Laurence Sterne - Tristram Shandy
Laurence Sterne - Tristram Shandy
Laurence Sterne - Tristram Shandy
SHANDY
Laurence Sterne
InfoLibros.org
SINOPSIS DE VIDA Y OPINIONES DEL CABALLERO TRISTRAM
SHANDY
4
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.
Chapter 1.II.
5
same hand,—engender’d in the same course of nature,—
endow’d with the same loco-motive 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 benefitted,—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 Gentle- man had got to his journey’s end
miserably spent;—his muscular strength and virility worn down
to a thread;—his own animal spirits ruffled be- yond
description,—and that in this sad disorder’d 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 after- wards have set
thoroughly to rights.
6
Chapter 1.III.
—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.
7
Chapter 1.IV.
8
shall confine myself neither to his rules, nor to any man’s rules
that ever lived.
this chapter; for I declare before-hand, ’tis wrote only for the
curious and inquisitive.
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 hun- dred 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.
9
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.
10
from the same authority, ‘That he did not get down to his wife
and family till the second week in May following,’—it
—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 1.V.
11
could be born in it to a great title or to a great estate; or could
any how contrive to be called up to public 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 misad- ventures and cross
accidents as ever small Hero sustained.
Chapter 1.VI.
12
you into too many circumstances relating to myself all at once.
Chapter 1.VII.
13
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 said seven long miles in dark nights and
dismal roads, the country thereabouts being nothing but a deep
14
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
in- structed 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
par- son 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 cheerfully 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
15
the old licensed matrons in the neighbourhood, to open their
faculties afresh, in order to have this wham-wham of his
inserted.
Chapter 1.VIII.
16
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
excel- lently 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 tomorrow morning.
17
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.
Chapter 1.IX.
18
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.
19
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
20
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 1.X.
Lay down the book, and I will allow you half a day to give a
probable guess at the grounds of this procedure.
21
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, jackass of a horse, value about one pound fifteen
shillings; who, to shorten all description of him, was full brother
to
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 cer- tain at the same time that Rosinante’s
continency (as may be demon- strated 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.
22
Let that be as it may, as my purpose is to do exact justice to
every crea- ture 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.
23
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 laugh-
24
choice of the lean one he rode upon, not only to keep himself in
countenance, but in spirits.
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
25
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
26
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,—noth- ing for the many comfortless
scenes he was hourly called forth to visit, where poverty, and
sickness and affliction dwelt together.
27
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
28
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 par- ish,—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.
Chapter 1.XI.
29
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 own-
ers.—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 some- times to the other, just as the temptation
has wrought. But a villainous affair it is, and will one day so
blend and confound us all together, 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.’
30
only adds, That, for near two centu- ries, 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 au- thenticated facts, was certainly the very man.
31
kingdom of refined parts; but a great deal of good plain
houshold understanding amongst all ranks of people, of which
every body 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 intermedi- ate 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 is- land,
where nature, in her gifts and dispositions of this kind, is most
whim- sical and capricious; fortune herself not being more so in
the bequest of her goods and chattels than she.
32
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 mor- tal men for days and weeks together;—
but he was an enemy to the affec-
33
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.
34
and his humour,—his gibes and his jests about him.—They were
not lost for want of gathering.
Chapter 1.XII.
35
stamp, which, notwithstanding Eugenius’s fre- quent advice, he
too much disregarded; thinking, that as not one of them was
contracted thro’ any malignancy;—but, on the contrary, from an
hon- esty 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 chim- ney-
corner, where the culprit was barricado’d in, with a table and a
couple of arm-chairs, and could not so readily fly off in a
tangent,—Eugenius would then go on with his lecture upon
discretion in words to this pur- pose, 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 extri- cate 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
36
him from a sense of common danger;—’tis no extravagant
arithmetic to
37
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 tear 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.
38
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, con- tinued 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
39
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 Panca, 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.
40
ecutors, laid upon his grave, with no more than these three
words of in- scription, serving both for his epitaph and elegy.
Alas, poor Yorick!
Ten times a day has Yorick’s ghost the consolation to hear his
monu- mental inscription read over with such a variety of
plaintive tones, as de- note a general pity and esteem for him;—
a foot-way crossing the church- yard close by the side of his
grave,—not a passenger goes by without stop- ping to cast a
look upon it,—and sighing as he walks on, Alas, poor Yorick!
Chapter 1.XIII.
41
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 impor- tance in
the world,—I desire may be enlarged or contracted in your
worship’s fancy, in a compound ratio of the station, profession,
knowl- edge, abilities, height and depth (measuring both ways)
of the personage brought before you.
42
incidents, or inuendos as shall be thought to be either of private
interpretation, or of dark or doubtful mean- ing, 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 1.XIV.
43
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 have 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.
44
hurry;—but to go on leisurely, writ- ing 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 book- seller, I
shall continue to do as long as I live.
Chapter 1.XV.
45
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
be- got, 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 com- puted 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
46
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,
dis- charge, hinderance, forfeiture, eviction, vexation,
interruption, or incum- brance 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 per- sons 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
47
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 Dixon, 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
48
tenths, tythes, glebe- lands.’—In three words,—‘My mother was
to lay in (if she chose it) in London.’
49
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.
Chapter 1.XVI.
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
50
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 disap- pointment of this, he
said, was ten times more to a wise man, than all the money
which the journey, &c. had cost him, put together,—rot the hun-
dred and twenty pounds,—he did not mind it a rush.’
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 imagi- nation 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
51
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.
Chapter 1.XVII.
52
happen- ing, 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.
Chapter 1.XVIII.
53
Dr. Manningham was not to be had, she had come to a final
determina- tion 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 ex- posed, not only the
blunders of the sisterhood itself,—but had likewise super-added
many curious improvements for the quicker extraction of the
foetus 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,
observ- ing 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 ten-pence a
yard.—‘Tis the duplication of one and the same great- ness 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 mid- wife had really some little claim to
54
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.’
55
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 unani- mously 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 cur- rent 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.
56
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.
57
counterpoise what I perceive my Nobility are now taking from
them.
58
power;—which, for a century, he said, and more, had gradually
been degenerating away into a mix’d gov- ernment;—the form
of which, however desirable in great combinations of the
species,—was very troublesome in small ones,—and seldom pro-
duced any thing, that he saw, but sorrow and confusion.
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
59
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.
60
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 any thing, Madam,
but that tender and delicious sentiment which ever mixes in
friend- ship, 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 1.XIX.
61
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.
62
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
63
through life like his shadow, and, in the end, made a miser and a
rascal of him, in spite, Sir, of your example.
64
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 scep- tical notions of the comick kind to defend—
most of which notions, I
65
and twist and torture every thing 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.
66
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 oper- ated 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.
67
him to say, he had ever remem- bered,—whether he had ever
read,—or even whether he had ever heard tell of a man, called
Tristram, performing any thing great or worth record- ing?—
No,—he would say,—Tristram!—The thing is impossible.
68
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 1.XX.
69
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
erudi- tion 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 af- firm 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 pas- sage, 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
70
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,—Anglice 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.)
71
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 example, may be taught to
think as well as read.
Reponse
72
quaest. 88 artic. II. suit cette doctrine comme une verite
constante; l’on ne peut, dit ce S. Docteur, baptiser les enfans qui
sont renfermes dans le sein de leurs meres, & S. Thomas est
fonde sur ce, que les enfans ne sont point nes, & ne peuvent etre
comptes parmi les autres hommes; d’ou il conclud, qu’ils ne
peuvent etre l’objet d’une action exterieure, pour recevoir par
leur ministere, les sacremens necessaires au salut: Pueri in
maternis uteris existentes nondum prodierunt in lucem ut cum
aliis hominibus vitam ducant; unde non possunt subjici actioni
humanae, ut per eorum ministerium sacramenta recipiant ad
salutem. Les rituels ordonnent dans la pratique ce que les
theologiens ont etabli sur les memes matieres, & ils deffendent
tous d’une maniere uniforme, de baptiser les enfans qui sont
renfermes dans le sein de leurs meres, s’ils ne sont paroitre
quelque partie de leurs corps. Le concours des theologiens, &
des rituels, qui sont les regles des dioceses, paroit former une
autorite qui termine la question presente; cependant le conseil
de conscience considerant d’un cote, que le raisonnement des
theologiens est uniquement fonde sur une raison de
convenance, & que la deffense des rituels suppose que l’on ne
peut baptiser immediatement les enfans ainsi renfermes dans le
sein de leurs meres, ce qui est contre la supposition presente; &
d’un autre cote, considerant que les memes theologiens
enseignent, que l’on peut risquer les sacremens que Jesus Christ
a etablis comme des moyens faciles, mais necessaires pour
sanctifier les hommes; & d’ailleurs estimant, que les enfans
renfermes dans le sein de leurs meres, pourroient etre capables
73
de salut, parcequ’ils sont capables de damnation;—pour ces
considerations, & en egard a l’expose, suivant lequel on assure
avoir trouve un moyen certain de baptiser ces enfans ainsi
renfermes, sans faire aucun tort a la mere, le Conseil estime que
l’on pourroit se servir du moyen propose, dans la confiance qu’il
a, que Dieu n’a point laisse ces sortes d’enfans sans aucuns
secours, & supposant, comme il est expose, que le moyen dont il
s’agit est propre a leur procurer le bapteme; cependant comme
il s’agiroit, en autorisant la pratique proposee, de changer une
regle universellement etablie, le Conseil croit que celui qui
consulte doit s’addresser a son eveque, & a qui il appartient de
juger de l’utilite, & du danger du moyen propose, & comme,
sous le bon plaisir de l’eveque, le Conseil estime qu’il faudroit
recourir au Pape, qui a le droit d’expliquer les regles de l’eglise,
& d’y deroger dans le
74
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 meme moyen, il seroit necessaire de les
baptiser sous condition; & en cela le Conseil se conforme a tous
les rituels, qui en autorisant le bapteme d’un enfant qui fait
paroitre quelque partie de son corps, enjoignent neantmoins, &
ordonnent de le baptiser sous condition, s’il vient heureusement
au monde.
Chapter 1.XXI.
75
—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,
smoaking 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,
76
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 cli- mate, 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 obser- vation 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.
77
per- fections, from which, if we may form a conjecture from the
advances of these last seven years, we cannot possibly be far
off.
But I forget my uncle Toby, whom all this while we have left
knocking the ashes out of his tobacco-pipe.
78
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 through- out:—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 god- fathers and godmothers.
79
different tracts of investigation, to come at the first springs of
the events I tell;—not with a pedantic Fes- cue,—or in the
decisive manner or Tacitus, who outwits himself and his
reader;—but with the officious humility of a heart devoted to the
assis- tance merely of the inquisitive;—to them I write,—and by
them I shall be
80
choice in them,—but to things;—and this kind of mod- esty 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 con- verse 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.
81
some- what 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 emo- tion.—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 any thing in the
world, only to let the story rest.
82
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 his.
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 feel- ing and compassion for the character
of our family?—What is the charac- ter 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,
83
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 Scientiae there is no such thing
as Mur- der,—‘tis only Death, brother.
84
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.
Chapter 1.XXII.
85
dwelling in Aldersgate-street, ‘That it is an abominable thing for
a man to commend himself;’—and I really think it is so.
I was just going, for example, to have given you the great out-
lines 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
86
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.
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.
87
For, if he begins a digres- sion,—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 digres- sion.
Chapter 1.XXIII.
88
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 bee-hive, 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, conse- quent upon such frisks, &c.—
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
89
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.
Many, in good truth, are the ways, which human wit has been
forced to take, to do this thing with exactness.
90
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 reple- tions too; and by correcting one
drawing from the other, compound one good figure out of them
both.
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.
91
Others, to mend the matter, will make a drawing of you in the
Cam- era;—that is most unfair of all, because, there you are sure
to be repre- sented 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.
Chapter 1.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
92
the rider, which come immediately into contact with the back of
the Hobby- Horse,—by long journies 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.
