A Farewel to the Reader
- Well, we've reached the last book of Tom Jones.
- The narrator compares the time we've spent reading this novel to the experience of a bunch of strangers traveling together in a long-distance coach.
- During these long-distance rides, strangers will joke or even argue with each other.
- But by the end of the ride, everyone becomes aware that they may never see their travel companions again.
- So they get really sentimental and start to talk about serious things.
- Similarly, we're going to get down to business in this last book.
- It's going to be all plot all the time—no more musings about the nature of Literature or Mankind.
- The narrator wishes us well. It's been fun!
- He hopes that we have enjoyed the novel.
- It may be that some of the material in this book has offended us.
- But he doesn't mean any harm.
- Other authors have accused him of being excessively rough and rude in his writing.
- This is ridiculous: it's Fielding who has been subjected to rudeness by these critics of his work.
- His main comfort is that he believes his work will outlive not only Fielding himself (which is definitely true), but also the weak writing of his contemporaries (more debatable).