<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0043" id="link2H_4_0043"></SPAN></p>
<h2> To Sir WATKIN PHILLIPS, of Jesus college, Oxon. </h2>
<h3> DEAR WAT, </h3>
<p>The farce is finished, and another piece of a graver cast brought upon the
stage.—Our aunt made a desperate attack upon Barton, who had no
other way of saving himself, but by leaving her in possession of the
field, and avowing his pretensions to Liddy, by whom he has been rejected
in his turn.—Lady Griskin acted as his advocate and agent on this
occasion, with such zeal as embroiled her with Mrs Tabitha, and a high
scene of altercation passed betwixt these two religionists, which might
have come to action, had not my uncle interposed. They are however
reconciled, in consequence of an event which hath involved us all in
trouble and disquiet. You must know, the poor preacher, Humphry Clinker,
is now exercising his ministry among the felons in Clerkenwell prison—A
postilion having sworn a robbery against him, no bail could be taken, and
he was committed to jail, notwithstanding all the remonstrances and
interest my uncle could make in his behalf.</p>
<p>All things considered, the poor fellow cannot possibly be guilty, and yet,
I believe, he runs some risque of being hanged. Upon his examination, he
answered with such hesitation and reserve as persuaded most of the people,
who crowded the place, that he was really a knave, and the justice's
remarks confirmed their opinion. Exclusive of my uncle and myself, there
was only one person who seemed inclined to favour the culprit.—He
was a young man, well dressed, and, from the manner in which he
cross-examined the evidence, we took it for granted, that he was a student
in one of the inns of court.—He freely checked the justice for some
uncharitable inferences he made to the prejudice of the prisoner, and even
ventured to dispute with his worship on certain points of law.</p>
<p>My uncle, provoked at the unconnected and dubious answers of Clinker, who
seemed in danger of falling a sacrifice to his own simplicity, exclaimed,
'In the name of God, if you are innocent, say so.' 'No (cried he) God
forbid that I should call myself innocent, while my conscience is
burthened with sin.' 'What then, you did commit this robbery?' resumed his
master. 'No, sure (said he) blessed be the Lord, I'm free of that guilt.'</p>
<p>Here the justice interposed, observing, that the man seemed inclined to
make a discovery by turning king's evidence, and desired the clerk to take
his confession; upon which Humphry declared, that he looked upon
confession to be a popish fraud, invented by the whore of Babylon. The
Templar affirmed, that the poor fellow was non compos; and exhorted the
justice to discharge him as a lunatic.—'You know very well (added
he) that the robbery in question was not committed by the prisoner.'</p>
<p>The thief-takers grinned at one another; and Mr Justice Buzzard replied
with great emotion, 'Mr Martin, I desire you will mind your own business;
I shall convince you one of these days that I understand mine.' In short,
there was no remedy; the mittimus was made out, and poor Clinker sent to
prison in a hackney-coach, guarded by the constable, and accompanied by
your humble servant. By the way, I was not a little surprised to hear this
retainer to justice bid the prisoner to keep up his spirits, for that he
did not at all doubt but that he would get off for a few weeks confinement—He
said, his worship knew very well that Clinker was innocent of the fact,
and that the real highwayman who robbed the chaise, was no other than that
very individual Mr Martin, who had pleaded so strenuously for honest
Humphry.</p>
<p>Confounded at this information, I asked, 'Why then is he suffered to go
about at his liberty, and this poor innocent fellow treated as a
malefactor?' 'We have exact intelligence of all Mr Martin's transactions
(said he); but as yet there is not evidence sufficient for his conviction;
and as for this young man, the justice could do no less than commit him,
as the postilion swore point-blank to his identity.' 'So if this rascally
postilion should persist in the falsity to which he is sworn (said I),
this innocent lad may be brought to the gallows.'</p>
<p>The constable observed, that he would have time enough to prepare for his
trial, and might prove an alibi; or, perhaps, Martin might be apprehended
and convicted for another fact; in which case, he might be prevailed upon
to take this affair upon himself; or, finally, if these chances should
fail, and the evidence stand good against Clinker, the jury might
recommend him to mercy, in consideration of his youth, especially if this
should appear to be the first fact of which he had been guilty.</p>
<p>Humphry owned he could not pretend to recollect where he had been on the
