III.
1751-1752.
[Lodging
at
Wapping
with
a
Swede
-
Penny
dinners
Stephanos
-
An
academy
Twopence
halfpenny
a
day
-
Stephanos
turns
Roman
Catholic
-
Emin
in
great
distress
and
homeless
-
A
soldiers
sympathy
-
Discomforts
of
beer-drinking
to
gain
respect
of
common
people
-
A
master
bricklayer
-
Emin
called
a
German
because
indefatigable
-
Three
halfpence
a
day
-
Escapes
kidnapping
-
Sir
John
Evelyns
grandsons
-
Emin
adrift
again
-
A
porter
on
։8
a
year.
]
On
Monday
morning,
a
Swede,
who
was
married
to
an
English
woman,
came
with
a
boat,
and
took
them
both
to
his
house
in
Wapping
(at
the
sign
of
Wapping
Old
Stairs):
he
was
a
very
honest
man,
his
wife
a
very
good
sort
of
a
woman.
Emin,
with
Masseh,
his
countryman,
lived
there
upon
bread
and
cheese
about
a
week,
and
paid
a
shilling
a
week
for
sleeping.
The
landlord
took
them
to
the
India
House,
to
receive
six
months
pay,
at
9s.
per
month,
which
made
3
l.
14s.
In
their
way
back,
they
met
with
the
Swedish
master
of
the
house,
who
said
to
them,
"My
lads,
this
small
sum
is
hardly
enough
to
buy
you
a
second-hand
suit
of
old
clothes
in
Ragfair;
what
then
will
you
do
to
live,
as
you
are
to
stay
in
this
country,
to
be
educated
and
brought
up
genteelly?
Your
best
way
I
think
will
be,
not
to
lose
the
opportunity
of
returning
to
Bengal
with
the
rest
of
the
lascars.
A
regulation
is
made
by
the
Honourable
Company,
to
work
the
ship
in
day-time
only,
and
not
to
keep
watch
in
the
night,
for
a
free
passage
without
pay;
otherwise
you
must
do
one
of
two
things,
either
beg
or
starve.
If
you
enter
as
a
common
servant
or
footman
into
gentlemens
houses,
in
the
first
place,
nobody
knows
you
to
give
you
a
character.
Supposing
that
there
were,
what
would
you
do
for
want
of
the
language,
for
you
are
hardly
understood.
I
find
it
was
a
wild
notion
which
some
wicked
man
contrived
to
put
into
your
head,
to
leave
behind
you
a
country
equal
to
paradise,
and
to
come
into
this
confounded
could
region,
where
one
is
obliged
to
work
like
a
horse,
to
break
his
heart
for
a
livelihood
only.
I
myself,
for
fifteen
years,
have
worked
hard
and
with
great
difficulty
made
a
little
money,
and
married
that
good
English
widow.
I
became
an
able
housekeeper
at
last,
and
it
is
through
her
prudence
and
good
economy,
that
we
live
somehow
happily,
so
as
to
bring
both
ends
to
meet;
for
even
a
man
of
great
fortune,
if
he
is
not
careful
enough
in
the
management
of
it,
will
soon
become
a
bankrupt,
and
be
sent
to
gaol
to
be
pickled.
"
The
author
heard
all
this
with
indifference,
till
they
reached
the
house
in
Wapping.
The
two
moneyless
Armenians
walked
up
to
their
rooms,
consulting
what
to
do;
immediately
after,
the
maid-servant
of
the
house,
the
beautiful
Sally,
lately
married
to
a
sailor
who
was
gone
to
sea,
came
and
stood
before
them,
saying
in
a
pathetic,
good-natured
manner
like
to
an
angel,
"Good
young
men,
my
master
and
mistress,
particularly
myself,
observing
this
week,
that
each
of
you
have
eaten
but
a
pennyworth
of
bread
and
cheese,
my
poor
heart
burns
for
you.
I
have
heard
my
good
master
and
mistress
telling
your
deplorable
situation
of
life;
which
puts
me
in
mind
of
the
distress
of
my
sweetheart,
the
dear
sailor,
"
(meaning
her
husband,
)
and
then
the
tears
trickled
down
like
pearls
from
her
lovely
eyes
over
her
delicate
cheeks,
and
deeply
affected
the
spectators,
who
sympathized
with
her,
admiring
her
unaffected
fidelity
to
her
lawful
love.
"What
will
you
please
to
have?
(said
she).
Give
me
some
money,
I
will
go
to
market,
buy
you
some
meat,
and
dress
it
myself
for
you,
to
save
you
from
killing
yourselves;
dont
be
uneasy
at
having
but
little;
God
will
provide
for
you,
and
take
care
of
my
dear
sailor
too
-
bless
him!"
fetching
a
very
deep
sigh.
Emin
begged
of
her
to
go
downstairs,
stay
half
an
hour,
and
then
come
up
again.
After
she
was
gone,
he
dived
into
his
mind
with
deep
reflection;
surprized
to
find
in
a
weeks
time
so
much
goodness,
and
truth
of
love,
in
the
females
of
that
blessed
Island,
who
labour
as
hard
as
any
to
preserve
the
sacred
tie
of
matrimony
with
faithfulness;
and
consequently
formed
an
honourable
idea
in
his
mind,
which
he,
in
the
space
of
several
years,
happily
found
realized
by
many,
both
high
and
low.
