The Virginians by William Makepeace Thackeray (top books to read txt) ๐
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- Author: William Makepeace Thackeray
Read book online ยซThe Virginians by William Makepeace Thackeray (top books to read txt) ๐ยป. Author - William Makepeace Thackeray
โI will back the old boy for taking his hat off against the whole kingdom, and France either,โ says my Lord March. โHe has never changed the shape of that hat of his for twenty years. Look at it. There it goes again! Do you see that great, big, awkward, pock-marked, snuff-coloured man, who hardly touches his clumsy beaver in reply. Dโโ his confounded impudenceโdo you know who that is?โ
โNo, curse him! Who is it, March?โ asks Jack, with an oath.
โIt's one Johnson, a Dictionary-maker, about whom my Lord Chesterfield wrote some most capital papers, when his dixonary was coming out, to patronise the fellow. I know they were capital. I've heard Horry Walpole say so, and he knows all about that kind of thing. Confound the impudent schoolmaster!โ
โHang him, he ought to stand in the pillory!โ roars Jack.
โThat fat man he's walking with is another of your writing fellows,โa printer,โhis name is Richardson; he wrote Clarissa, you know.โ
โGreat heavens! my lord, is that the great Richardson? Is that the man who wrote Clarissa?โ called out Colonel Wolfe and Mr. Warrington, in a breath.
Harry ran forward to look at the old gentleman toddling along the walk with a train of admiring ladies surrounding him.
โIndeed, my very dear sir,โ one was saying, โyou are too great and good to live in such a world; but sure you were sent to teach it virtue!โ
โAh, my Miss Mulso! Who shall teach the teacher?โ said the good, fat old man, raising a kind, round face skywards. โEven he has his faults and errors! Even his age and experience does not prevent him from stumblโ-. Heaven bless my soul, Mr. Johnson! I ask your pardon if I have trodden on your corn.โ
โYou have done both, sir. You have trodden on the corn, and received the pardon,โ said Mr. Johnson, and went on mumbling some verses, swaying to and fro, his eyes turned towards the ground, his hands behind him, and occasionally endangering with his great stick the honest, meek eyes of his companion-author.
โThey do not see very well, my dear Mulso,โ he says to the young lady, โbut such as they are, I would keep my lash from Mr. Johnson's cudgel. Your servant, sir.โ Here he made a low bow, and took off his hat to Mr. Warrington, who shrank back with many blushes, after saluting the great author. The great author was accustomed to be adored. A gentler wind never puffed mortal vanity. Enraptured spinsters flung tea-leaves round him, and incensed him with the coffee-pot. Matrons kissed the slippers they had worked for him. There was a halo of virtue round his nightcap. All Europe had thrilled, panted, admired, trembled, wept, over the pages of the immortal little, kind, honest man with the round paunch. Harry came back quite glowing and proud at having a bow from him. โAh!โ says he, โmy lord, I am glad to have seen him!โ
โSeen him! why, dammy, you may see him any day in his shop, I suppose?โ says Jack, with a laugh.
โMy brother declared that he, and Mr. Fielding, I think, was the name, were the greatest geniuses in England; and often used to say, that when we came to Europe, his first pilgrimage would be to Mr. Richardson,โ cried Harry, always impetuous, honest, and tender, when he spoke of the dearest friend.
โYour brother spoke like a man,โ cried Mr. Wolfe, too, his pale face likewise flushing up. โI would rather be a man of genius, than a peer of the realm.โ
โEvery man to his taste, Colonel,โ says my lord, much amused. โYour enthusiasmโI don't mean anything personalโrefreshes me, on my honour it does.โ
โSo it does meโby gadโperfectly refreshes me,โ cries Jack
โSo it does Jackโyou seeโit actually refreshes Jack! I say, Jack, which would you rather be?โa fat old printer, who has written a story about a confounded girl and a fellow that ruins her,โor a peer of Parliament with ten thousand a year?โ
โMarchโmy Lord March, do you take me for a fool?โ says Jack, with a tearful voice. โHave I done anything to deserve this language from you?โ
โI would rather win honour than honours: I would rather have genius than wealth. I would rather make my name than inherit it, though my father's, thank God, is an honest one,โ said the young Colonel. โBut pardon me, gentlemen,โ and here making, them a hasty salutation, he ran across the parade towards a young and elderly lady and a gentleman, who were now advancing.
โIt is the beautiful Miss Lowther. I remember now,โ says my lord. โSee! he takes her arm! The report is, he is engaged to her.โ
โYou don't mean to say such a fellow is engaged to any of the Lowthers of the North?โ cries out Jack. โCurse me, what is the world come to, with your printers, and your half-pay ensigns, and your schoolmasters, and your infernal nonsense?โ
The Dictionary-maker, who had shown so little desire to bow to my Lord Chesterfield, when that famous nobleman courteously saluted him, was here seen to take off his beaver, and bow almost to the ground, before a florid personage in a large round hat, with bands and a gown, who made his appearance in the Walk. This was my Lord Bishop of Salisbury, wearing complacently the blue riband and badge of the Garter, of which Noble Order his lordship was prelate.
Mr. Johnson stood, hat in hand, during the whole time of his conversation with Dr. Gilbert; who made many flattering and benedictory remarks to Mr. Richardson, declaring that he was the supporter of virtue, the preacher of sound morals, the mainstay of religion, of all which points the honest printer himself was perfectly convinced.
Do not let any young lady trip to her grandpapa's bookcase in consequence of this eulogium, and rashly take down Clarissa from the shelf. She would not care to read the volumes, over which her pretty ancestresses wept and thrilled a hundred years ago; which were commended by divines from pulpits and belauded all Europe over. I wonder, are our women more virtuous than their grandmothers, or only more squeamish? If the former, then Miss Smith of New York is certainly more modest than Miss Smith of London, who still does not scruple to say that tables, pianos, and animals have legs. Oh, my faithful, good old Samuel Richardson! Hath the news yet reached thee in Hades that thy sublime novels are huddled away in corners, and that our daughters may no more read Clarissa than Tom Jones? Go up, Samuel, and be reconciled with thy brother-scribe, whom in life thou didst hate so. I wonder whether a century hence the novels of to-day will be hidden behind locks and wires, and make pretty little maidens blush?
โWho is yonder queer person in the high headdress of my grandmother's time, who stops and speaks to Mr. Richardson?โ asked Harry, as a fantastically dressed lady came up, and performed a curtsey and a compliment to
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