XI.
1761.
[Letters
of
introduction
for
Petersburgh
-
A
reception
at
Lady
Yarmouths
two
years
previously
-
Lord
Huntingdon
-
Emins
description
of
Frederick
of
Prussia
-
Lord
Huntingdons
dinner
-
Suggests
that
Emin
shall
establish
a
new
religion
-
Emins
rebuke
-
Reported
to
Prince
of
Wales,
who
wants
to
help
Emin
-
Lord
Northumberland
objects
"too
much
money
will
do
him
no
good"
-
Ready
to
live
upon
air
to
please
his
lordship
-
Sixty
days,
London
to
Riga
-
Mutiny
on
board
-
Emin
pacifies
sailors
-
Emins
praise
of
British
navy
-
Devotion
of
Miller
the
German
to
Emin
at
Riga
Petersburg
-
Mr.
Keith
-
Count
Vorontsov
-
Empresss
kind
thoughts
for
Armenians
-
Her
death
a
misfortune
for
Emin
-
Letter
to
Lord
Lyttelton
from
Russia.
]
He
staid
in
London
about
eight
months,
very
busy
all
the
time
to
find
ways
and
means
for
going
to
Petersburgh.
The
late
earl
of
Bath,
after
dinner
at
Mr.
Montagus,
saw
Emin
much
dejected.
Mr.
Mantagu
said
to
his
lordship,
"Our
friend
Emin
cannot
get
a
letter
of
recommendation
from
any
gentleman
to
Russia.
"
His
lordship
immediately
answered,
that
he
would
give
him
one
to
Mr.
Keith,
envoy
to
that
court.
Mr.
Jonas
Hanway,
author
of
the
History
of
Nadir
Shah,
procured
him
a
pass
from
prince
Gallitzin
the
Russian
minister,
to
whom
Emin
had
before
the
honour
of
being
introduced
by
the
late
lady
Yarmouth.
Dr.
Secker,
then
archbishop
of
Canterbury,
wrote
a
letter
to
Doctor
Dumaresque,
chaplain
to
the
factory;
Miss
Talbot
to
the
princess
of
Georgia;
and
Dr.
Mounsey
of
Chelsea-hospital,
to
Dr.
Mounsey,
unseen;
his
relation,
chief
physician
to
the
late
empress
Elizabeth.
When
he
had
secured
all
these
letters,
he
waited
upon
his
patron
the
duke,
who
was
much
surprized
and
equally
glad
of
the
success
he
had
met
with.
Two
years
before
his
proceeding
on
this
journey,
it
happened
one
day,
that
the
foreign
ministers,
after
waiting
on
his
Majesty,
came
to
lady
Yarmouths
apartment,
to
pay
their
respects
to
her
ladyship,
and
among
them
was
lord
Huntingdon.
In
conversation,
the
king
of
Prussia
became
the
subject.
His
lordship
said,
"It
is
singular
that
we
cannot
have
an
exact
likeness
of
his
majesty
painted,
nor
can
I
discover
the
reason
of
it?"
Emin
said,
"My
lord,
the
reason
is
very
plain,
a
child
may
know
it
very
easily
by
looking
at
his
face
about
half
an
hour.
"
His
lordship
smiled,
and
the
rest
of
the
gentlemen
were
somehow
startled;
they
had
taken
but
very
little
notice
of
him
before;
they
asked
him
if
he
could
tell
the
reason?
He
said,
"Yes,
"
and
added,
that
the
king
was
not
made
like
the
rest
of
mankind;
that
he
changed
his
complexion
with
every
thought
that
passed
in
his
mind;
that
sometimes
he
looked
pale,
and
at
another
time
fresh-coloured,
white,
black,
yellow,
in
short
he
answered
all
sorts
of
colours
like
a
camelion;
wherefore
it
would
be
impossible
for
a
painter
to
draw
a
true
picture
of
him.
"
On
this
solution,
every
one
of
the
company
cried
out,
"that
is
the
very
reason
-
well
said!
this
is
Asiatic
penetration:
"
then
they
took
proper
notice
of
him;
and
this
pleased
lady
Yarmouth
as
much,
who
took
that
opportunity
to
introduce
him
to
all
of
them
in
form;
and
among
the
rest,
to
Prince
Gallitzin.
His
lordship
putting
a
second
question,
"What
is
the
cause
of
his
assuming
those
different
colours?"
Emin
answered;
"When
he
looks
fresh,
he
thinks
he
is
sure
of
conquest;
when
pale
as
ashes,
he
is
afraid
of
being
crushed
by
the
united
powers
of
Europe;
when
yellow,
he
fears
Voltaire
will
publish
a
scandalous
book
again
to
smite
his
mind,
and
so
forth.
"
On
the
second
explanation,
his
lordship
with
both
hands
moved
his
chair,
and
sat
close
to
him,
and
invited
him
to
dinner
that
day,
if
he
was
not
otherways
engaged.
