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THE FOOL OF QUALITY 








THE FOOL OF QUALITY 


LIBRARY OF EARLY NOVELISTS. 
Evirep sy E. A. BAKER, M.A 


1. Life and Opinions of John Bunele, Esquire. By Tuomas 
Amony ("The English Rabelais’) 


2. Adventures of Doa Sylvio de Rosalva. By C, M, Wrrann, 
3 The Heptameron of the Queen of Navarre. Translated by 


ARTHUR MACHEN. The Complete Text, with Verse Translations 
of the Verses. 


4 Boccaccio’s Decameron. The Complete Text; translated by 
J. M. Rroo, M,A.5 with J. Appinaton Sronv’s Zisay on 
Boccaccio as an Introduction. 800 pp. 


5. Novels and Novelettes. (Oroonoko: or, The Royal Slave; The 
Fair Jilt; The Nun, ete.) By Mrs. APHRA BEKN. 


6. Geata Romanorum : Entertaining Stories invented by the Monks 
as n Fireside Recreation, whence the most celebrated of our own 
Poets and others have extracted their Plots, Translated, with 
Introduction and Notes, by Rev. Cuartas Swan, 


7. The Fool of Quality. By Henry Brooke, With Kinestry’s 
Tatroduction, and a comprehensive Life of the Author by E. A. 
Baker, 








THE 


FOOL OF QUALITY 


BY 


HENRY BROOKE 


Wire a Brockaruicat Prerace ny 
CHARLES KINGSLEY 


Ann a xxw Lire or tHe Auritor nv 
E. A. BAKER, M.A. 





LONDON 
GEORGE ROUTLEDGE & SONS, LimiTep 


NkW YORK; & », DUTTON & co 
1906 





INTRODUCTION 
Axy further introduction to an author whom Charles 


eee aed in with so eul ic oem would 
a supererogation, not the tunity 
arisen of ing some additions to the litle that i 


Kis ~ preface 
been retained in the present edition ‘he Fool of 
Gute, for it is now identified with the book ina way 
few prefaces are—at all events, such as are written to 
‘other men’s work. It contains the finest pone 
of the character of Brooke, a portrait that has the 
and enthusiasm, and displays the in- 
lete and fervent sympathy. 
luck to find, in a writer who had pi 
‘® century, a man singularly like himsel: 


ography of Henry Brooke existing — for 
eiere account is, after all, only a ri a is 
excuse needed for trying to fill in the outlines with a 
details, For much of the material to be used 
this 1 am indebted to Mr. Henry Brooke of 
Liverpoel,  eacendsn of Robert, the younger brother of 
insellor Brooke, as lie was familiarly known in his 
day, author of Z#e Foot of Quality. Mr. Brooke has 
ly supplied the appended family tree, which he has 
considerable pains to verify, and has lent for repro: 
the life-like monochrome portrait which is included 
here. He has also put at my disposal, for the purposes of 
this introduction, hdd eroatiog collection of Brooke papers 
and letters. Tam further much indebted for a number of 
references and other notes to Mr. Ernest Palser, who has 
ioe sel Sow study of the life and works of the author. 
Several of the references to the contemporary press are due 
the researches of Mr. J. K. Dowling. 
‘As the reader who casts an eye over this introduction 
‘will doubtless peruse Kingsley’s preface, I will not worry 
v 


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pee dramatists. His first_ schoolmaster was Mr. 
Comerford, who, says Mr. C. H. Wilson, author of 
the anonymous Breokiana, *had traversed the lettered shores 
Cay onthe peepee * imagined that all knowledge 

pursuit of a rational being was treasured up in 

and Sy entre other language being 
‘merely a jargon, uni anything but to carry on the com- 
‘munication of sordid trade, or, the inferiot arts of fe 











the Church, but was sent to London in r724 to read 
Bape reas et, ae 
‘several men of wit mn inclu 
Pope and Lord ron; Swift he had already met at 
Rantavan = The is reported to have said that 
Brooke was a ‘young man of genius, but he was sorry to 
that genius incline to poetry, which of all other pur- 
was the most unprofitable.’ He treated the young 
with great kindness and indulgence, and was repaid 


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Brooke was suddenly recalled to Ireland by the news that 
a beloved aunt was on her death-bed. 

‘He arrived in time to receive the blessing of his relative, 
who delivered to his guardianship her daughter, Catherine 









Meares, a beautiful girl of twelve. The relationship seems 
to have been on his mother’s, the Digbys’, side. e child 
was left with bat small provision ; so’ at 


Brooke took her to Dublin, and put her in a 

His visits were frequent, and the pair of 
once fell in love, Catherine's schoolfellows 
Jong finding out their secret, and vexed her con- 
with their saillery, At length she complained to 


precocious guardian, who proposed an effectual remedy, 


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‘She was furthermore a woman of piety and good sense, 
aril ile eli to a letter of 


i 
of our dear Mr, Noward when the toil and business of the day is over. 
May the God uf love and mercy blow lit in all be underiahes ; may 
Setb « bletalag Wherewcr bo pocw and wheretér be steps, In he tarnet 
prayer of his sincerely affectionate 

CA. Brooke, 


which there is no need to add very much to what Kingsley 
bas said. Though now it merely a historical 
interest, for/it best auifered. the fat of nearly all didactic 
pocery: the work has sterling merits as a summary of the 

thoughts of its time on Nature and the Creator, and 
bears ample testimony to Brooke's depth of scholarship. 
Its thesis x] ee beauty of the —— is the 
Snopes vine order immanent in all creation, 
a ity which 


Mimicked in oar tumbler «train, 
‘Hiustrious, thro the world’s great poem reigns. 





INTRODUCTION ai 





‘The style shows an attempt to graft Milton's syntax on 

Pope's prosody. 
Ole where the mae eri! realms ext 
Bier misty oy Lele weight rae 
‘Win sudden a ese the eloud, 
‘And er the vapour throws a whiealag ihroud : 
Nie sau aver ball’ 
Or when the sable skies, 
Eisply tbe cal 
Coochir 
The Suysal 
Astron tha posed soo indy the ring hai 
Kot niga ti the mist sepels, 


gloomy. 
SGbrtracted drench the omslpatig Ml, 
‘thre’ the porous grit distil’ 
‘ftom ‘town howard cells 
flood impatient swells : 
Whence issaing torrents burat the mourtain side, 
Thence impetuous pour thei headlong tide. 
its ‘central from the wide circurnfluous waves 


fH 





But trips ee with ‘ce pace, 


yy Iabyzinth coauns § 
fh ladigeatlon foams 3 
with nah npr shoots the nee gl 

ihitening silvers in the long 


‘The theology of the poem, like that of 7’ Fool of Quality, 

ly impregnated with the doctrines of the mystical 

i. The oes is the case with another long 

poem, Redemprion. ‘hese poems appear again in the 

Slecoad edition of her father's poetical works made by 

Brooke in 2778. As much of bis poetry as the 

ordinary reader will care to examine will be found in 
Chalmers's British Pocts. 

“Family affairs, perhaps the needs of his children, who 














INTRODUCTION 


xi 
were multi plying rapidly, recalled Brooke to Ireland ; for 
seven or ei he practised in Dublin as a chamber 
coon bt ambition brought him to London 
again in 31336. received a cordial welcome from 
Pope and pticlton, and ‘was introduced by William Pitt, 
afterwards of Chatham, to Frederick, Prince of 
Wales, ‘who es him with great familiarity, and 

him with many clegant and valuable to! 

iendship,’® No doubt his engaging character and 
demeanour, backed by an attractive person, did more 


ments as an author, Brooke was a good French and 
Ttalian scholar, and about this time brought out a transla- 
tion in verse of the first three books of Tasso's Gerusalemme 
Liberata, It was highly praised by Hoole, who stated 
that his own translation of the poem would have been 
rendered unnecessary had Mr. Brooke turned the whole 


lee toa ish. 
has told the story of the production of 
eae Vasa, % play described cone of Brooke's 
evlogists as ‘the foremost production of human powers,’ and 
of the circumstances that led to its author's final return to 
Treland®. There is little reason for doubting that the cause 
of his retirement from the troubled sea of politics in London 
was really the one alleged, namely, his wife’s excessive fears 
lest he should get into trouble through his impassioned 
advocacy of the Prince of Wales. The King had now 
publicly broken with his son, who withdrew from the Court, 
and took the lead of the opposition. Though absent from 
his friends, Brooke still kept up an active correspondence, 
The Prince honoured him with more than one letter, which 
with others from Lord Lyttelton and Chesterfield perished 
ina fire, Soveral letters that passed between him and Ps 
have been preserved poem author of Brockiana. Brool 
says many flattering things to the poet, but in a tone of 
sincerity that is unmistakable, He quotes a conversation 
ae had with a Mr. Spence, who had asserted that 
mas the greatest poct that ever lived, an opinion from 
whlch be dissented: “Told hm to the purpose that Virgil 
pis me equal pleasure, Homer equal warmth, Shakespeare 
greater rapture, and Milton more astonishment, so ungrateful 
+ A gold seal presented to him by the Prince is still extant. 


# According to an old bil Vara first acted In 
Liviaposl, By 8orj'by Minsier Buy, *the ong: Rosch? 





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soil, there was more dogmatism than Christianity, 

however, one of those who valued religion 

jism ; he was never 4 party man, even on 

stirred his feelings most profoundly. 

of that in his political attitude, 

was so fh lent that it annoyed Whigs and 

Protestants and Catholics almost equally. His 

Robert Brooke, and two of the latter’s sons, Terame 

Deena older Hany Brocks, dasrosshot tinoolfy hs 

our Henry Brooke, distinguished himsel is 

fervent Piety Tn his life, compiled by Dr. Isaac d'Olier, 

there is a full account of his spiritual history, and of his 

with the nagtee William de la Fléchére, 

or Fletcher, Vicar of Madeley, the friend of Wesley, and one 

of the most devout and carnest workers in the Methodist 

a ‘This Henry Brooke Junior was himself an active 

ourer in the same field: several hymns and meditations 

by him are inserted in his memoir. The tide of 

lism reached our Henry Brooke, but he was not 

r away by it. A letter written by his daughter 

to her friend Miss Thompson shows how he 
regarded certain of their tencts. 


3 


frat 
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those maters which 


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monarchy, and the possible overthrow 
of establishment, ‘This common enemy,” 
‘he declares, ‘is now at hand. He is our enemy by nature 
Mumetartes pre tic cassqicie vo urea 
i uence t 
eect 


utter subyersion of our State.’ But 
revolution had long passed away, at 
letters were hardly in print before 
collapsed, and the cause of the 
reaction was lost forever, But 
holies 


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Thave already represented to you, in two formes letters, the great 
dangers that and our posterity from 
ara alkene ho 


of the = a woe Hae the gt el 
Ts gel 
Oa ea 
i and r»_ Thave alto shown you how the Charch of 


| makes use of both the other powert to 





INTRODUCTION xvii 


ee te ae ‘The plan of his book is well set 
by the title-page, which runs as follows = Riese ah A 
Commission directed 


is sis of the evidence, proves to 
ee ee ae Sa aad ao) of the ic hostile 
advocate, who confesses himself convinced, that this 


ceurrence never took place on anything like the scale 
in the current accounts. “This he describes as a 


whether ‘the People, properly called the Roman 

‘of Ireland,’ were guilty of the barbarities alleged 

— them in 16h the jury return an answer of not 

* Are the religious principles of Roman Catholics 

consi oo earererg) with the welfare of civil govern- 

ment?’ To this also there is a favourable reply, and the 

a to the demand whether there is any danger to 

3 from the attachment of Irish Catholics to the 

house of Stuart, So ends the Zryat Boast ue the 

Popery Laws themselves are next indicted, and after a 
farther hearing Baron Interest concludes: 


You have demonstrated, in all 
es is Sy aed the Popery Laws, have conduced 
the throne or government of Ireland 5 

Me Ser rgeant himself is of the same opinion. 


a 








aril INTRODUCTION 


forhe peel ep with this L auaion on me 
ia Peck and Credit ty lees oo dekh Loan et the 
of enlarging 


Gantck, the following ges to Brooke, on his 
publication of the Farmer's Letters, which were read with 
much admiration in London : 


thew whose aiteas fecborn genus charms, 
‘Whose’ rustic zeal each patriot warms, 
irmue the glorious task—the pleasing toil ; 
Formake the fields, and till a nobler sil 
Farmer's care ind, 


Tat no tank weeds cormupt, or brambles choke, 

‘And shale he vermin from the Brits ca 

From hotthera blasts protect the vernal bloom, 
ase ook pears fs the wee o Rotes 


Ria veap Une barrel ol tral ne? 


Brooke was not seduced by this invitation to forsake his 
retirement. His satirical opera, Jack the GiantQueller, the 
Het oe ai hast poetical works, which appeared two years 

after the Farmer's Letters, did not, as Kingsley supposes, 
See te nislancn ok the conser. After being once acted. 
it met the fate of Gusavus Vasa, and was 
gonlliiet nade under an act passed by Walpole in 1736, on 
score of its political allusions, Brooke published the 
songs contained in it, and issued a pamphlet, written in 
si ll ce fakin Good, 


Sie ery corruption ; ; ‘yet,’ an admirer says, ‘so. ee 
so versatile, and we may add so anomalous, was the man’s 
ena a be that be ans up all with a peroration descriptive of 
of Redemption, so eloquent and orthodox, 

that a eres might have read it for its spiritual beauty, 
a Calvin endorsed it for its truth, and an Edward Irvin, 
ppenehadiih foe eg it for its gracefulness and originality.’ One o} 
Phe ama in this opera was such a favourite 
readers and hearers that it may as well be 


INTRODUCTION xix 
[as & spe of his verses. It is founded on the 
Be fis oo young poe ce 


fe, Berrvas ba wr Geer, 29 20 weet, 


oe ty ceue re Ces 


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‘ance, end to sport on the plain, 


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le life, uit heady h 
Geert ersten: pat or Gain ws ee 
did not improve the song by changing G: 
Be peetat ins naseen, Ths, Wc moauy So ot the 
fae composed for one of the melodies native to 
Scotland, and familiar to Brooke’s audience, 
to uber no more’. 


















“One Sunday, while the congregation were 
d in which he lived, they waited a 
Brie ie ene, Anco 
not. to come that day, they 

Had detained” hin, sok beloy fet to depart 








= INTRODUCTION 


en! without their errand, ‘ith one accord, requested 
Fp ese seep al eapeaha Be cae 


In the midst of his discourse the clergyman entered and 
found his whole cor ion in tears. He entreated Mr. 
Brooke to proceed ; but this he modestly refused; and the 
other as modesty declared, that after the testimony of 
bapa abilities, which he perceived in the moist eyes of 
all present, he would think it presumption and folly to hazard 
anything of his own. Accordingly, the concluding prayers 
alone were said, and the congregation dismissed for the 
day.’ 

In 1749 Brooke was solicited by a large body of the 
electors of Dublin to stand for that city at the peace 
election, but he declined the honour, ‘because of some of 
the most eminent merchants having published a declaration 
in favour of another man, who,’ he modestly says, ‘to the 
advantages of being a free citizen and excelling trader, he 
adds an acknowledged superiority in every other merit.’ He 
was probably of too Quixotic a disposition to succeed in 
parliamentary life. His various excursions into politics dis~ 
pleased every party; his tracts on the Irish Catholics, in 
spite of the praise they won Erte literary merits, had no 
practical effect whatever. It has been well said of him that 

he saw the peaks of virtue in enthusiastic lights, and if he 

conceived that he was sailing on the current of truth, his 
course then became reckless, and he would scorn the rudder 
while he hoisted every sail to drive with the breeze or catch 
the blast. He had a thorough knowledge of the world in 
theory, and saw into character with a piercing eye ; but he 
was simple and artless in his practical conduct, and too 
chivalrous for common life.’ same writer records a 
pleasant trait in his character. ‘A clever pamphlet was 

lished against him full of personalities, and just after he 

finished its perusal a friend came in and inquired how 
‘he had liked it. Brooke answered, “ W! T laughed at 
its wit, and smiled at its malice.”’ Many 8 other 
evidences are on record of his alert sympathy with the ji 
and sorrows of his friends ; he was the kindest of landl 
though often imposed upon, and entered into the troubles of 
pit Ey ad on his estate with a degree of sympathy almost 
mor 











ENTRODUCTION xxi 


After the death of his father in r745, he lived for some 
ten ee old House of Rantavan with his brother. 





Henry Brooke devoted himself to the education 

is children, His daughter Charlotte bears witness to 
the Soealic aaa with which he superintended her studies. 
But his open-handedness 


County Kildare, 
Robert had already, im 1758, migrated to Osberstown, near 


Canal. Henry lived by his pen and the profits of his govern- 
ment appointment, which brought him in about four hundred 
‘a year, and Robert added to his income by the sale of his 


by 
about 1779 to the nei thood of Rantavan, and buildi 
us ret ing 


life, agriculture was his raling passion ; he not only ploughed 
and planted, and wasted “lags tecia on NSpRRICeR 
schemes, but he wrote many able essays on the subject, 


more precious than a vein of gold,’ a correspondent writes 
in Brookiana. *1 believe he had all the writings of Hesiod, 
Aratus, Eratosthenes, Cato, Varro, and even 
jaginian, by rote.’ 
iterary ambitions, projecting several 
schemes that came to nothing. In 1763 he had become 
the editor of the 's Journal. A pi ctus for a 
of Ireland from the earliest times eyes issued, 


ib 


some years ago, but the project fell through, 

having ariven as to the use of certain documents 
and other materials on which he had counted. Many of 
his productions were in the last degree fugitive. A number 
‘were published anonymously, for he was very careless in 
uch matters. Among these was a series of translations from 
the French of Comtc de Caylus, issued in two volumes in 


Rirerreceey pan rb tn = wet 





INTRODUCTION 


under the te A New System of Fairery 43 or, A 
sg aoe entirely mew containing’ ( 
was matali sed ine ‘ce days ‘even of works written 
ete useful lessons and moral sentiments.’ 


Tia be must be 


are readable now, with the exce bd] 
rality, He was sixty years old when this 
ear, and by the time the last volume was 


3, and he never recovered from the blow. 

for @ length of time, we are told, ‘to a state 

aint total imbecility.” ‘The powers of his mind were 

iy his genius flashed only by fits.’ Another 

pal ‘wliet Grenville, was a product of this period. An 

extract ftom it ie as just Botibied airackil in Whitehall 

of 25th December, 1773, the subject being, 

‘True ye.” It was translated into German the following 

binge The following notes from contemporary newspapers 
interesting : 

At Drury Lane—Mr. Sheridan, we hear, is toappear {n the character 


of the Hart of Ease, in the tragedy of that name, writen by Mr. 
Brooke, the author of Gurlavwr Vasa, and never yet in 








sit is Royal in Drury Lane, by 
say Hooke, Fath CF Cassar Pater axnd January, 1768 
wen forme ones 
on 7h Frnt 

‘Dublin, sth September, Crow Street Theatre —Mr. Brooke has 
written a Farce in which Mr. Bas And Mrs: Dancer ae t perform. — 
Waitehall Bvewing Part, Sth Octo) 

Dublin, tst November-—We are to fave ‘two new pieces brought out 
the theatre this season, wean get actors Pe 
by Mr. Brooke, suthor ‘Of Gusiagas Vasa,— Whitehall 

November, 1765. 


Brooke died at Dublin on the roth October, 1783. 

*He roe os ys Miss Brooke, ‘as he lived—a Christian, 
With the edited of a lamb, and the fortitude of a hero, 
he supported the tedious infirmities of age, the languors of 
and the paing of dissolution ; and his death, like 

is life, was instructive.’ ‘My father was the best of men, 
‘Yet he did not die rejoicing. He died resigned, meek, 
hunible, It is the Lord, let him do what seemeth him 
good." He was buried in his father’s old churchyard at 








INTRODUOTION sali 


Mollagh'. In 1852, ‘B’ (the Rey. Richard Sinclair Brooke, 
father e Ror topford Brooke) who wrote the memoir 
Sea ithe same periodical bow be met with very 
old wrinkled woman, by name Judith Gallaspis, who 
pa 8 the. beeen where Henry Brooke was 
; * seven! as a 
colleen, wont with the whole meetpecang iis Eaeet 
the pest camieg Sexy Dublin.’ ‘And she told of the 
tombstone and which had been erected, but now 


stooped over the sod, and with her long staff, as with a 
diviner's rod, she traced the lines, and accurately squared 
the se where close ander the south-western wall of the 


singularly combined the highest intellect with the humblest 
graces of a ‘istion. Here indeed is no tomb or 
monumental marble ; but in the absence of all such decay- 
able matter, God's sun shines perennially on the spot, and 
every evening its di ling beams will visit the ruin, 
bane Bae tenes Hight seat 08 Es Rood casts 
grave, bathing the green sod in glory,’ ave quot 

for the sake of the reverent feeling that it shows for 
fhe ‘of Brooke. Such a feeling was by no means con- 
fined to his own relatives. Among the lines written to his 
tmemory may be quoted those by the honest blacksmith at 
Longfield, who wrote them the moment he heard of his 
master’s death = 


‘A tongue in Greek snd Latin akill'd s 


‘And trightac’d up theis gloomy haunts 
An eye that wink'd at others’ % 
‘And errs close shut to noise and railings. 


yout 
‘The paths that lead to praise and truth, 


ft fs enrlons that on the register of St. Michan’s Church, Dubtin, 
appears this ehlry: $1783, Ociober 22. H. Brooks,’ It may be a 
coincidence, the entry way to Fol rome ity in 


or peck 
(Gemaction with Femoving thé body to County Caran. 


é| 


aly ayrropvarion 


all extremities a friend, 
Siow, Sow to om, nd 
Tn all his acts sincere'and just, 
‘Then drop a tear upon his duxt. 


Of the two best portraits of Brooke one is repro- 
a small monochrome Pegeristesas bearing 
the ini ‘From a picture in possession of W. 
wate x Gray's Pale Arie Tale ( and published, 
x82r. Engravi ition, Fvol of Quatity; Henry 
Brooke) tlt: Brooke by Thurston." This" was those by 
Charlotte Brooke as the portrait to illustrate her father's 
works, which would probably mean it was the better of 
the two best known portraits An engraving of it was 
ee in London by E, & S, Harding, on July 16, 
From the original picture in the collection of 
Ne Harding Pall Mall; Brooke pinxt.; Clamp sculj 
trait alluded to is the large oil-painting 
eae The Farmer, now in Mr. Henry Brooke's posses- 
sion. It was painted by T. Lewis, a London painter, 
and scene-decorator to Thomas Sheridan, who, on a visit 
to Dr. Thomas Sheridan at Quilea, painted Sheridan's 
‘Painted Parlour.’ This large oi-painting was engraved in 
Ireland by Andrew Miller, in 1756, with the title of 
The Farmer, and was reproduced again in J. C. Smith's 
British Messotint Engravers, 1884. The Dublin Untver- 
sity Magazine for 1852 has a delicate etching, full length, 
pen this painting, oe es edition ie Te : rf 
ity, 1859, has a half- length engra’ ; 
Arm} ¥ ey the same parae ae sackanie word- 
portrait of Brooke is preserved in Brookiana. It is 
contained in a letter describing a visit to Longfield. ‘To 
tell you the truth, I was charmed with the manner in which 
he received me. I was scarce half-an-hour in conversation 
with him, when I found I could trace him in all his 
writings. He was dressed in a long blue cloak, with a wig 
‘hat fell down his caer babes man, as neat a8 wax 
work, with an oval face, ruddy com jplexion, and |; eyes, 
full of fire. In short, he is like a pene mellowed by time. 
Mrs. Brooke is in a very ill-state of health; she is quite 
emaciated, and so feeble that she can cael walk across 
the room. I never saw so affectionate a husband, and so 
tender a father, in my life. Out of two-and-twenty children 
there are only two alive, a son and a daughter, Arthur and 
Charlotte. I did not see the eon ; the daughter inherits a 











dren only two survived him— 
brave soldier, who served in Canada, and after- 
India, where he diced, after attaining the rank of 


in; and eres ie Trish scholar. She was an 
arly pioneer of the Celtic movement, anticipating the 


‘Of his twenty-two chil 


Q 
AE 

at 
ip iH 

age 
lun 
ie 
eizée 
Bes 
fogs g 
istae 
geist 
ae 


cousin Henry Brooke, was 
ET. Co's serie oF Fort St. ye, Madras, 
indent of Warren Hasty Two 
eee ‘out to the East under ays 
was killed in action; Robert, his elder brother, 
to high military rank, and amassed a large fortune. 
a founded an industrial vill sin Kildare for she paspows 
cotton-spinning, calling it rous; and was able to 
assist his uncle by redeeming the mortgage on the Cavan 
LAr He was afterwards Governor of St. Helena. 
family tree which Mr. Henty Brooke bas kindly drawn 

up Warde id interesting particulars a3 to other members 


ly. 
Th the memoirs of Henry Brooke Junior, an anecdote is 
which concerns the origin of the present book. He 
nd his uncle, the bes used frequently to ride together 
from Killibegs to Dublin, and the incident took place 


Shei 
Hpt 
aise 
Be 
23 

i 

i 

z 


i 
= 


i 





xxi INTRODUCTION 

during one of these rides. ‘My uncle desired me,' he 

tele, to Keep silence il had is min sek 
on a considerable time without aj 

td eri eo 


intone of er ee imagination, and with that poe 
of ate of which he was 90 complete a master, a story 


40 oe ee 0 4 seed of $0 » rich a mental harvest, 
as coon as he alighted from his horse, he retired to a room, 
and while the impression was vivid and the recollection 
epee, he providently committed the whole story to 
and laid by the manuscript ately ‘The termina- 
the ride concluded the story for time, and no 
father notice was Laken, 
* About twelve months after, one day that Mr. Brooke and 
his uncle were alone together, he thus accosted his nephew; 
jarry, don't you remember when you and I were riding 
ie Killibegs to Dublin nearly a year ago, how I told you 
‘one of the prettiest stories you ever heard in your lie?” 
“1 do indeed, sir.” “It is entirely gone from me; I have 
not the faintest trace in my mind of the particulars; I 
shall neyer be able to collect them again: 1 have only 
the general recollection of its being very 
HOW Pid ould ba if 1 tad Wes wrilen f done 
T am sure it would make a very pretty book, and be 
Ee read. Oh, my Harry, what would I now give 


1 

«Mr, Brooke then sre out of the room, and going to 

escritoite took out his manuscript, poms rey every 
particular of the story as related by his uncle with 
utmost raciness, ioe immediately aed and handed 
him the paper. dyes and delight of the uncle may 
be easier Ba th than He embraced his dear 
neabey, and ale som with rapture the overflowings of a 
‘grateful ICobrathor Brouke now begin (0 ris tie 








iyTRODUCTION xxvii 


which he fanci pete, 38 The tae of Quaily 
bah sixty years ni i, and 
ke et ene ee 
Brooke did not return from Hod Park to ney Cavan 
until 1769-70 (new or wrod style), the work must have been 
written ee for the Erase volume 

1 are 

oars vi ut ot roth and ath Api 
6 relates how John Wesley 
The of , with certain excisions, ae the 
author's lil under the title of Zhe History 


lifetime, of Henry, 

Earl of Moreland. He reduped the bulk by a leat ong 
Pass what he calls Bag ie aa al 
ween the author and his friend, as well as divers 
incidents ‘that would little entertainment to men of 
ling’, £4 omitted * part of the Mystic 

, 28 it is more philosophical Pit Scriptural,” 

We preface is interesting for its candour; the 
ng are very free, but the praise is obviously sincere, 

and fall of discernment. It is worth while quoting a letter 
written by Wesley to Henry Brooke Junior from Hull, 
Sth vr Pte Te a a RIC A} 


Dax Hassy,—When I road over. in Ireland 7% Row of Quality 
Ts Pomoc lepi nl pple wt gn 
to answer 


and that it was well 
T observed a week of two rs fees concer Juliet Me. Vet 
‘termed io me to be 4 few pavages both in the one and in the 
Gar WHICh tight Be listed fore beter T do not mean so much 
with regard to the sentiments, which ase ei ‘very just, as with 
eerd tri ie strectnva of the story, which sceaed’ bua and there to 
‘pot quite clear. I had at Gist a thought of writing to Mr. Brooke 
I did not know whether I might take the ‘ow 
author will thank you for imaginin are able to coreect their 
works, =p en ay erp ik it would be of any use, f 


Gatbesrendig to th hve work and vend hin ty 


‘te they occur. 


iti 
ad 


ago, a well-known writer stated in an article 
of Quality, that Wesley coolly appropriated 
cutting out what did not meet with his approval, 
the impudence and dishonesty to publish it 
mutilated, without the author's consent, and in his 

under a slightly altered title... and thus 

this book has been passed off as a ‘compotition 


E28 
Ee 





xxvii ixrropvarion 


of the great head and founder of Methodism.’ This, as 
instantly pointed out by correspondents, is not quite 


He (Heary Brooke Senior) is dlecply semble of your very kind 
offer and most cordially embraces it. He has desired me to express the 
warmth of his gratitude in the 6 terms, and says he most cheers 
{uly yields the volumes you mention to your Jaigments to 





precios that i€ may be too great an intrusion upon it, unless made a 
‘work of leisure and opportunity. Yet, as you have proffered it, he will 
not give up the privileges but hope leisure may be found for s0 friendly 
sand generous a work}, 


The first two volumes of Zhe Foo! of Quality were quickly 
sold out, and a second edition was called for in 1767, ‘The 
publisher was W. Johnson, of Ludgate Street. Wesley's 
version also went through a large number of editions, and 
was indeed the form in which the book was best known, 
until the two-volume edition appeared in 1859 with 
Kingsley's preface. The book is as puzzling to describe 
as, say, The Anatomy of Melancholy, ot The Doctor. It is 
not only a novel, but also a commonplace book, contain- 
ing the author's thoughts on ethics and social economy, 
pales, religion, sesthetics, and indeed as many multifarious: 
topics as those dealt with in the digressions of La Mowvelle 

(doise itself, Such a theme as the youth and education 
of an ideal nobleman gives ample opportunity for wide 
meanderin, 

Kingsley praise is enthusiastic, but not undiscriminating. 
His appreciation of Henry Brooke is eminently just and 
fair. In spite of numerous defects as a work of art, The 
Fool of Quality is, indeed, a brave book, and an eloquent 
book, filled with a noble inspiration that may well kindle 
warmer feelings of love and respect for its author than 
hundreds of more faultless works will ever attain. On the 
other hand, Brooke's editor was just as right in criticising 


1Ttis only fair to state that Brooke himself was doting at the time, 

aephew pracically tol the mater into his own bands ia 
ranting the permission, Wesley, also, laid himself open to criticism by 
‘ot mentioning the autbor either on vbe title-page or in his own prefnce, 





his incoherence, his exaggeration, and 
bag ee the san rate oh tek at“ 
is in excess, the hero's perfections most of all. 

For prigs Brooke had no love ; but with the usual ill Juck 
ere eee tee emesis Da) 8. reside Ager SAS 
‘not i mi 

ee eee ee 
the lambs as snow-white, as in the works of any melo- 
dramatist of our own sentimental fiction; although in this 
particular respect the book is infinitely superior to the 
eg ie eae ea oe alata Dt 

* fiction ‘aria Edgeworth, 

Taeranas eno ‘Hany's boyhood and his deeds 
of charity are extravagantly overdone ; so are the calamities 
of the blameless unfortunates, and the marvellous turns of 


pean arc carried to preposterous lengths. Onc 
bad ofttimes as if the victims of ingenious wallaiape by 
stupidity, deserved ey got; and that 

Srdclate hanes wa his friends a pedeal better 
if were a. little less demonstrative in their emotions, a 
tittle less effusive in their love of rectitude. But allowance 
must be made both for the author's strong and fervent 
for the influence of the school to which as a 


5 that supreme over 


century. Mackenzic imitated Sterne, Robert Bage took 
; Mrs. Inchbald, Mrs. Radcliffe, 
Maria Regina Roche, and a number of writers who are 
now almost entirely forgotten, produced novel after novel 
im the manner taught in the school of sensibility, There 
was, as Kingsley observes about Henry Brooke, and might 
have said about a score of other novelists, something rather 
Satiig tty cpposst to Unglsh palogns. Brook 

i to English phlegm, Brooke's 
‘sentimentality, however, is at any rate, not of the morbid 
kind. Ik is the generous excess of the man’s temperament, 
‘the natural ebullition of feeling, that makes him enter with 
‘the same gusto into the dare-devil feats of Ned and Harry's 
boyhood, as into the miraculous virtues of their precocious 


There is another point that has not been noticed much 


| 


by Brooke's critics, Zhe Foo! of Quatity was the first or one | 


belongs, if he belong to any, Sterne and | 
third quarter of the eighteenth | 





INTRODUCTION 


ie 
gis 
Hi 


Ey 
Zas 
ue 

+4 





z 


most fascinating in the whi 

social and ethical ideas the influence of Rousseau is 

ibly to be traced, but most of all in those on education. 
upbringing by his uncle, the natural mode of 

education, whi rings out the child’s inborn tendencies 

powers, is contrasted with the false and artificial 

methods to which ‘Lord Dickie’ falls a victim in the 


atl 


of The Fool of Qualiy are truly in the grand style. Stary, 

thought are, in many pas: wrought into 
a harmony, and inspired with an admirable wisdom, 
@ genuine humour, and a noble ardour of feeling that makes 
‘the reader's heart with responsive sion. 

Among passages that may be singled out as equally fine 
in manner and in matter, are such things as the fable of the 
‘Three Trouts, and the old story retold of Damon aud 

j Brooke's skill in rehandling an old and hackneyed 

and endowing it with a new freshness and power, of 

itself marks him out asa writer, In his new version of the 

jet Eacitas, he catches something of the poctic spirit 

of the Biblical writers, as well as the magnificence of diction 
and the stately rhythm of their English translators. 


Ti he cries was, it is war; the banners of blood are let loose to the 
wind, and the sound of the clarion kindles all men to battle. Ris 








INreoDucTion = 


i 
: 


jemselves in harness, and range in territie array 5 and hie 
begin to neigh and tear up' the ground, and his chariots to roll 
disnt thunders, They move and cover the earth wide as the eye 


i 


Bae 


dost the fruits of the field, and the labours of the 
javirious ; houses, vineyurds and standing corn the villages and 
on every side. 


gem of the book (or is it only the piece that I 
) ig the story from Froissart of the surrender 
» and Queen Philippa's intercession for the 
burghers; let me quote a few sentences therefrom : 


w Bey 
Fil 
2 


i 


thes 
Of these to your majesty. They are self-delivered, self-devoted, and 
come ti offer up their inestimable heals ax an ample equivalent for the 
ransom of thousands, 


That is the right epic note. The author himself 
anticipates the objections of those who think we may have 
too much even of a good book. ‘Sir,’ he says, ‘a book 
may be compared to the life of your neighbour. If it be 
en it cannot last too long; if bad, you cannot get rid of 

too 


early.’ 
ERNEST A. BAKER. 

















BIBLIOGRAPHY OF HENRY BROOKE 


Universal Beauty; a philosophical poem in six books. 1735. 

A Translation of the first three books of Tasso. 1737. 

Gustavus Vasa: the Deliverer of his country; a tmgedy, 
Intended to have been acted at Drury Lane. 1739. 

Constantia ; or, the Man of Law's Tale (in Ogle's Canterbury 
Tales Modernised), 741. 

Prospectus of a work to be entitled, Ogygian Tales; or a 
curious collection of Irish Fables, Ailegeries and Histories, 
from the relations of Fintane the Aged, for the entertain- 
ment of Cathal Crove Darg, during that Prince's abode in 
the Island of O’Brazil. 1743. 

Fables for the Female Sex, by Edward Moore (author of The 
Gnmoster), and Henry Brooke. 1744. 

‘The Earl of Westmoreland: a tragedy. 1745. 

The Farmer's Letters to the Protestants of Ireland. 1746. 

The Last Speech of John Good, vulgarly called Jack the Glant- 
Queller. 1748. 

New Fables. 1749. 

i Letter from the Farmer to the Freemen of 
Dublin. 1749. 

A New System of Fairery ; Collection of Fairy Tales. 
Entirely new ; translated from the French; 2 vols. 1750. 

Redemption; a poem. 1750. 

‘A Description of the College Green Club, by H. B.? 1753. 

‘The Spirit of Party. 1754. 

‘The Interests of Ireland considered. 1759. 

‘The Earl of Essex; a new tragedy, as it is now acting at the 
Theatre Royal in Drury Lane. 176 

‘The Tryal of the Roman Catholics, 1761. 

‘A proposal for the restoration of public wealth and credit by 
means of a loan from the Roman Catholics of Ireland in 
consideration of enlarging their privileges. ¢. 1762. 

The eyemmen’s Journal (edited by Henry Brooke), Dublin. 
' 








xxiii a 


rely BIBLIOGRAPHY OF HENRY BROOKE 


The Foot a aes a Vol. [.; Dublin, Printed for the author 
jaing,’ in Dame Street, facing 
Soros Sts. “Wes 


Printed for W. Johnston. 1766, 
» 1768. 
” 1769. 


” i 


aT. 1767. 
== New efttion, real altered and improved. 5 vols, 
London: Edward Johnston. 1777. 

SS earth 5 vols. London : Edward Johnston. 1782. 

— Another Dublin, 17 

[= Anether calilon; VoL, Londen) 188. 

— Vol. 11. London. 1809. 

— Edition in 4 vols. Same date. 

—— Constable's edition. 1852. 

Henry, Earl of Moreland. An edition of The Fool of Quality, 
edited, with retrenchments, by John Wesley. 1781. 

Second edition. 1793. 

Julict Grenville, 1773. 

Juliet Grenville ; oder, die Geschichte des menschlichen 
Herrens. Leipeiy. 1774 

A Collection of the Pieces formerly. publiched by Henry Brooke, 
‘Esq, to which are added several Plays and Poems; now 
first printed, 4 vols. London. ih 

Another edition with large omissions. 4 vols. Dublin. 1792, 

¢ two editions were unauthorised and defective. 
ae a Reprobate; being the Life of David 

ida rma = 

= Pariphirasad ee Phillips. 1822. 

