t^-U^C^ K^A-T ^^ <^C^ £~ (fcC
THE
LIFE, ADVENTURES, AND
Opinions
OP
flfewn*
COL. GEORGE HAJSfGER.
WRITTEN BY HIMSELF.
TO WHICH IS ADDED,
Advice to the Prelates and Legisla
tors, how to correct the immorality
and Jacobinism of the present Age,
, and at the same time increase the
Revenue.
Advice to the lovely Cyprians, and
to the Fair Sex in general, how to
pass their lives in future to their
better Satisfaction, and to enjoy
with Discretion the three Cardinal
. Virtues.
On Matrimony, Compulsive Wed
lock, and on Polygamy.
On the Misery of Female Prostitu
tion, o-i
The History of the Lovely /Egyptra,
the Pamela of Norwood, and Pa
ragon of the Egyptian race; the
Author's Marriage with her, and
her cruel infidelity and Elopement
with a Travelling Tinker :
And a history of the King's Bench
Prison, written by the Author dur
ing his Custody under the Marshal
of that Prison, descriptive of the
Miseries endured by the Prisoners,
and the extravagant Expense inci
dent to their Confinement.
Insanire parat, certa ratjone modoque-
Nudus agris, uudus niimmis.
HOKAT,
VOL. I.
LONDON, PRINTED: NEW-YORK,
Re-Printed &v Johnson & Stryker, No. 29 Gold- Street,
For J. W. FENNO, No. 14/ Broad-Way.
tA 80 I.
THE
LIFE, ADVENTURES,
AND
OPINIONS
OF
COL. GEORGE HANGER.
rip JL HE lives of malefactures, in general, are prefac
ed with a strong outline of their birth, parentage, and
education, with other peculiar circumstances belong
ing to them. As for instance, A. B. was born in the
parish of , in the county of , of reputable
and genteel parents; but, falling early in life into bad
company, both of wicked men and lewd women, he
contracted habits which ultimately
I shall not discant on the virtues and superior excel
lence of my parents. They were well known to the
world; and let their characters speak for them. I
shalLpnly state with great brevity what I knew of, and
experienced from them.
My father served in three parliaments, and was one
of those respectable, independent, old English charac-
ters in the House or Commons, called Country Gen
tlemen ; who formerly had a considerable influence
with the Ministers, and to whose judgments and opin
ions every Minister paid the greatest respect. They
were disinterested, honest men, who had no selfish
views, and performed their duty to their constituents
unbiassed by any party. I wish from my heart the
case was the same in the present day. But I lament
that, with nine in ten, the difference is very great in
deed; when an opulent country gentleman, who never
has known London but for a short time together, and
solely on his own private business, is chosen member
for a county or a great town, he takes a house for the
winter, comes to London, and being elected a parlia
ment man, becomes parliament mad !
Now there are two blessings, which, in the nature
of things, will be sure to attend him.
First, his wife, for certain, makes him a cuckold.--—
But more of that hereafter: and,
Secondly, instead of doing his duty to his constitu
ents, independent of any party or prejudice, he allies
himself to some one faction or other; and, if the fac
tion which he joins, should choose to be of opinion
that beans'and peas are bacon, he gives his assenting
voice, and endeavours, wherever he goes, to prove,
that beans and peas may be bacon, although they are
not positively hos's flesh. As he must join one party
or the other, the most prudent step for him to take in
these times, is, to join Administration : for, although
they want no addition to their forces, yet, I dare say,
on his leaving London, after having given a whole
winter's specimen of his sincerity, the Minister would
not refuse making a seventh cousin of his affectionate
and loving wife, an Ensign of Fencibles.
He now returns to his country-seat, where he
amuses his brother-foxhunters, with discanting on the
political frugality of the Minister, the justness and ho
liness of the war, or the affluence and extent of our
trade and commerce. If on the other side, he ex
claims against the enormous expenditure of public mo
ney, the barbarous masacre of human lives, and the
horrid effusion of human blood; the pressure of the
taxes, the accumulation of the national debt, and the
corruption of the times.
His affectionate wife, to play her part with some
eclat, astonishes the natives at the county race-ball,
on appearing with black eyebrows, a flaxen wig, and
half naked, in the London fashion. She invites her
gallant to visit her in the country, who generally brings
some friend with him to entertain her sister, or female
confidante. If an officer, he brings a recruiting .party
into the neighbourhood. The drum and fife delight
the servants. The grenadier-serjeant and corporal
dance with, and make love to the maids in the hall,
whilst the Captain and his friend are doing their best
to amuse the ladies in the drawing-room. Poor, hos
pitable Bazil, all this time smokes his pipe, drinks
his bottle, entertains his country friends in the parlour
with his winter campaign in parliament; while the
Captain, who eats his venison and drinks his wine,
that he may not be wanting in gratitude, intrigues
with his wife. -At the end of the summer, the ser
vant-maids have-danced themselves into a dropsy with
the serjeant and corporal, and retire to their relations
to be cured; and the sister, or the female confidante,
goes on a visit for a few months to a near relation,
either in Scotland or Wales. — Thus passes the summer
campaign. My father never solicited a place ; and I am confi
dent he never received a bribe. He purchased the
commissions his sons had, during his life: one for my
brother, the present Lord Coleraine, in the blue horse,
and my own in the guards: both of which I make no
doubt but he might have had given him, if he had ask
ed for them, as he was a strenuous supporter of the
King and Constitution, though not blindly devoted to
the Minister. He was affluent and independent in
point of fortune, and had honest pride enough to keep
himself so. To conclude my account of him, I believe
from my heart he was as honest a man as ever stepped
in leathern shoe.
In my mother I have experienced a most affection
ate, kind, and tender parent. And thus much for my
parentage. I shall proceed now to my birth, education, and
transition through life. I was born at my father'-s
country-seat, in the best bed in the state-room, ac
cording to ancient custom. Whether I came head
foremost into the world, or whether I was born with
teeth in my gums, or with hair on my head, it will
not be expected that I should determine, having no
other record to go by than a treacherous memory: but
I am inclined to believe, if I may judge from the
length of my nose, that at my birth the midwife com
mitted some indignity on my person. I can, however,
assure the reader, that since my godfather and godmo
ther have been released from their baptismal duty, and
I have taken upon myself the charge of my own sacred
person, I have never been pulled by the nose, or been
compelled to soap it.
Many gentlemen of distinguished rank in this coun
try, are indebted to the protecting qualities of soap,
for the present enjoyment of their noses, it being as
difficult to hold a soaped nose between the fingers, ^as
it is for a countryman, at a country wake, to catch a
pig turned out with his tail soaped and shaved, for the
amusement of the spectators.
I was early introduced into life, and often kept both
good and bad company; associated with men both
good and bad, and with lewd women, and women
not lewd, wicked and not wicked; — in short, with
men and women of every description, and of every
rank, from the highest to the lowest, from St. James's
to St. Giles's; in palaces and night cellars; from the
drawing-room to the dust cart. The difficulties and
misfortunes I have experienced, I am inclined to think,
have proceeded from none of the above mentioned
causes, but, from happening to come into life at a pe
riod of the greatest extravagance and profusion. Hu
man nature is, in general, frail, and mine I confess,
has been wonderfully so : I could not stand the temp
tations of that age of extravagance, elegance and plea
sure : Indeed, I am not the only sufferer, for most of
my contemporaries, and many of ten times my opu
lence have been ruined.
Besides, money was in those days in such plenty,
and the money lenders had such implicit faith, that
any person of tolerable good character, had it for ask
ing for : no writings were ever drawn ; and millions
were lent upon simple bond and judgment. This
made it then much more easy and convenient for a
gentleman to ruin himself, than at present. In these
days of difficulty and obstruction, it requires consi
derable ingenuity and perseverance ; for, with the
best security in the world, a man may wear out ten
pair of shoes before he can borrow five hundred
pounds ; and then must wait a month for the writing
to be be drawn and approved: in short, for all the
wearing and tearing of legal delay.
I was first sent to school at Reading, in Berkshire ;
and I beg my friends to believe me, when I tell them
that I was a very idle boy, and never could be induced
to look into a book until it was forced under the sha-
dow of my nose in the school room: the consequence
was, that the tyrannic demagogue, my master, was
used to beat me with such cruelty, that, on the kind
representation of my brothers, I was removed from
such a scene of barbarous discipline. This tyrant did
but seldom use the rod ; his favourite instrument was a
long rattan cane, big enough to correct a culprit in
Bridewell. But this was not all: the savage used to
refine on his punishment, and to gratify his infernal
feelings by varying the modes of it. The shrieks of
the boys who were writhing beneath his blows, were
music to his soul. But to the proof:
Whenever he found out that two of the big boys had
been fighting, he caused them to strip to their shirts
in the public school-room: he then gave to each a
large bending rattan cane, about three feet long, and
ordered them to strike at each other with all their
force; while he presided with a similar weapon, and
whenever there appeared to be a relaxation of activity
in either of the unwilling combatants, he compelled
them by his own violent strokes to renew theirs.
I declare to God, that I have seen wales on the
sides, ribs, and arms of boys, of the bigness of my
finger. This brute, had he been master of Westminster
or Eton, would, in Jess than a fortnight, have been
tossed in a blanket by the upper boys. The fellow
had also another pleasant amusement : if a boy had not
washed his face very clean, he used to have it rubbed
with the coarsest horse-hair cloth that could be made.
Some years after, when at Eton school, and a very big
boy, I have often wished to be sent to reading again,
that I might have had the satisfaction of soundly
threshing the brutal pedagogue. I declare on my
honour, were a schoolmaster to inflict such punishment
on a child of mine, I would cudgel him as long as I
could stand over him. A child of mine ! ! ! ! ! Yes— -
B
10
a child of mine shall be treated in a different manner :
instead of correcting him when he fights, his tutor
shall be ordered to give him a crown every battle he
delivers, and half a guinea if he is victorious in the
combat : and should he beat a boy much bigger and
older than himself, he shall receive a guinea. Yet at
the same time he shall not be encouraged to fight for
the sake of the money to be awarded him, but only to
resent injuries. Such principles, instilled into him at
an early age, I am convinced will teach him, in maturer
life, to resent insults with a proper spisit, but will not
by any means dispose him to be quarrelsome. Take
two boys of equal age and equal dispositions : Jet the
one be kept under the master's eye, and never out of
his sight: forbid him positively to fight, and let all
those who strike or insult him be punished severely :
let the other mix with his schooll-fellows, and, if struck
or insulted, resent the injury by instantly delivering
battle : — the former will contract tyrannical and cow
ardly habits, which will accompany and disgrace him
through life ; and the latter will be bold and liberal,
but by no means more quarrelsome than his neigh
bours. Such characters as the former have I seen even
at Eton; — they were proud, insolent, and cowardly;
and have continued so to the present hour, without
any alteration but what years have made in them.
From reading I was sent to the Rev. Mr. Foun
tain's, at Mary-le-bone ; the present Doctor Fountain
was under-master to his father. This was certainly the
best school for little boys that ever was. They were
treated with the utmost kindness and attention ; and
with proper correction, but only when it appeared to
be absolutely necessary. Mrs. Fountain was the best
and most attentive of women to the small boys ; she
had them every morning in her own room, and made
them learn their lesson to her, which prepared them
before they went into the school-room to the Doctor.
11
She used to coax them to learn by giving them biscuits
and milk, and shewing them various other kindnesses.
She might rather be considered as a mother than a
schoolmistress to the children under her care. What
ever I learned was from kind and gentle treatment, for
beating would not go down with me. A kind word,
and my lesson explained to me, had more effect than
all the sticks and rods in Christendom ; for I was bold
and daring even at that early age.
Before I quit my worthy friends, the Fountains,
whom I shall never cease to remember with regard, I
must relate a very ludicrous scene between me and
the celebrated French tooth-drawer, for dentist, as I
suppose he must now be called,) Monsieur Laudo-
mier, who used to attend at certain times in the course
of the year, to examine the boy's teeth, and take out
such as were defective. He had drawn out one of
mine, which gave me great pain, and wanted to
draw another, a ceremony which I did not approve :
but the more teeth he drew, the more guineas in his
pocket. Perceiving, however, that I was resolute, and
would not consent to a repetition of his operation, he
endeavoured to play me a trick, by concealing his in
strument in his handkerchief. He accordingly pre
vailed on me to open my mouth, that he might feel
with his finger and thumb whether the tooth was
loose or not ; but the moment he got his thumb on
my under jaw, he attempted to hold my mouth open
by force, and had nearly fixed the instrument on my
tooth; but I gave him a violent kick on the shins,
which rather deranged him, and at the same instant
caught his thumb fast between my teeth, and gave
him a small item to remember me as long as he lived.
I then ran off, leaving him jumping about the room,
from excessive pain ; and I shall probably be believed
when I assert tfifet he never after that attempted to
draw any teeth of mine.
12
From Mary-le-bone, I went to Eton, where I really
made considerable progress in my learning ; and, by
the time I got into the fifth form, I was a very tolera
ble Latin scholar, and could construe most books with
sufficient readiness. But I took a most decided aver
sion to the Greek language, and never would learn it.
My studies, however, after some time, had a differ
ent direction ; for, from the moment I came into the
.fifth form, I studied every thing but my book._ My
hours out of school in the day were employed in the
sports of the field, being already very fond of my dog
and gun. By night, game of another kind engrossed
my whole attention. At that early period I had a most
decided preference for female society, and passed as
much time in the company of women as I have ever
done since. A carpenter's wife was the first object
of my early affections ; nor can I well express the na
ture of my obligations to her. Frequently have
I risked breaking my neck in getting over the roof of
my boarding house at night, to pass a few hours with
some favorite grizette of Windsor. During the latter
part of my time at Eton, to perfect, my education, I be
came attached to, and was much anamoured of the
daughter of a vender of cabbages. Ovid's Epistles
were totally laid aside for his Art of Love, in which we
made a very considerable progress. The big boys had
a very wicked custom every Sunday of resorting to
Castle prayers at Windsor ; not to seek the Lord, but
to seek the enamoratas who constantly and diligently
attended to receive our devotions. Besides, in summer
time, it was our custom to walk in the public promo-
nade in the Little Park. My father lived only six miles
from Windsor, and consequently, I was as well known
to every family in that town, and neighbourhood,
as the king himself ; but, notwithstanding this, I con
stantly walked with some fair frail one arm in arm
with as much sangfroid as 1 now would walk in Ken«
sington Gardens with a beautiful woman.
13 '
There is no occasion for me to confess all the atro
cious sins committed by me at this period, in sanctified
as well as unsanctified places ; for I solemnly declare
that I have most truly repented of such scandalous
crimes, and have every reason to believe that my for
giveness is sealed, although I have not been favoured
with absolution from the Pope : nor, were I ever so pe
nitent, it is likely that he would order a general thanks
giving for my repentance, although a former Pope did
order one in consequence of the murder of many
thousand Protestants on St. Bartholomew's day. Boys
commit sins from incoherent giddiness and want of re
flection, which they would scorn to perpetrate at a
more mature age of improved knowledge. I declare to
God, I would sooner cut my hand off than repeat such
offences. Although our divines may have no sins of
their own which cry for pardon, yet I shall not request
them to spend their time so unprofitably as in praying
for mine to be forgiven, having reserved that task to
myself. Nay, I trust that even the most antiquated,
regenerated, and pious Whitfield ite beldams, too old
and ugly to have carnal temptations to sin any more,
will attribute those crimes to giddy unreflecting youth,
and not be too censorious; for. to use the words ot
Mother Cole, I myself, as well as' they, am new-born.
I made one in the great rebellion, under Dr. Foster,
though only in the lower part of the fourth form. Fos
ter was only a schoolmaster. In Dr. Barnard's time,
such discontent never would have taken place : he
was a gentleman as well as a scholar, and knew well
how to make the boys both obey and love him. He
was well acquainted with human nature, and governed,
not by the rod, but by good sense and a knowledge of
the passions. We marched to Maidenhead-bridge,
when my father, who lived within one mile of that
place, having heard of the business, sent his groom
and a horse three different times in the day to take me
14
home. I had pledged my honour to the boys not to
leave them, of which I informed my father; and
though he was much incensed against me, I steadily
adhered to my promise, and never deserted the cause,
to support which I had so solemnly pledged myself.
Some disgracefully forfeited their honour, and were
never after respected whilst at school ; and it is yet
an existing blot in their escutcheon of honour. We
had also a serious quarrel with the townsmen of Wind
sor. I was only then in the lower school : but I went
up to see the big boys fight ; some of whom ran away
before even a blow was struck, and they have been
stamped as cowards from that day to this. Some few
boys I have known to be so timid that they never
could be brought to fight even open-handed, and, had
they been beat with a lady's thread-paper, would have
cried as much as others would have done from an
horse-whipping. Those who are cowards at school,
ever remain so; age gives experience, but not courage :
it is strange, but it is true, that these characters conti
nue to be insolent and overbearing at an advanced pe
riod of life ; but it is generally to their inferiors, unless
they happen to light on some person of consequence
who is as noted a coward as themselves ; then indeed
they are wonderfully bold : but when an inferior has the
impudence not to respect their consequence, and resents
the injury, sooner than fight, they will make the most
abject, mean, and disgraceful apologies. Such men as
we have daily proofs, are to be found in right honora
ble families, as well as in the middle ranks of life.
When I left Eton college, I did not go either to Ox
ford or Cambridge to complete my education, as is cus
tomary with most young men. This was a very fortu
nate circumstance, in which my father shewed his su
perior judgment. As I had resolved on being a sol
dier, a German education was the best suited to the
profession I had chosen. Had I been placed at Ox-
15
ford or Cambridge, not being of a studious disposition,
my health might have suffered from every species of
riot and dissipation, which is so prevalent at our uni
versities ; and my mind would have remained in the
same uncultivated state at my departure, as at my arri
val, for it is a hundred to one if I had ever read any
literary works except the Sporting Calendar and the
Newspaper. I was accordingly sent into Germany, to
Gottengen, which is one ot the most celebrated uni
versities in the world. The first teachers in every sci
ence are to be found there ; and public lectures in all
branches of learning are delivered by the most expe
rienced and learned professors. But Gottingen is not
a proper place, in my opinion, for the character of a
young militant (particularly an Englishman). For
a soldier, whom no talent, after courage, can recom
mend so much to the favour of the great world as
good-breeding, and elegant and polite manners, is
not likely to acquire those fascinating accomplishments
from a recluse set of learned professors, whose know
ledge extends no farther than the lectures they deliver
to their pupils. Such societies are too confined and
contracted to improve and expand the mind of a young
militant. Whilst studying the memoirs of the great
Frederick ; while adoring and envying his immortal
fame, his tender breast, as yet a stranger to the toils of
war, or its hard and dear-earned pittance, pants to ac
quire inferior honour in the tented field ; and anxiously
awaits Bellona's solemn call, to meet the winged mes
senger of death, or share the laurels on the victor's
brow. There is another material deficiency in such semina
ries of learning ; the society of women of the first
manners, fashion, and education, without which no
mind can be polished, is wanting. The lovely fair
ones contributed more to soften our behaviour, and
take off our natural roughness, than all the universities
16
and voluminous libraries in Europe. Twelve months
residence, in a polite foreign court, will refine a young
man's manners, and bring him nearer to that most
desireableand enviable of all characters, a perfect, easy,
and fine gentleman, than an age of attendance on the
pompous, pedantic, periwigged pride of all the learned
doctors of the age, vomiting forth, with volcanic force,
streams of Hebrew, Greek, and Latin lava. I would
rather sit in company with two or three sensible and
well-bred women, than all the Doctor Johnsons that
centuries have produced ; for a well-bred woman can
be guilty of an indelicy with more grace, than Johnson
could put on to present himself before the minister
who pensioned him.
There is another defect in Gottingen. There are
generally too many English there, who herd together,
and, by always talking there own tongue, never ac
quire a fluency in that of the country, which can only
be obtained by associating with the natives.
After applying myself to mathematics, fortification,
and the language, for about twelve months, I quitted
Gottingen for Hanover and Hesse Cassel ; at which
places I spent the rest of the time I remained in Ger
many, which was three years. At Hanover I had the
distinguished honor of being patronized, in every sense
most flattering to my feelings, by Prince Charles, our
queen's eldest brother, a soldier and high-finished gen
tleman, to whom I owe a thousand obligations and
friendships ; and also by that gallant veteran Field-
marshal Sherhen, whose distinguished conduct in the
seven years war, under Duke Ferdinand of Brunswick,
who commanded the allied army, gained him immortal
honour, and the love and respect of all Englishmen.
The abilities of this brave and able veteran shone with
peculiar splendor on that memorable day when the
French army suffered a total defeat on the plains of
17
Minden, when so many thousands of them bit the dust.
In various other successful conflicts with the French,
he shared the laurels which so justly adorned the brow
of that great General, whose military fame Bellona
gladly welcomed and approved, while she justly rated
him the contemporary rival of the immortal Frederick.
But the officer with whom I contracted the greatest
intimacy, and from whom I received the greatest fa
vour and friendship, was General Freytag. It is not
without some degree of vanity that I reflect on a friend
ship which was formed at so early a period of my life,
and lasted to the very hour of his death, which han-
pened about four years ago. This gallant soldier had
distinguished himself in the command of a large par-
tizan corps of yagers, hussars, &c. in the seven years
war, and is the same Field-marshal Freytag who acted
with our troops in Brabant this war, under the com
mand of his royal highness the Duke of York. By
the above distinguished character I was introduced to
the first nobility in Hanover, and constantly passed my
time in the most polite circles. With the officers I also
formed friendships, which have lasted to the present
moment. I was at this time an ensign in the first regiment of
British foot-guards ; nor could any youth be more at
tached to his profession than I was. The officers of
the Hanoverian guards kindly permitted me to stand in
the regiment with them on field days ; as did those of
the two regiments of light horse. The officers who
composed these regiments, had many of them served
the whole seven years war in that distinguished
corps of hussars commanded by the greatest partizan
of the age, General Luckner, who shewed me the
same favour, and instructed me also in the discipline of
the light cavalry.
Thus I passed my time with the utmost satisfaction,
C
18
and was daily learning my profession. I attended all
the reviews in that country ; and, by letters from
officers of distinction to General Saltern, the governor
of Magdeburg. I was, through his interest, honoured
with permission from the king (the great Frederick) to
attend the Prussian reviews near that town. On those
extensive plains his majesty reviewed twenty thousand
infantry and five thousand cavalry. Every manoeuvre
which the fertile mind of the great Frederick could
devise, was performed by this army, with an accuracy
scarcely to be conceived. ' Two of them attracted my
attention above all others. The first was a square, con
sisting of about six thousand infantry, supposed to be
the part of a beaten army retreating over an open plain
for many miles, attacked by five thousand cavalry, in
all directions, until they gained the inclosures ; when
the cavalry desisted from molesting them any further.
The second was the five thousand horse, in one line,
charging, for above half a mile, with the utmost regu
larity. The three first charges they attempted to per
form did not please his majesty : before they had
advanced half way, some small irregularity taking
place, which, though ever so trifling, could not pass
unnoticed by his all-penetrating eye, an aid-de-camp
was dispatched to stop them ; they went about three
different times, and took up the ground again which
they before had occupied. The forth time they made
a rapid and correct charge, with which the king was
highly pleased, and sent them his thanks. They halted
within fifty yards of his majesty ; and the whole line,
of so large a body of horse, was as regularly dressed
as I have ever since seen one single regiment. Two-
thirds of this body of horse were cuirassiers ; those
troops, whose praises the king had sung in the elegant
poems written by his majesty at Sans Souci. I was fa
voured with permission to' remain in the Prussian camp
the whole time of the review, which occupied four
19
days, dining and sleeping in the tent of Colonel Rohr,
of the regiment of young Stutterheim, a great favourite
of the king, who had served the whole seven years war
under his majesty's command. This was a most sin
gular favour conferred on me, and which I am certain
was never granted to any other English officer in those
days: for it was with the greatest difficulty they could
obtain permission, even from a great distance, to see
the review, the mounted chasseurs keeping the ground
clear for some miles around. Five thousand cavalry,
in one body, is a sight rarely to be viewed in Germany,
and what very few British officers ever have seen. The
charge they made was beautiful and grand ; and the
very ground, which was hard and parched by the sum
mer's heat, shook under them.
From Hanover I carried with me letters of recom
mendation to Hesse Cassel, from the above respectable
characters. I was also recommended to General
Schluffen, who at that time was minister to his serene
highness the Landgrave of Hesse Cassel, by my much
respected and ever to be lamented friend, the late Lord
Southampton, then General Fitzroy. Between these
officers a great intimacy subsisted, from their having
both been brother aid-de-camps to Duke Ferdinand in
the seven years war.
Here I made connections in a service in which it was
my fate, in a few years, to have the honour of being
employed, and to make my debut, on the hostile plains
of America. Little did I think, when I was first in
troduced at the court of the distinguished and amiable
Prince of Hesse Cassel, that I should ever have the
honour of serving in his army.
Hesse Cassel is one of the cleanest and most delight
ful towns I ever beheld. The new town is built en
tirely of stone, and, on approaching it from a distance,
has a very beautiful and grand appearance.
20
I shall now, with pleasure, speak of my old com
panions in war, the Flessian troops, than whom there
are no braver or better disciplined forces in the world.
Their discipline is the same as that of the Prussians.
In one respect the preference may be given to them,
the Hessian regiments being composed all of landes
kinder, (natives of the country,) whereas the Prussians
have a great number of foreigners in their battalions.
They were both of them in alliance with us in the
seven years war, and in that of America, and ever
behaved with the greatest gallantry and fidelity, and
the most sincere attachment to the cause in which they
were engaged.
The brilliant actions which, early in life, distin
guished the present Duke of Brunswick, when here
ditary prince, then commanding a detached body of
troops from the allied army, under the orders of Duke
Ferdinand, in the seven years war, and have establish
ed hisfame as a soldier, were performed under his
command, by the Hessian grenadiers, some British
infantry regiments, and Elliot's light dragoon's. The
reputation of the Hessian grenadiers is too well known
to want any eulogium from my pen. In all times, in
all places, in every situation, their conduct and valour
have distinguished them.
The Landgrave of Hesse Cassel is a powerful prince.
His coffers are well stored, his finances well regulated,
and his army in the highest state of military discipline.
His Serene Highness, whenever he chooses, can bring
forty thousand troops into the field, as good as any in
Germany : there cannot be any better appointed, or
betterdisciplined. At this early period of life, I made
a particular acquaintance with that distinguished cha
racter, afterwards so well known to, and so much ad-
mired and respected by the British army in America,
Col. Donop, who died of the wounds he received in
. gallantly storming Red Bank, in the attack of which
fortress so many of the Hessian grenadiers fell. The
attempt to take it by storm failed, although some of
the Hessian grenadiers were killed in the embrasures.
My early acquaintance with this distinguished cha
racter, led me some years after to decide on soliciting
the honour of serving in the Hessian troops, when I
quitted the first regiment of foot-guards ; the cause of
which I shall explain at a proper period. Nor can I
in this place be silent on circumstances which were a
great impediment to me in my military career, and
early desire to see active service.
From my connections at Hanover and at Hesse Cas
sel, I could have gone in the suite of the young Prince
of Brunswick to join the army of Count Romansoff,
then serving against the Turks ; but as this would have
incurred an expence beyond the income my father al
lowed me, I wrote home to him, to request he would
be so kind as to advance me a thousand pounds ; with
which he refused to comply, not, I believe, from want
of generosity, but from the tender love my mother bore
me. Lie stated my youth, and the wretched climate
of the country in which I wished to serve. I am con
vinced it was from paternal affection that he refused
me; as I assured him, on my honour, that I would
repay him, when of age, from the estate which he
held during my minority, I was much mortified at the
refusal, being passionately fond of my profession ; and
I looked on this as a most favourable opportunity to
advance me in it. It Would certainly have benefited
me much, could I have accomplished this object. To
the best of my recollection, the young Prince of Bruns
wick, brother to the present Duke, lost his life with
the Russian army. No part of my life had been so
pleasant and agreeable as the three years I passed in
Germany. 1 cannot help remarking with what ele-
22
gance a person of small fortunemay live in that country.
In England, with a small income, one can scarcely
procure necessaries of life. My father allowed me
three hundred pounds per annum, which was fully suf
ficient for all my expences, and at the end of the year
I had always an agreeable overplus.
I shall give two instances of the cheapness of living
and of servants wages. I had an extraordinary good
servant, who came every morning at eight o'clock to
my apartments, and stayed as late at night as I wished,
I only gave him one Louis d'or per month, for wages,
board-wages, and clothes.
While I remained in any great towns, I always dined
at the public table d'Hote, over which some officer of
distinction of the garrison presides. Many military
gentlemen resort to it, as well as travellers of the first
distinction. The dinner reckoning, inclusive of wine,
was about fifteen pence, for which were provided two
courses and a desert of pastry : every thing else was as
cheap in proportion. The hospitality and the open
honest character of the Germans, so attached me to
the country, that when ordered home to join my regi
ment, I quitted it with much reluctance, and abso
lutely shed tears on my departure.
I forgot to mention in the proper place, that, when
I first went to Germany, my father committed the
same error as many other parents have done, by send
ing a clergyman with me to see me settled at the uni
versity of Gottingen. I have the utmost respect for
this good man, who took the trouble of travelling so
many miles to take care of me ; for he discharged his
duty with every attention and civility. In my humble
opinion, clergymen who have never travelled, but have
been immured in schools and within the walls of uni
versities, are very ill calculated indeed to travel with a
young militant. Their knowledge of the dead Ian-
2-1.
guages is but of little use to them in the polite circles ;
and they are as much out of their place at a foreign
court, as a dog is in a dancing-school*. However, it
lias been much the custom to appoint clergymen in
general as bear-leaders to young men who travel.
