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Amelia
VOLUME III - BOOK IX - CHAPTER VIII
Henry Fielding
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       _ Chapter VIII - In which two strangers make their appearance.
       Booth went to the doctor's lodgings, and found him engaged with his
       country friend and his son, a young gentleman who was lately in
       orders; both whom the doctor had left, to keep his appointment with
       Amelia.
       After what we mentioned at the end of the last chapter, we need take
       little notice of the apology made by Booth, or the doctor's reception
       of it, which was in his peculiar manner. "Your wife," said he, "is a
       vain hussy to think herself worth my anger; but tell her I have the
       vanity myself to think I cannot be angry without a better cause. And
       yet tell her I intend to punish her for her levity; for, if you go
       abroad, I have determined to take her down with me into the country,
       and make her do penance there till you return."
       "Dear sir," said Booth, "I know not how to thank you if you are in
       earnest."
       "I assure you then I am in earnest," cries the doctor; "but you need
       not thank me, however, since you know not how."
       "But would not that, sir," said Booth, "be shewing a slight to the
       colonel's invitation? and you know I have so many obligations to him."
       "Don't tell me of the colonel," cries the doctor; "the church is to be
       first served. Besides, sir, I have priority of right, even to you
       yourself. You stole my little lamb from me; for I was her first love."
       "Well, sir," cries Booth, "if I should be so unhappy to leave her to
       any one, she must herself determine; and, I believe, it will not be
       difficult to guess where her choice will fall; for of all men, next to
       her husband, I believe, none can contend with Dr Harrison in her
       favour."
       "Since you say so," cries the doctor, "fetch her hither to dinner with
       us; for I am at least so good a Christian to love those that love me--
       I will shew you my daughter, my old friend, for I am really proud of
       her--and you may bring my grand-children with you if you please."
       Booth made some compliments, and then went on his errand. As soon as
       he was gone the old gentleman said to the doctor, "Pray, my good
       friend, what daughter is this of yours? I never so much as heard that
       you was married."
       "And what then," cries the doctor; "did you ever hear that a pope was
       married? and yet some of them have had sons and daughters, I believe;
       but, however, this young gentleman will absolve me without obliging me
       to penance."
       "I have not yet that power," answered the young clergyman; "for I am
       only in deacon's orders."
       "Are you not?" cries the doctor; "why then I will absolve myself. You
       are to know then, my good friend, that this young lady was the
       daughter of a neighbour of mine, who is since dead, and whose sins I
       hope are forgiven; for she had too much to answer for on her child's
       account. Her father was my intimate acquaintance and friend; a
       worthier man, indeed, I believe never lived. He died suddenly when his
       children were infants; and, perhaps, to the suddenness of his death it
       was owing that he did not recommend any care of them to me. However,
       I, in some measure, took that charge upon me; and particularly of her
       whom I call my daughter. Indeed, as she grew up she discovered so many
       good qualities that she wanted not the remembrance of her father's
       merit to recommend her. I do her no more than justice when I say she
       is one of the best creatures I ever knew. She hath a sweetness of
       temper, a generosity of spirit, an openness of heart--in a word, she
       hath a true Christian disposition. I may call her an Israelite indeed,
       in whom there is no guile."
       "I wish you joy of your daughter," cries the old gentleman; "for to a
       man of your disposition, to find out an adequate object of your
       benevolence, is, I acknowledge, to find a treasure."
       "It is, indeed, a happiness," cries the doctor.
       "The greatest difficulty," added the gentleman, "which persons of your
       turn of mind meet with, is in finding proper objects of their
       goodness; for nothing sure can be more irksome to a generous mind,
       than to discover that it hath thrown away all its good offices on a
       soil that bears no other fruit than ingratitude."
       "I remember," cries the doctor, "Phocylides saith,
       Mn kakov ev epens opens dpelpelv ioov eot evi povtw
       [Footnote: To do a kindness to a bad man is like sowing your seed in
       the sea.]
       But he speaks more like a philosopher than a Christian. I am more
       pleased with a French writer, one of the best, indeed, that I ever
       read, who blames men for lamenting the ill return which is so often
       made to the best offices. [Footnote: D'Esprit.] A true Christian can
       never be disappointed if he doth not receive his reward in this world;
       the labourer might as well complain that he is not paid his hire in
       the middle of the day."