After
his
contemplation
on
the
subject,
he
called
the
lovely
Sally,
with
as
much
affection
as
a
brother
to
a
sister.
"Well,
my
dear,
(said
he,
)
take
this
money,
"
which
was
exactly
three-pence;
"please
to
buy
a
pennyworth
of
beef
stakes,
a
pennyworth
of
potatoes,
and
with
the
third
penny,
two
halfpenny
rolls;
dress
the
meat
well,
and
let
us
have
it
as
soon
as
possible;
for,
as
you
observe,
we
are
really
very
hungry.
"
Sally,
hearing
the
writers
stately
orders,
ran
down
like
lightning,
and
told
her
mistress
of
the
unaccountable
extravagances
of
Emin
and
his
countryman.
The
landlady
could
not
help
laughing;
but
good
Sally,
still
in
great
concern,
came
up
again,
and
conducted
them
to
about
fifteen
doors
higher,
to
a
very
neat
Dutch
woman
who
kept
a
cooks
shop,
chiefly
selling
broth,
a
large
bason
for
a
halfpenny;
so,
with
a
halfpennyworth
more
of
bread,
broke
and
put
into
it,
they
made
a
tolerable
dinner.
In
this
manner
they
passed
another
week;
during
that
time,
Sally
took
great
pains,
and
when
she
had
an
opportunity
to
come
and
stand
by,
she
comforted
them
with
as
much
sincerity
as
if
they
had
been
her
dear
brothers.
She
was
endowed
with
a
talent,
which
he
thinks
it
would
be
ungenerous
if
he
should
omit
mentioning:
-
As
she
was
obliged
to
rise
early
in
the
morning
to
work,
she
always,
in
her
choice
of
songs,
warbled
the
song,
"All
in
the
Downs
the
fleet
was
moored,
"
etc.,
with
so
fine
a
voice,
and
so
pathetic
manner
without
any
affectation,
that
the
hearer
of
it
might
have
snapped
his
fingers
at
the
most
admired
Italian
singing
girl.
The
reader
may
very
well
suppose
that
the
author
was
in
love;
and
he
owns
it;
and
so
would
any
one
else
of
a
well-meaning
heart
have
been,
to
find
so
great
fortitude
and
virtue
in
a
poor
innocent
servant
-
the
genuine
produce
of
a
famous
country
he
is
really
in
love
with;
which,
true
enough,
is
torment
and
plague
to
those
who
are
ungratefully
wicked
in
their
erroneous
way
of
judging.
It
is
true,
the
English
nation,
by
their
extensive
learning,
are
sensible
of
the
difference
between
the
goodness
of
the
admirable
laws
of
their
own
mother
country,
and
the
miseries
of
others:
yet
it
is
impossible
to
judge
perfectly
by
theory,
unless
(which
God
avert)
they
had
proved
it
by
experience.
At
the
end
of
a
fortnight,
they
met
an
Armenian
at
the
Royal
Exchange,
named
Stephenus,
who
shipped
off
Masseh
to
Amsterdam,
and
took
Emin
to
his
lodging,
at
one
Mr.
Newmans
on
Dowgate
Hill,
facing
Skinners
Hall.
The
author
had
about
fifty-two
rupees,
besides
a
few
shillings,
the
remainder
of
his
pay;
he
gave
them
all
to
Stephenus,
out
of
which
he
paid
three
guineas
to
Mr.
Middleton,
master
of
an
academy
in
Bishopsgate-street,
beforehand,
agreeably
to
the
rule
established;
and
afterwards
three
more,
when
he
had
finished
some
learning,
and
agreed
to
pay
a
shilling
a-day
to
Mrs.
Newman
for
lodging,
washing
and
boarding.
He
lived
in
that
house
exactly
fifty
days
when
the
Armenian
began
to
change
his
mind.
Mrs.
Newman
found
fault
with
his
eating,
which
she
thought
was
more
than
a
shillings
worth.
Stephenus
said,
"I
will
give
you
a
guinea
a-month,
but
cannot
afford
more:
manage
as
well
as
you
can.
"
He
contented
himself
even
with
that,
better
than
with
nothing,
lodging
in
the
same
house,
and
paying
a
shilling
a-week
to
sleep
in
the
garret,
two
shillings
and
six-pence
for
washing
and
mending,
and
a
shilling
for
shaving
twice
a-week,
making
in
all
fifteen
shillings;
there
remained
six
shillings
to
live
on,
little
more
than
two-pence
halfpenny
a-day.
Almost
for
seven
months
he
made
a
shift,
in
that
miserable
starving
condition,
and
diligently
attended
the
academy;
when,
to
his
sorrow,
Mrs.
Newman,
his
landlady,
gave
him
a
mouths
warning
to
leave
the
lodging,
and
said:
"The
Armenian
petty
merchant
will
not
stay
with
us
on
your
account:
as
he
pays
thirty
pounds
sterling
a-year
for
his
table,
should
he
leave
the
house,
it
will
go
against
the
grain
with
us.
"
Poor
Mrs.
Newman
made
many
apologies,
and
shewed
great
uneasiness
for
the
authors
distressed
situation.