Two successive summers I went, for a couple of
months, to Pyrmont, so well known, throughout Eu
rope, for its waters. This town and surrounding
country, is the property of the Prince of Waldeck,
and is the most beautiful and romantic spot I ever be
held. The walks and rides around it are delightful;
and it is resorted to by people of the first distinction
from all parts of Germany. 1 had the honour of receiv
ing the most distinguished civility and protection from
the then reigning Prince of Waldeck, and had the hap
piness of contracting a considerable intimacy with his
highness, who was a most amiable and accomplished
gentleman. Pyrmont abounds with variety of amuse
ment, and is one of the pleasantest places I know, to
resort to in summer. After passing through that most
detestable of all countries, Holland, where a traveller
is insulted by every species of extortion, and1 where
gold is worshipped more than the Deity, I took ship
ping for England, having bid adieu to it in the lan
guage of Voltaire — Adieu Canneau, Cannard, Cane-
taille !
Whoever passes through this country, when they
come to an inn, should always order dinner and sup
per at so much per head: then they cannot be impos
ed on much, as the price of wine is well known, and
lodging may be valued also. If you think you are
charged too dear, you can have redress by applying to
the burgomaster. At Delft, forgetful of this precau
tion, and coming in very late to an inn, I ordered sup
per, and went in haste to bed, to rise early the next
* I except dancing-dogs by profeffion.
24
morning and proceed on my journey. There was no
thing in the house but eggs and spinnage, and a few
slices of dried bacon, and bread and cheese: to this
sumptuous regale I added a pint of wine. In the
morning the landlady charged me above a pound sterl
ing ; and when I complained of the extravagance of
the bill, she desired to look it over, and returned it
to me with about ten or twelve pence added to it, say
ing, that she had omitted charging some articles. I
went to the burgomaster to complain1, who informed
me that if I had made an agreement he would have
punished the landlady; but as the case stood, it was
not in his power. Another precaution is highly neces
sary when you get out of the track scoots to go to the
inn: if you have a trunk and two or three bundles,
put them all into one wheelbarrow, for, if you are
not on your guard when your trunk is in the whell-
barrow, the porters will take each one bundle ; and if
it be only so light a thing as an hat-box, you must pay
them the same as the man who wheels your trunk.
I will give the reader another instance of the extor
tion and brutality of the people ; I mean only of the
lower orders. If you take a walk out from your inn,
and happen to loose your way, and you ask any com
mon person in the street, which is the way to such an
inn? mentioning the sign of it; instead of telling you
to turn either to the right or left, his reply is, I will go
with you there for a shilling. In France, if you meet
the meanest object in the street and ask him such a
question, he is over studious in describing the way.
In Holland, you must go into some reputable shop to
inquire; or address yourself to some well-dressed man,
or you may walk round and round the town and never
find your lodgings. Notwithstanding these impositions,
the laws in Holland are excellent ; and if you are ac
quainted with the customs of the country, you can
25
ever have redress: and one supreme blessing the inha
bitants of this country enjoy ; there is no imprisonment
for debt, which, with all our boasted liberty, is the
curse and disgrace of Old England.
The second part of this chapter, whose importance,
I trust, the world cannot deny, and which, I presum'e,
is already become highly interesting to every reader
of taste and discernment, will be found in its appro
priate situation in the second volume.
D
26
CHAPTER I.
Advice to the Prelates and Legislators how to correct the
Immorality and Jacobinism of the present Age,
and at the same time increase the Revenues of the
Country.
[T is the genera] received opinion of all parties, and
of all descriptions of persons in this country, that a
moderate and partial reform of parliament would be
beneficial to, the constitution : but our legislators are
of opinion that this is not a proper period for such a
measure. It being far from my wishes to make this a
political work, I shall reserve my opinion on the sub
ject. But I cannot refrain from giving my senti
ments without reserve, and in very specific terms, on
a point far more interesting, and which requires the
immediate attention of the legislature ; I mean the
speedy suppression of the immorality and Jacobinism
of this sinful and adulterous age. The vices of the
present day require a radical and vigorous reform ; the
sooner it is effected, the better ; for the more corrupt
the times, the more necessary is it for our law-givers to
interfere and suppress the prevailing immoralities, by
instituting salutary laws of correction, and to enforce a
due obedience to the Church as well as the State.
In my humble opinion, no regulation would strike
more effectually at the root of the evil, than an espe
cial statute to compel all persons to a more strict atten
tion to the duties of the Sabbath : such a regulation
would be founded in the purest piety and virtue. I am
daily in hopes of seeing an act of parliament passed,
which, I have been informed, was in contemplation to
be proposed to the legislature ; and I trust it only lies
dormant for a short time from the pressure of public
affairs : 1 mean an act to prohibit any one on a Sunday
27
to walk the streets during the time of divine service,
except physicians, apothecaries, and surgeons. This
regulation, I am informed, was first suggested by one
of our pious prelates. He deserves the praise of every
moral, religious, and reflecting person in the land.
I pray Heaven it may be immediately enacted ! The
community must derive considerable benefit — vice and
immorality will hide their heads — godliness will super
sede impiety — the wicked will be scattered like chaff
before the wind, and our clergy will be praised and
blessed by the applauding multitude, for thus advanc
ing the vital excellence of the people*. On this occa
sion the affridoulanthropic sensibility of that sublime
Christian, Mr. W , cannot be too much com
mended ; for I am informed that his humanity extend
ed even to the brute creation. He judged very pro
perly on a petition from Mr. M , the celebrated
veterinary gentleman, and horse and cow surgeon,
who proved to him how much the race of those useful
animals might suffer, if their medical attendants were
not permitted to visit their patients : besides, after the
labour of the whole week, it would be unjust if so
useful a set of men might not be enabled to finish their
business by one or two o'clock, so as to enable them
to take an innocent lounge on horseback in Hyde Park
on Sunday. From the respect which is so justly paid
to this truly pious and zealous Christian, the veterinary
surgeons were to have been admitted to the same pri
vileges and immunities as the regular physicians, sur
geons, and apothecaries.
The petition of these gentlemen was considerably
strengthened by the claims Mr. M , the veterinary
* The man that hung his cat on Monday for killing of a moufe on
Sunday, is on record : and we may, with great propriety, add the Me
thodist, who threw all his beer into the street, becuufe it worked on tjie
Sabbath-day.
surgeon bad on the , for having very con
descendingly stepped so much out of his sphere as to
prevent a favourite tom-cat belonging to his Lordship,
from continuing the exercise of those impurities, which
had been such a scandal to that chaste and pious family.
The petition of Doctor Norman, her Majesty's dog
physician, was particularly attended to ; (he was to
have been privileged equally with the above gentle
men), on account of his having paid the most particu
lar attention to the pregnant state of a she-monkey be
longing to Madame Swelenbergen.
Pig doctors, however, were totally excluded : a proof
that Government pays but very little attention to the
swinish multitude. As for myself, I am of opinion
that the swine are most useful creatures, and must
confess that I do not think a pennyworth of pig's meat a.
bad thing now and then*.
I cannot help lamenting that the privilege shewn to
veterinary surgeons did not arise so much from their
professional abilities, as from interest and favour for
their condescending qualities. But it is in this as in
most other occupations. Even in that most honourable
profession, the army, though there are many men of
merit who rise by the sivord, yet there are some of very
little merit who rise by the scabbard.
In these times of impiety and lewdness, it would be
but proper to forbid all women, under a very weighty
penalty, (but most particularly those who have hand
some legs,) from walking out on a windy day, without
sewing their petticoats down to their shoes, lest a sud
den gust of wind, on meeting a prelate, might attract
his eyes and derange his thoughts, which ought only
to be fixed on things above.
* Morhal fays, that the pig is the only animal which can be eaten from
the fnout to the tail.
25
Women of fashion, so deservedly called modest
women, have no thoughts of man in dressing themselves,
poor souls ! and endeavour only to appear clean and
decent, every one according to her qualitiy ; although
I solemnly declare I have seen a modest woman on a
warm Sunday in July, in Kensington gardens, with
nothing on but a thin linen petticoat (not a dimity one,)
a smock, and a muslin gown : but who will ever be so
censorious as to surmise that this was done to attract
the attention of man by any modest woman? lam
sure such thoughts never entered into my head, nor did
it in the least attract mv attention, further than to im-
press me with a kind apprehension that she might catch
cold. ¦As the prelates have very little to do when in Lon
don, if they were to attend all places of public resort,
they would then be more able to judge of the many
glaring immoralities of the age, and be better qualified
to report on them to the legislature. A wonderful deal
of "good might be derived from such wise and salutary
steps : effectual measures might be taken, and on the
most indisputable authority, to correct the hydra evil,
which stalks, with as many heads as tails, about this
sinful town. Thus the morals of this wicked age
might be amended: — they are indeed too bad ; I speak
feelingly : for I myself meet with such temptations
every day, from the conduct and appearance of the
women, both from what they hide, and what they dis
play, as to irritate my nervous system, and decompose
the regular flow of my spirits. In short, from the
universal depravity and Jacobinism of this town, (for
be assused that all vice and immorality tend to overturn
our Government and the Christian religion,) that I can
scarce enter a street in which I do not see something
to call up my feelings ; and if some measures are not
adopted to correct those indecencies, notwithstanding
all the resolution and philosophy I possess, I am fearful
30
I may fall into a way of life which I have hitherto so
studiously endeavoured to avoid.
Vice and immorality will never be corrected by the
prelates visiting St. James's on court day, where
nought but piety, sincerity, modesty, candour, and
ingenuousness ever enter : nor by their attending the
House of Lords, where the unbiassed legislators do
not suffer places and pensions to have the smallest in
fluence on their judgment or actions. Their time in
both these places is as much misapplied, as if they
were to preach to a congregation consisting only of
clergymen, who, of course, can want no amendment
or instruction.
They should bend their steps towards St. Giles's,
Wapping, Drury-lane, Field-lane, Chick-lane, Love-
lane, and Petticoat-lane. There would they see Satan,
with huge strides, walking along in open day, and the
daughters of corruption lighted by the children of the
sun, (vulgarly called the lamplighters,) to their mid
night orgies. If the whole clergy would only take for
their copy that much to be respected and pious prelate,
to whom all praise is due for his endeavours to banish,
from this too sinful Babylon, those indecent Qpera-
dancers, who distort their bodies in all postures, too
shocking for the feelings of modesty and virtue, we
then might have some hopes of speedy reformation.
Though great are the sins of this nation, I have con
siderable hopes in the forgiveness of Heaven ; and
that under the auspices of a virtuous Minister, we shall
shortly be delivered from all our enemies, our misfor
tunes and miseries. For, as charity covers a multitude
of sins, this nation has more claim for forgiveness and
mercy than any other ; for, in respect to charitable
deeds, we have exercised them towards all Europe :
as I believe there is not any power of consequence,
31
whether Majestic, Serene, or Most Holy, that we have
not subsidised.
To destroy vice, to promote modesty, and at the
same time to increase the revenues of the countrv, I
recommend a fine to be inflicted (according to a man's
rank ) not to exceed fifty pounds, on every one who
should presume to make water against the wall, in the
streets: it is highly indecorous; the ladies never prac
tice any indecencies of this kind, and why should we ?
— are not, logically speaking, our faculties as reten
tive as theirs? Besides, wooden houses might be
erected in every street, with large vessels to hold this
valuable liquid, so much sought after by tobaconists,
dyers, farmers, clothiers, and chemists. It being the
best manure in the world for land, the parish-officers
should be recommended carefully to collect and dis
pose of this valuable commodity at a public sale, by
inch of candle, to the great saving of the poor-rates.
It might also be an object of taxation, as it was in for
mer times, and a large revenue might be raised to the
state; a small part of which might be applied, with
great proprietv, to aid the support of the Magdalen
Hospital : I am certain, from the immense quantity of
this liquor produced by the consumption of gin, por
ter, ale, wine, &c. the revenue arising from it, (if pro
per attention was paid to the collection and sale of it,)
would in a short time rival the malt tax. Reflect only
on the double benefit arising from it; immorality will
be 'corrected, and the state coffers filled. It is an ob
ject worthy the attention both of the Bench of Bishops
and Lords of the Treasury: and, without any pre
sumption or unbecoming confidence, I do think, that
both church and state are highly indebted to me for
suggesting such an easy mode of advancing the best
interests of them both. Whether their Lordships will
be of that opinion, I have my doubts ; as, according
to a favourite proverb of my grandmother, God rest
her soul ! The great are seldom grateful.
I have often lamented the loss of this valuable fluid,
that might be made such a source of national wealth,
and have frequently turned my thoughts to frame a
judicious and saving mode of collecting it, in order to
present it to the consideration of the minister. But
self-interest, which we all possess (more or less,) has
prevented me ; for, not having the honour even of the
slightest acquaintance with him, I was fearful that
I might not get properly rewarded ; and that I should
have been told, as others have been on similar occa
sions, that the Chancellor of the Exchequer had the
same idea long in contemplation, but, from existing
circumstances, and the pressure of public affairs, he
has not as yet been able to bring it forward.
The distress of my country, however, now obliges
me, as a true Briton, to wave every private advantage ;
and when my plan shall have been adopted, I shall
throw myself on the generosity of my country for a re
ward. This, I again assert, will be doubly profitable, be
cause a most moral method of increasing the revenue,
as female delicacy is so often offended in passing the
streets by audacious or absent men, in obeying the
dictates of nature. I myself am wonderfully absent
at times ; and I will select two instances out of many,
which I declare on my honour are strictly true. One
morning I had dressed myself, buttoned the knees of
my breeches, put my shoes on, and was going out at
the street-door, when my servant reminded me that
I had forgotten my stockings. Another time I had
purchased some books in a shop, the corner of Sack-
ville-street, one dark evening ; and taking the candle
up to look at others near the door, I opened it, and
walked with the lighted candle as far as York-house
before I -perceived it was in my hand, when I returned
and gave it to the bookseller, who, with the utmost
astonishment, was observing my actions.
At this moment it occurs to my recollection, that on
the very day I walked out of the bookseller's shop with
the lighted candle in my hand, I had been deeply en
gaged in calculating the immense increase of revenue
that would accrue to the state by a tax on knives,
forks, and spoons ; which I was drawing out and or
ganizing in proper form to lay before the minister, and
which every sagacious and experienced politician will
acknowledge to be a sufficient excuse for my absence.
This scheme will be of infinite advantage to the
revenue of the country whenever it is adopted, which I
hope and trust will shortly be the case, to enable us
to carry on this just and necessary war.
The proposed tax, if properly levied, not exempting
any s.
" And when in quarter* we fliall be,
Oh ! how I'll kifs my landlady."
What ! kiss the landlady to pay the reckoning !
Oh, fye ! this is worse even than an officer not paying
his quarters at all.
46
Besides, there is the beggars Opera; which ought
not only to be banished the stage, but burned by the
hands of the common hangman, and as severe a pe
nalty inflicted on any person selling it, as on the
works of Tom Paine; for it is equally as productive
of disrespect to our present government and the chris
tian religion. It contains many of the grossest libels
on our nobility, people of fashion and opulent men.
For instance :
" Since laws were made for every degree,
" To curb vice in others, as well as in me,
" I wonder we ha'n't better company
" Upon Tyburn tree.
" But gold from law can take out the fling ;
" For if, like us, rich men were to fwing,
" It would thin the land, fuch numbers would firing
" Upon Tyburn Tree."
This is a direct libel on our laws, our constitution,
our nobility, and all persons of distinction and opu
lence. It has the audacity to state, that if a rich
man, or man of family, be ever so guilty, he can pur
chase his escape from the gallows by dint of gold in
defiance of all law ; and that, in short, none but poor
men can be hanged.
Again ; seven common women are introduced to
Macbeth at one time, who kisses every one of them
on their entering the room. Here is a most abomi-
ble scene of indecency, indecorum, and infamy. Then,
on the very moment "before he is to be executed, and
when the gaoler announces two more wives, with a
child a-piece, who wish to see him, the unfeeling
monster, without the least compassion, either for the
women or tender babes, and with a bold effrontery
and unfeeling heart, tells the gaoler to inform the sher
iff's officer that he is ready ; and goes with as much
composure to the gallows, as a long-haired, blear-eyed
47
methodist would go to the tabernacle*. The whole
is too shocking. — But the worst is yet to come. I
mean Foote's comedy of the Minor. This is by far
the most impudent and profligate performance ever
produced on the stage. All the scandal, debauchery
and fraud, of a common brothel, is publicly exhibit
ed before our virtuous and chaste wives and daugh
ters. An old notorious procusess avows that she has
procured a virgin nymph from the country for a no
bleman who is to be introduced to her after she re
turns from the holy tabernacle that evening. When
Loader has the infamy to ask her to tip the peer an old
trader, and let his friend, the baronet, have the girl;
Lord ! Mr. Loader, replies the old bawd, where do you
think to go when you die? So that hypocrisy is added
to complete the scene of infamy, for the amusement, in
struction, and improvement of pit, boxes and gal
lery. Then the pious apostle of reformation, and founder
of the Tabernacle, Dr, Whitfield — the very corner
stone — one of the most substantial pillars and props
— the very arch of religion, — to be publicly ridiculed
on the stage ! Oh ! what an abomination ! And then
to represent his holy- tabernacle as a receptacle for
bawds and profligates, which never was polluted
with unhallowed breath, and where none but the pu
rest and chastest zephyrs blow ! Then how doubly
cruel and wicked, and illiberal, to tum into ridicule,
on a public theatre, a natural defect of this sanctified
character, under the ludicrous name of Doctor Squin-
tum, because he had a whimsical kind of look that
serious people would call a cast in both eyes ! All
this is wicked in the extreme ; nay, what is worse
than wicked, it is ungentlemanly. But to return to
the heroine of this shocking piece — She is made, af-
* Archbishop Herring preached a course cf sermons against this de
testable Opera. And be it known, that I respect his memory for it.
48
ter describing the beauty of the deluded nymph, to
exclaim, with uplifted eyes ; that three such lovely
tender chickens would, in one winter, make her for
tune !" But let me hasten from a scene, which makes
me shudder as I contemplate it.
The pious prelates of former ages were industrious
in using every exertion in their power to suppress all
stage-performances. Not only divines, but laymen, both
ancient and modern, have, by their writings, endeavour
ed to suppress plays, as well as other amorous and
unchaste works. Clemens, Romanus, Nazienzen,
Tertullian, Ambrose, Jerome, Lactantius, Augustin,
and others of the early Christian teachers ; the fourth
Council of Carthage, and divers other Councils. Bab-
ington, Hooker, Perkins, Downham, Williams, and
all other commentators on the seventh commandment,
have condemned and forbid the writing, printing, sel
ling or teaching any amorous wanton play-books, his
tories, or heathen authors ; especially Ovid's Art of
Love, Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius, Martial, Plau-
tus, and Terence. Osorious also condemns them.
-
sa regirhinis et Castigationis uxoris sua licite et ra-
tionahilifer peftinet. The civil Jaw gave the husband
the same, or a larger, authority over his wife ; al
lowing him, for some misdemeanors, flagellis et fus
fibus aeritef verberare uxorem ; for others, only modi-
Cam Castigationam adliibere."
As, from a defect of your education, yOil do rtot,
ye lovely Fair, understand Latin, it is necessary yOu
should be made acquainted With this point in law, as
if materially concerns you. The sentence of " flagel
lis et fusfibus acriter verberare',*' when the true sense
of the words are taken, implies, that in some cases,
where the Crime the wife is guilty of exceeds a com
mon misdemeanor, such as making him a cuckold,
Spitting in his face, or breaking his head with a chaiii-
ber-pot, (the latter of which, when fast asleep in bed,
a friend of mine suffered from a most lovely and af
fectionate wife,) in such cases the law permits him to
give her a sound horse-whipping, or to knock her
down with his fist, and give her two black eyes and
a bloody nose.
Take care, therefore, how you behave when yotl
are .permitted to partake of the blessings and sweets
of holy matrimony, and remember I have given you
an early warning. I must for myself candidly Con
fess, that this law is particularly constituted to pro
mote the mutual peace and happiness of the marriage
state : as, from experience, I can testify, that in some
families (here would be no existing without it, so
wonderful are its magic powers in preserving peace
and harmony between a fond wedded couple. Some
times, even when the law is reversed, it has its salu
tary effects, as there should be good order preserved
either by one party or the other. I confess it often
gives me great satisfaction to reflect, that, whilst I
71
Carry in my hand an oaken shillelah, I am sanctioned
by law in the use of it : for if the law permits a man
to beat a tender delicate woman with a stick as big
as his thumb, surely no law will punish me for beat
ing a great, clumsy, overgrown, insolent rascal with
a stout cudgel. In this there is a double propriety ;
and in using it I have ever considered myself as act
ing strictly according to the letter of the law; and
sanctioned by the legislature : for the same reasons,
I hold it lawful to horse-whip any person who has
grossly insulted me, and refuses to give satisfaction ;
but as whaleing a gentleman fiom head to foot is but,
at the best, a coarse and vulgar revenge, I think, to
do the thing politely, it would be fully sufficient to
ride up to him, crack your whip at him, and cry —
Ware horse ! you son of a . The insult is just
as great, and the labour less.
It is the duty of every man of honour to protect the
fair sex, and even to risk his life in defence of their
honour, happiness, and welfare. Every brave man
will protect them from insult and injury, and will
find a recompence, devoutly to be wished for, in their
affections and confidence ; while he who tamely per
mits fhe wrongs they suffer to go unrevenged, will
meet with his deseits-^the hatred and contempt of
the loveliest part of human nature, for
None but the brave deserve the fair.
I must, however, confess that you have no right
to embroil us in your private quarrels one with ano
ther, though of this you are too often guilty. All
private quarrels between woman and woman, I am
of opinion, should be settled by you without our in
terference ; and if things have gone to so great a
length that they cannot be settled and accommodat
ed both with honour and satisfaction to each party
I can see no reason why you should not decide the
quarrel by sword and pistol, in the same manner as
men do. A few duels would be of infinite service to
the fair sex in general. It would prevent, in a con
siderable degree, your slandering and traducing each
other's characters so grossly as you now are accustom
ed with impunity to do. In all cases of love, when
the green-eyed monster jealousy prevades your heart,
you might call the rival enemy to the field, and, in
single combat, openly and boldly seek revenge ; a
conduct by far more noble than having recourse to
those base and underhanded means you now are so
want to take to be revenged of your rival or the ob
ject of your hatred. It would also, in a great degree,
preserve your chastity ; for many of you have spared
no pains to draw off the affections of a man from the
woman devoted to your hatred ; and have even gone
so far as to make a sacrifice of your persons to him,
without the smallest affection, but for the sole motive
of gratifying your revenge, by distracting and break
ing the heart of the female you hate, whose happi
ness was fixed on him. It would also prevent, in a
very considerable degree, all cheating at cards, which,
I am sorry to say, is too prevalent even in the highest
female circles ; for if Lady Kitty should observe Lady
Jenny cheating, she might kick her down stairs, and
not let the company be disturbed any further with
their broils and wrangling, but settle the affair the
next morning in Hyde Park.
Many of you are also very quarrelsome in your
cups, when bottles and glasses fly about as thick as
grape-shot in an action, by which your lovely fea
tures are soijnetimes wounded and disfigured. Sword
and pistol would materially correct these enormities,
and many others which at present are too tedious to
relate.
73
What gallant actions the newspapers would fre
quently announce ! as, for instance, " Yesterday Mrs.
C and Mrs. D , two lovely high-spirited
Cyprians of the fir6t class, had each a desperate ren
contre in Hyde Park : they received eight shots a-
piece; but neither of them would give in: the Bow-
street officers interfered, and took them before Mr.
Justice Bond ; but no one appearing for their charac
ters, and offering to bail them, but George Hanger,
whose recognisance the magistrate would not accept,
at the same time warning him to be careful of his
own conduct, they were committed to the house of
correction, and sentenced to mill doll*. The Duke
of and Lord appearing in their behalf next
day, they were liberated, on finding security for their
future good behaviour."
Such paragraphs as the following would also enli
ven the dulness of newspapers : — " We are happy to
inform the public, that the dispute between Mrs.
and the Countess of , which originated at a
division of the spoils of a Faro Bank, has been ar
ranged, to the mutual satisfaction of both parties, by
the interference of their friends. Mrs. made
use of such gross reflections, that the Countess could
ho longer retain her anger, but pulled Mrs. — - — 's
wig off, and threw it behind the fire. The Countess
has bought her a new jasey, and asked her pardon.
The Countess's coachman very kindly lent Mrs. ¦
his wig to go home with that night, to prevent her
catching cold."
" It is with the greatest pleasure we announce to
the numerous friends of Lady Dorothy Brown, that
her Ladyship is declared out of danger from the thrust
* For mill doll, vide the Dictionary of the Skng Lan
guage. K
74
she received in the lower part of her stomach." "We
are happy in being informed, that the Countess of
Bellebriggin is hourly recovering from the wounds
she received in the last duel : her Ladyship has had
seventeen different rencontres this winter. The wound
has been diligently probed, but the balls have not
yet been found, and the surgeons are of opinion that
they did not enter."
Much good, I am convinced, would be derived
from women having recourse in their private quarrels
to sword and pistol ; and I trust the fair sex will take
it into their consideration, and adopt it.
" Yesterday Lady Kitty, and the Countess of ,
met in Hyde Park, the former attended by General
Tarleton, the latter by Colonel Hanger : at the first
discharge, the Countess fainted, and fell into the Co
lonel's arms. The General imagining the Countess
to be killed, persuaded Lady Kitty instantly to make
her escape. On the General's attending the Coun
tess, and her friend the Colonel assuring him she was
not wounded, the General then called for water, and
applied a bottle of salts to her nose ; but George
Hanger, laughing at the General, said, " He would
be shot if he had not something better in his pocket,
that would bring her to immediately !" Knowing the
weakness of the Countess's nerves, he very prudent
ly had provided himself with a dram bottle, giving the
Countess a sip or two, not of gin, which shortly re
covered her, and she gallantly called for her second
pistol. Lady Kitty having fled, prevented this affair
from going greater lengths: it has since been arrang
ed by the seconds, to the mutual honour of both par
ries. This unfortunate affair originated from Lady
Kitty saying publicly, that if the Countess had called
her an" infamous scoundrel, she (the Countess) was an
infamous rascal. Lady Kitty very properly apologiz
ed, and declared, that if the Countess did not intend
75
to call her a scoundrel, she, Lady Kitty, did not in
tend to call the Countess a rascal. George Hanger
was decidedly of opinion that they should be brought
into the field again, and swore most manfully that he
did not understand such logical apologies ; but neither
party being very desirous of meeting again, the affair
was terminated."
" A very serious quarrel took place yesterday, at a
private tea-drinking party, between Lady A and
Lady B . Lady A told Lady B , that her
husband was a cuckhold and a nincompoop. Lady
B did not seem to take the former abuse much
in dudgeon, but she lost all temper on the supposi
tion of the latter, and vowed most solemnly that what
ever her husband might be, he was no nincompoop ;
that it was insulting her delicacy and feeling in the
highest degree, to let loose such a suggestion. From
words they came to blows : in the contest, Lady
B struck Lady A • with the heel of her shoe,
and broke the bridge of her nose. Lady B has
since presented Lady A with a cane, which La
dy A laid gently over her shoulder, which was
judged a sufficient atonement for the injury her Lady
ship received on the projecting feature of the visage."
Ye lovely Cyprians, as you are eminently distin
guished for your attachment to soldiers, any thing
which will be instrumental to the advantage of the ar
my, and to the honour and glory of our country, will,
I flatter myself, meet with your patronage and appro
bation. Many people are of opinion, that there are
as many shades of courage as of beauty; but I differ
widely from them. All Britons are naturally brave,
and I presume equally conspicuous for courage; nor
do I believe that one single shy cock is to be found
in the three kingdoms. Indeed, some few officers
have been found in a ditch in action : but no suspi
cion of cowardice can be attached to such conduct ;
76
they were only wiser than the generality of their com
rades, for discretion is allowed to be the better part of
valour. Indeed, though a man from his infancy be
of a nervous habit of body, the moment he puts on a
red coat, his whole frame is invigorated, and his heart
steeled against the greatest dangers. This infallible
nostrum for relaxed nerves, acts as effectually on the
heart as a strengthening plaster to a relaxed limb, and
is as efficacious to the human frame as firing and blis
tering to a horse ; it braces, makes firm, and brings
the nerves and heart to their natural vigour and tone.
A glass or two of grog taken after a fatiguing march
from Ealing to Acton, is as infallible a military nos
trum to establish true courage, as Dr. Brodum's Bal
sam, and Dr. Godbold's Botanical Syrup, for the cure
of asthmas and consumptions. But the common sol
dier is so stupid and wrong headed, that he cannot
be brought to believe the truth of this, though, to a
man of common sense, it is as intelligible as the Po
pish creed. Nor can he be brought to place the same
degree of confidence, when led to action, in a com
manding officer who has not been exposed to dan
ger, as in one who has seen active service.
As there are many of our generals, and by far the
greatest number of field officers, who never saw a
shot fired in anger in their lives; both for the satis
faction of the common soldier, and for the honour
and interest of my country, I propose that every ge
neral and field officer, who has not seen active service
before they be permitted to take upon them the com
mand of a brigade or regiment, shall be commanded
to walk backwards and forwards for one quarter of an
hour behind a canvas screen, about eight feet high,
placed in front of a battalion of infantry, the men fir
ing all the time as quick as possible at the cloth*.
* This was written in 1798, long before the expedition to
the hlelder ; all officers on that service die uirly ex^moted.
77
The soldiers then will have confidence in the valour
of their commanding officers. Another benefit to the
country would be derived if these proposals were en
forced : We should not then see so many gentlemen
raise regiments, with no intention whatever to go with
them, on active service, who now receive their pay
and do nothing for it. By such wise regulations, all
our generals and field officers would be men of tried
valour, and those who would not submit to undergo
the proof must resign and give up their pay ; which
would occasion a very great diminution in the army
estimates. The Commissary Generals, Quarter-Master Gene
rals, Barrack-Master Generals, Pay-Master Generals,
and their deputies, should all-be compelled to perform
the same ceremony, as it is equally as satisfactory to
the soldier to be fed, quartered, and paid by a brave
man, as to be led to action by one. These gentle
men cannot possibly refuse so trifling a request, con
sidering the great emoluments they gain by their
places, as to be shot at for one quarter of an hour on
ly during their whole lives, when the officer is liable
to be shot at every week or day in the year. 1 should
imagine that no man could be found so wanting to
his own interest as to refuse being made permanent
Commissary General, Ouarter-Master General, or
Barrack-Master General, on such easy terms. I forgot
to mention that a ditch should be dug contiguous to
the screen, about eight feet deep, where the first class
of the Humane Society of surgeons might attend. All
those who are wounded might be permitted to roll
into it; for it would not be fair to fire at them when
they are down.