       "I own, indeed," said the gentleman, "if we see it in that light--"
       "And in what light should we see it?" answered the doctor. "Are we
       like Agrippa, only almost Christians? or, is Christianity a matter of
       bare theory, and not a rule for our practice?"
       "Practical, undoubtedly; undoubtedly practical," cries the gentleman.
       "Your example might indeed have convinced me long ago that we ought to
       do good to every one."
       "Pardon me, father," cries the young divine, "that is rather a
       heathenish than a Christian doctrine. Homer, I remember, introduces in
       his Iliad one Axylus, of whom he says--
       --Hidvos o'nv avopwpoloi
       pavras yap tyeeokev
       [Footnote: He was a friend to mankind, for he loved them all.]
       But Plato, who, of all the heathens, came nearest to the Christian
       philosophy, condemned this as impious doctrine; so Eustathius tells
       us, folio 474."
       "I know he doth," cries the doctor, "and so Barnes tells us, in his
       note upon the place; but if you remember the rest of the quotation as
       well as you do that from Eustathius, you might have added the
       observation which Mr. Dryden makes in favour of this passage, that he
       found not in all the Latin authors, so admirable an instance of
       extensive humanity. You might have likewise remembered the noble
       sentiment with which Mr. Barnes ends his note, the sense of which is
       taken from the fifth chapter of Matthew:--
       [Greek verse]
       "It seems, therefore, as if this character rather became a Christian
       than a heathen, for Homer could not have transcribed it from any of
       his deities. Whom is it, therefore, we imitate by such extensive
       benevolence?"
       "What a prodigious memory you have!" cries the old gentleman: "indeed,
       son, you must not contend with the doctor in these matters."
       "I shall not give my opinion hastily," cries the son. "I know, again,
       what Mr. Poole, in his annotations, says on that verse of St Matthew--
       That it is only to _heap coals of fire upon their heads_. How are
       we to understand, pray, the text immediately preceding?--_Love your
       enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you_."
       "You know, I suppose, young gentleman," said the doctor, "how these
       words are generally understood. The commentator you mention, I think,
       tells us that love is not here to be taken in the strict sense, so as
       to signify the complacency of the heart; you may hate your enemies as
       God's enemies, and seek due revenge of them for his honour; and, for
       your own sakes too, you may seek moderate satisfaction of them; but
       then you are to love them with a love consistent with these things;
       that is to say, in plainer words, you are to love them and hate them,
       and bless and curse, and do them good and mischief."
       "Excellent! admirable!" said the old gentleman; "you have a most
       inimitable turn to ridicule."
       "I do not approve ridicule," said the son, "on such subjects."
       "Nor I neither," cries the doctor; "I will give you my opinion,
       therefore, very seriously. The two verses taken together, contain a
       very positive precept, delivered in the plainest words, and yet
       illustrated by the clearest instance in the conduct of the Supreme
       Being; and lastly, the practice of this precept is most nobly enforced
       by the reward annexed--_that ye may be the children_, and so forth. No
       man who understands what it is to love, and to bless, and to do good,
       can mistake the meaning. But if they required any comment, the
       Scripture itself affords enow. _If thine enemy hunger, feed him; if he
       thirst, give him drink; not rendering evil for evil, or railing for
       railing, but contrariwise, blessing._ They do not, indeed, want the
       comments of men, who, when they cannot bend their mind to the
       obedience of Scripture, are desirous to wrest Scripture to a
       compliance with their own inclinations."
       "Most nobly and justly observed," cries the old gentleman. "Indeed, my
       good friend, you have explained the text with the utmost perspicuity."
       "But if this be the meaning," cries the son, "there must be an end of
       all law and justice, for I do not see how any man can prosecute his
       enemy in a court of justice."
       "Pardon me, sir," cries the doctor. "Indeed, as an enemy merely, and
       from a spirit of revenge, he cannot, and he ought not to prosecute
       him; but as an offender against the laws of his country he may, and it
       is his duty so to do. Is there any spirit of revenge in the
       magistrates or officers of justice when they punish criminals? Why do
       such, ordinarily I mean, concern themselves in inflicting punishments,
       but because it is their duty? and why may not a private man deliver an
       offender into the hands of justice, from the same laudable motive?
