Journal Vol1 3
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | journal |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-journal-vol1-3-1046 |
| Words | 275 |
Our landlord, as he was guiding us over the Frith, very innocently
asked, how much a year we got by preaching thus. ‘This gave me an
opportunity of explaining to him that kind of gain which he seemed
utterly a stranger to. He appeared to be quite amazed; and spake
not one word, good or bad, till he took his Jeave. Presently, after he
went, my mare stuck fast in a quagmire, which was in the midst of the
high road. But we could well excuse this ; for the road all along, for
near fifty miles after, was such as I never saw any natural road, either in
England or Ireland: nay, far better, notwithstanding the continued rain,
than the turnpike road between London and Canterbury. We dined
at Dumfries, a clean, well built town, having two of the most elegant
churches (one at each end of the town) that I have seen. We reached
Thorny Hill in the evening. What miserable accounts pass current in
England of the inns in Scotland! Yet here, as well as wherever we
called in our whole journey, we had not only every thing we wanted,
but every thing readily and in good order, and as clean as I ever desire.
Tues. 17..--We set out about four, and rode over several high, but
extremely pleasant, mountains, to Lead Hill; a village of miners,
resembling Placey, near Newcastle. We dined at a village called
Lesmahaggy, and about eight in the evening reached Glasgow. A
gentleman who had overtaken us on the road, sent one with us to Mr
Gillies’s house.
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April, 1753. ] REV. J. WESLEY’S JOURNAL. 551