93
riding him about;—leaving the world, after that, to determine the
point as it thought fit.
Chapter 1.XXV.
94
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.
95
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.
Chapter 1.XXVI.
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
96
of the most memo- rable 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 En-
97
and in opposition to many misconceptions, that my uncle Toby
did oft-times puzzle his visi- tors, and sometimes himself too.
98
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 par- oxysms and exacerbations of his
wound my uncle Toby must have under- gone upon that score
only.
99
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 1.XXVII.
—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
100
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 occupa- tion,—but by nature) that I had
acquitted myself well enough, I shall fill it up directly, hoping, in
the mean time, that I shall be able to make a great deal of more
room next year.
So, Sir Critick, I could have replied; but I scorn it.—’Tis language
unurbane,—and only befitting the man who cannot give clear
and satis- factory 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
101
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.
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.
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
102
organs are not dull. And thirdly, a memory like unto a sieve, not
able to retain what it has re- ceived.—Call down Dolly your
chamber-maid, 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 in- dited
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.
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
103
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 (Greek); and in the Schools
104
’Twas not by ideas,—by Heaven; his life was put in jeopardy by
words.
Chapter 1.XXVIII.
105
Vauban’s line, the abbey of Salsines, &c. 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.
106
almost as many more books of military architecture, as Don
Quixote was found to have of chivalry, when the curate and
barber in- vaded his library.
107
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—goodnatured 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
perspira- tions—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 1.XXIX.
108
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 semi-parameter 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.
109
eloquent;—it had the greater effect:—The surgeon was con-
founded;—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 any thing 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.
110
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 1.XXX.
111
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 em- barked for Shandy-Hall.
112
Honour takes so much pleasure in fortification, we could
manage this matter to a T.
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
113
science; and was thought, by the cook and chamber-maid, to
know as much of the nature of strong-
114
advancing his left, which was his lame leg, a little forwards,—
and point- ing with his right hand open towards a map of
Dunkirk, which was pinned against the hangings,—I think, quoth
Corporal Trim, with humble sub- mission to your Honour’s better
judgment,—that these ravelins, bastions, curtins, and hornworks,
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
fosse, 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
115
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 fosse, (as was the case at St. Nicolas’s gate) and
facilitate the passage over it.
116
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.
117
concerted the whole plan of his and Corporal Trim’s
decampment.
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
118
uncle Toby, of enjoying a thing which took up a whole rood and
a half of ground,—and not have it known!
Chapter 1.XXXI.
119
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.
120
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 statue! How do the slight touches
of the chisel, the pencil, the pen, the fiddle-stick, et caetera,—
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.
But whether that was the case or not the case;—or whether the
snap- ping of my father’s tobacco-pipe, so critically, happened
through accident or anger, will be seen in due time.
121
Chapter 1.XXXII.
122
neither know nor do pretend to know any thing 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.
123
ability, and convenience of all the parts which consti- tute the
whole of that animal, called Woman, and compare them
analogi- cally—I never understood rightly the meaning of that
word,—quoth my uncle Toby.—
Chapter 1.XXXIII.
124
emergency too, both to go and come;—though, morally and
truly speaking, the man perhaps has scarce had time to get on
his boots.
125
Slop upon the stage,—as much, at least (I hope) as a dance, a
song, or a concerto between the acts.
Chapter 1.XXXIV.
126
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.
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 phaenomenon, 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
127
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 dirti- est part of a dirty lane,—when Obadiah and his
coach-horse turned the corner, rapid, furious,—pop,—full upon
him!—Nothing, I think, in na- ture, can be supposed more
terrible than such a rencounter,—so imprompt! so ill prepared to
stand the shock of it as Dr. Slop was.
128
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
Chapter 1.XXXV.
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 deter- mine 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
129
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.
130
their distance, and keeping his mind so intent upon the
operation, as to have power to think of noth- ing else,—
common-place infirmity of the greatest mathematicians! work-
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 1.XXXVI.
131
understanding, is to halve this matter amicably, and leave him
something to imagine, in his turn, as well as yourself.
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 up stairs to see my
mother.—And, to conclude this work of imagination,— let him
imagine the doctor washed,—rubbed down, and condoled,—fe-
licitated,—got into a pair of Obadiah’s pumps, stepping
forwards towards the door, upon the very point of entering upon
action.
132
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-tete,—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 1.XXXVII.
133
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.
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.
134
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 fosse 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 con- struction, 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.
135
a very considerable part of an outwork;—they are called by the
French engineers, Ouvrage a 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 noth- ing 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
136
My uncle Toby was a man patient of injuries;—not from want of
cour- age,—I have told you in a former chapter, ‘that he was a
man of cour- age:’—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 ele- ment in it,—all
was mixed up so kindly within him; my uncle Toby had scarce a
heart to retaliate upon a fly.
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 sensa- tion;—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 har-
mony of movement, attuned by mercy, might find a passage to
137
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 Literae humaniores, at the
university, have done for me in that respect, or dis- credit 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.
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
138
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.
139
brother worse;—but to hurt a brother of such gentle manners,—
so unprovoking,—and so unresenting;—’tis base:—By Heaven,
’tis cow- ardly.—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?
Chapter 1.XXXVIII.
140
Chapter 1.XXXIX.
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
141
far as Schevling, which is two long miles, on purpose to take a
view of it.
nothing else.
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
142
been con- structed upon solid ones, be they what they will, or it
could not have answered at the rate my brother mentions.
143
scientifick head which brought forth such contrivances;—yet I
would as peremptorily suppress the use of them.
Chapter 1.XL.
—You may take the book home again, Trim, said my uncle Toby,
nod- ding to him.
144
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.
145
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 lib-
erty,—he advanced, nothing doubting, into the middle of the
room, where he could best see, and be best seen by his
audience.
Chapter 1.XLI.
146
Trim’s reason put his audience into good humour,—all but Dr.
Slop, who turning his head about towards Trim, looked a little
angry.
Chapter 1.XLII.
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
147
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!
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 cyclopaedia 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.
148
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,—some- thing 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.
149
—For we trust we have a good Conscience. ‘Trust!—Trust we
have a good conscience!’
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 build- ing, 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
150
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, fetch-
ing a sigh from the bottom of his heart,—the poor honest lad
lies con- fined 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.—A dead silence in the room ensued for some
minutes.— Certain proof of pity!
151
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.)
152
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.)
153
continued he, lifting both hands, comes from the liberty of the
press.
‘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 con- science 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 af- fection 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
en- joyment: Or, lastly, were we assured that Interest stood
always uncon- cerned 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
154
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.
155
‘A man shall be vicious and utterly debauched in his principles;—
excep- tionable 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 fam- ily 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 and day from its reproaches.
156
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.—
157
widow and orphan in their dis- tress, 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.)
‘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 in- curred;—sees no
scourge waving over his head, or prison opening his gates
158
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.’
159
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 abso- lution. 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 him- self, 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
160
vicious in their own na- tures;—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 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.
161
‘So that if you would form a just judgment of what is of infinite
impor- tance 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 moral- ity.—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?
162
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.’
163
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
fosse 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 fa- ther
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
164
contented him- self 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 de- stroying them both.
165
but small dependence upon his actions in matters of great
distress. ‘I will illustrate this by an example.
‘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?—
166
Religion, the strongest of all motives, is out of the ques- tion;—
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.
‘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
167
serious mis- chiefs.—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 has the crusading sword of
this misguided saint-errant, spared neither age or 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.’
168
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 loose 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.—
169
all, quoth Trim, his colour returning into his face as red as
blood.)—’Behold this helpless victim de- livered up to his
tormentors,—his body so wasted with sorrow and con-
170
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.)
‘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 Sav-
171
iour hath left us, for these and such like cases, and it is worth a
thousand arguments—By their fruits ye shall know them.
172
Finis.
173
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 con- jurer 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
con- stantly had heard preached in his parish-church, was the
ground of his conjecture,—proving it as strongly, as an
argument a 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, a posteriori, the day after, when Yorick sent a servant to
my uncle Toby’s house to enquire after it.
174
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 rest- less Manes till this very moment, that I
tell the world the story.
175
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 par- son 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 vol- ume, at the world’s
service,—and much good may they do it.
Chapter 1.XLIII.
176
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 pre- rogative with them, and
give up some other rights in lieu of it.—I know not, quoth my
father, answering a letter too testily, to be quite dispassion- ate
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 any
thing, 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 foetus,— which has
177
received such lights, that, for my part (holding up his hand) 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 1.XLIV.
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.
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
178
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
high-way of thinking, as these two which have been explained.
179
joint;—that the political arch was giving way;—and that the very
foundations of our excellent con- stitution 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, con- sent.—And wherefore, he would
add, are we needy?—From the neglect, he would answer, of our
pence and our halfpence:—Our bank notes, Sir,
’Tis the same, he would say, throughout the whole circle of the
sci- ences;—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.
180
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 pur- pose;—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
and,
181
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 think- ing substance above or
below another,—but arose merely from the lucky or unlucky
organization of the body, in that part where the soul princi-
pally 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 cush- ion 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 conjec- ture;—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.
182
As for that certain, very thin, subtle and very fragrant juice
which Coglionissimo Borri, the great Milaneze physician affirms,
in a letter to Bartholine, to have discovered in the cellulae 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
183
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 hypoth- esis 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 net-work and texture in the cerebellum itself; which opinion
he favoured.
My father, who dipped into all kinds of books, upon looking into
Lithopaedus Senonesis de Portu difficili, (The author is here
184
twice mis- taken; for Lithopaedus should be wrote thus,
Lithopaedii Senonensis Icon. The second mistake is, that this
Lithopaedus is not an author, but a draw-
185
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
listed into the same conspiracy.—What is it to me which end of
my son comes fore- most into the world, provided all goes right
after, and his cerebellum es- capes uncrushed?
186
When my father was gone with this about a month, there was
scarce a phaenomenon 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 mon- strous
heads,—shewing a 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 organization 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.
187
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 os coxygis on that;—and
pray, what were the happy consequences? Why, Sir, your Julius
Caesar, 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
188
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 happen- ing 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
opin- ion: 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
pur- pose;—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
189
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 mod-
esty 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 Tristram, 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 Alquise, 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.
Chapter 1.XLV.
—‘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
190
first (Vide.))—’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.
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,
191
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.
Chapter 1.XLVI.
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.—
192
circumstances with which every thing in this world is begirt, give
every thing in this world its size and shape!—and by tighten- ing
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?
193
low down in the skirt.’—I need say no more—the father of
mischief, had he been ham- mering at it a month, could not
have contrived a worse fashion for one in my father’s situation.
Chapter 1.XLVII.
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 immedi- ately.
194
Chapter 1.XLVIII.
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.
195
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
196
quoth he,—‘get thee gone,—why should I hurt thee! This world is
surely wide enough to hold both thee and me.’
Chapter 1.XLIX.
197
heart interpreted every motion of the body in the kindest sense
the mo- tion 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 fa- ther, at length,
went on as follows.
Chapter 1.L.
198
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 1.LI.
When Dr. Slop’s maid delivered the green baize bag with her
master’s instruments in it, to Obadiah, she very sensibly
199
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 mea- sure,
unguarded the mouth of the bag, lest any thing 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 instru- ments, 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 tete, 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.
200
as it has oft-times done with the great- est patriots.—‘The poor
fellow, Sir, was not able to hear himself whistle.’
Chapter 1.LII.
201
from one end to the other (as you would cord a trunk) with such
a multi- plicity of round-abouts 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 to-
gether—there is no man living which 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 re- maining in his mind—which
of the two would have carried off the prize. My mother, Madam,
had been delivered sooner than the green bag infal- libly—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.
202
End of the first volume.
Chapter 2.I.
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 mid- wifery 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
203
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.
Chapter 2.II.
204
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.
My father had a great respect for Obadiah, and could not bear
to hear him disposed of in such a manner—he had moreover
205
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.
206
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 excommunica- tion 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 serious- ness 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.
