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THE

WORKS

OF

LAURENCE STERNE,

IN FIVE VOLUMES:

WITH

A LIFE OF THE AUTHOR,

WRITTEN BY HIMSELF.

VOL. III.

LONDON:

SAMUEL RICHARDS AND CO. GROCERS' HALL COURT,

POULTRY.

1823.

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THE

LIFE AND OPINIONS

OF

TRISTRAM SHANDY,

GENTLEMAN.

CHAP. I.

WE'LL not stop two moments, my dear Sir,only as we have got thro' these five volumes,* (do, Sir sit down upon a seat-they are better than nothing) let us just look back upon the country we have passed through.—

What a wilderness has it been! and what a mercy that we have not both of us been lost, or devoured by wild beasts in it!

Did you think the world itself, Sir, had contained such a number of Jack Asses?-How they view'd and review'd us as we passed over the rivu let at the bottom of that little valley!--and when we climbed over that hill, and were just getting out of sight,-good God! what a braying did they all set up together!

-Prithee, Shepherd, who keeps all these Jack Asses? ***

VOL. III.

Seven, according to the original edition.
B

-Heaven be their comforter-What! are they never curried?-Are they never taken in in winter?-Bray,-bray,-bray, Bray on,-the world is deeply your debtor;-louder still-that's nothing; -in good sooth, you are ill used.-Was I a Jack Ass, I solemnly declare, I would bray in G-sol-re-ut from morning, even unto night.

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WHEN my father had danced his white bear backwards and forwards through half a dozen pages, he closed the book for good and all,—and, in kind of triumph re-delivered it into Trim's hand, with a nod to lay it upon the scrutoire where he found it.

Tristram, said he, shall be made to conjugate every word in the dictionary backwards and forwards the same way:-every word, Yorick, by this means, you see, is converted into a thesis or an hypothesis;-every thesis and hypothesis have an offspring of propositions;-and each proposition has its own consequences and conclusions;-every one of which leads the mind on again, into fresh tracks of enquiries and doubtings.-The force of this engine, added my father, is incredible, in opening a child's head.-"Tis enough, brother Shandy, cried my uncle Toby, to burst it into a thousand splinters.

I presume, said Yorick, smiling,-it must be owing to this,-(for, let logicians say what they will. it is not to be accounted for sufficiently from the bare use of the ten predicaments),-that the famous Vincert Quirino, amongst the many othe

astonishing feats of his childhood, of which the Cardinal Bembo has given the world so exact a story-should be able to paste up in the public schools at Rome, so early as in the eighth year of his age, no less than four thousand five hundred and sixty different theses, upon the most abstruse points of the most abstruse theology;—and to defend and maintain them in such sort, as to cramp and dumbfound his opponents.-What is that, cried my father, to what is told us of Alphonsus Tostatus, who, almost in his nurse's arms, learned all the sciences and liberal arts, without being taught any one of them?-What shall we say of the great Peireskius ?—That's the very man, cried my uncle Toby, I once told you of, brother Shandy, who walked a matter of five hundred miles, reckoning from Paris to Scheveling, and from Scheveling back again, merely to see Stevinus's flying cha riot. He was a very great man! added my uncle Toby, (meaning Stevinus).-He was so, brother Toby, said my father, (meaning Peireskius)—and had multiplied his ideas so fast, and increased his knowledge to such a prodigious stock, that, if we may give credit to an anecdote concerning him, which we cannot withhold here, without shaking the authority of all anecdotes whatever, at seven years of age, his father committed entirely to his care the education of his younger brother, a boy of five years old,—with the sole management of all his concerns.-Was the father as wise as the son? quoth my uncle Toby.-I should think not, said Yorick. -But what are these, continued my father(breaking out in a kind of enthusiasm)—what are these to those prodigies of childhood in Grotiu3, Scioppius, Heinsius, Politian, Pascal, Joseph

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