The
foreign
ministers
spoke
in
French
to
lady
Yarmouth,
with
a
satisfied
pleasing
countenance;
and
said,
"Although
we
thought
before
he
was
not
worthy
of
the
notice
taken
of
him
by
the
nobility
of
England,
now
we
are
very
well
convinced
that
he
deserves
to
have
honours
conferred
upon
him,
and
that
his
Royal
Highness
the
duke,
and
the
earl
of
Northumberland,
had
really
great
merit
in
patronizing
him.
The
levee
broke
up;
the
gentlemen
went
away;
and
though
Emin
understood
what
they
said,
yet
lady
Yarmouth
took
pains,
with
great
good-nature
and
satisfaction,
to
express
it
to
him.
According
to
his
promise,
he
went
to
lord
Huntingdons;
at
dinner
there
were
two
brothers,
doctor
and
captain
Hamilton,
the
second
of
whom
was
equerry
to
his
present
Majesty,
at
that
time
Prince
of
Wales,
and
lord
Huntingdon
was
then
his
master
of
the
horse.
When
they
had
dined,
the
conversation
turned
upon
various
subjects,
and
his
lordship
in
a
bantering
good-natured
way,
said
to
Emin,
"Your
best
method
will
be
to
compose
a
new
sort
of
religion
like
Mohamed,
and
reform
your
countrymen
to
your
way
of
thinking;
otherwise
the
religion
they
have
now,
will
never
suffer
them
to
follow
your
example,
so
as
to
become
a
free
nation.
I
dare
to
say,
you
know
of
the
reformation
among
the
English;
who
if
they
had
continued
papists,
might
have
been
retained
slaves
to
this
day.
"
This
preposition,
though
delivered
in
jest,
agitated
him
not
a
little,
by
mentioning
the
polluted
name
of
that
Arabian
impostor;
and
he
said,
"If
your
lordship
will
not
be
displeased
with
my
boldness,
I
will
tell
my
opinion
on
that
head?"
His
lordship
said,
"Not
in
the
least.
"
Then
Emin
began
with
his
rough
comparison,
proceeding
thus:
"My
lord,
it
appears
to
me
that
you
are
very
learned,
and
your
elegant
conversation
is
most
improving
to
the
minds
of
every
hearer;
but
you
seem
exactly
like
a
surloin
of
beef
turning
upon
a
spit,
and
roasting
before
a
very
large
fire
in
a
chop-house;
where
the
customers
coming
in
one
after
another,
the
master
of
the
house,
with
a
sharp
carving
knife
in
his
hand,
like
a
Turkish
executioner,
cries
out,
What
will
you
please
to
have
gentlemen?
Roasted
beef,
master,
they
say:
he
cuts
the
outside
and
inside
of
it,
where
it
is
best
done,
serving
his
customers;
who
being
satisfied,
and
the
reckoning
paid,
the
beef
still
going
round
on
the
spit
by
the
help
of
the
jack,
till
at
last
it
is
eaten
up,
and
reduced
to
the
very
bone,
without
the
least
benefit
to
itself.
Now,
one
may
look
upon
you
just
in
the
same
light;
and
nothing
surprises
one
so
much
as
to
find
her
ladyship,
your
mother,
so
very
religious,
and
your
lordship
so
irreligious.
Several
free
speakers
like
you,
have
brought
down
the
true
Christian
character
of
the
most
noble
English
nation
to
the
lowest
degree
of
heathenism;
and
even
propagated
a
notion
all
over
the
eastern
quarter
of
the
world,
that
(which
God
forbid)
the
English
are
not
Christians.
"
This
grave
repartee
made
his
lordship
hang
down
his
head,
and
both
the
brothers
cried
out
laughing,
"He
serves
you
right,
my
lord,
upon
our
honour;
we
will
acquaint
his
Royal
Highness
with
every
word
Mr.
Emin
has
said
to
you.
"
Some
days
after
captain
Hamilton
sent
for
him,
and
acquainted
him,
that
he
had
been
very
industrious
in
giving
an
account
to
his
Royal
Highness,
of
every
syllable,
that
passed
at
dinner,
between
him
and
lord
Huntingdon;
that
his
Royal
Highness
was
greatly
pleased,
and
said
to
his
lordship,
"I
am
very
glad
you
have
at
last
met
with
your
match.
"
He
graciously
inquired,
if
it
was
the
Emin
who
had
been
in
the
late
compaign
in
our
service,
and
whether
he
was
rewarded
for
his
trouble
or
not?
"We
said,
"
added
the
captain,
"that
we
believed
not;
and
now,
my
friend,
it
is
high
time
for
you
to
inform
your
patron,
that
the
prince
is
much
interested
in
your
behalf;
so
that
his
lordship,
who
attends
every
levee
day,
may
agree
with
his
Royal
Highness
to
do
something
for
you.
"
Emin
mentioned
this
to
the
duke,
who
went
to
the
prince;
his
Royal
Highness
favourably
inquired
about
the
matter,
and
expressed
himself
very
ready
to
assist
Emin.
The
duke
said,
"He
is
already
provided
for,
"
meaning
by
his
Grace;
and
added,
"He
shall
have
any
sum
of
money
he
chuses.
