustration (full-page black tombstone)]
- [some editions have two consecutive black pages, positioned
- immediately after the first “Alas, poor Yorick!”]
- Footnote 1.3: Pentagraph, an instrument to copy ...
- [expected form is Pantagraph]
- between the scarp and counter-scarp
- [anomalous hyphen may be intentional]
- fee-farms, knights fees [may be error for “knights’ fees”]
- 470 pounds averdupois [expected spelling is “avoirdupois”]
- griping them hard together with one hand [expected “gripping”]
- May he be cursed in his reins [not an error: _renibus_ = kidneys]
- _ad ixcitandum focum_ (to stir up the fire)
- [error for “excitandum”]
- _Trim_ took his off the ground [missing “hat” may be intentional]
- and many and many a look of mutual congratulation
- [probably not an error]
- in the corner of an old compaigning trunk [expected “campaigning”]
- the one, of _Aætius_, [error for Æetius]
- from _Tartary_ to _Terra del Fuogo_, [spelling unchanged]
- Hyphens and Spaces:
- Inconsistent hyphenization or spacing has not been regularized. Words
- found only at line break were handled on a “best guess” basis.
- anywhere and any where [both forms occur]
- beforehand and before-hand [both forms occur at mid-line]
- hornworks and horn-works
- [both forms occur at mid-line; line-end occurrences have hyphen]
- christian (Christian) name and christian-name
- [both forms occur more than once]
- be-virtu’d [the only occurrence of this word is at line-break]
- shall not be opened again this twelve-/month
- [all other occurrences of this word are at mid-line: the three
- preceding have a hyphen; the one following does not]
- Punctuation and Typography:
- [Editor’s Introduction]
- for about five years. [years,]
- [Primary Text]
- for a stage or two together, [the comma is intentional]
- (quoth St. _Thomas!_) [. missing]
- ’yclept logomachies [apostrophe in original]
- rise up against him, [invisible , at line-end]
- Because, continued Dr. _Slop_ [, missing]
- for Mrs. _Shandy_ the mother is
- [“Shandy” printed in Roman (non-italic) type]
- ’Tis my comfort, however, I am not an obstinate one: therefore
- [missing paragraph-final punctuation is intentional]
- _Gordonius_, who (in his cap. 15. _de Amore_)
- [closing parenthesis missing at line-end]
- resumed the case at _Limerick_
- [“Limerick” printed in Roman (non-italic) type]
- the child looks extremely well, said my father,
- [final , invisible at line-end]
- if the _French_ are treacherous
- [“French” printed in Roman (non-italic) type]
- --or up to the ears in love [expected italics missing]
- I shall never, an’ please your honour, [first , missing at line-end]
- which _Plato_, I am persuaded, never [second , missing at line-end]
- I’ll see the rest of these good gentry to-morrow, [missing comma]
- the abbess of _Andoüillets’_ itself-- [apostrophe in original]
- and sing, and say his prayers, and go to heaven [prayers.]
- greater than the pain of a wound in the knee----or
- [the lack of paragraph-final punctuation is intentional]
- Greek:
- οὐσία [ούσία]
- Περιζώματα [Περιζώμαυτὲ]
- περι φύσεως [accent missing in original]
- Footnote 5.3: Χαλεπῆς νόσου, καὶ δυσιάτου ἀπαλλαγὴν [ἀπαλλαγὴ]
- Footnote 5.6: Ὁ Ἶλος, τὰ αἰδοῖα περιτέμνεται, ταὐτὸ ποιῆσαι καὶ
- τοὺς ἅμ’ αυτῷ συμμάχους καταναγκάσας.
- [diacritics as printed: Ὁ Ιλος, τὰ ἀιδοῖα περιτέμνεται, τἀυτὸ
- ποῖησαι καὶ τοὺς ἅμ’ αυτῷ συμμὰχους καταναγκάσας.]
- γυναῖκα τε, βοῦν τ’ ἀροτῆρα [γυνᾶικα ... ἀροτὴρα]
- Εὖγε! ὅτι φιλοσοφεῖς ἐν Πάθεσι [῏Ευγε! ... φιλοσοφεἶς]
- End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life and Opinions of Tristram
- Shandy, Gentleman, by Laurence Sterne
- *** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRISTRAM SHANDY ***
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