I must confess that I am a great advocate for the
new pivot manoeuvre, of wheeling backwards, from
the facility of its being performed with such safety in
all broken grounds, and especially in roads where the
7*
waggon ruts are deep, and in felled woods, where
the stumps of trees are left standing, or where the
roots of trees have been grubbed, and the holes not
filled up.
Although; the soldier performs this retrogade ma
noeuvre with perfect ease and safety, and without ever
tumbling down, yet I am of opinion, if he were taught
to dance, particularly all stage steps, it would be of
great benefit to him ; for nothing forms the limbs, or
instructs a man to walk gracefully so well as danc
ing: besides, nothing is more effectual to teach aman
to keep his mouth shut, and his ears and eyes open,
which is so essential to perfect discipline and good
order. I think the soldier might be taught to keep
the step with greater precision in wheeling backward,
if a sharp pointed iron peg, about one inch and a half
long, was fixed in the heel of every soldier's shoe;
then if any man should forget to step backwards with
the proper leg, his comrade before him would be sure
to pin his foot to the ground, which would enable
the adjutant to find out the soldier who was to blame,
that he might be sent to the drill to be perfected. At
present it is very difficult to observe what soldier is
guilty of the irregularity ; for although they often
tread on one another's toes, and break their comrades
shins, they bear the pain, however excruciating, with
silence and wry faces.
" Eyes right," and " Eyes left," are fascinating
and elegant words of command : the old fashioned
expression, " By the right dress, " By the left dress,"
was vulgar and incomprehensible ; besides, it has a
charming effect on the soldier, for it not only teaches
him regularity in his duty, but gives him an agreea
ble facility of squinting, which, when off duty, he
can tum to his advantage, by being able with grea
ter ease and grace to ogle the ladies.
79
I have hitherto endeavoured, as far as it has been
in my power, to connect my ideas, and arrange my
advice for your future happiness, pleasure, and ad
vantage, in order and method ; but as affairs of con
sequence to myself will shortly engage my attention,
and deprive me from giving up anymore of that time,
which, hitherto, I have with so much satisfaction de
voted to your interest, and to the correction of the
immorality and Jacobinsm of the present age, I am
compelled to give my further instructions to you, in
an unconnected and irregular way, just as the ideas
arise in my mind.
First of all, I entreat you, who may perchance have
children, never to permit them to be christened at
home in a punchbowl, or in one of Mr. Wedgwood's
earthen utensils; though I know it to be fashionable
amongst the great. Go you to church with them ;
it is by far more decorous : as for myself, if I had
twenty children, not one of them should be christen
ed but in a river, as it was done of old.
I must confess, I am a great admirer of short waists
and thin clothing : formerly, when the women wore
strong stiff stays and cork rumps, you might as well
sit with your arm round an oaken tree with the bark
on, as round a lady's waist ; but now, as you have
seklom any more covering than your shift and gown
of a cold day, your waist is extremely warm and com
fortable to the feel. Besides, it is salutary to go thin
clad, to let in the ambient heat. The loose attire of
your petticoats and gown is net only graceful, but ve
ry convenient ; it being equally appropriated to the
utility of women of fashion, and women of no fashion ;
it being admirably constructed either for a young la
dy to conceal a big belly, or for a shop-lifter to hide
a bale of goods. I will do you the justice to say, that
in summer you go thin enough clad, as very few of
you wear more than a shift, a thin linen petticoat, and
80
a muslin gown : but in winter, the cold compels you
to hide your shapes more than I can wish for your
sakes, as I am desirous that your beauties should ever
be displayed as far as decency will admit ; therefore,
instead of wearing a dickey*, which most of you very
prudently do in winter, though it totally destroys the
symmetry of your shape, I recommend you, in lieu
of it, to wear a very thin oiled-silk petticoat of a sky-
blue or flesh colour : this is the warmest attire you
can put on, as no air whatever can penetrate it ; and
then it is so thin, that not a dimple or muscle can
escape the eye. Some few of you who are most per
fectly formed, may wear breeches, made to fit you
to the greatest nicety, of flesh-colour oiled silk, and
over which nothing but a thin muslin petticoat and
gown, the transparency of which will shew your
shapes to the greatest advantage, and then you will
not be in danger of catching cold. I really am of
opinion, that many of you have been guilty of an er
ror, in leaving off false pads, especially all those who
are deficient in respect to that without which no wo
man can claim any tolerable degree of perfection.
They were useful and convenient in other respects ;
for, on a Sunday, you might carry your prayer-book
in them on one side, and one volume of my works
on the other, to prevent your falling asleep in church-
time, if the sermon should be very dull and long. A
further benefit many of you who are ill-bred might de
rive from them ; for if you behaved so ill as to be
kicked out of company, the seat of honour could re
ceive no damage.
Elastic false bosoms are much in fashion ; but they
never as yet have been turned to proper advantage.
* A dickey is a short flannej petticoat, reaching down be
low the knee.
81
An ingenious artist might so construct them, that you
might conceal your love-letters in them ; for your mo
thers are all acquainted with the old stale trick of
tucking them under your garters, or in your shoe, and
may search there for them. If they were made of a
competent size, you might carry your favourite squir
rel in one of them, which would he a guard to you
against immodest intruders.
Upon mature deliberation, I think the wigs now
so much in fashion are the safest places to carry your
billet doux j for, let your mother suspect you ever so
much, she cannot be so rude as to pull your wig off
in company, or even to discompose your coffeure.
Fashionable and elegant expressions, when in pub
lic company, ye lovely Cyprians, are not only agree
able, but denote a good education, and shew that
you have kept gpod company. Be mindful of the
following, which you may apply as the conversation
will admit you to bring them forward. " Patch,
" What a bore," That's the barber," « Go it,"
" The tippy and the twaddle," " What a swell,"
" Keep moving," " All my eye, Betty Martin,"
" Go along bob ;" and above all things, never forget
when asked any question which you do not choose to
answer, to sell them a bargain.
Ye lovely Cyprians, Father Foigard, (with whom
I agree,) says, " Receiving money before-hand .is a
bribe ; but if afterwards taken, it is only a gratifica
tion." Be, I pray you, mindful of his instructions.
There are many patents for the cure of smoaky
chimnies, I mean of houses, which are infallible; but
it has hitherto puzzled the ingenuity of man to cure a
natural smoaky chimney. Cardamum comfits, melli
fluous and odoriferous draughts, may for a few hours
conceal the defect, but it can never be for any time
effectually prevented, but by cutting off the head,
L
82
which,' though rather a novel and dangerous opera
tion, except performed by a very skilful artist, may
be performed, and you may enjoy every faculty of
nature except seeing, hearing, speaking, and smel
ling ; for the particulars of which I refer you to a
book written by an ingenious acquaintance of mine*.
Nothing sets a woman off so much, or makes her
appear more graceful, than an elegant and dignified
manner of walking : to plant the foot well, and turn
your toes out, is the first of all accomplishments.
iEneas knew his mother by the dignity of her walk,
before she spoke to him ; vera incessu patuil dea.
For the divine majesty of woman is displayed in her
very step. Nothing is more disgusting than to see a
woman, let her be ever so handsome, hurrying on
with her toes turned in, like a duck walking down a
gutter in a thunder storm. You that are not natural
ly endowed with this happy accomplishment, should
take a dancing master to teach you to walk grace
fully; though I think a drill sergeant is more capa
ble of setting you well on your haunches. Besides,
if you are militarily inclined, which is the rage a-
mongst the ladies of the present day, he can instruct
you in many useful evolutions; can teach you the
Indian way of fighting ; how the covered way may be
attacked and defended, how to batter a breach, 01
storm a fortress, to draw the sword with skill, and to
fire in all attitudes without winking or blinking.
To please you, ye lovely Cyprians, I have pur
posely avoided the regular form of Latin grammar
and syntax, which must have been extremely dis
gusting to you. All mood and figure work abound
ing with well-turned periods and priscan purities, re-
* Doctor Kentish's Treatise on the Use of the Guillotine.
83
semble too much a Mosaic pavement and Dutch
garden, all cut out in squares, and divided geometri
cally ; the regularity of which is offensive to the eye.
The reader will distinguish as great capability in
my writings, as the celebrated Mr. Brown expressed
on viewing wild, irregular featured land, which was
to be laid out in pleasure gardens*. Besides, too
much attention to grammar would have so cramped
my pen, I could not have written with any degree of
pleasure or satisfaction I freely confess, that it is as
painful a task for me to write and speak grammatical
ly, as it would be to study walking by the rules of
equilibrium. I have often, ye lovely Cyprians,
thought what infinite service and pleasure man would
derive from being able to fly. As there are flying
stage coaches, flying broad wheel waggons, flying ar
tillery, and flying dillies, I am astonished that human
ingenuity has not found out the art to enable man to
fly, who is by so many hundred degrees lighter than
the above machines, which all fly. I have often la
mented that I was not born with wings. What ser
vice I could have rendered my country ! No admiral
or general could have served without my assistance •
and when the rivers are frozen, I could carry dis
patches to and from the continent. But the greatest
of all satisfactions and pleasures would be flying in
at your windows, ye lovely Fair, in a dark night, un
observed. On mature reflection, I am inclined to
think that very few of you, however, would be be
nefited by my flying abilities, as from real charity and
compassion I certainly should be induced to spend
* Mr. Brown, eminently distinguished for laying out and
improving pleasure ground,' when he found he could beauti
fy a park or pleasure garden, said, " There was great capa
bility in the ground.'' From which expression he acquired the
nick-name ot Capability Browxi.
84
my time abroad, among the beautiful nuns in the con
vents, and the lovely fair Circassians locked up in the
Eastern seraglios. Our women have opportunities
enough of melting their lovers, as you well know,
while those unfortunate women have no one to sym
pathize in their distress. Then, what a gallant and
charitable exploit it would be to fly away with One
of the grand TurkV beautiful Circassian mistresses,
carry her home to her friends, pass a few days with
her; return and carry off another, and another, until
the whole seraglio was cleared. This might be done
by exercising precaution in my expeditions, and tak
ing the advantage of a very dark night. The Mufti,
when cousulted by the enraged Sultaun, would for
certain declare, that Mahomet had taken them into
the third Heaven, and the father of the faithful would
be satisfied.
Ye lovely Cyprians, I have ever submitted with
the most perfect obedience to the laws of arrest in
every shape, for two cogent reasons : first, for the
sake of society, and also not without some degree of
dread of entering into a correspondence with Thomas
Tullis, Esq.* for it would not be very agreeable to
be troubled even with one single line from that gen
tleman ; conscious that the wise, just, and pious le
gislators of our country could never suffer any law to
exist, which they could not perfectly reconcile to their
consciences, and which, when properly considered,
was in the smallest degree oppressive. But, second
ly, religious motives have induced me more implicitly
to yield to law processes and expences for debt, as I
find that the two great processes by which mankind
is either stripped to his last coat and shirt, and every
thing but what he has on his body, or is cast into
The hangman, vulgarly called Jack Ketch.
8'5
prison, are both sanctioned by Scripture : for in read
ing St. Matthew, chap. v. verse the fortieth, you will
find it written, " And if any man will sue thee at the
law and take away thy coat, let him have thy cloak
also." This undeniably is an absolute sanction for
all actions at fieri facias, which attach all -goods and
Wearing apparel. Again, in Matthew, chap. v. verses
25th and 26th, we read, "Agree with thine adversa
ry, (adversary certainly means an attorney) quickly
whilst thou art in the way with him, lest at any time
the adversary deliver -thee to the judge, and the judge
deliver thee to the officer, and thou be cast into pri
son." Here again we find a positive sanction for all
cases zvhich take the body in execution. By the above
texts from Scripture, you will plainly observe, that
the law in these days act as progressively, step by
step, as in the days of St. Matthew; for the lawyer
(your adversary) first sends a bailiff to take you ; he
locks you up in a spunging-house ; from thence you
are committed to Newgate, which you may avoid, if
you can afford it, by being removed by Habeas Cor
pus to the King's Bench. In the first case, (fieri
facias,) I have been more than obedient to the letter
of the Scriptural law ; for, when the bailiffs came for
my coat and cloak to my house, they also had my
stockings, shoes, shirts, and breeches ; to which I
submitted with all humility; although it would have
been very distressing to me, and a wonderful loss ; for
those very clothes would have been sold at public
auction for a trifle when compared with their real va
lue to me, as it would have cost me at least one hun
dred and fifty pounds to replace them, for a debt of
forty-eight pounds; had they not perchance been giv
en by the sheriff's officer to my friend Mr. Graham
the auctioneer, who generously paid the money for me,
and preserved my clothes ; for pay the debt I abso
lutely could not at that time, nor could I liquidate it
for many raorAhs with my generous friend Giaham.
86
Here both the lawyer and Mr. Graham verified the
Scriptures: but the world I trust will give the greater
credit to the latter; for the lawyer, when I was help
less, took me in; but Mr. Graham, when I was nak
ed, clothed me. I cannot help, but with a considera
ble degree of satisfaction and pleasure, remarking
the very moderate costs on this action of forty-eight
pounds, they not amounting to much above one-half
of the original debt, which I think I may say, and- 1
am certain was a bill given by me for twenty-six or
thirty pounds, not exceeding that sum ; for, in many
suits that have been brought against me, I have often
paid costs, amounting to within a trifle of the absolute
original debt ; of which I have given the reader some
authentic specimens, where I have paid nearly one
hundred per cent, costs of suit to the lawyer, and
hardly ever less than fifty per cent.
What advantage is it to you, ye lovely Cyprians, if
a man possesses the most transcendent abilities, and
will not afford you his counsel and friendship ? Mine
are of a very inferior degree ; but such as they are, I
have given them to you spontaneously : nor have I
made any conditions with you ; yet, I must confess
that it is not my intent to give you this advice gratis,
nor have I pleaded your cause without a retaining fee :
for I have long had the satisfaction of being the cham
ber counsel of many of you.
Let others plough the main in quest of gold, and
ransack India's burning soil in search of gems ; or
brave the winged messenger of death, to grasp that
phantom, Honour, in the tented field. My bark shall
spread her swelling sails, and bear me to that happy
isle, where reigns in loveliness attired the Paphian
queen; then will 1 bend the knee and sacrifice with
her sportive nymphs on Cytherea's altar, and pay due
homage to the Queen of Love ; for, to lovely woman,
and nought but her on earth, will I pay homage.
87
Attentive as I have been to your interests in this
world, yet I should be deficient in true regard to you,
if I were to study only your temporal welfare and hap
piness. Life is but a span long; but I have employ
ed every ability I am master of, to render your short
passage through a world fraught with misery, as com
fortable as the nature of things will admit.
Now, it is my serious and solemn advice, for the
sake of your immortal part, to let your leisure hours
be devoted to the Tabernacle, where, with due atten
tion to the salutary admonitions of the disciples of the
pious Doctor Squintum, you may speedily be regen
erated, be received as babes of grace, and admitted
to those feasts of pure seraphic love, where none
but the truly penitent are admitted ; and you may then
defy the cloven-footed gentleman and all his works.
It is not my practice to calumniate any one; but you
know it to be true that he is a very scurvy, rascaljy
acquaintance, who, if you continue any connection
with him, will not leave you a rag — no, not a single
rag to your backs.
For the more speedy accomplishing' your regenera
tion, you should pay attention also to the private lec
tures of the foot soldier in the guards, Swaddling
John, and Captain Joyce, formerly a boatswain's mate
on board a man of war; but, above all, I wish to draw
your attention to the Work of the pious Doctor Hunt
ington, intitled Huntingdon's Bank of Faith.
This pious divine was formerly a coal-heaver, after
wards acobler, then a gardener. The inferior situation
in life thathe occupied can be no disparagement to him
in your minds, for poverty and obscurity were his on
ly faults ; yet, in the most painful distress, he never
deserted the service in which he was engaged. Let
me entreat you to attend to this pious man's Work,
his Bank of Faith ; walk in the paths he has trodden,
and have but the same faith which he tells you he ever
had in the worst of times, and you will be sure to suc
ceed and prosper. It will not be possible, then, you
shall ever want either food, raiment, or any other ne
cessary, to make this transitory life comfortable.
You will observe, in perusing the extracts which
I shall select from this pious Christian's works, how
his faith was rewarded ; for, although he never provi
ded for his own sustenance or clothing, or that of his fa
mily or wife, and let the morrow ever provide for
itself, the Power whom he served never failed to send
him every requisite necessary for his support. When
he was absolutely starving, he was suddenly furnished
with partriges, rabits, and money. When tired, he un
expectedly received a horse to ride on, and at the same
time a tailor appeared to measure him for a pair of
leathern breeches to defend his posteriors from excoria
tion on horseback, when, in his zealous exertions to
preach the word of God, he had worn out his worsted
small clothes, and exposed his shameful parts, (to
use an expression of Mr. Burke,) to the ridicule of
the unholy multitude.
His pious wife also, when she wanted a dish of tea,
and had no money to purchare it, had but to order
the maid to boil the kettle, and, before the water
was thoroughly warm, some ministering angel sent
her tea: all this she acquired by having faith. Be
mindful, ye amiable Cyprians, that without faith you
can have no hopes, and without perfect faith every
thing may be obtained, as the pious Mr. Huntingdon
has gravely and gratefully informed us.
If you possess the same inward feeling, you need
not despair of receiving, from the same beneficient
hands, beef, mutton, tea, petticoats, and gin, which
you, of course, prefer to such a washy vaperous beve
rage as tea.
89
I shall now request yow attention to the following
extracts from this pious Christian's Works : I wish
to imprint them on your minds, that you may know
what benefits may be derived on earth from true faith.
The truth and assertions of this pious man, this spi
ritual shepherd, who gathereth together the sheep
who have wandered away from the sheepfold, and
fed on the wormwood and rue of vice and ungodli
ness, instead of the clover and cinque-foil of holiness,
cannot be doubted. I command you, therefore, ye
lovely Cyprians— I command you, by the sincere in
terest I take in your welfare, that you will not only
study this pious man's Works, his Bank of Faith, but
have faith— -aye, and faith in him, and in every thing
he relates ; for without it you cannot expect to be
regenerated or saved.
Extracts from Huntington's Bank of Faith.
" As the life of faith consists in hearing the cross of
Christ, we must oot expect to be long without tri
als. — -Providence soon frowned on me again, and I
got behind-hand as usual. This happened* too, at a
time when my wife was lying-in, destitute of those
necessaries of life which are needful at such times*—
The nurse came and told her there was no tea in the
house.-— My wife replied, ' Set the kettle on if there
is not.' — The nurse [whose name was Ann Webb, a
daughter of mine in the faith, and the first soul that
God called me) said, ' You have no tea, nor can you
get any.' — My wife replied, " Set on the kettle.' — ¦
She did so ; and, before it boiled, a woman (with
whom at that time we had no acquaintance) came to
the door, and told the nurse that she had broiaght
some tea as a present for my wife. Thus God, who
shewed Moses a stick to sweeten the waters of.Ma-
rah, sent a little tea to bitter the water in my dame's
kettle. Soon after my dame got over her lying-in,
M
90
tidings were brought to us that a gospel minister was
coming down to Kingston to preach. an evening lec
ture, and to break bread to the congregation. I had
a great desire to go to the table, and also to have my
child baptized at the same time: but, as I never
could go from the Lord's table without offering my
mite, and at this time had no money in my pocket,
I did not go. However, I begged of God to send
me a little money, some way or other, for this pur
pose; which I verily believed he would. So I wait
ed till within half an hour of the time to go, and
then began to think I should be disappointed: but,
just as unbelief set me to murmuring and complain
ing, I heard a man ride up to my door as I was in my
study at the back part of the house; and, when he
rode away again, I called to my wife to get ready to
go. ' Get ready ! said she, ' why you know we have
no money !' — ' Poh ! poh !' said I, 5 God has sent the
money!' — And true enough it was that God had sent
it ; for all the business the man had with us was to
give us some money ! Surely it was God that sent him,
and none else ; for, if the hairs of our head are all
numbered, we have reason to believe that our wants
are; and if God keeps our hairs from falling to the
•ground, he certainly supplies our wants too. Thus
the good God and Saviour, who made a fish produce
money for an earthly tribute, sent the man with three
shillings as an offering to God and of his own we of
fered to him." P. 73 — 75.
" My year being now expired, I wanted a new par
sonic livery; wherefore, in humble prayer, 1 told my
mosthlessed Lord and Master that my year was out,
and my apparel bad — that I had no where to go for
these things but to him ; and, as he had promised to
' give his servants food and raiment, I hoped he would
fulfil his promise to me, though one of the worst of
them. Seeing no immediate signs of my livery coming,
?!
I began to, omit praying for it ; though God says;
' For all these things I will be inquired of by the
house, of Israel, that I may do these things for them.'
It fell out one day that I called on a poor man, who
complained that he could not attend the word of God
for want of apparel. This drove me to pray, again
for my new suit of clothes, that I might give my old
ones to him. A few days after this I was desired to
call at a gentleman's house near London. Indeed it
had been impressed on my mind for six weeks before^
that God- would use that gentleman as an instrument
to furnish me. with. my next suit. And so 'it fell out ;
for, when I cafled on him, upon leaving his house he
went a, little way with me; and, while we were on
the road, he said, ' I think you want a new suit of
clothes.' I answered, 'Yes, Sir, I do; and I know
a poor man that would be very glad of this which I
have on, if my Master would furnish me with another.'
When we parted} he desired me to call on him the
next morning, which I accordingly did, when he sent
a tailor into the. room, and generously told me to be
measured for what clothes I chose, and a great coat
also. When I got the neio, I furnished the poor man
with my old suit. This was the fourth suit of appa
rel that my Master, gave me. in this providential man
ner, in answer to the prayer of faith. This God, who
kept Israel's clothes from waxing, old, though in con
stant use for forty years, gave, me a new suit every
year." P. 79, 80.
" I now preached at London, at Richmond, at
Cobham, at Wooking, at Worplesdon, and at Farn-
ham in Surrey. This I found too much for my
strength. However, I continued for a considerable
time, till at last I was generally laid up sick about
oi.ce a month. I found I had great need of a horse;
but feared I should not be able to keep it, if I had
one. However, it happened that I had a very severe
92
week's work to do ; I was to go fo Waking and
preach on the Lord's day morning, to Worplesdon in
the afternoon, and from thence to Farrfham in the
Evening ; to preach at Petworth in Sussex on the Mon
day, at Horsham on the Tuesday, at Margaret-street
chapel on the Wednesday, and at Ditton on the
Thursday, evening : biit before I could reach Ditton
on the Wednesday, I Was so far spent that I thought
I must have lain down oft the road ; yet, with much
difficulty, I reached home, and then I had to go to
London. Finding myself wholly unable to perform
all this labour, I went to prayer, and besought God
to give me more strength, less work, or a horse. I
Used my prayers as gunners use their Sztivels, turning
them every way as the various cases required. I then
hired a horse to ride to town ; and, when I came
there, went to put him up at Mr. Jackson's livery-
stables, near the chapel, in Margaret-street; but the
ostler told me that they had not room to take him in.
I asked if his master was in the yard. He Said, Yes.
I desired to see him ; and be told me he could not
take the horse in. I was then going out of the yard,
When he stepped after me, and asked if I was the
person that preached at Margaret-street chapel. I
told him I was. He burst into tears, saying, he
would send one of his own horses out and take mine
ift ; and informed me of his coming one night to hear
me Out of curiosity, because he had been informed
that I had been a coal-heaver. He told me that, un
der the first sermon, God shewed him the insufficien
cy of his own wretched righteousness-— the carnality
and hypocrisy of his religion — the true state of his
soul — and the necessity of the spirit and grace of
Christ Jesus the Lord to change his heart if ever he
was saved ; and blessed God for sending me there.
This was good news to me. He also said that some
of my friends bad been gathering money to buy me a
horse, and that he gave something towards him. Di-
9*
Vectly after; I found the horse was bought and paid
for; and one person gave me a guinea to buy a bridle,
another gave me two whips, a third gave me some
things necessary for the stable, another trusted me for
a saddle— -and here was a full answer to my prayer:
so I mounted my horse and rode home, and he turned
out as good an animal as ever was rode. I believe
this horse was the gift of God, because he tells me
in his word that all the beasts of the forests are his,
and so are the cattle on a thousand hills. I have of
ten thought that, if my horse could have spoken, he
would have had more to say than Balaam's ass ; as he
might have said, ' I am an answer to my master's
prayers — / live by my master's faith, travel with mys
teries, and suffer persecution, but I do not know for
what." P. 83 — 85.
" Having now had my horse for some time, and
riding a great deal every week, I soon wore my
breeches out, as they were not fit to ride in. I hope
the reader will excuse my mentioning the word
breeches, which I should have avoided, had not this
passage of scripture obtruded into my mind, just as I
had resolved in my own thoughts not to mention this
kind providence of God. — ' And thou shalt make
them linen .breeches to cover their nakedness ; from
the loins even unto the thighs shall they reach. And
they shall be upon Aaron and upon his sons when
they come into the tabernacle of the congregation,
or when they come near unto the altar to minister in
the holy place ; that they bear not iniquity, and die.
It shall be a statute for ever unto him and his seed af
ter him.' Exod.xxviii. 42, 43. By which, and
three others, (namely, Ezek. xliv. 18; Lev. vi. 10;
and Lev. xvi. 4.) I saw that it was no crime to
mention the word breeches, nor the way in which
God sent them to me ; Aaron and his sons being cloth
ed entirely by Providence ; and as God himself con-
94
descended to give orders what they should be made
of, and how they should be cut. And I believe the
same God ordered mine, as I trust it will appear in
the following history.
" The scripture tells us to call no man master, for
one is our master; even Christ. I therefore told my
most bountiful and ever-adored Master what I want
ed ; and he, who stripp'd Adam' and Eve of their fig-
leaved aprons, and made coats of skins and clothed
them ; and who clothes the grass of the field, which'
to-day is and to-morrow is cast into the oven ; must
clothe us, or we shall soon go naked : — and so Israel
found it, when God took away his wool and his flax,
which he gave to cover their nakedness, and which
they prepared for. Baal ; for which iniquity were their
skirts discovered, and their heels made bare. Jer.
xiii. 22.
" / often made very free in my prayers with my in
valuable Master for this favour \ but he still kept me
so amazingly poor that I could not get them at any
rate. At last I was determined to go to a friend of
mine at Kingston, who is of that branch of business,
to bespeak a pair, and to get him to trust me until
my Master sent me money to pay him. I was that
day going to London, fully determined to bespeak
them as I rode through the town. However, when
1 passed the shop, I forgot it; but when I came to
London, I called on Mr. Croucher, a shoemaker in
Shepherd's Market, who told me a parcel was left
there for me, but what-it was he knew not. I open
ed it, and behold there was a pair of leather breeches,
with a note in them ! the substance of which was, to ,
the best of my remembrance, as follows :
' I have sent you a pair of breeches, and hope they
95
will fit. I beg your acceptance of them"; and if they
Want any alteration, leave in a note what the altera
tion is, and I will call in a few days and alter them.
J. S.'
" I tried them on, and they fitted as well as if I
had been measured for them : at which I was amaz
ed, having never been measured by any leather
breeches-maker in London. I wrote an answer to
the note, to this effect :
'Sir,
' I received your present, and thank you for it. I
was going to order a pair of leather breeches to be
made, because I did not know till now that my Mas
ter had bespoke them of you. They fit very well,
which fully convinces me that the same God, who
moved thy heart to give, guided thy hand to cut; be
cause he perfectly knows my size, having clothed me
In a miraculous manner for near five years. When
you ire in trouble, Sir, I hope you will tell my Mas
ter of this, and what you have done for me, and he
will repay you with honour.'
" This is as near as I am able to relate it"; and I
added, ' I cannot make out /. S. unless I put I for Israel
ite indeed, and S. for Sincerity ; because you did not
sound a trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do.'
" About that time twelvemonth I got another pair
of breeches in the same extraordinary manner, with
out my ever being measured for them." P. 85; — 88.
" One providence I had almost forgot. We were
at that time very badly off for bed^ and bedding: my
children were no better provided than the Saviour
when he laid in a manger, for they slept upon bags
of hay : but prayer at a long run brought in these
things a-lso. Some of my most intimate acquaintances
96
knew how I was tried in this respect, though I never
made it known to any body who was capable of help
ing me out of my trouble. But one night, after I had
done preaching at Richmond, a person invited me
home to his house, and shewed me a large bundle
tied up, saying it was for me. I asked who the do
nor was ; he replied, ' You are not to know that.' I
carried it home, when, lo ! it proved to be bedding,
and the very things I stood so much in need of!"
P. 91.
" Perceiving that the Lord approved of a bold,
though not of a presumptuous beggar, agreeable- to
his word, ' Let us come boldly unto the throne of
grace,' &x. I boldly asked him the favour, and per
severed in it, until I was one day informed by a friend
that four or five pious people were coming on such a
day from London to visit me. Then my faith told me
I should soon have the bed. Accordingly they came,
and we had some comfortable conversation together.
Toward evening they departed, giving me four gui
neas. O ! what Christian in his right mind would
murmur and complain at his poverty, when with a
watchful eye, he sees such liberal supplies poured
forth from the inexhaustible stores of Providence !
Thus God, who provided a comfortable lodging for
Elisha the prophet, provided me ' a bed, a table, a
stool, and a candlestick.' 2 Kings iv. 10.