207
and chapter of Rochester.)
Cap. 2.III.
Excommunicatio.
208
et cum his qui dixerunt Domino Deo, Recede a nobis, scientiam
viarum tuarum nolumus: et ficut aqua ignis extinguatur lu-vel
eorum cerna ejus in secula seculorum nisi resque-n n rit, et ad
satisfactionem venerit. Amen. os Maledicat illum Deus Pater qui
homi-os nem creavit. Maledicat illum Dei Filius qui pro homine
passus est. Maledicat os illum Spiritus Sanctus qui in baptismo
ef- os fusus est. Maledicat illum sancta crux, quam Christus pro
nostra salute hostem triumphans ascendit. os Maledicat illum
sancta Dei genetrix et os perpetua Virgo Maria. Maledicat illum
sanctus Michael, animarum susceptor sa-os crarum. Maledicant
illum omnes angeli et archangeli, principatus et potestates,
omnisque militia coelestis. os Maledicat illum patriarcharum et
prophetarum laudabilis numerus. Maledicat os illum sanctus
Johannes Praecursor et Baptista Christi, et sanctus Petrus, et
sanctus Paulus, atquesanctus Andreas, omnesque Christi
apostoli, simul et caeteri discipuli, quatuor quoque evangelistae,
qui sua praedicatione mundum universum converte-os runt.
Maledicat illum cuneus martyrum et confessorum mirificus, qui
Deo bonis operibus placitus inventus est. os Maledicant illum
sacrarum virginum chori, quae mundi vana causa honoris Christi
respuenda contempserunt. Male-os dicant illum omnes sancti
qui ab initio mundi usque in finem seculi Deo dilecti inveniuntur.
os Maledicant illum coeli et terra, et omnia sancta in eis
manentia. i n n Maledictus sit ubicunque, fuerit, sive in domo,
sive in agro,
209
sive in via, sive in semita, sive in silva, sive in aqua, sive in
ecclesia. i n Maledictussit vivendo, moriendo,—manducando,
bibendo, esuriendo, sitiendo, jejunando, dormitando,
dormiendo, vigilando, ambulando, stando, sedendo, jacendo,
operando, quiescendo, mingendo, cacando, flebotomando. i n
Maledictus sit in totis viribus corporis. i n Maledictus sit intus et
exterius. i n i Maledictus sit in capillis; maledictus n i n sit in
cerebro. Maledictus sit in vertice, in temporibus, in fronte, in
auriculis, in superciliis, in oculis, in genis, in maxillis, in naribus, in
dentibus, mordacibus, in labris sive molibus, 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 unguibus.
Chapter 2.IV.
210
‘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 fa- ther—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:—be- sides,
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.
‘By the authority of God Almighty, the Father, Son, and Holy
Ghost, and of the undefiled Virgin Mary, mother and patroness
of our Saviour,
211
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.
‘May the Father who created man, curse him.—May the Son who
suf- fered 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.
‘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.)
‘May St. John, the Praecursor, 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
212
and four evangelists, who by their preaching converted the
universal world, and may the holy and won- derful company of
martyrs and confessors who by their holy works are found
pleasing to God Almighty, curse him’ (Obadiah.)
‘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.)
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!
‘May he’ (Obadiah) ‘be cursed in all the faculties of his body!
213
‘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!
in him!
‘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.—
214
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.
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.
215
Chapter 2.V.
216
suspended his voice in the epilogue a dozen times three seconds
and three fifths by a stop watch, my lord, each time.—Admirable
gram- marian!—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 com- passes, &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 di- mensions.—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 pyra- mid 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
Angelo.—Grant me patience, just Heaven!—Of all the cants
217
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.
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, consider- ing 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
218
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,
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
219
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.
Chapter 2.VI.
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,
220
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
Chapter 2.VII.
221
urn, or a three-halfpenny pickle pot—but above all, a tender
infant royally accoutred.—Tho’ if it was too young, and the ora-
tion 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 unwieldly 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.
Chapter 2.VIII.
222
DR. SLOP WAS WITHIN AN ACE of being an exception to all this
argumenta- tion: for happening to have his green baize 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.
223
Chapter 2.IX.
—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 on 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
224
Chapter 2.X.
—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 diffi- cult to know—and yet
of the greatest consequence to be known;—be- cause, Sir, if the
hip is mistaken for the head—there is a possibility (if it is a boy)
that the forceps ….
225
Chapter 2.XI.
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.
226
inconceivable an extent.—‘I know not how it happens— cried my
father,—but it seems an age.’
227
—But you have some ideas, said my father, of what you talk
about? No more than my horse, replied my uncle Toby.
228
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.
Chapter 2.XII.
229
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 2.XIII.
230
As for my uncle Toby, his smoke-jack had not made a dozen
revolu- tions, 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 jack-boots
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.
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.
231
Now, Agalastes (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,
232
for brevity, but out of no resentment to you, I lump all
together.—Believe me, right worthy,
233
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
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
234
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 em- pires.
235
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 Si- beria a little upon the left hand,
till we got into the very heart of Russian and Asiatick Tartary.
Now through 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 com- fortable provision of
good plain houshold 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 occa- sions to put them to use.
Now, Sir, if I conduct you home again into this warmer and
more luxu- riant island, where you perceive the spring-tide of
our blood and humours runs high—where we have more
ambition, and pride, and envy, and lech- ery, 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
236
our necessities— and accordingly we have them sent down
amongst us in such a flowing kind of decent and creditable
plenty, that no one thinks he has any cause to complain.
237
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 mis- tress, 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 thou-
sands 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 perpen- dicularly 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 opposi- tion 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 pas- sions
excited—in an air sung, or a story painted to the heart—instead
of measuring them by a quadrant.
238
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 forgive- ness;—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, with- out a trespass, or not—rashly determined
by them in five-and-twenty min- utes, 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
239
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 al- ready
weighed and perpended by your reverences and worships, I
shall
240
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.
—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.
241
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?
242
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 sup- posed 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 bois- terously 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
243
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.
Chapter 2.XIV.
244
it;—three drops of oil with a feather, and a smart stroke of a
hammer, had saved his honour for ever.
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
Chapter 2.XV.
245
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.
Had the parlour door opened and turn’d upon its hinges, as a
door should do—
246
‘When things move upon bad hinges, an’ please your lordships,
how can it be otherwise?’
247
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, be- sides my half pay? cried my uncle Toby.—
What is that—replied my fa- ther 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 noth- ing 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 op- erations 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.
248
Chapter 2.XVI.
249
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 re- serve 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.
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
250
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 uncer- tain devil which of the three he is to
take.
Chapter 2.XVII.
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 circum-
stances, 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.
251
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 pen- etration—I defy it—that so many play-wrights,
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-a-vis; than
betwixt a single amour, and an amour thus nobly doubled, and
going upon all four, pranc- ing 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.
252
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 moon-shiny night to see that every
thing was right at his fortifications—in the lane separated from
the bowling-green with flowering shrubs and holly—he espied his
Bridget.
253
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 imagi- nation 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 teaze 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 unfortu- nately slipp’d
in—Very well, Trim! my father would cry—(smiling myste- riously,
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
254
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.
255
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 2.XVIII.
ing 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 fa- ther, who was infinitely the
better politician, and took the lead as far of my uncle Toby in
256
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 prize-fighting
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 divid- ing 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 insurmount- able;—for by this means, he
would say, I leave one half of my bridge in
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.
257
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’Hopital’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
con- struction of them was a curve line approximating to a
cycloid—if not a
cycloid itself.
258
Chapter 2.XIX.
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’Hopital’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.
When Trim’s answer, in an instant, tore the laurel from his brows,
and twisted it to pieces.
Chapter 2.XX.
259
—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.
Chapter 2.XXI.
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.
260
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 2.XXII.
261
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.
Chapter 2.XXIII.
262
—‘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.
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 2.XXIV.
263
pounds fortune, and not a shilling more—and you insist upon
having three hundred pounds a year jointure for it.—
264
openings to equivocal stric- tures—and for depending so much
as I have done, all along, upon the cleanliness of my readers
imaginations.
Chapter 2.XXV.
265
—‘BECAUSE,’ quoth my great grandmother, repeating the words
again— ’you have little or no nose, Sir.’—
Chapter 2.XXVI.
266
—WHAT AN UNCONSCIONABLE JOINTURE, my dear, do we
pay out of this small estate of ours, quoth my grandmother to
my grandfather.
267
engine, and feel pity for the force of education, and the
prevalence of opinions long derived from an- cestors!
268
—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.
Chapter 2.XXVII.
269
an apple.—It be- comes 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 con- fesso, he will say—things were in a state of
nature—The apple, is 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.
270
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.
271
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.—
272
rood and a half of land in the Shandy family, thy fortifications,
my dear uncle Toby, shall never be demolish’d.
Chapter 2.XXVIII.
273
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—pur- chased Scroderus, Andrea Paraeus,
Bouchet’s Evening Conferences, and above all, the great and
learned Hafen Slawkenbergius; of which, as I shall have much to
say by-and-bye—I will say nothing now.
Chapter 2.XXIX.
274
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.—
Chapter 2.XXX.
275
‘NIHIL ME PAENITET HUJUS NASI,’ quoth Pamphagus;—that
is—’My nose has been the making of me.’—’Nec est cur
poeniteat,’ replies Cocles; that is, ‘How the duce should such a
nose fail?’
276
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 conve- niences also; for that in a case of
distress—and for want of a pair of bel- lows, 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 2.XXXI.
277
O SLAWKENBERGIUS! thou faithful analyzer of my Disgrazias—
thou sad foreteller of so many of the whips and short turns
which on 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.
278
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 injudi- ciously 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 cooly, 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 under- stood,
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 im- pulse, with a mighty and
unresistible call within me, to gird up myself to this undertaking.
279
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 thor- ough-stitched Digest and regular
institute of noses, comprehending in it all that is or can be
needful to be known about them.
280
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.’
Be witness—
281
That this Ambrose Paraeus 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.
282
I have but two things to observe of Paraeus; 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!
283
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 al- ready.—Of all the perplexities a
mortal author was ever seen in—this cer- tainly is the greatest,
for I have Hafen Slawkenbergius’s folio, Sir, to fin- ish—a
dialogue between my father and my uncle Toby, upon the
solution of Prignitz, Scroderus, Ambrose Paraeus, Panocrates,
and Grangousier to relate—a tale out of Slawkenbergius to
translate, and all this in five min- utes less than no time at all;—
such a head!—would to Heaven my en- emies only saw the
inside of it!
Chapter 2.XXXII.
284
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 en- quiry, 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
at- tempt; and with infinite patience would sit smoking 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 mili- tary
disqualifications to his seeing clearly into Prignitz and
Scroderus’s doctrines—I say not—let schoolmen—scullions,
anatomists, and engi-
285
purest—and generally least so where ’twas most wanted.—This
naturally open’d a door to a second misfor- tune;—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 2.XXXIII.
286
could not be brought together, to measure their equality, by
juxta-position.
Chapter 2.XXXIV.
287
father, putting my mother’s threadpaper 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.—
‘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.
288
—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
con- fusion 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.
289
’Twas all one to my uncle Toby—he smoked his pipe on with
unvaried
290
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.—
Chapter 2.XXXV.
291
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 every thing 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.
292
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.
Slawkenbergii Fabella
293
pilei parte anteriore tacta manu sinistra, ut extendit dextram,
militi florinum dedit et processit.
294
Et ex eodem metallo, ait tubicen, velut sternutamento audias.
Tantum abest, respondit illa, quod fistulam dulcedine vincit.
Aeneus est, ait tubicen.
295
argento laciniato (Greek), his sese induit, statimque, acinaci in
manu, ad forum deambulavit.
Dolus inest, anime mi, ait hospes—nasus est falsus. Verus est,
respondit uxor—
296
Ex abiete factus est, ait ille, terebinthinum olet— Carbunculus
inest, ait uxor.
