From Defoe's Roxana or the Fortunate Mistress—first read in 1983, I'm rereading it these days:
But to look back to
the particular Observation I was making, which, I hope may be of Use to
those who read my Story; I say, it was something wonderful to me, to
see this Person so exceedingly delighted at the Birth of this Child,
and so pleas'd with it; for he would sit and look at it, and with an
Air of Seriousness sometimes, a great while together; and particularly,
I observ'd, he lov'd to look at it when it was asleep.
It was,
indeed, a lovely, charming Child, and had a certain Vivacity in its
Countenance, that is, far from being common to all Children so young;
and he would often say to me, that he believ'd there was something
extraordinary in the Child, and he did not doubt but he would come to
be a Great Man.
I could
never hear him so, but tho' secretly it pleas'd me, yet it so closely
touch'd me another Way, that I could not refrain Sighing, and sometimes
Tears; and one time, in particular, it so affected me, that I could not
conceal it from him; but when he saw Tears run down my Face, there was
no importunate to be deny'd, in a thing of that Moment; so I frankly
answer'd, It sensibly affects, me, MY LORD, said I,
that whatever the merit of this little Creature may be, he must always
have a Bend on his Arms; the Disaster of his Birth will be always, not
a Blot only to his Honour, but a Bar to his Fortunes in the World; our
Affection will ever be his Affliction, and his Mother's Crime be the
Son's Reproach; the Blot can never be wip'd out by the most glorious
Actions; nay, if it lives to raise a Family, said I, the Infamy must
descend even to its innocent posterity.
He took
the Thought, and sometimes told me afterwards, that it made a deeper
Impression on him, than he discover'd to me at that time; but for the
present, he put it off, with telling me, these things cou'd not be
help'd; that they serv'd for a Spur to the Spirits of brave Men;
inspir'd them with the principles of Gallantry, and prompted them to
brave Actions; that tho' it might be true, that the mention of
Illegitimacy might attend the Name, yet that Personal Virtue plac'd a
Man of Honour above the Reproach of his Birth; that as he had no Share
in the Offence, he would have no Concern at the Blot; when having by
his own Merit plac'd himself out of the reach of Scandal, his Fame
shou'd drown the Memory of his Beginning.
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