       Revenge, indeed, of all kinds is strictly prohibited; wherefore, as we
       are not to execute it with our own hands, so neither are we to make
       use of the law as the instrument of private malice, and to worry each
       other with inveteracy and rancour. And where is the great difficulty
       in obeying this wise, this generous, this noble precept? If revenge
       be, as a certain divine, not greatly to his honour, calls it, the most
       luscious morsel the devil ever dropt into the mouth of a sinner, it
       must be allowed at least to cost us often extremely dear. It is a
       dainty, if indeed it be one, which we come at with great inquietude,
       with great difficulty, and with great danger. However pleasant it may
       be to the palate while we are feeding on it, it is sure to leave a
       bitter relish behind it; and so far, indeed, it may be called a
       luscious morsel, that the most greedy appetites are soon glutted, and
       the most eager longing for it is soon turned into loathing and
       repentance. I allow there is something tempting in its outward
       appearance, but it is like the beautiful colour of some poisons, from
       which, however they may attract our eyes, a regard to our own welfare
       commands us to abstain. And this is an abstinence to which wisdom
       alone, without any Divine command, hath been often found adequate,
       with instances of which the Greek and Latin authors everywhere abound.
       May not a Christian, therefore, be well ashamed of making a stumbling-
       block of a precept, which is not only consistent with his worldly
       interest, but to which so noble an incentive is proposed?"
       The old gentleman fell into raptures at this speech, and, after making
       many compliments to the doctor upon it, he turned to his son, and told
       him he had an opportunity now of learning more in one day than he had
       learnt at the university in a twelvemonth.
       The son replied, that he allowed the doctrine to be extremely good in
       general, and that he agreed with the greater part; "but I must make a
       distinction," said he. However, he was interrupted from his
       distinction at present, for now Booth returned with Amelia and the
       children. _
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INTRODUCTION
Volume 1 - Book 1 - Chapter 1
Volume 1 - Book 1 - Chapter 2
Volume 1 - Book 1 - Chapter 3
Volume 1 - Book 1 - Chapter 4
Volume 1 - Book 1 - Chapter 5
Volume 1 - Book 1 - Chapter 6
Volume 1 - Book 1 - Chapter 7
Volume 1 - Book 1 - Chapter 8
Volume 1 - Book 1 - Chapter 9
Volume 1 - Book 1 - Chapter 10
VOLUME I - BOOK II - CHAPTER I
VOLUME I - BOOK II - CHAPTER II
VOLUME I - BOOK II - CHAPTER III
VOLUME I - BOOK II - CHAPTER IV
VOLUME I - BOOK II - CHAPTER V
VOLUME I - BOOK II - CHAPTER VI
VOLUME I - BOOK II - CHAPTER VII
VOLUME I - BOOK II - CHAPTER VIII
VOLUME I - BOOK II - CHAPTER IX
VOLUME I - BOOK III - CHAPTER I
VOLUME I - BOOK III - CHAPTER II
VOLUME I - BOOK III - CHAPTER III
VOLUME I - BOOK III - CHAPTER IV
VOLUME I - BOOK III - CHAPTER V