This
circumstance
was
owing
to
the
unhappy
Armenians
being
turned
papist,
and
wishing
him
to
be
in
the
same
way
of
thinking;
but
could
by
no
means
prevail
on
him
to
become
a
turn-coat
like
himself.
He
remembered
the
same
ill
usage
from
some
Mahomedan
Persians,
when
he
was
persecuted
in
the
city
of
Cashan;
but,
trusting
in
God,
he
did
not
despair.
He
was
obliged
to
absent
himself
from
the
academy,
and
try
if
he
could
get
any
employ.
Mr.
Newman
and
his
good
wife
advised
him
to
go
to
the
register-office,
a
little
mean
room
behind
the
Royal
Exchange,
and
promised
to
give
him
a
good
character.
Miss
Newman,
their
daughter,
was
sent
by
them
with
Emin
to
have
his
name
registered
in
a
book,
where
several
gentlemen
who
wanted
servants
had
set
their
names
and
directions.
According
to
the
custom,
he
paid
a
shilling,
which
he
had
found
in
one
of
the
winter
nights,
about
nine
oclock,
walking
in
the
Exchange
in
order
to
keep
himself
warm,
as
he
was
not
permitted,
by
the
severe
order
of
the
Armenian,
to
enter
the
room,
or
go
near
the
kitchen
fire;
a
barbarity
neither
a
Turk
nor
a
Jew
would
leave
been
guilty
of.
The
register
master,
laughing
and
making
a
jest
of
him
all
the
time,
directed
him
every
day,
in
the
morning,
for
a
week,
to
different
gentlemen;
when
he,
with
great
difficulty,
for
want
of
proper
food
to
keep
him
in
strength,
found
the
house
being
chiefly
at
a
great
distance,
almost
at
the
other
end
of
the
town,
the
gentlemen
said,
you
are
made
a
fool
by
the
register,
we
are
provided
with
servants.
Some
of
them
said,
he
looked
very
ugly;
some
swore;
some
said,
he
looked
nine
ways
for
a
Sunday;
and
another
said,
"If
anybody
should
chance
to
see
your
countenance,
he
would
not
have
good
luck
for
a
fortnight
together.
"
In
this
unspeakable
condition
he
was
directed
at
last
to
go
to
Drury
Lane,
to
a
broken
house,
where
he
found
a
carpenter
working
and
a
labourer,
who
was
a
soldier.
When
they
were
acquainted
with
his
errand,
they
told
him
that
their
master
was
not
a
fine
gentleman
to
keep
a
footman,
but
a
bricklayer.
Emins
answer
to
the
honest
soldier
was,
"that
he
did
not
care
if
the
person
was
a
scavenger,
to
get
bread
by
industry
he
would
work
at
anything;
but
if
he
should
not
get
business,
he
was
resolved
rather
to
die
with
hunger,
like
a
man,
than
to
beg.
"
This
moved
the
brave
soldier
to
such
a
degree,
that
it
made
him
cry
like
a
child;
and
turning
himself
towards
the
carpenter,
"It
is
hard",
he
said,
"to
be
a
stranger;
for
I
was
in
the
same
situation
once
in
Flanders.
"
He
treated
Emin
with
a
pint
of
beer,
which
he
drank
against
his
will;
in
the
mean
time,
he
promised
to
speak
a
good
word
to
his
master.
While
he
was
comforting
Emin,
in
came
a
gentleman,
named
Mr.
Emir,
a
fresh
looking
man,
about
thirty
years
of
age.
The
honest
soldier
accosted
him,
and
began
his
mediation;
but
no
sooner
did
he
hear
the
name
of
a
foreigner,
than
he
flew
into
a
passion,
kicking
about
the
rubbish,
damning
Emin
for
a
Frenchman.
He
assured
him
of
the
contrary,
and
that
he
was
an
Armenian;
that
he
had
nothing
in
the
world
but
a
good
character.
The
gentleman
took
the
appellation
for
a
German,
and
said,
"Very
well,
I
am
very
glad
you
are
not
a
Frenchman;
step
in
the
next
door.
"
He
then
called
for
a
pint
of
beer;
and
seeing
the
author
almost
wasted
away,
ordered
some
bread
and
cheese;
and
stood
by
the
bar.
While
Emin
was
eating,
and
again
drinking
up
strong
beer,
to
have
his
good
opinion,
(since
the
common
people
in
London
have
the
conceit,
that
if
any
labouring
man
does
not
drink
strong
beer,
he
will
not
be
able
to
work,
)
Mr.
Emir,
the
master
bricklayer,
was
standing
by
looking
at
him,
and
pitying
him
with
as
much
concern
as
if
had
been
his
brother.
Emin
could
not
be
persuaded
that
he
should
pay
all;
he
paid
for
the
bread,
and
the
master
for
the
beer.
This
happened
in
the
month
of
May,
when
he
was
twenty-six
years
of
age;
the
days
being
long,
the
carpenter
and
soldier
left
off
work
and
went
away
at
the
settled
hour.
Master
Emir
ordered
Emin
to
sit
on
the
rubbishing
ground
to
work,
and
gave
him
a
pickax
to
make
holes
at
the
narrow
ends
of
slates
to
fasten
pegs
into
them,
which
serve
to
fix
them
on
the
tops
of
houses.