‘The Poetical Works of Henry Brooke. Charlotte Brooke's 
edition. 1792, 

Chalmers, Alexander. Works of the English Poets. Vol, XVII, 
Henry Broa ete. 1810. 


Benignity ; ays of Happiness. Selected from the 
ugly) atheny Brooke. 1818. 


A Guide to the Stars; being an easy method of knowing the 
telative position ofall the principal fixed stars, 1820. 


Uohnson, Samuel.] A Compleat Vindication of the Licensers 
‘of the Stage from the malicious aspersions of Mr. Brooke, 
by an Impartial Hand. 1739. 

Brookiana. Anecdotes of Henry Brooke. 2 vols. London. 1804. 

Mr. Morton's Zorinské and Henry Brooke’s Gustevus Vesa 
compared. 1795. 

AChamberlaine was faiher of Mrs Frances Sheridan, mother of 
Richard Brinsley, 























MEMORABILIA BROOKEANA 


Beauty, 1 

Hic ae a0 
corruption, 300-1. 

= rommiaaa 


cine 263 
ead of, 324-34. 


omnipresence of, 395. 
Christianity, ae 


Commerce, 352-6. 
Court, The, 305. 
Critics, 68-9. 
Damon and Pythias, 31-3. 
Debtors and a 224-7. 


Don Quixote, the rencest hero 
of modern times, 44-5. 


Education, Classical, 73-5. 
» | Weal, 127. 


em! iy es 


ee A, 137-9, 157-62. 

Ghosts, 17 

God ie'his Works 319-20. 

God's ‘Anger, 

Stic cia oll mes, 

and evil, Difference be- 
260-1, 


tween, 
Goodness, 367-9. 
Grief, Kinds of, 398-9. 


Heredity, 1426, 


roes defined, ete, 43-5- 
id 350 


Indo 35 for debt, 224-7. 
aeaen: 351-3) Fi 


Talaad pad sett, 356. 
King, The, 273-6, 


Law and lawyers, 1 

Liberty, Civic, pr 4 ia 

Lion and dog, Story of the, 
318-9, 

Léndan, 309. 

Lycurgus, the greatest hero of 
antiquity, 43-4- 


Magdalene House, 323, 
Man, 258. 

Masqueraders, 312: 
Money : its obligations, 346. 
Music, 309. 


Parliament, 281-4. 
Physiognamy, 128, 133. 


Self, 261, 399. 

Self-love, etc., 31-40. 

2 iM, 330-1. 

Society, 259-03. 

‘States likened to men, 2$7. 


‘Three Silver Trouts, Story of 
the, 





Tyrants, 253-99. 


Wine, King, Woman, 120-3, 
Woman, 119-23 


oxy 








pe, Wika = of 
of Rantavan, 5 
Scholar of T.C.D., Bi 
Rector of Mullagh, 
c 


b. 1669, 
a. xyeh Now? 1745. 





Dicey, Caraumnine, da 
feares, of the] 


b, 1697, Author of 
MAAT-CD,) 1723, “Noo! of Quaity,® | Mearscourt fami 
3c. 


Hexny, 


b. 170; 





1783. | 


i 
*Huwey, 





RLOTTR, 
Authareus of Artist, 
“ Reliques of and friend of | 
a oct." ac, Wesleyand lett 
lk fats, 1793 » Nova, 17.38, : 
a. 6th Oct., i 


*Wreuiam Hew 





i 


‘* Dictionary of National Mogeaphy. 
; EXT] 


OF DROMAVANA, AN 








PREFACE 


Hai 


a 


ianibe! ii 


> only 


ici ua 


ined 


rocond 


child of twenty-two—clinging to him, and yet supporting him, as 
ivy the moullering wall. § 
“remembering nothing of her father, 

life, unimpaire’ by the distractions of pain, and unshaken amid tho 


virtner and feelings which shone forth to the last moment of his 


ith 


ily 


‘His inner 


pea ond all thot is known of his outer lifo 


But with the exception of 
Ve ened into one short articlo in the Dublin University 


of 1787, in tho ambitions style of those 
lifo, of the man. One longs, bat 
eerap of dinry, private moditation, 

one who had seen, read, and above all 
az 


ith perfect truth. Yet neither he, nor any 
om T am acquainted, give any details of 


il 80 variously. 
8, nothing of tho kind soems to exist. 


wit 
with 
‘the 
for 
from 
February, 18%, full of good writing and of good 








i Flay § Pee USEC ery etl Sed 
iz i sHiety ls; a RE inary 
: a Peeing 
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uae Hen ai aseetgit tar? LS Le e33 
a Pai nuh sitesi iipaisieed 
HEHE HErs ea rH HSE Fee PE 
i ie A = i SHU Eater te 
HT ibe eee ret era 
E22 oe2eh grag fet y lez * es 
Haid HHH tH 








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eer A MEL 
wi | aH este FTE re 
a Seb eeahe2,32584 Sane lagees seas: 
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beets ean aa th 
: 34 a3 s : =e 2 
PET 





a PREFACE. 
ta, something of the charcter and fortancs of thik great Trish 


‘He was born in 1708, in the hous» of Rantevan, county Cavan, 


‘His father was a wealthy and ; his mother a Dighy, 
e woman of senso and of good family, of whom Swift at 
Rantavan on his way to Sheridan at ‘was eaid to stand moro 
in awe than of moet country ladies, 


poetry and love-making (unfortunate) eide Brookiana; who wns 
Oe ae fntended ‘that the child shoaid act eorse 


ircoly of ain, ws wire And no doubt Henry Brooke was a 
child, At eight years old a fellow scholar him 
eats bs te moo, which books ff with the nn kA 


Ah, whiy doth Phexbe lore wo sino by sight?” 
Under which Henry wrote at once :— 
“Because the vex looks best by candiclight* 


fart enough, comsdering his year, and the fusion ofthe timo} 
and afterwards, when 


Necnctlaesiriogirat ingle lene wer, “There are 
three of them in Brookiuna, with a theme or two, full of grace 
and firs. 


‘While he was at college, Swift prophcsioit wonders of him—only 
“regretting that his talent pointed towards poetry, which of 


“never wskod his opinion of any matter which waa beyond hia 
power, or which might ombarmass him.” ‘Tho artloas vivacity 
- swoetvess of the lad seems to have softened even that crac! 
Tt uttorly captivated, in the next fow year, men of equal 

nd of more humanity. When ho went to study law in 
London, in 1724, he bocamo at oned the pet of Pops and Lyttleton ; 
and one of tho fow really important things in Brooklana are a 
fow Inttors selected from a correspondence between Brooke and 
Pope, which Insted for many years. Whero are these letters now? 
Would that the Editor had given them all, even though, to make 
room for them, he had consigned to obscurity a dozen of Trish 
worthies, Brooke, In one of them written in 1739, is very solieitons 
about Popo's religions tenets, having heart it insinuated that he 
“had too much wit to be a tnan of roligion, and too much rofino~ 
ment to be that trifling thing called a Christian: which Popo 
answers ‘tisfactorily enough, sending him a “vindteation of tha 
‘Exsay on Man from the sspersions nnd mistakes of Mr, Crousaz;” 








ai 
Tee ut ie(iyye 4 
gute Hee HeeuUlp 
, Hae ah dee ies ili 
eg fae i POMEL Tf 
Bali Pad aes iiujautvalle 
alain tai ecaaylts Hi Hitt a 
j gills. ai He iia Atel 
oe iia head 
is ATE nee 
at 335 Hina 
if ts sft hie i 


SH RT ih Hn 
iflaas 


til PREPAOB. 

has been as yot the parent of all true freedom, and will be so 
to the ond of time, to judge from the success of tho Transatlantic 
attempt at liberty without loyalty. It is cary to boast of freedom 
tnd independence; bat there are those who would question (as 
Heary Brooke would have done) whether there was not as much 
manly fndepenience in the heart of the Englishman who kneels 
ani trembles, ho knows not why, before a certain Indy in 
St. James's Palace, as in the heart of the Yankee lad who bonsta 
‘that he is “as good as the President.” So, at least, thought Henry 
Brooke. He had an intense capacity for worship. All his life he 
delighted to look up to beings bettor than himeelf, and, throug 
‘them, to Gord, a+ tho sum and substance of all their goodness: and 
not in spite of that, but because of text, he was, in the very best 
sonse of tho word, a Liboral. Aguinst all tyranny, ernelty, and 
wrong: against the chicanorics of the law and the chicanorioa of 
politicians, his yoice was always lond and earnest. He hold 
political opinions which are now held—or, ut Ioast, acted on—by 
every rational Englishman, whether Whig or Tory, but which 
woro then considered destructive, immoral; and he 
suffere! for his opinions, in fame and in pocket, ans held them still. 
Never man lived a more original. self-determined, independent 


life; but he knew how to give honour where honour was due, 
in Lonion he stutiod law, ant enjoyo! such society ax Popo, 


of a good old Westmeath house He put her, wisely enongh, t0 
Hourding-school in Dublin: and within two year not quite #0 
‘wisely, married her secrotly. Yet, noither tho heavens nor his 


people not holding the tenets of Malthas—eonld not find it in thelr 
hoarts to scold so protty a pair of turtles, and simply re-married 
‘thom, and loft them to reap the awfal fraits of their own folly in 
‘the form of & child per year, On which matter, doubtless, much 
‘anwiaom has been, and will ba, talked in commonplaces which 
every one can supply for himself, Hut it is worth while to clear 
one's mint of cant, if it be only to jwike Henry Brooke fairly for 
five minutes, amd to lixentongls from each other some of the many 
‘unsound objections which, as wal, are rayposed to make one sound 
ono, It is wrong to marry secretly. ‘Tru, But which is worse? 
te marry secretly, or to bo vicious secrotly, with the vast majority 
of young men? Pr what his 








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the honour which ho is said to have done to Brooke, in 
retouching and even inserting many lines. Indeed, Pope's in- 
finence is plain thronghout, and the pupil has been imitating the 
manly tervenees, though ho has failed of tho calm statoliness of his 
great, though now half-forgotton, master. 

‘after the publication of this poem, ho seems to have 
returned to Troland; and eight years, of which no rvcord 
goema to romain, ho spent in Dublin ox a chamber counsol, not 
‘without success; end to have worked for eight years at so uncon- 
genial o business, in the very heyday, too, of his youth and 
ambition, will redeem him somewhat from that imputation of want 
of perseverance which is often urged against him, Let him havo 
the credit of having given the law a fair trial, His reasons for 
throwing up his profesion ure easily guessed. 'Tho delays and 
chicaneries of courts in the 18th century are well known. Het 





morality ; and ouo may well conceive that Brooke, expecially as a 





Tae Hy iis CUT ET 
i Aue ete He ileiae atid 
: Een Bap vasaiiialis 

of dient n ne 

CL eines iiaeineniat te 
PH IATHEa Lae el nT U 
HE ae 

arate a sieiiipaly 
Te 





nowhere else in London, ‘Vasa (so do timos change) might 
‘still bo a taking play. 

Tt took in Brooke's time, but in o fashion very different from 
that which he expected. After being accepted at Drury Lane, 
rehearsed for five weeks, and curried safely throngh all the troubles: 
of the groon room, it waa prohibited by the Lord Chamberlain, on 
account of its political tendency, 

Such silly tyranny bore such fruit as we have seen it bear in our 
own days. Tf the world might not soo, at least the world could 
road, Brooke publishod the play in eolf-dofence, and gold four 
thoussnt at five sbillings cach. The Prince sent him a bunlred 
guineas. Chosterfield took forty copies, Dr, Johnson published (what 
Tam ashamed to say I have not seen) an lronic * Complete Vindi- 


family and his wife, who (80 the Prince proposed) war to be foster 
mother to the yet unborn George IIL, and set up in life, at the age 
of thirty-three, as a distinguished Uterary character, with all that 
‘be noo led both of “praixe and pus 
If the charming and succossfal prospered 
‘a8 most men prosper in the world, thon we should 





dear to Heaven, “Whom the Tord loveth he chastenoth,” was the 
Jaw ages sinos, and will be, porhaps, until the end. At lonst, it 
wos so-with Honry Brooke, Far from pocts an courtiors, and all 
that was beginniy to intoxicste (as it must have intoxicated) his 
noble heart, he must sit through long years of ever-growing 
poverty and loneliness, watching the corpses of his dead children, 
doad joys, doad hopes, till ho has loarnt tho golden evcret, and 
ere screed BA rape wiih em ce rw ea as 





‘twenty-two. He shall return to his first love: but be shall return 
‘by a strait gute and a narrow way. 
‘Tn 1740, in the vory hoyday of his success, he is taken 


sitar agit 
ane | 
aL 3 
Cnt i 
Ci z 
flecttie | 
ster; 
ane 
itd i 


to obey ; to give up London, fare ant futhion ; 
of a woman whom ho had loved from childhood, and 
at hast, he pinod away, hencoforth to “drink water 
:” and a nobler act of self-renunciation one 


iy 
ie 
He 
rf 
ie 
jt 
Fa 
i; 
Fi 


the original, ‘Tho Barl of Westmoreland, a tragedy, was performed 
at Dntilin, as good ns other tragndies of the day. For several 
‘years, indeed, his bankering for the stagu continued, to the scandal 
‘of eome of his biogruphors; ono of whom, Mr. Richard Rynn, a 
Romish com of “Lives of Irish Worthies” thus vents bis (or 
‘his Methodist informer’s) respectability on the mutter >— 
“During tho grostor part of his life his religious opinions 
to what aro called Methodistical, yot ho uniformly 
the stage: nevertholes, it is cortain he lived more 
consistontly than he wrote. No day passed in which he sifd not 
collect his fumily to prayer, and read and expounded the Scriptures 
‘to them with a clearnos and fervency orifying and intoresting.” A 
strange phenomenon must Henry Brooke have been, throughout 
his life, to bigots and precisians of all denominations I have not 








A : 
intl 
Hit 
ilu i 
Ha 
Hib 
aii 


: 

i 

i 

: 

i 

it 
Ha 
ry ie 
Fling 


In 1747, ho wrote four poems for Mooro's “Wublos for tho 
Fomalo Sox,” ono at loast of which, “Tho Sparrow and tho 
Dore,” in a beautiful reflection of his own puro wedded lif: but, 
indeod, Henry Brooks is never more nobile, not even when be talks 
theology, than when he speaks of woman, 

‘Two yoars after, we find him “solicited by « lanre body of tho 
independent electors of Dublin to stand for that city,” and do- 
Alining—as ono would have expected him—becauso thers was 
another eandidate in the field, who was not only (what bo was 
not) an “exoolling trader,” but hud “an acknowledged superiority 
in every other merit.” 

Garrick, about this time, “offered him a shilling a Une for 
everything ho wonld write for the stage, provided he wrote for 


cad | Th pesad | #8 BEEga2* £22F bez. 
a Ate eaten 
tea jliendis Egh lea 
ail: fu ; HED cians 
eHeaeiud | ligaylies Bini 
shh 1) pein af lity 
Biss ah =f inh 1 ase, Zaeegsases 
atates i wali P| ESTEE 
Badd i HL aul 
la hi ay 1 aillaail a a3 dail 
i li itl ha te (yeahs 





Se Comnty Kitaro: i brother took bonse near him, 
the ono lived by his paintings, tho other by his barrack 





Hal Bierce) § g2igpisgigitg22 i 

hi a eat nea 

ieee eRe 

4H He PRA te BLT 
PHL Ge TE EEE 
uy sai etal 
e Sey 
bi Teun ne af 

iis ts LUAU ali 

ATER nie eae ER 


of possession, without considering 


many a man in Treland and elsowhere who would 


Pin met charm fone wap ti om 
eeetey 
have rested in the mero 





ie 
a ar 





ay Gee 
ish oe plies hare 
fifty agte ai #32) at bP eb 3 
pa ead 
HO aA bea eer PEE 
big palletes hc gel 
i POEM PU HH a eer 
RE AT CHT epi ett 
ail! tle gia aey 

He ae ij HA H TE 2533 AT 
HEE Ha is ft i ile Af | 





zg 


N 
1ko Noah, ho aaw ennso to be docply dinatisflod with tho state 


& 
4 


/ 
ot 
Hl 
i 
gz 
j 


itt 
z, 
} 
: 
i 


cost him great sacrifices; he had to the last enongh whereon to 


é 
Z 


Of his later publications T shall say but little: a clover polltfcal 
opera of his, “Jack the Giant-qnollor,” was acted in Dublin as 
carly as 1748, fall if not of humour, still of flaont Irish wit, thrown, 
into comio gongs, of his usunl lofty morality, The censor of the 
Dablin stage, to do him justice, must have been far mare liberal 
than tha English Lord Chamberlain, or the Giantqueller would 
havo boon a co-martyr with Gustavns Vasa. ‘There aro several 
more tmgodics and comedies from his pen, socraingly first printed 





t atte rfl =puntynanytai 273 
Hay tal Hite nil 
ne if - Pulat ee flee 2 
tatu ii iii! sf 
Te re 
THR sito 
ai Q siries 
cai ul Rea TR 





423 zeeee 
a 


a neh Te pation ie in 


many whoe ‘Tentonic rele tesa 


a 


ein and to believe (and not untruly) that foclings 





ethics the only method of perfection), could be mwvte as noble, fair, 


“pTTBLES! 
Hale 
i Hite } 
HH 
HHL 

i iH hi 1 é 
fi i if 
riiiteh 
iegites 
=E az z 


have touched many hoarts, and can touch none now. 


moment's reflection of haman natare is to signify 
morely ita overyclay and pettiort passions, failings, motives ;—if in 
‘8 won, the cations which aro for a succesful stage 


ying out—porhape for want of that very realistic tono of thought 
which fs to be found in Henry Brooke. 








wie 
century to copy God who mado him; how, in onforcing that dream 
of his, be did not disdain to uso those apologues and maxims of 
old heathens, which will live, we may hope, as long as an 
lish echool and an English scholar exist on earth ;—how his 
conception of tho ideal of humanity, because it ie founded on the 
bolicf that that ideal ia the very ixaago of God, ix neither “low, 
abject, nor servile,” but altogether ehivalrous and heroic;—and 
lastly how, in hix eyes, tho humblest resignation and the loftiest 
aspiration are so far from being contradictory virtues, that it ia 
only (@ he holds) by to tho “concoption of the Supremo 
goodness” that man can attain “submission to the Supreme will.” 
considered this, and more which he may 
he irritate himself no more about defects of 
outward mothod, but will bo contont to lot the author teach his 
‘own lemon in his own way, trusting (and he will not trnst in vain) 
that cach seeming interruption is but a step forward in the moral 
Processat which the author aims ; and that there is fall and conscious 
consistency in Mr. Brooko's method, whothor or not thore be dramatic 
unity in his plot, By that time also ono may hope the earnest 


PREPAOB. Wit 


reader will have begun to guess at the causes which have made 
‘this book forgotten for a while snd parhaps to find them not in 
ite defects bat in ite oxselloucies ; in its deop and grand othies, in 
its broad and genial humanity, in the divine value which it 
attaches to the relations of husband and wile, father and child ; 
and to the utter absones both of that sentimentalism and that 
superstition which havo been alternately debauching of Into 
years the minds of the young. And if ho shall hare arrived at this 
discovery, he will be ablo possibly to regurd at loast with pationce 

aro rash enongh to affirm that they have learnt from this 


more, bravo book, as God shall speed thoo; 
thou mectest, whether in psasant or in peer, with a 
royal heart, tender and tru, magnanimous and chivalrous, enter in 

dwell thers; and help fits owner to become (as thoa canst 
him) a Man, a Christian, and a Gentleman, s# Honry Brooke 


© Koster. 


DRAMATIS PERSONA 





RicrAvp, Rast or Morx.ayo, « disolute nobleman, 
's daughter, whom be marries and settles 
ee dows wil sity es bas tte tp ub lad caacae 
Brenan, "Lord Dickie their edit sn, 
Howe ‘ ere Mi Fone, ie cre ‘brother, a wealthy 
INTON, ot ia tt =i oe 
aS ace 








| Vindex NO ge 


et. CLs, the persecuted son ofa rich radeoman, rescued from 





‘Loner we man, who defends Arabella 
mm the charge of murder, and afterwards fails in love with ber 
es practical ok, 
Me. and Mra. FIELDING. Ned's long-lost parents. 
‘Tak Bans OF Maxsritin, « sagacious acbletaa, 
© 2 


JAITLAND, otherwise Fanny Goodall, Marchioness 
cee ‘Duchess de Houillon ; Henry Clinton the elder's cousin. 
Mr, GOLDING, a wealthy merchant. 
Miss GoLoIns, bis daughter, who marries Heary Ciinton the elder, 


SUSAR, 
Eixavow Dann, o ares daughter, 
Baanavt Tints, a chandler, ber busband, who scarly kills her brother 


‘Tomer Daseex, let for dead pr ia 
Natatora Seber feed ‘by Harry, but afterwards caught treating a 
[poor man unmercifully. 
Garrano Hence, an unortunste surety, formerly the saviour of Me, 
‘Fenton's life. 


‘Sta WiLtiam Tionsaitt, Homely’s landlord and protector. 
Kino Wittiam THe Taian, 





Mania Da LAUSANNE, alles * Pierro? a ciel who falls in love with Harry, 
and follows 


ANEXAMIX, vaherwi Stenger of Bilsa (Fanny Goodal's 
este an the Emperer of Boroeoy Hars/s de 











THE 


FOOL OF QUALITY; 


THE HISTORY OF HENRY EARL OF MORELAND, 


CHAPTER L 


Fics ann, the grandfnther of our hero, was ennobled James 
the First. He married a lovely girl of the ancient team of the 
ees A aes and at seven years’ distance | 


sons, Richard but, dying early in the he oe 
Chaslee the First, he bequeathed £15000 to his youngest, and near 
‘annual income to his eldest son—not in any personal pro~ 
Eee i ee ene the nume 
Star end pualan, Wis, educrtog, the chilrva sgreoctle fo 
guantian, wl lucating the children 
their different fortunes and prospects in life, in about seven years 


after tho death of thoir father, sont Richanf with a tutor to tako 
the tour of ‘and bound’ Henry apprentico to a considerable 
Londen merchant 


the travels of tho one and the appronticaship of tho othor, 


the troa ; and Cromwell assumed the rogency, boforo 
ths fortune of tho Mofelance cou be forflted or eniangored |, by 


siding with tho crown cr the commonwaaith 
rotarned to England a short timo bofore the Raton 


being too gay and too dissolute for the plodding and hy 
bromawall an his fanatics, he withdrew to the mansion- 


‘On his tanting, he hw! inquired for hie brother Henry; but 
hearing that be wax Into! aly uarsiod onl wally ‘bed in matters 
of etme tien an he had the utmost contempt for all cits and 
——' he took no further notice of him, 

Ta the ho amused himeclf with his bottle. hounds, 
hawks, and orees; but, on the restoration of his majeety, of 
pleesarable momory, ho hastonod to court, where he rolled away 
‘tnd shono as in bis native sphere. Ho was always of the party 

8 











2 THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


of tho king, Rochester, &c,, where virtue was laughod out of 
and where all manner of ditsolutences became at~ 

traotis Jablo by the barsta of merriment and zoxt of 
‘wit, But toward tho lattor ond of this droll reign, Earl Richard, 
age, and being still older in constitution than 
Lee See an heir to hi estate: and, a8 he 
taken vast Cin iggy mgt pe fe eg 
hor got a portion of £100,000, which 


3 
3 
= 
z 
i 
F 
i 
4 
3 
af 
aT 


ga 
net 





= 
9 
$ 
a 


8 
: 
Z 
? 
eH 
ee 
252 


: 
i 
SF 
ff 
ay 
H 
% 


rt 
i 

See 
i 

Ff 
i 
oH 
nh 
Hil 


~ When Harry 
ham! 
pay 


fifth yoar, his fathor, on a festival 
to sond for him fo his nurse, in order to 
boy might barn cat andy A, fn a fit of 


‘There was Sir Christopher Cloudy, who knew much but said 
othing, with bis very conrermble lady, who ecurvo know by balven 








THE FOOL OF a eee 


-— 
ae “4 5 re £ pale rr 2 
te it ie init ai HEH iii Ha He 
on ita: alectant tag Hp ia ety 
al phil i fe au Ge 
dey amanda andy tes Santee 
Ly le eb ai 
ia a hath 
$23qiee =e EF i zz f sere 
a iid i a i ret ip 
ag; Hs i i 
tee Hara is i BH fie aie jalan al 








sai 
Papal at ieee aw Fg Ui edua i qezter # 
i i Hise aa pave waeil 
Sint ae reel (i Lb Be mandy 2 | eigel : 
34 Abe Bal ee if Haig aula i 
dag}ertles?: liens fis hy 
sae een ned lil 
5 ae 3 AGE 238 ‘a axe EL Hpateall! ERP eg, cee 
te cate aH grails Fa 52333 Hila i 
ie Sat ee net 
8 sana sein Huth, 
_ sails i EE ie eal gist ity 4273 gizty: 8 
Pou raiy Alls USAT ean 





“4 an f zai Her Pee 
i af 
hey 

a as HH ie in 
ae ui de Beuet 

side a 

vai eiraanata 


eats RG i ads u 
PeLer F al Lie 
i iin fal liad i if 


at 





ted the old man, and started, 


dear? said tho old gontloman. 


ton! 


child then, looking tenderl; 
ear. The 


have you for a father, i€ you pleas, air. 


father! 





6 THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 
him up in is arms, and passionately ex- 
Slatmedt—You, staf ym shal, tonderest of 
=e pe tien emma tld fui! yart us 


mating and cried out—Gaffor, Gaffer, here comer 








you amaze mo greatly ; i this all the notice and care 
thay take of such a treasure’? Sir, replied the nune, they never 
sont for him but once ; they don't sain iy take 

fool. For a fool! cried he, and shook his head in token of diswent ; 
Tam sare fe has the wisest ofall hun hearts I wisi it may bp 
aes Ta Dinras at Lis boaed Vary wae, Soe ime at 


tho great house, She thon mado a of all our young 
waventures in the mansion parlour 5 tog the old beet in- 
wardly chuckled, and for the fiz time, of some years, itod his 


phteestald he every thing that hear and sce of this child sorves 
more to endear and bind mo to him, Pray, be 80, 

a eet A area eS 
os to porson and understanding. 

As this wtranger'’s peat made part of the village, thoy wore soon 
there, | Ho frat whlgperod hie old domestio, who upon 
aie ee id pleusare, The footman was next sent 
to bring the tailor: and somo i he staife from the town shop, Mat 
ters being thus despatched with respoct to our horo’s first cont and 


nurse, with a request that she would sond him eve 
‘promos that he shioid be tetornod every tight shear fe it 
Harry, being thus fumishel with the rtartal Sob et Tuan 
child having been born into the world, became an le 
ond so pa low fo his patron. Aft times of relaxation, the old yentle 
with the rot winning and sinnating edness, endenyoured 
mind an cultivate his morals by « thovennd Lite 
Sables; such as of boll eparrows end nacgity kile that wore carried 
gevay by the hawk, or devoured Ly the wal an nid cool adios 
innocent lambs that tho very hawks vee thomeelyes wore 











8 





poe i tit hae ae 
ea VF vane sel 
Pee ee ae 
ete ee ae 
& 
fail He - He railaertil 
in His ae i eae il 


Hiatt aunts a 











5858 5 2S 

nae q ul 3 Butt ini a iy padi 
fl etl a Gar Be gaa 
. ri i : y as 3 5 2 Zo 
ni ais! ie a i RE 
eaegii galls Cte ltt if spelt 
Shits ligtesdigys 4200107 Fe US Hid 
esc c) i metieee Bn retreat 
8 Pate 825 se ap Eel irre rae 3 Bee ae yatbivizata 
He qi? peeats Bets THE rac HoGahne 

t nae Heel iat Hie z pecise etic, 
ie Lau ine i Any ue 

ial Hy 

ry : a aE Hee 
Done re Rup ree ean 





rm 
for 


‘on i, that 


thar 


ww little mortal fishes 


pra oedared 
of all fishes ; for 


T warrant you. 


it 


ie 


¢, and I have been very 
pi 


ever since. Now, all I desire of 


the 


of my sight 


some time or other may 
God Immediately opened his under= 


and he knew the nature and meaning of suares, nets, 
Tines, and of all the dangers to which euch little trouts 


first he greatly 


in. this his knowled, 


working in 


quite ent. 


ide for my own living, 


if 


‘heart tremblod within m 
ch to take care of my own mifoty, and 


meaning of thia, and of all the ot 
T shall be the ba 


Sina 


died he. himesit safe, he dit 
moot all the face’ ts no Work. ‘Boho es 


jolced it 
ir 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 
to 
as I understand and am forewarnod of every mischicf that can 


subjected ns, poor 
ald than 
rurel 


cand 


na 
Tam 
sooner 





10 THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


it 
af 
is 
i 
he 
2 
83 
ef 
c 


EPii 


and skniked under the banks, where he in his 
till the elond was put, Ayain, when he maw iy ig 

water, ema Sais down the stream, he 
be m! pi foe mid he to them, 


geese 
ul 
i 
. 
- 
i 
i 


Tast diod, for fear of dying, the most miserabilo of all 


N came to the youngest silvor trout, and asked 
‘him what ho wishod for—Alas! kaid this darling little trout, zon 
know, may it please your worvhip, that Tam but a very foolish 
and good for nothing little fish ; and 1 don't know, not T, what is 
od for me or what ix tad for me; and I wonder how T came to 
worth bringing inte the world, or what you could ree in me 
fo take any thought about me, But i mut wish for something 
itis that you would do with mo whatsoover you think best; 
fhat T should be pleased to live or die, even fast ae you would 
wwe te. 
Now, aa soon ag this precions trout mad this ynayer. in hls 
and humble little heart, God took such # liking and a love to 
aa the like was never known, And God found it in his own hoart, 
‘that he could not but take gront caro af this swoot little trout, 
‘who had va yale a wholly to his love and good Paere) 


about him, and was to him os a fathor, and friend, and companion : 
and ho put contentmont into his mind, and joy into his hoart; 
and #0 this little trout opt always in peaco, and walonod in ghil- 
nom; and, whother ho was full or hongry, or whatover hnpponed 
to him, ho wus still pleased and thankfal ; and he was the happiost 
all fishes that ever awa in any wator, 

gt tho clos of this fable, looked down and grew thonght- 





Ey 
z 
i 
i 
: 
: 
: 
Fi 


of 
ful, 








a eee Sea 222, 3 = 2 Speers Se 56a ££ = 
eee WY a a gt 
rere rates! feai tn api: at iis 
stellt ella: Wye a 124 

pprespvicltigtirins nifty G2 27 i 

sdiean! Gey i ae 

s Felar fipeasdtetgciseecns cesleycte? Hf 

eee gas ples ed pte 
pieniineaiiatte Sgn he Fe dl 

B Apeisg ctiaeeetasgadests Sceegtilte def 2 2 a2] 

alee clit btu shy 23 iu 

He pain et ee ere miges yall 3 weeks 
Jeeta ditty geet iatla Tal 
ve eral Hig Tie “8 


Bn THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 
Anthor. Education, inrleed, has mito tho fondness next 
ie coral the 


to na 
tural; thy bells teach infants on Dreasts to be de= 
Spel! and glitter. child of an inhabitant of 
ee cacel Sees Ee ? 
Priend. 1 think not. 


ink 

Author. But when ho is instructed to prize therm, and sees it to bo 
‘tho fashion to be adornod with such thi a Pa caer lg 
iplttr of gold and poarl ‘Toll mo, was it the ar philesopy, 
of the cock in the fable, thet spurned the diamond, and veel 
for the pent oun 
moral that it wus his folly, that did not know 
a right estimate of things, 
‘Author, A wisor moral woul muy it was his Fiilovopiy, that dia 
know how to make a it estimate of things; for of what nae 
fo ——— Lh 0 seen ee Woe nes of scores ones 
to Ceres royal ploughman Triptolemuas, a ‘ley-corn. 
had been of aeeeats to tankind than ull the d that 


dt think of Tolnister of stat ho 
it wonl m of a at who 
if the utmost height of Ms 


to honour? he anewered (in the permuasion that he himself was the 
Person), “Lat the royal apparel 
therowith, and let him bo put upon the horse that the king usoth 
to ride, and lot bim be brought through the street, and have it 
proclaimed before him, Thns shall it be done to the man whom 
‘the king delighteth to honour.” What shull we say hore? could 
the sure and ambitious Haman think of nothing better than what 
‘would have suited the request of a ehild of five years old? or was 
it the Emperor of Asia, or this world itself, nothing more 

Yalaable to bestow than a fine coat and a hobby-horse? 

Fri, How many volumes do you expect this work will 
contain 

Author, Sir, ® book may be compared to the life of your neigh- 
Dour, If it be good it cannot last too long; if bad, you cannot 
get rid of it too early, 

weet But how long, I say, do you propose to mako your 
story ? 


dithor. My good friend, the render may make it as short ax ho 
ploasoe. 








THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


CHAPTER TH, 


Hae ma (eygean HIE: 
Hig tae (alii Ee 
7 eae He Bdaihll iain airy gil? 
shag init Eaytlsy (ietiig (at | 
vieedetn dete ead WE 
3 arctiailap iti! eee hy Sal 
: ta) a Se ae aia Hee! 
in epi ee a au Bias ues 
ne aig at ill etal i ale 
Chea sn ill 
# ar tele fa pon 
oie Hale He aaa ae 





EE 
F 
ae 
by 
= 
= 
=) 


EEEEES3 
te 
a 
3e62 
BEE 
Le 
uy e 
Beets 
te 
Hn 
i 


=) 

H 
se é 

3 


‘amazod at the combat. My lady vehemently criod. 

out to part them; but my lord rose and Peremptorily cormanded 

fair-play. Meanwhile yonng Skinkor, wholly desperata to ba fotled 

‘one 80 much his inferior in strength and mnderstanding, flew on 

Tike a fury, and fastened the nails of both hik on hin 

fic, from whic rp» our hero a quickly disengaged himself by 

to the nose and mout 5 tie sivorenry eee 

was instantly covered with blood, though his pusion not 

Dormit him to attend to the pain’; for, exerting his haat effort, he 
closed in on our little champion, and deter 





hil ‘vith n 
i ia eee 

All dismayed and wholly discomforted, Skinker Lyi! ‘aroad, and 

Hie: toi, shcrpastinetine Sis bUOSE Coen om spenat Leip 

y abi, ecopasatona ight, tarnod an overc 

‘spon the victor all peootemctsiy efalalmed:—0 2s, 4 

Tam quite ashamed; Master Harry, yon gavo the first blow : it 


Come, come, sald my Jord, there must be yomething more in 
aifhir than we are yet acquainted with. Come hither, Master 
Hp tell me, the, truth, my dear; what was Ht you did to 


Bkinkei 
‘Harry that provoked him to strike yout Tndeod, sir, wid Skiuker, 








i 
i A 
En 
na 
tH 
ul 
zit 

if 


i 
E 
3 

e ne 


F 
( 
i 
f 
F 
j 
id 


Whispering to his atime, deaired her not to be fright 
Set ae Get eotentimeelatis viniey. Ine 
fase ‘gathering oll. bis Utila companions fn 
in the centre of the parlour, held them a whil 
0 beck door tw, open ad 


=f 





Et 





lu 
mince Get pused tuck So oye wonte onl 


At sight horvof, Mastor Dicky, appoaring tho first to be fright- 
2 sereamod = and man cli a i itor 
protection: io grew instantly contagious, a 

EEE tithe grates, who ‘ore horeahes to furs gus eonsten, and 
to lend our armies, ran shricking and shivering to hide thomsclves 
in holes and to tremble in corners. 

alone, stood undauntod, though concerned; and Ike 
an astronomer, who with equal dread and attention contemplates 
some sudden momenon in the heavens, which he apprehends 
a ‘or forerunner to the fall of mighty states, 
of ons, 80 Harry, with bent and apprehensive 
‘and considered the approaching spectre, 
‘Be had never heard nor formed any idea of ghosts or hob- 


it ‘advanced upon him, nor had he yet badged; 
when his brother aie Loot from bebind my bays chair—Beat it, 
e 





sconce, 
=. drove the candle, flame and all, into the mouth of him who 


‘and hie upper lip from tho noge to tho tooth. Out 
fpoutod ‘tho as from a spigot. ho ghost clapped all tho 








a St Hi 
ig a iy iu ay (ued {lat 
a ae 1 phe ig fil 
of Fee ne ae Hy 
a erie detent ie 
if ste i fiegeee ie 438s 
sii an quasseaeaee ite fee 
= aif ily segs B.Sie 5 if a Pa 
Fy aa ay eet ply 
fe yee e 
ik Fill aie HEE Hel eee uh ie a 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, un 


Harry was now beeomo a favonrit cial the 
Marcin oored hic Hare tho advent af tho 


Peerierend 
‘that the world, q 
ghosts and spectres, 


funcy—I fear, while I convinced 
be feared: Do you think there is 


4 
ee 
af 
i 
A 
: 
E 
i 
2 
i 
E 
& 


' 
; 


room is warm onough, moro hoat is 1 
id conceptions aro raised in my mind; but 


tH 
E 


u 
u 
: 
i 
[ 
u 


i 


tk 
3 

FR 

of 
: 
‘8! 
4 
i 


Fe 
SE 
i 
& 
zg 
i 
E 


- must be but as the space 
abides and exists; indeed, rag ‘not 
be produced, or contined for a moment, but by hls existing omni 
, entirely, in and throughout every part. 

new, very new; but I will not batter my brains 
castle. According to your thesis, when a man is oj 
spirit or spectre, it is not of shadow but of sub- 


Certainly ; his ipal apprehension arises from his 
deok more poverkl, and more formidable, 
there are more tremendous reasons, On the 


ue, ‘hoy ive a man no manner of fir- 
here, ‘ve you there, and your best 
and fe no better than fencing against an invisible 
Bat, seromly, do you think we have any innate fear of 
matters 
All our fears arise from the sense of our own weakness, 
and fnclination that others may have to hurt us. 
horror of apparitions is not innate, how comes it 
ldiers, that general officers, who dare ll other 
6 


it 
a 
0 


i 


He 
‘i 
i 


in 
ag in 








i ql ee ie au ee gett 
if ie il fetal ce 230 Hl fi re as a 
cee na ey ia 
S euaiiathastidelia atl jolie! 
eri jeunes anil Ha 
eae - ieee 

Seen gbgstes 2 
al ta ae He ai Panne te 


ae as8 Pe ae He: 


ieG 
ia 





“AE i es Te Gn 
ng fe gee ep Gee a 
i Hl fie Jie siete Hiei [let 
ier yy ee ae Paar REITER 
i da eee 
BL ! mah, eae eal 
& Fe 2 Pay: 
uh LAU tt 


Hy 
HUY Hone apt Lu adeno? Pi Melts 


= 





n THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 

fal rnlg area a cil eas confound why don't 
you blow it thon? rej pial he 
Priend. My norves will not admit of thie for fhot, ‘The tale in- 
dood is though wich an instance of intrepiiity in any mortal 


be jc. Bat, shall we never return to our in? 
pe oy it matters not how far we travel from 5 neo Bie a 


‘of « wish can bring us back in a twinkling, 


CHAPTER Iv, 


Rvrrtxp linon, laced hat, silk stockings, &e., had 
onterod for Harry, with « new suit of clothes, trimme 
of Hean-insects, vulgarly called bnttortlies, wore 


# 
272 


larry, 
By Lord help that litte fal of thine ! int ss od 





if people won't love 5 Le patie) he more, 
Fool hewd! reposted my Jord, upon my word the child has move 
sense than half our nobility. 

