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poor lady in such distress, for she stood crying and wringing her hands over her children like one distracted, sent for the churchwardens to take care of the children; and they, when they came, took the youngest, which was born in this parish, and have got it a very good nurse, and taken care of it; but as for the other four, they had sent them away to some of their father's relations, and who were very substantial people, and who, besides that, lived in the parish where they were born.

I was not so surprised at this as not presently to foresee that this trouble would be brought upon you, or upon Mr.

; so I came immediately to bring you word of it, that you might be prepared for it, and might not be surprised, but I see they have been too nimble for me, so that I know not what to advise. The poor woman, it seems, is turned out of doors into the street; and another of the neighbours there told me, that when they took her children from her, she swooned away, and when they recovered her out of that, she run distracted, and is put into a madhouse by the parish, for there is nobody else to take any care of her.

This was all acted to the life by this good, kind, poor creature; for though her design was perfectly good and charitable, yet there was not one word of it true in fact: for I was not turned out of doors by the landlord, nor gone distracted. It was true, indeed, that at parting with my poor children I fainted, and was like one mad when I came to myself and found they were gone; but I remained in the house a good while after that, as you shall hear.

While the poor woman was telling this dismal story, in came the gentlewoman's husband, and though her heart was hardened against all pity, who was really and nearly related to the children, for they were the children of her own brother, yet the good man was quite softened with the dismal relation of the circumstances of the family; and when the poor woman had done, he said to his wife, This is a dismal case, my dear, indeed, and something must be done. His wife fell a raving at him: What, says she, do you want to have four children to keep? Have we not children of our own? Would you have these brats come and eat up my children's bread? No, no, let 'em go to the parish, and let them take care of them; I'll take care of my own.

Come, come, my dear, says the husband, charity is a duty

VINDICTIVE BEHAVIOUR OF THE AUNT.

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to the poor, and he that gives to the poor lends to the Lord; let us lend our heavenly Father a little of our children's bread, as you call it ; it will be a store well laid up for them, and will be the best security that our children shall never come to want charity, or be turned out of doors, as these poor innocent creatures are. Don't tell me of security, says the wife, 'tis a good security for our children to keep what we have together, and provide for them, and then 'tis time enough to help keep other folks children. Charity begins at home.

Well, my dear, says he again, I only talk of putting out a little money to interest: our Maker is a good borrower: never fear making a bad debt there, child; I'll be bound for it.

Don't banter me with your charity, and your allegories, says the wife, angrily; I tell you they are my relations, not yours, and they shall not roost here; they shall go to the parish.

All your relations are my relations now, says the good gentleman very calmly, and I won't see your relations in distress, and not pity them, any more than I would my own; indeed, my dear, they shan't go to the parish. I assure you, none of my wife's relations shall come to the parish, if I can help it.

I'll go

What! will you take four children to keep ? says the wife. No, no, my dear, says he, there's your sister and talk with her; and your uncle I'll send for him and the rest. I'll warrant you, when we are all together, we will find ways and means to keep four poor little creatures from beggary and starving, or else it would be very hard; we are none of us in so bad circumstances, but we are able to spare a mite for the fatherless. Don't shut up your bowels of compassion against your own flesh and blood. Could you hear these poor innocent children cry at your door for hunger, and give them no bread.

Prithee, what need they cry at our door? says she; 'tis the business of the parish to provide for them; they shan't cry at our door. If they do, I'll give them nothing. Won't you? says he; but I will. Remember that dreadful Scripture is directly against us, Prov. xxi. 13, Whoso stoppeth his ears at the cry of the poor, he also shall cry himself, but shall not be heard.

VOL. IV.

Well, well, says she, you must do what you will, because you pretend to be master: but if I had my will, I would send them where they ought to be sent. I would send them

from whence they came.

Then the poor woman put in, and said, But, madam, that is sending them to starve, indeed, for the parish has no obligation to take care of 'em, and so they will lie and perish in the street.

Or be sent back again, says the husband, to our parish in a cripple-cart, by the justice's warrant, and so expose us and all the relations to the last degree among our neighbours, and among those who know the good old gentleman their grandfather, who lived and flourished in this parish so many years, and was so well beloved among all people, and deserved it so well.

I don't value that one farthing, not I, says the wife; I'll keep none of them.

Well, my dear, says her husband, but I value it, for I won't have such a blot lie upon the family, and upon your children; he was a worthy, ancient, and good man, and his name is respected among all his neighbours; it will be a reproach to you, that are his daughter, and to our children, that are his grandchildren, that we should let your brother's children perish, or come to be a charge to the public, in the very place where your family once flourished. Come, say no more: I will see what can be done.