The
author
sat
himself
down
contentedly
to
work;
but
while
the
bricklayer
was
taken
up
with
other
things,
he
broke,
in
half
an
hours
time,
near
200
slates,
not
knowing
how
to
manage
the
tool.
When
his
master
came
back
to
look
how
he
was
going
on,
he
cried
out,
"O
Lord,
you
ruin
me;
you
have
spoiled
three
shillings
worth
of
materials!
-
come,
come,
that
is
not
your
business,
it
does
not
signify,
I
only
did
it
to
try
you;
I
can
see
that
you
are
willing
to
work;
what
you
told
me
agrees
with
your
industrious
motions,
you
appear
indefatigable;
never
mind
it,
you
will
be
able
to
live
in
our
country,
for
you
seem
to
be
a
true
German.
"
The
author
trying
to
correct
the
misunderstanding,
said,
"Sir,
I
am
not
a
German;
"
he
answered,
"Well,
well,
Germans
and
Armenians
are
all
alike,
as
long
as
you
are
not
a
Frenchman,
I
am
glad
of
it.
"
He
added,
This
is
Saturday,
to-morrow
is
Sunday,
when
all
good
Christians
must
go
to
church,
and
I
hope
you
are
one?"
"Yes,
master,
"
said
Emin.
"Then,
"
said
he,
"if
you
will
come
on
Monday
morning,
you
shall
have
half-a-crown
a-day,
like
the
rest
of
the
workmen;
"
bidding
a
good
afternoon,
which
made
him
in
some
degree
happy.
Emin
had
at
that
time
two
shillings
left
out
of
a
guinea,
the
remainder
of
last
months
allowance
by
Stephenus:
and,
when
he
went
home
and
told
his
mother-like
Mrs.
Newman
what
had
happened,
seeming
to
be
pretty
cheerful
too,
she
said,
"The
work
is
very
laborious,
and
equally
dangerous:
as
you
are
not
used
to
climb
up
high
ladders,
who
knows
but
you
may
fall
down,
and
break
your
neck
into
the
bargain.
Your
best
way
will
be
to
go
to
Blackwall
or
Deptford,
and
work
with
the
people
loading
and
unloading
ships;
and
consider
you
have
but
a
fortnight
more
to
stay
in
my
house,
for
your
Jew
countryman
every
day
threatens
to
leave
us
if
you
dont
go
away.
"
He
said
nothing,
went
up
to
his
garret,
which,
although
very
clean,
to
him
appeared
a
loathsome
dungeon,
in
which
he
hardly
enjoyed
comfort
of
bed
for
the
space
of
nine
months.
He
could
not
close
his
eyes
that
whole
night,
nor
the
next
following,
partly
through
hunger,
partly
vexation
of
mind;
but
praying
to
God,
he
bore
it
as
well
as
he
could.
Disappointing
Emir
the
bricklayer,
two
hours
before
sunrise
on
Monday
morning,
he
set
out
for
Deptford.
When
he
came
to
an
ale-house
by
the
side
of
the
Thames,
he
called
for
a
pint
of
porter
like
a
lusty
fellow,
to
appear
well
in
the
eyes
of
the
housekeeper,
sensible
that
for
two
days
before
he
had
not
digested
the
same
liquor,
so
that
he
poured
poison
upon
poison.
When
he
thought
he
could
speak
with
assurance,
he
said
to
the
woman,
"Pray,
madam,
is
there
any
vessel
here,
to
be
unloaded?"
drinking
up
the
pint,
and
calling
for
another,
to
appear
more
generous.
She
said,
"No,
Sir,
you
are
too
early,
the
Indiamen
are
not
yet
arrived;
you
have
no
occasion
to
spend
your
money
in
vain;
I
see
you
drink
against
your
will,
and
are
not
very
well.
"
He
begged
to
lay
himself
down
on
the
bench;
she
had
no
objection,
and
said
to
him,
in
a
grave
manner,
"After
you
have
rested
a
little,
step
into
the
next
long
room,
there
you
will
see
many
men
lying
and
rolling
upon
dry
hard
boards,
all
for
want
of
work.
"
A
few
minutes
after,
he
got
up
and
visited
the
mansion,
with
its
owner.
It
was
a
real
purgatory,
where,
if
he
should
escape
dying
with
hunger,
he
must
share
the
same
misery
with
them.
His
heart
was
filled
with
the
distracting
portion
of
beer,
without
a
soul,
in
a
plentiful
country,
to
be
found,
who
would
bestow
on
him
a
drop
of
the
antidote
of
hope.
He
can
hardly
recollect
how
he
reached
the
lodging
on
Dowgate
Hill,
where
he
had
just
sense
enough
to
throw
himself
down
in
the
house.
The
darling
drink
of
porters,
the
medical
barley
wine,
had
such
an
effect
on
him
and
took
away
his
strength
to
such
a
degree,
that
he
was
not
able
to
walk
upstairs,
and
lay
down
upon
the
stone
pavement
in
the
yard,
at
the
office
door.
The
kitchen
window,
on
the
first
floor,
was
over
that
place;
where
he
could
hear
the
Armenian
speaking
to
the
people,
murmuring
against
Emin,
dropping
unbecoming
expressions
enough
to
poison
the
hearer,
hallooing
loudly
to
Mrs.