Slawkenbergius’s Tale
297
borders of Crim Tartary.
298
By dunder, said the centinel, I saw it bleed.
And of the same metal said the trumpeter, as you hear by its
sneezing. ’Tis as soft as a flute, said she.
I’ll know the bottom of it, said the trumpeter’s wife, for I will
touch it with my finger before I sleep.
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
299
he, looking up—I am not such a debtor to the world—slandered
and disappointed as I have been—
The stranger had just taken three turns upon the parade, when
he per- ceived the trumpeter’s wife at the opposite side of it—so
turning short, in pain lest his nose should be attempted, he
300
instantly went back to his inn— undressed himself, packed up
his crimson-sattin breeches, &c. in his cloak- bag, and called for
his mule.
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? ’Tis an
imposture, my dear, said the master of the inn—’tis a false nose.
301
’Tis a dead nose, replied the inn-keeper.
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.
it? who did see it? for mercy’s sake, who saw it?
302
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.
303
cretly is conducting me through these meanders and
unsuspected tracts?
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
304
deaness, the sub- chantress, and senior canonness, had that
week come to Strasburg to con- sult 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 pi- neal 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.
once, in short, shut their eyes the whole night long from vespers
to mat- ins.
305
The nuns of saint Ursula acted the wisest—they never attempted
to go to bed at all.
306
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 un- learned—doctor and student—
mistress and maid—gentle and simple— nun’s flesh and
woman’s flesh, in Strasburg spent their time in hearing tid- ings
about it—every eye in Strasburg languished to see it—every
finger— every thumb in Strasburg burned to touch it.
307
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 cour- teous 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 trum- pet 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 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 pro- miscuously—but to this or that,
308
as is ever the way, as faith and credulity marshal’d them—in a
word, each Strasburger came crouding for intelli- gence—and
every Strasburger had the intelligence he wanted.
ied 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 oedematous 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 oedematous swellings.
309
It was demonstrated however very satisfactorily, that such a
ponderous mass of heterogenous matter could not be
congested and conglomerated to the nose, whilst the infant was
in Utera, without destroying the statical balance of the foetus,
and throwing it plump upon its head nine months before the
time.—
310
work off no more, than what the appetite brought it: or
admitting the possibility of a man’s overloading his stom- ach,
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 suffi- cient 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 foras- much 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.
of lungs, and but half a man, when both his legs have been
unfortunately shot off?
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
311
They amicably laid it down, that there was a just and
geometrical ar- rangement 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.
The civilians were still more concise: what they offered being
more in the nature of a decree—than a dispute.
312
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.
313
de Promontorio Nas. Tichmak. ff. d. tit. 3. fol. 189. passim. Vid.
Glos. de contrahend. empt. &c. necnon
J. Scrudr. in cap. para 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. praecip.
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.) which had decided the point incontest-
ably, had it not appeared that a dispute about some franchises
of dean and chapter-lands had been determined by it nineteen
years before.
314
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.
315
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 pas- sage 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.
316
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.)
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.
317
’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 a fiddle-stick, said the other. ’Tis possible, cried the one.
He cannot make two and two five, replied the Popish doctors.—
’Tis false, said their other opponents.—
Now the steeple of Strasburg being the biggest and the tallest
church- steeple to be seen in the whole world, the Anti-nosarians
318
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
319
—What was to be done?—No delay—the uproar increased—
every one in disorder—the city gates set open.—
320
foot—some led—some driven—some down the Rhine—some this
way—some that—all set out at sun-rise to meet the
—From his first parley with the centinel, 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
Personae Dramatis are just touched in, and the subject slightly
begun.
The Epitasis, wherein the action is more fully entered upon and
height- ened, 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
321
night’s uproar about the nose, to the conclusion of the
trumpeter’s wife’s lectures upon it in the middle of the grand pa-
rade: 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.
—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.
322
Strasburg!—the great Strasburg!—Strasburg, the capital of all
Alsatia! Strasburg, an imperial city! Strasburg, a sovereign state!
Strasburg, garri- soned 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 con- ducted 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.—
—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
323
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 trav- eller 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 pil- grimage—’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 en- tangled 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.
it was day he rose, and hearing Diego was risen too, he entered
his cham- ber, and discharged his sister’s commission.
324
The letter was as follows:
‘Seig. Diego,
‘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
325
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 embittered still more by dying un … —’
Ode.
326
Her hand alone can touch the part,
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 to- wards 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.
327
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.
’Tis as well known, that one branch out of many of that system,
was the
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.
328
What a fatal thing is the popular pride of a free city! cries one
histo- rian—The Strasburgers deemed it a diminution of their
freedom to re- ceive an imperial garrison—so fell a prey to a
French one.
329
Chapter 2.XXXVI.
330
to shut up the book; inasmuch, continues Slawkenbergius, as I
know of no tale which could possibly ever go down after it.
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.
331
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 cieling, in that case the two chins un- avoidably meet—
and to look down into each other’s lap, the foreheads come to
immediate contact, which at once puts an end to the confer-
ence—I mean to the sentimental part of it.—What is left,
madam, is not worth stooping for.
Chapter 2.XXXVII.
332
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.
Chapter 2.XXXVIII.
333
(ringing the bell at the bed’s head for Trim) was to a grenadier, I
think in Mackay’s regiment.
Chapter 2.XXXIX.
334
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.
335
faster than he could wipe them off—He laid his hands upon his
breast—made a bow to the ground, and shut the door.
Chapter 2.XL.
Chapter 2.XLI.
336
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 2.XLII.
337
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 commis- sion. 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
wonder- ful 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.
338
left-hand between the fore-finger 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 fol- low of themselves in course.’
Chapter 2.XLIII.
339
and striking one hand against the other.—It makes every thing
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.
Chapter 2.XLIV.
340
WHAT A CHAPTER OF CHANCES, said my father, turning himself
about upon the first landing, as he and my uncle Toby were
going down stairs, 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 calcula- tions, brother Toby. a mere
chance, said my uncle Toby.—Then it adds one to the chapter—
replied my father.
341
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.
Chapter 2.XLV.
342
destiny:—A sudden impulse comes across me—drop the cur-
tain, Shandy—I drop it—Strike a line here across the paper,
Tristram—I strike it—and hey for a new chapter.
343
piece, and never un- derstood 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
foetus, (Ce Foetus n’etoit pas plus grand que la paume de la
main; mais son pere l’ayant examine en qualite de Medecin, &
ayant trouve que c’etoit quelque chose de plus qu’un Embryon,
le fit transporter tout vi- vant a Rapallo, ou il le fit voir a Jerome
Bardi & a d’autres Medecins du lieu. On trouva qu’il ne lui
manquoit rien d’essentiel a la vie; & son pere pour faire voir un
essai de son experience, entreprit d’achever l’ouvrage de la
Nature, & de travailler a la formation de l’Enfant avec le meme
artifice que celui dont on se sert pour faire ecclorre les Poulets
en Egypte. Il instruisit une Nourisse de tout ce qu’elle avoit a
faire, & ayant fait mettre son fils dans un pour proprement
accommode, il reussit a l’elever & a lui faire prendre ses
accroissemens necessaires, par l’uniformite d’une chaleur
etrangere mesuree exactement sur les degres d’un
Thermometre, ou d’un autre instrument equivalent. (Vide Mich.
Giustinian, ne gli Scritt. Liguri a 223. 488.) On auroit toujours ete
tres satisfait de l’industrie d’un pere si experimente dans l’Art de
la Generation, quand il n’auroit pu prolonger la vie a son fils que
pour Puelques mois, ou pour peu d’annees. Mais quand on se
represente que l’Enfant a vecu pres de quatre-vingts ans, & qu’il
a compose quatre-vingts Ouvrages differents tous fruits d’une
longue lec- ture—il faut convenir que tout ce qui est incroyable
n’est pas toujours faux, & que la Vraisemblance n’est pas
344
toujours du cote la Verite. Il n’avoit que dix neuf ans lorsqu’il
composa Gonopsychanthropologia de Origine Animae
humanae. (Les Enfans celebres, revus & corriges par M. de la
Monnoye de l’Academie Francoise.)) 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.
Chapter 2.XLVI.
345
Chapter 2.XLVII.
346
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.
Chapter 2.XVLIII.
—’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 doctor Slop was led into the back parlour in
that dirty pickle by Obadiah.
347
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 biographi- cal 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 there-
fore, 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 third vol- ume (According to the preceding
Editions.)—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
wor- ships, that the more I write, the more I shall have to write—
and conse- quently, the more your worships read, the more your
worships will have to read.
348
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.
—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.
349
Chapter 2.XLIX.
350
Susannah ran with all speed along the gallery.
—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 interjec- tion 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
351
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 2.L.
It is a fine subject.
352
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
353
‘God’s blessing,’ said Sancho Panca, ‘be upon the man who first
in- vented 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.
Chapter 2.LI.
354
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 to- gether.—
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.
355
—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.
Chapter 2.LII.
356
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 any think 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
can- not reason upon it—yet we find the good of it, may it
please your rever- ences 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 di- rected him to any think 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,
357
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 2.LIII.
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
358
fortifications, may be told his honour here- after.—Trim’s
casuistry and address, under the cover of his low bow, pre-
vented all suspicion in my uncle Toby, so he went on with what
he had to say to Trim as follows:
359
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 firelock.—Or when
he marches up the glacis? cried my uncle Toby, looking warm
and setting his foot upon his stool.—
Chapter 2.LIV.
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:
360
My Father’s Lamentation.
361
give it. But how were we defeated!You know the event, brother
Toby—’tis too melancholy a one to
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 evacua- tions 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
conse- quently her foetus too, with that nonsensical anxiety of
hers about lying- in in town? I thought my sister submitted with
the greatest patience, re- plied 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
362
wished, in this general wreck of his frame, was to have saved
this little casket unbroke, unrifled.—
Still, brother Toby, there was one cast of the dye left for our child
after all—O Tristram! Tristram! Tristram!
Chapter 2.LV.
363
upon no one—quoth I to myself when I mounted—I’ll take a
good rattling gallop; but I’ll not hurt the poorest jack-ass 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, school-men, 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.
364
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 in it? You shall hear in the next chapter.
Chapter 2.LVI.
365
father.—She may be godmother, replied Francis hastily—so
announce my intentions by a courier to-morrow morning.
366
Your honour stands pawn’d already in this matter, answered
Monsieur le Premier.
Chapter 2.LVII.
367
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 gall- bladder, liver, and sweet-
bread of his majesty’s subjects, with all the inimicitious passions
which belong to them, down into their duodenums.
Chapter 2.LVIII.
368
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.
Chapter 2.LX.
369
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 ….
370
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 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.
371
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.
372
rate—so on I humm’d—and a tolerable tune I thought it was;
and to this hour, may it please your rever- ences, 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,
Chapter 2.LXI.
373
Didius; it should not go unnoticed, said doctor Kysarcius—he
was of the Kysarcii of the Low Coun- tries.
—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.
374
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 them- selves—rack—torture
your invention for ever, you’re where you was—In
Chapter 2.LXII.
One or two who had very nice ears, and could distinguish the
expres- sion and mixture of the two tones as plainly as a third or
375
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 knowl- edge, they could not tell
what in the world to make of it.
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
376
time in the upper regions of Phutatorius’s purtenance; and so
was natu- rally, 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.
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 for- wards—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.
377
This I will endeavour to explain to you with all imaginable
decency.
378
laws of decorum do strictly require, like the temple of Janus (in
peace at least) to be universally shut up.
379
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 gradu- ally 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 atten- tion, 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 dan- ger, leaving all his upper
regions, as you may imagine, as empty as my purse.
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
380
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.
381
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,
When great or unexpected events fall out upon the stage of this
sublunary world—the mind of man, which is an inquisitive kind
of a substance, naturally takes a flight behind the scenes to see
382
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, 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 sin- gularity of his temper, which would never
suffer him to take pains to set a story right with the world,
383
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 re- port 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.