VOLUME I - BOOK III - CHAPTER VI
VOLUME I - BOOK III - CHAPTER VII
VOLUME I - BOOK III - CHAPTER VIII
VOLUME I - BOOK III - CHAPTER IX
VOLUME I - BOOK III - CHAPTER X
VOLUME I - BOOK III - CHAPTER XI
VOLUME I - BOOK III - CHAPTER XII
VOLUME I - BOOK IV - CHAPTER I
VOLUME I - BOOK IV - CHAPTER II
VOLUME I - BOOK IV - CHAPTER III
VOLUME I - BOOK IV - CHAPTER IV
VOLUME I - BOOK IV - CHAPTER V
VOLUME I - BOOK IV - CHAPTER VI
VOLUME I - BOOK IV - CHAPTER VII
VOLUME I - BOOK IV - CHAPTER VIII
VOLUME I - BOOK IV - CHAPTER IX
VOLUME II - BOOK V - CHAPTER I (a)
VOLUME II - BOOK V - CHAPTER I (b)
VOLUME II - BOOK V - CHAPTER II
VOLUME II - BOOK V - CHAPTER III
VOLUME II - BOOK V - CHAPTER IV
VOLUME II - BOOK V - CHAPTER V
VOLUME II - BOOK V - CHAPTER VI
VOLUME II - BOOK V - CHAPTER VII
VOLUME II - BOOK V - CHAPTER VIII
VOLUME II - BOOK V - CHAPTER IX
VOLUME II - BOOK VI - CHAPTER I
VOLUME II - BOOK VI - CHAPTER II
VOLUME II - BOOK VI - CHAPTER III
VOLUME II - BOOK VI - CHAPTER IV
VOLUME II - BOOK VI - CHAPTER V
VOLUME II - BOOK VI - CHAPTER VI
VOLUME II - BOOK VI - CHAPTER VII
VOLUME II - BOOK VI - CHAPTER VIII
VOLUME II - BOOK VI - CHAPTER IX
VOLUME II - BOOK VII - CHAPTER I
VOLUME II - BOOK VII - CHAPTER II
VOLUME II - BOOK VII - CHAPTER III
VOLUME II - BOOK VII - CHAPTER IV
VOLUME II - BOOK VII - CHAPTER V
VOLUME II - BOOK VII - CHAPTER VI
VOLUME II - BOOK VII - CHAPTER VII
VOLUME II - BOOK VII - CHAPTER VIII
VOLUME II - BOOK VII - CHAPTER IX
VOLUME II - BOOK VII - CHAPTER X
VOLUME II - BOOK VIII - CHAPTER I
VOLUME II - BOOK VIII - CHAPTER II
VOLUME II - BOOK VIII - CHAPTER III
VOLUME II - BOOK VIII - CHAPTER IV
VOLUME II - BOOK VIII - CHAPTER V
VOLUME II - BOOK VIII - CHAPTER VI
VOLUME II - BOOK VIII - CHAPTER VII
VOLUME II - BOOK VIII - CHAPTER VIII
VOLUME II - BOOK VIII - CHAPTER IX
VOLUME II - BOOK VIII - CHAPTER X
VOLUME III - BOOK IX - CHAPTER I
VOLUME III - BOOK IX - CHAPTER II
VOLUME III - BOOK IX - CHAPTER III
VOLUME III - BOOK IX - CHAPTER IV
VOLUME III - BOOK IX - CHAPTER V
VOLUME III - BOOK IX - CHAPTER VI
VOLUME III - BOOK IX - CHAPTER VII
VOLUME III - BOOK IX - CHAPTER VIII
VOLUME III - BOOK IX - CHAPTER IX
VOLUME III - BOOK IX - CHAPTER X
VOLUME III - BOOK X - CHAPTER I
VOLUME III - BOOK X - CHAPTER II
VOLUME III - BOOK X - CHAPTER III
VOLUME III - BOOK X - CHAPTER IV
VOLUME III - BOOK X - CHAPTER V
VOLUME III - BOOK X - CHAPTER VI
VOLUME III - BOOK X - CHAPTER VII
VOLUME III - BOOK X - CHAPTER VIII
VOLUME III - BOOK X - CHAPTER IX
VOLUME III - BOOK XI - CHAPTER I
VOLUME III - BOOK XI - CHAPTER II
VOLUME III - BOOK XI - CHAPTER III
VOLUME III - BOOK XI - CHAPTER IV
VOLUME III - BOOK XI - CHAPTER V
VOLUME III - BOOK XI - CHAPTER VI
VOLUME III - BOOK XI - CHAPTER VII
VOLUME III - BOOK XI - CHAPTER VIII
VOLUME III - BOOK XI - CHAPTER IX
VOLUME III - BOOK XII - CHAPTER I
VOLUME III - BOOK XII - CHAPTER II
VOLUME III - BOOK XII - CHAPTER III
VOLUME III - BOOK XII - CHAPTER IV
VOLUME III - BOOK XII - CHAPTER V
VOLUME III - BOOK XII - CHAPTER VI
VOLUME III - BOOK XII - CHAPTER VII
VOLUME III - BOOK XII - CHAPTER VIII
VOLUME III - BOOK XII - CHAPTER IX