The History Of The Life Of The Late Mr. Jonathan Wild The Great(Fiscle Part 3) by Henry Fielding (best e book reader android .TXT) π
Of Those Wonderful Productions Of Nature Called Great Men.
As It Is Necessary That All Great And Surprising Events, The
Designs Of Which Are Laid, Conducted, And Brought To Perfection By
The Utmost Force Of Human Invention And Art, Should Be Produced By
Great And Eminent Men, So The Lives Of Such May Be Justly And
Properly Styled The Quintessence Of History. In These, When
Delivered To Us By Sensible Writers, We Are Not Only Most
Agreeably Entertained, But Most Usefully Instructed; For, Besides
The Attaining Hence A Consummate Knowledge Of Human Nature In
General; Of Its Secret Springs, Various Windings, And Perplexed
Mazes; We Have Here Before Our Eyes Lively Examples Of Whatever Is
Amiable Or Detestable, Worthy Of Admiration Or Abhorrence, And Are
Consequently Taught, In A Manner Infinitely More Effectual Than By
Precept, What We Are Eagerly To Imitate Or Carefully To Avoid.
But Besides The Two Obvious Advantages Of Surveying, As It Were In
A Picture, The True Beauty Of Virtue And Deformity Of Vice, We May
Moreover Learn From Plutarch, Nepos, Suetonius, And Other
Biographers, This Useful Lesson, Not Too Hastily, Nor In The
Gross, To Bestow Either Our Praise Or Censure; Since We Shall
Often Find Such A Mixture Of Good And Evil In The Same Character
That It May Require A Very Accurate Judgment And A Very Elaborate
Inquiry To Determine On Which Side The Balance Turns, For Though
We Sometimes Meet With An Aristides Or A Brutus, A Lysander Or A
Nero, Yet Far The Greater Number Are Of The Mixt Kind, Neither
Totally Good Nor Bad; Their Greatest Virtues Being Obscured And
Allayed By Their Vices, And Those Again Softened And Coloured Over
By Their Virtues.
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- Author: Henry Fielding
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Whole Earth. The Gentleman Is, By Employing Hands, Likewise To
Embellish His Country With The Improvement Of Art And Sciences,
With The Making And Executing Good And Wholesome Laws For The
Preservation Of Property And The Distribution Of Justice, And In
Several Other Manners To Be Useful To Society. Now We Come To The
Second Part Of This Division, Viz., Of Those Who Employ Hands For
Their Own Use Only; And This Is That Noble And Great Part Who Are
Generally Distinguished Into Conquerors, Absolute Princes,
Statesmen, And Prigs [Footnote: Thieves.]. Now All These Differ
From Each Other In Greatness Only--They Employ More Or Fewer
Hands. And Alexander The Great Was Only Greater Than A Captain Of
One Of The Tartarian Or Arabian Hordes, As He Was At The Head Of A
Larger Number. In What Then Is A Single Prig Inferior To Any Other
Great Man, But Because He Employs His Own Hands Only; For He Is
Not On That Account To Be Levelled With The Base And Vulgar,
Because He Employs His Hands For His Own Use Only. Now, Suppose A
Prig Had As Many Tools As Any Prime Minister Ever Had, Would He
Not Be As Great As Any Prime Minister Whatsoever? Undoubtedly He
Would. What Then Have I To Do In The Pursuit Of Greatness But To
Procure A Gang, And To Make The Use Of This Gang Centre In Myself?
This Gang Shall Rob For Me Only, Receiving Very Moderate Rewards
For Their Actions; Out Of This Gang I Will Prefer To My Favour The
Book 1 Chapter 13 Pg 48Boldest And Most Iniquitous (As The Vulgar Express It); The Rest I
Will, From Time To Time, As I See Occasion, Transport And Hang At
My Pleasure; And Thus (Which I Take To Be The Highest Excellence
Of A Prig) Convert Those Laws Which Are Made For The Benefit And
Protection Of Society To My Single Use."
Having Thus Preconceived His Scheme, He Saw Nothing Wanting To Put
It In Immediate Execution But That Which Is Indeed The Beginning
As Well As The End Of All Human Devices: I Mean Money. Of Which
Commodity He Was Possessed Of No More Than Sixty-Five Guineas,
Being All That Remained From The Double Benefits He Had Made Of
Bagshot, And Which Did Not Seem Sufficient To Furnish His House,
And Every Other Convenience Necessary For So Grand An Undertaking.
