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and black pair of silk breeches - portmanteau, and all, must have gone to the king of France - even the little picture which I have so long worn, and so often have told thee, Eliza, I would carry with me into my grave, would have been torn from my neck. - Ungenerous! to seize upon the wreck of an unwary passenger, whom your subjects had beckoned to their coast-by heaven! SIRE, it is not well done; and much does it grieve me, 'tis the monarch of a people so civilized and courteous, and so renowned for sentiment and fine feelings, that I have to reason with

But I have scarce set foot in your dominions

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WHEN I had finished my dinner, and drank the king of France's health, to satisfy my mind that I bore him no spleen, but, on the contrary, high honour for the humanity of his temper I rose up an inch taller for the accommodation. -No- said I-the Bourbon is by no means a cruel race: they may be misled like other people; but there is a mildness in their blood. As I acknowledged this, I felt a suffusion of a finer kind upon my cheek - -more warm and friendly to than what Burgundy (at least of two livres

man,

law, though the heir be upon the spot the profit of these contingencies being farmed, there was no redress,

a bottle, which was such as I had been drinking) could have produced.

Just God! said I, kicking my portmanteau aside, what is there in this world's goods which should sharpen our spirits, and make so many kind-hearted brethren of us fall out so cruelly as we do by the way?

When man is at peace with man, how much lighter than a feather is the heaviest of metals in his hand he pulls out his purse, and, holding it airily and uncompressed, looks round him as if he sought for an object to share it with. In doing this, I felt every vessel in my frame dilate-the arteries beat all cheerily together, and every power which sustained life performed it with so little friction, that it would have confounded the most physical précieuse in France: with all her materialism, she could scarce have called me a machine

I am confident, said I to myself, I should have overset her creed.

The accession of that idea carried nature, at that time, as high as she could go I was at peace with the world before, and this finished the treaty with myself

- Now, was I a king of France, cried I-what a moment for an orphan to have begged his father's portmanteau of me!

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III.

I

THE MONK.

CALAI S.

HAD scarce uttered the words, when a poor monk of the order of St. Francis came into the room, to beg something for his convent. No man cares to have his virtues the sport of contingencies

or one man may be generous, as another man is puissant-sed non, quoad hanc or be it as it may for there is no regular reasoning upon the ebbs and flows of our humours; they may depend upon the same causes, for aught I know, which influence the tides themselves - it would oft be no discredit to us to suppose it was so I am sure, at least for myself, that in many a case I should be more highly satisfied to have it said by the world, «I had had an affair with the moon > in which there was neither sin nor shame, >> than have it pass altogether as my own act and deed, wherein there was so much of both.

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But be this as it may. The moment I cast my eyes upon him, I was predetermined not to give him a single sous, and accordingly I put my purse into my pocket -buttoned it up - set myself a little more upon my centre, and advanced up gravely to him : there was something, I fear, forbidding in my look: I have his figure this moment before my eyes, and think there was that in it which deserved better.

The monk, as I judged from the break in his tonsure, a few scattered white hairs upon his temples being all that remained of it, might be about seventy but from his eyes, and that sort of fire which was in them, which seemed more tempered by courtesy than years, could be no more than sixty-Truth might lie between-He was certainly sixty-five; and the general air of his countenance, notwithstanding something seemed to have been planting wrinkles in it before their time, agreed to the account.

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It was one of those heads which Guido has often painted - mild, pale - penetrating, free from all common-place ideas of fat contented ignorance looking downwards upon the earth it looked forwards; but looked as if it looked at something beyond this world. How one of his order came by it, heaven above, who let it fall upon a monk's shoulders, best knows; but it would have suited a bramin, and had I met it upon the plains of Indostan, I had reverenced it.

The rest of his outline may be given in a few strokes; one might put it into the hands of any one to design, for it was neither elegant or otherwise, but as character and expression made it so : : it was a thin, spare form, something above the common size, if it lost not the distinction by a bend forwards in the figure but it was the attitude of entreaty; and as it now stands presented to my imagination, it gained more than it lost by it.

When he had entered the room three paces, he stood still; and laying his left hand upon his breast, (a slender white staff with which he journeyed being in his right) — when I had got close up to him, he introduced himself with the little story of the wants of his convent, and the poverty of his order and did it with so simple a graceand such an air of deprecation was there in the whole cast of his looks and figure-I was bewitched not to have been struck with it

--

A better reason was, I had predetermined not to give him a single sous.

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-TIS

-

Is very true, said I, replying to a cast upwards with his eyes, with which he had concluded his address 'tis very true- and heaven be their resource who have no other but the charity of the world, the stock of which, I fear, is no way sufficient for the many great claims which are hourly made upon it.

As I pronounced the words great claims, he gave a slight glance with his eye downwards upon the sleeve of his tunick -I felt the full force of the appeal I acknowledge it, said I a coarse habit, and that but once in three years, with meagre diet- are no great matters and the true point of pity is, as they can be earned in the world

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