But you must mark and carefully separate and distinguish these
two things in your mind.
Chapter 2.LXIII.
384
—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 af- fair—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 pa-
per, 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 ve- hicle—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.
385
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 advan- tage of being spread so infinitely thin, and with such
a mathematical equal- ity (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
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 concubinaria.
Chapter 2.LXIV.
386
—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 patriae & 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.
387
Kysarcius.— In course, answered Yorick, in a tone two parts jest
and one part ear-
nest.—
388
—It has not only been a question, Captain Shandy, amongst the
(Vide Swinburn on Testaments, Part 7. para 8.) 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
adjudged for the negative—namely, ‘That the mother is not of
kin to her child.’ (Vide Brook Abridg. Tit. Administr. N. 47.) 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 ar- gument—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 content- ing himself with whistling
Lillabullero inwardly—Kysarcius, Didius, and Triptolemus went on
with the discourse as follows:
389
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, ac-
cording to the statute of the 21st of Harry the Eighth, whereby it
is en-
390
consistory and prerogative courts of Canterbury and York, with
the mas- ter of the faculties, were all unanimously of opinion,
That the mother was not of (Mater non numeratur inter
consanguineos, Bald. in ult. C. de Verb. signific.) kin to her
child.—
And what said the duchess of Suffolk to it? said my uncle Toby.
391
Abridg. tit. Administr. N .47.)) one flesh; and consequently no de-
gree 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
Chapter 2.LXV.
392
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.—
—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 2.LXVI.
393
as the hasty sparks of temper, which occasion snapping, so
much
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 every
thing— 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
394
inconvenience hinted at above, which absolutely put him under
a necessity of deciding in favour either of the one or the other.
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
395
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.
On the other hand, the case of the Ox-moor was full as hard.
396
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.
397
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 consid- eration of equal weight, as to
keep the scales even.
398
old gentleman in such a state of suspense—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 fric-
tion works upon the more gross and solid parts, wasting the fat
and im- pairing the strength of a man every time as it goes
backwards and for- wards.
399
Chapter 2.LXVII.
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
400
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 counterbal- ance the many evils will
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 some- thing, 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
chap- ter before.
And now that you have just got to the end of these (According
to the preceding Editions.) three volumes—the thing I have to
401
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 na- ture, 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 cheerfully
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 satur- nine 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
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
mean time) I’ll have another pluck at your beards, and lay open
a story to the world you little dream of.
402
End of the Second Volume.
Dixero si quid forte jocosius, hoc mihi juris Cum venia dabis.—
Hor.
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 inscrib- ing the story of Le Fever to her name; for which I
403
have no other motive, which my heart has informed me of, but
that the story is a humane one.
Laur. Sterne.
Chapter 3.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.’
404
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 every
body’s!—O rare!’
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 (Greek) 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
405
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.
The Fragment.
406
… —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 pro- nounced 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 re- clined herself—I desire, continued she, you will go on.
407
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 be- fore the queen, but upon
sundry other occasions at court, with an accent which always
implied something of a mystery—And as the court of Mar-
garet, 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 gained
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 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,
408
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.
409
—The Lady Baussiere rode on.
410
but to make these etchings the stron- ger—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—ft, ft,—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 in 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
411
The best word, in the best language of the best world, must
have suf- fered 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 night-caps
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.
Chapter 3.II.
412
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.
ther, 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.
413
What plagues, cried my father, going on with his calculation.—
But the waters are out, said Obadiah,—opening the door again.
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 com- passes 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
414
nod—and keeping his compasses still upon Nevers with one
hand, and holding his book of the post-roads in the other—half
cal- culating and half listening, he leaned forwards upon the
table with both elbows, as my uncle Toby hummed over the
letter.
When Agrippina was told of her son’s death, Tacitus informs us,
that,
415
Chapter 3.III.
416
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—
no body upon earth can conceive, says the great orator, how
happy, how joyful it made me.
417
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.
418
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.
‘If my son could not have died, it had been matter of wonder,—
not that he is dead.
‘—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 hori- zon.’ (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 to-
419
gether, have performed their several evolutions, they fall back.’—
Brother Shandy, said my uncle Toby, laying down his pipe at the
word evolu- tions—Revolutions, I meant, quoth my father,—by
heaven! I meant revo- lutions, 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.
420
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, hon- est 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 stayed 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 Archi-
pelago into Asia; and that all this sailing affair with Aegina
behind, and Megara before, and Pyraeus on the right hand, &c.
&c. was nothing more than the true course of my father’s
voyage and reflections.—’Twas cer- tainly 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.
421
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.
‘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 do them—said my uncle Toby to himself.—
‘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.
422
‘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 to be freed from cares and agues, from love and
melan- choly, 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?
423
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 Caesar Augustus in a compliment.—I hope
’twas a sincere one—quoth my uncle Toby.
Chapter 3.IV.
Chapter 3.V.
424
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,
Chapter 3.VI.
425
so many different springs, and acted one upon the other from
such a variety of strange principles and im- pulses—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.
426
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 his harangue,—had Trim got upon his legs, to
speak his sentiments upon the subject.
427
Chapter 3.VII.
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.
428
—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 lament for him from my heart and my soul, said Trim, fetching
a sigh.—Poor creature!—poor boy!—poor gentleman!
429
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.
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 com-
merce with the soul,—gives a smarter stroke, and leaves
something more inexpressible upon the fancy, than words can
either convey—or some-
430
—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 made nothing at all of it.
431
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 3.VIII.
432
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 hat off the ground,—put it upon his head,—and
then went on with his oration upon death, in manner and form
following.
Chapter 3.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
433
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 de-
scribed Susannah’s affliction—is not all flesh grass?—Tis clay,—
’tis dirt.— They all looked directly at the scullion,—the scullion
had just been scour- ing 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 3.X.
434
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 curi- ous any body determine—
’tis certain, at least, the corporal went on thus
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
435
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.
436
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 shil- lings,—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.
Chapter 3.XI.
437
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.
Chapter 3.XII.
438
My uncle Toby’s opinion, Madam, ‘that there could be no harm in
Cornelius Gallus, the Roman praetor’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?
439
long, a profound and peaceful sleep, without dreams, without
distur- bance?—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 ora- tion, as recorded by Josephus (de Bell.
Judaic)—Eleazer owns he had it from the philosophers of India;
in all likelihood Alexander the Great, in
440
store-house it would be fetched.— Bless me! what a trade was
driven by the learned in those days!
Chapter 3.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.—
441
listened to it with composed intelli- gence, 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
Chapter 3.XIV.
442
good or bad, to her, he led her out after my father, that he might
finish the ecclaircissement himself.
Chapter 3.XV.
443
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
Chapter 3.XVI.
444
THE FIRST THING which entered my father’s head, after affairs
were a little settled in the family, and Susanna 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-
paedia, 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 devo-
tion as ever my uncle Toby had done to his doctrine of
projectils.—The difference between them was, that my uncle
Toby drew his whole knowl- edge 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.
445
hands.—Let no man say,—’Come—I’ll write a duodecimo.’
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
great advantages of na- ture, which should have pricked him
446
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, bona 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 per- sonage 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.
447
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 antiq- uity.—Prejudice
of education, he would say, is the devil,—and the multi- tudes 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.
448
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.—
Chapter 3.XVII.
449
to see how things are carried on in this world!—The chamber-
maid had left no
Chapter 3.XVIII.
450
Susannah’s steps to so proper an asylum. It is in vain to leave
this to the Reader’s imagina- tion:—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 3.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 re- doubt;—’twould secure the lines all
along there, and make the attack on that side quite complete:—
get me a couple cast, Trim.
451
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 de- mand 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
Chapter 3.XX.
452
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
Trim, by the help of his fore-finger, 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
453
listened to it;—and the story being told,—the dialogue went on
as follows.
Chapter 3.XXI.
454
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.—
455
and after a moment’s pause, my uncle Toby sinking his voice a
note,—resumed the discourse as follows.
Chapter 3.XXII.
Chapter 3.XXIII.
456
—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.
Chapter 3.XXIV.
457
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 3.XXV.
Chapter 3.XXVI.
458
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 short-hand 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 en- abled 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.
First, Had the matter been taken into consideration, before the
event happened, my father certainly would have nailed up the
459
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.
Chapter 3.XXVII.
460
brought up Spenser de Legibus Hebraeorum 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.
Chapter 3.XXVIII.
461
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
—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
462
Egypt.—Of that, answered my father, he will have the
advantage, when he sees the Pyramids.—
463
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 em- peror; and having shut the door, Yorick took a
book from his right-hand coat-pocket, and read, or pretended
to read, as follows.
Chapter 3.XXIX.
464
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 posi- tion, 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 striking 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 up- side down, and
foreside back, without touching any thing, he brought him- self
betwixt the horse’s two ears, and then giving himself a jerking
swing, he seated himself upon the crupper—’
‘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 there-upon 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
465
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.—
Chapter 3.XXX.
466
officer, making so many summersets, as they advanced;—the
French come on capering now and then in that way,—but not
quite so much.
Chapter 3.XXXI.
being laid in the first conjunction betwixt male and female, for
procre- ation of the species—I was insensibly led into it.—’Twas
natural, said Yorick.
467
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 phi- losopher 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
(Greek)—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 rea- son.—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
dis- course.
468
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.
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 3.XXXII.
469
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 Cat- echism. He can, upon my honour, replied
my uncle Toby.—Ask him, Mr. Yorick, any question you please.—
‘Poise your firelock,’ cried the corporal, doing the duty still both
of adjutant and private man.
470
The First—cried my uncle Toby, setting his hand upon his side—
….
Every thing 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.
471
my father, turning round to him,—What dost thou mean, by
‘honouring thy father and mother?’
Chapter 3.XXXIII.
472
‘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.
Now could the man in the moon be told, that a man in the earth
had
473
power and good- ness can enlarge the faculties of thy creatures
to this infinite degree of excellence and perfection,—What have
we Moonites done?’
Chapter 3.XXXIV.
474
—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 breath- ing: 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 3.XXXV.
‘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 func- tions 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
475
greasy unctions, which so fully saturated the pores of the skin,
that no spicula could en- ter;—nor could any one get out.—This
put a stop to all perspiration, sensible and insensible, which
being the cause of so many scurvy distem- pers—a course of
clysters was requisite to carry off redundant humours,— and
render the system complete.
Chapter 3.XXXVI.
476
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.’
Chapter 3.XXXVII.
477
the last chapter;—his eyes were fixed upon my father
throughout it;—he never mentioned radi- cal 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 follow- ing question,—aside.— … . It was at the siege of
Limerick, an’ please your honour, replied the corporal, making a
bow.
478
All this was as much Arabick to my father, as the rites of the
Colchi and
Chapter 3.XXXVIII.
479
spices; whereby the corporal kept up (as it were) a continual
firing, so that the radical heat stood its ground from the be-
ginning 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.
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
480
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 be- fore he opened his mouth,—he
delivered his notion thus.
Chapter 3.XXXIX.
481
old friend, Dr. Slop, and then delivered his opinion concerning
radical heat and radical mois- ture, in the following words.
Chapter 3.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.—
482
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.—
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.
483
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 3.XLI.
Chapter 3.XLII.
Seven long years and more (Greek)-ing it, at Greek and Latin;
484
Four years at his probations and his negations—the fine statue
still ly- ing 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 emi- nent
as he turned out after, entered upon the law so late in life, that
every body imagined he intended to be an advocate in the
other world: no won- der, when Eudamidas, the son of
Archidamas, heard Xenocrates at sev- enty-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?
485
have not a river or a spring running besides them;—every child,
Yorick, has not a parent to point it out.
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
486
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.
Chapter 3.XLIII.
MY FATHER TOOK a single turn across the room, then sat down,
and fin- ished the chapter.
487
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
chrono- logically,—Has it been always? Lately? How long ago?—
Or hypotheti- cally,—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?
sions 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?)
488
If I should see a white bear, what should 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?
Chapter 3.XLIV.