Harry had been now near a month with his and as his 
nurse had not yet he was tolerably amenable to quality 
government. However, he pined in the absence as he 
called him, ond daily importuned my lord and Indy to fitted 


be 
rape ean nes Binns yes * told him that his bearded 
loved him botter thun ‘the world, 80 Hi lowed him 
better than three worlds; for ho was ever desirous of going three 
times as far, in affection and good oflices, a8 any ono went for hima, 

‘At Iongth he obtained consent, and was conducted by his nurse, 
in all his finery, on « visit to bis dear dada. 

‘Thair meoting waa accompaniod by teara of Joy on both aides; 
when the old gentleman, struck with concern at the garb in which 
he saw his darling, cried out—And who, tA dear, Re ‘this fool's 
cont upon my child? Fool's coat, sir! aaye Yes, my love, 
it is worso than all that; they were very naughty dovtars who 
have endeavoured to ron By boy. There is not a bit of all this 
Jace and ruffling that is not fall of rank potsons, I will tell you 
a story, my Harry. : 

‘There wat once upon a time, a very and very clever boy 
galled Herenlos, As eee up, besides his prayers and his book, 

leap; to ride, wrestle, and cudgel; and, 

‘though ho was able to beat all the boys in the parish, he never 
to hort or quarrel with any of them, Hoe did not matter 
cold, nor hunger, nor what he eat, nor what he drank; nor how, 


a 








238 S832 ei 222227 

aa ae 

2 He Lad} Begens ites as THAI a 
e ? F] 3 aiae Pate 2: i iE fais Hi 
: if i Pa He favre wali uw allt fe 
: a 2 is ans eae 355 a Hy i eT 
in aus siti ii ‘iy nie 
ital vie =2 

seed i u nates fa f ia 


ennui ap i sini 
He Ti auleuaiaeal 


il 
ene ie Hal ee Hee Ball 





i ut Hae aeneal p Pine HE ate : 


apne fbcets 


ean by 
iret) 
tho 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


a 
08 
hie 

id my lord, 


is maararnns 


ihe 


seitlil He 
fale ain! i 


a 2s mi 


"eaten 
droll nnd 
pany ‘ito 
kind 
‘this for? 
¥e 
you 
a aid 
a 
is Lor 
harm 
git 
that 
dl Hercul 
ee 
eet 
re 
hie 
how 
T bel 
Tord an 
‘timo bel 
diseonee 
ag i 
he 
that is 
and 
le 
with 
‘or 
oe ‘a8 dinner was served 
earl Co Sts Sten, Stato 
Jord 
thon 
oon 
in 
an old 


pat He came in ondor 40 on 


difficn) 


ne 








POUL oP quariry, 





i358] a ji Nae a itt ey 


ty a ili f2 1a, eu ste: 
Ten ae ue 
ie all a HA, 
fs ee a ul i 


ie! el Hil i Hi 
at ae a 





“ THE POOL OF QUALITY. 


my parents died before T arrived at those years wherein onr 
allow of any tide to discretion. I had but one brother, Oh, 
Sih ae (ine ny Bia he aes oom sae wen er 


3 but, disaol my 
from travel, ho might justly deem mo unworthy of hia aequaintance 
or notice. 

the time of my intimacy with his Inte rand the 
Seba ee ee 
Spuueet hens tthap metoaaahar? weet Ligue se 
me r; pre orders for 
thelr immediate introduction, On’ their entrance T waa a 


BER 


oe, to wait in tho name of the 
3 iti Py othe citizens of anton’ aotae. tr 


roa. 
hays boon vorg dlacroot, said in their chaleo of an ad- 
must bo exorbitant if they fail of encoos 


‘Without T replied, or any inducement save that of 
own request, lot me bat know what I am to do, and 1 shull 


Sax der ba Gabdicecid consents to betey sou iets oat oe 
iy nol any mi 
taken or tmmerited ‘eomplaizance. I  adeayre atti 
of the lower onder. 

T now fait aaysolf blosh with shame end, dlauppoiutment; 1 
rewouted my being docivd Uy the dani of his appoaruncs sand 
Tera wor particulary piano bythe arvtva Kod of mao with 
which ho closed his ion, All confused, I looked down, and 


tended to cast eyes over the , in order to gnin time 
recollection, ‘Having, at tntorvals mattured 2 Sow words, pooh, 








fe 2 fngE TEE PETTY 
ty ieee apie, By HS 
Bi y wu fa eG ie WEE 
aa HSCd ach gist? Wists Pail Feaeas! 
ee ete ablaue 
a pergeeh aly Cantal daer ae 
serait i ih ie sande 

522 5 apa, # S23 825 8S. 
Hiatal at fl ne digi 
be a Hai a i HM 
a aigitelt il Mia cn 
eel EEE “| Mir is 


—" servants with titles, ich revenncs, p 


ry comfort, 


F sxtonsive, considemble, and ro- 
pi i who carries off overy rodundance, 


ho who fartiches ever 





iH 








i a aie Sree uy pale 3 ee atceae ° 4 


bi age tial 
7 PoE UPA BH ety lis 
ii i Hu mt reac : a bike wi itl 
Bani he acuta fie elie aie 
5 5 rife Rete cre iit and ROA 
8 alle ania Hier? aay of FEC Eh 
esa fig te Finead 
taties ia (tiabarcieditet ait 
ee inal Haat f iti 
as i gSayes ag 2 
agi a3 Bag 3 434 ae 
mer iris na ae Bint His a eal a Elle 





* HOD anh 


Ze 


=a 
2 paged 
ai 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 
ani 
of 
sho 
cannot 
her 
her 
will bo 
her 
Hie: rl 


iz sus 
body 
saat 





atlemen, 1 
ir fora broiter: 
2 


vos Like 


nt, 


to 


At 


courtien 


‘my aring, a8 
his 





B THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 

how wey lovely ho was in his porson; tmt the superiority of his 
tainty ead ie rotten of Ms searaere: pave hina aetnoeoe, 
that was not altogether 40 yervteful, 

AM day T kept: my fn uy 
polf, and the world. next morning T was informed, that 
thts fe tatgratcn nem y a eke, |, at hin 
poses Shree ik ng le 
nr convermtlon, and that all the court was fuse of thelr ad= 


: 
uv 
u 
Es 
FH 
iu 
| a 
H 
Bey 


after I hod married and retired from the gli 
and more larly on the birth of my first. , 
Pad es Resceta| Into a new sphere of domestic Tooliags, 


3 
ef 
sete 


1 
and stoning co od anon ef re ment. But, 
momenger wi ings that, some years 
wn. from trade, had retired to. Franco, or 


‘all correspondonce, and that in England 
anes 


aad = 


somo calamity, some heavy diatross, ? and no 
brother at hind to comiole or share your afflictions. Return to 
mo, divide my heart, divide my fortune, with me end mina! 

it I am! you know not that you have a brother, 
one Wemrving of that namie. Yon know not that this bosom of 
flint: # now humanized, and melted down in the fervour of affic~ 


lon towards you. You hate me, yon despise m 
brother! How, now, shall T make yon sensible that my 
Diet 4 our finage, of esteem, of tenderest love, for 
“Minton | 

T ain went other messengers in search of intelligence, and 
cured Jetiers to the bankers and merchants of principal 
abroad ; bat all ray solicitudes and inquiries were equally frat 

Tho that this ocoasioned first it mo 
cont a over the lustre of every object about m 
no more appeared an that world which, formerly, had 


P 
& a 
HL 


#4 
ET 
ales 








> aay ages Glenna cage 
a aay Seeley ipa ne 
fel UH Aapeindid) Pape 
Serer ua Be alice HinD 
a! (bet Heian aetna 
aera prep eal ar 
play ll cage ual sds apne ate 
ei: eH ae vee ol R a HH 
eu ylitelies enue nang 
tl a disile Peay Bat 


Hinks ie 


jig (eeu eu ea 


of 
Tam desirous it should be so; but cannot concelve, caumot reach 





Ey 
i 
i 
4 
i 
4 
i 
eft 
nha 


A 
3 
e 
F 
Ly 
ae 
i 
a 
i 


al 
eed 
saline 
PED 
ae 
Boe ¥ 
4 i it 
eiiveved 


pleat I, 
‘our notion, oxclaimer| the earl, amaxing, traly 
and every of u God who, are be ine 
finitely, worthy of all worship! Ia this Uno ronson, Mr. Meakiy, 


dh tho experiance of ages eons, and 
had agevod with Solomon tn this—that a 
‘voxation of spirit, If any may enjoy 

of tho groat consummation that you speak of, J am 

, Mr. Moekly, that you yourself aro the man, Your 

ipa, indeod, may nothing of the matter; but neither your eyes nor 

‘cath restrain {hh fon of somo extraondnary peace 

ubides within. ©! siy thon, my doar, my estimable friend, 

it happiness?—By 


a ele at 
fe nn ple 


ne ui 


One man 


to do evil; now, wi 
in their nat 
the proper 


TALITY, 


for 
or 
acconding: 
re is 
© 
patri 
s 
‘and 
Tord. 
aq 
of section, 


THE FOOL OF QU: 
ay? ins secnes 
in any other 
ona. — 

held 

sears al 

the cruel 

itute and 

retarned cod 

thom 80 to 
2—By no meank, 
rinafie or apr 

incipl 

mother te pleased 


ee Bat 


Hiei Guat us 


wo 


ape 
the 


80 opporits 
an obj 
meee 

, to dio 

im, to rotiro to 

in order. 

iy granting 

ciple, Self 

mm affiirs ; 

henerolones, love of countey, 
pon 


‘qual 


the condition, and did not wait for an 


hy 
rar 
286 Ul 


Ape 


sities oF motives 
‘act of Pythins to tho ox- 


fara 


und therefore 

leasure f a8 far a8 tho 
ing of 8: 
iy to refuse, 


pat 


ission, in the ints 


‘a8 frreconcllable as the ae- 


wise to Im) 


iD 


oF ccntomplat 
tho nature of su 
le condition of bis 


psd it 


pied, 
an 





fs 


it with pl 
, tho objects must be good whereby 


is 
img 
as 


5 it 
of his disconsolate 
sremptoril 


far 
feat 


ite 


7 
doing evil to, 
oti 


Bocawe, my 


friend, and Damon was accordingly sct 


Damon ; he instantly offered 


d with 
a op) 
one 
melas By 
eto attire 
most pei 
h 


of 
his 
all his courtiers were astonished at this action, 


account for it on 


are 
: the 


of 
bo 
to 
int 


conceived, on the i 
remain 


Sl 





ty of 
pecs Ms the Nena wonilty of Having 


Hin‘ rome timo oa his madness in prenming, Gat Damon, 


a 
Pythion, a firm voice rble aspect, L would it were 
Tat Trach euforn Thontand death father Wan my Raond chould 
aq eget ged ur. He cannot fail thorein, my lord. 


i 
H 
i 
u 


i 


T beeoech the to preserve tho Ifo und integrity of 
50 winds—prevent tho 

ore mabe envecroure—and sufer him 

my death, T have redeemed a life » thousand 


1g 
u 
i 
Yi 

| 


ag 
af 
F 
ie 
i 
A 
i 
Fy 
i 
Fe 
2 
3 


ae 
: 
é 
E 
i 
& 
E 
F 
= 
2 
= 
E 


wat confounded and awed by the dignity of thee 
sentiment, and by the manner (tll more sentimental) in. whit 

tiered, He felt his heart struck by a slight sense of 
truth; but it served rather to perplex than to undecelve 
eitated—he would have spoken; but he looked 


fatal day arsived. ¥ sought forth, and 
fe Bas pass wih concoan bul extn te pane ot 


there, He was exalted on a moving throne 

yA wha hares and eat pensvo and attentive 
isonet, 

vaulted lightly on the senffold; and bo- 

ho tamed 


3E 


A 


i 
i 
t 


s 
F 
| 
en 


ah 
fe 
gP 
ir 
5 
—& 
BE 
I 
it 


are heani, he cried; the godk are propitions! You 
friends, that the winds have been contrary tll yesterday. 
mld not coma—he could not conqnar smpossibllities ; Ne 
tomorrow, and tho blood which is shed shall 
the life of my friend, | O1 could T em from your 
oabt, every mean stepicion of the honour of the 
to 


4 
2 
Pe 


Sa gress 
fae 
e Hy 
BEE 
gE 
= 

SE 

FE 
ai 
se 
- 
iy 
5 


i 
253 
i 
he 
ae 
li 
fi 
iz 
i 
# 


exowd cant the words; and—S tho exocution! was re- 
peued by tho Wosloamentiy 

Aum camo at fall seo. The throng aro way to bis ap- 
proach. He was mounted on a stood foam, In an instant 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY. og 


he was off his horse, on the saffold, and held Pythias straitly 
embraced. 
‘Ye he cried raf, A 1 
The po be ta a T now ve nothing but desth 
suflivr ; Ree sebreed fron the wogol sf Coes occas 
wl iL gare meet for hoving endengured Ifo 0 dearer 
‘old, and halfspeechless in the arma of his 
in broken Coste ropa fear ty impationca wast 
Tow wot be wholly Simnppoiniea t since 1 cannot 1 
wilontus beset” bobeld, and oooeiored all with ax 
His heart a 


well in 
am I to understand by the term serv, Mr. Meckly? 


of matter, my lord, hax a &ELY, or divttict identity, 


(ah eal Ee Now, whilo 
‘it continuos in thia wtate Lae aren absolute distinction, 
it i utterly nsclom and insignificant, and is to the universe as 
it wero not. It hag, however, a principle of attraction 

‘or answerable to desiro in the mind), whi it on= 


derive to iteclf the powers and advantages of all other 
matter. 


a Li te gr gel 
So aperatlita distinct les into pip 


sEny ite 
then, and then only, Ueccrs capabl, and prolastve of shapo, 


an 5 
Bo too Tard, that this in matter 
Setirieee than srcaetastoacs of the lve povvon ta tals na 


‘that no rou) was ever Clete OF ancy ogre ol virtue or 
mye vo te 


affections from self; eave #0 
promoting, 








ama ae a a a 
a gli 3 nly ies ose neil es be 
404 a desl Bee aeigh aile ga! G8 
é iH vied ig Lata if ult 
Scandi! deettiey feqtay Sabla, <etyitaacayilts 
sig sulied dae! al anaes 
p3 pun tied HL ea daly 
pit HF dine Bee Hale iil ae ute i 
fal se ees PAID Ha 1 an 

i ie é sitea: at ah HE BS 
21 minnie) i ae 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY. a5 
dens, and a morsel of damaged corn was accounted matter of 


P| ved to atteraph the enexny's camp. 
ees Togas jolaad tatlos to ater 
‘Count Vienne was taken prisoner, 


ty Gee ae 10 slaughter retired within their 


Fn tho of tho goremor, the conimand develved 
Diese foe ware of a form, kina ct mae HEA 


bat 

Bustaoe now found himeelf under the noovesit; itulating, 
sol fred to deliver to ater th meer lt the fe 
aller of "he permit them to 


Tact hal og a aspects to meen the throne of 
Prune, was exneperated degree hat le, 
Shon oe alata deol hs want pen ho therviore 
an exemplary revenge, tho 
i Sor eaten cruelty. = sear ef gst 
A vanish ina 
fesined by hey Toate toe ed satel eereons tint bowers, 
fe pie wouled deanery, it Ses mcd to parlon ithe tak, 0 of the 
ie leliver up to him aix 
Spat tay Metal talicy ahont Wook teks og wicton of des 
that spirit of rel elon ith ebich a 
fh valet hor. 
Ail the remaing of this desolnte city wero convened in the 
square, and, like mon arrayed at a tribanal trom whenco 
‘was no appeal, expected with beating hearts the sentence of the 


he wished to 


When Sir Walter had Aeclarod his message, consternation and 
pale dismay was ir every face. Fach Tooke nipon death 
a8 his own {for how ahooid thoy deatre to"be saved 
at tho dha bal they to deliver, save 


pice parents, 
Brothers Kindred or yallant nelghtiours who had so’ oft i 
thie Tires fa their dec? AGS ke coh ead ana se 

and scoot tM Fustace i Te Pierre, getting up to 


8 assem 
“wo are brought to great tent this day. Wo 

iit to the terms of our cruel and ensnaring ¢con- 

ree tad our tender infants, our wives, and chasto 
Beach b cody ‘and bratal laste of the violating soldiory. 
We well p Herod intonds by his specious offors of 
it will "et mitioto his vongoanco to make ua merely 
jhe gael also make us criminal, be would make us 
$ grant ws life on no condition evo that of 


he will 
ty of He, 
friends, and fix your eyos on the persone 
eu wih to del er up é tho victims of your own eafaty. 
of fies wouk! ye appoint to the rack, the arm, or the 
horo who hnx not wutchod for you, who 
oy, who hax not Bled for you? who, through 
D 


Hie 
ae 
2 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


86 
the length of this invoterate siege, hos not snffered fitignos 
Ian wa nee ers tan oth at oa 
might survive to days o ay 

eae ae STUNDE you 


ot do ie Justicg houour, humanity, make such 


‘not, you 

treason imposible, 

“Where, then, is our resource? Js there any ex) left 

ere etree, Ss a ee Oa or the 
and horrors A seabed iy tae Ra yore in, 

my friends—thero i¢ expedient left; a gracious, an excellent, 


Ho 
around for the oxamplo of thut virtao and magnanimity in 
Sida ol Shei to mperers fa Caanbalnnes Teanga areca 


od—“Tt had been base wget § 


Be 
H 
i 
H 
2 
i 
i 
i 


are many a3 

of this martyntom, than T can be, however 

fear of impute! ostenfation may withhold ther from 

ost in exhibiting their merits, 

“Indeed, the station to which the captivity of Lord Vienne bns 

tnbappily fated me, imparta « right to be the first in giving my 

life for your sakes,” I give it frecly, I give it choerfully—who 

Ae aimed h, not to maturity, 
‘our #on! exclaimed a youth, not yet como “i 

3 See ," ered St. Perro, “1 am thon twice merificed. But 

Thad rathor bogotten theo second time. ‘Thy years aro few 

peo ‘the victim of virtue haa reached the utmost 


Calais 
The sixth victim was still wanting, but was quickly supplied, 
by Jot, from numbers who were naw emulous of so emnobling an 


ample, 
The, keys of tho city wore then delivered to Sir Walter. Ho 

took the six prisoners into hix tarot He ordered the gutes to be 

nod, al gave charge to his atteudania to contuct the 

Clieens, with thee flies, through the cardp of the Bughah. 
Detite they departed, however, thoy desired permladon to take 

thelr lat adioa of thefe delivercrs. “What a Sascue! 

They Ade wives and elie abn Sk itr a 

ow Tuibracod-—-thoy clang 
Pawn oben ay cima ey eA LE 








7 ; Hell ae if sD 
4 Hh El Hea i 


35 PB] 
‘iat i! 


pat ined ania ea 


Hei i]2Ti YF 4 FY]: 
Pte tl Ee 
ebabewetistiea ugitte 
rt sas tgits 
sudasjriits dats 
a Bence yeetis 
22492252 F8ese— oe E.. 
elas 
Aetuadayipet Su2egses 
faeauai ati 
ate il a 





THR FOOL OF QUALITY, 
the honour of the nation—it rospocts 


envitt ar 
Lan 
apes 
rue 
pres rue 
ate 
iil 
aul 
yin 
ieee 


“Ee 

‘n 

= 

ence 
i 


fh 


rathor disny ana reno gmbioe of 
ves our 

a the 

ah 

lr 


2 
i 
Fg 

eee 

Eee 

Fae 
Ee 
ze 
42 
2 
25 
2 


fie 
f 


to shame with ; we shall 4 them of 
Rep perder oplaico wl ich never fails to attend those who sullor 
in the cause of virtue, 

Tam convinosd—you, have prevailed—bo it so, cried Edwark— 
provent tho execution—have them instantly beforo ua! 

Aner cine | Sete He, jnoen, with an aspect and accents diffusing: 


Nativos of Frano, and inhabitants of Calais!—Yo have put ua 


fast and taturd inheritance ; bat, you attod bp to tis best of 
fan erroneous faigmont, and we audiairo and honour in yon that 


valour and by ‘which we aro 20 long kept out of our 
tfal posvomsions. 
‘ou noble ra—you excellent eltizvons! though you were 


have been anfiiciontly tested, We loose your chains, we snatch 
yon from the scaffolit; and we thank you for that lesson of lumilia- 
tion which you teach'ns, when you show us that excellence is not 








abovo 


“i 


ida thar ase vias Be Ae 
yours, aro justly and ominontly raived 


the 


since 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


oF nes Oe eta Tak rie. cine 6 Aelty 





car pages ea 
seahs 4 Bi tae 
tt 


GooD- 
lied the carl. I well 


wine 


forther affirm, that every 
bel 


will that is not informed by the one WIL of 


ra 


, be the act of malevolence. 
of that, rep! 
ve to intelligent 
1, for T soo that ho 
‘erefore prevent him from giving qualities as distinct from 


necessity 
can 
Patines free 


ae tl ne rE 
ed a 


ud iu Fea THe 
s ey 


ia iia 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


40 
biel deh pais Et a Gade | 
vl goodness ? 


capacity, discernment, power, wislom, ant 
it not such a Instant ‘ive, to a vust extent, the 
tee being tly ers aah 


ree of his carnsses, 
nurse and Harry wore departed, he called to him his old 
domestic, James, sid he, with » tear yet standing in his eyo, 
Tan no longer liv without the company of ths doar child hae 
Shorelors, tho orders I have already and Jet all th 

in readiness for the first, op) ig. domentio wo hat 
sich ie silent habit of his mastor, with « bow assented, and 


Meera or arated, nd Loot Dicky; with Hl Eros 


a number of little asociates, and an att Footman, got loave 
to go. copee a nutting. As the chil 
sounited with the way, tho servant dosird to stay bohind « whil, 
Su order fo Frode books Sr pulling sown the Leyashegs il wat 
granted issuod in high chat an’ spirits, 
mo lay at satno on ones of the par: behind 
house ; but when ‘had nearly approached the 


mao of their destination, Fiarry ilaod «garter, Bad, 
Soaediy to rejoin hia \ compan, wont back to seek it, 
moan time his associates, on entering the wood, met with 
Botte titipceed extn vilage hy, wha wet cn Baa 
gf whom a lag of nuts that soomod bulkier than the erm: 
So, gentlemen, myx Lord Dicky, where are you 5m ae? 


home—where should we go? says a little 


= wpa have you bean dong the Ink i ar 


Ask tomorrow, answered the hoor. Si icky, a little 
wokod, how ‘gare you to coase and oll neste’ where 
ro? Why, oa for that Mr. Dicky, ks other, Emow you 


Tors, not 1 Dicky, at ind to take 
ir nuts he My aoe gS ive you aa into the 
in, a8 na ete 7 Ae for tha “at She bie 


coolly answered the valngors you must do both or neither, re. 
T lay down my nuts between us; and now come any two of your 

















390 2352 Fed 22E9cect] 2202295228 Grdicy garagdece 4: 
SHH dani (aes Hear Gb 
a ret | Huby a gee § 

<i alemiaena Lata! Wan ede a 

3 Sie 28325 2 yall sie; reece Jaze errr 

a3 ul i ul ii iiyiisic, edadea getllP tiaed! 

iG lisudleameen ae Spel tated 
ee aa Sa 
E <e et ae a do. feb y 2 ite 
Beag it satph sale (gases acseaddind fesdareteelt-ti lif 
Bea sf is ie) 3 erty cee ety ae 328"e te 
Pieere bess oki ob d’egei G2 sag yet sok 
ane Ruel Ue aia 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


fag 


B 


A 


knows that. 
th 
shout the 

cul 
‘the Bo- 
», the 
was the Condé of 


of high achievement— 
war is « hero indewd. 


Spey 
who dos things 

the 

cela 

There 


Instructions toward his 
give 
ro 18 

whit jtextion |- 
one 

funous 

ae 

taal ily 

‘the Cyrus 

ond 

in ot Se 


? tell me, T beseech you, what fs a hero, my 


your hero is indood a horo; ho must bo overy 
do mo a vast honour; and T should bo 


hero, 

Sir, 
‘farther ts 
i 


523 
: as pag 
tls 


Prien. Sir, 


ul 


tatoos 


horvism, that boor and bar- 
hero that ever 


lied 'Themistoclos ; not 


3 who of & vi 


rok ope into a 


ink what « blockhond ‘Thomistocles 
‘of Rusiia, was the greatest 


ho considered as the greatest of heroes— 


to 


the fellow 
na whos 


‘conquers but who sa 
rains bt the man who srecks 
lespleablo peo} 

your 


wim wh cong 
‘the man who 
make & 


or tan & di 
abet? 


barian, Peter 


a8 
k 


fae 


Friend. 


Not 


a 


E 


he ought 


tr 


he disem- 


ty, 
hi 


‘Whom do you take to have boen the greatest hero of 


“ 


= 


Kate the wusherwoman, 


hinestf, But then, in 
4 nation. 


‘True, my frien; for, of a numerous 


oo 
‘that 


divide 


Author. 
Priel. 


a 





sreatont of heroes and 
early days, the 
orrant ; ackn 

wn will, or the will of 


ny 
wn, 


Tn those voi 
rnido and j 


pena ca 
of I q 
‘were oxtrom( 

‘no laws save the dictates of thoir o 


“ot: 


out compariton the 


ly 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


“ 

rulers, have assumed the aceptrs, bat his ambi- 
prea nt res ee ye 
nonls, manners, ond conduct of this and their . He 
Ponsa | tho most ox institations ever 
entered Into the heart or bead of man. Noxt to thoso of our 
Divini , they wore intended to form a now crosturo, 
He upon the rich to make an equal distribution of their 


‘the moderns? 
Avlhor. To confess the truth, among all that I have heard or 
rend of, the kero whom most affoct was @ the 
i whom T most affoct was a fool. 


jorst 
Troi I balls pou never, woul hare boon the titer 
you aro nt thie day, if you had not adopted somewhat of both the 
gaid quali” But coma, mnie, besoech you; whore may this 


Avihor. In & fragroont of the Spanish history, bequeathed to 
tho world by on iior Cervantes = hon 
Friend. G1 have you led me to my old intance? pray, his 


not your Pegasne some smatch of the qualities of the famons 


Author. Quite ns chaste, T wenre you. But T perceive that you 
think Tam drolling: you do not sq that you can ever be 
seriously Fs tho « rane ‘oriaien. Yet, you demand of your own 
momory, what have great heroes throughor tory been. 
renowned? it must answer, for mischief merely, for iting deso~ 
Iation and calamity atnong men, Tow greatly, ly, how 
divinely superior was our hero of the Mancha, who went about 


of wrong, and rodroating of injus up the fall 
serine does thoes whee iigaity had esate i this a 






7hom iniquity had ‘exal 
what batfotings, what braisings, what 
trampling of ribe, pounding of reached did hia bones not 
few aig ee at the recital.) But toil was his bed of 


‘tho houto of pain was to him @ bower of delight, while 
he considered himself ax engaged in giving ease, and 
Lope to others. If events eid not answer to tho enterprises 
of luis heart, it ia not to be imputed to the man but to his malady s 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


233 


ty 


ti 


: By 
al 


che 
qt] 


Hla 


Au 


saan 
3 B2085 


peylaliy 


i 


aE 
a | 455 


lori 


< the 


a domigod, 
nee, 


But how ean ii 
‘Tho sorene acts of benefives 


¢, In the throe Inngunges, signi 


lar to mere man. 
not mankind, in this instance, as blind to thelr 


interests, ae they wore iniquitous in giving glory where chamo 


‘oro 
was duo? 


nlate ve 
he uli Bt 


- 


alin the dot 


they proved at onco tho dupes and vietims 
raise fn ehild for his 


on 


malevolence, and you quicken 


In 
own 
and 


| 


aq 1 aa # i Bea zene Hey 
ae & > 

ial Lye Sige! lea cite 
TE 28 aj La fie a iqud 

& be8s ge 23 fl oe ih gate getty ieee ee 
eh nhs i fall Ube nls 
ani WH od Bue E etaalel Tis 
= iny Hite age 2 gual [EES 
ty) Bagchi 3 ie 4 a Eb Beige! ified 
pees: Wn Laiyk i Paine : 
if ah jdm Ua fale 
gig! te eres 

Sg87 yvie ae ) an acta i! 

2 5 ef 

‘ seBnte Ey iu tet ie uuhalnedy 








“tH 
eee 
bps ine ae Pe ere ele 
si IF vat el ie aaa eae 
ia i eae a ne 
lie factual eae pega 
8 tit uence dene BRIE 
jac uae St eee 
La eee Rania 
re allie fal 3 ie 
FH te 








st ea 
Jae titan relat ia fe 
gab denne a Bape iat Hy 
a ins aie pee He ‘ ses EH ia 
34 iq 3 4 ae iui i “if Eis Patat i 
fee ae S 2eesk fae fre erry er Her 
Bee Lo ite WE Pay luztccral’ aaci#atens 

= HI nella q Heh EE H aiieths 
qoute bet ui ila ful alin: 

Hine nu pri HATE eeRG i ipa 








THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 





sappeageheys 24°38,70730 HEM 
enna ge rena Ge 
fiat gee ln setae ney Oe 
glug tegtede astejdsltcaeies cstz't Pye, tgageca TAF 
Hine Hastie Gaui Wu sin agee 
badd deste stage Gieaingiy 
Halts ere Hapa devant 
Pal ie ee ee ee 
Filet lahenapial At ed 
ifs Has Sete a nit eed alte oui 
i jenth Hues a iii: 
il if ye une # a 
aise: a eae BAe 
His ete ak init en las a HE nite 


Heat dieu odl Game petal 





siett 

re fle : ue Vr tae esd iaz 
nitan iste rE ee ili 
alghene ee aft) sil puts 
Sadpidineen (Rusti Glin a) 
eatin saliifar yy at salar 
Ef # u agit yee pee 
Eu i tert INES es lay 

alanis IGEailieg pe queiaiallll 

Hane Hest ei sails Rubs rh 

22 Phe 
Pe ria 











, dee ie LRA 
iba : <4 pal pee H 
i a8h dls ial | alg ie 
eee ital th 
S Heniie Wu a sag fd 
: igh ped i : Nae Hy iy 
Pe a ame 
Sain pi! bl ide: ih b 
ae il i cea eG 


(i By 

i ail 
a ln 
hil jl 
inf ide 
qa hea 
ali Ha 


Hull il 


and universally bespattered or covered with mire, without ed 





Be tare iy roe 
Foes brother brother ‘Farry shall T mover bes may OWS ioe 


‘more 
Tot had alroaty despatchod ne ae of cirenlar letters 
fils scqpainionces, wat) other throughout te kines 
recovery of his 


ay eee offers, “3 tn sion a the 
clild. “But finding all ‘aa ho." twased! ifvastieewertte to: 


uae aie. CaS “ropentedly,itwerted in all the public 
pore: ag th same, ‘no donbt, are still extant, and may be found 
the musty chronicles of those singe, 
Within a fow weeks after the publishing of —_ advertisement 
amy lord received a letter reepecting his son m Heary, that 
st consolation to him ond his lady; insomuch that, with the 
‘lp of tho loniont hand of timo, in loas than tho epace of 
months this nolile family were restarod to their former choorfulness 
and a tranquility. 
But to return to the situation in which wo left our hero: the 
coach drove on at a round rate, and the children continued in 
glee, and thought this kind of convuunce the finest sporti imaginable le, 
When they entered a space on tho first common, tho 
looked about to take care that no one was in wight: pl pee om 
to the right hand, he held gently on till he came to another great 
rom!, on which he drove at his former rate. This he did again 
at the next common, and coming to another rond that led also to 
London, ant night now approuehing, be put up at the firet great inn 
came to, 








THE FOOL OF QUALITY, iS 
had tho precaution to his great-coat mufited 
esl pon onld shescre Rie banal i teres 
to a room, and fire and candies were lightod up. ‘Then his 

and domestic eh plead siseors and implo- 
for shay lockod the door, anid set to work in the presence 
all attention the whole 


rH 
j 


tat 
Hit 
i 

iu 

Fi 

i 

i 

i 


ue 
HE 
ie 
he 
ie 
= 
hd 
el 
g:] 
qs 


iy 
BS 

if 

a5 
ta 
lil 
3 ie 7 
uli 
Fae 
ef 
il: 
Eee g 


F' 


id 

f 
it 
: 
i 


it 
Be 
‘a5 
Hl 
i 
i 
: 
Fy 


7 
fe 
: 
2 
i 
&. 
E 
Z 
& 
2 
+4 


Mr. 
asociaten, ‘This invitation was aoceptod with trantport; and after 
‘tags till they 


about three days mors they arrived safe at Hou 
sopping at the court of a large house, that was 





attended at: talilo ly James and tho two footmen, 
s00n as the latter grace was said, and the cloth taken away— 

Fenton, it is now our turn to wait on Jomos and 
ts; for God made us all to be servants to cach 
man is hot hora a bit better than another; and ho is 
serves and attends the most, and 
wttended upon, And my precious, 
it shall ploaso God, may Become « 
‘good that peoplo showld be proparod 


took his associates down to the hall, just as 
to dinner. Ho guva his domestics tho 

to sot tho example, usked Mrs. Hannah, and 

janes, anni Mr. Frank, and Mr. Andrew, what they would 
to have? ‘The sarvants readily falling in with thoir master's 
‘ordered Harry to bring such a thing, and Ned to fstoh wach 
and Elarry to do this, and Hurry to do that: while Harry, 


ca Sete, 
stig 
a : 
a6 = 
oEeEEE 


i 
He 


ip 
i 








abge! age 2 
Fy 4 ageeals gansesg 
ie suena iH 1 auiay cae ut 
af e | Hated 3 3 i 
eet 


x dizsees ip 
Haniel een 
8 ial dediged sald sctli Huse a 
icra ce Piglets Heras Fe Ee 
Beal eH Snighes Pedy ily oy EE 
Hy ase Hicge yids te A! 
3 : ii eeeatpeese affs3 aa: Hat Ba 
bil ie neg 
ee cleat jekenaelly ; 
oH ui cid! Hac lie ialigiy ie 

We Pe Pee eee Bahai 

Hike fa aks baa 
isdclbE uy age ia 
faa 


= 





3 nal BEEP be PEE! 
in ee ae ne 


a it “ xl 
ane ae Hien 


iplerments nnd materials 


TRE FOOL OF QUALITY. 
father sd mothe, 
plying the 


ulahle CE aR iat 
anh 


rr be E 
Hiei Fi a ut dle lens ie 





56 THE FOOT OF QUALITY. 
eR pote Bs eee ‘Ho had a largo lawn 
‘his } and hither ho summonoa, three times in every 
‘woek, all Ka any nll Mpeg th fo 
our 


individually to himself for bis xine and 
fos mover Sould coment to bar te fete ror tbe Ral bat we 
session pu tees ampten rl oo ac eoiet 
or ‘whom 
Contents ir ho ft Wb seme aad Solst of hi tortiied pvertry, 
and consolingy hinted! at the injustice of tho Jades, and reformed 
hea ee 
} Whilo Harry ws 
sages atrer eche eres ae Poe Pons 
1 plaintive yoiee behind the hodgo, as he t, m the oppost 
He flow across the road, and, passing through # ‘torn- 
utile, soon found the unhappy objects he sought for. He stood for 
‘come time like a statue, and’ his compassion too strong for 
tours or utterance; bug, su turning and flying back ajain, 
he rnshod with precipi inte tho room whore Me. Kenton was 
wi ‘a lettor. What is the matter? said Mr. Fenton, 


ut frighted you, Harry—what makes 
‘this Harry replied oni et nea jing hold of his 
with all his foree—O come! says he: O come, dada, 
Mr, Fenton then got up, and suffered himself to 
the child pleased to” conduct him, without another w 
asked or answered on either side. 
Wj hihen they were come into the feld, Mr. Fenton obser 
iting on the gruund. His clothes seemed, from head 
remainder of bettor ‘Through a squalid wig and 
his palo fnce appeared just, tinctured with a faint and 
s1; and his hollow ayes, wire fixed upon the fice of «woman, 


rod; 

w 

dying, though without any Capea agony ; while a male inf 
wis half 


20g0, ftevtchod of the ground, and 
awross tho woman's Jnp, with its little nose pinched by famine, and 
ite eyes staring wildly, though withoat attention to any 
thing. Distrosa soomod to havo expended its utmost. bitterness 
eS NAS, AS NEE eee ah alibi Ao bevy Rees eee 
ox . 