Newman,
and
saying,
"What
is
become
of
your
garret-lodger?
your
honest
husband
was
foolish
enough
to
believe
him,
and
give
him
a
good
character
for
honesty;
who
knows
now
where
he
is
pleasuring?"
Mrs.
Newman
answered,
with
a
loud
voice,
"Say
what
you
will,
he
is
an
honest
young
man;
what
you
say
is
all
spite,
because
he
would
not
be
a
papist
like
you;
nor
do
I
care
a
pin
for
your
staying
or
not
in
my
house;
and
I
am
assured,
nobody
else
in
this
city
will
let
you
board
so
reasonably
as
we
do,
I
am
an
Englishwoman,
do
not
like
your
overbearing
temper;
hold
your
tongue.
"
To
this
dialogue
he
listened
five
minutes,
and
lay
down,
from
half
an
hour
after
six,
to
almost
eleven
oclock,
in
the
most
tormenting
pain.
Just
as
they
were
going
to
supper,
the
servant
maid
came
down
to
shut
the
back
door,
and
saw
him
sprawling
on
the
stones.
She
was
frightened
at
first,
but
when
she
knew
who
he
was,
she
ran
up,
screaming,
and
told
her
mistress
that
Mr.
Emin
was
dead.
This
happened
aptly
to
her
boarders
reflection,
and
her
good-will
towards
the
author;
she
immediately
ran
downstairs,
with
her
husband,
daughter,
and
servant,
who
took
him
up
in
their
arms,
carried
and
laid
him
on
his
bed;
made
him
to
take
a
glass
of
wine,
with
some
rhubarb,
and
with
a
little
care,
cured
him
of
the
disorder
and
saved
his
life.
He
reprimanded
lightly
the
old
unthinking
cruel
man,
who
meditated
another
method
of
revenging
himself
upon
Emin,
and
the
next
morning
called
him
to
his
room.
Emin
supposed
his
compassion
to
have
been
moved,
or
inclined
to
reconciliation.
But
on
the
contrary,
he
produced
an
account
of
the
expences
he
had
been
at,
and
made
the
balance
due
to
be
seventeen
pounds
sterling:
he
then
said
to
Emin,
"As
you
cannot
afford
to
pay
me
now,
it
is
necessary
to
draw
a
bond
in
form,
on
condition
to
pay
the
balance
in
six
months.
"
Well
knowing
he
could
not
pay
it
in
six
years,
(Mrs.
Newman
was
then
standing
behind
the
door,
and
heard
all
that
passed,
)
Emin
said
to
him,
"Sir,
since
you
depart
from
your
word,
as
you
have
departed
from
your
fathers
religion,
I
give
my
word,
that
I
will
pay
the
sum
when
I
am
able;
as
to
a
writing
under
my
hand,
that
is
not
to
be
expected.
"
And
added,
"That
he
was
sensible
of
his
wicked
intention,
and
that,
if
he
would
not
be
easy
with
the
answer
he
received,
he
would
give
him
a
good
thrashing,
and
expose
his
character
on
the
Royal
Exchange
among
all
the
merchants.
"
Upon
which
Stephenus
looked
as
pale
as
death,
resembling
Shylock
the
avaricious
Jew
in
the
Merchant
of
Venice.
When
he
came
out
of
the
room,
he
saw
the
landlady
standing
in
the
way;
she
stepped
in,
and
said
to
the
Armenian,
"He
served
you
right.
"
Then
she
came
out,
and
said
to
Emin,
"Well
done!
now
you
have
behaved
like
a
man
of
spirit.
"
The
author
seeing
it
was
impossible
for
him
to
get
any
sort
of
employment
in
the
light
service
of
a
gentleman,
made
it
his
business
to
go
upon
the
Royal
Exchange
every
day
except
Sundays,
his
finances
being
reduced
so
low
as
that
he
was
obliged
to
make
a
more
pinching
calculation,
and
lived
upon
three
halfpence
a-day
for
three
weeks,
in
order
to
linger
away
by
degrees
to
the
welcome
gates
of
death.
He
found
at
last,
on
the
Change,
a
sailor
in
a
blue
jacket,
belonging
to
Crisps
office,
talking
to
some
other
countrymen,
perhaps
no
less
destitute
than
himself.
Curiosity
as
well
as
necessity,
led
him
to
know
what
they
were
about.
The
man
in
the
blue
jacket
said
to
him,
"Well,
my
friend,
will
you
do
as
they
do?"
"What
is
it?"
said
Emin.
"They
have
no
friends
in
London,
like
yourself,
"
answered
he;
"and
are
desirous
to
go
to
Jamaica:
they
are
to
sign
indentures
for
so
many
years,
some
ten,
some
fifteen,
some
twenty.
After
the
time
limited
shall
be
over,
they
will
have
a
piece
of
land
given
them
for
their
service.
Though
it
is
a
little
hard
in
that
hot
country,
yet
if
they
survive,
and
behave
soberly,
they
may
make
their
fortune.
"
By
that
sort
of
dog
rhetorick
he
filled
the
authors
head
full
of
sense,
and
his
belly
full
of
victuals.
He
said
he
would
consider.
