Life of Lord Byron, With His Letters And Journals, Vol. 5 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 387 pages of information about Life of Lord Byron, With His Letters And Journals, Vol. 5.

Life of Lord Byron, With His Letters And Journals, Vol. 5 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 387 pages of information about Life of Lord Byron, With His Letters And Journals, Vol. 5.
by the ‘eminent Churchman;’ but I suppose he wants a living.  I once heard of a preacher at Kentish Town against ‘Cain.’  The same outcry was raised against Priestley, Hume, Gibbon, Voltaire, and all the men who dared to put tithes to the question.
“I have got S——­’s pretended reply, to which I am surprised that you do not allude.  What remains to be done is to call him out.  The question is, would he come? for, if he would not, the whole thing would appear ridiculous, if I were to take a long and expensive journey to no purpose.

     “You must be my second, and, as such, I wish to consult you.

“I apply to you, as one well versed in the duello, or monomachie.  Of course I shall come to England as privately as possible, and leave it (supposing that I was the survivor) in the same manner; having no other object which could bring me to that country except to settle quarrels accumulated during my absence.
“By the last post I transmitted to you a letter upon some Rochdale toll business, from which there are moneys in prospect.  My agent says two thousand pounds, but supposing it to be only one, or even one hundred, still they may be moneys; and I have lived long enough to have an exceeding respect for the smallest current coin of any realm, or the least sum, which, although I may not want it myself, may do something for others who may need it more than I.
“They say that ’Knowledge is Power:’—­I used to think so; but I now know that they meant ‘money:’  and when Socrates declared, ’that all he knew was, that he knew nothing,’ he merely intended to declare, that he had not a drachm in the Athenian world.
“The circulars are arrived, and circulating like the vortices (or vortexes) of Descartes.  Still I have a due care of the needful, and keep a look out ahead, as my notions upon the score of moneys coincide with yours, and with all men’s who have lived to see that every guinea is a philosopher’s stone, or at least his touch-stone.  You will doubt me the less, when I pronounce my firm belief, that Cash is Virtue.
“I cannot reproach myself with much expenditure:  my only extra expense (and it is more than I have spent upon myself) being a loan of two hundred and fifty pounds to ——­; and fifty pounds worth of furniture, which I have bought for him; and a boat which I am building for myself at Genoa, which will cost about a hundred pounds more.

     “But to return.  I am determined to have all the moneys I can,
     whether by my own funds, or succession, or lawsuit, or MSS. or any
     lawful means whatever.

     “I will pay (though with the sincerest reluctance) my remaining
     creditors, and every man of law, by instalments from the award of
     the arbitrators.

     “I recommend to you the notice in Mr. Hanson’s letter, on the
     demands of moneys for the Rochdale tolls.

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Life of Lord Byron, With His Letters And Journals, Vol. 5 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.