Unhappy man! cried Mr. Fenton, pray, who or what are you? 
‘To which the stranger faintly epitel, thon lifting his eyos— 
Mots you may be, disturb not the last hour of those who wish 

Bun, Harry, a Mr. Fenton, dexire all the servants to come 
to mo immorately, and bid Mrs Hannah bring some hartshorn 
anil « bottle of cordial, 


fe 
ini 

& 
ue 
ae 


& 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY. wT 


Away flow like feathorod Morenry. on his god-like errand, 
Forth ei ne Frank, and Auivows Leen 
Mig. Hannah, with tho howeraid au conti 





ci 
‘warmed in haste—tho new guests were all gonth 
undresied, and Inia therein ; and, being compelled to ewallow a 
mack.whey, they recovered to a kind of lanynid sensibility, 

‘The phiylean gave tt ae his opinion, that this unhappy family 
‘wore reduced to thelr present state by excess of grief and fiunine ; 
that nourishinent shonld be administered in very small propor- 
tions; and that they should be kept as quiot as posible, for a 


cht wt least. 
oven all as care is taking for the recovery of these poor 
people, we beg leave to return to the aflairs of thelr protectors. 


CHAPTER VI. 


Avovr a month befuro this, Mr. Fenton had ongoged one Mr. 
Vindex, the schoolmaster of the town, to come for an hour every 
amd initiate tho two boys in their Latin grammar. But 

he had n spocial cantion given him with respect to the gunerous 
dispositicn of our ‘which was said to bo induced to do samy 
thing by Kindness; but to be harsenod and roused into opposition 


by severity. é 
Tn about ton days after the late adventure, Mr. Fenton was called 
to whero he was retained about thre wocks, Sa settling 
ils books with his Duteh correspondents and in calling In a very 
arrear of interest that mas due to him upon his deposita in 


During his absence, Mr. Vindex began to aetme a more expanded 
authority, and gave a free eoope to the surly terrors of his station, 








Nemo me tmpune lacessit was f of whose impropriety not 

St. Anthony himeelf could porsnade 
All night he lay ruminating and brooding on mischief in bis 
+ and having formed the outlines of his plan townrd 


morning, he began ‘to chuckle and comfort himself, and exult in the 
scution, He then reveatod his prujet. to his hedfellow, Mr. 
Sits eal pouiae sete 


expressive of its Ly ape ay Mr. Vi 


ti furniture. a0 itabto to. the dignity of 
ee tor he tll cvsdered dered that tg f he 


Ratha ry tases: nro Saxe eenle ane et 
dominion and justice upon 
‘ho contre of the scat of this chnir of authority, Nod 
got Mr. James to drill a «mall hole, not discernible exept on a 
Wury minuto scrutiny. He thon provided a indica ack, of 
bout six inchor in length, to ono end of 
Pisoa ot laety"ene tote thar ook ho-fizel fan and iota lege 
epee ‘This mee had been a glover's, of approved metal, keen 
and. pol unre toward the point, for a quick and 
rely Penetialen of tocgh lost, Hie ‘ccs Soatened wo. eal 
coda tranevarely to the leaien extremity ofthe sticks andy James 
isting, they turnod tho chalr with the bottom tpward, and 
Serkad tha tose aie of se corte iv mucha inca ha anes 
the four cantinal paints of the compus ; while the stick remained 
suspended in an upward direction, with the Int of tho noodle Just 
4 far through the dil, am put it upon a 
oF de elisa heer ered ae mel wes oa 
about the iidile of tho stick, and dmwing this thread over the 
pe: rang, hoy arcu! thy end of it jst uoer Noda stoul, and 
replaced the seat of learning in ita former position. 
ety Ne pri when oC found Dai 
machine answered to « miracle; (or tho stick being restrainod 








s aay Hise i; 3320: Eten ie ii } 
Lee eae 

: B aii! Hae Saadaee eee 
; erSteqie ty fe 
: Hahei eiipoe Na 

Hustelallis el by Hi tha 

4 


: alt afl 
ii aie ny Heat i 


iets Bue idiineel He r| 


3 
2 
zs 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


i 
| 
: 


i 
F 
E 


34 
4 
5 a! 
i 
E 
h 
if 
BFE 


He 
ie 
é 
E'B 
= 
| 
2 
3 
a 


u 
iF 
: E 
Ba 
=e 
if 
: 
i 

2 


ving Him, eds could baspallas ‘what bad ho to, 
in mitigation of tho penalty, where, in the party 80 


i 


Ned's flogxing held him confined to his bed, 
ino to contrive with ane end, a just 





Harry went often to sit and condole with Ned, in this the season 

of his calamity; and as he had now conceived a aversion to 
. on account of his barbarity, he of to 

fied to measures deemed adequate to ipes and injuries 

‘The house of Mr. Vindex was a | and Jnilding, 
with a of atone stair, aod @ ions li 


before the ier was again on his Peary night aid 
cessive dark, and the fumily of the preceptor hud 


ing tho door, looked this way and that way, and culled out re 
peatedly to know who wens there; but no voice replying, he retired 
and glut all to again. Scarce was he roentered when he hears 








THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


He a A WG5e geqyesiey g gl? 
se 
egal tin a ia ite Wis i ia ah gies" ne = a 
582% ee Fi bet 5 gl Bie 5 aii £ pita 
rie el naite alene Lai 1 0H 
Hy Mana | si Heepe ttt 
bie ij paluniiis 3 lata! Mae aget 
atand Whaeaeraely TENG] aaudil poe! 
Baa S3a8tisic.. an ig ae Hi Mii: ie 
a Dieu pa ea Habba lana 

Ha iP Hail Hee nee Hane Lie 
ee uae ale ee oud 





TE 


leper 
Pepe 


fee B85 iF e 3s 

jess se eal A 
ds sat ar Hla : ppiaiey HL 
aie aie ee EE) waa 
LF ae usidiaaiue eel migel Ba 
' ae eine iaburai ited i 
iia RL a tH bale nie whi ule aaa 
ied Fae He datas Hau Hb ee 


if iE a Hig 
3 ag EE, ae 
Hest Ey REE 3 S235 ff it 
eae 
pee Hi fpin iihibiiess aig 

BEE E ait 5 ae be get zest igs get 33 
= gs sieelaciteils High seaad itgitia Ti] 
pean PUB ein ay Bentey au 
" ue a z nH nu el ha HL 
Halil ane WD : 
® all 3 aa8de 6h 3e 2 TW Aneel Bie: cE 
hie 32285 BgEe a B ee igttal a 

tli = il Eee iy iG 


ti ie Bue Te a 
5°33s 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


ae 
i 

: 

z 

f 

1 

i 

rf 

: 


unene 
ial 
ie 
fren 
bea 
i 
caper) 
au 


z 
i 
3 
: 
a 





‘rth doa, thengh ct rit of hit tnaetor; ant ba alo, 
the asaivtance of Mrs, Hunnab, put his wife and little boy into. 
slogn and somly eppar 
As James's invention was on the rack to got adequate satisfaction 
da tear of generosity and admiration on hi the 
‘of Harry's heroism and noblilty of soul. Os eee 
By his advice, Mr. James despatched a messenger to a draggist 
at Tanlon, and to soveral other saps for sundry apparstow= and 
Raving all things in rendiness, und Harry belng now able to’ bear 


a 7 
masons feom his mastor, as though he were Jast come home, 
and requested to speak with him. 

pee socortags comes and knocks, Tho door opens, he 


with porpeets;Recpiot and updruy at dbepped eld Ares 
rn fot, ani t dropped 

Ber SIR Slat ae Mas hen ra 
to contend for frightfuinoss with Milton's Dwath and Sin. Four 
fienils and two little impa at once laid thefr fangs pon him, and 
would have 4 him to the ground; but the pedagogue was a 
sturdy athletic 7, and ufos und scrutched, and roared it out 








GSEu0E8 £6 3 
aif) SPESyE agg bes gapsayTE at j 
Hue wee aT ee qi 
88 ii Bs i ig 4 pt Pee 431 nl Song 
elle ge a mee eal ab HUE ab 
SH al beled anes ae 
lets ali iaueeaarlbl i 
SHlnteiae pate ast aniiea| i 
a its ao hi F ented ant 
spain ib ib shiqaay ailing 333 
rae fe en Amer 
Haan Le Pa Hee iate 
WH Bay oi 5 





THE POOL OF QUALITY, 
whom he took to the tavern, he sent for Mr. 


ar 


‘the 


wt, 


sag 28 Ertl F 


ae 
Vy A oabhtee ah 
of our 
be. 


i 


it HL 


. 


He BEERS PPSSEea gE 
i HER He ee Tea 
im ia indi ‘ ae | a 
cai we ate 
Pi taaH aban cil; 
afd i Hh ae in ai 
a8 a3 AL aii gebgailagtil 
eal PH iain 
nla HH gts ay sei 


Le 


aul 


ae. 


Hii a 


F 


4 
i 





rier 
(ue eo 


He | 


valance gerr 2st > have 
unprinefpled, by such tators A ‘Mr. 


age 


er 


ik 


ne 


Hf 
nua iH Hil a 


dass f 


erety 





es 


amd has 


education, But may I 


you plloase, to be 
; you begin to 


icle 
do me a greater fuyour. 


you in 
is you 
val 
iro no further advant 
‘Mr. Fenton put a purse of five-and-twonty guincas 
The ofthe rewptor and wire wat ag 
he is a eensible Icind of a man, 
Ti hints pon 
? by all moans; as froo as 
cannot 
plague on, mom 
v 


drop come gunoral remarks upon the whole of 


instructions, 


pay, credit, this Mr, Fonton—I long to know tomo- 


dovils, Mr. 
soa el 


wok 


mo, 
Friend. Why, 


ai 
E al 
bal ai nid 





ite 


ae 





i 


ett ate sit 1 HAHN 
ijdeiuy dauecieal 
ee rer aA 
2, & Seeesaeens 28 Ea 
panei Pa ue eo 
giyieldestielit iS aatinaie 
ae tle tt MEA 
rH apeasl Fpssbsaesieste: be: 
pelgate ase 4 & Eibge sAgstiges 
et ee fo| Hie iat riba He 
PSU Rees ee ee 
Panty slit He detail 
tinh ai hdustigee Udall Suh 














a a ah La A i i 
2 i pa att be Hi ae a ta 
A eet eiatienarlt it 
Hi ti cual i aunt 
i Heber gas. ce 5 Breeds | psieaerseges 

4 tay 2 Ha gREes 522 E 
: ee pitataet Haldneaialiees 
GE Gla 
aac HUH) obese fy ee) 
: nt Hi ean 

He ie 


ny HA a HHHL He! Hr ule 3 


a= 





TRE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


vil. 


ap aga 
i i Tae Le ee 
ad tied He 
i i Laan uh 
sh2p%e EF p's2gie8 He 
B HL Ha 
i in Pie iE 
pegpe god > aeaeis » fH 
he Ih i wl ia 
walla ee 
dae 14 neh 


seit Ae uy HH ie f 
be | aie a (in 
lind a! 4 th ra 
aes? Hrigetere 22's 
e328 fede ee ge ier 
aetstgil sghbecseg 52) 
siisiics gout isis ar 
siya Bnet 
Paced dieen 3 ise 
Hoa nla ra ni 
Batis Ball ae 

tea i peal at 
Perey Fial apelin] 





* SEpstgapia [LT GEE! G48e dappsty cage 278 

ne fae ne is oe ul tai 
. ie Pat UG Aes gE tel ei 
BURG HE GHG US anil pide 
Sieh ie Hed? Ge uta faet 
sR tal gee i guid] i] 
: He Fe 23 Beg pied i cated ttecien i 
faa git Bu ie pipe Behan 
les ae : re 2a 1 ea al un ib 
He { Ht Hn) Hild Anu eee 





it 


Gf 
aH 


to 


the 


ty 


id 
Thao no iosaes 


eee 


iteful 


of 


lad 
era 


f 


wo had drank a glass 


rales 


fortune is small, 
uw 


would be 
th 

a eee a 

led Me, 


glad 
my emplo; 


id beat suit 
such, 


? 


day, who tat attentive in « comer, 


red that ho 


irillo agnin entered tho coffee-hours 


in the next room. 
I 

you 
it 


‘a8 T have an jon 


jeman, ono 
oy 
‘to have but fow 
ly 
and 


st 


ame on 


My 


daya Mr. 


Appoar 


a, and wi 
id. 
vo usefal for 


ween Ren 
what 


Bike 








Hee Bay i a aan Heel i 
ti ae fa Ht u to i a itil 
fa me dada a pitt Halheriey t a oH 
se ta Been 
pe uieeida WIRTH TH REA 
pte Hier ah eb ie 
Ne eee ut 
alah aeigis Baile SE edie Had val 
autlitt Ue Pidiin eile sueile ae 








Se ag g2ip 32 ranges a Saati fled 4 
gee ase 
TA ees maa an 
ge dU a et 
1 taf hal ified Ube: danuiala ts 
E0igd Ms Tee 
‘ee i re Dernier 
Ha ae Bie THE ‘ fea 
ft pat ie ue Hu ae HE eat et HI 
a ea ae ta ainnegly 





23223 bee 8% 78 Hae 

“TE a el a BG 
‘Ss ; aa $. ¥ ge fist nal sce belt a4 
fa na i Bj lah Hae Hei Lote 
uaa gh bead [ul ial Wiaae 
idditbadid ya aie al oindl ele 
ge haatinpagd fd 2fledy GR Ted ge ites 
i: Hall Hal ag Pee pests cities 
g ebasseey aed! B 287 eaHpalt) 
Hares te a al Te et 
Saal ifud tail, 

i HL Dy alain 1 an zl 

Sn Ure Bie Hen BL ah, Fh 


a 
ute 
ia 
eihgt 
‘ae 
ZF as 
ny | 
cet ey ple 
p2 rt 


? 
i 
g 
. 
2 
i 
EE 
ik 
a 


ag 
BE 

HAG 
i 
ine 
SEH 
5 
2 


Per l228 
fal 
EES Fs 
ail 
H E 
seEEee 
Se 
sete 


| ; 
eek 
ie 
[ 
ae 
' 
Pr 
HT 
i 


x 
F 
5 
Fs 
Fa 
E 
KI 
Ee 
ges 
eR 


mado. 
‘ng pagoda vary painful and rostloes night, I remembered 
nothing farther, til, at the expiration of pera T aoomed 
to a out Of «long and uneasy droam. 

T tamed my head and beheld, ax T imagined, all arrayed in 
shining white, and at my Dedaide, an inhabitant of some superior 
region ; for nevor fll then had I goon, nor even concelved an idea, 


of x0 lovely. 

Tel aid Tf Fig = ae workd am Beh fend 
instead of replying, she flew out of my apartment, and soon after 
roturnod, acc d Uy Dra. Graven, wilows bands md ayes Wats 
elevated, as in some extraontinary emotion, 

Mrs. Gravor, aid I how do you do? T hope you are wall, T 

begin to conjoctire whereabouts I am. But neither did eho 
amawer but falling on her kges by my bed, and taking hold of my 


thon, says slic, wo romembor that trouble no more, now that you 
ae nga, born into the werd 

“Daring tho fow waooecding a in which I, kopt may bed Mrs. 

Graves and hor fate lace, Arubola, whom X had ra vision, 

constant reakfasted it their evening apartment, 
eave thax K ehOTt Vaatve of hay Seeaguny: EMey ye 











© Feeg ugannengaey qqpeataneynas pu eegeat rd 
if Hen ce naa Me cui z i nie i i 
a et £ ate aad H eh ie : Rs 
aud Segueigedtae, Uigeasdafectaa fy t20ha3 433 i. 
PER HOT ET UG ielsteese's #2 giptss rig@ts 
3 Ee ied 3 i ifjainlll alae i 
= = = Pi Hee F ali oeP senate see ES z ie rE 
bla th Cea eas 
fellay faa peepee 
ed i ee aaa i a! ai 
Ay ore ae) ees fat Fitpra tH 








z e183 # 38 Sgazpse & 
i Hal a ah pe ui i faut 
hoy i Hate 5 ai dite ae Ge i a8 
+ dau leas wel ie iat 
ne dbase fete Hg ay Lait 
bagi uy ate aL 

ae bls Eis ee ye 

Hie eeteye: if faz, LEB eldreigirt 1H 
iilutaann arate ET 
4 222°33 

JME “Gletal ne ath 





“a ia ed eee ed 
fe a nae! i mle ld tei 
Hala ae ia 
bin Pieters HH estan 
: aaa subte ia| 
hee aati i Hettt 
: Pipa Hind ck 
i aun a 
se ait hy 





Re ih ie agli He Hee er 


is a glut of them in all markets Teo ais 
‘per 





& Hy s 
Hi 
mn 
H if 
ti 

ie 
ith 
nu 


I 


ir 
z set s 
Aare iH 
a nie 
pt 
st e uty 
i Ha 
Fasten 
fiat rile 
ae 
3 Bt 


that i contained boveral ‘very free Temoostrances apaitat his 
majesty and the ministers for’ faye 3 with France in the war 

inst Holland in opposition to the civil and religious interests of 

land, togethar with a few collateral di in assertion 
of Magna of the freedom of man in general, and of Britons 
in particular. I perveived that it wax written with much more 
juigneat than genius. And what, said T to Welleot, will you give 
to that man who shall. confessedly, excel this your most eminent of 
patriot writers upon his own subject, and in his own way? Give, 
sir? cried the bookseller ; thanks, ani 9 proportinnebis Joe 
crease of the profits. Enough, sir, I answered ; you shall soon 
hear again— TTOW. 


of pamphlet shops, and bought up all the political papers that had 
say reference to the matter in hand. 
fat down to my work like a hungry man to his and 
tay heart thoea short indalgencoa which it enjoyed fa 
the society of tho two objects of ita fondest affoctions. 
Having finished my first papor in about a fortnight, I entitled 
it the Weekly Monitor, and took it directly to Welloot's. aes) 





FOOL OF QUALITY. 





treed Sees (HY Tle 
ret ga 0 eae Gt 
Ghee Ulan Hae pent iiaeia| 
Heel Egeten =" sts d33- eae boae g arte 
bere ate add) antiga 
iiliientue Hei bit pis att 
sg2t esta yiee paeceepn ed fosauct ER ESeErges 
rie De Sch Gee eer 
sQyhesceazeeh git patadcayg:2 acca ec tetgety ie tnass 
lala i a Aa 
ey gists Us say i ie aie Petters 
pron ty ou neneeedt ear 


agen aESiae sete 3. 





Hire ta oe ae SAE YU 
foie el ely 
ar el tik f se lied aup Weel 
bicep Prsnerpe ye 
Gages 1 i teen partly ri 
Ss Hitt fe waty 
Ri aca eee = HIE egas aired: gijesk? a3 
& sggphaehtiaa tite sire teintel gy gic-s°fagh 
" Feil sb erdgar fil ii He ia 

Hills ts uae He Hf bel 


ane ian 


tae 


moment. T shonld bo hphsaey 


+ pray, stay 


you went aw: 


eepeeae ft 


in the greatest of all erro 
‘should think that I could m 


? No, sir, 


But is it p 


oy Sak 


no, of wll amen Living ; 


tbh 
Tae 


to you, 





tH Hee Hf it i ail hy 
32288535552 sea gitle S32 
s i saith eid fe Re Pa ae 
y beele eae ftte 23 cet) geldse 
3 fy ih pelts eral i! A eal 
agen foctanie anes 1G Evita 
eae 
84 pe ude ae us H ogi! ae F 5 ‘iis Bal 
Eee PL pee aiiis ih 
i Etna lei ale 


cy THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 





T had now, within the of five received 
hundred and twenty cr'cm the sale of bis Eee ag ld 
‘abroad one f d, within a oa 
by 1 if my name was Clement 
Jt is, air, 1 anaworod, ‘Thon sir, ED Soe rae 
‘s namo for ion, against 
three’ or four abngeants thet. usteniod, bo had 
me ly saizod and conveyed toward Newgate, 


As I was not of a timorons temper, nor conscious of the smallest 
tincturo of the crimes with which I wax charged, 1 ehould 
tmade little more than « jost of this business had I not trembled. 
ba mehensions of those who I knew would tremble for me, 


3 


“°P oataly wnt for umpley Cael ba 
mediately sent for Humphrey Cypher, .W, 
whom 1 hal exe vocaslonally fee's fn Teal of Stee Cravcay aad 





and ingenious young gvutloman ; bat I find that you are better 
nequiinted with tho’ repatlics of Grooce, than with the natu and 
‘constitution of our limited alone, 


Some Inpece and miaapplleations thal your adversarion woul lay bold 
of. Yot there is nothing grosaly scurrlone or malcions throng 
or what may amount to the inicurring of s premunire, by the most 
violent constraint or wresting of the senao If yon are it 
to proceed tn the course of thot papers, I would ast 

mat in bul, and to stand the netion, ‘But ax T am 
that the court Inve commenced this progeution awn matter mere 
4a lorrorem, to (eter you from a work that gives them groat diqgust 
if you havo any gente friend who would salict in your favour 
and promise a future conduct more amenable to power, you would 
undonblodly be discharged withoat farther cost or trouble, 

T retamod my warm ncknowlolements to the scrzeant for bia 
friendly counsel, and told hi 1 would consider of it before I gave 


mye he, 
you to pi 








sgiea sept apaggige cuggye te agezeny ppvege anuaee 
Teg ae eae Fe 
a g [Bsn ta 632 ges Fud s 5s age 
gael geal jl ianuee want, 
S eestibst peered Gli yeetie] acer 
Terai Malet Wal iat 
Safe ener ne fans 
Oy al fe ee ply, 
Borge rist i288 sii fae ue ae 3 guile BE 

33 Ace 
gai : ‘ait aj eaueunealig 
Pa el Mean teiietae 





fia eee 
Be ive inn 
ny eee rie 3 Hl i i “ij 

lilae feats a a Galea 
re tdi ip ails tz | Ae £33 aaa Hid ss ae 4 
: ila 2 gee is ati on eer i 
Riehl ae a ete te es ? 
oP Ts tl i al Pe vidi breast Z 
ee silent Ee 
sit sgh a daibaane ae 

& 3 aces Ey sae Hs Ey se 5228 pele a 
ae eee 
eel ety 
teas 
a meeaee i 








* ae Hs EG peuteg #38 ER tt 

fe He ela ie 
Blog ee nui ste i i 
gh Poet eight 8) Baa 
eh ta eel 
54 by Eaatieiplagesd 
: me RE 
- Hie ieee 
F ual Bike oat waa il 
une ree arene elu ty Hl Fi 





8B THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


a the third mor after sas bam tir! Hg Aye | Tr 
4 large bundle of antipat jets in hie chariot, ani 
ints for my instruction, He brealke 


io fen thas th mained ti T 
—— ¢ , 3 
enem! orer ig tee ate was onlaine p pro 


reign T proved, from many authorities 
and instances, derived from Greece and Romo, that ie never 
to dangorows to a popalnce as when it is taken into thelr own 
hands; that the governors and governod, by the violence of ool- 


odd, 
Now, xir, though E thus altornately sided with the 


nt fats om thor hav and equally I 
question, the cause of my country, of Uberty, and truth, 





Hf Hy, agsy0 a ne a Rae Gistagigns Ceqqyizagry 
a Hl Banks uh a jal i 
eth iin sera a Hipanl | 
Slide jitsu elit: 1 eat 
e sitts sagaselaeeiee se tenth, par eeht 
Piney Hepa eelaity a! 
g SBuig ppsagie ageecieelscfap itis Hnlnver I 
nih tl ee dared | 

z HAE 

eels 3 ie ti Hy B fe alll 
THE te tee earn Be wh | Hae 








ere taka 4 He re If pan 3 i fi 


ve ae He rauiay ae 

: A Hee a ee ii 
3 ie 2: G22gh* 225528 
at ay i et a 
: Wn Walia gay) lad ull 
‘ st bin lg iad Head win 
5 ieuiiil eae 


pula pate 
is aaa: rile oe Fes b ratts 
aa aes san a8 th 


fe Hela i: HH 
z S = HORE = 
. Hail ce ue ai bolas le a 





Hus 


be Wnt gia Biel, GEE Mey 
zi A ae . ne Biull iF Hl i dee eps 


es ee a “5 HL iis 
i rib o agli ‘ Helga alone 
gf iw: rs aps este Meat E 
s Be i PH a Hee endl 2 
8 438 Hi ee 4s us 2 fide i 
R a rE: ae rH = ce rainll 
ge oH ae Poree an e Ht 





rm ee 
eb i wae ine Hd fal laa be 


nae ety al 


a] 
if 





21 Ut A 
if of iB ie 


aia al G aphegads age 
at gia alii: i 
a ee aE ia 8 F] i 
eH | geiban il 
epee bs may ie 
arias He it 
PLL igi if 
puis eae aay gett 
ia te Hip liane tif 
ee ilinaiagts seat dee 
aca ec 

Fess 235 antes? 
fille eee ats f 








Hn Tid eri ae 
igs: 5 ezEeh es : # es dete ee 
lis He He Heel Ha 
eel sre taetut are Hubei 12 
geet ee eiieeant Gad Batis it 
Hille ate poet eee a 
eal A a : i Be i Bae Hu ite 
une fi 
LAL ola a an es 





be | i 

i pails ae 
Sth a ByxEse 3 
id 1) z a3g Hii a et 
Jus i i a Py ay Prt a 5 
Hany fig atl ant died uae 
ie aT eee fey ie Hate 
enue ia saat ie aba aie ae 
# see air aly (Fe Ha 
z BAH g 28233 igen ae eg i is #253 ca8s 
i] ela Ae Ate Aue isting 
i aed quite he paral 
Ue etaegeiata | 8 raat 
Hug eticasy POSE aight ies 
Hasserieyial tila eae] 
tala 


seeyen FAgih 44005 TERI~gGiT YS pesdeiaa ize 
ing i me 3 ae aul rae aay ees 
is pl git ae ey eine ell 
h cer vil a iA abl a fie 
EanH abe zit fyeag igdlfae Bie] 
SUE railed Husa PEGE BPEL tHiEe a 
see dt uteadell gendituae |e 
i EEE atisae UG aune 
: a3 aetaglD | levadtcatfaeaaidac a fain: 
3 li stl ant Ay eH eee 
ere ie an eneae ee a wien 
teat peek tdiiaiG oie 
& Pees He au gut it i 
nie oe gies Tan HaUeR Ee 








a 


not own me? will not 
me. He 
y child 


‘our fon, 
of your age, wad tho 
apo 
‘poor 
you are my 


owl 


ack 
oannons and 
indeed: 


not 
og tho contort 


jon 2 
LO ea peated 
me through 
SOE bellon 
+ faintod away. 


2 will 


you 
famamo) 


il, BO 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 
‘manded—Will you not know mo? will 
nate spoale 9 
ones Beloved 
While 
‘ol, 
‘Hammel, and 


CHAPTER VII. 


aaayiiany ieee: Felsieye Hage 
Fe nan 
Fp Bs rotten Pee 
sfree qj i une annie ee 
dite: toe ee ely 
Haga refi ute te 
33 eSG5s bsg seuregse Folees* 
al lunesta aie 
aig $38 ee gin rid Hs sie Hie: 
Sa 


outa a 





s iy | 383 a PE § y re ie il 
iif Aan ea We ae na Ho Bat 


ane F be Las ze 
1 HH i Hie se (Laid aly 


PAE Lato StH EE 
ee ee tne ue 
pe atghtlr sin aiileilit 
Jor eerier git ae 





“TEL 


are FOOL OF QUALITY. 


a 
Males 


uel a tie Hae Hit EE 
ed antes leg UDG | 
aie a an ala i 
sees | [Letters 0 
Hey eceenjee | Gia 
HZ = iil Fe He Z 
ee t ane clei ap.ailie i 
tia! ie neds ta ee i 
ak 


oe | 


i ne ir 


na 


My is 


é 


Cio mry m o  n Msr 


Ht 


ie 


alata War 
ayh dl 3 bi? ang te! 





a 
UUs fh 

areiets reas iis ua 4 
ea aa 
pay Ene abies leit ae 
eH ub eaitenin Bre HH 
re ean al jell ia Eaislall es 
"= a3 see gee eg £ ees ne F 
Bap Hii Hidedletiuee it ai dee 
if, Fd pall Hy ot NF ipa ial 
Lie nal orth fn fiatilapen au 
ee Lihatiely He ihe iat ed 
Tibi evbli 








BgHdgggye SR2¥] 2872 2258 + F fii 
igi: anti! 
pidiile GES 2i0e ai, ub ali hy 
eMeuel ed ll sia te a iat 
chy SHG Pal dn We dt dr on J 
sfaehaiparttg 2. in i id) Leb 
Eyplsmeetiee: (ea (bt Ue auntie 
SuReeen ne WA en Ge 
b isi tee et at 
3 2u7zi 
eooHee He ay aneul hy 





fied 22H tH Hate 
ae id fH ne ua Yel ‘ ij 
2 4 a i SUP ui ibid li 
: Hi Ts Ace AUTH F en 5 
eile tad Pe isda a 
3 i ii G2822 222 235 
piel Whali@ugl fa Bi b 
§ Z yw hee alee iesdaes y 
: =: 


ait Bau o ey 
Shas ul; 
- : Sete i 


. 
a 
* 


A 2 [ital | 
= Ss 55 & F. Bp z 
ea ree ee 


Ss 


ore 


circumstance that could serve for condemna~ 


as heard rough all the gentry, and 


‘lump 
what 
Fog 


ny, 
taken int 
ow 
my 


dotain you, sir, with an account of the examinat 


fa 





2 g2g2204 22599 4a78 ft 
Hig be Al He 
atRE Ups 
B peetceae 3 2 Shey 
3 nak HetdE ity 
s lldeaint i2 
gevicdecdeectucbaer gillé 
cnlbaiaiiy Gul 
Bag else iit: ih F 
PUREST: ae 
rH reeitee| shal 
HALPER iE 


gua af ange ge 
Hari a 
fea ij 

re ter Higa! 
#a | a] Et G aE 5 
af 235 9 Fea, tage 
Hi 280,48 biG2 abi: 
A ag its Tae 
Ki ES ,27 #25552 
it eid 
OF Pagel Mass 
ed 
Pee Rae 
Seta liaiiE 





He LEAS aye 
He i 1 YE a He if 
? u Sal £ a2 ii, ie eal if 
tf ug it 
ie wipe PEGE Hie es, an TES 
| : Te i AL tet iia Se ne 
S sigedege ah Ralasts = g! Be elas ty 
: ae rp raat iia if 
He Ree ate arena are Bae 
ee plc neat Pune 
i a at ay inlets 
Hea ele ’ eles Eada 
cure avait 








THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


g322g50922°92 $82 ge 

a duals i afl 21 a 
te ie pate af 
me He ere 7 Hal 
bile Wiis dieeced al 
fle apiiapilnn tye 
i i hig dua ee 
ua! iar i eilisig! pecdeazite 
ii}: | a i Hie Lae BLATT 
jek au Ju aude e abe Hi 
HEME inline Hea le 


pESEzE GEES Eze 


is 38 fea 
i 


inveterate; 
the ei 


‘This his lord- 


fA 3 fey] 
ee 


3 
Et 


nly 


ipo 


acted 


your heuil to ae 


iv into y 


paused; and the judge cried out—Clerk, 
You wuffer that so exoceding chaste and 


Stee aos 
oars words fe 


the exambaation of thi prevariator 


ug ti the 
‘of twelve months and wpwards? Why 


‘OF long before now, give informations 


ou 29 sudlenty tale 


He 


would 


3 





H b ise i ts saz 
era ae 
a Tags Beaheeg tal ii BT ay ld 
ty ites i ila 
sili Wille yeaa 
bei S aa beat 
fie ee null! Hit 
i ae i ee 
e1FH He tease Hill gh ls Rtite 





® eT npaeyvaree even cenearesage Type yet 
iat iu a He i hl ieee lL, 
i boii; aq°t 
a He a if agyul si] 

4 uy bt sice 
4 Hite i332 eh ee art i 
te Le cea 
Te seausin flats eer ser 
i Ep acta et 
labeHie EE is uel Bune 





108 THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


ited, eee ee 

in distant parts of the 

wife then tied gully enti Heh kia 
T thank you, ree Seek ye pea she, again 


foun si salted Ue lee ee. te jown,” Dut f could 
contain oy ia amet 
me 
Scopes tae Inds ora the ar} alge 
SRL cried, ho for over preserve tho 
properton Mes of the orthy elles of Eonar 


id my faoo in hie and broke into toara Ho 
to himeolf; but I hold him fast. 1 believe, 
said hh, you must bo Mr, Clement. T ‘you, sir, with 


if 
EE 
Ls 
id 
ie 
HT 


nd brother ay preservor! cried ‘own you 
is, xiinoo bl vee, grentantof ‘gna wit 


Be 


Pail 
& 
Lt 
ale 
BEaSdE 
4, = 
Eee 
beet 
F ict 
a 
oF 





* We never mors ‘cnt fou are 


ze 


FF 
fi 
i 
{ 
2 
if 
z 


of 
‘As sho walkod Soeward, attended by Mr. ee ee 

thoy mado way for hor on cithor hand, and tho atmosphere 

rang with shouts and woclamations, So xincere in 

the populace pay to virtue ; and such ik their ‘when 

innocence rigos superior to oppression! But when innocence and 

virtue are Spit hy ity, their reverence grows almost 

criminal and approaches to adoration, 

ns wo 


Thi returned to Nowyate, amidst: the 
and praises of a yielding multitude, who still re 





THE POOL OF QUALITY, 109 


igTHE 
23h ee 
are 
deel 
ae3 c2i 
ile 
EE 

i 
ei 
: 


further discourse, T called up the keeper, discharged 
reckoning and fees, and returned thanks for his clvility to my 
Arabelln. I then sent for a couch, and we drove home together. 
Sounott rvceived us with warm congratulations; we imme= 
Gaby invited, her to a dish of tea, over which sho agreed with 
our for the strect-rooma on the sume floor at three shillings 
per week. Arabella was now at liberty to revisit her old acquaint- 
She was more carersed than ever, and tool in so much work 
‘that she was obliged to hire « girl to attend to the child, 
Twas now at the very pinnacle of human happiness, Affliction 
no more. Tho remembrance of distrosa and povorty had 
vanished oso dream, Our moved up and down, und joy and 
peace prepared cur pillows, 
Mr. was 


His 
z 
z 


the as private tutor to his son; and we agreed at fifty 
poands annum, to commence as soon as the young geatleman 
from the nursery. 
Mr. Longtield, as 1 told, yo, was very lovely in his person, and 
Lecame daily more aralable and engaging in my eyes. 1 wns 
pleated that be a in the same light to my wife. I 
it we could nover love him enongh ; and I dsily importuned my 
to affect him with a tendernces equal to my own. 
‘At length I bocame uncasy, I know not why nor wherefore. 
Whon I could form a protenco for rotiring or going abrond, 1 took 
Gaclilary walk, or withirow to seme rece, where I lightened my 
dion by given a loos to my teare. Ab! are not the 
i of life it? Yot man aids to the heap by his tondoncy 
to realize what je merely imaginary. 
‘The tource of my malady was How no longer a secret to me, 





iat ff aH ue EN 
ved i _ aul aj 

I nie Ey oy By 
ul : ie a a We eli 


me to 
sr abba 


EL 
igual ins ae 

oe at 
3 sg2i1ad ain in iE a far Bat 





Peel : fH gb TSSGcss Gia 238. gt 22 
Hele Ha al ee 
iH B ALP eH z rag £5 i 
ae Beet nel antag ae 
cen ln a aii ae 
e Mitac gel piesa tial We 
B seldteea deetecotig apts $8 meee gaa FH is 
be Peet 4 Lf sist of i gba S85 oe , i 
pieeif Spin Tobe Aube dal, au 
fle ett fi arene a a 
ie i 2 282 
ibaa aadieipeaewie oi 
ail Hat uli le ata iy Hid 








ewrurd 

and with moro thin » mountain's weight upon ty mind, On 
1 Lifted up my eyos and rung my inakind of 
a I Drosd! T oried taverdly. Mercifel boswoo, 
itu, bat a very Witle trend My helplest wife! my helplowin- 


fant! a Ittle pittance for them: T crave it in mercy! and, O kava 
me from beholding them famished, and gasping for a morsel of 
sustenance before my free! 

