leetle more perhaps, and very wicked years some of them had been. His adventures, his sellings and
his returning, his lettings and his unlettings, his bumpings and spillings, his smashings and crashings,
on the road, in the field, in single and in double harness, would furnish a volume of themselves; and
in default of a more able historian, we purpose blending his future fortune with that of Ercles, in the
service of our hero Mr Sponge, and his accomplished groom, and undertaking the important narration
of them ourselves.