"
The
duke
told
Emin
what
his
Royal
Highness
had
said;
adding,
"It
is
not
proper
you
should
have
more
money
than
is
necessary;
you
came
hither
without
any;
without
language
or
friends;
and,
by
your
own
activity,
made
yourself
known
to
the
greatest
princes
in
Europe:
you
have
letters
of
recommendation
to
the
court
of
Russia,
who
will
certainly
write
to
prince
Hetaclius,
and
he
immediately
will
employ
you
in
his
service;
by
which
means
you
will
be
as
rich
as
any
prince
in
Asia.
"
Emin
said,
"My
lord,
your
advice
is
excellent,
but
I
shall
never
be
able
to
compass
my
design
without
money,
or
being
independent;
at
least
that
country
is
very
well
known
to
be
poor;
if
not,
prince
Heraclius
father
would
not
have
gone
to
Russia,
to
solicit
like
a
beggar
for
assistance.
"
The
duke
said,
"No,
my
dear
Emin,
you
are
mistaken;
he
is
gone
for
some
greater
affair
unknown
to
us.
"
Emin
said,
"My
lord,
when
I
was
in
Armenia
at
Etzmiatzin,
the
archbishop
of
Teffiz
told
me,
that
king
Tahmuras
of
Georgia,
through
mere
necessity
being
at
variance
with
his
son,
was
sent
to
Moscow
to
be
maintained
by
the
Russians.
Has
not
your
lordship
read
of
Sir
John
Chardins
Travels,
which
say,
that
the
Georgians
are
the
handsomest,
the
worst,
and
the
poorest
of
mankind?"
"No,
no
Mr.
Emin,
you
will
do
very
well
with
prince
Heraclius.
"
"Yes,
my
lord,
if
I
were
independent,
I
should
do
better
with
all
the
world;
but
since
your
lordship
has
that
great
opinion
of
your
humble
servant,
that
he
can
live
upon
air,
he
shall
say
no
more
about
it;
he
is
ready
to
obey
your
command
in
gratitude,
even
if
you
order
him,
he
is
ready
to
shoot
himself
at
the
feet
of
your
lordship;
that
the
world
may
have
the
pleasure
to
say,
Emin
behaved
obediently
and
gratefully
to
his
last
breath,
to
his
princely
patron.
"
TO
MRS.
MONTAGU
(
July
1761
)
To
the
Queen
of
Universe
I
have
an
Oppointement
to
see
at
my
own
Cottage
one
of
my
Countryman
from
the
City,
at
ten
oClock.
If
I
shoud
be
able
to
get
him
away,
about
eleveven
I
shall
obey
your
Orders.
b
ut
if
not
you
will
I
hope
forgive
me,
and
wish
you
all
the
Health,
and
Happyness
immaginable.
I
dined
with
Miss
Talbot
Yesterday,
she
has
told
me
what
your
great
Soul
wish
to
tell.
I
cannot
part
with
you
forever,
therefore
let
me
not
see
you
any
more,
it
will
hurt
me
to
the
very
Soul.
If
it
be
worth
your
while,
write
to
your
distracted
Slave
from
the
Country!
Dont
you
be
uneasey
about
me
at
all,
if
you
hear
me
not
successful,
I
am
resolvd
to
die
for
my
Country,
I
will
do
all
to
help
towards
it.
àdieu
my
dearest
Madam
Your
most
obed
t
and
obliged
hum:
Ser
t
and
gratefull
Slave
EMIN.
Tuesday
morning
July
7
1761.
(
On
the
back
off
the
letter
)
To
Mrs.
Montagu.
This
consultation
being
over,
the
duke
gave
him
a
hundred
guineas,
and
promised
him
two
hundred
more,
to
remit
after
him
a
hundred
each
year,
and
to
continue
for
three
years
and
no
longer.
What
could
Emin
do,
but
make
much
of
a
little.
Mrs.
Montague,
Lady
Sophia
Egerton,
and
Miss
Talbot,
made
up
about
sixty
pounds;
Lady
Anson,
his
valuable
friend,
was
dead;
he
was
therefore
worth
160
l.
deducting
30
l.
for
fitting
himself
out;
paid
five
guineas
to
the
captain
of
the
ship;
took
leave
of
his
friends,
and
set
out
on
the
I5th
of
October
1761.
He
arrived
with
moderate
wind
in
eight
days
at
Elsinore,
a
sea-port
town
in
Denmark,
where
he
stayed
two
days;
on
the
third
day
setting
sail,
on
the
fourth
a
storm
arose
with
such
fury,
that
nothing
could
equal
it;
in
a
few
days
more
made
the
Island
of
Bornholm.
Here
the
sailors
embracing
the
opportunity,
(which
was
very
near
proving
fatal
to
the
ship,
and
all
who
were
in
it,
)
half
a
dozen
of
them
got
drunk,
set
the
whole
place
in
an
uproar,
and
did
not
care
a
pin
for
the
captain.
Emin
had
much
ado
to
quiet
them.
