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The Vicar of Wakefield.
93

of misery; but it was very different. The pri­soners seemed all employed in one common design, that of forgetting thought in merri­ment or clamour. I was apprized of the usual perquisite required upon these occa­sions, and immediately complied with the demand, though the little money I had was very near being all exhausted. This was immediately sent away for liquor, and the whole prison soon was filled with riot, laughter, and prophaneness.

"How," cried I to myself, "shall men so very wicked be chearful, and shall I be melancholy! I feel only the same confinement with them, and I think I have more reason to be happy."

With such reflections I laboured to be­come chearful; but chearfulness was never yet produced by effort, which is itself pain­ful. As I was sitting therefore in a corner of the gaol, in a pensive posture, one ofmy