Journal of A Voyage to Lisbon
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第30章 THE VOYAGE(18)

That the evil which I have here pointed at is of itself worth redressing,is,I apprehend,no subject of dispute;for why should any persons in distress be deprived of the assistance of their fellow-subjects,when they are willing amply to reward them for their labor?or,why should the lowest of the people be permitted to exact ten times the value of their work?For those exactions increase with the degrees of necessity in their object,insomuch that on the former side many are horribly imposed upon,and that often in no trifling matters.I was very well assured that at Deal no less than ten guineas was required,and paid by the supercargo of an Indiaman,for carrying him on board two miles from the shore when she was just ready to sail;so that his necessity,as his pillager well understood,was absolute.Again,many others,whose indignation will not submit to such plunder,are forced to refuse the assistance,though they are often great sufferers by so doing.On the latter side,the lowest of the people are encouraged in laziness and idleness;while they live by a twentieth part of the labor that ought to maintain them,which is diametrically opposite to the interest of the public;for that requires a great deal to be done,not to be paid,for a little.And moreover,they are confirmed in habits of exaction,and are taught to consider the distresses of their superiors as their own fair emolument.But enough of this matter,of which Iat first intended only to convey a hint to those who are alone capable of applying the remedy,though they are the last to whom the notice of those evils would occur,without some such monitor as myself,who am forced to travel about the world in the form of a passenger.I cannot but say I heartily wish our governors would attentively consider this method of fixing the price of labor,and by that means of compelling the poor to work,since the due execution of such powers will,I apprehend,be found the true and only means of making them useful,and of advancing trade from its present visibly declining state to the height to which Sir William Petty,in his Political Arithmetic,thinks it capable of being carried.

In the afternoon the lady of the above-mentioned mansion called at our inn,and left her compliments to us with Mrs.Francis,with an assurance that while we continued wind-bound in that place,where she feared we could be but indifferently accommodated,we were extremely welcome to the use of anything which her garden or her house afforded.So polite a message convinced us,in spite of some arguments to the contrary,that we were not on the coast of Africa,or on some island where the few savage inhabitants have little of human in them besides their form.And here I mean nothing less than to derogate from the merit of this lady,who is not only extremely polite in her behavior to strangers of her own rank,but so extremely good and charitable to all her poor neighbors who stand in need of her assistance,that she hath the universal love and praises of all who live near her.But,in reality,how little doth the acquisition of so valuable a character,and the full indulgence of so worthy a disposition,cost those who possess it!Both are accomplished by the very offals which fall from a table moderately plentiful.That they are enjoyed therefore by so few arises truly from there being so few who have any such disposition to gratify,or who aim at any such character.

Wednesday,July 22.--This morning,after having been mulcted as usual,we dispatched a servant with proper acknowledgments of the lady's goodness;but confined our wants entirely to the productions of her garden.He soon returned,in company with the gardener,both richly laden with almost every particular which a garden at this most fruitful season of the year produces.While we were regaling ourselves with these,towards the close of our dinner,we received orders from our commander,who had dined that day with some inferior officers on board a man-of-war,to return instantly to the ship;for that the wind was become favorable and he should weigh that evening.These orders were soon followed by the captain himself,who was still in the utmost hurry,though the occasion of it had long since ceased;for the wind had,indeed,a little shifted that afternoon,but was before this very quietly set down in its old quarters.

This last was a lucky hit for me;for,as the captain,to whose orders we resolved to pay no obedience,unless delivered by himself,did not return till past six,so much time seemed requisite to put up the furniture of our bed-chamber or dining-room,for almost every article,even to some of the chairs,were either our own or the captain's property;so much more in conveying it as well as myself,as dead a luggage as any,to the shore,and thence to the ship,that the night threatened first to overtake us.A terrible circumstance to me,in my decayed condition;especially as very heavy showers of rain,attended with a high wind,continued to fall incessantly;the being carried through which two miles in the dark,in a wet and open boat,seemed little less than certain death.However,as my commander was absolute,his orders peremptory,and my obedience necessary,I resolved to avail myself of a philosophy which hath been of notable use to me in the latter part of my life,and which is contained in this hemistich of Virgil:--Superanda omnis fortuna ferendo est.

The meaning of which,if Virgil had any,I think I rightly understood,and rightly applied.As I was therefore to be entirely passive in my motion,I resolved to abandon myself to the conduct of those who were to carry me into a cart when it returned from unloading the goods.

But before this,the captain,perceiving what had happened in the clouds,and that the wind remained as much his enemy as ever,came upstairs to me with a reprieve till the morning.This was,I own,very agreeable news,and I little regretted the trouble of refurnishing my apartment,by sending back for the goods.