At
last
every
one
of
them
got
on
board;
and
no
sooner
was
the
anchor
weighed,
than
a
contrary
wind
began
to
blow
three
times
stronger
than
before;
half
of
the
crew
mutinied,
and
laid
a
scheme
to
kill
Emin
(the
only
passenger)
and
the
captain,
because
they
advised
them
not
to
drink
more
than
was
necessary,
and
then
to
carry
the
ship
to
France,
at
that
time
engaged
in
war
with
England.
Emin
finding
no
other
remedy,
to
quiet
them,
he,
with
the
captain,
resolved
to
shoot
the
ringleader,
a
very
stout
young
man,
a
deserter
from
a
man
of
war;
the
rest
seeing
what
was
going
on,
submitted
to
join
Emins
and
the
captains
party,
and
with
much
ado
the
young
lion
was
secured
in
irons.
The
captain
drew
up
an
affidavit
of
their
unruly
behaviour,
and
the
poor
fellows
every
one
of
them
signed
a
paper,
confessing
themselves
guilty
of
a
conspiracy.
Exactly
in
fifty
days
they
with
great
difficulty
came
to
an
anchor
at
Riga.
It
may
not
be
unpleasant
to
say
something
of
the
passage.
The
ship
being
a
prize
from
the
enemy,
which,
when
in
their
own
possession,
carried
fifty
guns,
with
600
French
sailors
in
it,
was
bought
by
the
Russia
merchants
in
London,
and
converted
into
a
timber
ship.
In
that
hard
weather
(in
the
month
of
November),
on
the
terrible
Baltic,
where
the
buntings
froze
up
to
the
thickness
of
three
inches,
and
all
the
ropes
in
proportion,
the
ship
like
a
snowy
mountain
sailing
upon
the
water,
there
were
no
more
than
eight
men
to
take
in,
reef,
or
furl
the
mainsail,
when
there
was
occasion.
This
shewed
the
difference
between
the
English
and
the
French,
for
the
whole
ships
crew,
with
the
captain,
mate
and
passengers,
were
no
more
than
twenty-four
hands.
These
are
the
brave
men
to
be
admired
with
awe
-
who
are
ruled
by
the
wisdom
of
Old
England
-
the
very
bulwark
of
that
famous
nation
-
who
maintain
the
liberty
of
it
in
the
midst
of
so
many
malignant
jealous
princes
of
Europe!
-
Brave
fellows!
what
hardships
they
go
through!
how
unsparingly
do
they
work
for
a
livelihood!
to
the
shame
of
many
Jew-like
Christians
in
the
East,
who
live
and
loll
in
a
slavish
idle
life,
like
so
many
beasts!
When
the
captain
was
going
on
shore,
he
took
the
bloody
affidavit
to
punish
them
all
by
the
Russian
law.
Emin
snatched
the
paper
out
of
his
hands,
and
tore
it
to
pieces;
saying
to
the
captain,
"How
can
you
be
so
cruel,
and
act
so
rashly?
Who
will
work
your
ship
back?
Do
not
you
know
the
severity
of
the
law
of
Russia?
Yourself
must
remain
in
the
place
before
the
bloody
affair
is
decided.
Come,
come,
be
quiet;
forgive
them;
they
are
all
honest
fellows.
"
They
came
all
on
the
gangway,
crying
out,
"God
bless
you,
noble
stranger!
Excuse
us,
we
do
not
know
your
honors
name:
we
are
in
duty
bound
to
acknowledge,
if
you
had
not
been
with
us
on
the
passage,
we
might
have
perished
through
our
own
foolishness.
It
was
owing
to
the
brandy
we
bought
in
that
Danish
island.
We
beg
the
captains
pardon;
since
you
have
made
peace
between
us
and
our
commander,
we
pray
God
to
prosper
you
in
all
your
undertakings.
"
Here
every
thing
ended
amicably.
The
captain
and
Emin
went
on
shore
at
Riga,
where
the
captain
was
not
a
little
sensible
of
his
passengers
good
behaviour;
did
not
fail
to
inform
several
gentlemen
of
his
acquaintance,
a
few
English,
and
many
Swedes
and
Germans,
who
all
came
and
thanked
him.
The
house
where
he
took
up
his
quarters
belonged
to
a
German,
about
fifty
years
of
age,
named
Miller,
who
had
been
settled
and
married
there
for
several
years.
He
was
originally
a
journeyman
baker,
and
saved
enough
to
make
up
a
capital,
so
as
to
set
up
a
sort
of
eating-house,
which
went
on
pretty
briskly.
He
used
to
go
to
Poland,
and
buy
horned
cattle,
providing
ships
with
beef,
by
which
he
made
a
fortune
of
60,
000
dollars.
By
his
first
wife,
who
was
then
dead,
he
had
children,
a
girl
and
a
boy;
he
married
his
daughter,
and
himself
married
a
second
time;
and
by
his
second
wife
he
had
four
more.
Emin
made
an
agreement
with
him,
to
pay
half-a-crown
a-day
both
for
his
lodging
and
boarding,
and
stayed
exactly
ten
days
in
the
house.