‘As soon as T had crawled 


not now wi m1 of broad, that 
the widow of wifo, my chil?, and I for this vies 
it alt down. er and eat before we died. 


pretended vO itten somewhat, and again hastonod out. 
of doors, ‘The night ia jose fallen, and wos atill en 


Rago, anguish, and despair gavo mo now strength and jand, 
arms 


I perceived a adrancing at same distance, T hastened to 
meet him; and, Sooty within tom poces—Stand! I erled; pass 


afi sree Gu AL 
eed a 
ie ius ci leis tadite ballalite 
etait ees He HRY BE 
tia puceeeeti i 
S st itpeehe ee Leckie srgecbs epee Ala ystacdeeage” Baga” 
Ue anne ety aist 
8 Beey8 cizae Sogddee iestascuteicd debateus te 
tae ai: aba gels alee fe 


Sees 


aie HE 
faut Hy pen Hie iit lan ge al 


Pslaai 








Oe a EE A 
qq aaie ae ae as ii 
; ie: apy ee adh Bede® ie idan Hi 
FE iit fig yun iE qed ayiifitat; | 
sf HE Ta eh HG 
of acd gis BEM) nies be 
gé ages es se He aE bet beet Bee : HI 
ee. 
ati ae Ha 
HE af Hine ial is ili fui Ba} E ai 





“I a B 
ee ea a 
rt Ht ia jie i rae ee fe nif 
Mee ae TE a ae ae 
eT: Haina TGs a 
feu bil eal Hue Se H 
Gali Roa HnHE Uouieldtil 





agi 
i a ig; 228848 

al i ae ob ell 1st 
Hoy reutieaiaa eH 
h i eee namie ii 

clay Heng tal i 
8 £2257 rt in nlite 3272 eats Be ist 
: aun pte (ie pene 
pale alse santa 
§ 185; e324 e3i leper tar sig 
aan sit Tit Palen ayia: 7 
Fa ne E a tun ieee fe 
pire ues ire tii i 
[iat sie oii ae 
Aart ees be 
iiitial dataee 





Had eageeg Ha fae e3u52 jae ii2 5 
il i ne Halt ne Hie ee HT 
{eras ih Li ae taglgfeaes 
Sees ee slid 1h lag Sigua tinea] 
SE Goatees Bt 
SHH HNP eine aiid 
f eee fetter ee 
EE ie hak tdi 
Sa PE ilies 
ing ng 3 a2 225 i ul 
apes one ite ul ore Hab tle Hl 





sali 


July ie 


ea 


faint, we took 
wl 
could eA 
andwe seemed 
‘could from the 
ro went, may Wife 
‘tho 
with 
ourselves on n bank 
ae 
Wik th wo 
on 
‘triumphal into Ke 
“any, Ans what 
but to iy 
oe 


weet le is to 
horrible, to die 


it fini THe 


ee 43s ii 
(ib 


ee id uae 
ee a 

da Hel = fy 

- Hale 55a] 
»S 2 3 e223 5 tl 
Biante Thy 
acl eg 8a% ie 
bal a 
HAUT a 
1 ee Bele Ses 
sini at an 
EH 





“(i TL a i 21 rial fey (a i 
TH aie i u ay Haan i 
‘3 i ip é ee agi ees yagi u Biel: 
Henge gt y Leet 
ae ee Bethe Vitti il Helaii] 
Panga ae eR 
PHO de cy iL 
Hine lel ee HE ei fat 
He ‘a : 
Heuie ii iif att lai all TE i 





ie ills tal wade |e 
oil 7 ile Wi i La Hy 
Vfoea ge) WUE gies 
re Hie aap ear Be i 
Nini Sr ait 
ee He ae Hf a 
3 patie tH diet Sti 
rae a Sanat 10H is 











aa HSE He 
a ey Ha 

7 “l Hu Hee aaa iting fs la a 
a PEE! 
fb: plilkey 
8 ai aed age i 
= 43 LE Tr 7 
& fy 7) Ss 
als i th 

alias 

My 2 fat HE Uhl slg 

wine uk ial ie He ae as 





ic 


Li 


ay, i 


[Pe be 


A ie 
Le 


ao bile 


ee if pppieas 22 
Tiel 5 His a eae rs 
ee oH Th igs hE 
aa ay sil: i: i 
lth i ering 2h 
nh sau Hus ij 


flea 
lide 


test Hale 
bee wah i 


ce tale tle ta 


Friend. Pray, my geod tir, this aume Ksdms, i» it among tho 


canonical books ? 


fa Es He Freee tiad ie aud: oT Pia 
i ae aa 
3 38 ine Pedvste g2455 22 p25) 
ily i He ia te ie inl 
gif; 4 Magali Hee non aen 
baa Ege es Mace 
Ed ggh & SAE iat a apy 
eg acute tees al) 
Ey sae Lect ay 
2 i} ee 22 é 2 © 
HS THe gun CRU tte 





1a THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


chy yt rian a nee org eb pre ee 


joint testimony, ie = 


Fain Nowenrap priest yarns | 
‘a sentiment of lowliness mut; a wom fg in 


E 
! 


‘Awo, gratitude, veneration, and a of salf.tebasoment, 

united to Sis bert aad gaticat ‘lin: and in the course 

af conversation abe fraquently hesitated and blushed 3 
Mr, Fenton, with his wonted delicacy, made haste to dit bee 


,, to be sure; and my faults I find ust be vory my 
noes when they aro ready to fy in my faoe every moment. 
Why,’ Mra. Clonont, said Mr, Fonton, do you hold Liashing to bo 
evidence of guilt ?—Cortainly, sir, said Arabollas it can bo 
nothing fhnt omias that ought to give 


pared to plea 1 havo, Indeed, hoard many, and various 
generilly coinciding: wit my Arabella 
salar sof ribald enlendrs, 


more qi 
Fenton, the mere understanding of 

‘be a fault in the ereature than in the $ 
the offence of guilt bears no reference to knowledge, but consists in 
‘the approbation of evil alone. A woman the WI 

tisay blashes not for herself, but for the fanlts 
ie and |-mannered company, who havo not tho grace > 
vernselvos. 

When I speak here of blushing, E would not be understood, 
‘any means, to include the deat oc voaleys oe te eddaniogs ee 





TRE FOOL OF QUALITY, 125 


ready 
sweetly hinted just now, from an apprehension of somothi 

i » or others, But who or what is 1 that 
? Ta it guilt that is afraid or ashomed of 
Ja virtue alono that can fear or be ashamod 


4 228 
ne i 
puta 
ere oss 
ies fl 
es ted 
ES i z 
£ He 
HAL F 
Lest PS 
Hin Gy 
that 


a 


iM 
madam, mid fr. Fenton, it amounts to much more, and 

does. But you are a wiokod little sophister, and 
bo od, by our yielding to you the canso that 
1 


against yourself. 
hen I observed that nothing but virtue could andesign 
expres: a dipprobation of vice, f ought further to have ob 

that the greater and the purer, the more excellent and more vi 
‘that this virtue ix, the more apt it will be to take alarm at the 


EPL 
re 
e 23 


= 


2: 


jon of having said or done, or of being xuspected to have 
‘or done, or of any thing amiss, or contrary to its own 
As far as 0 m. loves and fg reconciled to guilt, it be- 
Rea parirck sitet renee tere hice fh Be poate 
‘will Biewh in a. closct in a desert, in dacknees on fearing {0 woe tn 
danger to have said ot dono any or disgustful to 
ite own sonsibilit 
But where such a dolicate virtue i# accompanied by lowli- 











aa 


ine 


a : 


Hilal 


aah 


oH 


nie 


ar 


ae it 


4 Dit 


ge PP aoe 


2 
ils a 


S522. 
1 a 


Let 


Ht 








: rie 33 

fet 1H FETE 
Ligne al 
i i rile 
a 
a au teil i 


iv BAe ti Ht ay ie ise ‘i 


Egtiuthat 
3 3 fag 24qtie Bs Ee sai ad 
eee a 


i 
He Ne iby Ha Panne tke 





LG PEASE G8 pal 
+E a8) aac BE th 
ly i il Hl ae eH a wind uae 
2 faget eet Nie eyet al ail ane ae 
Ae Fi Hue UH Hatha 18 
SEs sisal ri afl SE eSs 2 25858 iit Fa a 
Sg shite tgskesstie Bel ety Era tees Pe 
tees na Hae 
82 Gs Becher ite eee Pe ca ee ee Be qi 
gi ; RTH DEES aby 2S ehes geessoA sibea ease 
p= fighiieesi deat f Brake Fates ee 
vl if aneeigl ile aeeitaie ty 
zs = é Bee EA} pas ag tse: 
« Helin uanen i 





Heese 


# 
i 
i 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


fast un 


ant 


: anit 


ins 


a letter, 


wor the; 


Jealousy, vexation, conten 


It; 


vt 


ly of physiognomy who 
w 


certainty, on an art that requires 


of tho face, aho is understood 


who never were ta 


a own account, that ho 
stud 
ures and impressions ; 


, affection, «i 


Mr. Clement, 
ind of 
‘or of attention, reapect, 


an ene on 


vy, pride, 


Cees 


in ue 
lain 
: a i all 


rai 


Hel 


23907902! 
sail 
a 
: Hi 238: 
He rey: 
plicit 
ipaeiy 
HEgE 
ater 
5 

bial 








js i He Ty qui 
ante 
Ee ee 
SiR skola Heel aie a “i fly 
e dayit- Ale bale boi aule 
uate Gauel GbE each 
BF 34 ingle Sbagee Z 5222 ES ing BY 

kabe 2 Brat iat z a ats Hi aay 
i pape meer ila een Hoe Rink petit 
fel nee Heel iH eee: iN Hy od 





*H aH 
iy 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


fare 


fal 


fis {ELGG 
a es 
ose = 2 F FE Saopsse 
aay i file ealuey 
ei diane tl wale 
hae aan Ge ues 
sone i ea 
eSisags sadieaieudt 44 cael ete 
ey rey sat aie 


hi ibs He anal zat 
ery e | 3 
jail ing in Rata 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


pester ite Seny cie aaa ghee 


ty 
a 
i 
i 
fi 
ig 


AE 
i 
: 
a 

i 
é 
i 


ie 
et 
a 
oH rh 
a | 
cE 
eee? 
biiele 
a5 
ul 


of be 
ippressed for some powerfal 
Sapte Foch ils so ila ow ater 
mxteomplouios by exaicion 08 we chairman, 
a Caer Larner aasive Pell oon aetaonien aed ta 


T vill fake the argument in the against 
Sait Towel hapeeos a ak os be catcrolly of x nebagetecaan ne 
ntenaace; that he his the 


i 
g 
g 

38 


Dad 
at his twenticth or thirticth year. I will then that his 
habit of body and tempor of mind are totally « by medicine, 
alow of rote a as. fara cf aon and gratin of 
of complacence in the divine dispensation’. He now grows foci 
bonovolent, cheerful, always Joyons whan in company, 
when alond, Task, ‘on this accasion, will yo to 00 the 
same cast and habit of melancholy in this snan's countenance? No 
more than yo can see the gloom of last winter in the smiling serene 
of a summer's evening. For somo time I admit it will be difficult 
for the set of joyous muscles and glances to ove ‘their 
tition who have so long. kept the fell: but, inthe on 
prevail; they will recolve constant supplies from within, and 
Pesages for their reinforcement will be opened mors and 
while their opponents daily subside, give place, ani di 
‘What I have observed with respect to mel 
equally affirmed of uny other affection whose opp 
habitual empire in the mind, Y say habitual, because 
such variable und fluctuat 





z 
ef 


ay 


a 
i 
i 
— 
: 
B 
ir 
i 


5 
i 
3 
i 
i 








Epeseqcgete™y g2q2 E823 252 32355, 
"aL aa iH Freel 
Pe oe Ya 
& a a gee ea ab 3 sills 2579 HE gat? 
sn of ee eat aati 
SHR ls wil Ghand, eH sete ean 
pina i eel ipa ifn Ha a 
gee erat git lee 
e320 8 Sy =2 Be een 3 stihete 
wiuiiaiGh: ai; ae Bait see aul 
tlle dante nan gt gr 














se sea a a 
a Be od 
ae ae a i Le oF 


eeu i Boek 
as B42 ise i igs ii lula | is if 
a He Heals ae agai ea 








tala nt Aa? Erie a hae H 
2 $ 

ATE He tia a F :' 
ui efi anu 2 esr alald i idid 
sai wiped ite fibula aitagis 3 27 Gell 
ae ian is ee Hata Eset: alles 
ari : a i Be Kee ie 
i GLa AG 
nillHa iui ial a a iD 








THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


136 


of clay 
Suess 
menen, and for 
i sm 
‘Here we reach at the nature of that onchant or 
are #0 as to 
‘an enchantment 
tenderness, 





ill ind attract as before ; 
Path Rear hah ae Th not eseentially tn 
wire wo tee anit” Than Yo, 


mi ihlo ringnot, that Le areal 
intolligent und affectionate boings, through the medium of creatures, 
to tho graces of their Creator ; till tho voll shall finally bo taken 
svny, and that he hinge shall appear, in his etormal, unclonid, 
and Ie beauty, infinitoly lovely and infinitely beloved, 

Bat £ havo outtalked my timo, says Mr. Fenton, rising and 
Jooking ut hie wateh. Tam enguged for an hour ot two above 
treet, and wish yo a good-evening. 

‘Ona day whilo Mr. Fenton was abroal, Ned, who would not will 
ingly have chinged his unluckiness for the heinhip of an estate, 

od to take a Iittle rumble thronyh the town. He held a stick, 





could take off at plewsure; ani fom the ‘the foruls, 
there ary sma ie A i le of ubout forty-five 
dlogees. "Tle ha fled rule with puddle water, which by 
inet mre of the stick, he conld equirt out to donble the 
Mo eters be uy, wn det genloman whose 
shadow, being length pan Ata with a 
slow and atatel sate ei Ne | ogra he exclaimed. with 
aero 0 that behind you? 
Take caro of Suane tri ee fr event ao, take caro. 
mtleman, erway instantly tart turned palo 
Becta wed ray tty side, when Ned, 


montenance, tid—O sir, I beg pardon, T believe 


Friend. This, 1 presume, must be some very respectable per 





THE POOL OF QvaLiry, 187 


sonage, some extrnordinary fyvourite of yours; since, within a few 
yon style Riva tres tr Sr thnes by yor “mbes. venerable 
leman.” 





? 
for If, but I speak for th 1 
Gn le tnd an nh i would T 
‘whan. T apeak to others ale, T tiest spesk with tbe 
ecoarding to hel 





sword 

iY 
A certain impadence aired by low people, being 
camually conversant in high Ifo, as passed a moan through Muay 
companies for—a gentleman. 
In the country a tacod bat and whip sales 
Ebest wees ate ye 

manner q 

nagar oreo Say suite mada 


verso, In our own minds, perl they 


various and perl are also 
undetorminod ; question if any man has formod to himsolf 


Hl 
AE 
pee 
a 
# 
Hf 
il 
a; 
Bi 


the pi 

and the allowed at th 

‘A gentloman. 
T aptehend that this chameter te much 
modern. fn all ancient or dead languages we have no 
adloqnate wiernby we may express it. Tn the habits, 
characters of old Sparta and old Rome, we find an 
all the elements of modern gentility. Among those 


ER 
HE 


d 
i 
3 
= 
) 


a 
z 
Efe 
i 
fae 
i 
| 
rat 
is 
a 


te 
in 
ut 
i 
t 
| 

Es 





ale 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


tae 


He a anne Bune ge 
Ea a ig a 
ce ae He 
aa fit 2 inn! ie fa 
Hee oer erg fa 
sti ented 
fear eay ae iat alii 
a Ei Bigaa sit rf Hee 
geee.sfze tas 

ci nui (Ne: 


See peommrs to Nhe ccnettiution of Sp wtp charade 


‘aie 


ae $ 324 ia] GHene | segues 
He ea ae Hine 
ia ne ii Hae i a ne fe 


perceivo that we haye not 


le of all characters. T am 


1 


hear your definition, or rather description, of your 


THE FOOL OP QUALITY, 
vory first timo you tire, I will indulge you, if you 
x. 
tmnch. 
hig 
full 
straight 
stranger 
time, to 
‘Snarle, for 
one 0} 
haste 
clot 
jorriat 


ee a sai au 
He as wap 
‘aaa ee 


By what you say, 


time. 
a; Your most 
Sine re 
was not of a 
ceeres 
upon 
ena 
wever 
fe a 
ear 
pair 
for the 
thee spend 


ain 


touched 
Author, 
desire it. 








agspag 4ulg ENa 4292 Weyyieaegs 3299 sayz epperiea 
ga dat Te eal wade id Sle 
iy ae ie HG y pe a ae sift lat 
ieee files qui Gas iia 
yeedecyecanyes| ES 2g ctdas? gate [tacdagiays 
ide tigeaeeati eet el 
Sarabeaacetgassuiey curt p tacees Wy sigidafeie 
Us r ies sieiaii ebeiacers Pb as 
et ie Hea diac tut uae 
eat y ta tesseg , 25 8s2goscee,i 2 “2 2ize28 eyes 
Hata a ata i anal : 
etre reer a BAT Ree ere 
i qe ite Henle Phen 





HE 
i) pias Hi if 
i EEEE 


yea 

nn 
i cd fale 
i 


F 

are 

rage Mepeare Hilde 
uy ith rete any 5 Ee 


ed ie 
i 


THE FOOL OF eee 


que a 


EFES 
eaten nag He 


itl 


plan BAe ner atin 
tea a. i 
neni 


ay ‘gaged 
PG aie 
Hd He 
i 


qiuit 


ce a iui is an a 
aula eat a it : 
Bar iE Hela Lh ma Hee ui a id 
i ik i at ial ee Bie fe 
a2gegeeese 4 5 2h 35 a Le 3 
ty aR uot ia Hy i at 
ae Aaa ig 
ih! i : Fs dul +H aft 
a iE A yas ue all ee 








= meet HT & 3 afget se Tp 

i nat i Hieiy 
HU F g * Li 3 ‘ ir re i 
ia a a 
wal 285235 Hp eee rd aes 
Eel bilp ia & a a i ll 

s al fl 


ae F 
ie ie a ne a ial f 
ne fan fn He 








THE POOL OF QUALITY. 
grow in mathematical proportion to the growth 


ee 
i 
i 


i 
A 
i 
| 


agg? 28 
ede 
Serghet fae 
Abs eepee 
ete 
: il 





fund to chato, and to Inbour after, ‘The great are abovo temptation, 
the world had nothing further to exhibit for thair eeduotion ; and in 
this light algo they aro Become th most reepoctuble of all Boop. 
‘Author. Whenever you can make it evident that, to humble tho 

it of man, you ctight to place him in authority ; that, to con 


: 






i 
to humanizo his disposition, you shonld remove him ax far as possible 





from a sonso of the miseries of his fellow-creatures : when, to cure 
f; man of dstempers incident to is natare, you would plaee Rien 
en, 


the milst of adventitious contagion—then, and not 
weall ion, and power be productive of reformation and virtue 


mA. 
Your error lay in supposing that sonsual appetite and spiritual 
sain Pied cane atte ration pega 


‘cravings cannot be satiated till it is possessed of some object that is 
wants to its nature; and, as this world has no euch al 

exhibit, gratifioations only servo to provoke to further dosiro, or 

finally to sink un into utter despondonce. And thie makes tho moral 


Your don I -—With et to ly m, that 
tho esokndants Sf the mighty and tha ezatad inbare the qualitas 
and excellences of thelr progenitors, you spork as though this 
earth, and all that was thoreon, were invarinbly permanent ; whare- 
na the knowing-ones will tell you that the one and the other aro 
subject to annual, and even diiimal, revolutions. 

‘erhaps there is not « beggar or slave upon earth whose some 








Pee 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


ial 174) 


i 


cal 


fis 


ri 


ue ai in 


i Hy 
Be tif i Hees 
ahd nue 





pied 3ag = 
ie Hine 


28 bt e52 
i 
au oa 


sete 








| i He a8e, 
$ ine 2542 ava: af 

an ine fate ie Hie | 

ne i ee eal if 

pitt elie ile ieee 

i eC LRREG Hated it | 

if Ey suit iy HH 1333 125 ; 

diay at meee Gt paged | 

La ie Li mi 

bisa i in wally 

Po relae ae! 

iene Ruta 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


S258" 2 


id ale 


speaking, Andrew entered with tidings 
Barrie tration wl realy tor foe a eee 
Gint bs ferred he pool 


le in it were much burt. Mr, Fenton's 


fr. Benton was 
techn y cartel at the news ; he ordered the servants 


i : aa 
Haunted 


ij 


Bas He 

ey fate a ih 
any Hy nt cbf daz; 
eghee GF fhrges 3 

fa dep 
a3 ae 
tsait Waeaaeg * 
ibaa A BEE 
ee 
Brak ral yal 


23 
uaa ae 


a 


eat it Tt ie fel 
sczgirsisicgs chy sezesssqcitea 2228382382 

Ste et a) UR ie 
bgaiitetenipiles 1 Beet Sade 
Mduegaielte Walia ical 
a i Rae Pre eet aie 
pUEe Teete Ue SET ee 





= Star apa 
: a ey a a ‘an 

EEE rie Ht: iy Se aL He 
de ioe i iit plein 
cline Rule aati HUG Huta 
ee ee 
: SUED iy ie sale 
ik A sett tea wel Hea ne 

A SsHILHIE mp a Tape 
i if Tate # Hae He fae ee 


HE Hee Ser eile a at HEH 











rte Ne TE ae 
Hes ue i £ 
_ . bin aa 


fae 
‘Debated 
erm 
ers, or rejoindens 
if to tho 
ich 
io 
again Is 
rplextt 
i 
to 
by recon, 
esting asi 
lapse of 
‘upon 
Tn tho 
and 
pe 
aod 
a 
canal 


st 
mre yet to 
ung 
carly 
ian fe 
els fore 


Pe nl 


THE FOOL OF maeninds 
» they then bequeath it 


ses ie nce 
moe 
it 
eek 
en 
and or 
ee 
of na rs 
bills, or 
dere 
tho shat 
teriously 
rely & 
ton but 90 
fo clan, tho 
er of mh 
itricate, knotty, 
gown and 
mat 
or throe 
iple honest, 
wee 
and 
ith, what hi 
quo 
|-twont 
do I seo 
ea 
ae) 
insorauch 
become a 


a ae iiatt vu hes 
THA Hie agile SiHH Heal il 


7] 


it Hi batt ee fea ut 
el et 1 i ae 
i cH nC 

iy sty 
ite tea Le : Hoe 
SE a 


THE FOOL SORES 
obtain a 
ied, ann 

amount that 
to be rer 
people 
oF 
of 
oxrere, fn 
or 
our 
itions of 
insolence 
a 
ting 
mon a 
courts of 














8 
a Hite a3 Boh 

£228 da iE ue 3 ie aA 

ied RL eee He ; 

Haba ta ale ve fede hilt 

s BH x Hak HE ee Pate a 

inhaa i Hifi be eal 

: Bhs g ty Ha wha age fags oepse 

vue GHEE Bilt ill 

PES Fee rH Se iplgtitd ee: aay 

s ine! i eel uate alate 

Biles! Agia Gel allenic! 

Be ie lat ane 

ea in tec fs ee 
i ea ne aie uta ueesere 


Risiggecs eps Bat ee eH | 
@ beee y q283zfeé fa 4): a aie ae gd edt 
a re UT RU baal 
uni bis, Git flr (ie He fain 
cat se Ba ay tel | Hie line 
vf A ah cele a ali 
arely 2 silane: <ee Heels Geea. Sue Froese itlag 
beat nitty i Lista anil 
Se La He 
pyuHn ae ab Mande sqpeltisiial 
ue Sr Ta PE ee 4 Hh 











8 a 
ees aA He ae 
ee 
te a 
ite 
apa! 


Fak 83 
Wiig 1 
Ty 1 ff : eh 3 us 
hae oe 
oo 
E Hi g i tae 3 ty ly i aes 523 ae BY; 
= ape Wie a ly Ep bist ifaal ae z a 
2 gs eee ae ue Ty a qr ait ae e 
8 i be as ae ful E fue ite a Lee 
fn ae il ne flat i Lik 
E eee Fi HI ih 
i rat, 
z ti 





uae ai 
Fy BH i z eae - 
8 a £ i 


wl if 


SRE 
fillah Ee 





§ 3 Fe 
ny Ee uh fa! iff 
aaa aal Ge ae 
tena, Aide ine Ty P 
elit ae i att le i 
He Gl Gl callin Hail Es 
3 iy 33 fie rate re paar i i onl cig 
ripe sibe Peal et iste 
at eset He is Hine 
iio oT i H Fe lin ne 
ie Bint laieut 








= E| 
+ a] aut ets ih 
gi ia Hy qs ij - Hea ie 
ial ff ih bed aie: tages) tet 
ria : sai] ap 2eti By nie iW 
a ae 
Sait een 
panel deve aula ial 
3 fap Ss. 2 ft i: 2 PEE gees TE zaif Eg Es 
pee Hi es 
: Po PAL $3 iis i i 
file ah WEAAHAG 
fe Hos oe 
8 238 





“AR a6 tie i jefe: AM 
Se 2 EE 2 
si aie ie eH Tir ell seti! 
ie fa byagies 2 
fladiaie sale 1 i Hida | 
cle Aa call Ge peat 
Satie Gees Bip iat | 
ag ag ig all juan iiieta 
HE fe Ho iit a 
ip u gece. Berets s H Zes ne 
an i 
H ee iE ie: ial aie He ae 





&: 33 9 cei BEF 2. i un 
at i i ee He i te i Hit 

eh gage Snultb stale se: dy = i 
H ait] 3 Taal Hal des ne 
LC i i ee ie 
dani ae at ae ah 
ia i] it tee i aut 
bi: on eoiilenia 2 peel lbs 
335 HE He i Heil 
fe eee 


ee ingiiedialte 





eggs aviapery pare wan gegen ay 
“eel penat i a aa ten 

: i 383 | an gisils 
ee a a 
Hee ae pee eueh Leite 
8 gbise? gf! Hn uy heath stp itil 
cies bee ithe: fal ln 
: ah rh Stee dl ue ae AR Hi ea 


to make tho 
Edward 


{ernie 
Se ee 


HUE Bit Hee HON Hay 
Legal HELE Aa 
sel ree ei a 








100 THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


his 
‘countenuioe at the court, Sir Joscph attended 3 
ani the couse being opened thy judge demanded whether tas vias 
ies by 


ene oe Ly of spinsters? No, my 
lord, are lilies Talley: 
las yet 7 rk Iie glory 


con 
tho herdsmen of his nephew, Let, respeoting the propriety of the 

Of tha lands Sharan thay doslt Seat cota moe. soaree 
contain tho abundance of thelr cattle: and those go as i 
universally the ease, had respectively endenvonrod to kindle and 


Another ea) lity of tho trae gentleman is, that of feeling 
himsolf a bs crested in thors Never was there #0 
Dbonovolent, 80 affecting, 80 pathetic a pioce of orn! exhibited 
upon arth, as that of Abraham's pleading with God ree. 

i matter 


my to the at full 
must doduct from its beautics, and that nothing can be to 
tha exoollonoes thereof. | ic a 
fononr, again, is said in seriptnre pecaliarly to distinguish 
charactor of a gentleman; whero it is written of Shechem, the son 
of Eamor, * That he was more honorable than all the honse of 
sehle yon prince, si the violence of his tnd 
This you . gtving way to the violence 
dlidhononrably Mtoneecd Binal, tho datighter of duccke But hie 
affctions aun soul cleaved to the whom bo had injared, 
He set no limits to his offers for repairing the wrong. “Ask me" 
he said to hor kindred, “ask me never so much dowry and gift, 
and I will give according as ye shall my unto mo; but give mo 
tho damsel to wife.” 
‘From henco it may be inferrod, that human excellence or human 
YY arnlablencss doth not 90 much consi in freedom from fealty in 





= igeeringane aiegeriu eu 
Gre | Re | 

: ute : vise llegtly | i PEP 
Hester ali Santee ate wie | 
GLH eG oun ia 
sbi etee tal uuatiad oetut | 
peatatlei ely Gl eee de | 
Hated EVR Ba GN 
SHE Pear ne Uae! 3 

5 HE ii Tua ai asf 7 aie af Peer ied 
i EF al nel Pea ih Fri wie 
tll bela 33 ah acelin Fa 58% : EB 





be 


os 





fee a 


gute 22 
ae He ee 


a 
£ E22 a of ags 
ett 5 bead 
Sepals bt i 
aeiiiatt iegad 
i inaue LT a 
te eguits ate A 
“ai8 Balen a He 





aa Pil 3uF He Hayes He is Hae BE bere 
wea is Abe jah pet Ul 3 a 
i rn re He an a aig G2 Ga! 
WH dadiad Gobi egy ais 
Sno gue) Glue eke a 

5 pole fetdbPagted ghesicggiccs S205 85i63 
Wai pie ei i noe Hide 2 iy 
ofa aati tiade obs Hi saa 
5 id bid cesettefidvassgecls citsHiereeedi i 
By a ae i duu! iy uel, § 
nasi; Far adit uilin ath 

ull HS uma aigiiwc Aue 





Hl a5eg4 22ae 
Hn agit aves gu8egip ysGcadd G2 2 
pled gla fice fh 
F lik ial Wa ai rie Tene bu Hi 
i ie E Heth ie qt uy ae AE af 
sua HELE tH HG | ad ail WF 
su a3 ut eee poi uty ai 
eal: fe a al atta | 
bd bh bale i Pieler tut i 
a Fath Euan a 
i caelininyiae Ee iuiitna 
send He Pan ler 
o HEEL fs =H Ball 
ahs Hollie ie 
Meinl 





] PaEuerd ges2LaTEHEEGGg? “ G4gE GRIT 
ila Halal iff 1 LIne i 
feels Gees oy ene | 

: ghd if ze Halil an nay He 

ser esau aed Heenan 

® iit Yivaa dpag Tent Haul 
iris erred et ee iiiaita 

Bild qltst Hulillela fog 

itis soldi ila abies spare tea taiita ; 

B 25b242ae syfittess sla fleliayata: aE 
sani Ante ats etneill 
srijainnaaieed ides Hi sable 

srelbdatbansdladi a's Haasan eae 








tHe pen . iH * 
ak a Bay i i i 
ane 

Gi alt GREE ats tel aga 

ppt esr i icataatiee: bye 

int . i ie Ha | HO 
ae is Heal as aaa : 

Hes elle paetaigil Babhel 4G 


16 THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


Amspes made the following most memorable of anewert 
As you are but boy hei on. ad Lagat EL AE 
passage to you, and give you senso of it, 


Dut ove soul ft could not be at once both and ovil—not a 
lover at tho same time of what is honest dishonest; it could 
not at onco desire and be averse to the same thing. It is, there- 
fore, most evident that wo havo two soul; and when the good 
soul hath the works are med; but evil works 
when the evil soul nates.” 


however endeavour, to my power, to accommodate 
"oat ig wile tat gona el pny Sale 
pa ed and therefore santo tmeliate 


any wise than by infor 


and jonas. 
‘This would lend me love, to the unfol ‘that 
of which you are not yet pete sptible 5 ee mgr 
world, sun, moon, and stars, with all tho worlds 
yond them, deponi and hang, aé your hat would bang 
yon . 


‘The angels that in hoav perfect, and 
cloriouy Doings; Deena thy are filed with the presto, 


for the reception, the feeling, nw enjoyinent 
Sa tieweteral alr sin Oe ee 
‘How tho spirit of wan came to be, in itself 6o much worse than 











ag Aps}cues aHTteiaet 28 2278494 Sage 
ie can Nay 3 un = Hani ie i ris 
ie ae ut nal aaa eae 
Ger Ore a M 
Jee es 
31 ieee SHEL! 
sa illite diuak i guca He 
Elune neues cinta | 
: i Gre en crt re lh 
ue Le a : ne H i Ble i blair 


ily 


ae et ey 
‘mean! Seer: 
ee 

vg 


beenu Eee a 





a au aie ee 
uc Gell : i ie i 
fu Ree gia tt te 
Ue einen de a 
i Hl tial? alin 
begtigdagtandysly staccereetaaed 
es 
anit in a a ti 
ee ileal 


Sista 


ais 


aie 


which you gaye to 


fe 


for the difference which 


a teas 





wa 

| H Lye 3 nae bl be ] ie if 
“Hae mh isi i mh oe (i i He i 
} _ 43 ie ae au Hil tH 
He ff 3 a al ui Hon Hil fee 


Fl 
ail L ae 3, ie : i rial a tf i: iit iH 


"4 18 eee a 
Halu: a Gb ie ie ne a 











see yi 2 
1 a 
: i ape b int He HHS ety Fe iE 
F] ies Be i fei uit Bil 
bi aingre uel Gadde TH 
SES aite Goll sat age ad 
aaipatyis Guzedee Hpbi east Bien 
ny Hille ne fui Hai! Hf 
ee ule sald itelind Han 
Hit i il ve Hie ag Halil iis 

2 HL PIP ERE cite 








& BEEe g fd aise Bef 28582 
SAE en 
eaeyia| fay dest ay Se tanty 2y 

sued Bae stadia neat a | 

bai agli at alae He 
siais stiie ie (ath eH 

: neil Lae ie 

gitar H LA 
HH rt i i i a ba afi 

feelin fine updinmidlige 
ii H itl: ant itz 


Eee 


as 


ayaaiae Wane EF He 2B 





: bt 27) Bunge LL eae 
ie ae He Pine : cae 
HE He iby i i ie bat : pana 
z a i il at eEhy a] pens 





He : i83 fi nan 2E8 
i z an ‘linen iey He Ha il 
HE abate FH Hai Are peel Hu 

alll taal diieliauiepeias 





ene: 


ait 


jue, 
aie 


hold of that little ove to 


uneasiness 


perfidy ; 


informed me that could not hel 
your 


oy for 


28s. 
Hal 
g cat? 
Z ie 
Sia 
& $24) 
el 

ki a 


iil 
baal ie i seb 





more. 
eae = 





Bea SL gga Bea Bee | 
ie ee Fe a3 ie f litt a Hae 
Hale BEE i ieee 


eS ee 


2 
4 FI PE A ft gH 25233 z Zige 
S Hu : ite ii agit JF ru i fi Hans 
date, bebpede Sectlaageegier: Payen ised 
| qe geertsh alesis: Guanine 
eh Ril by Boban Uae iniueall 
ee He A ha oa 4 


3 
Lot 


eh ie 3 i £2 
gi Util aria eee re 





eyes 
eg L ve! i 
ar alae i (ai ee HE faa 
# ais aay ask aizt 213 abs 
=e E 3 Bes 28 228 a 
ay fil ie ne il ah. 
e Hinulyta! al lea an enn isa 
ol Hk disses: a i pi ae Ha 
lind ij ae iat elie! 
qi i ath fale iad iia m1 
reat eo ae aut 
eae an ait di ; Hi if au tall 
ge: TH 2 yi BE il 
Sea SPUR For’ : 











Heine Ey 
Hee el 
te ni ne a8iy Heri i He 
i isis ee fei qld 
Lt us pee i iiieatyies iti 
ie ae flop aiicu eet 
sie at iyt (Ua iids an i aia 
antl ff eysdaa : dest a al pees 
oes ee wetcliieede tee 
E Alani as Bate creed eee 
Ae tr Ho Fe UB iea arhartennt 





EE TET 
= 7 Bae ae Bet Fisee 

cinta ns a rhiteran ua 
Hee Hie eet aera eeu te Pai 
eee eu eae an, 
Braue Beloit ro rai ll a 
see Tn aE Hal ee 
he eae Hh k aia Hilfe i 

aera nt ea 


an 


Fe 





) THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 
the distinguished original of the portrait which T had in my 


Here I ly broke in upon my God 
be Lexclaimed ; he then lives, he ee most dear 
rat you are apy: ‘and that is enough’ ag 
‘Your relation—your only relation, madam—eried my lori! Ts ho 
trurst?Procoeh ay tnt adj Toll then al poe al oe 

‘out disguise or pall toe . “4 
T confess to you, answorod my husband, that tho sight of him 


Ove 
isure you that I hare not sot my eyes either on fhe original oF 
Wine b ahs jou el’ me? cxclaimod my lord, ou are net 
me my on are 
by. Could poche 


es 
at zo a pariod? 
as Tego veeeac tdee Gon aaceelth 


hosband the little adventures, improssi 
infancy, wherowith you are’ alzendy acquainted, Whon 


you irtae against Can 
yon exeuse me? Will you forgive mo? May Th ‘that you will 
Testore mo to the blessings of your friendship? May I flatter my~ 
self that you gaye me as much ws ou cond of oar ation 
hoa you ‘had been able, you would have me with a lore 
ino’ 

T will not distress you, my cousin, by # description of the affecting 

Sipe Bt soraet My husband left me rich, but still moro 


tlorn. During the first years of widowhood, looked upen mee 
os & friondless and unnecessary burden pon oarth, T 





ei itty 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


Sabeceei 
alee 
i raul? 


ee 


Hal: 


nieiteil 
He 


3328 eee et P 
sel uishall fa 


oe 
EE aa i 


RES" exea 
pare Wa 


Eeupii 


Seas r. iJ Leet seri 
Bi ee 





CHAPTER XITL. 
STORY OF THE HON. MR. CLINTON. 


is 
own, 
cheerful 
ig in 
with 
cry 
Toy 


Fi 








ey ee I pgpayscanranine 
es ae a 
SEeee: - aeseess z 

Hi lel ee 
fl he He Bi eeranitald i | 
Ci a 
Paeihg AI eer LR 
tapi z ‘anal Peery ere 
fas i walle i igi eee quail Hue 
PE Hae Pra urrtaier 





2 i i" : Hie ua inn 


a i: 
a 


eisai oy ty 
before I 
ae ee 


euite: 
i lit deed 
ie a Ve sli ie 


wip au area 
bap ingle Pawn He lige Bn a 


with 

of 

ae the | 
‘som 
of 
apy 

le to 
ae 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 
merchants in 
ond 
‘nd all the open 
aiing and 
by mater 
seth te 
fa summer F rod 
of 
‘his country-sent. 


that T was now 


‘wearied 


emotiess 
ae 


sia2 sa reer s shen 
Si Wesabe 
a A a 
sFelasiiteet iaigel etre cdirite af epi 
ali eee at 
8 Gites fatlgeeieedd ql tlseeli (il 
Te : u finest ase iy Eigttfan 
e: SEgE2g2 2 S Hite shy agus ue 
co Hadi bali 
pay BI Tr EL 

=a : Lie Fl 33. [GhesoeE aged) a | i 
iif Puan Ute etre 








jute a 


"i ie al Gi diesel 





He aides Hf nna 
i Pa mil i He el ae 
F saa it tie ase fi mere : Tee ni 
: i ne a ui au Hon Pi Fan rea 
siya paid aie sigalg id vale 
PEL ieee ion epee rin beta reer 
pe udsunealel ain ai 
hs Peet Peer ert 
iB BH ' Se : Hip : H ELA 
Pat irae eat a iti 








Hh a af pan He ue ae bal 
tia fa Hal ee ce Hut 
ea erreon ae een 
oie aie 
apts BLES HH ia} Petpet 
ae tial He an ee 
pale er ee ret peda 
ae oe stile ig 


fli fan z he 
mee] ad Taba He i 


fens 


ele 






Hy Sig8 ai i Hie | 3 


b 
Bsé, 
eae HE ne fle SHH 
tide Glues THIGH a ae 
bu Heat agg iyiiscigsis of igileisa 
5 tel Hl be i aeafe, H on 38s iu Ee 
sai Gue Taeieidetegy ti lle 
efit! Uniatuciils, agi 
nd ty a ies eine aoe 2a 
a fee gq * Gita? 
il dattte iiale: ies 
et ne 2 E 
HaHa ath HnepHiny BEI 





: ee fe aga 28 
ina aut bi sie a 
FRCL Ha i 


aa ib i Hite ue (EE 

=2i5" = sa. gsi He 
ae poe lee sae: 
iit coe Witt an 
5 a] Be gab 2a 5B plies ue al ie3 E j 
a tae pan a da 
apf il i i fi ta aie 
Per ail igen a sil 
VALE aL 4 aude 





ee He 
He eal aul al GE aut at 
it y ghia Ge 2 fa 8 ; 
h: i au in Hes aa rE ie th nei ae 
elites La cee el tei 
Honig iy aa He pale if 
rade pdiys fal Sy nae 
eee Pe Ae Fu ani} agizzi ited se 328 : 
eal ea 
ane died SUG lin 
t z E. 
iy i Hire a ial ite 





PEs a 
ia a A Bree Rs yh 
Halt Be i 
ae eis Un 
ae a al 
fee trees hg 2b sted ps pss edie edaite Hele 
Ee ma eee a 2 
ripe is Seen eed ee ere #7] i " 
: Pratigd adele eles y 
oe me cite it gieiy ge “=i uy 
ae ee ee 
Hes jee He Eee 








THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 





3 


£2 


any 

85S, 
ie! i 
aa 2 


b 


eat 


_ 
a 
re 


aH 


Fh 
a 


Ee 
3 


; 
iE 


aR 


25% 


if 


Hl 


mt 


uy 


218 


seit 


rat 


Ere 


Fis 


5 


i 


#224] 
aan 


= 


= 
s 


aay 
Bid 
Te 


5, 


8 


Laat 


2 & 
; | 


a; 


A 


‘a 
ia 


Be 


Bae i pe paggyaceensnpay i 
fie deo | i tel ¢ ale & aa Buk 
: ann 


Faein rad a Bat 
a gigicke cf=3 degesesate’ S228 ae i 
aah rie A aun aa i 
wD deus Gigi | diate (Pat 
aeaes fi sf tie ae 
ae i aueee gare 
ane fae ea ey 

PTR pete SRA 
seen 








neither, for 
—No, six, no, 1 never take money from 
doos not leave me to the temptation, 





port 

to , madam, that, agroeable to the advice which 
me hhad piven mo, L’went to foliitate tay encle, Goodall 
m bls martiage with your mother. He bad already boon informed 


had 
of my recent admission into partnership, and thereupon 
with very unnsual marks of esteem and affection, 
Your mother nt that timo wns exeeating lovely fn her parson 
manners. At every seaxon of leiemre I jnented their house, and 
conceived a vary tender and warm frien ee See oe 
om. 


i 
Be 


zm Tentered F observe that ah eat 
» morn gown was wrapped about , and Buses, 
‘lows her bebind. On’ my er spirita 

took the alarm, She scarce ventured a glance toward me. I 
wat greatly painod ‘by the aboahment andor which T saw she 
Taboured, and I hastened to relieve myself a woll as bor from the 


Tat down by tho bedside, and gently taking ono of hor nn, 
vwiltont looking in hor face-°Ay doar Ale Gold, a 1d hope 
Jou will not bo jealons of your papo’s affoction for mo. 
° 


LS 
Ee 





a Uap 


Be : A ne 
ic bal 


ine Bee 


Be i 
adel 


inet pant 


if 
ee 
is, 
ane 
‘eonatitutes tho whole 
T shall 
to jaro 
dd to at 
lot 
mo to 


se 


vat; aensibili 
‘that it fs all 


= 


Ba 


ae 








22 EH 
ules 


BSE aS guns gyssyzesagigesese. F3 
“ie ally Hal al ii ee i 
fit Baal argh Hee 34 





a FE : 3 
eit ae ra eee 
S ghegereils ash fan “aul 
 aligliln Sills elie pulls 
: Unig! fh i ie Te ln Heil 
il a ae ry asleep ane 
Hae ao ae ALE GI ee ian 


# mt H 
“ie 4a 5 Hel iii FR 
| u nu ie tae Hite aetoae Hale 


TERE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


yiz4 8 
ne 
if 
a 

i 


us 
a 
ia 
A 
4 
F 
# 
Fe 
Le 
i 
3 


1H 

rail 
a 
a 
beg: 

Hee 
Hie 
iis 


Friend, Ee pM tats ot moll 8 


affecting ; for it opena and invostigutes a number of little pasmges 
‘nd mares in the ‘whieh are qlee aicasdae jo to 
Pporgons of hard nerves and callous conceptions, I am froe, how 
ever, to tell Fed that I folt myself offended bre compliments 
‘mouth of 
Matilda. Tt ik ined, a very rare matter for people to of 
‘themselves with duo decency and delicacy, T-wish you could have 
procured some other condult for conveying to ux the history of 
omr knight, | Gas, T thinks i dhe only pera whoy with ney 


Autor, T have not w word to say in Mr. Clinton's defence ; 
perlups ho may offer something for himself on the occasion, 


CHAPTER XIV. 


