Treatise Life And Death Of John Fletcher
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-life-and-death-of-john-fletcher-005 |
| Words | 399 |
He told him the difficulty they were under,
with regard to the exchange of money. The Jew replied,
“Give me your money, and I will get it changed in five
minutes.” Mr. Fletcher without delay gave him his purse, in
which were ninety pounds. As soon as he came back to his
company, he told them what he had done. They all cried
out with one voice, “Then your money is gone. You need
never expect to see a crown or a doit of it any more. Men
are constantly waiting about the doors of these inns, on
* Rude and inhospitable to foreigners.-EDIT. purpose to take in young strangers.” Seeing no remedy, no
way to help himself, he could only commend his cause to
God. And that was enough;--before they had done break
fast, in came the Jew, and brought him the whole money. 13. Inquiring for a person who was proper to perfect him
in the English tongue, (the rudiments of which he had begun
to learn before he left Geneva,) he was recommended to
Mr. Burchell, who then kept a boarding-school at South
Nimms in Hertfordshire. And when Mr. Burchell removed
to Hatfield, he chose to remove with him. All the time he
was both at South Nimms and at Hatfield, he was of a
serious and reserved behaviour; very different from that of
the other young gentlemen who were his fellow-students. Here he diligently studied both the English language, and all
the branches of polite literature. Meantime his easy and
genteel behaviour, together with his eminent sweetness of
temper, gained him the esteem as well as the affection of all
that conversed with him. He frequently visited some of the
first families in Hatfield, who were all fond of his conversa
tion; so lively and ingenious at the same time, evidencing
both the gentleman and the scholar. All this time he had
the fear of God deeply rooted in his heart. But he had none
to take him by the hand, and lead him forward in the ways
of God. He stayed with Mr. Burchell about eighteen
months, who loved him as his own son. 14. Afterwards, one Mr. Dechamps, a French Minister, to
whom he had been recommended, procured him the place of
tutor to the two sons of Thomas Hill, Esq., at Tern-Hall, in
Shropshire. In the year 1752, he removed into Mr.