" I was determined to keep this money for a bed ;
and therefore went to a good man in London, and
bespoke one ; which he very soon sent me, with a
rug also, and a pair of very good blankets. Soon af
ter I called to pay him for it ; when he told me to pay
his clerk, who gave me a receipt for the same; but
afterwards the gentleman went a Jittle way with
me, and at his departure gave me all the money back
again. How sweet are temporal mercies, when re
ceived by those who are under the influence of grace!
97
when they are seen to come from a covenant with
God and Father, in answer to the simple prayer of
faith." P. 92, 93.
" But when I got about half over the comirion, it
came suddenly into my mind to go out of the' horse-
road into a little narrow track, which leads over the
hills, between the Hand-post and the Bath-house. I
could gain but very little ground by this, nor do I re
member that I had ever gone that way before; but I
soon found what this impression meant ; for there was
to be a battle fought between a stoat, or Weasel, and
a large rabbit. The stoat, or Weasel, was to fight the
battle and to win the field, and I was to take the
prey. So I took up my rabbit, and gladly carried
him home ; and it proved as fine a one as I ever saw,
being quite in season, in every sense of the "word, for
we had nothing but bread in the house.
" This occurrence happened before I received the
horse. But I cannot recollect every circurhstance so
as to range it in its proper place, my memory being
naturally bad. Hived in this manner ft)r seven or
eight year together, and every day afforded some pro
vidence or trial.
" My dame about this time was pregnant, and not
far from her lying-in. She gave me a large catalogue of
the necessaries that she should want against that time.
1 told her I had no money, nor was there any signs
of my having any, and we could not get them with
out. She went on in suspence this way, till she ex
pected her time every day, and began at last to fret
amazingly. I told her 1 thought that God tried her
thus, because she was remiss in the blessed privilege
of private prayer. I also remarked to her, that God
would be inquired of by us, that he might do these
things for us, and that, if she did not pray for them,
she was not like to have them. I believe this drove
N
98
my ckme to prayer; for soon afier this there was a
parcel sent from Lambeth, another from Kingston,
another from Richmond, and a few things from some
neighbours near.r home. I now asked the old wo
man if she thought she had got enough. She replied,
' Yes, and more than enough. W God had exceeded
all her desires; for she had feared that she should not
get money to buy the stuff to make up her little things ;
and that, if she did get it, it would have been so late
that she should not have had time to make them :
' but God,' said she, ' lias sent them ready made.'
So Mary was very well pleased, and richly supplied-
—And I think, for thiee or four births successively,
the Aim ;ghty raised up one Dorcas here, and another
there, to provide for my dame against her lying-in."
P. no, fii.
" At another time, when Providence had been ex
ercising my faith and patience till the cupboard was
quite empty, in answer to simple praver hesent ong
of the largvst hams that I ever saw. Indeed I saw
clearly thatl had nothing to do but to pray, to study,
and to preach ; for God took care for me, and my fa
mily also, agreeable to his own promise." P. 125.
"After I had preached there a few times, it came
to pass one evening, when 1 had finished my sermon,
that a person came to inform me that a woman (who
was lately taken very ill, and was apparently near
death) desired to see me. I accordingly went; and,
when I came to her bedside, asked her if she had
sent for me. She replied, ' Yes.' I asked her what
she had sent for me to do. She said, to pray by her.
I asked her what I was to pray for — that she might
be raised up again ? She replied, ' No ; pray God to
give resignation to his will, and that he may not de
part from me.' I asked her if she was sure the Lord
was with her. She said, 'Yes.' She now gave me a
very sweet account of the operations of the Holy
99
Ghost, and of the precious liberty which he proclaim
ed by the revelation and application of Christ crucified
to her understanding, mind,, and conscience. These'
tidings made my bowels yearn. O! the conversion of
such souls are greater riches to me than all the trea
sures of Egypt ! God in mercy soon after raised her
up again ; and she attended my ministry for about
two years, appearing a most amiable Christian. She
always sat with her head down, and heard me with all
the attention imaginable; and, when she had got her
portion, like Hannah, she would set off without either
looking or speaking to any body, as if she suspected
every one that spoke to her to be a robber of her con
science. Indeed she was no' bastard — she was ifiy ozvii
daughter — she loved a- private religion, that lay be-
tvveen Christ crucified and her own conscience ; and
I believe she kept her day-book very strictly. Her
name is Stuart. I dearly loved her soul in the bozvcls
of Christ, as / had begotten her, and had sorely tra
vailed for her." P. 143^-145.
" A good gentleman, with whom I had but little
acquaintance, and of whom I bought a load of tim
ber, sent it me in with a bill and receipt in full, as a
present to the Chapel of Providence. — Another good
man came with tears in his eyes, and blessed me, and
desired to paint my pulpit, desk, &c. as a present to
the chapel — Another person gave half a dozen chairs
for the vestry; and my friends, Mr. and Mrs.
Lyon, furnished me with a tea-chest well stored,
and a set of china. — My good friends Mr. and
Mrs. Smith furnished me with a very handsome
bed, bedstead, and all its furniture and necessa
ries, that I might not be under the necessity of walk
ing home in the cold winter nights. — A daughter of
mine in the faith gave me a looking-glass for my chap
el study .—Another friend gave'me my pulpit-cushion,
and a book-case- for' my' study. — Another gave me a
100
book-case for the vestry.— And my good friend Mr-
E. saemed to level all his displeasure at the devil;
for he was in hopes I should be enabled, through the
gracious arm of the Lord, to cut Rahab in pieces;
thereibre he furnished me with a sword of the Spirit
— a new Bible, with Morocco binding and silver
clasps." P. 148, 149.
" However, the Almighty condescended to stop
the rapid spreading of this disease by a singular cir
cumstance. I received the following note from en
unknown friend :
' Mr. Anti-Arminius's free-grace love to Mr.
Huntington, begs his acceptance of a dish of dead
men's brains ; he believes most of them are of the
.evangelical family; they will be with him in a day or
two : he is desired to ask no questions of the bearers.
' Dead-man's Place,' &c.
" What these dead men's brains were, I could not
conjecture ; but suspected something to be sent by
way of contempt, as the doctrines which God had
taught me are point blank against Arminianism. How-
belt, in a day or two the dead men's brains arrived in
a very large packing-case, brought by two chairmen;
which I at first refused to take in, suspecting an Ar-
minian cheat; however, I opened the wooden scull,
examined the brains, and found them to be three or
four hundred volumes of divinity, geography, history,
&c. " A few days afterwards he was pleased to send
me another dish of brains, or a second course ; which
he informed me, by note, consisted of some good and
some bad; and so I found them; for, among others,
were the tracts of the irreverent Dr. Priestley, clothed
in a suit of red Morocco, embroidered with gold. I
had not read much of him before his priestly craft
101
greatly disgusted me. I stripped him out of his coat
of many .colours, and served it as, I think, Christ will
serve the author; that is, I cut it asunder, and ap
pointed it a portion in the fire, as the Lord will do
with all hypocrites and unbelievers. I confess I was
much displeased to find some precious old authors,
who were administering comfort to the people of God,
.with nothing but a sheep's-skin jacket about them ;
while the Doctor, that sworn enemy to the God of ar
mies, (busy in undermining and destroying that com
fort), was strutting about with an embroidered uni
form! ' Ah, Doctor!' thought I, ' I will put this scar
let suit on one of these old warriors who have been
good soldiers of Jesus Christ; they shall walk in em
broidery, for they are worthy.' There were a few
more sly hypocrites crept in among them, to whom I
gave house-room until I found them out, when I sent
them bag and baggage after the Doctor." P. 157, 158.
" Reader I could have mentioned many more bles
sings which came to me in a way of Providence; but
as 1 have recited, perhaps, too many of them already,
I have here given thee only a few fathoms of heaven
ly meditation, with which the God of all grace enabled
me to sound this mystery in a fit of sickness that be
fell me at Thames Ditton. Then it was that I re
ceived the greatest part of this consistent chain; the
links of which kept every faculty of my soul, and eve
ry thought of my heart, so delighted and entertained,
that I sat down a most willing, submissive, and de
lighted captive, at the foot of my prevailing lover and
almighty conqueror." P. 172.
The above extracts, which I have taken from the
righteous book, written by that pious coal-heaver,
cobler, and divine, Doctor Huntington, intitled, Hunt-
ington"s Bank of Faith, I most cordially recommend
to your attention, ye lovely Cyprians! By them you
102
will be taught how to wrestle with Heaven ; but re
member, you must use your prayers as gunners use
their swivels*, turning them every way as your various
cases require, or they will have but little effect ; and
you must positively leave off dancing, for that, he in
forms you, in page 27 and 28 of his pious book, "' is
just as serviceable a net to ruin souls as devils could
invent." Observe, when you pray for any thing in
which you are considerably interested, that you go un
der" a hedge to pray, cut a stick half through, bend it
down, come back, look at it, and praise God it th<£
favour you ask is granted. At another time you mos*
go into your tool-house in the garden, and wrestle hard
with God. This pious man never prayed for arty
thing but he informs you the Lord sent it him. The
Lord killed carps, eels, partridges and rabbits for him;
to feed his children with. When he had nothing lefr
to eat, nor any money to buy any victuals, the Lord
took away his appetite for three or four days. And
at another time, where he knew there- was no food in
the house, he looked in the cupboard, and found that
his heavenly master had sent him a large ham. His
prayers are so substantially efficacious, that whatever
he requests by prayer is sent him1; not only clothes*
of every sort for him and his wife, but even the mi
nutest articles of life, such as bedding, stools^ candle
sticks, whips, looking-glasses, tables, tea, sugar, &c.
&c. But, above all, I charge you, ye lovely Cypri
ans! be mindful how he got his leathern breeches, as
it must give yon great satisfaction. If you can be as
well fitted for a pair as -this pious coal-heaver, eobler,
and divine was, without any tailor taking measure of
you, your modesty will never be put to the blush.
Kowl cannot see any reason whatever why you should
* Vide Huntington's expression's, page 83, in his Bank
of Faith.
108
not obtain all the various benefits, gifts, and advanta
ges which were granted to this pious coal-heaver and
cobler, provided you have equal faith with him; for
without faith nothing is to be obtained.
I have given you, ye lovely Cyprians, every instruc
tion in my power for the happiness of your souls and
bodies in this world ; and, to secure it in both instan
ces, you cannot do better than follow the precepts
laid down by this righteous coal-heaver and cobler, in
his book intitled, Huntington's Bank of Faith. If you,
ye lovely Cyprians, have but equal faith with this pi
ous man, every thing in life, that you can possibly de
sire to have, you are plainly shewn how to obtain, ex
cepting gin ; and as 1 do not recollect, in any part
of this enlightened and pious work, mention being
made of his ever having obtained that wholesome li
quor either by faith or prayer, I confess I am at a loss
how to instruct you relative to the acquiring of this
liquor, except by purchase. However, should you,
by the means which he employed, obtain a superflui
ty of clothe.8, our father's brother* will always indulge
you with the loan of a trifle on a pledge; and as this
liquor is so salutary and conducive to your health as
well as to your happiness, every exertion must be used
to obtain it; therefore, mind the directions this pious
man gives how you are to obtain any thing you most
ardently wish for: be mindful, then, to wrestle hard,
and turn yotir prayers in every direction as gunners
turn their swivels. This direction, strictly observed,
will, when you are once brought to believe it, obtain
every thing you wi>h — an excellent and useful endow
ment which this pious coal-heaver and cobler was
blessed with ; and if you, ye lovely Cyprians, can but
arrive at the same proficiency, you will find it of the
.greatest advantage. It will prevent your passing ma-
* Our unc!e.
104
ny unhappy hours when the green-eye'd monster in
flames your heart. Whenever this pious man's wife
went to glean in the harvest-fields, not informing him
by any means which way she intended to go, his piety
taught him to go directly straight to the place where
she was; which was equally the same, he informs you
whether she had gone north, south, east, or vest.
Now, if, by faith, wrestling hard, and throwing your
prayers in every direction a,-, gunners turn their swi
vels, and by leaving off dancing, (for that he positively
forbids as a deadly sin), you can arrive at the same
perfection in finding any person you immediately wish
to see, you will be the happiest mortals on earth; for,
if the captain or your flashman should ever go astray,
you will immediately know on what part of the town
to dash after him, and be enabled to take vengeance
on your rival's countenance. If you find him paying
his court to another female, the gay deceiver can have
nothing to plead in excuse, and you will get rid of a
gentleman who, at the best of times, is but a trouble
some guest. Make yourselves, therefore, I entreat
you, perfect mistresses of this pious man's writings,
and tread in his paths with unerring attention: after
which you may study two other pious Works, Bun-
yan's Shove to a Heavy-breeched Christian, and Hea
ven taken by Storm by a Repentant Sinner; with the
assistance of these two, in addition to the pious Hunt
ington's Bank oLFaith, you must shortly get into the
high road to heaven, from which if "you ever wander,
" the devil himself (to use his expression) must be
within your bodies, and Rahab have full possession of
your soul."
Be mindful that you constantly frequent the Ta
bernacle, in preference to the Church of your estab
lished religion, and in preierence to the rational
termons preached by "bishops, deans, and other
of the established '"'Church of
105
England: seek far and wide the pious and in
structive harangues of the following enlightened and
righteous men, who all serve in the bowels of
Christ*, whether they deliver their pious instructions
and exhortations to repentance and faith either in tub
or pulpit, in tabernacle, or in the high-ways, in a cart,
or from an hay-cock :
Rev. Mr. Norman, Dealer in old clothes.
Mr. Wilson, Grinder.
Mr. Timothy Hands, Sheep's head seller.
Mr. Sanders, Coach-painter.
Mr. Godston, Pressman,
Mr. O , Mangle- maker.
Mr. Downes, Glazier.
Mr. Hiskup, Footman to T. G. Esq.
( Tooth-drawer, periwig*
Mr. Stanton, < maker, and phleboto-
(^ mist.
Mr. Party, Breeches maker.
The wisdom, science, education, and learning of
the clergy of our established Church, can by no means
he put in competition with the superior talents and
abilities of the above-named pious, learned, and sci
entific disciples of Methodismf, who, to use the pi
ous Huntington's expressions, serve in the bowels of
Christ; for they, as the righteous coal-heaver and
* Vide Huntington's Subscription to the Dedication of
his Bank of Faith.
t The above are the names and professions selected out of
$gj persons who took out sixpenny preaching licences, at
the Session-house, Clerkenwell, in the year ijg6-j, takea
from The Rise and Dissolution of the Infidel Societies. By
W.. Hamilton Reid.
106
cobler mentions, can fill you with as much religion
as you can very well carry away; and besides, can
teach you also how to barter in old clothes, to grind,
to deal in sheep's heads (commonly called Field-lane
ducks), to paint a coach, to press, to mangle, to
mend windows, to wait at table and at tea, to draw
teeth, make periwigs, and bleed, and to make
breeches. Pardon me, ye lovely Cyprians ! for using
the word breeches : and it is my duty, having the ex
ample set me by the pious Huntington, to apologize
for using that indelicate word ; I ought to have said
inexpressibles. Now all these accomplishments you
may turn considerably to your advantage in life : I
conjure you, therefore, attend strictly to these en
lightened, pious, and learned preachers.
Having performed my duty to you, ye lovely Cy
prians, in endeavouring to provide for all the happi
ness of which your natures are really susceptible, I
am of opinion that I cannot express mvself more to
your satisfaction, or to my own, especially as I have
lately commenced the trade of coal-merchant, than
by adapting the words of the super-excellent Hunt
ingdon, which are attached to the Dedication of his
Bank of Faith. " I thank thee, Christian ; but be
seech thee not to put any titles or compliments upon
me : give them to those who can make a meal of
them — Coal-heaving is hard work ; and coal-heavers,
and, 1 might add, coal-merchants, require better focd
than fine speeches, windy words, and airy compli
ments. For the pains I have taken to correct the immorali
ty and Jacobinism of the age, I trust the bishops (as
a reward for my laudable endeavours to promote re
ligion, strengthen the Christian faith, and suppress
immorality,) will at least order 1000 copies of this
work to be purchased, and distributed amongst the
poor c'ergy, who cannot afford, though ever so desir-
107
ous, of purchasing a book so fraught with morality
and the purest precepts.
And you, ye lovely Cyprians, and fair sex in ge
neral, will, I trus% be liberal in your recommenda
tions of these volumes, after the pains I have taken
to instruct you how to practise the cardinal virtues,
and the attention I have paid not only to the happi
ness of your bodies in this life; but to the peace of
your souls in another to come ; together with the at
tention I have manifested to your health, in recom
mending a general and constant use of that whole
some and cheap beverage called gin. If certain la
dies of fashion will but lay aside their cordial stomachic
strong waters for plain gin, by which their healths will
be benefited, and the lovely Cyprians will leave off
drinking brandy,, rum, raspberry, and cherry-bounce,
and stick to royal gin, and gin only, so peculiarly sa
lutary to their health, it is reasonable to expect that
the consumption of that liquor will increase at least
one third — then I trust I shall experience more grati
tude from the distillers of that liquor than my friend
Dr. Moseley has from the West-India planters and
merchants for having published those excellent trea
tises on the salubrity and utility of coffee and sugar,
which has been productive of such advantages to their
trade as to increase the consumption in a very consi
derable degree*. For the truth of this I appeal to
the historian of the West Indies, Bryan Edwards.
But great men, when their turn is served, think but
little of us inferior mortals.
* Three treaties published by Dr. Moseley, namely, Mose
ley on Tropical Diseases; Moseley on Coffee; and Mose
ley on Sugar — not only shew the extensive professional
knowledge of the physician, but the philosophy, the philan
thropy, and erudition of the scholar, and the urbanity of the
gentleman.
ioe
¦„,ll nil ll' f WiH
CHAPTER III.
On the Misery and Wretchedness of Female Prostifo-
tion.
JL AM extremely desirous that all persons wh© read
this particular Chapter, should be acquainted with
the real motives which induced me to write it ; and
I trust and believe that they will favour them with
their approbation-
Among the modern, new-fangled, and soi-disant
philosophers of the present age, lost in longevity and
putrified in matter, one of whom tells lis that no man
could die if the mind was not prejudiced by the fear
of death, which makes him incapable of the necessary
degree of volition to live. I own I do not Understand,
in this sense, the meaning of the word volition. He
might, in my humble opinion, as well talk of the air
balloon of life as the volition of life, which nought
but the Almighty can give and take away.
Another of these wretched animals and idiot blas
phemers, whom it is degradation to mention, who
draws the breath of life, and dares to. assert, that if
there be such a thing as what is called God, it can be
only matter*.
These men, by arrogating to themselves a know
ledge which can belong only to the Supreme Being,
Know then thyself, presume not God to scan,
The proper study of mankind is man.
109
who made this world and every thing in it*, have, I
am sorry to say, induced some unthinking persons to
doubt the validity of certain points jn religionf which
constitute our chief happiness in this World, and can
alone conduct us to happiness hereafter. Religion,
now-a-days, is much out of fashion. But I confess I
am not ashamed to own that I am old-fashioned enough
to have some religion in me, and glory- in an ardent,
unshaken belief in God. Yet at the same time that I
view the atheist with abhorrence J, I despise the su
perstitious bigot.
I have read the Works of these half-enlightened ex
otic philosophers, who spring up from the faeces of
human corruption, are bred in the hot-bed of athe
ism, and are fostered by wickedness and depravity ;
these Ark-wright, literary, spinning jennies, who
spend their time in spreading cobwebs to catch the
wavering flies ; these turnspits, who, in the metaphy
sical wheel, turn the spit of conjecture, while they
emit the fumes of a distempered imagination, and the
vapours of a sickly brain ; — who think that they have
travelled far in philosophy ; but, like the dog in the
wheel, end where they began. They have riot brought
me over to their no-faith, nor have they, in the slight
est degree, shaken my belief. Stronger toils must
they spread to entangle me. The little finger of com
mon sense, by one single movement, wipes away
* Who knows but he, whose hand the lightning forms,
Who heaves Old Ocean, and who wings the storms.
t Reason, to think of God when she pretends,
Begins a censor, an adorer ends.
J I never heard of one of these men who had ridiculed
every thing serious, when on their death-bed, and apprized
of their approaching dissolution, who did not make a watery
end.
110
such cobweb films, which for an instant may dazzle,
but never can blind the true and perfect vision
If one of these men were to ask me how I know
that there is a God, I would give him for answer the
words of the poor ignorant Arab of the desert; who,
when asked that question by one of these metaphysi
cal turnspits in philosophy, replied, " In the same
way that I am able to tell, by the print impressed on
the sand, whether it was a man or a beast which had
passed that way." I should like to be informed by
one of these philosophers, what confines the sun be
tween the tropics- It is not to be accounted for by
any philosophical hypothesis. He who walks daily
in the great temple of Nature, and contemplates her
wondrous works, wants no assistance to assure him
of the existence of a Creator: his wondrous works all
nature proclaims aloud ; it is conspicuous to every
one, and is known even to the blind ; for, though de
prived of sight, they feel the warmth of the sun ; and
the untutored Indian sees God in the clouds, and
hears him in the winds. We cannot even draw our
breath without conviction. How fated to misery is
that nation, governed by a king, who fears not a fu
ture state of remuneration! there is hardly any ex
cess, cruelty, or oppression, of which he may not be
guilty. It is not possible to keep society together without
religion : such is my irrevocable opinion. But I cer
tainly am no bigot: and I have ever thought that there
is a wide difference between priestcraft and religion-
Nor does any one see the folly of superstition in a
more ridiculous point of view than myself. Nor am I
one of those hypocritical psalm-singing repentants,
who, conscious of the infamies they have committed
in their more early days, think for certain, that, to
sure their future and eternal happiness, it is necessa
ry to set apart so many hours in the day to prayer and
1 1.1
hymning. One self-approving hour far outweighs
whole years of Tabernacle prayer and Tabernacle
praise. The mens conscia recti is a surer guide to happiness
hereafter, than all the formularies that have ever been
established. I know' the use and the necessity of pub
lic worship ; but the daily attendance at a parish-
church will be of little avail, both for this world and
that which is to come, if we do not contrive to estab
lish a chapel of ease in our own breast. There I
learn, from the preachings of Conscience, an heavenly-
gifted orator, ordained to its holy work by God him
self, that it is my duty, as it is my inclination, to sup
port and plead the cause of seduced, deserted, and
miserable woman.
Is there a man so base and so unfeeling, who walks
the streets of this metropolis at late hours, without
feeling the utmost pity and compassion for the mise
rable objects whom they, behold taking up their
night's lodging on some dunghill, or under gateways,
waiting for the early opening in the morn of some
noxious gin-shop, their sole and only residence or
abode, whilst the vije seducer, at that moment, re
vels in every luxury of life ?
Amongst the lower order of people, though high
ly culpable, yet the seducing a virgin, and turning
her adrift on the wide world without any maintenance
whatever, and absolutely compelling her < to prosti
tute herself in the public streets to satisfy the calls of
hunger, is more easy to be accounted for : but in re
spect to the gentleman of education and fortune, there
is no palliation or the smallest excuse for the crime,
and the infamy is increased an hundred fold. Yet,
how many women do I know, who have been seduc
ed by such men, and prevailed on to quit their pa
rents and desert an hospitable home, with every as-
112
surance of the tenderest regard and protection ! Sortie
have not, to my knowledge, even scrupled to offer
matrimony to accomplish their treacherous designs— >-
that nuptial bait so calculated to lead a fond and doat-
ing woman to the arms of the seducer: yet, after all,
and every promise of the most tender and sacred na
ture, they have taken the lovely all-credulous fair one
to some common brothel, where, after having grati
fied their barbarous passion, they have left her to the
power of a mercenary, unrelenting, infernal procur
ess : she is soon brought in debt to the Lady Abbess,
who threatens to send her to prison, or to turn her
into the streets, unless she consents to her infamous
designs. To her parents she cannot return. Desert
ed by the man on whom she has placed her affections,
and in whom she had reposed the utmost confidence,
she has no alternative : a prison, famine, or prostitu
tion await her. Of these three cruel evils, the wretch
ed being chooses that which appears to her, to be the
least ; and nought remains for her but to become the
victim of despair, or to seek for refuge from the pangs
of her bosom, in a life of profligacy and intemper
ance : painful disease, and confirmed depravity, too
often close the scene. Some few, before they arrive
at this miserable situation, have found protecting
friends, who have provided them with a comfortable
home, and restored them to comparative happiness :
hut, after all, they are but few indeed, when com
pared with the thousands, who sink by degrees into
thelowestgulph of prostitution and infamy. Alas! how
many of those who have rolled along the streets of
London in their elegant equipage, who have been
decked in golden array, and were finest at every fine
show, have closed their short lives in a workhouse or
an hospital !
Can any man professing Christian morality, or even
professing nothing more than the character of a gen-
US
tjeman, reconcile such deeds to his mind ? Is there
a man so unfeeling, so destitute of principle, as to en
joy one moment's sound repose on his pillow, when
he reflects that some poor, wretched female, once fair
and beauteous, though now no longer an object of
desire, is reduced to the most miserable condition, by
his base seduction and perjured vows? Perhaps she
has not a bed of straw on which to repose her weak
and weary limbs. Destitute of food, with scarce a
garment to protect her from the piercing cold, and
courting the lu.->t of the lowest vagabond or mid
night robber for a momentary subsidence, it is her
final allotment to curse her seducer and to die. Yet
such men there are, who dare to walk the streets in
open day, and arrogate to themselves the character of
men of honour and of gentlemen : nay more, would
attempt to cut the throat of any one who even suspects
them of a contrary conduct. Monster! for man thou
art not, if perchance thou shouldst cast thine eye on
these pages, thou perjured, base, and infamous wretch,
I hurl my contempt and execration at thee ! But you
dese-ve much more from the injured fair one; ven
geance, nay death, inflicted by her hand, would be
but a just atonement for her sufferings ; and were she
to stab thee to the heart, and give freedom to thy soul
to quit its cursed abode, and fly thy base, inhuman
trunk, it is no more than thou mightest expect, though
it would be a punishment inadequate to thy crime.
To prove, therefore, that you have, in reality, some
spark of honour, some sense of crime, hasten, ere it be
too late, to atone, by future charity and kindness, for
thy past offence. Go, seek the deserted fair one far
and wide, whom thou hast seduced and forsaken,
and, by a generous conduct in future, make all the
satisfaction in thy power for thy horrid infamy. But
if thy cankered heart is hardened in misdeed, go, boast
the number thou hast debauched and abandoned, and
p
114
sacrifice fresh victims to thy infernal passions. But
know, that injured virtue will be avenged; another
world has its punishments prepared for wretches such
as thou art. Satan, at thy entry into his dominions,
shall pay thee homage; while the inferior demons
shall greet thee with the fraternal kiss, and make thee
partakers of their destiny. Be not troubled with any
alarm at the posthumous reproaches of this world af
ter death; I will insure thee the praises of posterity.
Haifa dozen seven- shilling pieces shall purchase thee
as many paragraphs in the public papers, which shall
hold thee up to the admiring multitude as a paragon
of virtue, and an example for the age in which thou
hast lived; and who will dare to contradict the asser
tions of those authentic, candid, and impartial reposi
tories of the current events of the world ?
But what am I writing? If your heart is so harden
ed, if you are so lost to all sensibility of what is truly
honourable in the human character, you will laugh at
the opinion of the world : and if, in a moment of re
turning virtue, you should repair, to the utmost of your
power, the wrongs which you have done, you will
secure the favour of all those whose approval is ho
nour, and whose friendship is happiness. To err is in
the nature of man, but to persevere in error, in spite
of the dictates of honour, the suggestions of conscience-
and the precepts of religion, belongs only to the vota
ries of the devil. — This is a very momentous concern,
in which we are all deeply interested : I beseech you,
therefore, ye gallant, gay Lotharios of the age, to look
to it. »
Before I shall propose any method by which lovely
woman may be more protected than she is at present,
I shall state the justice of the law of the land, by
which every man may obtain not only redress, but
heavy damages, from the person who does him an in
jury, traduces his character, or vilifies him so as to
115
affect his worldly interest. If a nobleman or a pri
vate gentleman is vilified or libelled, the law gives
him ample redress by heavy damages. If a trades
man is vilified or libelled, he prosecutes, and the law
gives him damages according to the injury he is sup
posed to have received, or may receive, relative tohis
trade. Unmarried women of fashion have received
heavy damages* for scandalous paragraphs against
them even in the newspapers : men and women of
all descriptions have redress open to them from the
law of the land, except the much to be pitied seduc
ed and abandoned fair one, whose injury is by far the
greatest that man or woman can sustain. As for the
nobleman or gentleman, when the aspersions on his
character are cleared up in public court, it is suffici
ent to his honour; the fining or imprisonment of the
libeller is but of little consequence to him; the ver
dict of a jury sets all right between him and the
world. Before I mention the actual and only redress that
a woman who has been seduced and abandoned can
obtain from a court of justice, I will ask a few ques
tions of those barristers who are in the most constant
habits of pleading at the bar, from the celebrity of
their talents and oratory. Do they often receive a
brief to plead the cause of a woman who prosecutes
for the non-compliance in a promise of matrimony,
and at the same time acknowledges, that, in conse
quence of that promise, she has given up her person
to the defendant? I believe they will not answer me
in the affirmative. Let us therefore examine what
redress a woman, in such a situation, can obtain in
* Mr. Tattersall paid 4000I. damages for a paragraph in the
newspaper of which he was proprietor, though he never
knew it was inserted until he arrived from his country-house.
116
a court of justice. I never yet heard of a woman ap
pearing to prosecute for a non-compliance of marri
age, who instructed her counsel, in his pleadings, to
state, that on the defendant's promising her marriage,
she yielded to his wishes. I am of opinion that her
counsel would advise her to keep that part of the his
tory to herself. But might not the opposite counsel,
on cross-examination, inquire whether she had ever
submitted her person to the defendant ? And might
it not be observed, with some degree of effect, to the
jury, that it would have been more prudent to have
gone to church first, and then have consummated the
nuptials? What charge would a judge give to the ju
ry on such an occasion ? and what damages would
they give to such a woman?. The action, I fear,
would be soon got rid of, and I have my doubts whe
ther or not she might not be told that she was an im
pudent hussey for demanding damages for a breach
of promise of marriage, when she had wantonly put
herself in a situation m which it would have been dis
graceful in any man to have fulfilled it.