Hens tho count for the first time, broke in upon her consin’s 
narration.—Happy Matilda, sho cricd, how distinguished was thy 
pe ! wes aie & your, wore ee oe vi 

{ enjoy tho consummation 
?, alowed f - 


ie 
a 





Tae 
3234 


; the 
‘worthy of But toll me, my cousin, how coul 
fgrnorant of the dear pits fe ion for you? The 
is 80 very intelligible, so expressive through every 
every organ, ax must with sufficient clearness have opened 
eyes to the object.—Indeed, madam, replied Mr. Clinton, 


olf led mo away from any such apprehensions, bi 
any pits of th muy whom abo nla ho love, al 


FI 
ane 


i 
i 
: 
: 
I 
E 
& 
i 
: 
= 
E 








THE FOOL OF QUALITY, A 


yttained and ascertained upon 

‘Cromwell was administorod with the 

ot whilo at tho mime timo it becamo re- 

Yored formidable te ee oxtondod its intluenos to regions: 
‘the most remote, Under 


‘hose ‘daye that felicity. was to bo tttal 


in 
harmony. Though commerce and acquaintance waa groatly 
eciena T al ye fod no friendships from home that par- 
took of lt tenderness, except for your mamma, All 
pleasures nnd desires—all my world was, in m manner, 

and absorbed within the compass of my own walls. In the good 


attachment to mo, t my soul could was 
centred. Mutual joy mt round our board. 
‘our pillows; ing a swimming period of aix yearn, 


if 
s 
4 


experi loot 
save what arose from the inordinancy of my wifo's affection for mo. 
Sra laipeainsesd: to hice moe, wast Sones Sera 





| 
ae Hild mite iy iin Teele 


aan wagiald Gpieegt yeti 4 
zt ae i u ale thee aide 
cH eaties titel ee pe 
slit ata Heth cnet 
Bigatti, Sr te eteeea oH ee 
see Wiis salad 
ranpealectabi nee uni 
Bal Pater Par cee 


u 
=! eh u ny 
ale an ine an 





; Hai 0 fein e Hs 

é RS Perris 
. a z ta de sa inifa fl aE 
Ha a LE i Ri ia ie (al 
z natde ip = yal | aja? 5 cg nel a 5 cake 3 
5 segs fet & Pe z fate paul A fa i 

HERE p pe ie Mage Haetit u ant 
a eaayiiet Wil i enter ian: 
ee iid ddan inulin 
ie ea pe ee 
sida gtl apie ye nteeians 

wane bala ape Beet aie ala fe 
¥s BtHe pl sl Huet fy 
a1! 2538 eau is an 





200 THE POOL OF QUALITY, 


of his lamentations, E withdrew to the next chamber, and there 
Plentifally vented my woe in weeping, 

After some time and ived that all was and 
returning, | found him in a kind of troubled doze, from wl he 
Aprende mpage ae 
nourishment ‘hough hic deter set Eagueceh Maes Gar aloe 


z 
# 
ip 


ut 
iv 
sf 
fe 
ore 
2529 
vie 
EF 
a: 
ve 
pet 
al 


qt 
2 
: 


il 
pitt 
ier 
v: 
rite 
& 
la 


3 
Hy 
3 


i to cling and climb upon yo? Gono, gone! 
Troaking ‘to teary T cro 
3 we Inay yot have many childron to bo tho conifort of 
your age-—No, my Harry—no, ho replied; You may indeed havo 


ra 
Hi 
; 
£3 
i 
Ee 
z 
E 
i 
Z 


iy 


kept up 
Yvon my company, and that of hia daughter, a to 
Hin; nial ha Purely lef hs spartmentt whehs oo old Salo Ale 


ith child, 

when 1 broke the mattor to him, he did haters be | to be 

bovis f affected ; in time, however, tho weight of affliction 
considerably lightened, and, as my wife advanced in her 





THE POOL OF QUaLiTy, 





‘One day't wont to ino with Mr Belo, han 
w ir. Bott a ware 

aur ps 
rotam in. Moorfisia, attended only by my 
favonrita Trishman, ‘active fellow, ne 
et fair day, I wns yn posta of robbers, who 
Fushed on me from behind a cover, The frst of them, running up, 

eat ee 

away fece of the upper Sear. 

ited Sate Teen ae vat ie them ata 
should have ta posible. T iuwtantly drew 
on tho second him also on the ground eforo he 
hod time to take his that his pistol wont harmlessly off 
In the moan on waa not flo; 
with two strokes ai ha bos! ovliod tro soore of 
apo grenies sponta aiepetiers betiehe 
serving tat'we a ot a the a hk i th oa 

run off wevoral ways ‘at they could, My good friend, 
‘Tirlch O'Ponnoh, then turned affectionataly toon Fou hurt, 

us 


I am, Tirlah ; 

home the best we can.—O, cried the noble crestare, if nobody was 
hurt bat Tirlah, Tirlah wouldn't be hurt at all! 

Tere, taking mo under the arm, we walked slowly to the 
= a eee he ae eae into ae 

io Ta, 8 me, a8 T began to grow weak 

tac efiion of blood. e 

SN NR RT tee De rarvearpiady Meath 


thunderod at tho door; anil my Matty, according to custom 
whenever I was abroad, was the readiest’ of all ous domestics to 
"By this time T hod fainted, and was quite inmenaible; but when 
my tender and true mate saw me two men into her 
sence, all palo and bloody, sho, who it ho had fortitude to 
1d, gave a ahriok thes wus enongh bo 
alarm the mi falling backward, got a 


wbourhood, an 
violent contusion in the hinder part of hor head. 
Immodiately we were conveyed to separate beds, and all requisite 
help war provided. Tt was found thut I had rocelved six or seven 
oun, but mano cf thom proved, dangeroas as, they were 
given ata distance, and by pistol shot. But ala? my May's caso 
she fell into sudden and prematnre labour, 
suffered extrome anguish all the night, during which 

she coasod not to inquire after me, she was with diflcalty 

infunt, who was suffocated in the birth. 
Tn the mean while, the good and tonder-bearted old gentleman 
hurried about incessantly from one of us to the other, wringing bis 
ands, und scarcely retaining his senses. 








casecet en fine wee Kear with tho 
ay a eck ne ear ae ony, ‘that hor father bad 
of of 





ms THE FOOL OF Quabiry, 


i 


ie 
i 
E 
i 
bel 
Es 
aEE 


| 
af 
HY 
ef 
iB 
fl 
u 


Dis 

ua 
stilt 
Hie 
Jee 
ne : 
ae 
We 
Eee fl 


is 
E 
g 
i 
Fi 
L, 


sEsEF 


s 
8 


2 
# 
i 
i 


g 
E 
y 
& 
ae 
z, 
3 
£ 
z 
F 
2 
; 


‘would forsake mo thon, my Matty? 
, in Teaving me the most wretched, 

of men, You die, my love—you die; and T, 

fortared you, and your, babe with my vitals ft I who 

the ono nnd for the other. But’ you mnst not 

me, fe Tcl og be Semen pl since we 

my 


= 

Hi 
i 
ie 


iu 


le—let us die together!" 


ua 
Here a passionate silence ousued on either part; but 


sowing gluful an bevinnig 000 , L was obliged 


S 
F 

z 

& 
4 
3 

i 
i 
o 
z 
Bs 
se 


tS 
ul 
i 
iE 
ae 
: 

FL 

i 
i 
*y 


roverod. Che tae contrary, ts theme Sage ull nee ee lara 
or pi ea avery, machine professed, Uke 

carry a Urim and Thummim about him; no 
engage in any business or tnrgain, though with an intont to 
resehi bis neighbour, without going apart, ax be ald, to 


‘My Matty, nt the same time, was the humblost of all 
out any parwde of sanctification, Hors was a roligion, 
value she had the daily and hourly experience ; 
religion of power, It hold her, as on a rock, in the 
turbulent and factuating world? it guvo her a peace of 
smiled nt Devroastion ie we her comfort in iction, 


ope tion, and triumph in death, 
Azout fre ‘weeks after ber unhappy, misouraiage; sia 


z 
i 


i 
ae 


i 





THE TOOL OF QUALITY. 


208 
reaming; and tho impression still ies heavy and melancholy on 


ii 
iH 
it 
F 
i 
z 
F 
EE 


He 
at 
4 


1 ]F 


F 
2 


ie 
i 


8 

eds, 
EI 
i 
= 


= 
4 
i 
J 


be more inthnately and more endearingly wodded 


yet there is neither marrying nor giving in marrit 
‘While yot sho spoke, her pain, us the pains of tour, again cama 
pla pe ad shape age neg 


out from us for ever! Nothing befor us but » blackness and 
of oblivion; or, beyond it, a doubtfal and alarzning ! 
ind strange worllls, weociates 


atrango scones 


of horrid roalities, infinitely worse then non- 
Eat anit pe ition, iA 


are the brightost prospects of i 


entity | 
‘Ware, af hat timo, nfo Your sctliors, your deflcm of fataitty? 


where your 


matter of langh and ridicule? Dejectod and their count 
ance wholly fallen, and their heart sunk within thom, 


tremble and wish to believe, in this the bour of dissalution, 
from under them ; 


thom, Inthe drowning of thelr socls, t9 ery 608 #9 


feel their oxistence sapped and sink 


natare compels 


companions, who turn their own eternity into 


sore thing, to any’ thing, Saves save or T pets 


Far different was the state 


any lithe al Toy Matty, my elt 


of saints, at that tremondous period! Where all others 


there 


the doared alos wnd eho dropped the workd an its 


— with her body and all the sensible affections thereof, 


sane it & poor 
would drop his tattered arb to put on 


‘with 
that a poor man, just come to a great estate, 


nm 

©, my beloved! she would cry in the midst of her pains, T have 
been weakly throuch life, T have bocn weakness iteelf, and thorofore 
ea ne th abe ne Diy Oe bes be Tare eee woaknoss, 


show thy mightinoss 
thy me 


‘Again, after & swoon, and whon har 
rofuso not thy proces, tay Master! sho Grog 


‘mo, and. thon lay it upon mo with all tt 


tal 


became oxcessive— 
‘Thy crosa and thorny 








| 3 nis 


nae ny a 


la musta ot hae oe na id ine 
mice Hare Pa ah (a 
int Rene if i eRe foi a 
Pn a EOE jae Bie 
ty gic! magi siddgeestgsne-as gust gol g2ne! 
rf ail fee HS en Eg gee 
SEeTRL Ey leafeceenactlt ies toetagta it 
Haien( mucins leat vat Pet isch 
Be eH eat eee Hun dferall 





"Hal 
Eoegsasa 4? 

oe aaa ia difiat Hee 

a | 2382 = 
gelaat sy i re Pf (a 
jae una He fete fs 
rane Ran nuh foal din 
fae ie Weee ree ll 
fe Aly nt renee sat dite 
re ae Hall if vane ae 
phil afl el He 
fs 








we cn 
i pu te 


THRE POOL OF QUALITY, 


sh ee 


itr 


Boral 


aa 


‘on the ine 
io pen 
lt 


lam, like that of the Seca ee 


mally 


i 


pane 


ho tem of tho soul 
enviar bat for n season 


Th 


re aa 
Bpide f 
2ig5sae 
ae 
Hie 
gacgeebed® 
Sglges aged 
EE aur 3 
aa ; zits 
Ebneta3 
233 
Les 

of 
He 
23 


my sorrows, 


coe 









“hifi: dhe GB PE i repay 


ah if aa lei: sits Ht we Beg! 
He x ceases oie 1 nue ig ai : 
upun alanine i eialay ie 
S auetdny (aie fea age 
San a pata tstages alti etd He ee 
33 afl si t3257% ce s ey Sieg ot eee 
sbegil Seebvilps Ht oodles 
ane dedi th hala 
Hin Shay if Be aE iui AU 
ual ae ele sla 
anu iifaill fulaee fae wut 






Aothing of real Import in the gospel of Christ 





iW ANE Wy SpE 
BF He ais mt at Pe fees ae 
bids iH weil Bini alee ne 


fala 3 ha a Be ey 


naness, 
Led 
do 
me 
laden aa 
‘rest to you, 
‘om 
me will 
Lord, 


POOL OF QUALITY. 
saith, 
will 
follow 
that 
taken 
ithor 
mavod. 
that 
at 
‘that 
nto 
‘our 
i, 
coud 
‘hand of his ever ready 


saeippiedt ah erie 
digi z Hi Ha 
el Br eter eH 


nr 
to Chris 
tionlow oF 
1 do bi 
rot it sik 
Si ee pon with 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 2 


Here bis countenance began to eettle into an carnost composure, 
and his eyes were turned and fixed upwant; while bis old and «n= 
foobled body continued to lubour onier the symptoms of near dio, 
fution, At length he startod, and seized my with a fying 
prossure—Thero is comfort, Harry; thero is comfort! he criod, 


was now cast ance more upon a strange and friendless world, 
All the interests of my hoart wero buried with this family ; and I 


f my uaeor and my May, I doirod that John, our litle ol man, 


John, said I, as ho onterod, here is « bill for fivo hundred pounds 
‘which our good ol master his loft you, in token of his acknowledg- 


any kind would but be an encumbrance to me—Then, sir, you 
keep your bounty to yourself; for T shall break 
five-ani-twenty hours are ovor.—Nay, John, sali 





you, thank yoa, Iwi 

not ‘Jou with my tears; but I shoutd dio unblese if I died 

out of your presence! So saying, he rushed from me in a fit of 
m. 

T then sent for my wife's xoald, whom I formerly mentioned. Sho 
had just hoard of my discharging the other sorvanta, and entored 
Bre red yee Niarseet co cadananot.-— Corns’ got; Quai, sat euiag 

rs: 
‘arma, 


wo, your honodr, and your disintorestednes towanl us. 
Ceacuaha pestoy an i on shoeed Teal give Yor each or is 

ou choose, vO iy 
of 2 This, however, doce bet d mo 
may regard snd attention to you, You sre of a helplor se my 
and calamitios : wher 


219 THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 
jiend, a8 to dobtor, Susy, and 1 will it my remem! 
Sens Serre renee 
have nce left the farourite friend of my Matty shall not 
1 propartian, 


iF 


: 

i 

i 
peiale 
tilt 
fiefire 


angel mistress! must I then be 
re live withoat the eorvice of the hands ans 
it T understand 


g 
Ey 
q 
as 
i 


tetphile I wos Preparing to leave the once-loved mansion, I found 
in cabinet 6 parchment that much ‘ined me. On 
my marriage, he had propored to mako a sottlemont of his fortune 
upon me, which, howover, I obstinatoly rofused to accept ; where- 
ufon, without my privity, he got this deod perfected, which ean- 
tained an absolute conveyance to me of all his worldly effects and 
: and this agin renewed in mo the tender and ¢n- 
remembrance of each of those kininesses and benefits 

which he had formerly conferred upon me, 

T now found ‘myaclt {n posaossion of near a million of money, 
which, however, in my disposition of mind at the tin ared NO 
worthier than so mach lumber in ® waste room. Al not 
how it was, that, through tha subsequent course of my life, 
T was by no means of an economict turn, though I never 
a debt, nor cave a denial to the wants of those who asked, nor 
turned away from him that desired to borrow of me, yet unooveted 
wealth came pouring in upon me, 

It was not without somo sighs and o plentiful shower that I 
departed from the seat of all my past enjoymenta, 1 
within a few doors of your father; and my little houschold con- 
titted of my fovourito Irishman, my little old man, two foot 
= an olderly woman who waod to dress a plain dish of 

a 

Tt was thon, my fairost cousin, that your opening ant 
Fe pe 

ed and my gricfe cheered by thé sweetness of your prattle; 
and T was melted down and niinted anow, as it were, by the 
‘mafoctod warmth and Jenoconce of Four area, | 

As T had no faith in dreams, not even in that of m; 
thonght it impossible that T should ever marry again, if ie Ord 
resolve!, in my own mind, to make you my heir, and to endow you 
in marriage with the best part of my fortane, int you are a Uttle 
pale, madam ; you look dejected ani futigued. Tf you pleus, T will 


suspend my narration for the present, and in the morning, if you 
i, as carly ws you will, I shall son anh eraoed ey 








4 














THE FOOL OP QUALITY. 218 


Insignificant history. Here he premed her hand to his 
swlibirew with w tearfdl eye ands heaving Beasts ind fe 
day he resumed bis ‘as followeth. 


fell on my constitution, and affected my 
‘think our doctors: fwd mach confound the one with other. 


Accordingly, T wie advied to travel for ehungo of alr and axa 
and T was preparing for my Journey, when thers happenod in my 
family the moat extrionlina’y instance of an everwatelifal pro» 
vidence that occurs to my memory. 

‘My lite old man Jolin began to decline space, und nt length 
took to his bod, and, havine » tender friendship for hin, T went 
sit beside him, and to comfort hit the best Icould. Joh, said I, 
are you afaid to die?—No, sir, not af all notin the Teast Long 
to be dissolved, and to be with our loving Lont,—Indeed, Job, eal 
1; Tam inclined te think you have boen n very good ier —A 

2 ‘dnnera 





am 
there’s blood hewd.—Blood ! 
rll dei ed 








hold upon the rock, and cannot. be shaken, 
how 20 yon’ stand to Claposs of your’ worldly substance ?— 
All that T have; sr, X got with you nnd miy old master and where I 


wre I resolve 10 leave it—Indeed, John, I will not 





‘and, 'whoscovor shall be tho first found before our door, lot that 

inhoritor of my substance.—It ehall bo 
Fou kay ; I will go and see whom God shall be pleasod to 
Lo 


Accordingly I went and opened our door, when a woman, who 


i 
z 
E 
i 
B 





He 
ele 

ee Cae lin ig 
, a Bnet 3 oe ui 4 7g GE 
geo cul nll a] oe 
ita! Oech li dean 
als ale Hahn eit Ble foal! 
‘eer ae oe 
Bhan be ip pens aa | 
rie iaiy 3 § Het "i il ebriaes 3 calE La pefiace 
i : Hilt Ht wii HEL alll tsiae 
Bit data peialeg iy ale Bea 
ghee Bias! igen 
Hel ely AG pals 

hal are a 








i fj my Bly BED | 
tall id Bel dal wn a SiH iets 
a aga? 7 i wl a gpe bap? Lee Baga? 
A a i z ‘ i nH ft speeds figs ih } 
a a neetgie Gay 
Sas ae cabniaa tpieae 2 
Per 3 iia “a aH : 
22 oy ince pipes | 
8 a3 fy Fipperi iid eiaie i 
: ae ETL Eee 
uy gelital al rk age. FSP per 
a in jet pate Rina | calle 
a eu el dil Halk sane Pil 





26 THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


233828 
ie ene 
28 Z 
Pee 
shay 
a 

He 

fa: 

FE 

2g 

Es 

i 


nt, 
‘soon as she had ended her short narrativeWell, John, said 
this business will do; in my opinion you uP ys 


= 





ho had killed my brother, T bated him wa much as T had ever 
him before, But thon when my Tommy bad of 
hig wounda T sent for and ner to inquire after him and fd hima 


j 
E 
[ 
; 
i 


Aangor to his wito and infint. 


‘And ho is returnod! shouted John—ho fs Nelly! 
Your barharous and bloody husbuncl, who stabbed your brothor, 
and left you and your infant to famish, he is retarned to you, my 
Nelly; and in his death, bo shall mak you amend forall hie 
sufferings which be brought upon you during his Metime! | But, 

master, send imme 


wy mustor, my ¢ diately for my child, 
emmy, T beseech bad as I am mysolf, I 
tnie’s Bowing Police tle mye 


was affected, madam, beyond expressic 
dents that wore at once #0 wonderful and so tender ; at ae 
tent servants and a sedan chair for James, with orders 


5 
ete Fg 


i 
28 
a 
= R e 
EE 
1] 


ve} for joy of pe | found him, and partly for grief of having 
him in that condition. 

0, my Nelly, my Nelly | cried Barnabas; had I known who the 
porson was whoso blood I drow that terrible night, [would sconor have 
thrust my Knifo into ny own heart, thin into any part of the body 
of that brother of yours, Dat L wan tA Sa 
and you were young aud handsome; and jealousy 








THE POOL OF QUALITY. 


Hee 


i 


aust 402 TEE) nine 2 
ue a al a 


a 
ie is 2 
penta janes auiea3 E it 


? Z Ei a8 =n 8Ese 
all He ae salty 


Het 


fatal 


Et a) 


Hear aBl 


HG 








ee 


ae 
8 ui is2 gaa 
i aslaeris. rail 
et ah nie 2 Hh u 
A aera 
Aaa ie pees 
od eat ft ay ul eine teal 5 
il fetal: Dae ene 
e iz : 2 3 i 38 a 33 EG Chet Peer Ze a= 
Se a 
tah: Hise 
s Gui ae oh ang! 


F | ie 
ai 
ra ler 
aa 
L feiss ca el al 
. eal agtetat ate H uu ie cae 
st diate miei! Hind ad va : 
Zi rr 3 He jeans ret He 
i slant a ai Hai a 
a4 cat aan eta 
iF ; : sg eal Ae a at 
i ne eigizsead i] aylitee rey Hg : 
1 ei dat Hee 
at seit 3 sue 
BEEAE: nut 
= aal 4 


aa 


all 
wai eaten 
TE ig fais 
K 


Pes HII 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


, haart, nnd un lerstastit 
FEopls of Aenean, fh ie ot persittet to enter into some 
nati folbles ant 


i? 









Ese! 
3 
3 
[ 


7 
1 


i 







- oxi 
is 
id his wietor then led the males and females 


aie 

a 

thing tha 

to his mother, and titlering and wiiepering: in her he se 
‘enton Is 


bebwoen the 
and the nine of clubs I do not think elther that 
knows any thing of the difference or value of coin; for, na we pasted 
through the ball toss, a bogear 
im slip a aling into is nd, Indeed, manna el 
groatost fool that fellow, 


FE 
BE ge2 


& 

E 

3 

3 

i 

£ 

: 
aut 
ati 


ar father’s fortane will never introduce you mong pela 
reeling or of any fishion, Can yon play at no kind 


‘The’ th maaan. —T it a cried 
eg pom 
rou, 


iF 
aa3 
Ay 
a 
# 
u 
it 
33 
fees 








THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


: 
fe 


‘are chid the and calling: to 
tor hat pe ame hing It me, I pray you, said she, 


erably ere 
at him, and Torte hin she fou are nol noble f 
AP ea 


i 
i 
Ee 


f 


z 
a 
i 
nh 
: ial 
= 
a 
a 
i 
Hig 
i fee 


f 


Siok at ber without helo fol af contempt sho had for 
by the sido iiaieleles ss! 


i 
E 
i 


fe 
Hl 
fF 
fe 
HA 
in 
s 
ee 
aa 
ae 


Saath atieha cranes me a 4 
conti, and kis ising the oan Pas he Wau Ya is oem heat 
le) great at Was get Uy ‘young assen| 
root the Seanuless expatares the foo foe fool, ‘be Sea am 
ttom Iatizhod, and 


if 


i 
i 
E 
2: 
2 
z 
i 
4 
HE 


my lear, could you be guilty of such an error? she wld: 
Euow that, when you gave. the candlo fata the bani af 
Ty, ake Became the candlestick, and ft was her yon 
ated wt i th el at 
whisper sa 

ap ispor 


fara 
i 
te 
Hat 
StEeATE 
abage 
Baa 
248 Ee 
ane 
petit 


"Soumny de ee ne ee ee) foie 
je ave yourself extromel 
Your young fricad hers who might ‘have mo poe 

I ae 


and ee is ce ea oe hg a 


general sketch ofthe manner In which you disposed of your money. 
Sin the first pace air, answered Cloanent, you. will ty 
iit, that, for Attic mare ian the five huntred. pounds 

‘we releated ninety five prisoners, whose debits ott from f 
Ahillings to, about twelvo pounds’ yor man, Thee, a the gene 
Jal teen jourmeymen tulle or weavers, ot professors of other 
inferior crafts; and, as they wanted means or 





caer iit Sanpienengy apart Ta 
Ee aga 
i fas - ‘iin Ws F 
oni ee tia a ate i 
Se rt 
S geecegty boty SUSU GIy Shaqacs te 
= HEU) ae eae aan i 
E ave sa aes ey ae 
B pris i vn iaeetreytupit aie 
b su Es es eur ss 556 
ruin H Ine Hue He Ong a, aii 
Harare anced: 


to forth. 


ce 


to seed 


ia 


rte 


‘he hindmost, and offered hima balfercrowa on 


he heand it 
and, walkis 


re come out heavy Inden. 
‘He Tet them all 


Three months since, about the «i 
pass ly his door, 


to 
of 
eS 
up to 


be. 


24 THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 
to 


cannot there! 
and anthority which he hath not in himself, 
‘Tho question then ocenrs, by what right it ts that the logislative 
and exocutive powers of community appaint some persons to death, 
and others ee a gir arswer in chor, and area 
ie per! uty, of every man, to defend 
Ki or bind tho’ attempters. Thi 


the right and duty of the trastecs of society to put to death or im- 
prison all who take away, or attempt the life, liberty, or property of 
of ita membora,, 
is right, however, extends to criminal matters only; and it 
doos not yor {0s naoa ‘whee resis cea eee 
in nature or policy, tho several societice of mankind have ngreod to 
doliver up hole mombors to slavory, to stripes, tortures, or im~ 


z 


world os barbarians, and oven tho Homan republic, the 
of it# most boasted policy and freedom, gave ap insolvant debtors 
(without inquiring into the canses or ooensions of snch saataaet 
‘ux slaves, or nbsolnto property, into the hands of their creditors, 
be sold at will, or pat to labour, or starved, mancrated, of tot 
in order to give value in vengeance, which they could not give in 
coin or other equivalent: commodities. 

The Jewish or Mosaic law, though aDowing sufficiently, as Christ 
says, for “the hantnoss of that people's hearts,” yel gave perfect 

ent to all Jens who wore bondmen, and perfect remission 





ten SELEE ETN Tt ie 
4 wun Hide a fs ie 1H: tasty ae ay i 
fia taba Hata ih a 
phat HES He adi H sey a Hd: 45 & 
LO eT aad) He 
Sai u x ee AA Hug < Saabs ty 
suet piaudlee bli tails ig 
i fag) GALS Per ey Hats 
ef A in Ege 4 la Peigaieid apeheeettes 
= ff u Baa ie Ey pitrisiat age aia 
lull Hs aa yeeeeszes 7 Ba RSLGHe a 
TE en aa rR 
ener 








ii Hill i fate s8 fi 4 

He ae aah i 
El be A Hie if Hi Aa Hone i 
a vad HH eee ap 4 2 ae nln vate 
po Mera ieee felt SUUbt a iia hh 
he ies ee ee ned 

ste antics gt Uli 
EB ues Ae eacetliegs 





2s g222 8 FRPEDER] SegRveza 
Teen Tn 
E gF pests q ealzstgt etpelea Pisg 
eau Git hail De ; fel uli - 
g ges é dgszé 3 dz = ce eae rh g4gss 
fede sl els qa 5 et ne 
oud beter i eeu 
sPesclldl glratetaehaielgi] © agevibedbeyge-tpee 
& az ay gee Fg i 2=Eee Ste Pes a: z 
sae ane + Fevers : 
sahil aie he st 
HH ep He ae nit 

















St AG at 
zaebyEeEa if Fe EEE GAsge 

Lie ite ae il pete i He 
mL et Bipid Palatal, pitsaiiids« ¢)130) Sfp 

fae aed sta alas SE che, 

= 24-21 BET peice dgercssdspeegiice secazé ase tr ss 

id ell llnnnt an aii 

Reeth es scuged £23329 sé pas £2569 5- see Re a8 

E Hilt Hapbe Hila puetaetaitt 
22:8 i328 Seeicazes Ecepsc ene im ets 

ti aialtd: planets Haina 

cht uale iat weit ne 

=F gogo cdeetcgs ss faye ee 

g ile tus bara eine! Bssiladihs 





TRE FOOL OF QUALITY. 29 





in. 
as, alas! poor Mr. Vindex, sald I; had T guomod 
of the misohiefs that our unlucky pranks have Decegtie pom 
you, I woul! Pl nd both my hi into the furnace of Nel 
chalinezar rather than have hal art or part In such a wickedness ; 
for herein we acted the fable of the frogs and the boys—that 
which was play to us was death to you, Mr. Vindex. 

Tn ,, now we are indebted to you for every snisfortuno 


re BR A 
faiferings 1 ere ivo you my hand and word to. make. gp 

‘and fifty pounds more for you; and for this I will not 
accapt tho smallest thanks, as 1 think it is no more than an act of 
emtion hoacsty.—AAni I, cred Me. Fenton, ¥ hold myslfindabted 
to zou w thonsand pounds, my noblo Harry for that single senti- 
mont.—That's woll—that's well, sir! oried Harry, leaping ‘ani 
clapping his hands; 1 shall now be cloar in the world with all my 


‘Thos, sit contin d he, it refoloed my heart ‘to bond 
i, nod xojoiced m: 
Mr, indo away in such beara Talle rd and I piel 


was said to be confined with ere father, And T ‘tell 
you their story, with two or threo other stories more, on account 





ih Beil | 
ia ae inl bee a FT ee tap! 
Hie a ed a Hare Haat =. Te i 
Hee ip Hal en 
He el 
diene a bali 
ieee eee AB 





apy 22054 age betag UP? a7 4 Hin Pa a ne 
cami rec a 
if nue ds i HL i 


ges 28. 





fall to tho sharo of an uncle by 
ieiall rite ef nian tania ek 


Spriieese paar 
with ono gon, and a doughtor whom 


(ate 732582 eh e3s, Le ar ik 
fl ab te dike nei jute f 


Bell duns Ha at ina hail 





en begun to gather; whereapon a 
‘wus in the coach, leaped out and mule his eecape, but the coach 
sua was 08 bo. locks; the people. pulled Elms en an Teac aaa 
having beaten and Wicked him, they tho 
eaeen tie we get on child ook and Mien. jem 
9 coach, upon it “dnahod i 
We then inught tbatwe iad nothing Farther to 
dng our child between us, we tured back and walked homeward ¢ 


poor apartments to cover ux from the weather, 

and, as my wife grew snddonly sick and fiint, T hastened tack to 
our lodgings and had our bedding brought hither. 

Th was now evident that the pretended gift of ‘Templar 
was no other than a diabolical echeme of the villain Delvil aby 4 
my darling within his fanys; and T cured my own stupidity 
not perceiving it at first; but blessed be God, however, in all 
events, that my lamb was still innocent—vwas still unsallied. 

‘What with grief and with fright together, my dear wife took to 
Ueda and rein Se ecties met Dosen oa portion 

er daughter m. My poor 

then fell as dead beside hor mother, and could not be recovered: 
from hor ft in many houra; and indeed it was 
Serre ee that wo might all be laid and forgotten in 
one grave or 

‘AS coon on toy darling: was recoverod, howover, I aguin wished 
to live for hor sake, thut I might not lenvo her without a com- 
fortor or protector in the midst of a meruiless and winked world. 

Tn order to pay the nurse-keeper, the doctor, and apothecary, aa 
also to dofray tho funoral expenses, T left m with the niurso- 
keeper, and, going to onr former lodgings, 1 sold all her 
mattera at something under @ this of prime cost; and having dite 
charged tho lodgings, and pald my Jail debts, T pp to lay my 








THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


atts 


Hr 


Ee 
ui Wi aiid BH 





ug ue ea 
13 it gea2t2 
ri it fete aay 
ue He Ove 
desley GE Plane & 
by peters cir aca ais eg hese a 
Hi ipl pe A Pee FL ore 
Ee ash 
z fala atest au ape fajietetl 
i ed HAS 
AOR eT areni cia a 





sie HHT quit La epee 
ay iP slaad alli dn: bial tl 
eee ee 
eae nalit naunaellity in 
Aeert it sifigl sad gc pe cdzeb2 32 cs 
B dueegideaysea?si22r Da lisuael: 
ae a Be lgieyieeistti a7! rE 
Hl fanaa oe L 
Spcfedgiszds er 2 
pee HERES a8 2 
Pate Ta 
2 aig Hie snl Prnbnlluuhin 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


a8 a 
iit 
Hite 
Frslee 
oy 
iat | 
eee 
Hipe 
Hirt 
= 


F-pLGge EERE 
bigit EiPESea2° 
ify 
gf i i 
38 ‘7 
Bere i 
by 
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i 
ie 


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i 

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it 
HT 

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it 
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A 
I 
Hy 
au 
J 
1 


Twill not bo put to the pain of taking this tack again, but 
epee See ne te ty oe Paha give it?0, sho 


i with to heaven T had as much more to add to it 
yoir sakes, 

T then inquired the name of her favourite family at the next 
door, and being told that it was Ruth, I looked over my list, snd 


0 
found that Mr, Ruth was in for above seven buandred pounds, 
grieved me very much, as such a sum nearly amounted to the half 
of our whole stock. However, I comforted myself with the 
that God would sead some ono else to make up to this poor 
what should be wanting om my part. 
Stern just then returned, I beg pardo an 

for detaining #0 long, bat I could not. avoid it, 
mani ts coven! dying cape fear death, indeed, in his 
strength, and almost in his fall health, stifling and gasping for air, 
which the swelling of tho glands will not to past. 

appointee 

wos 











fii 
iid Sn 
Pal Bees | spill Ae Bag 
yet ead ete ea Pu 
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1 Ena Lea dilate 
Sie EPae Epiviy: 2S Hee = : : 
S93 hele = ATRL ae ieee as 
: Sy ee ppb sal 
gyzteed s 2 Of seeeray! Bria Pere 
A neta BITE b 
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ff Hy j Lele HH ide te iy rari 

ee 
a EY i taut aaa aig Pe an 
Hilna Th TUFTh cpaeaae 


Ey 


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fieittteianls eee a suabes ace 





ma PRT Wu ar ij tik a 
fil i Hae Hie rely te Hf 
Jail danilige 3h 4 aia 
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H fill HUE i 
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Peano nae 


lata erate App La 





240 THE POOL OF QUALITY. 


Being, both Invited ope day- 40 dines ith eer at the 
house of a neighbour called Mr. Hoartless, iypection Lena 
aware over ta bn, whether the at = 
‘on end was the Envention of Columbus, or whether it wax 


. 

be 

H 

i 

i 

i 

i 

2 i Free 


iL 
i 
He 
i 
if 
it 
i 


. 
whe T claimed little patrimony. 

