all,
for an asthma I got in scating against the wind in Flanders;--I have been the continual
sport of what the world calls Fortune; and though I will not wrong her by saying, She has
ever made me feel the weight of any great or signal evil;--yet with all the good temper in
the world I affirm it of her, that in every stage of my life, and at every turn and corner
where she could get fairly at me, the ungracious duchess has pelted me with a set of as
pitiful misadventures and cross accidents as ever small Hero sustained.
Chapter 1.
VI.
In the beginning of the last chapter, I informed you exactly when I was born; but I did not
inform you how. No, that particular was reserved entirely for a chapter by itself;--besides,
Sir, as you and I are in a manner perfect strangers to each other, it would not have been
proper to have let you into too many circumstances relating to myself all at once.
--You must have a little patience. I have undertaken, you see, to write not only my life,
but my opinions also; hoping and expecting that your knowledge of my character, and of
what kind of a mortal I am, by the one, would give you a better relish for the other: As
you proceed farther with me, the slight acquaintance, which is now beginning betwixt us,
will grow into familiarity; and that unless one of us is in fault, will terminate in
friendship.--O diem praeclarum!--then nothing which has touched me will be thought
trifling in its nature, or tedious in its telling. Therefore, my dear friend and companion, if
you should think me somewhat sparing of my narrative on my first setting out--bear with
me,--and let me go on, and tell my story my own way:--Or, if I should seem now and
then to trifle upon the road,--or should sometimes put on a fool's cap with a bell to it, for
a moment or two as we pass along,--don't fly off,--but rather courteously give me credit
for a little more wisdom than appears upon my outside;--and as we jog on, either laugh
with me, or at me, or in short do any thing,-- only keep your temper.
Chapter 1.
VII.
In the same village where my father and my mother dwelt, dwelt also a thin, upright,
motherly, notable, good old body of a midwife, who with the help of a little plain good
sense, and some years full employment in her business, in which she had all along trusted
little to her own efforts, and a great deal to those of dame Nature,--had acquired, in her
way, no small degree of reputation in the world:--by which word world, need I in this
place inform your worship, that I would be understood to mean no more of it, than a
small circle described upon the circle of the great world, of four English miles diameter,
or thereabouts, of which the cottage where the good old woman lived is supposed to be
the centre?--She had been left it seems a widow in great distress, with three or four small
children, in her forty-seventh year; and as she was at that time a person of decent
carriage,--grave deportment,--a woman moreover of few words and withal an object of
compassion, whose distress, and silence under it, called out the louder for a friendly lift:
the wife of the parson of the parish was touched with pity; and having often lamented an
inconvenience to which her husband's flock had for many years been exposed, inasmuch
as there was no such thing as a midwife, of any kind or degree, to be got at, let the case
have been never so urgent, within less than six or seven long miles riding; which said
seven long miles in dark nights and dismal roads, the country thereabouts being nothing
but a deep clay, was almost equal to fourteen; and that in effect was sometimes next to
having no midwife at all; it came into her head, that it would be doing as seasonable a
kindness to the whole parish, as to the poor creature herself, to get her a little instructed
in some of the plain principles of the business, in order to set her up in it. As no woman
thereabouts was better qualified to execute the plan she had formed than herself, the
gentlewoman very charitably undertook it; and having great influence over the female
part of the parish, she found no difficulty in effecting it to the utmost of her wishes. In
truth, the parson join'd his interest with his wife's in the whole affair, and in order to do
things as they should be, and give the poor soul as good a title by
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