[The English Novel by George Saintsbury]@TWC D-Link bookThe English Novel CHAPTER III 55/84
But, at least with pupils and followers of any wits, there was not even any need of such breaking away from himself, though no doubt there are in existence many dull and slavish attempts to follow his work, especially _Tom Jones_.
"Find it out for yourself"-- the great English motto which in the day of England's glory was the motto of her men of learning as well as of her men of business, of her artists as well as of her craftsmen--might have been Fielding's: but he supplemented it with infinite finger-pointings towards the various things that might be found out.
Almost every kind of novel exists--potentially--in his Four (the custom of leaving out _Jonathan Wild_ should be wholly abrogated), though of course they do not themselves illustrate or carry out at length many of the kinds that they thus suggest. And in fact it could not be otherwise: because, as has been pointed out, while Fielding had no inconsiderable command of the Book of Literature, he turned over by day and night the larger, the more difficult, but still the greater Book of Life.
Not merely _quicquid agunt homines_, but _quicquid sentiunt, quicquid cogitant_, whatever they love and hate, whatever they desire or decline--all these things are the subjects of his own books: and the range of subject which they suggest to others is thus of necessity inexhaustible. If there have been some who denied or failed to recognise his greatness, it must be because he has played on these unwary ones the same trick that Garrick, in an immortal scene, played on his own Partridge.
There is so little parade about Fielding (for even the opening addresses are not parade to these good people: they may disconcert or even disgust, but they do not dazzle them), that his characters and his scenes look commonplace.
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