Miller
the
landlord
became
so
fond
of
Emin,
as
to
sit
up
and
keep
company
with
him
every
night
till
almost
two
in
the
morning;
something
more
than
common
appearing
in
his
countenance,
which
made
Emin
sensible
he
would
speak
it
out;
this
he
did
at
last,
after
many
apologies;
and
said,
"Sir,
excuse
the
liberty
I
am
going
to
take;
I
know
you
are
going
upon
very
great
business;
as
far
as
I
can
learn,
you
have
but
little
money,
and
I
am
worth
many
thousand
dollars;
I
can
spare
2000
of
them,
with
perfect
good-will,
towards
the
expences
of
your
journey:
I
shall
be
extremely
happy,
if
you
will
be
kind
enough
to
accept
of
it;
no
soul
in
the
world
shall
know
of
it
and
I
will
not
even
take
notice
of
it
to
my
wife.
Please
to
take
it
here,
or
by
a
bill
on
a
merchant
at
St.
Petersburgh.
"
Emin
thanked
Mr.
Miller
for
his
generous
offer,
but
would
by
no
means
accept
of
it;
and
said,
"Your
good-will
is
sufficient;
you
have
an
encreasing
family;
it
is
best
that
the
money
should
remain
where
it
is;
as
for
my
part,
I
am
a
single
man,
and
can
make
a
shift
any
how
to
live
and
manage
for
myself.
"
Mr.
Miller
was
not
in
the
least
pleased
with
his
refusal;
he
seemed
in
great
pain,
as
if
he
had
been
stabbed
with
a
dagger
to
the
heart,
and
still
continued
urging,
like
an
affectionate
father,
till
at
length
he
began
crying
like
a
child,
and
said,
"Sir,
if
you
do
not
accept
of
it,
you
will
break
my
heart.
"
Yet
all
his
expostulation
was
to
no
purpose.
Mr.
Miller,
finding
the
impossibility
of
prevailing,
stood
up,
and
said,
"Good
Mr.
Emin,
since
you
will
not
consent
to
oblige
me
in
this
trifle,
I
give
you
my
hand
and
heart
to
share
your
dangers;
I
will
go
and
serve
you
with
the
half
of
my
fortune,
while
the
other
half
will
very
comfortably
maintain
my
family;
and
my
wife
(thank
God)
has
both
sense
and
prudence
enough
to
take
care
of
them:
my
male
children,
when
of
a
proper
age,
will
come
and
find
us
out
in
any
part
of
the
world.
"
Having
said
these
words,
-
he
ran
out,
and
brought
the
Bible
to
swear
upon.
Emin
entreated
him
to
put
the
sacred
book;
and,
finding
it
impossible
to
dissuade
him
from
his
generous
heroic
resolution,
he
said
to
him,
"My
worthy
friend,
I
am
going
upon
an
imaginary
plan,
exactly
like
that
of
making
a
solid
figure
of
a
mans
shadow;
unless
the
Supreme
Being
shall
please
to
turn
it
into
something
substantial.
Should
it
happen
to
fail,
I
should
never
forgive
myself
if
any
accident
should
befall
you,
and
I
should
be
the
occasion
of
ruin
to
your
harmless
lambs
and
family;
I
should
consider
myself
then
as
a
rogue,
villain,
or
an
impostor.
But
so
far
I
give
my
word
of
honour,
that
if
success
favours
me
in
my
undertaking,
you
may
depend
upon
it,
my
blunt
pen
will
find
you
out
in
any
part
of
Europe.
I
beg
you
will
say
no
more
about
it;
let
us
sit
down
half
an
hour
longer,
to
enjoy
the
society
of
our
true
hearts,
which
the
Great
God
has
made
under
the
same
planet.
"
The
poor
man
then
shed
tears
bitterly,
and
said
no
more.
This
amiable
conversation
began
at
midnight,
and
ended
at
half-an-hour
past
two
in
the
morning,
when
every
one
else
was
asleep
in
the
house.
Emin
had
a
good
mind
to
repeat
to
him
his
Graces
prediction,
That
too
much
money
would
do
him
no
good;
but
he
thought
proper
to
say
not
a
word
of
it,
lest
he
should
hear
a
sarcastical
answer.
Mr.
Miller
then
changed
the
subject,
and
told
the
history
of
his
life,
which
was
very
entertaining,
and
equal
in
variety
of
hardships
to
that
of
Emin;
who
dares
to
declare,
*that
the
German
nation,
by
what
he
has
seen
in
Westphalia,
are
equal
in
goodness
both
of
heart
and
tongue
to
the
English
themselves.
God
seeing
the
plainness
and
honesty
of
their
hearts*
has
given
most
of
the
sovereignty
of
Europe
to
that
nation;
as
for
example,
the
king
of
England,
the
empress
of
Russia,
and
the
rest;
and
should
any
learned
man
be
curious
enough
to
trace
the
genealogies
of
other
European
princes,
he
will
find
their
ancestors
to
be
all
of
German
extraction:
*and
this
is
a
proof,
*
that
simplicity
is
more
acceptable
to
God,
than
cunning
and
artfulness:
for
instance,
who
is
more
cunning
than
the
Jews,
Hindoos,
and
others
that
are
no
better
than
they?