489
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!
Chapter 3.XLV.
490
or an hypothesis;—every thesis and hypothesis have an off-
spring 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.—
491
(meaning Stevinus)—He was so, brother Toby, said my father
(mean- ing 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 shak- ing the authority of all
anecdotes whatever—at seven years of age, his
492
Yorick, who composed a work (Nous aurions quelque interet,
says Baillet, de montrer qu’il n’a rien de ridicule s’il etoit
veritable, au moins dans le sens enigmatique que Nicius
Erythraeus a ta he de lui donner. Cet auteur dit que pour
comprendre comme Lipse, il a pu 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
commence d’user de la raison; il veut que c’ait ete a l’age de
neuf ans; et il nous veut persuader que ce fut en cet age, que
Lipse fit un poeme.—Le tour est ingenieux, &c. &c.) the day he
was born:—They should have wiped it up, said my uncle Toby,
and said no more about it.
Chapter 3.XLVI.
493
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
494
Chapter 3.XLVII.
Chapter 3.XLVIII.
495
temper, in that short time, more hurt than the other nine were
able to rectify all their lives long.
496
It is for these reasons, continued my father, that the governor I
make choice of shall neither (Vid. Pellegrina.) 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.—
497
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.
Chapter 3.XLIX.
498
say, sitting—for in con- sideration of the corporal’s lame knee
(which sometimes gave him exquis- ite 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 mas- ter 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 nei- ther
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 any thing, 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.—
499
so ill.—I hope in God he will still mend, continued he,—we are all
of us concerned for him.
—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 be- ing ordered, took away, without saying one
500
word, and in a few minutes after brought him his pipe and
tobacco.
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
501
and stick and go to the house and reconnoitre, and act
accordingly; and I will bring your honour a full ac- count 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 tennaile
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 3.L.
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 follow- ing account.
502
Toby—I’ll tell your honour, replied the corporal, every thing
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
begun the story to my uncle Toby over again in pretty near the
same words.
503
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 my 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.
504
opened the kitchen-door, your father will be well again.—Mr.
Yorick’s curate was smoking a pipe by the kitchen
When the lieutenant had taken his glass of sack and toast, he
felt him- self 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
505
water,—or engaged, said I, for months together in long and
dangerous marches;— harassed, perhaps, in his rear to-day;—
harassing others to-morrow;—de- tached 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 par- son,—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.
506
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 Levens’s—said the lieutenant.—I told him
507
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.
Chapter 3.LI.
508
The Story of Le Fever Continued.
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
509
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 my- self.—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, con- tinued 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.—
510
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.
Chapter 3.LII.
—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 3.LIII.
511
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 pressed 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.—
512
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 re- treating 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.—
Chapter 3.LIV.
513
That the governor of Dendermond paid his obsequies all military
honours,—and that Yorick, not to be behind-hand—paid him all
ecclesi- astic—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.—
On the back of half a dozen I find written, So, so, and no more—
and
514
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.
515
in hand, they impressed very distinct ideas of their several
characters upon his fancy,—whatever they may do upon that of
others.
516
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; re-
sembling 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.
517
tell me then, Mynheer Vander Blonederdondergewdenstronke,
why they should not be printed together?
Chapter 3.LV.
WHEN MY UNCLE TOBY had turned every thing 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
518
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 corpo- ral 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.
519
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 3.LVI.
his health, and, in short, every thing but his sword;—and was
waiting for the first ship to return back to him.
520
forbore mentioning Le Fever’s name,—till the character, by
Yorick’s inter-position, ending unexpectedly, in one, who should
be gentle-tempered, and generous, and good, it impressed the
im- age 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—
Chapter 3.LVII.
WHAT A JOVIAL and a merry world would this be, may it please
your wor- ships, but for that inextricable labyrinth of debts,
cares, woes, want, grief, discontent, melancholy, large jointures,
impositions, and lies!
521
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 every
body’s mouth, That poor Master Shandy … entirely.—And Fame,
who loves to double every thing,—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.’
522
Chapter 3.LVIII.
Chapter 3.LIX.
523
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 3.LX.
524
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
determi- nation,—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,
….
My way is this:—
525
t’other fasting;—or write it all full,—and cor- rect 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
526
good-humoured Shandean book, which will do all your hearts
good—
Chapter 3.LXI.
ther, shamefully.—
—Not but the child looks extremely well, said my father, in his
vests and tunicks.—
527
—I can not (making two syllables of it) imagine, quoth my
father, who the deuce he takes after.—
528
—They should be of leather, said my father, turning him about
again.— They will last him, said my mother, the longest.
529
—There’s for you! cried my father, losing his 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.
530
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.
531
they most affected, and wore on their birth-days and public
rejoicings.—That it appeared from the best
Rubenius told him, that the point wasstill litigating amongst the
learned:— That Egnatius, Sigonius, Bossius Ticinensis, Bayfius
Budaeus, 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 Bayfuis 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.
532
Chapter 3.LXIII.
Chapter 3.LXIV.
533
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
transac- tions 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.
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
534
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
cor- poral 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 corpo- ral 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
bowl- ing-green, and for that reason generally ran his first and
second parallels
535
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 rhapso- dize 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
mean time.
Chapter 3.LXV.
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.
536
To one who took pleasure in the happy state of others,—there
could not have been a greater sight in 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 nar- row.—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.
537
the one or the other of them, adding some new conceit or quirk
of improve- ment to their operations, which always opened fresh
springs of delight in carrying them on.
All these were painted white three times over the ensuing spring,
which enabled my uncle Toby to take the field with great
splendour.
538
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.
Chapter 3.LXVI.
539
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 ex- changed
between my uncle Toby and the corporal, as the carpenter did
the work.
—Surely never did any Town act so many parts, since Sodom
and Gomorrah, as my uncle Toby’s town did.
540
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 ammuni- tion—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.
541
critics, to the end of the world, as one of the great desiderata of
my uncle Toby’s apparatus.
Chapter 3.LXVII.
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
542
your honour, the corporal would say (giving a strong reason to
the contrary)—how can that be?
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
The completion was no further off, than the very next morning;
which was that of the storm of the counterscarp betwixt the
543
Lower Deule, to the right, and the gate St. Andrew,—and on the
left, between St. Magdalen’s and the river.
544
Chapter 3.LXVIII.
The corporal—
545
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 ves- sels, compressed into a clod of the valley!
—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 3.LXIX.
546
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 same time, though he had pledged his cap, he
thought it in
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 supple- ment 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
547
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 burnt 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, per-adventure, strike something out? as
sure as a gun.—
The corporal sat up the best part of the night, in bringing his to
perfec- tion; and having made a sufficient proof of his cannon,
with charging them to the top with tobacco,—he went with
contentment to bed.
Chapter 3.LXX.
548
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
549
’Twas well for my father, that my uncle Toby had not his will to
make that day.
Chapter 3.LXXI.
In less than two minutes, my uncle Toby took the pipe from the
corpo- ral again, and raised it half way to his mouth—then
hastily gave it back a second time.
—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.
550
Chapter 3.LXXII.
551
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
ser- pentine 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.
Chapter 3.LXXIII.
552
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 noth-
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 3.LXXIV.
553
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.
I told the reader, this time two years, that my uncle Toby was
not elo- quent; 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
554
my uncle Toby to make long harangues,— and he hated florid
ones; but there were occasions where the stream over- flowed
the man, and ran so counter to its usual course, that in some
parts
), and is endorsed,
555
Chapter 3.LXXV.
556
time know me, with all my vices, and with all my weaknesses
too, whether of my age, my temper, my
passions, or my understanding.
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?
557
as much concerned for the destruction of the Greeks and Tro-
jans 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.—
—’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 intoler- able 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.
558
Need I be told, dear Yorick, as I was by you, in Le Fever’s
funeral ser- mon, That so soft and gentle a creature, born to
love, to mercy, and kind- ness, 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 lib- erty, 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 bowl- ing-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 3.LXXVI.
559
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!—
Chapter 3.LXXVII.
560
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
561
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
comman- dants, commissaries, deputies, negociators, and
intendants, would permit him to set about it.—Fatal interval of
inactivity!
562
cheon-wise with his fore-finger extended,—’tis no part of the
consider- ation 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 to- wards 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 demol- ish 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 3.LXXVIII.
563
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.
Chapter 3.LXXIX.
564
my uncle Toby’s court- ship of widow Wadman, whenever I got
time to write them, would turn out one of the most complete
systems, both of the elementary and practi- cal 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—
565
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 pa- tients have been treated—
the one, of Aoetius, who always begun with a cooling clyster of
hempseed and bruised cucumbers;—and followed on with thin
potations of water-lilies and purslane—to which he added a
pinch of snuff, of the herb Hanea;—and where Aoetius 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.
566
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 3.LXXX.
567
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.
Chapter 3.LXXXI.
Thrice happy book! thou wilt have one page, at least, within thy
covers, which Malice will not blacken, and which Ignorance
cannot misrepresent.
568
Chapter 3.LXXXII.
569
My mother never did.—In short, she went out of the world at last
with- out knowing whether it turned round, or stood still.—My
father had of- ficiously told her above a thousand times which
way it was,—but she always forgot.
. . . . . . .
. . . . . . .
. . . . . . .
. . . . . . .
Chapter 3.LXXXIII.
570
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 straight line. Now,
571
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 ABD—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.
—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!
572
—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?
Chapter 3.LXXXIV.
573
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—
574
whilst these few scatter’d spirits remain, and these two spider
legs of mine
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 post-
boy gave a crack with his whip—off I went like a cannon, and in
half a dozen bounds got into Dover.
Chapter 3.LXXXV.
575
or took notice of the dock of Chatham, or visited St. Thomas at
Canterbury, though they all three laid in my way—
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 vola- tile salts, are all jumbled into one
mass—good G..! every thing turns round in it like a thousand
whirlpools—I’d give a shilling to know if I shan’t write the clearer
for it—
576
the second, third, sixth, tenth time, sir,—hey-day!—what a
trampling over head!—hollo! cabin boy! what’s the matter?
Chapter 3.LXXXVI.
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.
577
Chapter 3.LXXXVII.
578
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 3.LXXXVIII.
579
distinct families in the basse ville, or suburbs—it must have
grown up by little and little, I suppose, to its present size.
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 can- not, 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
580
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.
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 nei- ther.—A traveller may see it
to satisfy himself—he must not omit how- ever 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.
581
Bologne, 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 re-
markable, that at the Tete de Gravelenes, and where the town is
naturally the weakest, they have expended the most money; so
that the outworks 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 ac- knowledged that Calais
was never upon any account so considerable from itself, as
from its situation, and that easy entrance which it gave our
ances- tors, upon all occasions, into France: it was not without
its inconveniences also; being no less troublesome to the English
in those times, than Dunkirk
582
Chapter 3.LXXXIX.
—So put on, my brave boy! and make the best of thy way to
Boulogne.
Chapter 3.XC.
583
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—
584
—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.
Chapter 3.XCI.
585
the sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, and tenth time, and without one
excep- tion, I then could not avoid making a national reflection
of it, which I do in these words;
586
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.
Chapter 3.XCII.
587
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 ex- actly.—
thumb!
—But your worships chuse rather that I give you the length,
breadth, and perpendicular height of the great parish-church, or
drawing of the facade of the abbey of Saint Austreberte which
has been transported from Artois hither—every thing 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 con- sidering the chances of a transitory life, I would not
answer for thee a moment; ere twice twelve months are passed
588
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—
—L… help me! I could not count a single point: so had been
piqued and repiqued, and capotted to the devil.
Chapter 3.XCIII.
589
(Vid. Book of French post-roads, page 36. edition of 1762.) de
Montreuil
Chapter 3.XCIV.
Chapter 3.XCV.
590
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 con- cern of my friends, and the last
services of wiping my brows, and smooth- ing 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
Chapter 3.XCVI.