Bnt a greater misfortune attends the incautious,
credulous, unsuspicious fair one, who, from real af
fection, and knowing the sincerity of her own heart,
suspects neither deceit or perjury from her seducer.
She has no witnesses to bring forward to attest his
perjured promises : before Heaven, and in secret,
those vows were made : she theiefore has not, nor
can she have redress. But I must, at the same time,
beg leave to ask, if a woman is seduced and aban
doned, is not the injury done to her greater than the li- '
belling or vilifying the character of a gentleman or a
tradesman? Yet they have ample redress: the gentle
man, when his character is cleared up, suffers not in
the least, and has the pleasing gratification, in all
companies where he goes, of being complimented
and congratulated on the honesty of his conduct, eve-
117
ry one deprecating the villany of the assassin of hU
character. The tradesnian even benefits from the
false aspersion ; for, such is the natural compassion of
mankind, that many are induced to deal with an in
jured, honest man, who otherwise would not have
thought about him, or, perhaps, have ever heard of him.
But where does the kind, incautious, and affectionate
woman find redress? No-where. if, indeed, in ad
dition to the heart-breaking misery of being thus a-
bandoned, she should have the add'tional misery of
being with child, she may certainly swear the child
to the seducer, and compel him to pay forty pounds
to the parish, who will take care of the infant, if she
chooses to part with it; but it must be an unnatural
mother who does not wish to have the care of her
own offspring. In this place, I believe I am correct,
the parish will only allow her at most three shillings
per week. Thus the infernal perjured miscreant gets
rid of the woman and the child; for she cannot com
pel him to give her any maintenance. Thus, desert
ed by her friends, and forsaken by him, she is left to
make her way in the world as well as she can. Ma
ny, it cannot be denied, are compelled, from impend
ing starvation, to seek the means of satisfying hunger
by prostitution ; but they are very few indeed, when
compared with the great family of women who are
supported by it.
In former days, every unmarried woman who had
a child was compelled to stand publicly in the church,
in a white sheet; but the shame and exposure of this
punishment frequently produced the most unnatural
of crimes, as the terror of such a public exposition
was the cause of many women murdering their chil
dren, for which reason that fatal ceremony is now al
together omitted: nevertheless, the unfeeling and cen
sorious part of the world deride and censure a woman
who has had this misfortune. They, alas! never look
118
into their own conduct, but are ever greedy to slan
der others; and yet people with such a disposition go
to church constantly, and dare call themselves Chris
tians; but little do they imitate or think of the all-
forgiving love and kindness of the Author of their
religion who even pardoned the woman taken in adul
ter-'. Before I give any opinion how these unfortunate
and injured women might be redressed and protected,
I will relate three instances of villany perpetrated by
unfeeling monsters, which, within a tew years, have
come to my knowledge, and I pledge my honour to
the truth of them.
A young woman, the daughter of a reputable trades
man, happened to gain the friendship of the daughter
of a gentleman of wealth and consequence, and such
were her amiable manners, that the parents of the
young lady were induced to take her into their house
and complete her education. There an officer per
suaded her by the usual arts, and a most solemn pro
mise of marriage, to elope with him to the Isle of
-Wight. But he remained only one night with her;
and, without giving her the least suspicion of his inten
tions, went on board the fleet then lying at Spithead
under sailing orders for the West Indies. When she
arose in the morning, and inquired after her lover, the
waiter of the inn informed her that the gentleman had
taken his trunk away with him, and was gone in a
boat on board the fleet at Spithead. At the same time
he informed her that every thing was paid in the house,
supposing her, from the conduct of this ruffian, to be
a woman of pleasure.
I need not tell the reader the distraction and mise
ry of mind she must have suffered. Having quitted
her parents and her protectors, where she was educa
ted, to them she could not return; and, in this wretch-
119
ed situation, she knew not what step to take, or what
measure to pursue. At length she recollected that
two young ladies, with whom she had been in the
strictest habits of friendship, lived not far from the
place of her misery. She wrote to them, requesting
they would be so kind as to call on her; at the same
time informing them in general terms, that, from some
unforeseen and extraordinary events, she was in the
greatest distress. They immediately came to her,
when she related to them the whole of her misfortune.
These excellent girls went home to their father, and
told him the v. hole history. That worthy man in
stantly took h(.r to his own house, treated her with
the utmost affection and tenderness, soothed her sor
rows, and after a certain time, the affair being known
only to his family, he reconciled her parents to her,
and restored her to them. — The villanous miscreant
of a seducer died of the yellow fever shortly after his
arrival in the West Indies.
' My next history is of a girl,, the daughter of a re
putable tradesman in a country town, who had for
two or three years lived as lady's maid in a genteel
family in the neighbourhood. An officer in one of
his Majesty's regiments prevailed on this girl to quit
her place, with every promise of, protection, and to
live with him. When she had been with him only
twenty-four hours, the father, being informed of her
elopement, made a diligent search after her through
out the quarters of the regiment; but her seducer con
cealed her so as to elude the vigilance of her father,
and sent her with a soldier's wife to an inn in London,
assuring her that, as soon as his duty would permit
him he would follow her. Four days after he sent her
four guineas, and told her by letter that if was impos
sible for him to live with her; for, if his parents should
discover the connection, it would prove his ruin. I
am of opinion, that, injustice, they should have dis-
120
carded him for ever for so base a conduct towards the
woman he had thus seduced and deserted. I most
solemnly declare, that I would make a son of mine,
if I had one, allow a woman in this predicament an
ample maintenance, according to his power; or I
would disinherit him for ever. By the greatest
chance in the world, the wife of an officer in the na
vy came up from Chatham to the same inn, when,
observing this girl extremely miserable, she prevailed
on her to disclose her distress, and this amiable and
generous woman took her into her own family. She
has since, as I have been informed, married an officer
in the navy.
It is but an act of justice to mention, in this place,
how kind, affectionate, and generous the gallant tar
is to woman. There is scarcely an instance of a sai
lor deserting a woman, or using her ill. Rough at
sea as the boisterous billows, unconquerable they ride
over the foaming surge, and, masters of the waves,
to woman, and to woman only, do they own subjec
tion. They know the value of the lovliest part of hu
man nature, and treat them as they deserve, with ho
nour, sincerity, and protection. Would I could say the
same in general, of their brethren in war ! But with
sorrow do I relate, that many seek as much to ruin a
woman, as others seek a civic crown; and regard eve
ry virgin sacrificed to their infernal lust, as a fresh lau
rel on their brow. Nor are there a few who feel as
little remorse in turning a woman on the town, as in
turning a horse for the winter, to save expence, on a
common. I am no friend to an increase of penal sta
tutes; we have enough of them. Yet I should wish
to see another, with heavy punishments for female
seduction, added to the number.
The third and last instance of the baseness and vil-
lany of man towards woman, with which I shall trou
ble the reader, although I could give fifty more is of
121
a servant girl who Jived with a woman that was kept
by an opulent citizen. He visited this woman for
some months, allowed her an income, which was paid
her punctually every week; but he never let her know
his name, and desired she never would ask who he
was. This is a constant practise amongst citizens
who are not known at the west end of the town : nay
more, they often pass by fictious names; it is their
constant practice ; and there are many women at this
moment who are sumptuously maintained by mer
chants, whose n?a/name they never know, and whose
interest it is not to know it ; for, if these delicate fac
tors should suspect that they were discovered, it is an
hundred to one if they ever entered the house again.
This honest citizen at last took a fancy to the servant
prevailed on her to quit her mistress and take an apart
ment, promising to maintain her in comfort and inde
pendence : the girl yielded to his wishes ; and the fol
lowing morning he quitted her altogether, and left
her to pay the lodging.
Let me soberly and seriously ask my readers what
they think of these three miscreants ? My opinion is,
that they merit the gallows ; but so, alas ! it is, that,
in a country renowned for the wisdom of its legislature
there is no law that can reach them.
I shall now propose the outlines of a remedy, to
prevent such inhuman monsters from perpetrating
their acts of infamy, at the expence and~ rum; of too
credulous, confiding woman. It certainly is in the
power of the legislature to afford the sex more pro
tection ; and it is my prayer to Heaven, that some true
lover of them, now in Parliament, may undertake their
cause. I pledge myself, if ever I should have the
honour of a seat in the House of Commons, to consult
some of the most able men in this country, in order
to bring forward a bill for the better protection of wo--
man, and to afford relief and maintenance to a female,
Q
122
seduced and abandoned by any faithless and unfeeling
man: and I trust, that, in such a just, humane, and
laudable design, I should find a warm and animated
support, both in the hearts and voices of a great and
commanding majority of the British senate.
I am conscious of my own inability to frame a law
for the prevention of such abuses; therefore I shall
only give the outlines, trusting that some generous and
able senator will undertake the framing and comple
tion of this grateful task. I propose, therefore, that
every man who seduces awoman, if he does not mar
ry her, shall be compelled to give her a maintenance,
such as the legislature may judge that she has a claim
to receive, and the man, according to his circumstan
ces and situation in life, is able to bestow. Not that
I would, by any means, wish that a woman's oath
should alone convict a man, and make him father a
child, when she has been connected with others, which
she may now do, and lay her infant to any man whom
she choses to pitch upon, although he never has been
within twenty miles of her; a circumstance that has
happened to many* men, and particularly to an ac
quaintance of my own, who was thus compelled to
father his brother's misdeeds. I am sanctioned for
wishing to exclude a woman's oath without some cor-
roborating testimony, when I inform the reader, that
Madame La Chevaliere d'Eon, when she personated,
for some years, Le Chevalier d'Eon, had a child sworn
to her.— Substantial proof should be produced, the
same as in cases of crim. con. ; and, I think, were the
court to compel the seducer to maintain the woman,
it would be full as laudable an act as the endeavour
to make a man pay <£ 13,000 for defiling the chaste
bed of a taylor*. It may be truly said, that many
* Damages were laid at 13,000/. and the verdict was very
heavy, amounting to several thousands. With the specific
sum I cannot charge my memory.
123
men could not pay such damages, and must be con
fined to a prison ; but are not all those who are found
guilty of crim. con. compelled to pay the verdict, lie
in prison, or fly the country? Is not the one crime
morally speaking, as great as the other?
To consider this matter further, I am certain it
would considerably lessen the number of those wretch
ed women whom we every night see roving the streets
to supply the necessaries of life, if man in certain cas
es, and in certain cases only, (which I have minute
ly spoken of in my chapter on Matrimony and Poly
gamy), were permitted to marry a second wife during
the life of the former. To the above-mentioned chap
ter I refer the reader for my reasons, which are stat
ed at a considerable length. 1 am confident, if these
two regulations were enforced, and permitted by the
legislature, that in a very few years prostitution would
lose one half of its wretched victims. The Magdalen,
Foundling Hospital, and other charities, are laudable
institutions: but, in effect, they are no more than at
tempting to lave the River Thames with hand-buck
ets ; you must strike at the fountain-head, to dry up
the stream.
Having spoken so fully of the detestation and ab
horrence in which I hold the crime of seducing and
abandoning women; injustice to myself, and for my
own satisfaction, and particularly on account Of that
respect I so truly profess for all censorious old maids,
church-going hypocrites, and pious, regenerated, me-
thodistical sinners, as well as to save them the trouble
of making any pleasant remarks relative to my con
duct in this instance, I here most solemnly, and in the
ft have
taken an Habeas Corpus, to remove myself back to
the King's Bench. The whole expence would have
been about seven pounds ; and if I could not have
136
procured the money, I must have remained in thd
Fleet. To this case there is something more attach
ed than the expence of bringing myself back by a
Habeas Corpus to the Bench. By the kind assistance
of my worthy and best friend, Jacob Wilkinson, who
was my bondsman to the marshal, 1 had procured the
blessing of a liberty to walk and enjoy the open air
within the boundaries of the King's Bench, called the
Rules. The expence incurred on the bond to obtain
the benefit of the Rules, is ten pounds for the first
hundred, and four pounds for every other hundred of
the debt or debts for which you are imprisoned. For
instance, if a man is a prisoner for four hundred, he
must find good security, and pay twenty two pounds,
and so on in proportion for a larger debt. Flad I
been carried over to the Fleet, and there remained, I
must have forfeited the money I had paid to obtain
the liberty of the Rules of the Bench, and been close
ly confined, if not able to procure money to pay the
expences necessary to procure the Rules of the Fleet:
and, what is more singular, if there had been seven
or eight writs, say any number, (for it makes no dif
ference, in common, whether it be one or one hun
dred pleas against me,) I should have been dragged
there for every one of them, and paid the same ex
pences on each and every writ as on one, if I could ;
and if I could not, the expences would have lain a-
gainst me in the Fleet, and I must have discharged
them before I could be liberated from prison, after
settling with my creditors.
I shall beg leave to mention another singular fact.
If a man surrenders to the Fleet Prison instead of the
King's Bench, which is at his option, if he has but
one writ against him in the Court of Common Pleas,
and one, eight, or eight hundred writs, (it is all the
same, though not the same expence,) in the Court of
King's Bench, against him, on every writ in the
137'
Court of King's Bench he can be removed to the
King's Bench Prison from the Fleet. This is ringing
the changes with a vengeance. It is not sufficient
that a prisoner be confined in one prison, but he must
like a shuttlecock, be thrown backwards and forwards
from one prison to the other, with the distress of be
ing put to considerable expence, in addition to all
that he has already sustained.
A short time before I was discharged from this
place, two brothers were brought up from some dis
tant part of the island, and surrendered there. They
had been engaged in a law suit, in which they were
cast. The person with whom they had been at law
was so humane as not to continue the process; but
the attorney sent them both to the King's Bench for
the costs of the suit, amounting to something above
twenty pounds. This case may appear singular to the
reader, who fortunately is not informed of the perse
cution practised on prisoners by attornies : but I will
inform them, and if they doubt my assertions, they
may apply to the records of the King's Bench and
Fleet Prisons, and they will find there are many hun
dreds who are confined for the costs of suit to the
lawyer, whose original debt did not amount to ten
pounds ; nay further, there are numbers now in pri
son for debts originally amounting only to the small
sum of four, five, six, or seven pounds. These small
debts have been brought to a judgment by the attor
ney, which attaches the person, the moment the costs,
jointly with the debt, amount to above ten pounds,
though the debtor is able and willing to pay the ori
ginal debt. Many have offered to pay even a part of
the costs : but, although the original debt did not ex
ceed five or six pounds, they now are fixed in prison
for above twenty pounds, owing to the attorney not
being willing to relax one shilling of his demand for
costs of suit in bringing the debt to an execution.
s
138
I will give you an instance, relative to myself, not
only of the extravagant expence attending small debts
under ten pounds, but of the generosity and integrity
of the honest tradesman. I built a one-horse chair
some years past; the price was, to the best of my re
collection, between fifty ai d sixty pounds. The first
day I drove it for two hours, merely. to try it, and to
have it properly hung : I then left it a few days with
the maker, to regulate it; and, before I took it away,
I paid one half of the price in money, and gave a bill
for the other half at a short date, which was paid.
However, I happened to send the chaise back to be
^screwed up, and to have some trifling alteration made,
&c. the expence of which amounted to five pounds
six shillings, cr six pounds five, 1 forget which. Af
ter owing this trifle for a considerable space of time,
I was served with a copy of a writ: this was but a
very few months before I surrendered to the King's
Bench prison, amongst a variety of other demands of
much greater amount, all of which I paid before that
horrid day, the Morrow of All Souls, which is so fa
tal to many bodies in the first week in November. I
had been out of town for above two months, and to
tally forgot that I had been served with a copy of a
writ for so small a sum. In December following, a
sheriff's officer met me, who had oftentimes arrested
me, and told me he had a warrant against me. I asked
him why he did not call at my house in the morning
early, that I might have gone out with him and set
tled it, as it was then near my time of dinner. He
gave me a very satisfactory reason why he did not: I
asked him the sum it amounted to. " A small sum,
somewhat above twenty," he replied. As it was ra
ther late in the day, and near dinner-time, I desired
him to call on me the next morning, and I would set
tle it. " I would with pleasure, Colonel," said he ;
" but it is an execution." "That is impossible!" I
139
replied, " for I have not signed any bond or warrant
of attorney to any person existing." — " I assure you,
Colonel," continued he, " it is an execution. You
ought to know the law, and what lawyers can do,
for you have paid enough to know it in your lifetime."
— " I now understand you," I replied ; " I suppose
it is some small debt under ten pounds, brought to a
judgment by the attorney." — " Exactly so." To cut
this matter very short, I went to my friend Mr. Wright
in Ca ev-street, and surrendered to him. My agent
very kindly brought me the money to discharge the
debt and costs, which amounted to above twenty-
four pounds. Now, if I had not been able to pay it,
I must have surrendered to the King's Bench or Fleet,
and there I might have lain until I had rotted, unless
I had paid the twenty-four pounds ; for I have no rea
son to believe that the attorney employed against me
would have deviated from the line adopted by his
brethren, and have shewn me any very distinguished
favour. I may here, I think, as well as in any other page
of this volume, inform the world, that when I was
making an arrangement with my creditors, and they
had agreed to take a part in money, and a security in
future for the remainder, the particulars of which I
have stated in another part of this Work, there was
but one attorney, out of the many employed against
me, that would relax one shilling of their costs. Al
though their clients were satisfied with a part, they
would be paid their whole demand; and some of the
costs to the attornies amounted to very near as much
as the original debt owing to their clients. But this is
in the ordinary way of the detestable profession which
they follow. But, notwithstanding all the injuries
they have done me, and are continually doing man
kind, I will prove my Christian charity by presenting
them with their portrait from the sacred writings —
J40
"Ye are of your father the devil ; and the works of
your father ye will do." Filial piety, perhaps, may
be their only virtue.
I desire it might be well understood, that I do not
mean, in any sense whatever, to apply this conduct
to the higher orders of attornies and solicitors, who
would disdain to engage in low and base traffic;
though not one of them is without one of these low
fellows in his service to do the dirty work which they
must not appear to do for themselves. Whatever they
may do in the higher course of business, they disdain
the common jog-trot of writ, declaration and judg
ment ; nor are they linked with the pawn-broker, sil
versmith, ironmonger, &c. &c. who discount gen
tlemen's bills, giving a part in money and the rest in
goods, with four, five, or six names indorsed on the
back of the bill, and who purchase such bills from
these extortioners, in the hope that the person who drew
them will not be punctual at the day the bill is due,
so that he may bring his action against the drawer of
the bill, and make him pay costs for every separate
name indorsed on the back of it.
I shall now proceed to relate an example of extor
tion which I know to be correctly true. A lady in
the habit of doing bills in the manner J have related,
issued a bill for eighty, ninety, or an hundred pounds,
1 forget which sum: this bill, after passing through
eight persons' hands, of course had as many indoise-
ments, and was purchased by one of these miscreants.
When the bill became due she could not immediate
ly pay it, and he of course issued a writ against her :
her lawyer undertook, put in bail tor her, and defend
ed the action. When she came forward to pay the
money, this honest man charged her eight costs.
This worthy member of society, who lived in the
Temple, is now dead, and gone to the devil. There
141
being a special cause to be tried in the infernal re
gions, his infernal majesty could spare him no lon
ger ; but, in return for services performed he has
made him his attorney-general*. On her paying the
wretch his demand, she then informed him that she
would prosecute him for an usurious transaction, and
make him pay about fifteen hundred pounds, which
would be the penalty of it, in return for his generous
and liberal conduct to her. But the Devil, who
has so greatly promoted him in the other world, used
to stand his friend while he was in this ; and he help
ed him out of the scrape in the following manner :—
This lady had a whimsical propensity now and then,
when in want of cash, to borrow some creditable per
son's name, in a way which is commonly called forg
ing; and a bill of hers was at this time in circulation,
which this attorney had got into his possession, with a
distinguished nobleman's name to it, which she, in
her free way, had written with her own fair hand. He
accordingly took an early opportunity to inform her,
that a bill had been offered to him for negotiation,
drawn by her, and accepted bv a nobleman, for which,
before he gave cash, as persons of high rank were not,
like their inferiors, always punctual at the day of pay
ment, he requested to know if she had any objection
to his calling on him to ascertain that circumstance.
The lady repii.-d, that the bill would certainly be paid
on the day it was due ; and that it would be very in
truding in him to trouble the nobleman with a visit
on any such subject. At length, however, our hero
in infamy began to speak a little plainer than he had
hitherto done, and frankly told her that the bill was in
* The attorney-general, in formsr times, was called Dia-
bolus Regis, or the King's Bull Dog. Vide a book intitled
" The Mirror of Magistrates."
142
his possession, and that he knew she had forged that
nobleman's name. She then threw herself on his mer
cy, and he generously spared her life on her engag
ing not to commence a prosecution against him for
his former infamous conduct. I am not certain whe
ther I am right or not as to the law in such a case;
but I am inclined to believe that this honourable and
humane attorney was guilty of compounding felony ;
but if he was, it is not to be wondered at, as it was in
the way of his business.
As to myself, I cannot charge my memory with
ever having paid more than four costs on one bill of
exchange, which has fallen into the hands of such ho
nourable practitioners of the law ; which, by the by, is
tolerably re?sonable. These particulars are related-in
another part of this Work ; I shall therefore proceed
to the misfortunes, hardships, and prosecutions to which
prisoners are subject, from unfeeling, creditors, and
their harpies ycleped attornies, when doomed to this
prison. To proceed — An acquaintance of mine was
committed io the King's Bench, in the year 1794, for
twodebts, amountingto upwards of anhundred'pounds,
when he gave up all his property, which was then in
Chancery, and took the benefit of an Act of Insolven
cy. In the year following he was imprisoned again,
for a debt of no more than twenty-two pounds ; when
he applied for his sixpences, and was denied them, on
account of his having taken the benefit of a former act
f>r the debt already mentioned, and would have starv
ed, had not a subscription been made for him by his
fiends, although he had property coming to him
which waited die decision of Chancery.
Since that period I have had nothing further to ob
serve : it may, however, be remarked, that when a
prisoner sues for his sixpences, he must swear that he
is. r.ot worth five pounds, (I believe the oath is now
143
extended to ten ;) I will not positively assert the actual
expence the prisoner must pay to obtain three shil
lings and sixpence per week, for sometimes their
friends do it gratuitously ; but where it is paid for, as
in many instances, the following charges are near the
mark :
For moving the Court — •
To the attorney, for attending at the
King's Bench —
For attendance at Westminster Hall
£¦
s.
d.
0
iO
6
0
6
8
0
6
8
£. 1. 3 10
But these are not all the expences of this process.
He cannot appear at Westminster Hall unless in the
custody of a tipstaff belonging to the King's Bench,
who must also be paid for his trquble: then he can
not put his nose out of the prison without paving for-
a day rule, the price of which, I believe, is the same
to him, or to any prisoner who has taken the benefit
of the Rules, and wishes to go to town to transact
business, that is four shillings. I do not pledge my
self in this one instance, to the correctness of the charge,
but, I believe, the fee to the tipstaff is ten shillings;
thus thirteen shillings are added to one pound three,
already incurred.
If it were not for the sufferings of the prisoner, this
process, which a man must undergo to obtain three
shillings and sixpence per week to keep him from
starving, is so absurd and ridiculous that it would be
worthy of laughter ; for, that a prisoner should pay
one single shilling to obtain the scanty pittance from
his creditor of three shillings and sixpence per week,
is truly ludicrous. Although it is not in my nature
to sport with the feelings and sufferings of the oppress
ed, yet I am at liberty to laugh heartily at a process
144
of law, I mean, (reader, do not misconstrue my words)
the lazv of atlornies relative to the charges they have
made to their clients, at whose suit a prisoner is con
fined. Every Monday evening, before the clock strikes
nine, three shillings and sixpence must be deposited
in the hands of the door-keeper for the use of the pris
oner; in which payment if the creditor or his attorney
is deficient, th-' action is supersedable, and the pri
soner is discharged. Now, I do assert positively, that
many atlornies have charged their clients three shil
lings and four-pence, or six shillings and eight-pence,
for sending their clerk, or going once to the Bench
themselves, to pay the three shillings and sixpence.
This, reader, you will readily believe, when you know
that these gentlemen will not take a walk over to the
King's Bench, or work in any shape, for nothing. So
the creditor pays his attorney either three shillings
and four-pence, or six shillings and eight-pence, in
addition to the three shillings and sixpence. The
whole transaction is scandalous, and requires imme
diate redress. It may appear singular to the reader,
but I assert, that, at this very moment, there are ma
ny persons lying in prison, whose original debt to the
creditor did not amount to above three, four, five, or
six pounds, whose debts now, from costs to the attor-
nies, do exceed twenty and thirty pounds. 1 myself
have paid for a debt of four pounds thirteen shillings,
and for one of six pounds sixteen shillings, and two
or three times for a debt under ten pounds — I say,
that I have paid ten, twelve, or fourteen pounds costs.
Many prisoners are able, and have offered to pay their
original debt, but cannot pay costs to the attorney ;
they therefore remain in confinement, where they might
pass their lives, if an occasional act of insolvency did
not relieve them.
I know also, that many creditors have been very
willing to take the original debt, and have been desi-
145
fous of liberating the debtor: but a creditor cannot
release the prisoner; for, if he grants the prisoner a
discharge, the attorney fixes him with the costs of the
debtor: so the creditor must pay the attorney twenty
or thirty pounds costs for doing nothing more than
what he ought to do, namely, for discharging his
debtor, on his paying the original sum he was indebt
ed to him.
I must now apologize to the reader for breaking off
so suddenly, and not describing various other miseries
and oppressions to which the unfortunate debtor in this
prison is subjected, much to the discredit of a country
which boasts so proudly of its liberty; but I promise
faithfully, in a third volume, which I shortly intend to
publish, to give various interesting cases of distress
and oppression, not only in the King's Bench and the
Fleet, but also in that Court, so well known by the
name, style and title of the Marshalsea.
At present I have neither time or place sufficient
in these "volumes: I shall therefore conclude, for the
present, with two or three interesting stories relative
to the conduct of attornies, how they obtain bills of
exchange, for what reasons they take them, and what
cost they charge on them ; together with a few parti
culars relative to prisoners confined for debts under
ten pounds.
Reader, mark well what I am now going to relate,
and seriously reflect, whether, in a Christian country,
and in a land of liberty, it is fit that any individual
should be subject to such dire persecution. It is not
possible for me at present to speak with certainty to
the fact, not having as yet obtained an account of the
number of prisoners who are confined in the various
prisons in London for debts under ten pounds: But I
call God to witness, that, from the conversations I
have held with various prisoners in the King's Bench,
x
145
(in the Fleet it is exactly the same,) and the infor
mation I have acquired on the subject, I truly believe
that I speak much within the compass, when 1 with
horror inform yon, that above one half of the prison
ers in the King's Bench and the Fleet, (aye, and in
most of the other jails in England.) could be libera
ted, and would be liberated, to-morrow, were it not
for the costs that must be paid to the attorney before
they can be discharged.
I shall now relate one instance in which I myself
suffered very materially. Many years ago 'I kept
horses at the livery-stables of my old friend Mr. Fo-
zard. I had sometimes given over keeping horses, and
bad settled all accounts with him for many months,
when a man called on me, and told me that I owed
him four pounds some shillings, for the keeping of a
horse at grass some distance from London. I told
him that I knew nothing of the matter; that I never
had put any horse to grass with him ; and that I did
not even know the place where he lived, which I
literally believed was the fact. In about three days
after, I was served with a copy of a writ. I then
began to reflect, and did recollect, that Fozard had
put a horse one winter into a straw-yard for me ; but,
having settled my account with him, .Iof course con
cluded that I had paid that expence with the rest.
I accordingly went to his stables and examined the
books, when I found that he had not made such a
charge, and of course that I owed it. I was served
with the copy ot a writ on a Friday evening, and on
Monday morning quitted town for the neighbourhood
of Ascott-heath, preparatory to the races. I was so
incautious as not to look at the date of the writ, to
see when it was returnable; nor did I send it to my
lawyer, thinking that a week would make but little
difference, as I should be in town the following Sa
turday. The writ, however, was made returnable in
147
three days, and a fresh term commenced in four days.
Thus the lawyer had the start of me by two terms in
one week, which enabled him to make such' rapid
progress in his expences. On the Saturday afternoon,
only eight days from the time I was served with the
copy of a writ, I went to his house to pay the debt;
and judging that I should not have above twenty shil
lings to pay tor the expences at first incurred, was
surprised, when his clerk made the account out, to
find that the four pounds were, in eight days, accu
mulated, by the attorney's costs, to eleven or thirteen
pounds, I really forget which; but either of them is
sufficient for my purpose. On my expostulations re
lative to the exorbitant charges produced in so short
a time, the clerk informed me, that another term had
commenced since the issuing of the writ, and condo
led me by the assurance, that it was very fortunate I
happened to call that day, as, from my having neg
lected to plead through my. attorney to the writ, judg
ment would have been entered up against me on the
Monday morning following, which would have been
three pounds more, and that then I should have been
taken in execution. I now began to understand the
affair, that it was very regularly carried on, was very
legal, very moderate, and \ery just; and nought was
left for me but to pay the whole sum, acknowledge
the equity of the process, and content myself with
having had the good fortune to call that day, the mo
ment I came to town, by which 1 saved the additional
charge of three pounds. This all took place in eight
days. I had, indeed, seen, during my absence at
Ascott-heath, some tolerable good raceing ; but this
attorney, it must be allowed by all sportsmen, beat
every thing for speed.
I will trouble the reader with but one case more
relative to exorbitant costs on debts for small sums,
although I could mention several others which I
have paid within the six or seven last years of my
life. Before I surrendered as a prisoner to the King's
Bench, I gave a bill to a tradesman, not for any debt
contracted by me, but for a lady of my acquaintance.