Won ol the yf 1 Mz. Hollow, ho broke into a loud 
longh. Your aes ori 





Joss than eternal perdition, ‘Thus we bamod, on both sides, 
mqpenchable fires nnd tho Kingdom of Satan was fully-epenod 
within ns. 

At length my body was imprisoned, at the suit of bour 
Hoeurtlews for £700, and ils were taken Senta 
the sult of my neighbour Hollow, for the sum of £2000. But I 
soon was informed that all this money was my brother's, who had 








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a ec a 
ae 


fis ab in| eb 
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ay aes inet ad Hu ey ul | i a hie ni 


242 BH i 
Rou Rely ne al pig edent tor 





sladicn nl ee Ht Hi 
E i tH ile u oe Haak lf i 





2 ates pega # ge 85 
A MH Aa ERRATA EL 
i LL ce ay 
3 52 Hp r 2 gi Pag seb sa; BSc A tesa ee 
= eayee ce Hi ae aeii Perit nahs gga eH 
ee KS jaan nee at oe Fatale 
SF rire ay ih HHP Hires 
eee ‘ Hey Hotel 
oP reper SCH be | eee 
Ri aie Heed 





“ag 
i yas hele an ape hae a 

: cea ii i Ht ul ede 
HG fi ie ny gute ts ule il 
Sone ener ety Baie en 
Li apt an 
aS 35 pod eck-dce pee ieiae®ebets alii iaaiay ‘3 
Pu i si arian He ae al 
Ct wey Hale sat ee it ae 
if we ell bppadiid Hou Halal 


4 TIE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


‘Yea, eriod Mr. Rath, to my bosom, to my heart with tho | 
SUIS tan welocnae ina x otavea sicanvoa poner od 


= 
F 
z 
i 
i 
g 
H 
a 
ea 
Hi 


a 
! 
Fl 


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He 


g 





pa Ours the 
usband !—O my children |—and down éhe dropped. 


rr 
fomp, and dancing about, eriod—O sir, sir] my mammy, my 
Tammy! thero’s my mammy, wx sure us day! 


snd 0 with all speed to Br. and Mix. Fielding, 
‘© surety, whother Ned is their 
ay nl moment ns som. a Yo iven Frank his 


mare 
ny holo, this, bal wn 
hor tnt the Bouse by fore and coating 





hor in one 
rooms till Mr, Fielding arrives. By all Ned’s account, she must be 


executed mattors accustomed punctuality, he returned 
O21 cxiod Jannos It is exponibla| thas ‘this woman #hould be 
‘® mammy, “his ne unhappy 
uvenan te tinosent ot the tsce Tans maaan ar 








* Hy Be 


i 


a 2 
3 saat 
> uj ms aia le 


Hit 


ii 


ia 


ia 


:4 
1 


‘your 
han 
wi 
inct.—Here she presented 
following words: 


ee 


‘ paper that contained 


suspicion of 
‘man and a great aaint, 


at 


“gad 


“ MARMADUKE oo ee c" 


anda gt 2 ay 
Be es a is 


vA mined 


He then took « per 


for her to sit down, 


reading this Mr. Fenton towed, 
him, 


Pee 


Guna 
aL i eusil 


26 Se 6 es eee en of the 
wandering or dissolute class . Be pleased, Mr, 
to look orer this certificate ; ink ft has all the marke of 


being genio, 
‘moment that Mr. Fielding cast his: on the well- 
known axe Indeod! ho eeclatmed.> Te cr 


hho eos his 
irmative, 
tat again be cast eae. ary soe cas toe te ec 
must again be cast asiile. Itore comen our 
ih gros hasto; I want her word that wo Bod foul ts 
‘whom we suspected to have stolen our child and desired 
ould most mo here dirvctly. 
i nurse enfersa panting, 
= 
whore 


While Mr Fielding ‘spoke m ed panti 
seein eta oat B 
aioe 


Fi 


thi 


ui 
Hl 





: 
3 
g 
; 
ie 
E 


i 


Se ee ae sag etek Sara ‘this woman or 
woman ; but you must not have another child 
Hf ho in indoed your son, 1 shall know him in an instant : 
know him frotn ‘all the children that ever were born.—Why, 
oried Mra, Fiolding eagerly, do you know of any natural mari, 
mole, or «pot, by which you'coulll guews at him #—He hail no 
aot upon him, matam but, if he be a lving boy, hs as 
my own making that never will out, and that's the 
T never dared to tell you of it—What mark, 
tell me instantly, I beg you. 

‘Why, madam, you must know as how the weathor was 
it boing twelfth day in Christmas holidays. So yon and 
home on visting, and 1 had o rousing fire down, 


id Shen fellow of ine and inches could 
old, and os a of ob 
dears throw eo 


4 
5 


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ai 
Hla bli 











2 
ee 


Hu 
Hi 


ta fae ee eae 
Ha 2 ie a ‘ ag 
: Ba Segs pes 3 Py} 

ie of Bi at 


yim 
fa 


fal metal 


Ei 


is my child! he tenderly 
that thou shouldest thos visit me wit 


in have T deserved 


is this? 


325 
ile Hare 
eer 





a ea am 
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aie at, iy sl ee sf Hit He a tty 
fa ecard Ei iy 
S Res. eerie eereeee Fae a fice 
yea gee (teal HN aia Buttes 
au ne ane eal Geel 

aiieist bd ae 
fy iulines pe ean ie fal 
He aH GATE: ib Henne gate 





& < 





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fa dull pg UGE 
Ves a arash ¢ pfu 

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ers p32 SF38caee 2 ‘g 
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eh enti Wah 
25 beyegetaapegtes ilar 
zu Gaba qi 
Bs Hie Pr 
pid $ i 552335) qos ai 
Hy aiea lee ee find 
FS Dae Bt PLE PEE 
EHR aes 


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nee ay HE 
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TRE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


‘to drink tea with the Widow Ne 
@ countenance that spoke am uncommon welcome, 


a 





an45: 2s 


rue ue iit qi 


itl 


fis uy ene i 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


bit al 


Saul ric 


feet: 


3 
2. 
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By 


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eh ae Heel i 


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lfiegiite, 





‘The question yot sai Arabella, whether your dovila of 
‘occurs, 
usbonda om 


‘thou gallo rene thoring up tho 
5 

win iar is pera sf cg hd 

on each ‘ho cried with an undaunted air, “I toll x 

fear thee not!" Ab, thou villain! eho yooiferated, daros thoe 


my presence? Gut thee back to fellows and hnmeys 
on whom thee spenileat my snbetance! geil Lorsuver he a 
00 


i 


Sronnd, and eourngoodsly repeated, *T tell thee, Mary, I fear 

fear me, sirrah! strrah, not foar me! sho; wo shall 

a twinkling. So she whipped up the monsuring- 

, and, seudding round the counter, she flew to the door. But 
already vanished as fast as his fat sides would lot him, 

And, to tell you the truth, ladies, there was something 30 axthori- 

tremendous in the litle yoice and manner, that 


fative and 

Twas glad fo got out and to scampor after 

‘The company laughed heartily, and Mr. Vindex added—T forget 

the hero's name—e crest he waa, and I a 

He won battle abroad, but was sure to, in his 

turn also, as often as he returned home to his 

‘Well raid Herculos and tho distaff, orics Horry. But to tho 

point; the bravest man I know is ono Peter carrier, 

who lives in the suburbs, My tutor and I were 

through Islington, when we perceived tho likelihood of a seufllo at 

brn with great fury 
wo ‘wo saw one man ti 

to another, who hare ateatiog niin east rete: om 





Ww qe ai Bh wi raat s 
Hf Hu ie a 


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gaia leg Laid a at ne i, 
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es ae narra tierra 


a 28455 . 
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: =F g LE i be Bere or sila: it, 
g igldye panes 229 ectbney tacdl ergata! 
S plass Ubtata te) Geetet2sdlee ls Pelee heat 

Silay Ht 7a Hae e Ey 
Saupe dilees Ge Gareth ink ated a! Bry 
singin in iolsints eee aHE 
Peitall Be ae ean on 


PTH Te a cite: 
se aR 
Real ote ea Hla ue 
ed P HOR ort Hie BH amit Lie 











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a559 2387. 
afl Al 
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gi an 
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Pe State 
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SPS terre 
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— 





8H if if sepia EQeiesatneaedy £22 
Ce 
UH fini Mig siuui ied ll 
a ag i we Fe Hee a aes fle: 
Ue a ab en dei 
eee ih de Paull 
f Hot nls itt eid adel 
; if are ee 
Hah vit mine iE HBHGe itty 


Noor this eapectal he called ff to bts closet—You 
aro already, my lov, salt he, rormibor of the Btidh stato, and, 





ee 


st a er at i 
Ha Bie Erne a Gi 
a fe taut 

: ot ay ie 
Sites He Per aac. ae 
ae 
pl i iene ee fe aa 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


TFL 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 
aoe a 
Sea : 





good wish, or a ingle 

or evil motion of any kind. And what I then of you 

ogually be aaid of all mon, ant of the highest angoly now 
‘No croature can be better thin a CRAVING AND DARE DESIRE. 

No offorts of its own can Kindle the smallest 

be i till God, ‘himself, gives his and 

"Flere ties tho etoraal difference between evil and good, betwoon 


the croature and tho Creators rite who aro now in 


the darkness 
pee ae a eee their desire of a proud and 











EUG RL GI i Gi ghee (aah sage it 
a a re FL i He a ali ia ta 
ih “ ul 3 te ; EP 4 ii E iB 3 oo 
ae ie 
catia Hai ail ee 
jean lees au ne ee heel 
en agit! oe 453,828 ail 
nla uae nhl cat tip bee ¥ af 








eles Hay HH 
Law th 
era iin li 

if ae : i ie an 
: ee Bi : ae 
a fgg Ha EG 
a al ei ah mii ; 
Peery aud esas 
a ipssks 43 ra HHL Pigaecdaa 


nia felt 
aa 
a 


igi? 
ine 





na ge ae gc a 
aH te fe a fu ct 


: 


pened 


re He 

ae Ha ail ie : 
ES 3. fen} eh 
ni is at aah i oe 
He af aba? plese beds Ae Aur pibse 
i fil i eae 
ic a os aa th lel ea i 


Jape REAL 


TRE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


ech, hon are me 


3,88 


Hi 








pa Te 
a bu hh a Me nh a ! 
q ceseed Ue aeee ai: peleie eee : 
PHBE be a Hill cee i tt 
a Feta i a li 4 ea H 
olla i Hie ae ena 
i Wien tee paar ua | py 
eee ote 
fe er Hie tg Rua noe ui us Bis Hy Hy 


88a SEiS 





BE 
fy wegen i A 
ii jel! ny 
i & 


al 
ae 


a A 
seal it edt pelted Phe] eth 
gfe ae lng HE fee tl 
ae eal Wael 
: rs UE Mere ear 
Ha zeae cee 
i F a ale eet a ne 
& prea Pa Get ree be qi 








at ae a; uel i ea 
a ay a 
wd i nuit Here ee 
bit HE st (Uda Hated 3 
: a. é ae in ueatiay lt 
SOE Ee les aie 
: i aati a ies 
ee ig tee hii a: 


He Hu ial od ni 


Bh 


Pel 


12 are 


if BH 


an a2 Sab 


A 


ila 
Peat) 


Heh 


aie 








waa 


Sig 3 Ho 
ale He ae 


Ey BSS 
sidaita® pi 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY. att 


‘unfruitful of expodionts, 
faboth's property (without his consoat) under elour 
Ge meer (wit ie raf Y, 


i 
i 
le 

g 

& 

i 


iantred yours ago, on his 
the originul contract with the people, engaged to 
according to the howe et ee 

Mapproved and anclnt fiws off ths kingdom ; this 


322 


Bad 
aot 
erie 
alee 
a8 32 
BiH 
pil 
rly 
a 


z 
fe 
“Fed 
eae 
= 2 
id 
'e 
E 4 
A 
SERRE 








& 4. 
z 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 





ty gnc aa ae 
u Hae i au nih a Fi 
fe ein uae EE 
at Pautaied Burma ien id aa 
Hl Hehehe abe Je ai 
abieeny een Mle i 
Bele eiatayll ign ca in 
HanlalPay a Hl SH fs 





peg MN a 
ae a a 


a 
i i : = sad Fier 
_ {Aas Seat e cS u ? 
i i alti pies ri 4 a ides feat 


ine Bale arte 
ah seuilap esr, ie Hea 
ii Pe cia i ee 
3 = Eats 2 z sf. & e=| * 
ae ‘alae at dea 
e Haat ig 3 Geshe 
a a ala i RL AueReeee 
Hie seaaalt 


ite igs ce 
eal an taal 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


4 
a 
l 


! 
Bal 
ky 
ne 
ie 
a 


of hab yatee silvor, Bi ort are therefore: 


tataten 06 ation sad Tie 

pF eee prekg to eebone std digatty 
nace wate consort, 

ate 


foes © “auras ya ta ed 
gnardianship of d_ possorsions 


te 
FF 


eat 
ie 9 
un 


Eg 
aff 


‘without 
L tom ene fy itive of a negutive voice in tho 
logit a y prorogative (or rather duty) iequently. 


most worthy, most 
of Omnipotence: 1 
Tn treating of the second and thint estate, T come naturally to 
consider what those restraints are, ay while they are preserved 
inviolate, sare so happy a tendency to the mutual prosperity of 
‘prince and people, 


Gho Nristocratioal or Sooond Ketato, 
nobility, or eocond estate in the constitution of Groat 


ro) 
up 

service to the crown for the reat pee 

Liat baronies, rion name they bore, they 


SES ws pacer ot an ect aap 


or fefont a title to nobility. ‘Thole wore not v0 
y wnts of their peers upon Tegel trial; and when any 
Woon go depeiyec, or, bapoanet a ‘ceria tay the 








"a ed i Hi GE LES a a be 
High a aaa 
ae ene aa ies Eat i Bu 


é igcescs ‘R258 oo eee 

ae He i 
2 = i te 

iden F ue He eal ia 2 ae G ae 


28% i wee 
A in ae fie sl ie ban 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 
aoe 
best 
and 
‘wond 
own 
who 


ee 





fae pti ot 
vo a 
and 
e ort chat Ino on ‘an ek a 








“Hi tif Te Ei 


Hide 

il aes Va cae i ; 
dt Haale el ae 
vie u Ha aT ET ae ig 
eee ate i dleutat ea 
at 

342342 id 

ied au tnine Hid lle ae A Ut es 





be2 #5 sgse it HEEL 
dese Flay taehe 
ane it ee tia Geeta j 
it i i i ii Hi 
fea iil ae pau ut iia 
si i 3 iH, uy tlt 
ee Ht is te 


ia ali 
es ee We ah ehianuta 





He EEE He 
ered et lt 
Cr UU a 
Ha tat at 
Helagtl By er 
i ypel 4 if a 
Hipabne renal 


it we 


eal 
He Ait pill 


ofr ate power, 


Score 


gree 


Jords, and commons, in 
Barty 5 the a 
‘hen oonrened in ob0 
‘pierans 
three 
fa 
aly, 
go, Ki 
D by 
others 
‘the tah 
of 
and 


Ghe Ghree Letates in Rarliament. 


havettenamal their 
F thoir wholo 
axeombled, boing the 
ae atl 
rodress of 
of any of the 
Frequent holding of 
cannot 
‘three estates ori 
in 
fe expressed) 
the advice 
and of 
clause of 
on 
itual 


pesis 


Pale 


te Hull 





ais be Geli GE ae uinse 
: # oc 3 


2 His es AE ga® 

ne Beg gl aE and HA ale ate ails a 
ie ae 
2 ilen Wh aiphe ee ai PTL 
deat (ae fees Hi itt 
ad ae i a i pee Gn 
ial ie a at Lies nee ti 
pean git fie Agee eae aid 





man was hungry, ld 
Pmy toll mo, my lad, how the nffhir was. 
‘on. nist: know ag how Mr. Ni master 
morning to the town with a ‘to buy two 
sixpenny Toaves, Bo, ax T'wna coming back, T met: at 
who made me afraid with his palo and meagre fied—-My 
boy, says ho, will you give mmo ono of those loaves fa charfty 
dare not, sir, says I; they are none of my own—Here, ‘ho, 
Yell give you my hat for one of them: but thi T refuel 


hit, 

to my thinking, was not worth a t—Nay, says oust have 
‘one of the loaves, that is certain, for T have a wife and seven 
all starving in yonder hovel, and while there is broad in 

Ripe React ae it snatch a morsel for thom, as T told 


beran 
ts tay oyo tll Tan hisn eto Iodgod. 

Hi food bis ‘while "Tell me 
Ban! wala soe Eitngly bave piven ene'ch tases ENGp ie ea 
own, Ly ve one 

pat was the tardy fro ? 





; 


ay 


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) 


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2 


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2 





z 


rf 


i 


i 
Fy 


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= 





3 





Hi: 


ist . 
ze 
a 


iti 





= 
5 


esta 


2 


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ae ie 


Ha: 


aa 


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a 


53 








a8 


gusedly 


snl el fn Wnts in 


# is 2ye8 352 i i ngs : 
re Ee ; i ] Ur rer 
ile Pl i 2 Bhi q 


nt 


hak 


habe, and would 
my bones, that we 
tag coward 
fon in. 
and 
iy oa 
sal nd 
of 
‘took 
take of 
ving 
had 


FOOL OF QUALITY, 
it about 
rh 
Tut 
ny 
oh bet 
fy ted 
ordered 
Md 
runt 
me 
a, 
ay, 
Is to 





fethiig ial His ia! 
Hi lesuetiad tay Pn 


Mane 
Hie Ha 


z igiedily BH Hee 2 
HHS ie ll eae 








dE 


i 


4 


EG 
lie 


i Bb 
i La, 


ue 


fee 
rr 





if ei oI 
dip Bi ie ay 
8 
tis g Guest | 
ais 5 in 
ug i Gael : 
2 TER ah iT ae 
: ee 
uae Pete | 
une ace alpiacton } 
Fahad dl ute ail 2 
an Paes epeesade a ty 
Hitt a ane ipaad 
BiH Un at tory fees 





te se : i ule te: an; He i ae iy pai 
iB ai | He ee F iy hi rae 
ee tf sidatin (eet 
SH it fl ne dig uit ile iit 
aarti deciuliian) ill aon 
“galas Malas 
ee é ae fellate a8 Hah a un 
Aca uaeany erat fae 





H 
a 
i 
a 


ho came to condole with 


oe 


me, little A 


's con and heir, came running, and 
ashe anv the blood, and ow Webloid Bile 1 Yoaked, 


our landlord” 


upon the 


=a 


vu 











fee 


§ szeed 


é 


t 


aiilitie 
Hel ae 


Pal 


= 





He 
aay 
PAR 
au 
‘ cae 
AG 
Ba chi ecgeee~ | 
al EGE 
iar iallye Gata 
As sees £3375 Eee 3 
Pie gga ear 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


= 


a fed gajle aie 22] Hales 2 Bess $2 83 
Ee ee a ge 
ail Hit By ca WY all uu ath i¢i 
i fala 2 0 eel tate all ae 
fe pee 2g bf Fe apebzazee i gia3] = aa 
ae ai baud fat ae tk. 
i i kisi $3 zaid Fe apHbaastes ai are a a 
ball epee aia Ui 
i Hu pHa 3 ies I ee fie 
ale eal Hany i ide Bae 
jets eye Be Be Pen ie 


immodiately—1 
ae ee all that Crecente dom 
mo f. 
yon within two or throo dage at farthest par 


astonish heart mixziving me at the time, as if it 
tho mischief hut werp to fallow. 4 


T waited with it anxiety for his return till eve 
bien Gai io ore 
for 


London five hours before, ‘This threw mo into = pani 


admitted to his presence ; bul he was not up, or just 
gut o had company with im, or was furt hai were dress satan 
to bo spoken to, and 80 forth, 

‘At lougth, when he found that X would not quit his house without 








"ue a a 


2 ey 


pa i 


Lk sl Bae ttle 


ge U Saedgse3 
Pr tl tees 5 UE ene é 





ar 
Ae ine Ei ee a jee 
i regis 


‘s 
& 
We 


Fite 
Uni 












Hd t Hl ait etreay f Bees ie 1] 
rai chante dani Gal puiitly ba 
oijeunl alld Aanmne a 








idea 


erieie 


fee 


ye nih 
ae i He i 


after a 
told mo 
your 


‘this 
rea, 
the 
and 
you 
louse 
tam 


Se lod 
other. The 
to phish 
os Prego 

—T have 20, pl 
sign! 


Fenton deman: 


ticular of any sigoifieation 
you never moot with any ad 
rogolloct! 


Did 
Did 
now 


Fe wt 


gh 

each 

sent 

Here Homel 
bailiff who pureed me, 
came to the river Avon ; 


Some two or threo 


Mr. Hi 





& aU RE HE i au Bera Hi i Ha 

ith eile ite yj ie i enna} 
ee nn ae 
: i des | 


3 A 23 cE 
sficgege L j He yy lis Lets 
mehige ieee i 2a a ae Ha ae 
if ge H Sut 2 eite ee ed eet He 
petite pup laid Pudge 











7 
am 


Hie 


i rei 


ee Ly 

| al 

Geeset 2 
Hele at 
festa enled: 


tHe 
at8 


& 
aisilzais 


tae egha 


and 
omely, 
fi 
aid 
ly took 
‘valle sal 
proof 


ania 
: 


a8 
AS 


to our common lord and master. 
y 


unto me, as it isa 


will be pleased to 


Within he 
. 
diroctly, 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


Was 2, 1) BE mae sip ai 
mt ea eit eo 
esi ian 


pe ay 
ae Fi ae ue 
ee 





sahsai i =e “ yi aoe grees 
Hie tik E Peaerte eee 
eee aA ee 
ant a ee MN dae 
lia zie Heth Hi fea au 
We ne ane nee i anisuea 

pe i Sate ete ete 











THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


a 
Al 
‘Ut 
: 
4 


5 
i 
i 
: 


i 
u 


i 
i 





Be 
if 

: 
a8, 
if 
258 
iF 
i 
tl 


: 
el 
tf 
i 
if 
ah 
ie 


z 
f 
i 
“i 
3 fz 
i 
Be 
HI 
UF 


i 
eal 
i 
ue 
i 
Hi 


£343 
bee 
TH 
ace 
258 
af 
HE 
i 
gS 
Ebti tl 


b 

i 

i 
al 
s 
7 


i 
i 
i 

a 
eH 


d 
3 


it 
tll good hopes that the picture which you have. drawa 
po pi 
Govornor! eres Vocr, T mpoko not « word of 
ol le, wir, 





6 of the in fares, and. they, a 
on ur goverases! the fa the moet wonder 
‘and the newest ‘that ever I heard.—A doctrine oven ag old 


‘as tho constitution, rejoins Harry. ‘They are not only our 
igi cure Dect Se Rae coe Hie lordly the 

man in company whose An some fnstances, exempt fom 
thels jrisdetion; but his property remains sill snbfested to thelr 


jecision. 
No law can be made in Britain but by the in thelr Hi 
snd, when those lawx are mode, the jbecstge oe ceed 


th thereof on their jury-tribunals, 
sitios a ules doen ot fats wal ghia rhother cil ce aay 
throughout the realm, ° 








a ay ay 

Sea 2 Buk 
fae ily _ 
Tie: rt ae een a 
Vee 
fie Pie ay a 
8 goal ind ite = age ih hur 
lige peat Be in Ei 
cea an a ale 
ety Hone ree 
ae eee 
a ier 
Paadsd 58 E aie 





Teer Per ree 
ee at 
HF ld at ik adi 

p pant il a a L all} 

le ie a pid 

34 3 i is 

i Ae 





sop fry a 


is oe 
oun iy 


ie ee Hie a a 


Bee 








: 
ne 
Eig 





i 





wn 


int es 


ae 


He € 

et ie he ee aah a] 
Ha 

4 gicsedis di a pen 3 
Pina uney | 
Sure Epitisgcesecceusapter 4 
yee Brn 
lay pei 4 
ating 
uuu Halse! 
ee eyesdsagie ll fleasas” 


fai 





Tape : $43 ties 
Tn ee ae IA ! ne 

lean] Hana ui 

i Tun i an ene i fa ae 

HUNG Hin Hail iil 

ae sala ra eee 

8 ete ie 223 tia Li fig Ty 
snails ay RSI pa 
ie ean pili sani) 
pune ate ist lat 


B52 
Lid 


nt 


ie 


aaa 


i 





as 





peepee 
= 
te 
{is to bn. pe 


my life at tho ri 
and I have not seen oe 
for hit, 


wha 


advise with mo 





gO, 


hayo sent Hi 


= 


dail 








§ HEeE G89 43 8g2 
ily en a Be Ue e322 
ey 
ail Lies H ne ea 
ace Lara ra iala 
sia tal Aes a 
pure nice Hise 
sae 

Ha Hen Rape aegiane! elt ; i 

* sna eet ae Ha tl 


a8 
3 
3 
3 
; 





favour from the ministry. Lastly, that ‘no more be 
distressed ae ront, T pil neces oat a penny of you aro 
Greet awe gy, fable too gch, aut oer 
tical, repli Ble Witten’ ings you hare aot 
payed drawback I propose to have enya “Whon- 
Sor ogmsed easy Fo mar not ey sessed elaetaat a 
00 
{6 tink your honours alta cut of tat ete howsvod. fast 


. Renton. , entlemen, rejoined Homely, a man 
Spits woul soorn to sooeyt Saal Ibenadite without malin Quine 
After twelve o'olock at night, and an affectionate and tander 


i 

the conveyance of him and his family, : 
nicht before thelr parting, Mr: Fenton desired that Homely, 
his ould be sent to bis closet. As scon as they 
ont ho closed the door, friends, said eo 
up in the morning to a Teave of you, - 
yelto:ge ly office to-night Mra 
SS ee 
ine for your throo pretty ra 2 care 

to havo itd ol for tears upon good aovurities, he 


threo ordera upon hie banket, for five bansred 
hand; thon, turning to Homely, 

pb wh teed Pheer ty amid your dear Pegsy, my 
he evied, and give us all a blowted meeting where 
no more 

"Tho distressed Se ee bat and 
flinging himealf at the foot of his patron, while on ber 
knoos wooping and sobbing beside him: O, he Jeng, 
next to my God! 0, next to my Lord and my God lord 
Mirus nods ‘orang Daica sunsie, Fler woe sa Sopa 

next moraing before sunt 
Homely's apartinont, embraced hm sat ie wife, “ite thee eed 
and cares all the ils an! boys round, and gare to each of them 
a god medal to keep him in. thoir semenimence: when Homely 
ant “ogy, with open arms, treml 
began to take thetr lorre... God bo wth yon T Gat bo wits Seat 
sobbed Homely aloud; never, nevor till T get to heaven, shall I 
oii, Fenton now judged it timo to forwar his Harry's edutaton, 
.. Renton now imo to for 

expocially with roapoct to hia knowlodgo of the world, of the views, 


i 
ln 


i 


his family, and, for a fow weeks, to stay with Clement. ‘and 
in 


, there to show him whatever might ‘his curiosity, 
or merit his inspection, pa : 








i 





Pia rae ¢ 
aa RE 
if HL ft Bhakti 
Pohl ieee eure ener 
1: cot te ay et 
AY sae peel 
ene ey 
i ii Pree fetfsit ain a 
i eaniay aie aed a3 : 
lal Be at (Hina Hl Ha 








. aaa ed ERTLLER gies Peedi MaaE Bites 
le Hi hee Baal Get 
ei edititinitl ae 
Sosa ee Haat wal 
3 Heh: He Sapte aliith 4 
u ba i HH i hla ‘tats agsivigg 
i Benicia tact 
‘Hi : se aff fat 
filieeatalt ill esti 
2 Hee eae alana 





3 By ae if 442 if 2 s 4 

na a a 
at ihua : ; 

| He i Sat E f be iaatiii 
: fe Hie iiliie taal da Ge 

saver eee Hl Hea 

i uu Hie tie ey te mia 
& 2 3 


fag ile bg ale 
Had eit bephe ani eae : 





eh fh 


2 


ae 


4 


ie 


z: 


‘Sa 


BE 


ats 


ae 


room, and 


ich was a 
a celebrated atatae 
oyod it ottonti 
see om 
jncous 


upper end of w) 


whereon 


i 


carey 


‘cast ay 
his cad 


bir 
stantly 
grasped 





: 

tt i Ue if ae ae aan ay a 
ie sei Blau ite 
diel aa Henin f he 

sale lie Hie aE Hf aii 
Gad a3: j Zag i aged ite F 
lbnauinda! ae ee ideale 
i He Heer ape an Hay 
I Hee San al He La in ae 
oe es us 












i 

ict plac if Re 

Pe ae a 
a geese nerds ein 








“it if TE HE 2278 # ee LE ae ie 
He i if ee alll (at ih Hall z it 
ual rl eH 3 
Hag liGe i Hu i tae nan 
zg He BHR H i Ae 4 bt 5 lag EF 
$ he ie ab 7 rn ~E ae quel # i sue ij 
be dane - Lat a 
: rat ales ail is iu sigue ide i 
Bets avin He rey i 
a nee eG B3 fie ia Bau 


ree 
ie 


ify 





aie 


as 


lee oe UAH if int 
iM Le He 
ee ae 
ERT Bate ata 
is PE uH Wa a We sees ai 
ie Ue RH 
Bs : LF iP ty get ais 
ae aga 3 ibsins au : u 714 
ai dicwealdctiial: anal 
ae ne ute yer ai 
Rte A at oP rE 





iy 


ae 


THE POOL OF QUALITY, 
breakfast 
ond 


fal 





xuinens 


3 
ills 


ik il 





ee 


eg! 


& 
i 
a 


Hu 


2p 
fi 
: 0 
: : a ey 
Feeble 





i - 





u 














ate LMA j aaa ay EL An 
H He HE an roe 
a uel ain Ane mir 
Tees sualik 2 ti it ay 
ee te el 
1 pte iF ae nH ae 
Tele [Te rl nu Bate 


Steal foe the 
bode 
apy 
ees 


to threaten all 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 
ty te only frien the 


Nag stampa ry bp recat 
x fe day 
aie aay 
he was 
of his 














7 

dal ue 

TREE a a 
Le ; con 
ith a3 ae eat 
PR Hh ti uibitt | eine gti 
ai Hertel patil 
ahi Ha SHG Bhs 





FOOL OF QUALITY. 


aH 


ee 


iy 


HE 


Bills 
(alae 


yet! i aidies 
Siig 283 23 
lee pull iia a : 
He | Anas “all 
a sh Ha 
nian an Iyyiifetaiis 
ree Fe ih eee tet 
jal 1H Uta! unt 
agers Ef FH 
FE Hee vie He Hee Hu 


re tha 


S 





oe 


ud 








Hey 
true fa as Hi Ail Hae Hy 


: 3 He F uy 
ra ce Ga ae 
pte te i aH z an 1% 
ee ab aa ey alte 
il 7H esata aH ee eal ies 
itu be elite il Bea = ul 
iets Liaaneen ee entHty 











be ae ie 


Se 


ite 


LA a ae H ; ple 

iy He vill ie i ua ral 
‘ail He dank Hea penidts nel 
a ae Gillie unit gelld 
ale ine be | el tunebite : 
eee HEPES ai ile 
al Hh HEL ae a eet a ere 
ee i nul, ee sn itiaeetiue 
eal en UH ee na rnaE 


arg sUyiyey Ggg)g atMd gsgegay am 1aag9 
“at nie a eee i Wi a He 
ae GLa ea 
z i ihe aut Bate ae ier ae ud 
Bd Hie ahs acre ie an il pease gee 
vant Ts a all Le alee 
3 aey eee EUS, gout quence Wapedia! 
Hil amu ieene ae lien tae 
ace alniuhe ee pe 
Eee 

ie etercdaeees ; : 
iia Haiinorenies iain iat 








i 


a 


4 


1 


# 


sult 


Fs 


niga 


225378 


Hil 


aie 


i 
is 


fla 


= 


H 






mil 


fe 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 





agete Heeagsve 20 guna BVT agTTTUIE I Hae 
Ee fi saahys fy eh i 
pate Figo oa: rs 2 itp fs iy ie 
ear ae ae Peet 
I aN i aug at oe 
bine ates ilk i a 
i | ibe et : nt 
a 255, e3u55 ty s 2 : 4 3 
ten teac Be siiaie fabis 
ap. me 3 ty 
ee oe 
yee a aH ingly fia! i eal 3 pe 
i ig le ee ihe ae 


5 





u 
2 
| 
4 





f 
a 
2 
a 
: 


re 
Tr 
ecbte 
ey 
ue 
Be if 
ii i 
aFeE E 
oe 
iu 


H 
i 
al 
i 


2, 
=} 
& 
£ 
§ 


ii 
i 
ag 


gressors may ‘be capable: 
first of theso arch-folons doomed himself 

and being inoxparienced in the power with whom 
he to arrogate all worship to himeclf, 


and 

"The e0cond of ons war the first to 
licgltace tothe author’ oC hs being oad fo expect tanguase taal 
suthor' ; 

inowledge frum tho onal fro th inten nt 


af 


ue 


i 
ty 
ay 
u 
e 
= 

cit 
i 
E 


fnto vast regions, now mule more and 
sinful by the sin of fallen Adam, eee 
air, demanded Beaty, had Lats any concern In this 


ceivablo extent, was once the dominion of Lucifer, 
angels, But whon, by their a] Vight, and 
anit goodness of God,’ they had caused dasiaeas nd 
cavy, migo, and uproar, and every specios of evil anil & 
minant their ki ¢ 





it i 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 





PrHTEe ut B E agesateay! 
Poe rear Aer a Agee 
burnin bas 
ie ye gists pet 
2 reeten GER Ee 

aay Hants a 
isi analog! 
ie ay ar 
Ee 

facts 2 sae z ue 
ieieiaaly Ht bee 
Falla igual Laan 


z 32 
i ai 
ay gl 
- 
rf 


2 


tte 





Hen 
idle 


He 
fal 


Hina 
Hi 





B23 ips Bae peetU228 98 £48 S*2 
Hi ae vane fle he 1 


deff ae ui 
ey eeesa Ge 


si mae 4 ae ae ni i C 2g2628 cl iF 
sate f a sil veg Pa eer 23 fej 
sii 42, fl ep i aie ngpesaiets ‘| AE 
Pip HE Ulead, tel Slips ceeliviagel2 ts 
3 Lei SERS Erantai2cstiatysce le asthe ie 
hr Fa? 1 erat | nail ety 
yeasdad, z isp a ef ayiei: Sat 
ae iiuHall 5 era / plate ne al 
bia He HH HE iis ET ils il oan 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


his immensi threw the 1] of limitation, 
{ima he tnvedie hia eternity a0 is omnipotence put on 
and his supremacy put on mitjoction: and with the voll of 

ho shrouded his beauty, that he might become familiar to ms, 


wan 

Before the incarnation, God was feared in his thunder, 
wiored in the pate wad magnificence of his works, But it ix in 
the mock ant lowly Jesus that he becomes the object of aft 
in the bleeding, the offering, the ying ers eae 
with weeping gratitude, we him with a love of 
burning, a love that languishes for him, that cannot 

eyes 


i 
i 


without him. 

iow could that perverse people shut thelr 
of their lous Messiah, while ho gave such hourly 
ph tho power and extent of in and 
things? while be went about doing good, boating 
broath, in his touch, in his garmonts ; while te fae 
faa a bounding roo at hie bidding; while the tempest 
voice and was still, and tho sew sproad itself as @ carpet 
the foot of its creator; while the doaf car wus 
dumb tongue Ioowd to utterance; while ho poared 
of his light upon the new opening ayes of tho bllnd-bam. mars 
and while in death, ani amidst the tombs, his word was 
resurrection ? 


? 
7 


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igi 


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HE eas fe 


THB FOOL OF QUALITY, 
z 


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cae ae 
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fad i 


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‘the trv 
tiscorered 
red ad uletiat 
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aes 
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Sear, Iny 
also bm 
himself into 
eres 
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the exclaimed in a mer 
oon thy 
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‘weight of bis 
roa ‘with 
hls volce ; und 
ee 
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rt 


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THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


z 4 SxgsgsSze35" GEES. 
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ay tei Hala y fal 2 ey 
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i a le HE 3 E Biagerge La dunks 
ante lft a alse hee alle 
serie tile WEGES nna! ale 
Hell AH sijians sp raligia augue 
Hue i eae Ba zt eine aay! He tae 
see ae deal 








2 THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 





own 
by business; for I do not ‘that Lam the 

man that I was while agone. ‘too 
anit Yook down upon all m; 

Goodman Dobson then conducted to thoir ancient hakita- 
tion, Nurse Dobson was just up, und proparing to comb the beads 
eb, exe BGT havo tnbaght rung toner, who, 

to, wigs he, T have it to you a 

ho can give you somo account of your little Harry ¢ ‘ays bots 
still alive, notwithstanding all your and will shortly pag a 
visit to some parts of this country ; and knows then 
‘we, among others, may hay to sot onr eyes upon him, and that, 
I think, would be a great: , my Kath! 