591
days; and therefore, as thinketh the great bishop Hall, ’tis one of
the sever- est 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 the wheel we are talking of, and whereinto (but not
whereonto, for that would make an Ixion’s wheel of it) he
curseth his enemies, accord- ing 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 commen- tator, I should make no scruple to affirm, they
had great store in that hilly country.
592
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.—
Chapter 3.XCVII.
—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 cau- tiousness 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
593
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—
594
than what I borrow from my imagination—peace to thee,
generous fool! and let me go on.
Chapter 3.XCVIII.
ing to inform you, but what I have informed you once before—
and that was—that Janatone went there to school.
595
Chapter 3.XCIX.
—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
596
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 Cure offers you a pinch of
snuff—or a poor soldier shews you his leg—or a shaveling his
box—or the priestesse 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,
597
as my nose—I leap’d out of the chaise in a passion, and so saw
every thing 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—
Chapter 3.C.
The first, the finest, the most brilliant— The streets however are
nasty.
598
night, by a postillion in a tawny yellow jerkin, turned up with red
calamanco—crack, crack—crack, crack— crack, crack,—I wish
thy whip—
the streets are so villanously 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
cooks shops! and twice the number of barbers! and all within
three min- utes driving! one would think that all the cooks in the
world, on some great merry-meeting with the barbers, by joint
599
consent had said—Come, let us all go live at Paris: the French
love good eating—they are all gour- mands—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 (Chief Magistrate in Toulouse, &c. &c. &c.) at least—
pardi! we shall all wear swords—
Chapter 3.CI.
600
As for candle-light—I give it up—I have said before, there was
no de- pending 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 Hotels, which they number up to you in
Paris—and the five hundred good things, at a mod- est
computation (for ’tis only allowing one good thing to a Hotel),
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
That by the last survey taken in the year one thousand seven
hundred and sixteen, since which time there have been
considerable augmenta- tions, Paris doth contain nine hundred
streets; (viz)
601
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—
—but ’tis what no one needeth to tell you, for you will read of it
your- self upon the portico of the Louvre, in these words,
The French have a gay way of treating every thing that is Great;
and that is all can be said upon it.
602
Chapter 3.CII.
Spleen.
603
first principle on which I set out—and with which I shall now
scamper it away to the banks of the Garonne—
604
Si quid urbaniuscule lusum a nobis, per Musas et Charitas et
omnium poetarum Numina, Oro te, ne me male capias.
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.
605
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 dedi- cate that Volume to some gentle
Shepherd,
I am The Author.
606
The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gent.
Chapter 4.I.
give 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 rever- ences may laugh at it in the
bed-chamber—full 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
con- trivance 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.
607
—My ink burns my finger to try—and when I have—’twill have a
worse consequence—It will burn (I fear) my paper.
Chapter 4.II.
608
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 Bour- bon—so having first
obtained 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.
609
was ready at the gate of the convent for the hot-baths of
Bourbon—two rows of the unfor- tunate stood ready there an
hour before.
slowly to the calesh, both clad in white, with their black rosaries
hanging at their breasts—
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
610
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.
—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.
611
come along with them from the confines of Savoy, &c. &c.—and
as how she had got a white swelling by her devotions—and
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,—
612
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.—
Chapter 4.III.
613
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 Andouillets? and why didst thou not suffer thy servant to go
unpolluted to her tomb?
Chapter 4.V.
614
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 ravished and die unabsolved of them,
we shall both- but you may pronounce them to me, quoth the
abbess of Andouillets— 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.
Chapter 4.VI.
615
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
Andouillets—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
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.
616
Quicker still, cried Margarita. Bou, bou, bou, bou, bou, bou, bou,
bou, bou.
Chapter 4.VII.
617
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 any thing 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.
Chapter 4.VIII.
—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 chace—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—
618
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!
619
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 con- sequence
of his systems and opiniotry—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 ex- ecuted—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 travel- ling is no
more,—or which comes to the same point—till the world, fi- nally,
takes it into its head to stand still.—
620
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 abbey of Saint Germain.
Every thing is very fine, and very rich, and very superb, and very
mag- nificent, 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 every thing into order and discipline—
621
uncle Toby and Trim so much harder than him, ’twas a relative
triumph; and put him into the gayest humour in the world.
622
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—
Chapter 4.IX.
623
—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 hereaf- ter—
There is but a certain degree of perfection in every thing; 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 walk- ing 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 (The same Don Pringello,
the celebrated Spanish architect, of whom my cousin Antony
Chapter 4.X.
624
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 for- wards
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 noth- ing—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 Cote roti, as I shoot by
the foot of them! and what a fresh spring in the blood! to behold
upon the banks advancing and retir- ing, the castles of
romance, whence courteous knights have whilome res- cued 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.
625
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 Andouillets’ itself—that I was just open- ing
my mouth to give it to the devil—when a pert vamping chaise-
under- taker, stepping nimbly across the street, demanded if
Monsieur would have his chaise refitted—No, no, said I, shaking
my head sideways—Would Monsieur choose 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.
—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—
the centre—
626
—Every thing 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.
Chapter 4.XI.
627
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—
628
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.
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 4.XII.
629
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.—
630
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.’
Chapter 4.XIII.
631
—’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 thresh- old, and with his two hinder feet
towards the street, as not knowing very well whether he was to
go in or no.
632
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—
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
oppo- site way—
633
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 benevo- lence 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.
634
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 4.XIV.
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.
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—
635
Chapter 4.XV.
636
Sir, said I, collecting myself—it is not my intention to take post—
—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—
Bon Dieu! what, pay for the way I go! and for the way I do not
go!
637
ashes, at his devotions—looking still paler by the contrast and
distress of his drap- ery—ask’d, if I stood in want of the aids of
the church—
Chapter 4.XVI.
Excuse me; said I—for you have begun, Sir, with first tearing off
my breeches-and now you want my pocket—
As it is—
638
—’Tis contrary to the law of nature.
—By all which it appears, quoth I, having read it over, a little too
rap- idly, 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
639
—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 4.XVII.
640
mine?—you maid of the house! run up stairs— Francois! run up
after her—
Sancho Panca, when he lost his ass’s Furniture, did not exclaim
more bitterly.
Chapter 4.XVIII.
641
heaven) worth six into the bar- gain; 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, Francois,—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 4.XIX.
642
The French women, by the bye, love May-poles, a 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—
643
twisted that—ey! by my faith; and when they are published,
quoth I,—
Chapter 4.XX.
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 Chi- nese history, &c. except the time, said
Francois—for ’tis almost eleven— then we must speed the faster,
said I, striding it away to the cathedral.
644
gradually went off, till at length I would not have given a cherry-
stone 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
Chapter 4.XXI.
645
When I came—there was no tomb to drop it upon.
Chapter 4.XXII.
646
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.
647
the boot:—when I had finished the affair, I turned about to take
the mule from the man, and thank him—
Chapter 4.XXIII.
648
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.
Chapter 4.XXIV.
I HAD NOT GONE above two leagues and a half, before the
man with his gun began to look at his priming.
649
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—
—How we disposed of our eggs and figs, I defy you, or the Devil
him- self, 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
650
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 talk- ing 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,
fid- dlers, friars—not passing by a woman in a mulberry-tree
without com- mending 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.
651
’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 drunk 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 Andouillets) 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.
652
—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.
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.
653
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
Pescnas, 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—
Chapter 4.XXV.
lines (Vid. Vol. III.) 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
654
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—
Chapter 4.XXVI.
655
The thing is this.
That of all the several ways of beginning a book which are now
in prac- tice 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.
Pope and his Portrait (Vid. Pope’s Portrait.) 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
656
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.
Chapter 4.XXVII.
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,
657
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
numer- ous family, for these four generations, we count no more
than one arch- bishop, a Welch judge, some three or four
aldermen, and a single moun- tebank—
Chapter 4.XXVIII.
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,
658
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 re- peated manifestoes thereupon to all the world,
made it necessary for my uncle Toby to look into the affair.
Chapter 4.XXIX.
659
—The most perfect,—Madam, that friendship herself could wish
me— ‘And drink nothing!—nothing but water?’
Fancy sits musing upon the bank, and with her eyes following
the stream,
660
Chapter 4.XXX.
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.
661
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
Is it not enough that thou art in debt, and that thou hast ten
cart-loads of thy fifth and sixth volumes (Alluding to the first
edition.) 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
662
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?—
Chapter 4.XXXI.
Chapter 4.XXXII.
663
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
unfur-
nished; 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, super-added 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
charac- ter I intend to give of her—
664
—And then good night.
Chapter 4.XXXIII.
665
Now from one little indulgence gained after another, in the
many bleak and decemberley nights of a seven years widow-
hood, things had insensi-
bly 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 deco- rum, having first
open’d the bed-clothes 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, accord- ing 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
666
mechanical one of the most inflexible bed-chamber in
Christendom.
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 devo- tion: 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
From all which it was plain that widow Wadman was in love with
my uncle Toby.
667
Chapter 4.XXXIV.
Chapter 4.XXXV.
668
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.
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 center
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!
669
—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
meta- phor)—
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-cooks 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—
Chapter 4.XXXVI.
670
Chapter 4.XXXVII.
WHICH SHEWS, 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 speak- ing, 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-dandy- ish 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.
671
She stood however ready harnessed and caparisoned at all
points, to watch accidents.
Chapter 4.XXXVIII.
672
Chapter 4.XXXIX.
on by the meseraick veins and arteries, through all the turns and
lateral insertions of the intestines and their tunicles to the blind
gut—
673
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
Co- lon—
Chapter 4.XL.
674
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 for- tress 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
675
before my uncle Toby (poor soul!) had well march’d above half a
dozen toises with it.
The difference it made in the attack was this; That in going upon
it, as in the first case, with the end of her fore-finger 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.
676
skill’d in the elementary and practical part of love-making, has
occasion for—
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 attack’d and sore push’d on both
his wings—was it a wonder, if now and
Chapter 4.XLI.
677
THESE ATTACKS OF MRS. WADMAN, you will readily conceive to
be of dif- ferent 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 any thing), 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—
678
the desert, which in your road from Fesse to Cluny, the nuns of
that name will shew you for love.
Chapter 4.XLII.
It has lain there these six weeks, replied the corporal, till this
very morning that the old woman kindled the fire with it—
679
—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 4.XLIII.
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 Aegina towards Megara), did
upon Corinth and Pyreus—
680
—‘It was a thousand pities, an’ please your honour, to destroy
these works—and a thousand pities to have let them stood.’—
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.
681
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 Story of the King of Bohemia and His Seven Castles. There
was a certain king of Bo..he-
682
latter end of the last chapter, left it lying beside him on the
ground.
—’Tis every word of it but too true, cried my uncle Toby, that
thou art about to observe—
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
683
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.
—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—
—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—
684
all the pilgrimages of the patriarchs, to the departure of the
Israelites out of Egypt—and through- out 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 differ- ent reason than you wot of—
—It was the year next him—which being the year of our Lord
seven- teen 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.
In the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and twelve,
there was, an’ please your honour—
685
—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 in- credible vigour—but likewise
on the score, Trim, of thy own story; be- cause if there are—and
which, from what thou hast dropt, I partly suspect to be the
fact—if there are giants in it—
—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.
—Leave out the date entirely, Trim, quoth my uncle Toby, leaning
for- wards, and laying his hand gently upon the corporal’s
686
shoulder to temper the interruption—leave it out entirely, Trim; a
story passes very well with- out 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 any
thing at all of geography?
687
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 cli-
mates, their heats and cold, their inhabitants, their customs,
their lan- guage, their policy, and even their religion.
688
ting 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 pow- der; the furious execution of
which, renversing every thing like thunder before it, has become
a new aera to us of military improvements, chang- ing 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.
689
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—
690
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 gun-powder, 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
691
My uncle Toby never spoke of the being and natural attributes of
God, but with diffidence and hesitation—
692
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 over-flowings;—a short silence ensued.
So, thou wast once in love, Trim! said my uncle Toby, smiling—
Souse! replied the corporal—over head and ears! an’ please your
honour.