This bill was kept back by a lawyer, into whose hands
it fell; and, not being a debt of my own, it escaped
my notice. After I was liberated, it was demanded
of me ; but as I could not pay it, I was arrested, and
compelled, fiom actual necessity to bail it, and de
fend it for some time, till I was able to pay it, when
I gave my attorney a sum of money to discharge that
bill, and some other matters I had to settle ; but not
having sufficient money given him, he left six pounds
unpaid, and informed me of his so doing. The lawyer
was perfectly satisfied, and assured him that he would
put me to no trouble for the remaining trifle, and that
I might pay it when convenient. My lawyer, how
ever, went out of town for two months on business, in
which time this gentleman carried on the process
against me; and, having brought it to an execution,
fixed me in judgment for sixteen pounds sixteen
shillings. It is necessary to remark, that the original
bill was only pounds, the costs pounds,
of which he was paid all but six ; and this six pounds
he increased, by additional costs, to sixteen pounds
sixteen shillings and six pence, which, together with
what he was paid before, brought the original debt of
twenty-six pounds to no less a sum than
In addition to this, the customary expences attend
ing on a judgment, such as sheriffs poundage, caption
fee, one guinea, searching the office, and some small
perquisite to the house of the officer I went to,
amounted to above two pounds more. Thus I
paid, for a twenty-six pound debt, no less a sum
than
149
This is law, aye, and very sound, legal, and ex
cellent law too, and what is practised every day in
the year, to the emolument of the attorney, and
ruin of the debtor, who, when it is adistressing circum
stance to him to pay six pounds, is compelled to pay
sixteen or be sent to jail, and there to lay until he
rots, or can pay the costs to the attorney as well as the
principal debt.
The reader will please to observe, that I paid six
teen pounds sixteen shillings to the attorney for his
costs on the remaining six pounds which were left
unpaid on an original debt of twenty-six pounds, on
which he had already received
costs.
Before I take my leave of this wretched subject, I
cannot refrain from relating a history of an attorney
into whose hands a bill fell belonging to a very parti
cular friend of mine ; but, first, 1 shall state the mo
tives which induce attornies to purchase bills of ex
change. — When money is scarce, and a gentleman
wants a little cash, and cannot get his bill discounted
at his banker's, having overdrawn his account consi
derably,- or, as many are situated who have no banker
at all ; he goes to some advertising money-broker, and
gives him a bill, we will say for an hundred pounds;
to get discounted : the money-broker goes to some
pawn-broker, woollen-draper, ironmonger, or some
other tradesman who is in the habit of discounting
bills, and giving part in money and part in goods. Of
the particular losses that gentlemen suffer by taking
half goods and half cash, which is the general cus
tom, I have mentioned in another part of this book ;
I shall, therefore, only relate how this bill is put into
circulation. The tradesman pays this bill away to some other
tradesman who is accustomed to the same traffic in
150
bills, and puts his name on it, the broker having in
dorsed it before for a veiy good reason, because his
name, being.on the back of the bill, prevents him be
ing called as a witness on a qui tarn action for usury.
7 be second tradesman, who now holds the bill, in
dorses it also. Now, there is the name of the drawer
of the bill, the broker's name, and the two trades
men's names, on the bill; these make four names.
The labt-menticneri tradesman, being in want of cash,
goes to some attorney who is in the constant habits
of purchasing such bills: when he comes to the attor
ney and shews him the bill, telling him he wsnts mo
ney for it, the attorney never examines the face of the
bill, but looks directly on the back of it, to see how
many names are there indorsed. If there are three
names, it is a matter worthy of his attention ; if four,
it is excellent, that making five names with the draw
er's. At first he pleads poverty ; but at last tells him
that the drawer of the bill is not a punctual man in
payment of bills, and that most likely he shall have
some time to wait for his money ; in short, that he
cannot give him above ninety pounds for the hundred
pound bill. This the tradesman very readily takes,
he having, by the bad quality of the goods he sold, if
he was the first discounter, made already from thirty
to forty per cent, or has purchased it at an inferior
price of the former tradesman ; but, in general, these
men, who give large quantities of goods, and but a
small part in cash, are many of them connected inti
mately together, and mutually pass each other's bills
backwards and forwards, with mutual indorsements.
But, to return to the attorney: when the bill is due,
if not paid at the day, a process is commenced, and a
writ civilly issued for form's sake; for these polite at
tornies are to well bred to arrest the drawer of the
bill in the street; but inform him, in a very civil let
ter, that he is sorry he cannot give time on the bill,
being directed by his client to inforce payment, (the
151
client, observe, reader, is no other than his own dear
self,) therefore respectfully requests that you will fa
vour him with the name of your solicitor, that he may
undertake for you to put in bail, as it is far from his
intent to serve you publicly with an arrest. — You have
now to thank him for his polite method of doing bu
siness, and send him the name of your solicitor. Bail
is shortly put in ; and if it is not in your power to pay
it in a term, bail above must be put in, and bail must
be justified; and, when you take the bail up, you
must pay four costs exclusive of your own; and there
is no means of avoiding these four extra costs, unless
you let judgment go by default, which if you do, you
must be prepared with the money to pay the princi
pal sum of the bill and your own single costs, or your
person is taken in execution, which is the ne plus ultra
of the law, and your body may be committed to New
gate. If you defend the action by various ingenious
methods, such as sham plea, writ of error, and some
other very clever inventions, you may postpone the
payment of the bill for many months; but, at the fi
nal arrangement, when neither sham nor fudge .can
avail any longer, then you must be contented to pay
four costs exclusive of- your own ; which, indeed, is
tolerably moderate, as i have given you one instance
in the foregoing pages, in which an attorney made a
lady pay eight or nine costs, and every one of them
were special originals, and each ten pounds expence ;
but he was a jewel of an attorney, and as transcen-
dant in real honour as a brilliant is to a rose diamond,
to the rest of his fraternity.
You now see, reader, how great an object it is to
an attorney, who buys a bill of a tradesman, to have
four or five names indorsed on the back of it, other
wise it is not worth his having; nor does he think it
worth negociating, if there is a probability that the
drawer will punctually pay it at the day when it is
152
due : the attorney, after all, runs no risk, even if the
drawer of the bill should run away, for he can come
upon the indorsers.
But, to come to the story, which is not without
amusement : — A friend of mine, who was notalwavs,
,as well as myself and many others, rigidly punctual
in taking up his bills at the hour when due, discount
ed a bill in the preceding manner: there were four or
five names on the back of the bill, which made it ve
ry eligible : an attorney readily purchased this bill.
The morning when due, it was presented at his house
with the accusto nary notice left in writing : — "Your
bill for 100/. lies due at Messrs. , bankers*.
Please to call this day betiveen the hours of three and
five." — My friend, that day, a happy day for him, but
a day of disappointment to the attorney, was, per
chance, more in cash than usual, and sent his servant
with the money, between three and five o'clock, to
take up the bill; which he did, and brought it to his
master cancelled.
A few weeks after, the same tradesman, who sold
this bill drawn on my friend to the attorney, called
again on him with another bill drawn on the same
gentleman, asking him to discount it. The moment
he saw on whom the bill was drawn, he threw it with
indignation on the floor, saying, " I am astonished,
Sir, at your offering me such a bill ; I will have'nothing
to do with that gentleman's bills, for the last, which I
gave you money for, to oblige you, was paid the day
it was presented." — The tradesman, much to his mor
tification, was obliged to depart without getting cash
for his bill, and had the trouble to seek for some other
* Oftentimes the attorney announces that the bill lies for
payment at his house or chambers.
153
attorney who dealt in bills, to whom the unusual
punctuality of my friend was not yet known.
Reader, I trust this story has given you some plea
sure ; and I assure you, on my word, it is a fact. For the
veracity of the following interesting account ot a dis
tinguished junto in this town, 1 cannot be altogether
so responsible ; but, on my honour, I have heard it
from good authority, and I believe the general outline
of their transactions to be true.
A few years past there existed in this town a truly
philanthropic money-lending society ; it consisted of
about five or six reputable tradesmen, two. attornies,
and one bailiff. I have had the honour of knowing
them all personally; and with the three latter, the
two attornies and the bailiff, I have been on a very
familiar footing, and through them have experienced
the philanthropy of the, society to the amount of ma
ny and many hundreds of pounds. This distinguished
society (pardon the vulgarity of the expression!) all
roived in one boat, passing bills from one to the other
to multiply the names on the back of the bills, till at
last they were placed in one of the attornies' hands,
by whom they were ultimately consigned to the care
and attention of the bailiff. I have been informed
that they even shared in the perquisites of the bailiff:
but I do not believe it, because his fees are so trifling
that it would not be sound policy in these able finan
ciers to partake of so small a part of the profits, and
let the bailiff share with them in the greater. In my
opinion he could not have had any share in the pro
fits, excepting the expence of the arrest and those in
curred in his house, unless he placed money to the
general account : in this manner he might pull an oar
in the boat also. This amiable society is totally bro
ken up and dispersed, by the devil having wanted one
of the attornies to transact special business in the in
fernal courts, and by the other respectful limb of the
v
154
Jaw having retired, otio cum dignilate, into the coun
try on an handsome fortune, acquired by costs upon
bills of exchange, and costs charged to distress debt
ors, there to await the call of his infernal majesty ;
for two such able men he will not admit at the same
time in his dominions. The devil even dreads their
power, and stands in awe of their unparalleled skill
and abilities.
For the present I shall say no more relative to the
King "s Bench, or of attornies, but promise the reader
to give him, in a Third Volume, which will be soon
published, a more minute account of that prison, and
a complete investigation of the conduct of attornies to
debtors, with other circumstances relative to the po
lice of the King's Bench.
155
CHAPTER V.
Interesting Particulars relative to Colonel Georg£
Hanger zvhen in America; being a Continuation
of his Life and Adventures.
AN about three months after I was appointed a cap
tain in the Hessian Yager corps ; and in the middle
of the ensuing month of March, I sailed from Ports
mouth for America. — Reader, be not alarmed! I am
not going to fight over again the American war ; it is
as much forgotten as the Trojan war, and the recital
of the one would be full as interesting to the public
as the other. It is however, my intention to relate
some incidents relative to myself, which, in the histo
ry of my life, are necessary to be mentioned.
I had not been arrived above two months in Ame
rica, when I received a letter from my mother, (the
best and kindest of parents,) informing me that Mr.
Wyatt, soon after my departure, and before he could
parcel out my estate, had been seized with a paralytic
stroke, which, she was fearful, would shortly prove
fatal to him. She informed me at the same time, that
the mortgagee was endeavouring to foreclose the
mortgage on my estate, and to sell it. She also sent
me a fresh power of attorney for me to execute, to
empower her, and some friend jointly with her, to
transact my affairs, as she was fearful my worthy
friend Mr. Wyatt would never be well enough to act
for me. This fresh power of attorney 1 forwarded by
the first packet to England, to my mother. In the
mean time, my worthy friend Wyatt, recovering a lit
tle from the effects of the paralytic stroke, neglected
not, the moment he was able to go down to my estate
156
to arrange every thing for sale ; but a second visita
tion of his disease put an end to his valuable life.
Durirg the interval between his death and the ar
rival of the fresh powers of attorney from America,
for my mother and her friend to act for me, which,
in passing- and repassing, took up some months, the
mortgagee foreclosed the mortgage ; and all that my
mother could do was in vain, for my estate was sold
before a Master in Chancery, at public auction, for
little more than half its real value.
The reader will be pleased to remark, that the ve
ry circumstance which rendered me happy and satis
fied on my leaving England, by having placed my af
fairs in so worthy and able a friend's hands, proved
my ruin, from my want of caution in not putting the
name of some other person jointly in the power of at
torney I gave to Mr. AVyatt : had I so done, as I have
been informed, from the best authority, it would not
have been practicable to have foreclosed the mort
gage ; but f never dreamed of Mr. Wyatt being struck
with a fit of apoplexy ; for he was a hale hearty man,
and by no means advanced in years, though he was
of a corpulent habit. Some months afterwards, the
common process of law having taken its course, my
estate was sold, as I have already mentioned.
It is also necessary to relate, that, in the interme
diate time, and previous to the sale, war with France
and Spain was declared, in addition to that wherein
we were engaged with America, which was the oc
casion of land falling above one third in value. In
short, my estate was sold for sixteen thousand and
some few hundred pounds ; though, if I could have
kept it till the peace, it would have fetched between
twenty and thirty thousand.
In addition to this piece of good news, my kind
mother informed me, that some outstanding debts,
157
amounting to several hundred pounds, remained un
paid, notwithstanding the security Mr. Wyatt had
given for me ; and that executions had been intro
duced into my house, after his death, from the great
deficiency of the sale of the estate. Thus I at once
found myself several hundreds worse than nothing,
instead ot not owing a shilling, and having eight or
ten thousand pounds in hand, as Mr. Wyatt assured
me, and which he certainly would have accomplished,
had not the French war broke out, or a legal compul
sion forced me to sell my estate during that period.
I now, indeed, and in truth, became a soldier of
fortune, for I was stripped and plundered of every
thing, and, which was worse, left encumbered with
debts. After serving the first campaign in the Flessian Ya
gers, my old and worthy friend, Sir Henry Clinton,
requested the Commander in Chief of the Flessian
troops to give me, in addition to my Yager company,
the command of two hundred men selected from the
Hessian regiments, which he was so kind as to com
ply with ; and, in addition to that request, he permit
ted a certain number of men from every Hessian re
giment to turn out volunteers. As soldiers, who have
been confined to the regular duty of a battalion in the
line, are ever desirous of serving with light troops at
the out-post, it raav be easily imagined that these
men were the eliti of the Hessian infantry. This fa
vour was much approved of by my commanding of
ficer, Colonel De Wurmbe, as it not only increased
his command, but strengthened it kby the addition of
a body of men with bayonets, who might by night be
employed to greater effect than the Yagers, who had
no bayonets, and were armed only with rifle-guns. A
further and most singular favour was granted me on
this occasion. If any man behaved ill, or of whose
conduct I disapproved, I was permitted to send him
back to the regiment to which he belonged, and to
158
have another sent to replace him. This was produc
tive of such good order, that, during three campaigns,
I never was under the disagreeable necessity of pu
nishing any one of them, further than by a few days'
confinement. — With the additional command to my
Yager company I continued to serve until the great
expedition to the southward was undertaken by Sir
Henry Clinton, to accomplish the reduction of North
and South Carolina, of which I shall make mention in
proper time; but, prior to that, I must advert to inci
dents in which I was personally and most materially
concerned. Shortly after the arrival of Lord Carlisle, Mr. Eden,
and Governor Johnson, at New- York, they published
a proclamation, in the name of the King, addressed
to his Majesty's revolted subjects, and the different
United States. It was judged proper, for form's sake,
that the Commander in Chief should forward this pro
clamation by land, from the out-posts of the army, to
Congress ; and that the Admiral should dispatch a
vessel with the same to Philadelphia. This proclama
tion was sent to the out-post of the Yager corps, to
my commanding officer, Col. De Wurmbe, with or
ders to him to forward them by a flag of truce to the
most contiguous advanced post of the American army.
I was the only Englishman in that corps: my friend
Col. De Wurmbe, therefore, requested me as a favour
(it not being my turn for duty) to go out with these
proclamations, and assigned as his reason for desiring
me to undertake this business, that, as the other of
ficers did not understand the English language, some
mistake might take place from their not being able to
explain matters, and converse with the American of
ficers. Col. De Wurmbe certainly could have com
manded me on this service ; but to comply with a re
quest, or even a hint from him, was but a small tri
bute of gratitude for me to pay to so good and amia-
159
ble a man, as well as so kind a friend. It was, there
fore, with the greater pleasure that I undertook this
duty ; but not without foreseeing the disagreeable
consequences attendant on it, by which I might have
lost my life, and in the most unpleasant manner for a
Soldier and a gentleman.
I was perfectly aware of the temper of the Ameri
cans at that period, elated as they were by the succours
which their great and good ally had already sent, and
promised still to send them*. A French fleet being
off the coast, some French troops having been alrea
dy landed and marching to join General Washington's
army, and others coming from the West Indies, it was
most natural to imagine that they would reject all
proposals from the British Government, not only with
scorn, but contempt. I, therefore, told Colonel De
Wurmbe, on my taking leave, that I would endea
vour to stay as short a time at the American out-posts
as possible, merely to demand a receipt, and push back
with all expedition ; for I was confident, if I remain
ed a sufficient time for them to deliberate, that I should
be stopped and made a prisoner. The event proved
the truth of my conjectures.
I must here observe, that the trumpeter and mount
ed Yager that went with me, carried several hundred
printed copies of this proclamation for me to distribute
as I went along, at the country-men's houses, and in
the towns through which I passed. In Ferry-town,
situated fourteen miles from our out-posts, I distri
buted some hundreds. About three or four miles
farther, beyond Ferry-town, I fell in with a patrole of
light dragoons, who carried me to their officer at a
house close by, who commanded about fity men. I
* Count D'Estaign had blocked up New-York harbour
for some time, and was then gone for Rhode-Island.
160
gave him thirteen packets one addressed to every State
and one to General Washington. On reading a print
ed copy, he told me he did not know whether it was
proper for him to receive such papers, and that it was
necessary for him to send to know the commands of
General Scott on that subject, who lay at the distance
of about four miles. I told him I was commanded to
leave them at the first American out-post that I should
fall in with : and, with an air of non-ch alance, I added
that, if he did not choose to receive them, I should
leave them with the landlord of the house : but that
it was but common politeness from one officer to ano
ther, to give me an acknowledgment under his hand
that I had left them at the house, merely to shew my
commanding officer that I had done my duty, as I
might otherwise be very severely reprimanded on my
return to the British army, and perhaps put under ar
rest. In short, after a good deal of persuasion, and
telling him that the proclamation, whatever it contain
ed, was nothing to him or to me, as it came from the
British Commissioners, and that certainlyT should, in
a similar case, not hesitate one moment in giving him
a receipt; I procured a receipt from him, and, taking
a polite leave of him, rode off for our army with no
small degree of speed and pleasure. A few minutes
after, he dispatched an officer with the proclamations
to General Scott, but not before I had given every
soldier who came round me one of them.
On my return through Ferry-town, there were above
two hundred persons collected together, and I was
under some apprehensions that they would have stop
ped me, as a few armed militia amongst them said
they knew not what business I had to deliver printed
papers inviting the citizens of America to desert the
Congress. I told them that I was under the sanction
of a flag of truce, and had done nothing but what the
inhabitants requested. The populace were nearly all
161
in favour of me, and requested me to continue my dis
tribution of the papers, which I did, and absolutely
went so far, at their request, as to read one to the peo
ple as I sat on my horse ; and nailed one up against
the public house before I departed. I knew very well
from the distance General Scott was, that I could not
be easily overtaken, and that I had near an hour to
spare. I then made the best of my way home, and
met with a strong patrole of our corps within two miles
of the town, when I returned, without further inter
ruption, to the camp.
This very day the Admiral sent Lieutenant Heele
in a cutter to Philadelphia with counterparts of the
same packets which I had carried out. The moment
we C3st anchor in the river Delaware, the lieutenant
and his whole crew were made prisoners; and Lieu
tenant Heele remained above1 a year in Philadelphia
jail; and I should have been sent there also, and have
kept him company, had I waited to receive General
Scott's commands; who, in a very few days afterwards,
as I learned from the communication we held at the
out-posts, had sent orders to detain me; but fortu
nately the bird was flown.
I should never have thought of mentioning the fol
lowing circumstance, had not my character, both as
an officer and a gentleman, been most grossly aspers
ed by the infamous Philadelphia and Connecticut
Journals on that subject. The following is a correct
statement of the whole business — So help me God!
The Commander in Chief, after having given or-
derb to General Prescot to evacuate Rhode-Island, des
troy the works, and repair with the troops to New-York,
was induced, a few days after he had sent those in
structions, from certain events that took place, to
countermand those orders, and sent me to Rhode-Is
land for that purpose, giving me instructions to exa-
x
162
mine two particular works; and, if I found them not
destroyed, or capable, by a few days' labour, of being
put in their former state, General Prescot was by no
means to evacuate the island. I sailed in the Dela
ware frigate, Captain Mason ; and although it is not
above an hundred and eighty miles from Sandy Hook,
I was seven days on my passage, being forced to work
up close under Long-Island, in the very teeth of the
wind, as it blew very fresh throughout the whole
course of it.
On the seventh day, in the evening, just at dusk,
the frigate cast anchor about one mile and an half
from the island, off the mouth of the harbour. Ori
our approach, there were two small armed sloops work
ing out of the harbour; but, on seeing the frigate,
they immediately put back. This gave us strong sus
picions that they were enemies, and that the island
was evacuated; but, as there were small rivers and
creeks on the opposite shore of Connecticut, it was
possible that they might come from thence, and not
from Rhode Island. I consulted with my friend,
Captain Mason, on the occasion, who was clearly of
opinion, that, from the length of our passage, we were
arrived too late, for that the island was evacuated. I
was of the same sentiment: yet, as there was a chance
that it might not be so, as, when frigates arrive, they
always send their boat in, and the General might not
think it necessary to send a boat off from shore till the
next morning; I suggested to Captain Mason how
very absurd I should appear were I to return to New-
York, and there find that the troops had not left the
island at the time I had arrived ; stating to him, at the
same time, the magnitude of the business on which I
was employed, and that I should never dare to shew
my face before Sir Henry Clinton, if I did not do eve
ry thing that depended on myself: I was, therefore,
anxious to risk any danger in order to investigate the
163
object of my commission. I accordingly requested
him to give me an armed boat, being determined to
land in the dark, and gain intelligence.
Captain Mason in compliance with my earnest so
licitation, gave me his ten-oared barge, two marines,
a cockswain, and one of his lieutenents ; so that we
consisted of fifteen persons. I timed it so as to enter
the harbour just at the latter end of the flood-tide, so
that we might have the tide with us on returning. On
my departure from the ship, he told the lieutenant
strictly to obey my orders, and do every thing I com
manded. At the same time, being sensible of the
danger which I encountered, he requested me ro act
with the utmost prudence and circumspection, for
that he would not, for ten thousand guineas, have that
boat's crew lost or taken prisoners, as they had at
tended on his person, as barge-men, during the whole
war. The boat was well armed ; every man had a
musket and bayonet, with cutlasses, pistols, &c. &c.
and plenty of ammunition. With oars muffled, I ap
proached the harbour in silence, keeping close under
the shade thrown on the water by the high craggy
rocks on the right ; by which, and the darkness
of the night, we were so impervious to the view,
that a sloop working out of the harbour, absolute
ly, when she tacked about, was not above one hun
dred and fifty yards from the boat, and could not
perceive us. We lay on our oars till she had com
pletely tacked and stood half way over to the other
side, when we proceeded, and brought the boat to
shore directly under the High Bluff of Brinton's Point,
and not far from the battery. A boat might have pas
sed us within thirty yards, and not have perceived us.
I then landed with the two marines only, who had
sailors' blue jackets over their red ones to conceal the
red and white uniform, and who were ordered to fol
low me closely, to proceed when I proceeded, and to
lie down flat on the ground when I fell down. We
164
then crawled up the precipice, s© as to be able to •
look just above the summit, and remained some time
in that position, to observe and determine how I was
to proceed. I heard the centinel's challenge every
now and then, and cry " All is well ;" for they were
quite on the alert, having observed a man-of-war an
chor off the harbour, as I was afterwards informed.
At last a patrole from the nearest picket, which, from
the fire, I judged was not above three hundred yards
from me, passed me so near that I could distinctly
hear them speak ; and I heard two sentinels challenge
the patrole, one on my right, the other on my left. I
knew, when the patrole was passed, that I had little
to fear, and that I could easily, from the darkness of
the night, pass between them. I accordingly ran
across the road they went down, and, when over in
the next field, which was very rough and bushy, I laid
the marines down and sat up myself, in order to set
the position of our boat by the seven stars in the
north, the pointers of which point to the north polar
star, which is immoveable. This every officer, espe
cially of light troops, should be well acquainted with :
if I had not known it, I might have been easily taken
prisoner in wandering along the cliff in search of the
boat on my return.
I then looked about for a house from which I might
take some person to gain intelligence, and fixed my
eye on two, about a mile distant, as well as I could
judge by the lights in them, and quite at a distance
fiom any others. There were several nearer me, but
they were two contiguous to the pickets and patroles
along the shore, to suit my purpose. With great cau
tion, and always laying down when Iheaidany thing,
I approached them ; they were about two hundred
yards apart: in the one I saw two lights, in the other
only one ; I, therefore, made up to the latter, and lay
ing the two marines down among the cabbages in the
163
garden, I stood about ten yards from the door, at the
garden gate, and halloed out — "Holla! house!"
when an old woman came to the door, and asked
what I wanted, and who I was ? I replied, " I am an
officer come from town, and am ordered over to Con
necticut* by the General, on business. I have lost
my way in the dark, and want to be put into the
pathf to Bnnton's Point : pray send some one to the
end of the garden to put me into it." She replied,1
" One of our family is gone to town, and the other is
gone to bed ; but if he is not undressed, I will send
him to shew you." I had previously determined with
my two faithful marines, if I could not entice any
one person out of the house, to enter it and take some
one away by force ; but I dreaded the consequences,
knowing that if resistance was made, we should be
obliged to shed blood in our own defence. My stra
tagem succeeded completely : out came a fine young
fellow, as straight and as tall as a poplar tree. The
moment I saw him on the steps, I said, " Come along,
my good man, just put me into the path to Brinton's
Point, and I will give you a dollar."
I retired a few yards from the garden gate, which
he passed ; and when at a sufficient distance from the
house, I took him fast by the coat, and, putting my
pistol to his head, told him to look behind him at the
two marines, who had their bayonets pointed within
two feet of his body. I then charged him not to
speak, pledged my honour to him that I would not
hurt him ; but if he uttered a word, should be hear
any soldiers passing, he would be killed, and we must
endeavour through the darkness of the night to make
* The name of the opposite shore from Rhode-Island.
+ This is the cant term the New England people have for
all roads : whether little or great, they call them all paths.
166
our escape. I took him into a rough place close by,
and made him sit down by us. I then told him I was
a British officer, not an American, and was landed
from the frigate, that lay off the harbour, to gain in
telligence. I now gave him a half Johannes, and re
peated my assurance that I would treat him well ; but
that he must come along with me. His fears at length
subsided, and he told me that the day before I arriv
ed the British had evacuated the island, and that an
American force of three thousand men now occupied
it. The marines judging with me that the tide of ebb
had made, and that the moon would rise in about an
hour, we proceeded to the boat, walking alongside of
this man, with my hand fast in his right hand jacket
pocket : for I knew too well to trust to a New Eng-
landman's promises ; had he got a yard start of us,
he would have alarmed the whole country.
When I had proceeded within about four hundred
yards of the rock from whence I landed, I had the
same road to cross again on which I had seen the pa
role pass. As we lay down on one side of it, waiting
for the passing of a patrole, that I might hear where
the sentinels were, my guide endeavoured to betray
me, telling me there was no danger if I went up the
path : I knew better, and now no longer trusted him ;
but put it out of his power to do anv mischief, by tak
ing my pocket handkerchief and stuffing the greatest
part of it into his mouth, that he should not vocifer
ate. At the same time I made one of the marines
hold him fast by the left hand, whilst I held him as
fast by the right. When the patrole had passed, we
crossed the path, and, on arriving at the brink of the
precipice, I had, by keeping my eyes constantly on
the north stars, set the boat with such precision that
when I halla'd, " Mason, a-hoy !" I was answered
directly beneath where I stood, " Hanger, a-hoy .'"
167
which were the signal words fixed on before our de
parture. I got my gentleman into the boat, and row
ed out of the harbour ; and the moon did not rise be
fore we were quite clear of it. Every thing turned out
well; the tide and rising of the moon was well timed,
and with no inconsiderable degree of pleasure I arriv
ed on board the Delaware frigate, to the great joy of
my friend Captain Mason. Unfortunately it was not
possible to land this man on the opposite shore, or to
send him back to Rhode Island. Captain Mason
therefore proposed putting him the next day on shore
on Block Island, a few leagues from Rhode Island;
but the fog proved so thick, that we could not
make it with safety. We therefore stood out to
sea, and I was compelled to take him with me
to New- York. On our arrival there, I provided him
with quarters, drew provisions for him, and supplied
him with necessaries. It was intended that he should
be sent by the first flag of truce to Rhode Island, or
by the first boat to New London, or some town conti
guous to his home in New England ; but he had not
been six days in. New York, when he sickened of the
small-pox, and died of that distemper.
The sudden disappearance of this man certainly
wore an aspect of suspicion, which gave room to ma
ny unpleasant conjectures. The fact, however, being
known, that he had been taken away by force off the
island, and his never appearing there again, was pro
ductive of many reports, all infamously false, and de
trimental to my character. In various shapes and
forms was this transaction related, both in the Con
necticut and Philadelphia newspapers, whose princi
ple was to render odious, in the eyes of the country,
any officer who possessed the smallest degree of en-
terprize or resolution. It was stated first, that this
man was murdered on the island ; and afterwards,
that he was thrown overboard at sea. But, after some
time, it being publicly known at New York that I
168
had necessarily brought him there, and treated him
with kindness, a more just account was published ;
but still it was added, that this man had been thrown
into prison, where he died of the jail fever. I have
pledged myself solemnly to the fact, and should not
have troubled the reader with the minute particulars,
was it not absolutely necessary to state them, to justi
fy my character as a soldier and a gentleman.
