The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 480 pages of information about The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders.

The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 480 pages of information about The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders.

While I sat here, I heard the woman in the bar say, ’Are they all gone in the five?’ which was the box I sat in, and the boy said, ‘Yes.’  ‘Who fetched the tankard away?’ says the woman.  ‘I did,’ says another boy; ‘that’s it,’ pointing, it seems, to another tankard, which he had fetched from another box by mistake; or else it must be, that the rogue forgot that he had not brought it in, which certainly he had not.

I heard all this, much to my satisfaction, for I found plainly that the tankard was not missed, and yet they concluded it was fetched away; so I drank my ale, called to pay, and as I went away I said, ‘Take care of your plate, child,’ meaning a silver pint mug, which he brought me drink in.  The boy said, ’Yes, madam, very welcome,’ and away I came.

I came home to my governess, and now I thought it was a time to try her, that if I might be put to the necessity of being exposed, she might offer me some assistance.  When I had been at home some time, and had an opportunity of talking to her, I told her I had a secret of the greatest consequence in the world to commit to her, if she had respect enough for me to keep it a secret.  She told me she had kept one of my secrets faithfully; why should I doubt her keeping another?  I told her the strangest thing in the world had befallen me, and that it had made a thief of me, even without any design, and so told her the whole story of the tankard.  ’And have you brought it away with you, my dear?’ says she.  ‘To be sure I have,’ says I, and showed it her.  ‘But what shall I do now,’ says I; ’must not carry it again?’

‘Carry it again!’ says she.  ’Ay, if you are minded to be sent to Newgate for stealing it.’  ‘Why,’ says I, ’they can’t be so base to stop me, when I carry it to them again?’ ’You don’t know those sort of people, child,’ says she; ’they’ll not only carry you to Newgate, but hang you too, without any regard to the honesty of returning it; or bring in an account of all the other tankards they have lost, for you to pay for.’  ’What must I do, then?’ says I.  ‘Nay,’ says she, ’as you have played the cunning part and stole it, you must e’en keep it; there’s no going back now.  Besides, child,’ says she, ’don’t you want it more than they do?  I wish you could light of such a bargain once a week.’

This gave me a new notion of my governess, and that since she was turned pawnbroker, she had a sort of people about her that were none of the honest ones that I had met with there before.

I had not been long there but I discovered it more plainly than before, for every now and then I saw hilts of swords, spoons, forks, tankards, and all such kind of ware brought in, not to be pawned, but to be sold downright; and she bought everything that came without asking any questions, but had very good bargains, as I found by her discourse.

I found also that in following this trade she always melted down the plate she bought, that it might not be challenged; and she came to me and told me one morning that she was going to melt, and if I would, she would put my tankard in, that it might not be seen by anybody.  I told her, with all my heart; so she weighed it, and allowed me the full value in silver again; but I found she did not do the same to the rest of her customers.

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The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.