He Resolved, Therefore, To Go Immediately To The Gaming-House,
Which Was Then Sitting, Not So Much With An Intention Of Trusting
To Fortune As To Play The Surer Card Of Attacking The Winner In
His Way Home. On His Arrival, However, He Thought He Might As Well
Try His Success At The Dice, And Reserve The Other Resource As His
Last Expedient. He Accordingly Sat Down To Play; And As Fortune,
No More Than Others Of Her Sex, Is Observed To Distribute Her
Favours With Strict Regard To Great Mental Endowments, So Our Hero
Lost Every Farthing In His Pocket. This Loss However He Bore With
Great Constancy Of Mind, And With As Great Composure Of Aspect. To
Say Truth, He Considered The Money As Only Lent For A Short Time,
Or Rather Indeed As Deposited With A Banker. He Then Resolved To
Have Immediate Recourse To His Surer Stratagem; And, Casting His
Eyes Round The Room, He Soon Perceived A Gentleman Sitting In A
Disconsolate Posture, Who Seemed A Proper Instrument Or Tool For
His Purpose. In Short (To Be As Concise As Possible In These Least
Shining Parts Of Our History), Wild Accosted This Man, Sounded
Him, Found Him Fit To Execute, Proposed The Matter, Received A
Ready Assent, And, Having Fixed On The Person Who Seemed That
Evening The Greatest Favourite Of Fortune, They Posted Themselves
In The Most Proper Place To Surprise The Enemy As He Was Retiring
To His Quarters, Where He Was Soon Attacked, Subdued, And
Plundered; But Indeed Of No Considerable Booty; For It Seems This
Gentleman Played On A Common Stock, And Had Deposited His Winnings
At The Scene Of Action, Nor Had He Any More Than Two Shillings In
His Pocket When He Was Attacked.
This Was So Cruel A Disappointment To Wild, And So Sensibly
Affects Us, As No Doubt It Will The Reader, That, As It Must
Disqualify Us Both From Proceeding Any Farther At Present, We Will
Now Take A Little Breath, And Therefore We Shall Here Close This
Book.
Book 2 Chapter 1 Pg 49
Characters Of Silly People, With The Proper Uses For Which Such
Are Designed.
One Reason Why We Chose To End Our First Book, As We Did, With The
Last Chapter, Was, That We Are Now Obliged To Produce Two
Characters Of A Stamp Entirely Different From What We Have
Hitherto Dealt In. These Persons Are Of That Pitiful Order Of
Mortals Who Are In Contempt Called Good-Natured; Being Indeed Sent
Into The World By Nature With The Same Design With Which Men Put
Little Fish Into A Pike-Pond, In Order To Be Devoured By That
Voracious Water-Hero.
But To Proceed With Our History: Wild, Having Shared The Booty In
Much The Same Manner As Before, I.E. Taken Three-Fourths Of It,
Amounting To Eighteen-Pence, Was Now Retiring To Rest, In No Very
Happy Mood, When By Accident He Met With A Young Fellow Who Had
Formerly Been His Companion, And Indeed Intimate Friend, At
School. It Hath Been Thought That Friendship Is Usually Nursed By
Similitude Of Manners, But The Contrary Had Been The Case Between
These Lads; For Whereas Wild Was Rapacious And Intrepid, The Other
Had Always More Regard Far His Skin Than His Money; Wild Therefore
Had Very Generously Compassionated This Defect In His School-
Fellow, And Had Brought Him Off From Many Scrapes, Into Most Of
Which He Had First Drawn Him, By Taking The Fault And Whipping To
Himself. He Had Always Indeed Been Well Paid On Such Occasions;
There Are A Sort Of People Who, Together With The Best Of The
Bargain, Will Be Sure To Have The Obligation Too On Their Side; So
It Had Happened Here: For This Poor Lad Had Considered Himself In
The Highest Degree Obliged To Mr. Wild, And Had Contracted A Very
Great Esteem And Friendship For Him; The Traces Of Which An
Absence Of Many Years Had Not In The Least Effaced In His Mind. He
No Sooner Knew Wild, Therefore, Than He Accosted Him In The Most
Friendly Manner, And Invited Him Home With Him To Breakfast (It
Being Now Near Nine In The Morning), Which Invitation Our Hero
With No Great Difficulty Consented To. This Young Man, Who Was
About Wild's Age, Had Some Time Before Set Up In The Trade Of A
Jeweller, In The Materials Or Stock For Which He Had Laid Out The
Greatest Part Of A Little Fortune, And Had Married A Very
Agreeable Woman For Love, By Whom He Then Had Two Children. As Our
Book 2 Chapter 1 Pg 50Reader Is To Be More Acquainted With This Person, It May Not Be
Improper To Open Somewhat Of His Character, Especially As It Will
Serve As A Kind Of Foil To The Noble And Great Disposition Of Our
Hero, And As The One Seems Sent Into This World As A Proper Object
On Which The Talents Of The Other Were To Be Displayed With A
Proper And Just Success.
