Page:Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure (1749, vol. 2).pdf/238

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234
Memoirs of a

In this interval, however, I pick'd out of the broken, often pleasingly, interrupted account of himself, that he was, at that instant, actually on his road to London, in not a very paramount plight, or condition, having been wreck'd on the Irish coast, for which he had prematurely embark'd, and lost the little all he had brought with him from the South-Seas, so that he had not, till after great shifts and hardships, in the company of his fellow traveller, the captain, got so far on his journey; that so it was, (having heard of his father's death and circumstances,) he had now the world to begin again, on a new account: a situation, which he assur'd me, in a vein of sincerity, that flowing from his heart, penetrated mine, gave him no farther pain, than that he had it not in his power, to make me as happy as he could wish. My fortune, you will please to observe, I had not enter'd upon any overture of, reserving to feast myself with the surprize of it to him, in calmer instants. And as to my dress, it could give him no idea

of