From my having been absent from New- York so
many days, indeed above double the time usually re
quired to make that passage, (for the wind was foul
nearly the whole way back, as well as going there),
I was given over for lost. Some imagined that the
frigate had sailed at night into the harbour and was
taken, though such croakers little knew the abilities
and judgment of Captain Mason; while others sup
posed that I had landed and was made prisoner. I
arrived, however, to set aside all conjecture, just as
Sir Henry Clinton was at dinner with fourteen or fif
teen officers at table, none of whom, that I recollect,
are living, except my old friend, Sir Thomas Wallace,
who was one of the company, and is well acquainted
with this circumstance. :
After relating the whole affair, at table, to Sir Hen
ry Clinton, and receiving his thanks in the kindest
manner, I never shall forget, to the last day of my life
a very singular remark of his, nearly in the following
words: " I commend your prowess much; but at the
same time, I am sorry you risked so much, as it was
not my wish you should venture so far: for, upon
my word, my dear Hanger, 1 believe if they had ta
ken you on the island, they would have hanged you
directly." I replied, " My dear General, that never
entered into my head, it being a thing totally impos
sible for the Americans to commit such an outrage
on an officer sent by you, in character of an aid-de
camp, with orders to our commanding officer at
169
Rhode Island. I could be subjected to no other dan
ger but of being imprisoned; they could not surely
be guilty of such an act." " You may," replied the
General; " think so, Hanger; but I give you my
word I do not, for I know not what they would not
do: and I am happy to see you returned safe." At
this time my worthy and intimate friend, Major Andre,
aid-de-camp to Sir Henry, was sitting at table ; the
same who suffered some "time afterwards, and of
whom I shall have cause to speak hereafter.
Nothing of consequence, or of peculiar notoriety
in the history of my life, took place, worthy to be
related, until the great expedition sailed from New
York for the reduction of the Southern Provinces, ex
cept various military incidents and occurrences, in
which I acted an inferior part, on the great theatre
of the war, by no means interesting to the reader,
who long ago must have been heartily tired of every
thing relative to that subject, and it is very distant
from my intention to trouble him with it. A repeti
tion of the Trojan war, in my humble opinion, would
he equally as amusing.
Before I pass to the Southward, and relate my ad
ventures in Georgia, South and North Carolina, I
must mention a singular reverse of fortune which I
now suffered. The Devil and Mammon had already
conspired to ruin me, and had ransacked and plun
dered my property in my absence, by compelling the
sale of my estate at auction, from the fatality of my
agent's death, at a time when lands were one third
less in value than they were before the war or after.
Fortune, that fickle goddess, not satisfied with having
already turned her wheel from me and my interests,
again destined me to be the object of her caprice and
neglect. I received a letter from my sister, Mrs. Van-
sittart, whose tender love and regard for me is deeply
imprinted in my breast, informing me that the Duch-
170
ess of St. Alban's (my godmother) was dead. She had
made a will in my favour, that was witnessed by my
mother, in ^hich she,made me heir to her whole pro
perty, to a very considerable amount. Within the
last twelve months of her death, a Mr. Roberts came
over from Ireland. She had never seen him before,
or ever heard of him. He, however, proved, to her
Grace's satisfaction, that he was related to her; so that
she reversed her intentions, made a new will, and left
every thing to him. Her second will only bore date
six months prior to her death; hadtshe died seven
months sooner, I should have inherited a considera
ble property, and a great addition after the Duke's
death, who was then living. The Duchess of St Al
ban's was a Miss Roberts, a rich heiress: her parents
and her near relations dying when she was very young,
my father received her into his family, educated and
protected her: out of his family she married the Duke
of St. Alban's; she stood god-mother to me, and lived
in the strictest intimacy and friendship with our fami
ly. It was but natural to believe that she would have
left some part of her property to our family; but thus
she in gratitude repaid my father and mother for their
tender care and attention to her for many years, by leav
ing her whole property to a gentleman with whom she
never had any acquaintance till about a year before her
death. With what great expectations some people look
forward to dead men's and dead women's shoes : but
those who do may go bare-footed all their lives. I never
expected a guinea from her, therefore suffered no dis
appointment ; for my mother, although she was one of
the witnesses to the Duchess's will, which was made
before I sailed for America, never, even in the most dist
ant manner, intimated it to me. As I never had buoy
ed myself up with any hopes of advantage from her, I
suffered no mortification on the occasion, though I could
not but reflect on the bitterness of my fortune, that, with-
171
in six months, my interest should have suffered so ma
terially, having been fixed on by her grace to be her heir,
and had never given her cause to withdraw her former
good opinion. But fate had decreed this, together with
many other mortifications, miseries and distresses,
which I was destined to suffer. Doomed as 1 was to
a life chequered with misfortunes, by a Supreme Pow
er, that same Power gave to me a vigorous constitution,
and a bold and undaunted mind, to stem the current
of adversity, and bear up against a sea of troubles.
When ihe expedition from New York took place
for the reduction of the Southern Provinces, my wor
thy friend Sir Henry Clinton fulfilled the promise he
had made me, of giving me a command : It consisted
of the two hundred picked men from the Hessian ar
my, Col. Emirick's company of riflemen commanded
by Captain Abthouse, and about sixty German Jagers.
On their arrival at Savannah in Geoigia, some compa
nies of Provincial light ihantry were to be added to
the above men; and, at my own request, I was to join
my corps to that of my most intimate, affectionate, and
deceased friend Col. Ferguson, an officer whose dis
tinguished merit and gallantry is well known to the
Brtish army. The above mentioned men were put on
board the ship Anne. In the violent gale of wind,
which arose about five days after we quitted the har
bour of NewYork, (Sandy-Hook,) this ship ran foul of
another in the night, and carried away both her main
and mizen masts; of course, having but the foremast
remaining, she was compelled to put before the wind,
and make every wind a fair one. She found herself
unable to make either the American coast, or bear
down upon the West Indies; therefore putting the
troops and crew upon shorter allowance, bore away
right before the wind, it then blowing hard at north
west, and the first port she made was St. Ives in Corn
wall. The oldest navigator must acknowledge this as
172
a most singular event — a ship dismasted, bound for
Georgia, and driven to England.
The kindest inquiries after my health were made
(as I have since been informed) by some of those phi
lanthropic gentlemen who had shared in plundering
me of my estate, on their hearing that a corps of sol
diers, commanded by Major Hanger, were arrived
from America at St. Ives in Cornwall. However, the
mutual happiness which both parties would have reci
procally enjoyed at meeting, was for that time pre
vented, by my having sailed on board the ship John,
at the particular request of my worthy friend Sir
Henry Clinton, to see that proper attention was paid
to three favourite horses of his during the ; voyage,
which were placed under my particular directions.
Thus did I escape being driven to England, by which
I should have been obliged to have taken a passage
once more over that small herring-pool to America to
join the army, beside the good fortune, perhaps, of
falling in with some one of those tender-hearted gen
tlemen who were so kindly interested in my health,
and experienced from them the pleasure of a familiar
tap on the shoulder.
This was a fortunate event for the soldiers in the
ship Anne, who escaped, by this singular event, the
miseries of ill health, to which all those are doomed
who are fated to serve in those intensely hot and sick
ly climates, whose baneful influence ii known only
to those who have experienced it. To me it was a
misfortune, as it deprived me, for some length of time,
of the command of a corps of light troops, so desira
ble an object to all officers.
My worthy friend Sir Henry Clinton, until an op^
portunity presented itself of employing me more ac
tively, honoured me, during the siege of Charlestown,
by continuing me in his family as one of his aides-de-
173
camps. Before I quit New York altogether, I must
relate a circumstance that had nearly cost me my life.
The Commander in Chief had fallen down to Sandy
Hook, preparatory to his sailing with the army, and
had desired me to remain in New York till the next
day, to bring some papers of consequence to him
from his secretary, which were not then finished ; and,
having received them, I thought of the best means of
proceeding to the Hook myself. The transports had
all dropped down for some days ; and I could not,
even in all the river, find a sloop or schooner for my
purpose ; I, therefore, pressed a strong row-boat, with
two men, from the Flymarket-stairs, and proceeded
on my way to the Hook. The frost had set in intensely
severe for two or three days, so that vast sheets of
ice floated up and down the channel with the tide.
Before I had got half-way to Staten-Island, the eddy-
tide, from round the back point of it, drove several
large sheets of ice into the channel, in which my boat
got completely entangled; and we could find noway
out, the ice approaching nearer to us every moment.
At this instant, Mr. Hamilton, a gentleman in the
quarter-master and transport service, was fortunately
going down from the dock-yard, in a very strong large
sloop. Mr. Hamilton, seeing a boat in distress, sur
rounded by the ice, and endeavouring to find her way
out, knowing the danger we were exposed to, very
humanely bore down upon us, breaking, by the force
of his vessel, through the flakes of ice. I was on a
very intimate footing with Mr. Flamilton, but knew
not who my deliverer was until I came within fifty or
sixty yards of him. He was astonished how I could have
been so imprudent as to attempt passing down the
river amongst the ice in a row-boat. I told him I
had been warned of the danger, and knew it at my
departure, but I could get no sloop or schooner; and,
as the papers were of consequence to the Command-
174
er in Chief, it was necessary he should have them, as
the fleet was to sail that night: besides, I thought, as
the tide of ebb ran very strong down to the Hook, I
should not meet any ice in my way sufficient to block
me up, as it would go the same way with me, and
therefore would not greatly endanger me. Indeed I
never dreamed of the shoals of ice that are hurried
round the point of Staten-Island, by the eddy-tide
meeting the other bodies of ice going down to the
island with the ebb-tide, which completely hemmed
me in between them.
Myself and one of the watermen had not stepped
on board the sloop above two or three minutes, when,
as the other waterman and my servant were handing
a favourite spaniel and my portmanteau out of the
boat, a sheet of ice stove her nearly in two. My
servant jumped on board ; but the waterman slipped
down, and would have been crushed between the
vessel and the ice, if we had not thrown a rope to his
assistance, and hauled him up. Thus I providential
ly escaped from a most miserable death, as I was above
three miles from any shore, and must evidently have
foreseen my death approaching, without any chance
whatever of escaping. I arrived, however, safe at the
Hook, delivered the papers to the Commander in
Chief, and sailed at day-break the next morning.
This happened on Christmas-eve.
Had this expedition been delayed forty-eight hours
longer, the whole fleet of transports would have been
frozen fast in the river, as the frost that winter was
more intense than the oldest American had ever known.
Incredible as it may appear, it is an absolute fact, that
in a few days it froze so intensely, that a regiment of
cavalry, cannon, and waggons, passed from Long-Is
land toStaten-Llandon the ice, over a channel so deep
as to admit the largest snips in the British navy to sail
up to Nrw York.
175
The rendezvous of our fleet was at Savannah in Geor
gia, where I arrived after a tedious passage, owing to
contrary winds and the most violent storms, which dis
persed a great part of the fleet: there we were obliged
to remain until several ships, which had been obliged
to put into the Bahama-Islands joined us. The army
then proceeded to besiege Charlestown in South Ca
rolina. The greatest part, under the Commander in
Chief, proceeded by sea; the other, under the com
mand of General Patterson, by land ; and both join
ed their forces before that town. During the time I
remained at Savannah, I had an opportunity of seeing
about six hundred Indians, of the Cherokee and Creek
nations, preparing and training themselves for war.
This sight was very pleasing to me, having never seen
any large body of Indians together before.
The Indians abstain from women, take physic and
prepare their bodies for war, by frequently running
and using other manly exercises. In one, not unlike
the game we call goff, they shew great skill and ac
tivity. They were a very fine race of men. One of
their Chiefs came to pay his respect to the Command
ing Officer at Savannah. Reader, I think his trium
phant entry and dress will at leastmake you smile. He
was mounted on a small meanChickesaw horse, about
twelve hands and a half high: his dress consisted of
a linen shirt, a pair of blue cloth trowsers, with yellow
and scarlet flaps sewed down the outward seams;
over this he had on an old full-dress uniform of the
English foot-guards, the lace very much tarnished; a
very large tye-wig on his head; an old gold laced uni
form hat, Cumberland-cocked; a large gorget round
his neck; a sword, in a belt, hung over his shoulder;
a tomohawk and scalping knife in his girdle ; rings
in his nose and ears; his face, and breast which was
quite open, painted various colours; and a musket on
his shoulder. He was one of the most distinguished
Chiefs among the whole Indian nations, and was cal»
176
led the mad dog. I took him for a madman ; and ne
ver laughed more heartily in my life than when I first
saw him.
The beautiful red birds of that country, which are
known in England by the name of Virginia nightin
gales, are as plentiful in Georgia as sparrows in this
country. A negro man had caught a dozen of them
in a trap, and offered to sell them to me for a York
shilling. I might have had them, I dare say, for six
pence ; and the cock-birds are sold in London by the
bird-fanciers for three guineas a-piece.
When the siege of Charlestown was finished, and
the town taken, Sir Henry Clinton gave me a warrant K
in conjunction with my old friend Colonel Ferguson,
either jointly or separately, throughout the provinces
of South and North Carolina, to regulate, inspect,
muster, &c. all volunteer corps, loyal militia, and
others; and to inspect the quantity of corn, cattle,
&c. belonging to the inhabitants ; and to report there
on to Lord Cornwallis, who commanded in the South
ern Provinces. Lord Cornwallis most kindly told
me, that, although I was separated from my old friend
and protector Sir Henry Clinton, if it was in his pow
er to make my situation pleasant, I had but to com
mand him. To serve under the command of so good
tempered and brave a soldier could not but be pleas
ing to me, and to every other officer who is acquaint
ed with his goodness of heart. I should be wanting
in common justice, if I did not testify his kindness
and protection towards me, which, from that day to
this moment, he has never with-held from me.
The power and command invested in me by this
warrant was very extensive; it extended even so far
as to empower me to join the race of Carolinians to
gether in holy matrimony. This however, requires
explanation — By the laws and customs of Carolina,
177
all justices of the peace, field officers, and colonels of
the militia, had a power to marry, and did marry, the
inhabitants who lived at a remote distance from a
great town. In the back parts of Carolina you may
search after an angel with as much chance of finding
one as a parson : there is no such thing — I mean,
when I was there. What they now are, 1 know not :
it is not impossible but they may have beco -ne more
religious, moral, and virtuous, since the great affec
tion they have imbibed for the French. In my tim?,
you might travel sixty or seventy miles and not See a
church, or even a schism-shop*, lhave often called,
at a dog-house, in the woods, inhabited by eight or
ten persons, merely from curiosity. I have asked the
master of the house, " Pray, my friend, of what reli
gion are you?" — " Of what religion, Sir?" — " Yes,
my friend, of what religion are you of, or to what sect
do you belong ?"— " Oh ! now I understand you ;
why, for the matter of that, religion does not trouble
us much in these parts."
This distinguished race of men are more savage
than the Indians, and possess every one of their vices»
but not one of their virtues. Ihave known one of these
fellows travel two hundred miles through the woods,
never keeping any road or path, guided by the sun by
day, and the stars by night, to kill a particular per
son belonging to the opposite party : he would shoot
him before his own door, and ride away to boast of
what he had done on his return. I speak only of the
back-woodsmen, not of the inhabitants in general,
of South Carolina ; for, in all America, there are not
better educated or better bred men than the planters.
Indeed, Charlestown is celebrated for the splendour,
luxury, and education of its inhabitants : I speak on-
;f> m.T<^jVxt^j
* A meeting-house. z
178
ly of that heathen race known by the name of Crack
ers. Had I continued to remain in this capacity with
my friend Col. Ferguson, I might have suffered the
same fate as he did at King's Mountain, where he
was killed, and his corps defeated. The Americans
had such an inveteracy against Ferguson, that they
buried all the other bodies, but stripped Ferguson's
of its clothes, and left it naked on the field of battle,
to be devoured by the turkey-buzards, a species of
vulture in that country. I state this merely to shew
the inveteracy of the enemy ; for it is of little conse
quence, in my opinion, whether a man's body be de
voured by vultures, or embalmed as the ^Egyptian
mummies are, or buried in AVestminster Abbey. If,
indeed, as Mahomet is' said to have done, I could
take my flight to Paradise ^n a jackass, that would
be a pleasant ride. But Fate destined me for other
things: my friend Col. Tarieton applied forme to be
appointed major to the British Legion ; and the Com
mander in Chief, Sir H. Clinton, appointed me be
fore he sailed for New- York.
The reader will give me credit, I trust, for having
passed through my campaign to the north so peacea
bly as I have done, having not dealt in the exploits
of war further than was , absolutely necessary to keep
up the chain of my Adventures. I trust also he will
applaud my humanity in not shocking his feelings :
for, as yet, I have not drawn one drop of blood of the
enemy; nor is it my intent. I have also studiously
avoided relating all those calamities and horrors that
in war are impossible to be prevented in the best
disciplined armies, some of which, were I to relate
them, I assure the reader, would make his wig stand
on end on his head : but a truce to murder, plunder,
-and~a*esolation. , Let the reader be assured,-if his wig
179
is not incommoded by other circumstances, my writ-
ingr shall never disturb it.
In the progress the army under Lord Cornwallis
made to the upper parts of North Carolina, I caught
the yellow fever at Charlottebourg. Tarleton was
just recovering from it as I sickened. When the ar
my marched from that town, myself and five officers,
Who had the same disorder, were put into waggons
and carried with the army. They all died in the first
week of our march, and were buried in the woods as
the army moved on.
My sickness happened in the autumn, at which
time the rainy season sets in, when small rivulets,
which, generally, the soldier may walk through and
not wet him above the ancles, swell, in a few hours,
to such an height as to take a man up to the neck,
and oftentimes for some hours impede the march of
an army, tn passing several of, these small brooks,
the straw on which I lay in the waggon was often
wetted. Kind nature had endowed me with a consti
tution much stronger than the generality of mankind,
or the damps I encountered must have killed me.
The fatigue of travelling alone brought the other five
officers, in a very short time, to their graves. I took
the advantage of the escort of a regiment, which was
ordered to leave the army and march down out of
North Carolina to Camden in South Carolina, where
I arrived safe, and all but dead. There Lord Raw-
don (now Earl Moria) commanded. I had travelled
over a great extent of country, in a waggon ; so that .
from the roughness of the roads, and the great debili
ty of my whole frame, I was reduced to something
very like a skeleton. I was, indeed, so weak that I
could not turn myself, -but was forced to be moved by
my attendants when I wanted for ease to change my
posture. In this- miserable situation I lay so long;
first on one side, then on the other, and then on my
180'
back, that the bones of my back and each hip came
fairly, or rather freely, through the skin. I then had
no other posture to lay in but on ray stomach, with
pillows. to support n e.
The reader may think that I exaggerate the mise
ries I suffered, for surely no man ever endured more ;
but, I pledge my honour, that all I relate is strictly
true: but I will give additional testimony to my own;
for, having the honour to dine at Lord Moria's house
in St. James's Place, about two years after my arrival
in England, where his Royal Highness the Prince of
Wales, Sir Henry Clinton, General Vaughan, Gene
ral Crosbie, and may other officers who had served
in America, were present, his Lordship could not re
frain from observing how surprising it was that a man
should be sitting in that company, whose bones he
had absolutely seen at Camden come through his skin.
-—The disorder at last fell down into my legs, which,
I am of opinion, saved my life ; as that moment I
began to recover. Till that circumstance I had taken
nothing to support me but opium and port-wine for
three weeks, as nothing else would stay on my sto
mach. I now began to have an appetite, and by de
grees I recovered; but for along time could not walk
without the assistance of one crutch. If I do not ac
tually owe my life to Earl Moria, I certainly am in
debted to him for the more speedy recovery of my
health, from the, many comfortable and nourishing
things he sent me every day from his own table, which
my servants could not make, and were not to be pur
chased ; and the butcher's meat killed at that time of
the year, is absolutely little better than carrion at
Camdfn. I was witness to the arduous task to which this no
bleman, young in years, but a veteran in abilities and
military science, was appointed, and from which he
extricated himself with so much honour to his talents
1*1
and advantage to his country. — Lord Cornwallis's ar
my was marched into- Virginia, and Lord Rawdon
left to protect South Carolina, with a feeble force,
against the whole power which General Green could
.assemble in both the provinces ; and he unquestiona
bly (without any disparagement to the militarv cha
racter of General Washington) was the best and most
active officer in the whole American army. From
Camden I went down to Charlestown, where I found
my old friend Doctor Hayes, (now Sir John Macna-
mara Hayes,) physician-general to our army, who as
sured me, that, notwithstanding the great debility I
laboured under, my stamina was sound and unimpair
ed ; and that if I would either go to sea for two or
three months, and take my passage to the northward,
so as to quit, for a short time, that baneful climate,
I should be as good a man as I ever was, in respect
to health. Captain George Montague, an intimate
friend of mine, who commanded the Pearl frigate,
was ordered by the Admiral, with the Iris frigate,
Captain Dawson, to cruize off the Bermuda Islands;
and be kindly took me on board. I remained at sea
above three months ; and so beneficial was the sea
voyage, and bathing every morning in salt water, that,
before three weeks were passed, I had laid aside ray
crutch. During our voyage, I had the pleasure of landing
at Bermudas, a beautiful spot, and the most healthy
climate on the face of the whole earth. Sick persons
from the West Indies and the Carolinas resort to this
island for the recovery of their health. Being situat
ed a great distance from any land, it feels not ihe heat
of summer, from the perpetual refreshing breezes of
the ocean. There are here two species of fish, un
commonly fine, and of a very luscious quality, called
Grooper and Porgey, the one equal to a John-clone ;
the other superior in flavour to a carp. This island
1,82
swarms with poultry, and yields the finest onions,
both which are sent to the West Indies. Cedar wood
is in great plenty on this island ; so much so, that all
the schooners and sloops are built with it : they are
very light and buoyant, and sail faster than any ves
sels. The time for our cruise being expired, Captain
George Montague bore away for the Chesapeak-bay.
We made the Capes about two o'clock P. M. and
were standing in to the Bay. It was my intent to land
at the first British port, and proceed to join my re
giment, the British legion, commanded by Col. Tarle-
ton. A privateer, however, fortunately bore down to
us, and informed us that the Count De Grasse, with a
French fleet, lay at anchor up the bay. If it had not
been for this intelligence, we should have anchored at
night, in the middle of the French fleet, as we ima
gined we should find the British fleet there.
Thus, by my being at sea for four months, did I
escape being captured with Lord Cornwallis's army,
as well as the being made prisoner at sea by Count
De Grasse. We stood out a great distance to sea
that night, in order to avoid the track of another
French fleet coming from Rhode-Island to join Count
De Grasse, and then made the best of our way to
New York, where we heard all the particulars relative
to the situation of Lord Cornwallis's army, which, in
about six or seven weeks afterwards, surrendered to
the joint forces of the French and Americans.
It is necessary for me to observe, that I sailed from
New York with that fleet of men of war (in my
friend Montague's frigate) which took on board ten
thousand chosen troops, the prime of the British and
Hessian forces, under the command of Sir Henry
Clinton, with the intent to relieve Lord Cornwallis's
army. This force unfortunately, arrived three or
four days after Lord Cornwallis's army had capitu
lated.
183
The fleet, with the troops on board from New-York,
finding this misfortune had befallen the army in Vir
ginia prior to their arrival, returned to New York. —
This misfortune dfew the war to a conclusion.
The next year Sir Henry Clinton went home. I
lost my kind protector and friend, and the army the
best of men and a most gallant soldier. — Sir Guy
Carleton, now Lord Dorchester, assumed the com
mand of the army in America: The manner in which
this gallant and distinguished veteran received me,
after all those officers, under whose auspices I had
served the whole war, were departed for England, was
highly gratifying to my feelings; and the assurances fie
made me, on his arrival at New York, of employing
me in a very active line, (provided the war had con
tinued,) deserves my warmest thanks.
I cannot refrain from relating a ludicrous conver-
sation which took place between Sir Guy Carleton
and myself, one day when I had the honour of din
ing at head-quarters, immediately after his arrival,
which strongly evinced his good humour and affabili
ty. The great skill which, from years of practice,
(even from a lad when educated in Germany,) I had
acquired in the knowledge of a rifle-gun, and the pre
cision and perfection to which I had brought the art
of shooting with a rifle, was well known to the
army, and Sir Guy Carleton had been informed of
it. At dinner, he said to me, sitting opposite to him,
" Major Hanger, I have been told that you are a most
skilful marksman with a rifle-gun. I have heard of
astonishing feats that you have performed in shoot
ing!" — Thanking him for the compliment, I told his
Excellency, that I was vain enough to say, with truth,
that many officers in the army had witnessed my
adroitness. I then began to inform Sir Guy how my
old deceased friend, Col. Ferguson, and myself, had
practised together, who, for skill and knowledge of
184
that weapon had been so celebrated, and that Fergu
son had ever acknowledged the superiority of my skill
to his, after one particular day's practice, when 1 had
shot three balls running into one hole. — Sir Guy replied
to this, " 1 know you are very expert in this art."- —
Now, had I been quiet and satisfied with the compli
ment the Commander in Chief paid me, and not push
ed this affair farther, it had been well for me ; but I
replied, " Yes, Sir Guy, I really have reduced the art
of shooting with a rifle to such a nicety, that, at a
moderate distance, 1 can kill a flea with a single ball."
At this Sir Guy began to stare not a little, and seemed
to indicate, from the smile on his countenance, that he
thought I had rather outstepped my usual outdoings
in the art. Observing this, I respectfully replied,
" I see, by your Excellency's countenance, that you,
seem doubtful of the singularity and perfection of my
art ; but, if I may presume so much as to dare offer
a wager to my Commander in Chief, I will bet your
Excellency five guineas that I kill a flea with a single
ball once in eight shots, at eight yards ;" — (and, rea
der, I will bet you fifty guineas I do ; and, what is
more, the person who wagers with me shall decide
the bet, to shew that there is no bubble in it.) Sir
Guy replied, " My dear Major, I am not given to lay
wagers; but for once I, will bet you five guineas, pro
vided you will lit the flea hop." — A loud laugh ensued
at the table ; and, after laughing heartily myself, I
placed my knuckle under the table, said, " Sir Guy, I
knock under, and will never speak of my skill in
shooting with a rifle-gun again before you."
Peace took place shortly after, when I obtained a
passport, both from the Congress and the French Am
bassador at Philadelphia, to repair to that city to visit
my old acquaintance the Duke de Lauzun, afterwards
Duke de Biron, and afterwards guillotined. I must
confess, although I had a passport from the French
185
minister and from the Congress. I was rather doubt$
ful and diffident how I should journey across the Fer
ries to Philadelphia in the character of Major to the
British Legion, a corps not much esteemed by the A-
mericans. But my friend, Mr. Church, who resided
many years, after the war, in England, together with
Col. Wadsworth, who had acted with him as Joint-
Commissaries to the French army, kindly took me
under their protection to Philadelphia. These two
gentlemen, in great good humour, but not without
some degree of fear and displeasure on my part, when
they arrived at Princetown, invited the celebrated,
pious, and well-known character, Doctor Witherspoon.
To this pious man they exhibited me in such charac
ters, that, although the Peace was concluded, I truly
believe the Doctor thought his head in danger that
night; and cerfain I am, if he had heard that I had
been within ten miles of his pious and sanctified
domain, he would have buried the last silver tea
spoon he was possessed of ten feet under ground.
Thus did my friend Church and Wadsworth amuse
themselves at my expence : and, what is more, all
they told the Doctor in good humour and fun, play
ing me off before him, the pious Divine took for gos
pel. I was treated with the greatest civility, not only by
the French ambassador and officers, but also with the
most perfect respect, attention, and politeness by the ,
leading families in Philadelphia, particular by Mr.
Morris the financier ; also by Governor Morris, a gentle
man, who 1 think at that time filled the office of Secret
tary of State for. the war department ; and though he
had by some misfortune lost one leg, that accident had
not in the least impaired his understanding ; for he was
one of the most sensible, the best-informed, and most
agreeable of men I ever knew ; But, above all others^
I here with pleasure pay that tribute of gratitude to
A a
General Dickenson*, a distinguished officer in the A-
merican service, for the uncommon civility and atten
tion he shewed to me ; his house replete with the tru
est hospitality, was open-to me by night and by day ;
his mind was too noble, too enlightened, too expand
ed, to think ill of, or harbour any rancour against me
or any other officer, who, by any active services,
might have made themselves obnoxious to the gene
rality of Americans. I am convinced, from my heart,
that, had I been of ten times more detriment to the
Americans his respect would in proportion have
increased; for he had from an early period of the
war, served his country with distinction and alacrity,
and honoured those British officers who endeavoured,
to the utmost of their abilities, to serve their king
and country.
I shall here relate a conversation that took place one
day at his table, before a large company; and an opin
ion which I gave relative to the future destiny of the
government of that country ; and I am of opinion,
that the state of affairs there is rapidly hastening
a dissolution of the United States. At that time,
when peace had been concluded but a few weeks, I
was of that opinion ; and remember well, when Gen
eral Dickenson asked me my opinion of the govern
ment and of its stability, I communicated my thoughts
nearly in the following words : " Sir, as long as
General Washington, and the other principal military
characters and leading men in Congress, who have
brought about this revolution, are alive, the govern
ment will remain as it is, united ; but when all of
* He was brother to the famous Dickenson, who was cal
led the Pennsylvania farmer, from having written Letters un
der that name at the beginning of the unhappy differences be
tween Great Britain and her Colonies,- which instigated the
people to take up arms.
»
187
you are in your graves, there will be wars, and ru«
mours of wars in this country : there are too many
different interests in it for them to be united under
one government. Just as this war commenced,
you were going to fight amongst yourselves, and would
nave fought, had. the British not interfered : you then,
one and all, united against us as your common ene
my ; but, one of these days the Northern and South
ern powers will fight as vigorously against each other,
as they both have united to do against the British.
This country, when its population shall be completed,
is large enough for three great empires. Look, gentle
men, at the map of it : view how irregular the pro
vinces are laid out, running into each other: look
particularly at the State of New York ; it extends one
hundred and fifty miles in length, due north; and in
no place, in breadth, above fifteen or twenty miles.