Upon this, he sends and gathers all the relations together at a tavern hard by, and sent for the four little children, that they might see them; and they all, at first word, agreed to have them taken care of; and, because his wife was so furious that she would not suffer one of them to be kept at home, they agreed to keep them all together for awhile; so they committed them to the poor woman that had managed the affair for them, and entered into obligations to one another to supply the needful sums for their maintenance; and, not to have one separated from the rest, they sent for the youngest from the parish where it was taken in, and had them all brought up together.

It would take up too long a part of this story to give a particular account with what a charitable tenderness this good person, who was but an uncle-in-law to them, managed that affair; how careful he was of them; went constantly to see

AMIABLE DISPOSITION OF THE UNCLE.

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them, and to see that they were well provided for, clothed, put to school, and, at last, put out in the world for their advantage; but 'tis enough to say he acted more like a father to them than an uncle-in-law, though all along much against his wife's consent, who was of a disposition not so tender and compassionate as her husband.

You may believe I heard this with the same pleasure which I now feel at the relating it again; for I was terribly affrighted at the apprehensions of my children being brought to misery and distress, as those must be who have no friends, but are left to parish benevolence.

I was now, however, entering on a new scene of life. I had a great house upon my hands, and some furniture left in it, but I was no more able to maintain myself and my maid Amy in it, than I was my five children; nor had I anything to subsist with but what I might get by working, and that was not a town where much work was to be had.

My landlord had been very kind indeed, after he came to know my circumstances, though, before he was acquainted with that part, he had gone so far as to seize my goods, and to carry some of them off too.

But I had lived three quarters of a year in his house after that, and had paid him no rent, and which was worse, I was in no condition to pay him any. However, I observed he came oftener to see me, looked kinder upon me, and spoke more friendly to me than he used to do; particularly the last two or three times he had been there, he observed, he said, how poorly I lived, how low I was reduced, and the like; told me it grieved him for my sake; and the last time of all he was kinder still, told me he came to dine with me, and that I should give him leave to treat me: so he called my maid Amy, and sent her out to buy a joint of meat; he told her what she should buy ; but naming two or three things, either of which she might take, the maid, a cunning wench, and faithful to me as the skin to my back, did not buy anything outright, but brought the butcher along with her, with both the things that she had chosen, for him to please himself. The one was a large, very good leg of veal; the other a piece of the fore-ribs of roasting beef. He looked at them, but bade me chaffer with the butcher for him, and I did so, and came back to him and told him what the butcher had demanded for either of them, and what each of them came to. So he

pulls out eleven shillings and threepence, which they came to together, and bade me take them both; the rest, he said, would serve another time.

I was surprised, you may be sure, at the bounty of a man that had but a little while ago been my terror, and had torn the goods out of my house like a fury: but I considered that my distresses had mollified his temper, and that he had afterwards been so compassionate as to give me leave to live rent free in the house a whole year.

But now he put on the face, not of a man of compassion only, but of a man of friendship and kindness, and this was so unexpected that it was surprising. We chatted together, and were, as I may call it, cheerful, which was more than I could say I had been for three years before; he sent for wine and beer too, for I had none; poor Amy and I had drank nothing but water for many weeks, and indeed, I have often wondered at the faithful temper of the poor girl, for which I but ill requited her at last.

When Amy was come with the wine, he made her fill a glass to him, and with the glass in his hand, he came to me and kissed me, which I was, I confess, a little surprised at, but more at what followed; for he told me, that as the sad condition which I was reduced to had made him pity me, so my conduct in it, and the courage I bore it with, had given him a more than ordinary respect for me, and made him very thoughtful for my good; that he was resolved for the present to do something to relieve me, and to employ his thoughts in the mean time, to see if he could, for the future, put me into a way to support myself.

While he found me change colour, and look surprised at his discourse, for so I did to be sure, he turns to my maid Amy, and looking at her, he says to me, I say all this madam, before your maid, because both she and you shall know that I have no ill design, and that I have, in mere kindness, resolved to do something for you, if I can; and as I have been a witness of the uncommon honesty and fidelity of Mrs. Amy, here to you in all your distresses, I know she may be trusted with so honest a design as mine is; for I assure you, I bear a proportioned regard to your maid too, for her affection to you. Amy made him a curtsy, and the poor girl looked so confounded with joy, that she could not speak, but her colour came and went, and every now and then she blushed as red

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