693
himself could scarce have gained it—he was press’d hard, as
your honour knows, on every side of him—
694
into a cart with thirteen or fourteen more, in order to be
convey’d to our hospital.
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.
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 upon one leg—
695
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 4.XLIV.
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
696
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.
’Tis the most serious thing, an’ please your honour (sometimes),
that is in the world.
The young woman call’d the old man and his wife into the room,
to shew them the money, in order to gain me credit for a bed
697
and what little neces- saries I should want, till I should be in a
condition to be got to the hospi- tal—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.
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 any where but in the Spanish Netherlands—except at
—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.
698
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 wish’d 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 bed-
side, holding back my curtain and offering me cordials—and I
was only awakened from my dream by her coming there at the
hour prom- ised, 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 sick- ened, 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 hon- estly say, an’ please your honour—that … once.
That was very odd, Trim, quoth my uncle Toby. I think so too—
said Mrs. Wadman.
699
Chapter 4.XLV.
700
Chapter 4.XLVI.
Every thing was still and hush as midnight about the house—
There was not so much as a duck or a duckling about the yard—
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 fore-finger of her right hand to
rub under my knee, guiding her fore-finger backwards and
forwards by the edge of the flannel which kept on the dressing.
701
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—
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.
702
I perceiv’d, then, I was beginning to be in love—
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—
Chapter 4.XLVII.
703
—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.
O! let woman alone for this. Mrs. Wadman had scarce open’d the
wicker- gate, when her genius sported with the change of
circumstances.
704
Chapter 4.XLVIII.
—If a man will be peeping of his own accord into things of that
na- ture—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 Rodope’s (Rodope Thracia tam inevitabili
fascino instructa, tam exacte oculus intuens attraxit, ut si in
illam quis incidisset, fieri non posset, quin caperetur.—I know not
705
who.) besides 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
Galileo 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 nei- ther 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.
Chapter 4.XLIX.
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
706
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.
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 con-
707
verse—but whispering soft—like the last low accent of an
expiring saint— ’How can you live comfortless, captain Shandy,
and alone, without a bo- som to lean your head on—or trust
your cares to?’
It was an eye—
Chapter 4.L.
708
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:
709
timental heigh ho! which mixing with the smoke, incommoded
no one mortal.
Chapter 4.LI.
710
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.
Chapter 4.LII.
—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
711
—She can no more, an’ please your honour, stand a siege, than
she can fly—cried the corporal—
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.
712
It may not, Madam, be so very large, replied Bridget, as you
think— and I believe, besides, added she—that ’tis dried up—
—We’ll know and long and the broad of it, in ten days—
answered Mrs. Bridget, for whilst the captain is paying his
addresses to you—I’m confi- dent 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—
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—
Then, an’ please your honour, said the corporal (making a bow
first for his commission)—we will begin with getting your
honour’s laced clothes
713
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 4.LIII.
Chapter 4.LIV.
714
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.
Chapter 4.LV.
715
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 al- ways 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.
Chapter 4.LVI.
716
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 not- withstanding 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.
717
Every body, said my mother, says you are in love, brother
Toby,—and we hope it is true.
Chapter 4.LVII.
718
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—
719
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—
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—
720
—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 break- ing the thread of his discourse—
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 philoso- phy and truth—the second, excites to
desire, simply—
Chapter 4.LVIII.
721
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 com- pany—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.
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, contin- ued my father, turning
himself to the company, that widow Wadman has been deeply
722
in love with my brother Toby for many years, and has used every
art and circumvention of woman to outwit him into the same
pas- sion, yet now that she has caught him—her fever will be
pass’d its height—
723
We have taken our measures badly, quoth my uncle Toby,
looking up interrogatively in Trim’s face.
And whence, cried Slop, jeeringly, hast thou all this knowledge of
woman, friend?
724
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:
Had it been the good pleasure of him who disposes of our lots—
and
725
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 par- ticular 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 oftner 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.
Let not thy breeches be too tight, or hang too loose about thy
thighs, like the trunk-hose of our ancestors.
726
cause, if thou canst help it, never throw down the tongs and
poker.
—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
727
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 Aelian relates such
effects—but if thy stom- ach palls with it—discontinue it from
time to time, taking cucumbers, melons, purslane, water-lillies,
woodbine, and lettice, in the stead of them.
Chapter 4.LIX.
728
should put it off beyond the next morning; so accordingly it was
resolv’d upon, for eleven o’clock.
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 (Alluding to the first edition.) 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
Chapter 4.LX.
729
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 curios- ity, 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
730
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 equi- noxes—Heaven above
knows—My mother—madam—was so at no time, either by
nature, by institution, or example.
731
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.
Chapter 4.LXI.
732
ladyship a smile—it curl’d every where but where the corporal
would have it; and where a buckle or two, in his opin- ion, 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 every thing 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
733
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—
Chapter 4.LXII.
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
734
oft as he did it, gave a slight flourish with his stick—but not
vapouringly; and with the sweet- est 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 taking bawdy.—
Chapter 4.LXIII.
735
—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.
736
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 4.LXIV.
737
moment with his white dimity waist-coat 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 every body he met:—
But alas! Tom! thou smilest no more, cried the cor- poral, looking
on one side of him upon the ground, as if he apostrophised him
in his dungeon.
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.
738
Chapter 4.LXV.
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—
A negro has a soul? an’ please your honour, said the corporal
(doubt- ingly).
—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?
739
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—
Amen, responded my uncle Toby, laying his hand upon his heart.
ment 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.
740
Chapter 4.LXVI.
741
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.—
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.
742
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 4.LXVII.
743
we shall neither of us want so much humanity and fellow-feeling,
as to face about and march.
stick, and striking his hand upon his coat-skirt as he took his
first step— march’d close behind him down the avenue.
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
744
windy day, never to return more—every thing 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.—
Chapter 4.LXVIII.
Chapter 4.LXIX.
745
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:’
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—
I need not be told, that the ethic writers have assigned this all to
Pa- tience; but that Virtue, methinks, has extent of dominion
746
sufficient of her own, and enough to do in it, without invading
the few dismantled castles which Honour has left him upon the
earth.
Chapter 4.LXX.
….
747
I wish, said my father, raising his voice, the whole science of
fortifica-
tion at the devil, with all its trumpery of saps, mines, blinds,
gabions, fausse-brays and cuvetts—
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.
748
’Tis enough—he tasted the sweet of triumph—and went on.
—But she must persuade my brother Toby first to get her one—
To be sure, Mr. Shandy, quoth my mother.
The first Lord of the Treasury thinking of ways and means, could
not have returned home with a more embarrassed look.
749
Chapter 4.LXXI.
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.
750
the soul herself, and arguing the point over and over again with
her upon the extent of her own faculties—
In short, they were good for every thing 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.
751
ance of good writing, but I instantly make it public; willing that
all man- kind should write as well as myself.
Chapter 4.LXXII.
—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.
752
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 Situa- tion, like all others,
has notions of her own to put into the brain.—
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
753
looking into my Laundress’s bill, as my book: there is 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.
Chapter 4.LXXIII.
754
indebted to the muster-master general of the Grecian army, for
suffering
755
THE SEVENTY-FOURTH 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!
’Tis very true, said I—but ‘twere better to get all these things out
of our heads, and return to my uncle Toby.
Chapter 4.LXXV.
756
suspended for a full minute in his hand, he scarce knew why.
Bridget stood perdue within, with her fin- ger 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.
Chapter 4.LXXVI.
—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
757
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 any thing
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.
Chapter 4.LXXVIII.
Chapter 4.LXXIX.
758
(Two blank paragraphs.)
—You shall see the very place, Madam; said my uncle Toby.
‘What would the world say if I look’d at it? ‘I should drop down,
if I look’d at it—
The corporal did not approve of the orders, but most cheerfully
obeyed them. The first was not an act of his will—the second
759
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.
Now in order to clear up the mist which hangs upon these three
pages, I must endeavour to be as clear as possible myself.
Chapter 4.LXXX.
760
that way, she further forms a judgment, whether it will not break
in the drawing.
‘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.
761
Chapter 4.LXXXI.
762
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
communi- cation of the tenderest offices—she had moreover
considered the other causes for which matrimony was
ordained—
And accordingly … .
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 4.LXXXII.
763
MRS. BRIDGET had pawn’d all the little stock of honour a poor
chamber- maid 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.’
764
Chapter 4.LXXXIII.
—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.
The Invocation.
Gentle Spirit of sweetest humour, who erst did sit upon the easy
pen of my beloved Cervantes; Thou who glidedst daily through
his lattice, and turned’st the twilight of his prison into noon-day
765
brightness by thy pres- ence—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 (He lost his hand at the battle of Lepanto.), and wide
extended it to all the evils of his life—
766
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 gate-way, at your departure—
and besides, my dear Sir, you get a sisterly kiss of each of ‘em
worth a pound—at least I did—
—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.
767
I would give him a four-and-twenty sous piece, when I got to
Moulins—
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 pub- lished 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.
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
768
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.
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—
769
grave sentences the rest of my days—and never—never attempt
again to com- mit mirth with man, woman, or child, the longest
day I had to live.
Chapter 4.LXXXIV.
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—
770
—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 Lerne 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 neces- sity I was under of writing the
84th chapter of my book, before the 77th, &c?
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
771
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.
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.
772
My uncle Toby never understood what my father meant; nor will
I pre- sume 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.’
773
—As for children—said Mrs. Wadman—though a principal end
per-
774
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 with- out 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 4.LXXXV.
775
York; which is about the half way—nor does any body wonder, if
he goes on and asks about the corporation, &c ….
She had accordingly read Drake’s anatomy from one end to the
other. She had peeped into Wharton upon the brain, and
borrowed Graaf (This must be a mistake in Mr. Shandy; for
Graaf wrote upon the pancreatick juice, and the parts of
generation.) upon the bones and muscles; but could make
nothing of it.
To clear up all, she had twice asked Doctor Slop, ‘if poor captain
Shandy was ever likely to recover of his wound—?’
Quite: madam—
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.
776
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 de- scribe 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 motion bad for it?’ et caetera, 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
777
—And whereabouts, dear sir, quoth Mrs. Wadman, a little
categori- cally, 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 fore-finger 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 to 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 De- cency, if then in
being—if not, ’twas her shade—shook her head, and with
—For nothing can make this chapter go off with spirit but an
apostro- phe 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
778
one to a woman in dis- tress—let the chapter go to the devil;
provided any damn’d critic in keep- ing will be but at the trouble
to take it with him.
Chapter 4.LXXXVI.
Chapter 4.LXXXVII.
779
That would have undone us for ever—said the corporal.
—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—
Chapter 4.LXXXVIII.
780
IT WAS LIKE THE MOMENTARY CONTEST in the moist eye-lids
of an April morning, ‘Whether Bridget should laugh or cry.’
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.
781
—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?
Chapter 4.LXXXIX.
782
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—
Chapter 4.XC.
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 fin- ger—Prithee,
Trim! said he, taking up his pipe again,—bring me a pen and ink:
Trim brought paper also.
783
Am I to set them down, an’ please your honour? quoth the
corporal.
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 mis- chance to me, Mrs. Wadman would
have enquired into every circum- stance relating to it a hundred
784
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—
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—
785
Chapter 4.XCI.
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 pur- poses you could possibly have, in exporting a
family secret; for she in- stantly 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 surren- der.—
786
brother by it, was demonstrating toYorick, 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.
Chapter 4.XCII.
787
faculties, and turns all the wisdom, contempla- tions, and
operations of the soul backwards—a passion, my dear, contin-
ued 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.
—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—
788
—When Obadiah broke into the middle of the room with a
complaint, which cried out for an immediate hearing.
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.
789
—Most of the townsmen, an’ please your worship, quoth
Obadiah, be- lieve that ’tis all the Bull’s fault—
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—
A Cock and a Bull, said Yorick—And one of the best of its kind, I
ever heard.
790
791