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The Vicar of Wakefield.
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about town that live by it in opulence. All honest jogg trotmen, who go on smoothly and dully, and write history and politics, and are praised; and who, had they been bred coblers, would all their lives have only mended shoes, but never made them.

"Finding that there was no great degree of gentility affixed to the character of an usher, I resolved to accept his proposal; and having the highest respect for litera­ture, I hailed the antiqua mater of Grub-street with reverence. I thought it my glory to pursue a track which Dry­den and Otway trod before me. In fact, I considered the goddess of this region as the parent of excellence; and how­ever an intercourse with the world might give us good sense, the poverty she grant­ed was the nurse of genius! Big with these reflections, I sate down, and find­ing that the best things remained to be said on the wrong side, I resolved to write"a