Three
days
after,
as
the
month
was
expired,
he
left
the
lodging;
for
that
day
he
made
a
shift
to
walk
in
the
Change,
saw
the
man
again,
agreed
to
go
on
board
the
next
day,
and
ashamed
to
tell
the
fellow
that
he
had
no
place
to
steep
in,
was
obliged
to
walk
in
the
streets
of
London
for
the
whole
night,
from
one
end
to
the
other,
like
a
watchman,
having
no
more
than
three
halfpence
in
his
pocket.
The
next
morning
providentially
he
met
Mr.
Middletons
son
William.
Now
he
hoped
to
live
in
England,
as
William
stopped
him,
at
the
top
of
Bishopsgate-street,
and
was
very
inquisitive
to
know
the
reason
of
his
pale
look,
and
the
cause
of
his
absence
three
weeks
from
the
academy.
At
first
he
hesitated,
but
to
no
purpose
but
when
he
told
his
case,
the
young
gentleman
cried;
forced
him
to
the
academy,
told
his
father,
and
Mrs.
Middleton
the
mother
who
pitied
him
extremely,
and
were
sorry
for
not
knowing
his
distress
before.
The
father
said
to
the
son,
"Will,
take
him
to
your
room,
let
him
have
some
victuals
first,
then
we
will
talk
the
matter
over.
"
The
wandering
writer
took
great
care
in
eating,
for
fear
of
ill
consequences.
The
young
gentleman
conducted
him
to
his
own
room,
treated
him
with
great
humanity
(being
then
hardly
twelve
years
of
age);
which
behaviour
could
not
have
been
surprising
if
he
had
been
a
full
grown
man.
He
brought
breakfast,
dinner
and
supper
with
his
own
hands
for
several
days
after.
Emin
slept
in
the
house
that
night.
The
next
morning,
Mr.
Middleton
the
father
asked
him
the
reason
of
his
falling
out
with
the
Armenian
Stephenus.
He
said,
"Sir,
I
will
not
trouble
you
with
the
story;
please
to
send
and
ask
the
people
of
the
house
of
Mr.
Newman;
they
will
tell
you
at
once.
"
Immediately
an
elderly
servant
maid
was
sent
for
that
purpose.
When
she
came
back,
she
related
all
the
circumstances,
and
Mr.
Middleton
was
made
easy
in
regard
to
his
character.
He
then
said,
"What
do
you
intend
to
do
now,
Mr.
Emin?"
He
answered,
"Sir
I
am
obliged
to
this
young
gentleman
for
his
hospitality,
which
saved
me
from
dying
in
the
street
for
want.
I
beg
it
as
a
favour
to
take
quarter
in
your
house
three
or
four
days
more,
if
it
is
not
troublesome,
and
then
I
will
go
away
about
my
business.
"
"Whither
do
you
intend
to
go,
"
said
he,
"let
me
know
it?"
Emin
then
proceeded
thus:
"The
bread
of
idleness
is
poison
to
a
man
who
would
rather
starve
than
yield
to
it.
I
have
agreed
to
sell
myself
on
the
Change
to
work
in
the
West-India
plantations
for
a
livelihood.
"
He
then
repeated
his
grateful
thanks.
Mr.
Middleton
said,
"Can
you
bring
to
me
the
person
with
whom
you
have
made
the
agreement?"
"I
dont
know,
Sir,
"
said
Emin;
"if
you
please
I
will
go
for
him.
"
He
went;
and
when
he
had
found
him
on
the
Change,
he
said
to
him,
"Come,
let
us
go
to
a
friend
of
mine
just
by,
who
is
desirous
to
know
the
nature
of
the
indenture
which
is
to
be
signed.
"
The
man
no
sooner
heard
the
name
"a
friend"
mentioned,
than
he
flew
in
a
passion,
and
said,
"We
have
nothing
to
do
with
any
one
that
has
even
an
acquaintance
in
the
place.
Get
away!
dont
trouble
my
head
about
it.
"
But
when
the
author
went
back
and
told
Mr.
Middleton
of
it,
he
very
gladly
expressed
himself
thus:
"You
have
escaped
being
kidnapped;
for
those
soul-buyers
make
harmless
creatures
believe
them
till
they
get
them
on
board,
and
then
by
compulsion
oblige
them
to
sign
the
wicked
indenture,
instead
of
ten
or
fifteen
years,
as
had
been
settled
a-shore,
and
according
to
their
ages,
make
them
write
forty
or
fifty
years,
so
that
the
poor
simple
slaves
must
live
and
die
in
misery.
In
my
opinion,
your
best
way
will
be,
if
you
do
not
think
yourself
demeaned
by
it,
to
stay
in
my
house,
and
wait
on
the
gentlemen,
keep
the
key
of
your
desk,
and
when
you
have
an
opportunity,
sit
in
the
academy
and
mind
your
learning
with
them:
you
will
then
have
boarding
and
education
by
your
own
industry,
without
being
beholden
to
any
one,
and
the
servant
will
not
be
long
before
he
goes
away;
you
shall
have
the
same
wages
that
he
has,
which
is
nine
pounds
a-year.
"
All
this
passed
before
the
gentlemen
in
the
academy,
above
forty-five
or
fifty
in
number,
half
of
them
boarders,
and
half
day-scholars.
The
author
accepted
the
offer
with
cheerfulness;
his
young
friend
expressed
great
joy,
and
made
him
in
a
manner
his
companion,
treating
him
with
civility,
while
the
old
servant
continued
in
the
house.