No country can be said to have a boundary or fron
tier, unless its exterior limits are marked by an un-
fordable river, or a chain of mountains not to be pas
sed but in particular places. The greatfinger of Na
ture has distinctly pointed out three extensive boun
daries to your country : the North River, the first ;
the Great Potamack, which runs three hundred miles
from Alexandria to the sea, unfordable, the second ;
and the Mississippi, the third and last. When the
country of Kentucky is completely settled, and the
back country farther on to the Banks of the Mississip
pi shall become popular and powerful, do you think
they will ever be subjected to a government seated at
Philadelphia or New York, at the distance of so ma
ny hundred miles ? But such a defection will not hap
pen for a very long period of time, until the inhabit
ants of that country become numerous and powerful* :
* The new country of Kentucky at that time was but in
its infancy, and this day there are above eighty thousand
men able to bear arms.
188
the Northern and Southern powers will first divide,
and contend in arms."
I remember, perfectly well General Dickenson's re
ply to my opinion: " God forbid that I should ever
live to see that day, or that such a dire calamity should
ever befall my country after my death ! Yet I am
afraid that there may be some just grounds of suspi
cion for the foundation of your opinions." I could
not refrain from making some further observations
relative to the future situation of America; for this
liberal-minded man insisted on my giving my opini
ons without the least restraint ; and I continued
my discourse as follows: — " The Americans, Sir, are
grateful, and ought to be grateful to the French nation,
for having assisted them to gain their independence ;
but I think a day will come when the Americans will
have reason to curse the hour that they ever admitted
a Frenchman into their country. Look, Sir, to Eu
rope : throughout all that great continent you will find,
that wherever France has gained a footing, she has
ever, by the intrigues of her emissaries, embroiled
those European powers in disputes and wars, and us
ed them to her interest. She will endeavour to act
the same by yeur nation, and make you subservient
to her interests, as she has done by other nations."
I am bound in justice and truth to add the opinion
of the company ; and the whole of them seemed much
to undervalue the sentiments which I entertained of the
policy of the French nation : and General Dickenson
replied, " Major Hanger, in this point, relative to the
French, you, in the opinion of the company, and also
in my' opinion, are totally tniJpken ; for the councils
or influence of the French will never prevail amongst
us: they can never have any influence or power with
us." — Thus the conversation ended.
The Americans, at that time, acted on the truest
principles of liberty and honesty. Little did they sus-
189
pect that, so young as they now are as an independent
nation, (for their independency has existed only about
twenty odd years), venality and corruption should
have established its ascendancy with such rapid and
gigantic strides, of which we have at this day such
convincing proofs: for, although the States of Ameri
ca are not thirty years old, infants, they may be called
as a power, yet veterans are they in corruption and
state-intrigue. I claim no greater merit for my opini
ons, relative to America, than is due to Mother Ship-
ton, who prophesied that London would go to Hamp-
stead ; and we all know that it is already arrived with
in a few hundred yards of it.
I will risk a farther opinion relative to America :
should I live to a good old age, I am confident that I
shall hear of the Northern and Southern powers in
America waging war with each other; when one par
ty will solicit assistance from France ; the other, from
Great Britain. It will then depend on the judgment
of those men who, at that period, may be at the head
of the French and British Councils, whether or not they
will interfere in American disputes. In my humble
opinion, it would be better for both countries to let
them settle the matter amongst themselves. — I will be
so bold as to offer another opinion. We should give
up Canada and Nova Scotia to the Americans, pro
vided we could make this sacrifice the foundation of
an alliance offensive and defensive with the United
States : then we never should be obliged to send the
prime of the. British army to die like rotten sheep in
the West-India islands. In America we could recruit
forces for the West Indies with men inured to an hot
climate, who would not suffer by death and sickness
in any degree equal to the new levies sent from En
gland; with the additional advantage of keeping our
army entire and in full vigour at home. I anxiously
hope and trust I shall live to see the day when an al-
190
liance offensive and defensive will be formed between
the two countries; as Great Britain and America may
defy the united powers of all Europe. Surely such
an alliance between the two countries would be more
advantageous and natural for both, than one with
France. One further observation, I recollect, I made at Ge
neral Dickenson's table : — " in the process of time,
when your Western territories are perfectly settled
from the Ohio to the Mississippi, which in time can
not fail to be perfected ; and when your Western and
Southern Colonies become in population as numerous
as the sands of the sea — then will the riches of Potosi
attract the attention of the Americans to the conquest
of Mexico and Peru. This is an object which, from
the magnitude of its wealth, is certain in time to take
place ; but, as that cannot happen for at least fifty or
an hundred years, I think, Gentlemen, we should
pot postpone taking a part of the wealth of that coun
try immediately ; therefore I freely offer my services
to the Congress on such an expedition ; and, on my
honour, I will serve them as faithfully as I have my
king and country! for I am a soldier of fortune." So,
taking the bottle, I filled a glass, and drank to an ex
pedition against the Golden Spaniard. My toast was
productive of much laughter, mirth, and good-humour,
together with many observations on the situation and
wealth of the Spanish Colonies so contiguous to them ;
and I am inclined to believe, that, at that time, even
the company did not think that the possession of the
wealth of Mexico was quite so difficult, or required
so many years' application and study as to arrive at
\he knowledge of the Philosopher's Stone.
Before I quit Philadelphia, I cannot refrain from
mentioning the toasts which were always given after
dinner at the tables of the most distinguished charac
ters. I was invited by the President of the Congress
191
to dinner, when he gave the following in rotation : —
The Congress — Our great and good ally the King
of France — The King of England — General Washing
ton — Sir Guy Carleton, ' These were the standing
toasts , after which many convivial and polite ones
were given. At the time that these gentlemen were
^toasting the King of France as their great and good
ally, poor Lewis never dreamed that they were drink
ing a separation to his head from his body ; but it is
well known now, that the revolution which he favour
ed in America brought on his destruction and the re
volution in France.
After my retdrn from Philadelphia to New York,
Sir Guy Carleton gave me leave to go to Nova Scotia,
in order to petition the Governor of that province to
allot lands for those soldiers of our regiment, the Bri
tish Legion, who chose to remain and settle in Ame
rica. I landed at Halifax, and from thence sailed to
Port Roseway and the River Jordan ; as well as to
many other places. This country may be described
in a few words. In this province there is seven
months' intense hard winter ; during the other five,
the inhabitants live, without any intermission, in a thick
fog. One happiness the poor settlers enjoy, and I
know of no other: In one day they can catch enough of
cod-fish to salt, without going above four or five miles
from the shore, to supply two or three families for a
twelvemonth; with a small patch of potatoes, there
fore, they can never starve.
I saw nothing here worthy of observation, except
ing a perpetual continuation of rocks and stony moun
tains, and an iron bound coast, frightful and danger
ous to the mariner. I was very near being cast away
on making Port-Roseway harbour: if the fog had not
cleared up a little, in half an hour more we should
have been driven by the current on the breakers ; for
then we were lying-to, having had a faint view of the
192
land through the fog early that morning. From Ha
lifax I returned to New York, on board a frigate com
manded by my old friend Captain Hawkins, now Ad
miral Witshead, where I remained until Sir Guy
Carleton, with the troops, evacuated that country.
With that fleet I took my passage for England, and
arrived in the Downs after near seven years' absence.
Some months before I quitted America, when my
worthy and true friend, Colonel M'Mahon took his
departure for England, at his kind request I gave him
a power of attorney, jointly with my friend Tarleton,
to endeavour at an arrangement of my affairs prior to
my arrival ; as it was agreed that, on my arrival in
Europe, I should go to Calais, and there remain un
til I knew how the land lay in England. M'Mahon,
that I should not be in want, generously gave me a
credit on his banker in London for five hundred
pounds. To this friend I certainly owe all the unhap-
piness and misfortunes I have undergone; for, had it
not been for his exertions, 1 never should have come
to England, but gone to Germany, where I am cer
tain the Landgrave of Hesse-Cassel would have requit
ed my services in a far more satisfactory manner than
this country has done. Would to God I had never,
to this hour, placed my foot on British ground ! I
had then my half-pay as Major in the British service,
which I could have received abroad ; and, besides
this, I had about two hundred and forty pounds per
annum left me by my kind mother, which sum was
then totally unimpaired. With my employment and
pay as a Flessian officer in his Serene Highness's ser
vice, I could have lived most magnificently, and ne
ver have known distress, or have been subjected to a
prison, in a land of liberty. However, Fate had de
creed it otherwise. Mt-4- ^v*
I am at length arrived at a period in'rhe History of
my Life when I am able to testify my gratitude to a ,
193
very old and intimate friend, Mr. Richard Tattersall,
for his unbounded' friendship towards me; a liberality
and generosity of conduct that stands unrivalled.
When he heard that Colonel M'Mahon was deputed
by me to endeavour to arrange my shattered and plun
dered circumstances, so as to enable me to live in my
native country, my dear and worthy friend, old Rich
ard, waited on colonel M'Mahon, and joined his ex
ertions: in fact, he took the whole burthen of my
distresses on his own shoulders, and employed his
jawn lawyer to examine and investigate my affairs.
I will not trouble the reader with minute particu
lars, which could not be very amusing to him : but,
after about two months' correspondence with me at
Calais, my friend Col. Tarleton was so kind as to come
over to Calais to visit me, by Tattersall's desire, as he
could, in a few hours, make me more fully master of
my affairs than by writing fifty letters by the post.
Tarleton staid four or five days with me ; nor shall I
forget the letter he brought me from Mr. Tattersall,
to the last hour of my life. It was as follows, and
ought to be written in letters of gold :
" My dear Major,
" I do insist on it that you will come home direct
ly to England, to my house, where you shall be made
happy. You have been robbed and plundered. I will
bail you from every body who may arrest you ; and,
if you cannot pay, I will.
" I am, dear Major, &c.
" Richard Tattersali."
This letter, though very short, the reader must al
low to be sweet. It is necessary I should state, that,
for some years before I quitted England, I had lived,
when in affluence, in the strictest terms of intimacy
and friendship with this worthy old man, and had
Constantly kept up a correspondence with him during
Bb
194
the whole of the American war. He proved himself
one of those few men in this world who do not desert
an old friend in distress.
It was agreed between Tarleton and me, before he
returned to England from his friendly visit to me at
Calais, that I should not return to London* until I
had heard from him and Mr. Tattersall after his arriv
al there. In about ten days I received letters, and
took my passage in the next packet for Dover, and
arrived at my old friend Tattersall's house, Hyde-
Park Corner, where I was received with the truest
friendship, and remained under his hospitable roof
for near a twelvemonth afterwards. I here held a
consultation with my lawyers, when they were of opi
nion, from the securities I had given, before my de
parture from England, for every farthing I owed, that
I could not be cast in any action by which I might
be arrested : however, to make things more secure,
my lawyers were prepared to plead the Statute of Li
mitations. I knew not then what that statute meant ;
but I do now most thoroughly; and Ihold it disgrace
ful for any man to plead that statute to evade the pay
ment of just debts; but not in my case, plundered and
stripped as I had been, and brought in debt by those
who Were the cause of my ruin, by compelling a sale
of my estate, the particulars of which I have already
related, from the unfortunate death of my agent Mr.
Wyatt, who, had he lived, would have prevented all
my misfortunes. While he lived, they could not
have foreclosed the mortgage on my estate ; and I
should have been worth ten thousand pounds, instead
of being beggared and ruined. It is not for me to
comment on the propriety or impropriety of my own
conduct: I relate the facts; and let the world judge
me, From Tattersall's house I sallied into the world,
arid in a short time was arrested for between seven
and eight hundred pounds. This was all that was
195 i
against me. Old Mr . Richard, and his son Edmund,
(now my friend, the present Mr. Tattersall;) were
my constant bail.
I brought the actions into court; and, the first
cause I tried, the jury never left the box, nor even
consulted together for more than a couple of minutes,
and gave a verdict for me : after which, all the rest
withdrew their actions, of which I believe, there were
nine or ten.
My lawyers being prepared with the Statute of Li
mitations, as the great salvo of all, was of no material
benefit to me ; for the whole world knows that a jury
(especially of tradesmen) will never permit any sta
tute to be pleaded to bias their judgment, when they
perceived a direct intent of the person to defraud a
just creditor; but mine was a very different case.
After I had been ruined and jobbed of my estate,
and plundered of my whole property, these creditors
of mine were not satisfied, without endeavouring to
confine my body in a jail. Thus by compelling a sale
of my estate before a Master in Chancery, from the
unfortunate decease of my friend Mr. Wyatt, at a
time when land was fallen full one-third in value, I
was undone ; and, instead of being worth ten thou
sand pounds, was made about eight hundred pounds
worse than nothing. I had now to begin the world
again, after having served my country faithfully seven
years. Had I not gone to America, I should have kept
my estate to this moment; for, while I remained in
England, my creditors could not have forced a sale.
The summer after I came to England, his R^yal
Highness the Prince of Wales did me the honour to
take me down with him to Brighton. I never shaljt.
forget the two or three first seasons I had the honour
of being with him there. In all my days before and
since, I never passed my time more agreeable or with
196
greater happiness : — they were indeed the pleasantest
days of my life. I had good health, good spirits;
was not in debt; and had no earthly care whatever to
distract my mind. But, of late years, how has Fortune
frowned upon me !
If I were not to acknowledge the obligations I owe
to the Prince of Wales, I should be worse than un
grateful; I should be the basest of men. In affluence,
in poverty, at liberty, and when in prison his kind
ness to me has never varied ; but, for one action be
yond all others, I am truly indebted to him ; when a
prisoner, and deprived of the power of vindicating my
self in public circles; where the ever-busy tongue
of calumny tried to strip me of the only wealth I
possessed, my character as an officer and a gentleman ;
"he nobly came forward, pledging himself to the false
hood of the assertion, and stemmed the tide of public
calumny, until justice and the law of the land proved
the baseness of the aspersion, and covered my enemies
with shame. For above sixteen years I have had the
honour of his protection and acquaintance : it is hard,
indeed,, if I did not know him in so long a period of
time, when I have viewed him in every stage, in health,
en the bed of sickness, in convivial and in serious
hours. This Prince is but little known to the world
at large, who judge of him from report only. What
is common, report, but a common prostitute? To
make her the standard of truth, is as erroneous as to
make the cameleon the standard of colour. A day
shall come, vipers, when ye shall be compelled to
swallow the poison you here spit forth. By my honour,
and, the sacred love and reverence I bear to truth, I
am not induced to speak of him from his dignified sta
tion in life : I speak not of him as being Prince of
Wales. Were he an ensign on half-pay, with no other
support than that scanty pittance ; or a clergyman
serving three churches for forty pounds a-year — two
197
situations most deplorable, and the least to be envied
in life — I would select him, above all mankind, for a
companion and friend; and by his judgment I would
' be guided in the most weighty and intricate concerns.
His enemies even acknowledge that he is the most
accomplished and best-bred gentleman of the age ; a
master of languages, and an elegant classical scholar,
three distinguished qualities rarely to be met with in
one man.
The year I came to England, the contested election
for Westminster (Fox, Hood, and Wray, candidates)
took place. The walking travellers, Spfillard and
Stewart, the Abyssinian Bruce, who has feasted on
steaks cut from the rump of a living ox ; and various
others, who in their extensive travels, have encounter
ed wild beasts^ serpents, and crocodiles, breakfasted
and toasted muffins at the mouth of a volcano — whom
hunger, have with joy, compelled to banquet on the
leavings" of a lion or a tiger, or the carcase of a dead
alligator — who can boast of smoking the pipe of
peace with the Little Carpenter and the Mad Dog —
and lived on terms of the strictest intimacy with the
Cherokees, the Chickesaws, and Chuctaws, and with all
the aws and ees of that immense continent — who, from
the more temperate shore of the Mississippi, have ex
tended their course to the burning soil of India and to
the banks of the Ganges — from the frozen north Euro
pean seas to the banks of the temperate and more ge
nial Po — may boast their worldly experience and know
ledge of human life — butnoone^in my humble opin
ion, has seen real life, orcanknowit, unless hehas taken
an active part in a contested election for Westminster.
In no school can a man be taught a better lesson of
human life than at a contested Westminster election :
there can he view human nature in her basest attire;
riot, murder, and drunkenness are the order of the day,
and bribery and perjury walk hand in hand; for men,
198
who had no pretensions to, vote, were as plenty to be
found in the Garden as turnips, who, at a moderate
rate, were induced to poll. A gentleman, to make
himself of any considerable use to either party, must
possess a number of engaging, familiar, and conde
scending qualities : he must help a porter up with his
load, shake hands with a fish woman, pull his hat off to
an oyster wench, kiss a ballad-singer, and be familiar
with a beggar. If, in addition to these amiable good
qualities, he is a tolerable good boxer, can play a good
stick, and in the evening drink a pail-full of all sorts
of liquors in going the rounds to solicit voters at their
various clubs, then, indeed, he is a most highly finish
ed and useful agent. — In all the above accomplish
ments and sciences, except drinking, which I never
was fond of, I have the vanity to believe that I arrived
nearer to perfection than any of my rivals.
I should be ungrateful, indeed, if I did not testify
my thanks to those gallant troops of high rank and
distinguished fame, the knights of the strap, and the
black-diamond knights*, who displayed as much bra
very and attachment to our cause. By my soul, they
are higher in my estimation than all the knights in
Christendom together, not excepting even the Knights
of Malta, with Quixote Paul at their head. At that
time I formed a great intimacy with them, which has
continued to this day between us, for I never forget
my old acquaintances whenever I meet them, nor
look upon my old friends with a nezvface, which is too
much, in general, the custom of the world. We
have shaken hands and drank together frequently
since the time of our factive services ; and I trust I
shall live to taste many a good pot more of brown
* The Irish chairmen and coal-heavers.
199
stout with them : I will ever acknowledge their gal.
lantry and honest attachment.
I was eye-witness to a very singular circumstance,
which if I did not relate, I should be a very unfaith
ful historian: — When the numbers for Lord John
Townshend began to increase rapidly on the poll, the
adverse party, to delay our polling so many in the day,
substituted a device to delay our exertions, and to les
sen the numbers on the poll-book, and insisted that
every man who came to vote should take the test-oath.
The celebrated Edmund Burke, of pensioned memo
ry, came before the hustings to give his vote, accom
panied with Peter Delme, Esquire ; when the poll-
clerk for the opposite party informed Mr. Burke,
that he had positive orders not to permit any person's
name to be entered on the books unless they had taken
the test-oath. Mr. Burke began to expatiate with him
on the subject, presuming, that, as he was a member
of parliament, he would not insist on his taking the
test-oath. But the clerk was positive, and Mr. Delme
made no objection, though he also was in Parliament,
took the test-oath, and accordingly gave his vote. But
when the clerk offered Mr. Burke the Testament,
Mr- Burke, with an indignant look, and a rage not to
be described, snatched the book out of his hands, and
threw it at his head: then walked indignantly away,
muttering his resentment, but without giving his
vote. I do not mean, by this narrative of simple
facts, in the smallest degree to imply any thing more
than that Edmund Burke was very shy of the Testa
ment on that occasion.
I beg it may be well understood, before I proceed
with remarks on the Westminster elections, that it is
very far from my intent to sing a recantation of my own
actions; but, after years of cool reflection, I reflect
with horror, that the capital should have been so con-
200
vulsed for four or five weeks by the faction of two
parties contending for power. I trust I shall live to
seethe time that all elections will finish in one day,
and the votes taken parochially, which would effectu
ally prevent riot and perjury, and many other inferior
crimes which at present are committed at all elections.
Fine speeches every day were delivered from the hust
ings, endeavouring to impress the minds of the people
with the freedom of Elections, and how disinterested
ly both parties acted for the public good, for the li
berty of the people, and freedom of the nation.
I am bound in honour to render justice to each par
ty forthe striking proofs they gave of the sincerity
of their professions ; as it must be admitted that they
manifested it to an eminent degree by the freedom
they displayed in breaking each other's heads. Of
that species of liberty each were abundantly lavish.
At present I must conclude the subject of Westmin
ster elections ; but, in my third volume, it is my intent
to treat more at large on that and on all other elec
tions. The reader, I hope, will pardon me now for taking
a very long hop, step, and jump, over a period of above
twelve years of my life, more replete with anecdotes,
and fully as fluctuating in circumstances, as those years
I have already described. For a narrative of those
twelve interesting years I must entreat their patience
for a few months longer, until a third volume of my
Lite, Adventures, and Opinions appear before the Pub
lic : for I find these pages swelling to such a great ex
tent that I am compelled hastily to conclude the volume
and approach that period when I surrendered as a
prisoner to the marshal of the King's Bench prison. I
am peculiarly anxious to relate my conduct when there,
and the consequences which led me to suffer confine
ment. As I am neither ashamed or afraid of making
201
known any thing I have done, the public shall be mi
nutely informed of the particulars.
Prior to that circumstance taking place, it will be
necessary briefly to narrate by what means I was reduc
ed to ruin, after having got over all former difficulties;
and had been blessed, not only with a comfortable,
but an affluent annual income, which was much more
than I had reason to expect I should have attained, af
ter the various changes of fortune and poverty I had
experienced. For several years the East-India Company had done
me the honour to employ me on the recruiting service,
in this country, for their army in India. There was
no salary attached to the employment : the more ac
tive my services were in behalf of the Honourable
Company, the greater were my profits. I had brought
this business to such perfection, that I never, any year
after the first, made less than six hundred pounds pro
fit. During the first year I intrinsically lost five hun
dred pounds, which was expended to set this great
machine going. After having once wound up this
recruiting-dial, it wanted but little regulating, which
my subsequent successes and regularity proved. I had
extended my communications so wide and general,
that there was not a town in England of consequence,
in which I had not established a regular rendezvous.
To my worthy and kind friends, Sir Stephen Lushing-
.ton and Mr. Devaynes, I am indebted for this employ
ment. At the death of Major Weldon, who had a
warrant to recruit for the East-India Company, they
recommended me to succeed him. With truth I may
say, that, for several years, I occupied this .employ
ment to -the satisfaction of the Honourable Company
and with credit to myself.
An unfortunate dispute between the FJoard of Con-
:troul, and the. Directors of the. Honourable East-India
C c
202
Company, to 6k place, relative to the building of a bar
rack in this country to receive the East-India recruits
prior to their being embarked for India. This system
the India Directors opposed to a man, excepting the
Chairman and Deputy Chairman. A long debate took
place on this subject (at which I was present) in the
public court-room, and a very great majority, by vote,
threw out the plan for erecting barracks. The board
of Controul, after that question was carried by a very
great majority of Proprietors against them, thought fit
to change the whole system of recruiting for the Hon
ourable Company's army in India, and gave them re
cruits from Chatham barracks. This put it out of the
power of the Honourable Company to employ me any
longer. Thus I lost a very comfortable maintenance.
It was not the loss of six hundred pounds per annum
(and I solemnly declare I never made less) that I had
alone to lament; but, having the honour of being em
ployed by the India Company, I was perfectly satisfi
ed with my occupation, and judged it as a certain em
ployment for life; and as such it was universally con-
rid ered. The Honourable Company would never have
discharged me from their service but in case of mal
practices, which I trust they know I am incapable of
committing. This certainty, as I looked on it, made
me forego many other advantages. One, particularly
beneficial, was proposed to me. A reputable army-
agent, who, it is very well known, made near thirty
thousand pounds in the business, proposed to me (he
having a capital sufficient) to join with him in recruit
ing mert for the new regiments which were going to
be raised just at the breaking out of the war, and to
be concerned together in a general agency-line. I
could also have been appointed Lieutenant-Colonel to
a regiment of cavalry then raising on the Continent,
which, since that period, has been established, and is
now in full pay. These two objects did I relinquish ;
203
the first, from principles of honour ; that, when em
ployed by the Honourable the East-India Company
I could not engage to assist in recruiting for the line :
as for the second, it was not worthy my attention to
take an employment so inferior in point of emolument
to the one I already possessed. I did not only suffer
from losing an employment which brought me in an
nually above six hundred pounds; but I lost at least
six years of exertion, expended to no permanent solid
purpose hereafter; and, during such a space of time,
an active mind, which, .thanks to my God, I am en
dowed with ! would, if this employment had not pre
sented itself, have struck out some other equally as
advantageous, and more to be relied on for its conti
nuance ; for, in so large a capital as London is, if a gen
tleman be not too proud to follow various occupations,
he may very readily, and with not much trouble, find
some employment which will prevent him from falling
into the miseries of want; although the business he
undertakes may not be of sufficient emolument to ren
der his situation affluent.
One misfortune seldom comes alone. Indeed I ara
convinced of it: and, my dear reader, have you not
generally found it so ? — ?I had also, for near four years
enjoyed a salary of three hundred pounds per annum,
as Equerry to his Rjyal Highness the Prince of Wales;
which salary the arrangements made by Parliament,
relative to his Royal Highness's affairs, deprived me
of, by the reduction of his household. Both these
Josses I sustained, and hea^y ones they were ; nay,
they were the more distressing, because the one took
place shortly after the other. Thus, reader, did I lose
suddenly and unexpectedly, an income of above nine
hundred pounds per annum — all at once, as it may be
said. The two above employments were surely most
pleasant, and much to be envied ; as the profits deriv
ed from the first sprang from an honest exertion in the
204
service of the East-India Company ; the emoluments'
derived from the second employment, were given me
by a personage, whom it was not only an honour, but
a pleasure to serve.' I have reason to complain bit
terly of my misfortunes at this period of my life ; for
I am of opinion there is no other instance of any per
son losing an income of nine hundred pounds a-year
without having been guilty of some misconduct or
malpractices ; but it was my misfortune that my pecu
niary resources should be subjected to events which
could not be foreseen or avoided.
Once again I had risen to a state of ease and hap
piness, after the various misfortunes I had suffered,
when 1 was again most suddenly reduced to the great
est distress. 1 had fondly brought my mind to think
that I had weathered all the storms in life, and brought
my vessel into a quiet strong harbour: but how was
I deceived ! for the hurricane of misfortune, without
giving me notice, drove me from my comfortable moor
ings into the troubled ocean, once more to seek the
necessaries of life. I now began gradually to measure
my steps towards the King's Bench ; and, on the 2d
of June 1798, I surrendered to that prison, where I
remained until the 6th of April 1799, on which day I
was discharged.
Prior to my surrendering to the King's Bench I was
engaged in a family law-suit, which was decided by ar
bitration before a Master of the Court of King's Bench ;
by this I gained a considerable sum of money, when
I compounded for my debts and was discharged. My
affairs on this occasion were settled in the following
manner: — My creditors were paid seven shillings and
sixpence in the pound, in cash ; and I signed a bond
to them to pay them the remainder in future from eve
ry property I might have to receive by will, reversion,
or email. After allotting to them the various sums
205
assigned them, there were forty odd pounds remain
ing, which I took for my own use ; and that was all-
I reserved to myself. I therefore started again to run
the course of life, with forty pounds capital stock.
And now I shall beg forgiveness if I once more in
troduce myself into the Rules of the King's bench, in
order to mention a circumstance which I trust the rea
der will believe ; but if he has not faith enough in my
word, I can shew him written documents, as I have
preserved all the bills as brought in every Monday
morning by my servant when they were paid : those
bills will prove, that, on the average, I never spent
above three shillings any one day during my residence
in those blessed regions of rural retirement. I had two'
reasons for living so cheap : first, being of opinion a
prisoner for debt should not be squandering away mo
ney nor should he live sumptuously, yet he-should not de
ny himself the necessaries of life : secondly, I was de
termined to ascertain how cheap a gentleman could
live, and want for nothing necessary to his mainte
nance, namely, a hearty breakfast and dinner every
day. Bread and beer were cheaper at that pe
riod than at this moment. ; but meat was much the-
same. The reader must be informed that I drank
nothing but porter.
Before I surrendered to the King's Bench; nay,
from the very commencement of this war, I endea^
voured by every means, and by repeated applications,
to be employed on active service : I even proposed
to form a corps from the convicts ; shewing how,
after the war, they might be provided for, and not
be turned adrift in the world again : And two years
before the act for that purpose took place, I suggested
the permission for the militia to enlist in the regiments
of the line. I also proposed to be allowed to take
one thousand volunteers, at a small bounty, from the
militia, and train them to the use of the rifle-gun — a
206
science which I have made my study ever since I was
sixteen years old.
Finding every channel shut up to my solicitations
for employment, I then resolved to apply myself to
trade, and, in May 1800, commenced coal-merchant.
It has been circulated and reported, in order to injure
me in my new profession, that I receive a certain
sum per chaldron commission. On my honour, the
report is absolutely false ! I am allowed an annual sala
ry, which, with prudence, will keep me from want,
by a generous friend who has undertaken this busi
ness to serve me, and to set the trade a-going.
By the distinguished favours I have already been
honoured with, by a further protection from the Pub
lic in favouring me with their commands to supply
their families with coals, and by the orders which are
weekly increasing, I shall, I trust, be able to relieve
my friend from his anxious exertions, and to establish
the trade myself, in a few months, on a solid and per
manent commercial basis. Sunt mild deliciis, sint mihi
divitite, Carbones, is my motto. May the black dia
mond trade flourish with me ! which, if it receives,
as I trust it will, a generous support from the Pub
lic, cannot fail of success.
To a man whose affairs have been so deranged for
a long period of years, it is no small degree of satis
faction that his pecuniary obligations are confined to a
very few persons. Mine are concentrated in three
noble Earls — the largest sum two hundred pounds,
the smallest one hundred. At the same time that I
acknowledge my gratitude, it is doubly pleasing, on
reflection, that their characters are so eminently res
pected by the world at large, as well as by me.
One singular mark of generous friendship I experi
enced from an old acquaintance, who had been for
years acquainted with poverty, (that worst of crimes,)
206
and who came suddenly, by the death of a near relation,
to a command of money. Fie offered me two thou
sand pounds, requesting me not to think of paying
him until I should be a rich man. I refused it, on this
principle — I knew I never should be able to repay
him, and held it dishonest to borrow a sum so large
that I never should be able to refund. I took one
hundred pounds from him : he pressed the whole on
me, almost to an injunction.
Twice have I began the world anew. I trust the
present century will be more favourable to me than
the past.— Valete et plaudite !
PRINTED BY G. Sf R. WA1TE,
JfO. 64, MMDElt-lANE,
NEW YORK.