Every
one,
according
to
his
merits,
is
stationed
by
the
invisible
hand
of
the
Almighty,
so
as
to
let
his
truth
shine
over
all.
The
good
Mr.
Miller,
and
his
friend
Emin,
at
three
in
the
morning
parted,
and
each
retired
to
his
bed.
After
two
days
more,
he
hired
a
covered
cart
for
Emin,
who
took
his
leave,
and
proceeded
towards
St.
Petersburgh,
where
he
arrived
in
twelve
days
from
Riga.
He
waited
on
the
chaplain
doctor,
who
received
him
with
great
politeness,
and
invited
him
to
live
in
the
house
with
him
all
the
while
he
stayed
in
that
place.
The
other
letters
introduced
Emin
to
other
gentlemen;
the
first,
to
Mr.
Keith,
the
next,
to
count
*
*
Passages
that
I
was
very
sorely
tempted
to
suppress.
They
are
reprinted
only
in
consideration
of
the
fact
of
their
having
been
written
over
130
years
ago.
Woronzoff,
the
Russian
Imperial
chancellor;
then
to
doctor
Mounsey;
the
fourth
letter
was
from
Miss
Talbot
to
the
princess
of
Georgia,
her
correspondent
by
the
means
of
doctor
Dumaresque,
who,
to
Emins
great
misfortune,
was
then
dead.
She
being
married
to
prince
Dolgorucky,
the
letter
he
gave
to
the
prince
her
husband,
who
is
uncle
to
prince
Heraclius
by
the
mothers
side.
If
this
lady
had
lived,
Emin
might
have
succeeded
in
some
points,
as
he
owed
so
much
of
his
success
to
the
noble
ladies
in
London.
The
gentlemen
to
whom
he
was
recommended,
divided
Emins
time
so,
that
he
could
never
dine
at
the
doctors;
who
was
very
glad
of
his
being
taken
so
much
notice
of,
and
accompanied
him
wherever
he
went
like
a
guardian
and
a
father.
A
few
days
after,
Emins
character
excited
the
curiosity
of
St.
Petersburgh,
like
the
dromedary
brought
over
by
a
Greek,
and
exhibited
in
London.
Mr.
Keith,
doctor
Mounsey,
and
doctor
Dumaresque,
by
the
desire
of
count
Worronzoff
the
chancellor,
took
Emin
along
with
them
to
the
house
of
that
nobleman,
who
asked
him
several
questions,
doctor
Dumaresque
acting
as
interpreter
between
them.
"Your
intention,
"
said
he,
"as
I
understand
by
the
letter
from
prince
Gallitzin,
is
to
go
to
prince
Heraclius
in
Georgia.
He
is
very
poor,
and
his
father
king
Tahmuras
is
come
hither,
to
beg
our
assistance
both
in
money
and
troops;
what
can
you
do
there
in
a
princes
service,
where
those
two
great
articles
are
wanting?"
Emin
answered,
saying,
"May
it
please
your
Excellency,
neither
of
the
two
are
in
fact
wanting,
with
sense
and
proper
management;
the
country
is
one
of
the
richest
upon
earth,
and
produces
two
very
valuable
articles
of
commerce,
silk
and
cotton.
As
for
eatables
and
grains
of
all
kinds,
no
country
is
so
plentifully
supplied
with
them;
and
great
part
of
the
people
perhaps
have
hardly
tasted
water,
for
wine
is
their
common
drink;
they
have
good
meat,
and
all
sorts
of
grain
and
honey
in
abundance:
so
that,
with
a
little
European
management,
that
country
may
flourish
and
be
happy,
without
being
obliged
to
depend
upon
any
other
nation;
when,
in
the
mean
time,
the
Armenians
will
join
with
a
good
will
to
expel,
as
they
easily
may,
the
Mahomedans
out
of
their
country.
Therefore
I
am
sorry
for
king
Tahmuras,
who
at
the
age
of
sixty-five
years,
almost
worn
out
in
his
wars
against
the
Lazgi
mountaineers,
comes
so
far
for
succour.
God,
when
he
created
man,
gave
him
a
head,
with
two
hands
to
take
care
of
it;
but
if
those
hands
are
not
sufficient
to
help
that
head,
they
deserve
to
be
cut
off.
A
little
smattering
of
a
Turkish
education
will
make
a
poor
Georgian
slave-boy,
when
he
grows
up,
created
a
basha
or
grand
vizir;
while
a
naked
mountaineer
Armenian,
at
the
head
of
200
men,
will
be
able
to
beat
a
whole
Turkish
army.
Another
goes
to
Constantinople,
and
becomes
a
head
banker
of
the
Grand
Signior;
a
third
works
for
his
passage
as
a
groom,
with
some
horses
from
Basra,
on
board
of
an
English
ship,
becomes
master
of
some
lacks
in
Calcutta,
where
he
domineers
over
his
countrymen
like
Nadir
Shah;
while
your
Excellencys
humble
servant,
who
now
has
the
honour
of
standing
before
you,
ran
away
from
his
father
in
Bengal,
without
shoes;
and
having
worked
on
board
of
an
Indiaman,
became
a
porter
in
London
for
almost
five
years,
and
rushed
through
thick
and
thin,
till
he
made
himself
worthy
to
be
taken
notice
of
at
present
by
your
Excellency.