The
gentlemen
thought
it
rather
unpolite
of
Mr.
Middleton,
to
say
that
he
should
wait
on
them,
and
with
great
reluctance
could
bring
themselves
to
send
him
even
on
an
errand,
as
he
had
been
a
school-fellow
of
theirs
for
nine
months
before
that
happened.
But
Emin
took
pains
to
inure
their
delicate
minds
to
command
him
as
their
waiting
servant,
expostulating,
and
showing
the
difference
between
his
former
and
his
present
station;
begging,
in
the
mean
time,
that
they
would
be
so
good
as
to
consider
his
present
preferable
situation
to
a
life
of
slavery,
which,
if
he
had
not
escaped,
they
would
have
been
continually
calling
him
to
mind,
and
saying,
"Oh,
poor
Emin!
he
is
gone,
and
lost
for
ever;
though
the
artful
kidnapper
said,
he
would
be
a
great
man.
"
Among
the
boarders
there
were
two
brothers,
the
grandchildren
of
the
late
old
Sir
John
Evelyn;
the
name
of
the
youngest
was
John,
amazingly
considerate
for
his
infant
age;
he
took
more
notice
of
everything
than
the
rest;
was
surprisingly
exact
in
his
morning
and
evening
prayers;
yet
very
cautious
not
to
be
seen
by
any:
he
used
to
comfort
Emin,
when
now
and
then
he
found
him
a
little
thoughtful.
One
day,
as
the
author,
after
school,
was
sitting
at
his
table
writing
some
accounts
in
his
book,
both
brothers
came
in
and
sat
upon
the
desk
before
him,
teasing
him.
As
not
being
in
one
of
his
best
humours,
he
begged
of
them
to
let
him
alone;
they
still
persisted
to
play
and
laugh;
when,
by
accident
or
intention,
his
young
friend
even
set
the
inkhorn
on
the
page
of
the
book,
and
daubed
it
from
top
to
bottom,
which
wrought
upon
his
wild
Asiatic
temper
to
strike
the
face
of
his
best
friend,
and
set
the
poor
innocents
nose
bleeding.
He
wished
that
very
instant
the
elder
brother
had
been
strong
enough
to
have
beaten
him
heartily
for
that
unaccountable
conduct;
but
he,
seeing
the
poor
child
in
that
bloody
condition,
took
him
by
the
hand
to
carry
him
to
Mr.
Middleton
and
make
a
complaint.
The
author
then
took
for
granted,
that
without
fail
he
must
prepare
for
an
asylum
on
board
of
the
crimp
ship
for
the
West
India
plantation.
The
harmless
bleeding
lamb,
instead
of
concurring,
made
this
very
speech:
"Dear
brother,
I
have
received
the
blow
of
that
ironhand
according
to
my
desert;
we
plagued
him
first;
what
business
had
we
here
after
the
academy
was
over?
Your
heart
I
am
sure
is
sorry
for
me,
but
consider
Mr.
Emins
case;
what
will
become
of
him,
if
Mr.
Middleton
were
shewn
the
condition
I
am
in?
He
will
be
turned
out
into
the
street,
without
a
friend;
what
shall
we
get
by
that?
Come,
Mr.
Emin,
do
not
make
yourself
uneasy,
it
is
all
our
fault:
upon
my
honour
I
will
not
open
my
lips
about
it
to
any
one
in
the
school,
and
you
shall
have
a
new
book
from
me:
come,
give
me
your
hand,
let
us
be
friends,
again;
do
not
mind,
it
is
all
over.
"
What
will
the
candid
reader
think
of
this
singularity?
It
is
to
be
hoped
he
cannot
avoid
being
sensible
of
the
authors
meaning:
in
endeavouring
to
write
the
rough
narrative
of
his
life,
he
inadvertently
comes
in
the
way
of
truth,
and
spreads
the
light
of
it
upon
every
page,
without
which
every
line
of
it
would
appear
as
dark
as
midnight.
The
man
went
away
a
few
weeks
after:
Emin
succeeded
to
the
office,
cleaning
twenty-four
pairs
of
shoes,
and
twice
the
number
of
knives
and
forks,
and
running
on
errands
for
all
the
gentlemen,
who,
though
he
did
not
think
it
reasonable
to
be
paid,
yet
would
by
force
make
him
accept
some,
saying,
"If
you
refuse,
upon
our
honour
we
will
never
speak
to
you
any
more.
"
Twice
a-week
he
carried
some
eatables
in
a
hand-basket
to
the
country-house
for
the
family,
nine
or
ten
miles,
down
to
Aldborough
Hatch;
sometimes
he
walked,
and
at
other
times
rode
on
horseback.
In
that
situation
he
passed
life
very
comfortably,
and
more
so
through
the
good-nature
of
his
school-fellows,
and
their
amicable
expressions.
As
he
could
not
sit
at
table
to
dinner
with
them,
they
honoured
him
by
turns
with
inviting
him
to
drink
tea
every
afternoon
in
their
separate
apartments.
But,
to
his
great
sorrow,
Mr.
Middleton
broke;
and,
being
indebted
to
some
tradesmen
to
the
amount
of
4000
l.
was
obliged
to
conceal
himself
till
a
commission
of
bankrupt
was
taken
out.
As
Mrs.
