A Political Romance

Laurence Sterne
A Political Romance, by
Laurence Sterne

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Title: A Political Romance
Author: Laurence Sterne
Release Date: January 2, 2007 [EBook #20257]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A
POLITICAL ROMANCE ***

Produced by Jerry Kuntz

A Political Romance, Addressed To ____ _______, Esq; of York. To
which is subjoined a KEY.
Ridiculum acri Fortius et melius magnas plerumque secat Res

YORK: Printed in the Year MDCCLIX. [Price ONE SHILLING.]
A POLITICAL ROMANCE, ETC.
SIR,
In my last, for want of something better to write about, I told you what
a World of Fending and Proving we have had of late, in this little
Village of ours, about an old-cast-Pair-of-black-Plush-Breeches, which
John, our Parish-Clerk, about ten Years ago, it seems, had made a
Promise of to one Trim, who is our Sexton and Dog-Whipper.--To this
you write me Word, that you have had more than either one or two
Occasions to know a good deal of the shifty Behaviour of this said
Master Trim,-- and that you are astonished, nor can you for your Soul
conceive, how so worthless a Fellow, and so worthless a Thing into the
Bargain, could become the Occasion of such a Racket as I have
represented.
Now, though you do not say expressly, you could wish to hear any
more about it, yet I see plain enough that I have raised your Curiosity;
and therefore, from the same Motive, that I slightly mentioned it at all
in my last Letter, I will, in this, give you a full and very circumstantial
Account of the whole Affair.
But, before I begin, I must first set you right in one very material Point,
in which I have misled you, as to the true Cause of all this Uproar
amongst us;--which does not take its Rise, as I then told you, from the
Affair of the Breeches;--but, on the contrary, the whole Affair of the
Breeches has taken its Rise from it:--To understand which, you must
know, that the first Beginning of the Squabble was not between John
the Parish-Clerk and Trim the Sexton, but betwixt the Parson of the
Parish and the said Master Trim, about an old Watch-Coat, which had
many Years hung up in the Church, which Trim had set his Heart upon;
and nothing would serve Trim but he must take it home, in order to
have it converted into a warm Under-Petticoat for his Wife, and a
Jerkin for himself, against Winter; which, in a plaintive Tone, he most
humbly begg'd his Reverence would consent to.

I need not tell you, Sir, who have so often felt it, that a Principle of
strong Compassion transports a generous Mind sometimes beyond what
is strictly right,--the Parson was within an Ace of being an honourable
Example of this very Crime;--for no sooner did the distinct Words--
Petticoat--poor Wife--warm--Winter strike upon his Ear, but his Heart
warmed,--and, before Trim had well got to the End of his Petition,
(being a Gentleman of a frank and open Temper) he told him he was
welcome to it, with all his Heart and Soul. But, Trim, says he, as you
see I am but just got down to my Living, and am an utter Stranger to all
Parish-Matters, know nothing about this old Watch-Coat you beg of me,
having never seen it in my Life, and therefore cannot be a Judge
whether 'tis fit for such a Purpose; or, if it is, in Truth, know not
whether 'tis mine to bestow upon you or not;--you must have a Week or
ten Days Patience, till I can make some Inquiries about it;--and, if I
find it is in my Power, I tell you again, Man, your Wife is heartily
welcome to an Under-Petticoat out of it, and you to a Jerkin, was the
Thing as good again as you represent it.
It is necessary to inform you, Sir, in this Place, That the Parson was
earnestly bent to serve Trim in this Affair, not only from the Motive of
Generality, which I have justly ascribed to him, but likewise from
another Motive; and that was by way of making some Sort of
Recompence for a Multitude of small Services which Trim had
occasionally done, and indeed was continually doing, (as he was much
about the House) when his own Man was out of the Way. For all these
Reasons together, I say, the Parson of the Parish intended to
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