Therefore,
why
may
not
the
Armenians
or
Georgians
be
as
enterprizing
in
their
own
country,
as
they
have
shewn
themselves
by
frequent
examples?
The
difficulty
lies
in
the
beginning
of
it.
When
they
have
once
opened
their
eyes
from
the
slumber
of
ignorance,
they
will
go
on
as
well
as
their
neighbours.
"
This
speech
of
Emin
pleased
his
Excellency
the
chancellor
so
much,
that
he
became
his
friend
as
warmly
as
Mr.
Pitt
in
London;
and
with
inexpressible
cheerfulness
said
to
Dr.
Mounsey,
"Prává
aschen
khóróshá
gávárial
v
ètá
dobri
chállavéte;
-
that
is,
Well
spoken,
he
is
an
honest
man.
"
He
then
ordered
one
of
his
attendants
to
go
with
his
compliments,
to
call
king
Tahmuras.
When
he
came,
the
chancellor
took
Emin
by
the
hand,
and
put
it
into
the
kings,
saying,
"This
is
the
only
man
recommended
to
us
strongly
by
our
noble
friends
in
England.
We
can
with
great
security
present
him
to
your
majesty.
Bestow
him
upon
your
poor
country
as
a
treasure
who
will,
we
are
in
great
hopes,
rise
with
artillery,
ammunition,
and
every
thing
necessary,
provided
you
will
hear
him.
"
Upon
this
sudden
scene,
the
mighty
king
was
surprised
as
if
in
a
dream;
he
stared
about
five
minutes
at
so
small
a
body,
the
Georgians
generally
being
tall
and
stately;
thanked
his
Excellency
for
his
great
present,
and
with
humility
and
cheerfulness
lifted
up
his
hand
and
head,
praying
to
God,
and
hoping
that
his
son
Heraclius
would
concur
with
Emin,
and
hearken
to
his
counsel;
and
he
declared
that
in
reality
they
were
more
in
want
of
men
of
knowledge
than
of
any
thing
else;
and
that,
if
it
pleased
God
that
he
should
live,
Emin
should
be
his
second
son,
and
esteemed
next
to
prince
Heraclius.
Emin,
upon
this,
with
great
respect
kissed
his
majestys
hand,
and
was
honoured
with
being
kissed
by
him
on
the
forehead.
His
Excellency
ordered
dinner.
The
king
was
placed
between
Mr.
Keith
and
the
chancellor,
with
an
interpreter
standing
behind
the
chairs:
the
rest
of
the
company
sat
at
the
same
table;
and
during
dinner,
the
English
envoy
was
giving
an
account
of
Emins
transactions
to
the
chancellor
in
French,
and
he,
by
the
Georgian
interpreter,
explained
it
to
the
king.
When
dinner
was
over,
Tahmuras
took
Emin
in
his
chariot
to
the
house
where
he
lived;
delighted
much
in
his
conversation;
gave
him
great
hopes
that
they
should
succeed
in
defending
their
country
from
the
encroachments
of
the
Mahomedans;
and
said,
"He
did
not
in
the
least
doubt
that,
by
the
means
of
Emin,
the
Armenians
would
soon
unite
with
the
Georgians
to
shake
off
entirely
the
yoke
of
subjection,
"
not
knowing
thoroughly
the
jealous
disposition
of
his
son
Heraclius.
After
a
conversation
of
two
hours,
Emin
took
his
leave,
when
the
king
desired
him
to
make
the
house
his
own,
and
come
there
as
often
as
he
pleased.
He
went
thither
constantly
every
day,
and
dined
several
times
with
Tahmuras
at
the
chancellors,
but
more
commonly
at
Mr.
Keiths,
who
was
to
him
as
kind
as
ten
fathers.
Doctor
Mounsey
in
particular,
and
his
lady,
were
equally
polite:
he
told
Emin
twenty
times,
that
the
late
empress
Elizabeth,
who
was
then
sick
and
inaccessible,
had
declared
that
if
Emin
was
fortunate
enough,
and
she
should
recover
from
her
illness,
"he
shall
be
taken,
"
said
she,
"better
care
of,
and
properly
sent
to
Armenia,
so
as
not
to
be
much
indebted
to
the
Georgian
prince.
The
Armenians
are
an
honest
and
faithful
people,
for
whom
my
dear
father
Peter
the
Great
had
taken
considerable
pains;
and
had
he
lived
longer,
would
have
delivered
them
from
the
slavery
of
the
Mahometans.
Poor
Emin!
who
without
either
a
real
friend,
or
money,
treads
the
same
steps
with
equal
zeal
of
patriotism,
shall
not
want
help
or
a
friend,
if
I
can
but
recover
from
this
disorder.
"
But,
alas!
to
the
great
misfortune
of
Emin,
and
to
all
the
Armenians,
she
died
in
the
month
of
December;
and
exactly
a
fortnight
after,
died
king
Tahmuras
of
Georgia.