Mr. Thomas Heartfree Then (For That Was His Name) Was Of An Honest
And Open Disposition. He Was Of That Sort Of Men Whom Experience
Only, And Not Their Own Natures, Must Inform That There Are Such
Things As Deceit And Hypocrisy In The World, And Who,
Consequently, Are Not At Five-And-Twenty So Difficult To Be
Imposed Upon As The Oldest And Most Subtle. He Was Possessed Of
Several Great Weaknesses Of Mind, Being Good-Natured, Friendly,
And Generous To A Great Excess. He Had, Indeed, Too Little Regard
To Common Justice, For He Had Forgiven Some Debts To His
Acquaintance Only Because They Could Not Pay Him, And Had
Entrusted A Bankrupt, On His Setting Up A Second Time, From Having
Been Convinced That He Had Dealt In His Bankruptcy With A Fair And
Honest Heart, And That He Had Broke Through Misfortune Only, And
Not From Neglect Or Imposture. He Was Withal So Silly A Fellow
That He Never Took The Least Advantage Of The Ignorance Of His
Customers, And Contented Himself With Very Moderate Gains On His
Goods; Which He Was The Better Enabled To Do, Notwithstanding His
Generosity, Because His Life Was Extremely Temperate, His Expenses
Being Solely Confined To The Chearful Entertainment Of His Friends
At Home, And Now And Then A Moderate Glass Of Wine, In Which He
Indulged Himself In The Company Of His Wife, Who, With An
Agreeable Person, Was A Mean-Spirited, Poor, Domestic, Low-Bred
Animal, Who Confined Herself Mostly To The Care Of Her Family,
Placed Her Happiness In Her Husband And Her Children, Followed No
Expensive Fashions Or Diversions, And Indeed Rarely Went Abroad,
Unless To Return The Visits Of A Few Plain Neighbours, And Twice
A-Year Afforded Herself, In Company With Her Husband, The
Diversion Of A Play, Where She Never Sat In A Higher Place Than
The Pit.
To This Silly Woman Did This Silly Fellow Introduce The Great
Wild, Informing Her At The Same Time Of Their School Acquaintance
And The Many Obligations He Had Received From Him. This Simple
Woman No Sooner Heard Her Husband Had Been Obliged To Her Guest
Than Her Eyes Sparkled On Him With A Benevolance Which Is An
Emanation From The Heart, And Of Which Great And Noble Minds,
Whose Hearts Never Dwell But With An Injury, Can Have No Very
Adequate Idea; It Is Therefore No Wonder That Our Hero Should
Misconstrue, As He Did, The Poor, Innocent, And Ample Affection Of
Mrs. Heartfree Towards Her Husband's Friend, For That Great And
Generous Passion, Which Fires The Eyes Of A Modern Heroine, When
The Colonel Is So Kind As To Indulge His City Creditor With
Partaking Of His Table To-Day, And Of His Bed Tomorrow. Wild,
Therefore, Instantly Returned The Compliment As He Understood It,
With His Eyes, And Presently After Bestowed Many Encomiums On Her
Beauty, With Which, Perhaps, She, Who Was A Woman, Though A Good
One, And Misapprehended The Design, Was Not Displeased Any More
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