settle with these gentlemen or I shall never know a
happy minute more,” which was done several times
both before and since, but still I must remember that
Joshua Lirriper has his good feelings and shows them
in being always so troubled in his mind when he cannot
wear mourning for his brother. Many a long year
have I left off my widow’s mourning not being
wishful to intrude, but the tender point in Joshua
that I cannot help a little yielding to is when he
writes “One single sovereign would enable me
to wear a decent suit of mourning for my much-loved
brother. I vowed at the time of his lamented
death that I would ever wear sables in memory of him
but Alas how short-sighted is man, How keep that vow
when penniless!” It says a good deal for the
strength of his feelings that he couldn’t have
been seven year old when my poor Lirriper died and
to have kept to it ever since is highly creditable.
But we know there’s good in all of us,—if
we only knew where it was in some of us,—and
though it was far from delicate in Joshua to work
upon the dear child’s feelings when first sent
to school and write down into Lincolnshire for his
pocket-money by return of post and got it, still
he is my poor Lirriper’s own youngest brother
and mightn’t have meant not paying his bill at
the Salisbury Arms when his affection took him down
to stay a fortnight at Hatfield churchyard and might
have meant to keep sober but for bad company.
Consequently if the Major
had played on him
with the garden-engine which he got privately into
his room without my knowing of it, I think that much
as I should have regretted it there would have been
words betwixt the Major and me. Therefore my
dear though he played on Mr. Buffle by mistake being
hot in his head, and though it might have been misrepresented
down at Wozenham’s into not being ready for Mr.
Buffle in other respects he being the Assessed Taxes,
still I do not so much regret it as perhaps I ought.
And whether Joshua Lirriper will yet do well in life
I cannot say, but I did hear of his coming, out at
a Private Theatre in the character of a Bandit without
receiving any offers afterwards from the regular managers.
Mentioning Mr. Baffle gives an instance of there being
good in persons where good is not expected, for it
cannot be denied that Mr. Buffle’s manners when
engaged in his business were not agreeable. To
collect is one thing, and to look about as if suspicious
of the goods being gradually removing in the dead
of the night by a back door is another, over taxing
you have no control but suspecting is voluntary.
Allowances too must ever be made for a gentleman
of the Major’s warmth not relishing being spoke
to with a pen in the mouth, and while I do not know
that it is more irritable to my own feelings to have
a low-crowned hat with a broad brim kept on in doors
than any other hat still I can appreciate the Major’s,
besides which without bearing malice or vengeance the
Major is a man that scores up arrears as his habit