O no, no, no! exclaimed nurse, without deiguing to cast her 
‘on the atranger—ho is dead, ho ia gone from me These many 1% 
once hoped to have lis infant on my knee, and in my bosom: bat that 
hopo is quite gone. Never, never, shul] I behold my G 

larry bad seated himself just ite to nur; when, 

ut) Tried and i ares  gecerly fa his ace Dee ea 
mo, William, mo, tell mo, at once i 
is my child! a 5 the world, the dimple in that salle i the 








E 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 





stage YUL aig’ guaviea|2 uienges ciga EEpAy AL 
ght ied tute Waar Hut tte 4 
wan ri ites Hin ll Heel H 
a i Blue Hea Houten t 
Seasd ptse EA a 525 ziiise res : PH i 
He at ae aillia 
elt Uae Tint Satta i ty tet 
ad Ad EME pat { z sures 4 Peatiegs 4 
i a HB ibs Hh LH Heel Lead 
RNa een tigi: Getatel 
pe LM pits pray pote ear jrestlinice [ 
elilat z ath? Esaase Fhe] He 3 F-| ai. 4 
estes Spee cen &: an an Aas ae = 
SHUR oun He ita tne 






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une bin ae | Pa ee 
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i He Fy E¥8isced ai 

gay pnt ed tintin eulenail 
ee ain 14 ule olan Gwiietee 
PH leg Bien fen Geeny 
ne i: fal ae! ta, ilgicalgjers 28: 222 sgatel! 
heglatanidte a Ale 
#3 wee fei oo rite Pree ESP ray 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY. fly 





Mr. Meekly, iving that He was on his return, 
‘nwa aloof Ema hich, bed with an eve car ie arg 
B: time the crowd had ‘themselves: of 
Jat makiees b> snsthar aby ek lsece aronesene aerate 
m6 re 
up.a Joint shout of triumph, a 


a 
‘Pleweo your honour, says Tom, this is my father, and this ix 
Gaffor Gabbing, and this Goodman Det Farmer 


stor, and this 
Folstor, and 80 on. 
Harry, with tho lowlinoss of a washer of fect, would have kissed 
so soet eran at et ae 
ec : 
skirts of his clothes all round. 
God bless your sweet face! eried Goodman Demster; who sees 
it fm 9 maming can't fl, think of prospering the liv day. 
When he in succession, to companions of his 


‘Tho rost of the girls now pressod for thoir sharo of Harry, and 
it wns with difficulty that he divided himself with any 
equality among them, a8 they all kissed hin close, and 
#0 

At Harry's watch reminded him that it was time to 


3 
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32 
dail 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY. ‘B45 


‘shall introduce me, and tell me, who 
is heavy Inden, it must not give a 


, perceiving that Harry was on his return, kept 
onward, aloof from him, but with an eyo on his motiond, 
thin time the crowd ld sorted themclvos; the princlyals of 
‘tho families into one group, the young men into ~, and the 
fair maidens into ; and, as Harry approached, they oll vet 
up a Joint shout of triuro 
‘Please your honour, says ‘Tom, thin is my father, and this i 
Gaffor Gabbing, and this Goodman Domster, and this Farmer 





fina mom refit thinks ok baring tie estore ayo 
cx ba rateerit exranedoes i tea exaenioen ai ae omer 

au he Kised and’ shook bunds with cach in tara, sme, reminded 

ima of his having beat them at oxioe, otuors af resin, axa all 

a Nain with them at prison-bars, leap-frog, shout 
ito, and 20 forth, 

Sean ‘whilo the gicia panted, gazod at him, and longed to 
him to themeclves.-Sir, eays Tom, here i your old eatin 
ay ator Mall chore ie tot ls th Town hom sh 
stl! tes eat your ono Maly Toke fall of Beal 


i 

2 

P 

é 
ay 
i 

L 
rt 
Ebee 


ui our 
‘The rost of the girls now protod for their share of Harry, and 
was with diftientty that he eins himeolf with any satil 


loth to part. 

At Tongth He watch reminded him that it was time to 
attend his father, and ux he parted they shouted after him—Eang 
life, and health, and henouns to our ‘own boy, our 
own dear, sweet child | 

In the mean time Mr. Meckly had returned home, with his heart 
fall of tii to the earl, fast. 


arrh 
table, and he perosived that his father Som in Sie 
notice was taken of the affair ab that chanel homes, on ether arts 





aie jel ce ih a q be tt 
a ed EB 
uf flak ie a 
pv 
Fy 3 


his 


himself deeply pes 


rofess themselves 
this is i prevling 


r alc 
they 
half @ million. 


yot this ia tho man, exclaimed the 
skly)—t 


itence on Mr. Mecl 


stil, qirviiess We 
de Bite S328 
2 fi lant apne bead? er 


And 
‘on whom I looked down jab a 


ho cried 
ey 1 
be di 
Ido 
os me 
‘s 
=! a 
thing ami 
y 
inp 
ive a 
Loe ‘ix, my lord, 
or emperor upon earth, 


pga 
penit 


THE POOL OF QUALITY, 


T can soon ol lordship, answered Meekly; for 
very short frigliadse Pecinsich pent scnt with uncommon 


Inoidents., 
Sag mrothngestedytahens ght Sebine ed ‘My father did not: 
ive her two years; und F fell to the care of my only kineman— 


F 
i 


ita, and 1 conosived that to ularly to chareh, receive 
‘tho sacrament a miso: ae 
‘vioes, was the sum ity. 1 thorefore entered 


and 
and I hold that to pardon an affront would have been one of the 


‘Ono day, at St, Jamos’s coffeo-house, Colonel Standard and 
another gontleman engaged at backgammon for five hundred 
guineas: anil the stake 
celebrated for their skill in the game, we all crowded about them 
to s00 the 


and going against bim. Pray, gontlemen, be ery, don't 

ear upon meso; for Beaveais ‘sake keep of —you 

Tose the game! Hereupon I did eet to bear back from 

tim, but tha. corm me ih mpite of all T cou 

do: till the colon: fan unhappily decisive cast, turned about 

in fury, and spat directly in my face. 

Indignation gave mo sudden nd unusual strength, and, 

all ff "who hd bore apon me, I facantly drew my wor 
body. The 


man tho eolonal throng iy. The coropany exied out that all 
‘was fair, and. opening a window for ime, they sped ‘To to cscape, 
Accontingly 1 got off rode post to Dover, and there. embarked 
for France. 

‘The colonel, God be 1 did not die of his wound. He tay 
under of the sa for seren months, then 
recovered, and went to join i it in Flanders. 





i: 


ets 


a 


ing 


a 


ipa 


a 
fied cere : 
Aaaltt ai! bia 









Fal i] fein PGNE i ite a 
i: geal Hae i a ne 
pieuate gala ae tik 


cle to the amount of For I 
reoraes noe ee 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


aut 2 = ie 22852258 
viele iF ell a apa 


Tl Hee eee 


#uaieldaecestilie Lidbea 


drew 1] 
my 
a gos 


i 


I romained with 
‘was obliged 
a a of tho colonel I went to Amsterdam, from 


es 


#H 


imothod whoreby tadustry ani could be daly promoted. 
‘Great and i 
Wire rata i i a 


it put in execution, aor 


riee mo, Mr. Meekly, maid the eacl; ‘mie 
sen ne wt’ tactiod te Toake. thon tndeateioon! Bow eam 


E 
i 
Hf 
& 


bocanso plored, 

lame and the blind; and all find a ready aale, without 

loss of time, without travel or delay, for products of their 

‘Thronghout Great Brital et eee yy 
ag T om 


for want af encouragement to labour. 

Permit me, then, to explain to your lordship, how some men and 
some nations come to be encouraged to industry, and others to be 
discouraged, or in a manner prohibited, froma tf, 
pDierent, mon are maison fforemt alesis ant as 

wflicient in many respects, though superfluous in others, it 
own occasions, Different. countries are also endowed with different 


invite and impel all id all countries, to claim to 
Hart that racprcal isto which ie dancin comers 


exchango 

in thet tea, et ieeore ta tals eraser aaa 
ir h in a 

and fale of ali ‘their redundancies, neither ‘want nor 

could find place upon earth, 

All this is quite cloar and self-evident, Mr. Moolly ; tut how to 
procure this ready sale ix the question. 

Your lonlship must allow that the way to procare it would be 
to bring barterers and commuters, toyers and sellers, all who 
matually want and mutually abound, together. For this is the end 
and purpose of every market upon earth, 








THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


ti 
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i 
: 
2 
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s 
£ 





of 


Pee 
pie 


interest in 


pon earth, the productions of every region, and 


man an 
‘Dis capital Vevelit of water 
Grantee a BS 


“ populous and most prosperous of 


ae 


done w 


ail 


elie 


? 


ae y “ 


a i 


in 


aek 


HE 


a ine sil 


i 


He tis He ile HaPag Se 





THE POOL OF QUALITY, aT 


Peete tit apg he fos A 
5 Rote Sah y's al 


At 

the darkness of my no ‘when, | ing up, 1 

the hooper of my prisom hed ha entered, tho gore beng yo lucked 
His ‘a5 I thonght, was bound about with a tiara, from whens 
the glory aroee that shone around mo, In the coronot, instead 
of ‘were inserted a number of thorns, whose ftreamed 
with incessant and inefferable brightness; and on the golden 
ri ies i oR TI 


Soran rwt 
wi looking upon ma with a smile of ineffable graciousness, ho 


pproached and took mo by pete and at the contact T sprung 
a a ih great el height in my ‘awoke to sensations of inde- 
ness. 


ore come, then, my Lord, my salvation! yon are come, m; 
Master! I cried; snd T wil ling tooparahiy to you. Never, 
nover moro will J sufer you to depart! HT uve levee fl 
what pat) without you! for in your ‘though but 

1k sapblents| idee toe meron ball hed ele ores is 
ete sy ci. Ba Ed ean: be aes eae are ee 


‘nature becamo, as it were, whi 
a ie, er ey eal ees for which Tormey sake apes 


11 any ettamptel te tnjore ov defi] mia of iy be 
sisted it without variance, snd thereby L found ly 


eed of my own will and of ues 





“au 
ua uf Beet 
re Ht is wales 
: ne Fr Fi 
5 £235 i i S28 
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Eta oF eu 
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ert 


Hun Hanh Al ef 


Pala 


aj 


bead Hn Ha 
wee ute a 


Hate 


assure you; 


wate 
Pan 
mere 
caeoelonns 


mire 

thank you, wo 
ion me 
"iy patron then rang 


if 


72 


ie 
ate ae He 
pele Free a3 





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bella ite aad lisa 
dealin ; i i f x iui M unit 
iit: ae spinal lane phalteal 
Held 3 He a oa apeedae ung 
Pig ieee iS aa ilaiaiad 
une sat Harel Hieten 
Ee leaiende 
en bees 





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A THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 
indeed, my lord.—Glory for that in the highest! exnltingly cried 


of your Twill have his skin ‘with incens, 
his’ naila of gold; and he “ban Ta my hall om 
generation to generation, to commemorate Fe sn ere 
oat folly Kini, end selgaoarn, 30 eas ond ioast eats 
ra 
This day. Sorrow hath endured. her wight; but joy coneth, with 
chil, an ariveth on us as a new moruing? 
et bccn ms having. their 
es comm oe ek 
ras hoary lesen wih ee 


— with victaals and liquors; besides two hogshoads of October 


it apart. 
Th the of hi and the recont prowens 
of his Sarees forth with 2 chosrfal countenance, and. 


banquet. 
night for t in caroueal, their great fire bei Pon lye ted 


it hogshoude exhausted, they peacefally ‘other to 
Shoir reqpoctive: hemes: rogretting, however, had net 
Leen honoured with the prosence of their 
thom: for Harry hal besought his father to with him 
fa while from partaking in any part or scene of festivity, 
when appointed in his own honour; and Mr, Mfoekly 


applauded his motion, 
"On the evo. of the following dar, Mr. Meckly rod load on a 


charitable visit to a dying man in my 
Ton was foully toying, and patting tho cheek of his os 
they stood at the hall door, when Harry spiod a 


joor, wi 
turning up. the lowor end of tho grout arene; and 
cried out—Thore’s my uncle, my local = 1 
uncle! and off he shot Iiks ig peste coach drove, 8 
slowly; Harry was up with it in a twi vaulting 
toa eixtow, won’ tn oa ostinkta ies aad or he st trod 
and patron. 

iin the moan time the earl had retired into the hones in 
agitution, He feared and was jealons of the manner in his 
brother would moet him; and this gave him equal doubt i 
hesitation respecting the manner in which he ought to. h 
brother, Mr, Clinton, an the other hand, was not Re 


some similar emotions; so that, when Harry introduced 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 805 


{nto the parlour, no two noble personages could salute each other 
with tae yi ginnee the fice of 
furl, however, a upon 
brother, felt a tide of returning affection, and, 
Canis lnrideen wise aoaieee been 
int my song! 
Sastenod forward fo s oan fos, and 


Our hero, observing tho vielonco of their 


with o 
Tanderly by 
Por 
the 


years, hi 
my neglects, my pride Doienione my 
superior—of my 


aloof, with hin head 












a 
ea 





a4 
if ane 
7 aut 
2 E. a :} 
EG i Re ; 
q a i ed ni 
hig : ae f Hi 
HART Hike it oH 
afk Set Lo all i 
rs sen e ap Es 
Ls Bide ae He i 
Hoan aia 5 
oH cet Ue 
peg 
eaee 








"AA a a a 
g nuit sly Plage eter) tell 3 a ee 
base Bait gigi Aninett bb i i | 
7 4a fel ealiteea iti uf i 
3 een ShStZee S=Eegzes eee ceseete case? 3 
oe Udi git Mase it sissy lieu! 
a afigtin eat catia 
 hapiba Pid ae sla tga 
B regpreeqenaies Gi eee eHHEE pay Pare 
reir aie Hi shay ieee 
siligaetilaceuaterpteseeedziteca . ae 
il LY aagiiiaplpala aa Hie Ws 


hay 
act of ereatara id every it ereaturely power, 
was a forsak! Oy tea aera een strength in they 
stood; could all intelligent crenturex hare been continued in that 


Here Mr. Clinton nd his auditors continued in a kind 
ful musing, a& ettentive to what he farther offor, 
At longth the jover, never more, my brother, 


hore, and 5, some former 
subjects, and I received much satisfaction and instraction from 
Bia but he was not quite so explicit and convincing as you 


ve been. 
Ah, my lord! cried Moekly, were T as intimate with the fountain 
‘of all knowledge as precious brother ix you would not then 


have me in the conversation we last held on those heads, 

‘On tho following day, ut Breakfast, Mr. Meekly took out. kis 

pocket-book, bank and stock-bills to the amount of 
1 thousand pounds. He then 


that he hae enabled mo thus far to mpprove myself 
Senet many above all, I bless him for giving me once more a 
ight of the countenance of my patron. 

for you hed misarably perished a dungeon ; to you, sir, 








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Sigetiar lle Seay a ap ose 


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Be 


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80 


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THE POOL OF QUALITY. 








7 Seliegee 332 ¢ 23 gia #2 2335 a 5a fap 2 
retest da Ha 
Gee SEeRPaE aot pegirdds fet elstaetice a2! Jee 2 
pe stgeene Byipee.? £g8 Saqgzeriss Ais. gif 
pane each “a yall Sb | 
nh jul a net He 
iealaeineied Ga ual ent | 
iis aici Be age Heald 
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plait lie ialace [i Mauatid ae a8 
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3 m4 228 5: eee = Beate mScigepee 
eB i nale eile Pae Eela 








z 


a2 
then 
iy 







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EF 


Hf 


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manner was all grace—' 
thi yoong man, Mr. De ‘Wit?—t wil 
‘to thom both. 


I, on my part, surveyed 

arvd, inleci, apparently unde 
fiend doer! aa a enchantment 
infased through the fine ronndings of his 


tonance. 
In short, I felt such a anddon attachment to 
I resolved to keep on the 
y 


station, 
vettow lang Me, De Wit would may to 

iow long, Mr. it would may, do mn 
fhin Tercae-TI T can prevail spor’ then Tigspemnnde ba 


ppt deproe for T feel ay affection so tled to them, that 
cannot think of parting: 


ieee arp 

to let his fall; and ox 

Siete ett oat fo Sen ae 
catwen 

Te bam omy mitt pon the Bor 


to hire wi osign. 
1 own, said I, my swoet fellow, 
1 um of noble descont, and of riches sufficient to 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 878 


we spite tok Se tet be hat ie vse eee le 
fe; but the t ip now eternally bl in amore sui 
Bridegroom, 


Will you indulge me, air, anid hi sede ‘the of your loves; 
it may eesti groat meararo fo preg? Bolt ied 
however well meant, was very lari 

ore I Teined to"bim the short pathetic that Ttold 
of my Matilda, with which he was so affected, and in such 
that T was quite affyighted for him, and stopped several times; but 
he insisted on my proceoding: 

‘Ah! sald be, when I concluded, should I evor be comforted in 
fhe manner that you ant your Matty were, how Wesel T shal 
think myself!—I jbl, said 1,0 litte alte in England, and 
the Tovliost child in the wort, jan if you, wil ter, when 

come to proper years, E will eettle ten ion 
money upon you. Mean titoe, I beseech you to say Potting 
your mamma of what J Se rong not, said he, unless I see 
& discretion 

‘That night L wont te the city to scttle the afftrs of my bouse- 
bold, “On my return next morning, I met Mr. De Wit ‘at the pnts 
ol court. 

Pde a oF wea a |—Gono! 


iH 


me adieu—Have you no commands, madan coke T, for the good 


me ty one sake WR 
juivalent to servants “aise 


Pd a 
[Lae a I 
$e 3 F 
elit hil diag Weel aa ant, 
es Hull ee ae uel fi sas a8 3 
ey ala a ait: andl at Hf 
ushdelle politi yi Hees 
ie iE Hinata ie a 
i he ait ene tated: i 
rot Ly i gp Wereeise aHed ¢ 
See ata | 
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neieaabe Hil ality: i 
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ae 
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Be sie bgedeeiee fogs ayes tint Beg: acs 
au i cee itt ie 4 Hf 
ut y Hats full ms FH Tats 
fe Nes ea 
glad oh jucititiernpil olin i any 
Sui DHAnubdeiG a on ty 
§ ShpfEs +E eee Fataras trace gees seeds 
piisie sutrniaaey in yt 
sien iaitaedeiadt EG usb adte 
He ie tatty lie ciel get HAE 
itt Hi ee qin ti ie He idle 
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THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


RE et TH Ho 
fil iF He We seid : ei i uel 
a lak ie SR TGH: ny th ru fib 
ne ae a 5 ere 3S A Lt: é 2587 
dia | sddauigtatl aad ee 
A 22 2p 2 F eres tie AER Hie 
ihe 38]: eabligigine were 
afte? fp auniies Tie Bi iiat 
THEE Bie eee AEH HH 
BU eel eg nina 
bik: SH GE TEE bgzless aise Baus ai 


tt. 
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HHI 

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Hy 

Hi 
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‘and I was preparing to take my when the 
Non anal net think of parting, say Beak Dea i 
oe. Hid bkicaane png ag ed of this house, and of all 
is in 
‘The surgeon then ordered his beep pn himself as 
soon ai possible; and, having wished him a T gent 


lay fuming om the sideboard. 
wing swallowed a fow bits, with a glass or two. of T 
and siuntored through the room, 1m 


ing, and nearly despairing of being ever 
apne. time after Tat down, to undress and get to bed, when 


th a 
seized my sword that I had put off, and, coming whisper to: 

commmanied me to secon them, without making any: sig 
madness to resi 


Es 
cs 
Z 
Es 


fhe officers It then instantly occured that Iwas in the house 
my rivals fe monrquia was the vory 
Si been destined ; that I was dom an 


the: dcting. mo tho ‘of which 1 bad board as 
many affighting atorios as are asuall {oli be fn 


‘one 
‘the turtle; the roaring of the lion, and the pounces of 
may dos oootttully lurk under tho one and the other, 

A some they took me to a ‘housa, whore 
welt eon teane ae Soneiictn: being alo ae of their 
parliament, Having knocked ily at the gate, and wa 
some time, at length we were wilted, and they look me to a 
of lobby, where we stayed, while one of the posse went to ailvies 


horoaftor trust to the bleating of the lamb, or the of 
Kone orale, 














* Pay 5: z 
“ee a a AT a 
a: il ee il i ue i HiT we fu 
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nee Peta eatin wae 
: lle ie ebay Wagan 
3 Guts 4 Pe 7 eal 
g efuapan annette Abe eeigh 
ent i PAE U HE 
: 


SEP aPSes ee 
fanetaiim 


RTE 





e232 PG oa Pies 


nena 








He 
eel 


52 


un ai re ia 


ai fii 

be ap aa 
et 4 2isgie gH 

Ha ae rt 
gone 23a aed 
ae z cH Se @ 
a fe ae 
ia anes 


ah baal He sageulagauteecggaeey 
AE of daaie si lallieae: 


fEH 
E iL 


Hata 
A 
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i 


ae 
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& 


RSEES 


If 
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ees Pe fF an 3 ay se i esa 
i ide quit Hi a dt ual i i reel 


ig? br aes isis? 
STATE TEC eT reign I 





fave 


Haieay lareyeyiresy ue mE j Hi 
a ah in ee had tl 


He 
Hera: 

fe He: il ane at Be eae ut 
: Ae Hi iu ia ine i EH 
pia aU GL Gia 
uu Hilt PHS see Ha i 
Dea et He iuetils AEG 
Aa le et ei iu rad fi 


satt 
ie seit S828 RHE i Pus 35 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 
Piso tee Nite echo But what T mentioned was 
of 
company 
a 
the 
of 
wor ‘brother! 
sae ee ean ee 
what shall we do fer you? You 
oe 


& 
eB 


“Biaee ral i ry inne ute i 


ler Gd inet po 
iH au ise 44 py H ue 4 3 Patt | 
Hae ie th ae Bet 
8 qe 47: 2 A ae frie bey A 
ay he Eee Tate ayl 
Biiyiss Be gEee2 i igang He rie 3 
aN et 
Hk Hi at ile Hay ie ijt ie 


Bia HA iltean et Has pe ee lai 





nn 





i an Be pid ! 
eee enum 
ee A 
i 

E 


THE FOOL OF QUuaLiry, 


ets 
vent or the 
vt ee easy 
4 from the 
See 
eae 
shone 
Yourself, madam, for 
with 
W 
and sunk 
stay and 
tote 
oe 
th. His 
him. 
what 
into an 
with distraction 
} aro 
it not 
put 
not 
Id bo ft 
but then you have 
iF akesinn, Ftp, ea 


ue nhats Wu 
# ith Be 
Bat ir A ie Het tae 


tow g 
than m 












er ff Pas ete iM 
HEE uD ee re aie 
Ae ee 

iG oe a glgetd eis Hi i nis He = fy 
fod Tie damnit Haat ail 
ste Hl aa! i Tait grabber peas’ 
brid ales Gee he 
oF af EELPT Ts be oF Ye setge RITE aula 
Paaft Epbis ae ay Hu apps! 
ges i ai Hy aace i Hil he saat 
lal oH Hu nt Pie i, HEE fie anit i 
eS BH Et ln an fishin 


ae dei td Fast HOE fee fam 





wu Hy 
ian a ‘ate ital i 
5 EP r 3 ths 2e<82793 Ri 
ital cis Renee anh Had 
5 i a fis 3 i : 4 Hin § a Pt 
3 Ls i: * ag eh | rt 
Haideta aa sual al 
-F B Heeb a a ial peat oe 
i Bey it gd 23 oi ult patel - nulla! Hi 
a pee Beare ie mide 


be 1 ie : iE iil {fia Hin 
ea a 
fai He i ip na 


» to grow liko eagles’ foathors 
took » 
pee trea tones 
saune te 
wither nel 
panted after a 
han Hoppe 
to lay @ vic 
did not even wish 
had appointed that 
its Dinckness to 
eee this 
to know 
lotter and of the 
seals and veila that 
org 
spat 
an 1 of God 
‘not. Homer 
‘ime that their 
yd om 2 
vith the 
ee 
ET 
of voin ot 
‘one. 
iy 
years on 
ae 
another, 
eeegt os 
Neate 
el 
te 
a sho! 
Tight 
circume!) 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 


My friend Jamoe, in the mean time, 


= 
2 ay ig EE 3 | ital = Pas 3 abate 
ee He a Pe alee 
adele ata 


town, in order to 
ior. 
and 

Tn all this 


of 
elawa. 





E 


epeauae ua i Tet par 


ie sat i 
ie oe alin Blan i ed Tan 
ee i ei 
tit ae Hate ee te Bee ee 
a onpiie stil te = Haan 
3a & 2 a eH age 
eae fee Heigl 
Heated ahead eal 


TRE Foot OF QUALITY, 37 


Harry, says he at have yot to precious treasures 
1 apn sh ri tt nor hare tf them: it is 


owe the Countess of Maitland; and the brother of my 
d'Aublgny, Lot as go in search of them, my 

ton! Next to my fare tho loveliest of all living. 

abound in all homen will caress us 


On the of tho bell, and the of the 
domeatis came fexth. Mr, Cliten, perce Wat-all was, OS 
Jn the hall, and this fostntly gave an alarm to his everready 


alighted, however, and stepping, with his Harry, ap the fight 


though T never was ro happy a8 to 200 your face before. Ho! 

gondoned end rang anuter Nel, cama all of you! Attend 

Brower ot your lord atend the 'proent mate and lord of your 
‘Tmmnodintoly tho palaco wan in commotion, the parlour and hall 
wore, lighted tip, exsd:all aeomied! 40: hawe. wontons 

to their motions, 

Mr. Clinton lookod with ft cach of the domestics, 


but all the were 
he, where is master? where and how ai 
ww fire they still in good health? has he had any children by 


Please honour, said an eld man, my master's firet 
aad of chldtitte ua her infant ecahod wile bers but bet 
since married to one of the liest women in the 


i 


held a Nes 


‘ lest 





it, 
became wholl 3 You went beyond, ‘went ont of 
poomalt: moh rvithout Tefection, how ‘slightfal i ts to ge 

th with your in his social, nobile, and 
sensibilities} and yon delightfully my Harry, ‘that much 
house of mourning 





ani away he was 
Tn the mean time Mr. Clinton waited suppor for him, and 
to grow tnoary when the clock struck tele. At last his 
return tidings that they stayed for him above 
the was over ; ond bad over sinoe 





THe FOOL OF QuaLiTy, 


i 
i 
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| 
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& 
es 


f 
F 

i 

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aE 
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Z 
ft 
i 


cetellt 
ay 
Fete 
lia 
Eaecebak 
he E, 
siti, 
ig 5 
Bie i 

3 ue . a 
iy aa? if 


), your bed lies yonder; you 
ETE ‘till coming on, fo bad 
ocked me in. 
During an hour after sho had withdrawn, while T walked about, 
conaering what T had to apprehend from the threste of this 


T then conceived my span 
T held it beneath mo to be caught in the manner; and so T resol 
to wait till morning, and then to force my passage ber 





Pes 

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ay if ue Hee 
eh ua a ae 

53 read BY ai 

if ap ae a ra cae 

gta Pa 


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Lee 


THE FOOL OF sree 


= 
ge Fe 
age 


feline 


be ie 
: sist a tat in Tee aia ide 
anes one a 


ay 
2 : HEE ee 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 405 


i 
A 


While he the eyed him over and over 


wondering ast = myself happy, malar, 
in Tatag and iche Dudll Wevide 60-8 Malye poms Ras eae 


appearance; of what country, may I premme?—OF England, sir, 
sip tha st amet t you with five hunitrod 
io Int, 


a 
‘And he to his fo tho shipping Sanutre. after 
tho fiends that T told you of, end thon fellow mo 40 the 
‘tavern in Cheapaide, 








4 u WA @ me aa ¥ 
F 3 2 24 eC 
a a a 
Dt aia tee pe Oi ac abel 
He ae ie 
Leas Ese 
; 2 a Zssg85s a eeinY us Ae Fie i 
HL aobieaunauiline voto tinlias 
wieeite cats deal laeh 


a Ue ebil! a ai i 
F Z Beas sai ay ee : rT | 
i Hage lin 


aba Hepa il ay ue 











es ae Hl 
is UTE eee He ie bien 
eg seine ene aun edte, 


8 yaiap 1200 J 
aegis 2 e 
iy 


sR eas 
lf 


agit ceri 
CGE fuiitatepa 





fs 

; sil: UM ipaE Misgalacteeetl 
CHU Wraiiagidl Haibel pita lat 
5 Fised Seekeae- titel E 22g pote Pitoee 
ile Whe iadanh auiilintial 
rie ie gs Widen 
EReied feel tza gisele Ei cistlirsttiecs! 
eeinbiee B Eby eBogedst< 282 aaz0+ 222 tse! 
Hipplta mi giqu nes eaters 
qsidiale BE ey dh age jalan: 
ractlk'? ero a Fo tra Eater ree 





He quant 


LE Have Tate aN EEE: 


2 


a Fit f2 FPG: ie iui HG 4 He Besap 4 
mae ta 
in He Had died tty guia 

paral “ld i bs ii HI & or Hiei! 
S18 fied Hane jt if fig ie i 
ya eee eer 
a lian ieee fu if fe Hii 
fee Nipet stihl ae af a ioe 
rier ald ak ea duh He sae rd 


2 pinta ls be ea! 
EF ree rath oie ftien aie 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY. 


418 
when, after some cursory conversation, Ned Jooked at him with 
A listurtance, and criel—Bless me! my heart tells me 
that there is something in that fice which is not quite unknown 
to me. TET coal i after my aay and Tate agi 

ie difference of I 


ca 





th cars, ‘verily 

believe that you wore ons: Harry Feat ied oot era 
up; your Harry eae, 257 Ned! 

Harry then ‘opened lis arms to receive his friend, while Ned 

Jeapod and catchod ot him, as the irippling-iron of a corsair would 

“Al the fasily thon, 20 BSN oe they had been ciged by our 

a en 
horo and bie father, ‘who shoald bo foremost in their 
wnt w Hasxy Yoos to is ‘Di woF6 ‘bed ap G. 

Ly x rose : 

in romp and ented ‘poonage, talling’ hoa bo eval ba thete 

fir that night.—1 consent onlyon this conrltion, ald 

had Jor all prone cha Fielding At Rnfteld, 

rr, wi : Zi a, 

with at. ay fie Tuan a great 


Earl of Moreland, says Harry; bat 
as 


rtd 
and held til late. But our hero declined dancing, that his 
Nod micht stand forth pratt in tho eyes hed bride, 


Be 
a 
i 
i 
: 
if 
z 
Hi 
je 
3 
LE 


om 
rbite Ss the duchies tb and 

angle, about 
arrive with the joyfal dings that my otbar woe 


; 

de 
tf 
rel 
veld 


i--} 
E 
i 
i 


of yourse] The 
Avenamin, tho. fair’ princess -Abenaiie. "The du 


z 
i 
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i 
5 
ES 
F 
= 
8 
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as 


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= 
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4 2. 
Hk 
i 
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ih 


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i 
# 
f 
F 
s 
aE 


ity —She 
told; so that her pride will 
of ber charms. However, I haste to mect sod welcome 
‘most noble brother. 


E 


‘was 
black main and teil, and three largo bl spots on 
shoalacr. He ‘was ‘oo Tistructed and. subdued 
tmonéye that bo reemea to have no will eave tho will of his ridor 

arry’s Toast motion, like electricity, informed every joint 





ia z a Hi ue2 ua a iT it 

i ma Bf peed hae 

eat | j i" oe ; 
i 


ty 3 
»: £F igh ill aU Bel ae 

ae a! ses £3 Posit we 
‘isis pee Metal ae : 
ses iitua bareagis uy we Ha 
Paden athe (tur oe 

nee i 
eS 


ule ¢ 
aes ja ud 


PRBE i i 
eee tine iF uh 
nine eee Hii id 





i 
| 





i 





: 
3 
: 
5 


a8 


: 


in a 
ho came forth with a serene and eountenanee, and embracing 
mo, cried—O my friend! my dear kinsman! how transported I am 
to find and acknowledge you for such; the parent of my angel 
Becomes a part of myealf! 

He mo by the hand into the bed-chamber of my Eloisa, 


where we renewed our caresses without restraint, But the m 


ship of my own, not as @ corsair, but 
rather for trade in the Mediterranean, On their return from the 





THE FOOL OF QUALITY, 419 


From these they learned that my Eloiss’s mother and little 
beothon weary Bead jae: peace e wae Sat ae Bea sie 


knew not whither. 
‘Sho wopt incessantly, and I it Tee nee enti 


said—You have conquered, my 
ed night of aftiction. "Oth sat you coal bok 


nbd als 
fo one Pret meh b ead son nt Sak 
soul, and one sentiment, for ev 

Tt was now, for the first ene, ako ‘ 
crushed it to my Nps an Sut jb 40 tay soul. 


enjoin, T eri Lywould do 
to my Eloisa ; ‘e life and in eau be yi ian i is “a 
never—never to be mundered ill her spirit oh 


of may apirt hereafter! 
"sho sudeny claimed that ithe very thing Tso ager 


desire, the God of rr be 
tho God of my epirit be nk eS nee 
— ta tim, and Jointly partake of his blomednoss through 


Ab ME cried; can I forego the divine pi ees 
u 


Yonr prophet, siya she, preaches only to eee sein 
that & all that be docs-or can pretond to; but Case, my 





Kisol vee hand, and withirew. 
seal far the ie! of We Chitin mionais 


‘throaghont the 
ys matictias teen tases thee a ieteel eneEy 
Sea oc ny reformatin, bot attertod M By ‘ierest and 
even by 2 ea again 


if 





nt to the 


iy. 
went 


hy 
jaitland. Sho ts now 
to the presence, 


fete 


Ep StE EPs 2 
= Ze noone Fy 
g 3s Halal beaks u Ed 


mar cousin ; and the 
ith the He 


roc 


if 2 
| ra 
: pn hd 
: mii jue 
ie i pa 

re) : : Bi 
. agit 
ara! 


eyes —S) 
my Fanny a fow heads 
ly. 


maid sho, 
hostil; 

Then oj 
some m! 


wv 
ah 





al 


THE FOOL OF QUALITY, #2 
niece, Whereon he welcomed and caressed her with an affec- 
tionate fervour. 

OL ate estoy 


ce 
think part parting with these dear 
more—that’s what sinks and dete my heart 


kindred in Christ, But 1 must first show them their rela- 


lovely aunt, and mie eo 


your vory ry dear’ relate your 
argu and Marcionese 1 AARNE 


She did as she was ordered ant Taetinitly bok apo tay Wight, 
Mike a new glory arisen upon ml ity 
M, seized upon her, as desirous of devouring ber. And 


iy 

T, in turn, took her to me with tearful eyes, ax alm: 

ist T onbreced. Goa aowiy-verived parson clay, Seer Mater 
"to perfect ‘was’ th Tescublante in erry giaco end 


feature, 
Hier royal father th Beck, and she instantly vanished; 
while her atecoce seemed to cast « shada th fdr 


and all that certain Tam now te gon t peu my ied 
hoart, and to reveal & pu ee 
fheso any months, but cou not hit on an 

it a Be iicte Ka ber jae eee 


occasion! 

T have but two children '; my Al and a fon a 
Soriaee won OF Sy aérapiin, “ei See ws 
& youth Gy! the fet, bot of a ead 


demeanour. Jong conceived an_fllicit yussion 
yong and Torely sister. ‘eng tho fre Ur forth, ad 
fitely Y attic to ener her 


sa tithe at break 
afer be See Bros of the Hicentious 








THE FOOT OF QUALITY. 


ie 
aL 
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a2 
it 
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ig 
$35 
4272 
Birt 


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A 5 
duke and duchess and Mook! 5 but Harry was not 
a whit the slower in laying hold of . 

Ho kinsod her forehea, her eyes, her checks; and Inetly dwelt 

spon hor lips, as though ‘ho would have fnfused his soul between 

_—Harry, Harry! eried Mr. Clinton, T will never introduce 
por tomy in) again, unless yon promise not 10 Kise «0 hand, 
wring so much blood into her face. 

Just then a footiman entered—My lord, says he to Harry, here 
are three carriages and several horsemen waiting without the gate. 
= Semis for one Master Fenton, who, they say, lives with the 
Enrl of red them there 


weland ; but I such 
ia the houwe-—Ob, sir! maid Harry, these are our old friends the 





E 


As he ay hed the om the we a shout of 
Joye Wig ty sla Me Polling & serra Bealed you ta on 
oad that "no one of of Ty 


Harry then obeerving that hie uncle had not equally 
his dauyhter to Ned— Sir, sal be, T-approtend Hist 

aus air; T havo alrauy sod the flr bride of my friend 
my 





ut 
i 





Ht 
i 


iy 
i 
H 
He 
i 
t 


& 
3 
8 
- 








ap 


felts 


A 
AG 


ite 


flowed ina train behind. A seacf of coruloan tint flew 


giter tenting alge oer a. potticoat of the fase thet 


hor nock benoath a hugo amothyst, fell tn Tuxnrient 
and shaded and revealed by turns the fine bond of her 
waist; & eoronet of ik which there waved m 


decline of hor lovel : In 
Drilliance Toe beneath her dazzling bosom, by a Sonate 
blaxe of uaremitted lgtt, chocked and tarnod the eye away’ 








t 
‘Our bord coming Tort, beheld hee, aa lar of 
issuing from her autechamber, He stepped cy 





"n aie 


ay a i i Hi 
ae i 
3] 
: 
E€ 





tee 
Pea Hea ea uly 











THE FOOL OF ce at 


measures with their source veoming pace 
of @ tortoite, ae 
closed the rear, mounted on his lord's r who: 
ato Jhind tho chariot; and the long oa 


the Phacton, acclamations 
‘unremitted, ps sinned toatrable to aoe ear, like the shouts of a 
Perwian army at tho rising of the sun. 
by ee te Ser mere |, the ee : Fe ncighers him, 
throw! a met eatlate their 
eyenieul ale Witt inp faieen of therein? ion eam an 
hands, prayers, blessings, and exclamations, were beard and 


‘THE xxD, 


— 
Printed iy Coan & Ca, Ei 




















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