day when the robbery was committed, much less prove a circumstance of that
kind so far back as six months, though he knew he had been sick of the
fever and ague, which, however, did not prevent him from going about—then,
turning up his eyes, he ejaculated, 'The Lord's will be done! if it be my
fate to suffer, I hope I shall not disgrace the faith of which, though
unworthy, I make profession.'</p>
<p>When I expressed my surprize that the accuser should persist in charging
Clinker, without taking the least notice of the real robber who stood
before him, and to whom, indeed, Humphry bore not the smallest
resemblance; the constable (who was himself a thief-taker) gave me to
understand, that Mr Martin was the best qualified for business of all the
gentlemen on the road he had ever known; that he had always acted on his
own bottom, without partner or correspondent, and never went to work but
when he was cool and sober; that his courage and presence of mind never
failed him; that his address was genteel, and his behaviour void of all
cruelty and insolence; that he never encumbered himself with watches or
trinkets, nor even with bank-notes, but always dealt for ready money, and
that in the current coin of the kingdom; and that he could disguise
himself and his horse in such a manner, that, after the action, it was
impossible to recognize either the one or the other—'This great man
(said he) has reigned paramount in all the roads within fifty miles of
London above fifteen months, and has done more business in that time, than
all the rest of the profession put together; for those who pass through
his hands are so delicately dealt with, that they have no desire to give
him the least disturbance; but for all that, his race is almost run—he
is now fluttering about justice, like a moth about a candle—there
are so many lime-twigs laid in his way, that I'll bet a cool hundred, he
swings before Christmas.'</p>
<p>Shall I own to you, that this portrait, drawn by a ruffian, heightened by
what I myself had observed in his deportment, has interested me warmly in
the fate of poor Martin, whom nature seems to have intended for a useful
and honourable member of that community upon which he now preys for
subsistence? It seems, he lived some time as a clerk to a timber-merchant,
whose daughter Martin having privately married, was discarded, and his
wife turned out of doors. She did not long survive her marriage; and
Martin, turning fortune-hunter, could not supply his occasions any other
way, than by taking to the road, in which he has travelled hitherto with
uncommon success.—He pays his respects regularly to Mr Justice
Buzzard, the thief-catcher-general of this metropolis, and sometimes they
smoke a pipe together very lovingly, when the conversation generally turns
upon the nature of evidence.—The justice has given him fair warning
to take care of himself, and he has received his caution in good part.—Hitherto
he has baffled all the vigilance, art, and activity of Buzzard and his
emissaries, with such conduct as would have done honour to the genius of a
Caesar or a Turenne; but he has one weakness, which has proved fatal to
all the heroes of his tribe, namely, an indiscreet devotion to the fair
sex, and in all probability, he will be attacked on this defenceless
quarter.</p>
<p>Be that as it may, I saw the body of poor Clinker consigned to the gaoler
of Clerkenwell, to whose indulgence I recommended him so effectually, that
he received him in the most hospitable manner, though there was a
necessity for equipping him with a suit of irons, in which he made a very
rueful appearance. The poor creature seemed as much affected by my uncle's
kindness, as by his own misfortune. When I assured him, that nothing
should be left undone for procuring his enlargement, and making his
confinement easy in the mean time, he fell down on his knees, and kissing
my hand, which he bathed with his tears, '0 'squire! (cried he, sobbing)
what shall I say?—I can't—no, I can't speak—my poor
heart is bursting with gratitude to you and my dear—dear generous—noble
benefactor.'</p>
<p>I protest, the scene became so pathetic, that I was fain to force myself
away, and returned to my uncle, who sent me in the afternoon with a
compliment to one Mr Mead, the person who had been robbed on Black-heath.
As I did not find him at home, I left a message, in consequence of which
he called at our lodgings this morning, and very humanely agreed to visit
the prisoner. By this time, lady Griskin had come to make her formal
compliments of condolance to Mrs Tabitha, on this domestic calamity; and
that prudent maiden, whose passion was now cooled, thought proper to
receive her ladyship so civilly, that a reconciliation immediately ensued.