Middleton
could
not
trust
the
secret
to
any
one
in
the
house,
she
deposited
a
note
with
the
faithful
Emin,
who
by
direction
found
the
tavern
where
the
gentleman
was
(he
believes
somewhere
near
St.
Pauls),
and
delivered
the
note
to
the
waiter.
Presently
after
came
out
Mr.
Middleton,
who
treated
Emin
with
half
a
pint
of
wine,
and
a
present
of
half-a-guinea,
giving
him
an
answer
to
the
note,
which
he
brought
to
the
lady.
No
soul
knew
of
the
secret
from
him
for
the
space
of
thirty-five
years.
A
fortnight
after,
Mr.
Middleton
came
out.
Mr.
Reeves,
another
academy
master,
took
the
house;
and
Emin
lost
his
wages,
6
l.
10
s.
which
were
then
due;
ill-natured
fortune
making
him
a
sufferer
as
well
as
other
creditors.
At
that
time
he
had
no
more
than
10
s.
6
d.
in
his
pocket,
with
an
old
Rag-fair
coat
and
waistcoat,
and
six
sack-cloth
shirts,
darned
by
a
good
washer-woman
in
an
hundred
places,
like
the
late
king
of
Persia
Carim
Khans
head-shawl,
or
the
patched
shoes
of
Peter
the
Great
in
the
battle
of
Poltowa.
The
Armenian
merchant
Stephenus,
like
Charles
XII.
of
Sweden,
pressing
very
hard
for
his
17
l.
the
author
offered
himself
to
the
new
schoolmaster
to
stay
in
the
house
as
a
servant;
he
answered
very
coolly,
that
he
was
provided.
The
young
gentlemen,
his
dear
comforters,
were
all
gone
to
their
respective
homes;
and
he
was
left
alone
again
to
his
fate,
with
a
hungry
stomach.
But
fortunately,
Mr.
Warren,
a
barber,
happened
to
know
him
at
the
academy,
where
he
used
to
do
some
little
errands.
As
the
gentlemen
were
his
customers,
and
he
frequented
the
house,
often
dining
there,
and
walking
in
the
place,
he
knew
Emins
character,
and
asked
him,
if
he
was
strong
enough
to
do
porters
work?
He
answered
without
hesitation,
yes;
to
save
himself
from
going
to
take
a
survey
of
the
streets
of
London
again,
after
running
eighteen
months
up
and
down.
Oh!
could
he
but
catch
that
imaginary
goddess
Fortune,
like
one
of
flesh
and
blood,
in
a
place
where
no
soul
should
be
but
God
alone,
he
would
make
her
sensible
of
the
cruel
bitterness
of
the
distress
which
she
inflicts!
As
the
author
thought
he
could
not
do
otherwise,
he
consented
to
Mr.
Warrens
proposal;
and
was
conducted
by
him
to
one
Mr.
Roberts,
at
the
corner
of
Sun-yard,
in
the
same
street,
a
grocer,
to
whom
he
was
recommended
properly
for
his
good
character,
agreeing
to
serve
at
the
rate
of
8
l.
a
year.
The
master
said,
"If
the
porter
behaves
well,
I
promise
to
make
his
wages
10
l.
next
year.
"
He
then
began
to
work
like
a
horse:
in
eighteen
months
he
cleared
his
debt,
partly
by
wages,
partly
by
vails;
and
managed
so
as
to
save
a
little
from
his
wages
to
pay
for
his
trifling
learning,
whenever
he
had
an
opportunity.
When
the
government
ordered
a
lottery
to
raise
money
for
the
purchase
of
Sir
Hans
Sloanes
curiosities,
he
had
courage
to
buy
half
a
ticket,
which
cost
him
a
guinea,
and
had
a
small
prize
of
4
l.
10
s.
His
upper
garment
began
to
appear
a
little
decent,
but
his
linen
was
in
the
same
plight,
darning
over
darning;
and
not
to
use
those
faithful
companions
too
ill,
he
thought
it
necessary
through
compassion
never
to
wear
them
in
the
night-time,
lest
some
unforeseen
casualty
should
befal
them,
and
deprive
the
author
of
their
agreeable
company.
NOTE.
Page
40.
GRANDSONS
OF
SIR
JOHN
EVELYN.
Not
succeeding
in
tracing
both
these
grandsons
of
Sir
John
Evelyn
from
the
History
of
the
Evelyn
Family,
by
Miss
Helen
Evelyn,
I
referred
to
this
lady,
who
very
kindly
sent
me
the
following
family
tree,
saying
that
she
thought
that
the
boys
mentioned
must
have
been
the
sons
of
Charles
Evelyn.
Later
on,
at
Leghorn
in
1760,
my
ancestor
renewed
his
friendship
with
the
elder
of
the
two
brothers,
and
he
writes
of
the
death
of
the
second
one,
John,
having
taken
place
at
school
of
smallpox.
Sir
John
Evelyn,
1st
Bart.
John,
2nd
Bart. |
Charles
(17O8-I748)
m.
Susannah
d.
of
Peter
Prideaux. |
4
other
sons. |
Charles
under
age
1741
m.
Philippa,
d.
of
Capt.
Fortunatus
Wright. |
John
under
age
I741
died
young. |
Edward
died
an
infant. |
John,
4
th
Bart. |
|
|