Treatise Life And Death Of John Fletcher
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-life-and-death-of-john-fletcher-031 |
| Words | 396 |
However, having chosen, at least for the present, this
narrow field of action, he was more and more abundant in
his ministerial labours, both in public and private; not con
tenting himself with preaching, but visiting his flock in every
corner of his parish. And this work he attended to, early
and late, whether the weather was fair or foul; regarding
neither heat nor cold, rain nor snow, whether he was on horse
back or on foot. But this farther weakened his constitution;
which was still more effectually done by his intense and
uninterrupted studies; in which he frequently continued with
out scarce any intermission, fourteen, fifteen, or sixteen hours
a day. But still he did not allow himself such food as was
necessary to sustain nature. He seldom took any regular
meals, except he had company; otherwise, twice or thrice in
four-and-twenty hours, he ate some bread and cheese, or fruit. Instead of this, he sometimes took a draught of milk, and
then wrote on again. When one reproved him for not
affording himself a sufficiency of necessary food, he replied,
“Not allow myself food | Why, our food seldom costs my
housekeeper and me together less than two shillings a week.”
7. “On the tenth of May, 1774,” says Mr. Vaughan, to
whom we are indebted for several of the preceding anecdotes,
“he wrote to me thus: ‘My brother has sent me the rent of
a little place I have abroad, eighty pounds, which I was to
receive from Mr. Chauvet and Company, in London. But
instead of sending the draught for the money, I have sent it
back to Switzerland, with orders to distribute it among thc
poor. As money is rather higher there than here, that mite
will go farther abroad than it would in my parish.’”
8. To show in how great a degree he was disengaged from
Wealth, honour, pleasure, or what else
This short-enduring world could give,
Mr. Vaughan gives us another little memoir, which fell
within his own knowledge: “After he had published two or
three small political pieces, in reference to our contest with
the Americans, ‘I carried one of them,” says he, in a letter to
me, ‘to the Earl of D. His Lordship carried it to the Lord
Chancellor, and the Lord Chancellor handed it to the King.”
One was immediately commissioned to ask Mr.