Emin
was
left
again
fatherless
and
motherless.
Doctor
Dumaresque,
during
the
time,
used
to
come
home
very
late
sometimes
at
one,
sometimes
at
two
oclock
in
the
morning,
and
found
Emin
always
up
in
his
room,
where
they
talked
another
hour
before
they
went
to
bed.
He
generally
happened
to
have
been
sitting
with
the
present
empress
Catherina,
at
that
time
duchess
of
Holstein,
whose
celebrated
character
is
known
to
the
world,
and
her
very
name
a
terror
to
the
proud
Turks.
She
hearing
of
Emins
motives,
often
signified
to
the
doctor
her
opinion,
that
if
there
was
a
sort
of
government
or
principality
in
Armenia,
it
would
be
of
great
consequence
to
the
empire
of
Russia,
especially
in
time
of
war,
since
they
would
harrass
the
Turks
pretty
smartly;
and
as
they
are
an
industrious
nation,
not
in
the
least
wicked
nor
treacherous
like
the
Georgians,
they
might
thrive
better,
so
as
to
become
a
free
and
flourishing
people.
(Her
late
achievements
in
the
past
war
against
the
Osmanlus
justified
her
sentiments.
)
To
prevent
Emin
from
being
too
vain
of
himself,
Dr.
Dumaresque
said
to
him,
"Before
you
came
to
this
place,
or
were
taken
notice
of
by
the
English
nobility,
her
Imperial
majesty
hardly
missed
in
conversation
mentioning
Armenia,
when
he
happened
to
speak
of
the
Persians
or
Turks.
"
He
must
not
forget,
in
gratitude
to
his
German
friend,
Mr.
Miller
of
Riga,
that
unknown
to
him
he
had
wrote
a
letter
to
his
correspondent
a
German
gentleman,
and
an
eminent
merchant
in
Petersburgh,
to
offer
him
the
same
2000
dollars
which
he
refused
at
Riga.
Emin
thanked
him
again,
without
accepting
the
generous
offer,
which
surprized
the
merchant,
who
was
well
acquainted
with
many
English
great
men,
and
knew
Emins
narrow
circumstances
as
well
as
they
did,
but
was
not
thoroughly
acquainted
with
the
pride
of
his
heart,
who
would
by
no
means
be
beholden
to
any
nation
but
the
English;
nor,
like
some
mean-spirited
persons,
scrape
the
rust
of
the
world
from
different
people.
As
for
his
beloved
English,
they
are
both
father
and
mother
to
him;
and
from
them,
whatever
favour
he
has
received,
it
is
his
principal
ambition
(though
they
by
no
means
expect
it)
to
return
it
tenfold
when
able;
but
if
he
continue
poor,
which
cannot
be
helped,
it
ever
shall
be
as
it
has
been,
his
duty
to
remember
their
goodness
all
the
days
of
his
life,
and
record
it
from
generation
to
generation.
LETTER
TO
LORD
LYTTELTON
FROM
PETERSBURGH.
My
Lord
What
will
your
Lordship
think
of
me,
not
writing
to
you
for
this
long
time,
I
hope
not
ungrateful.
If
I
am
not
mistaken
your
Lordship
did
order
me
expressly
by
the
word
of
mouth,
that
except
I
had
a
particular
business
or
I
should
have
found
myself
at
a
loss
of
an
advice
for
which
I
was
to
apply
there
by
Lines
to
your
Lordship,
who
had
always
been
my
counsellor,
and
brisk
spurer
on.
This
order
of
your
Lordship
has
deprived
me
of
the
Happiness
of
corresponding
with
your
Lordship
which
makes
me
extremely
unhappy.
It
seems
your
Lordship
is
tired
of
me,
nor
can
I
go
on
rightly
when
I
reflect
suspiciously
thereupon.
I
am
now
realy
for
want
of
your
serious
and
good
advice,
concerning
a
distressed
country,
which
I
shall
question,
and
explain
in
as
few
words,
as
my
none
Education
will
permitt,
as
follows.
1.
In
what
manner
can
be
a
country
maintained,
and
depended
against
a
warlike
nation.
2.
How
is
to
raise
money
of
such
country
which
is
totally
rained
nor
has
any
sort
of
Revenue.
3.
What
method
he
is
to
take
with
the
people
of
such
Country
to
reason
with
and
bring
them
to
Industry
who
are
as
obstinate
as
Bares.
These
are
the
obstacles
before
me,
if
I
should
be
the
help
of
God
overcome
all,
will
your
Lordship
then
think
me
worthy
of
your
friendship,
or
say
that
any
body
else
could
do
the
same?
I
have
wrote
everything
concerning
my
present
situation
to
Madam
Montagu,
she
will
acquaint
you,
at
your
Leisure
or
when
your
Lordship
pleases.
But
at
present
I
have
nothing
else
to
say
but
beg
your
Lordships
permission
to
subscribe
myself
my
Lord
your
Lordships
Most
obed
t.
humble
servant
EMIN.
St.
Petersburgh,
the
14th
January
1762
and
30th.
(
On
the
back
of
the
letter.
)
To
Lord
Lyttelton.