These two ladies resolved to comfort the poor prisoner in their own
persons, and Mr Mead and I 'squired them to Clerkenwell, my uncle being
detained at home by some slight complaints in his stomach and bowels.</p>
<p>The turnkey, who received us at Clerkenwell, looked remarkably sullen; and
when we enquired for Clinker, 'I don't care, if the devil had him (said
he); here has been nothing but canting and praying since the fellow
entered the place.—Rabbit him! the tap will be ruined—we han't
sold a cask of beer, nor a dozen of wine, since he paid his garnish—the
gentlemen get drunk with nothing but your damned religion.—For my
part, I believe as how your man deals with the devil.—Two or three
as bold hearts as ever took the air upon Hounslow have been blubbering all
night; and if the fellow an't speedily removed by Habeas Corpus, or
otherwise, I'll be damn'd if there's a grain of true spirit left within
these walls we shan't have a soul to do credit to the place, or make his
exit like a true born Englishman—damn my eyes! there will be nothing
but snivelling in the cart—we shall all die like so many
psalm-singing weavers.'</p>
<p>In short, we found that Humphry was, at that very instant, haranguing the
felons in the chapel; and that the gaoler's wife and daughter, together
with my aunt's woman, Win Jenkins, and our house-maid, were among the
audience, which we immediately joined. I never saw any thing so strongly
picturesque as this congregation of felons clanking their chains, in the
midst of whom stood orator Clinker, expatiating in a transport of fervor,
on the torments of hell, denounced in scripture against evil-doers,
comprehending murderers, robbers, thieves, and whore mongers. The variety
of attention exhibited in the faces of those ragamuffins, formed a groupe
that would not have disgraced the pencil of a Raphael. In one, it denoted
admiration; in another, doubt; in a third, disdain; in a fourth, contempt;
in a fifth, terror; in a sixth, derision; and in a seventh, indignation.—As
for Mrs Winifred Jenkins, she was in tears, overwhelmed with sorrow; but
whether for her own sins, or the misfortune of Clinker, I cannot pretend
to say. The other females seemed to listen with a mixture of wonder and
devotion. The gaoler's wife declared he was a saint in trouble, saying,
she wished from her heart there was such another good soul, like him, in
every gaol in England.</p>
<p>Mr Mead, having earnestly surveyed the preacher, declared his appearance
was so different from that of the person who robbed him on Black-heath,
that he could freely make oath he was not the man: but Humphry himself was
by this time pretty well rid of all apprehensions of being hanged; for he
had been the night before solemnly tried and acquitted by his fellow
prisoners, some of whom he had already converted to methodism. He now made
proper acknowledgments for the honour of our visit, and was permitted to
kiss the hands of the ladies, who assured him, he might depend upon their
friendship and protection. Lady Griskin, in her great zeal, exhorted his
fellow-prisoners to profit by the precious opportunity of having such a
saint in bonds among them, and turn over a new leaf for the benefit of
their poor souls; and, that her admonition might have the greater effect,
she reinforced it with her bounty.</p>
<p>While she and Mrs Tabby returned in the coach with the two maidservants, I
waited on Mr Mead to the house of justice Buzzard, who, having heard his
declaration, said his oath could be of no use at present, but that he
would be a material evidence for the prisoner at his trial; so that there
seems to be no remedy but patience for poor Clinker; and, indeed, the same
virtue, or medicine, will be necessary for us all, the squire in
particular, who had set his heart upon his excursion to the northward.</p>
<p>While we were visiting honest Humphry in Clerkenwell prison, my uncle
received a much more extraordinary visit at his own lodgings. Mr Martin,
of whom I have made such honourable mention, desired permission to pay him
his respects, and was admitted accordingly. He told him, that having
observed him, at Mr Buzzard's, a good deal disturbed by what had happened
to his servant, he had come to assure him he had nothing to apprehend for
Clinker's life; for, if it was possible that any jury could find him
guilty upon such evidence, he, Martin himself, would produce in court a
person, whose deposition would bring him off clear as the sun at noon.—Sure,
the fellow would not be so romantic as to take the robbery upon himself!—He
said, the postilion was an infamous fellow, who had been a dabbler in the
same profession, and saved his life at the Old Bailey by impeaching his
companions; that being now reduced to great poverty, he had made this
desperate push, to swear away the life of an innocent man, in hopes of
having the reward upon his conviction; but that he would find himself
miserably disappointed, for the justice and his myrmidons were determined
to admit of no interloper in this branch of business; and that he did not
at all doubt but that they would find matter enough to shop the evidence
himself before the next gaol-delivery. He affirmed, that all these
circumstances were well known to the justice; and that his severity to
Clinker was no other than a hint to his master to make him a present in
private, as an acknowledgment of his candour and humanity.</p>
<p>This hint, however, was so unpalatable to Mr Bramble, that he declared,
with great warmth, he would rather confine himself for life to London,
which he detested, than be at liberty to leave it tomorrow, in consequence
of encouraging corruption in a magistrate. Hearing, however, how
favourable Mr Mead's report had been for the prisoner, he is resolved to
take the advice of counsel in what manner to proceed for his immediate
enlargement. I make no doubt, but that in a day or two this troublesome
business may be discussed; and in this hope we are preparing for our
journey. If our endeavours do not miscarry, we shall have taken the field
before you hear again from</p>
<p>Yours, J. MELFORD LONDON, June 11</p>
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