Japhet, In Search Of A Father Part 1 by Frederick Marryat (read people like a book .TXT) π
Mammon--So Precocious As To Make Some Noise In The World And Be
Hung A Few Days After I Was Born--Cut Down In Time And Produce A
Scene Of Bloodshed--My Early Propensities Fully Developed By The
Choice Of My Profession
Those Who May Be Pleased To Honour These Pages With A Perusal, Will Not
Be Detained With A Long Introductory History Of My Birth, Parentage, And
Education. The Very Title Implies That, At This Period Of My Memoirs, I
Was Ignorant Of The Two First; And It Will Be Necessary For The Due
Development Of My Narrative, That I Allow Them To Remain In The Same
State Of Bliss; For In The Perusal Of A Tale, As Well As In The
Pilgrimage Of Life, Ignorance Of The Future May Truly Be Considered As
The Greatest Source Of Happiness. The Little That Was Known Of Me At
This Time I Will However Narrate As Concisely, And As Correctly, As I Am
Able.
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- Author: Frederick Marryat
Read book online Β«Japhet, In Search Of A Father Part 1 by Frederick Marryat (read people like a book .TXT) πΒ». Author - Frederick Marryat
Father, And I Told You Mine Should Be To Look After My Mother. You Have
Selected High Life As The Expected Sphere In Which He Is To Be Found,
And I Select Low Life As That In Which I Am Most Likely To Discover The
Object Of My Search. So You Perceive," Continued Tim, Laughing, "That We
Must Arrange So As To Suit The Views Of Both Without Parting Company. Do
You Hunt Among Bag-Wigs, Amber-Headed Canes, Silks And Satins--I Will
Burrow Among Tags And Tassels, Dimity And Mob Caps; And Probably We
Part 1 Chapter 17 Pg 85Shall Both Succeed In The Object Of Our Search. I Leave You To Hunt In
The Drawing-Rooms, While I Ferret In The Kitchen. You May Throw Yourself
On A Sofa And Exclaim--'Who Is My Father?' While I Will Sit In The
Cook'S Lap, And Ask Her If She May Happen To Be My Mother."
This Sally Of Timothy'S Made Even Fleta Laugh; And After A Little More
Remonstrance, I Consented That He Should Perform The Part Of My Valet.
Indeed, The More I Reflected Upon It, The Greater Appeared The
Advantages Which Might Accrue From The Arrangement. By The Time That
This Point Had Been Settled, We Had Arrived At The Town To Which We
Directed Our Steps, And Took Up Our Quarters At An Inn Of Moderate
Pretensions, But Of Very Great External Cleanliness. My First Object Was
To Find Out Some Fitting Asylum For Little Fleta. The Landlady Was A
Buxom, Good-Tempered Young Woman, And I Gave The Little Girl Into Her
Charge, While Timothy And I Went Out On A Survey. I Had Made Up My Mind
To Put Her To Some Good, But Not Very Expensive, School, If Such Were To
Be Found In The Vicinity. I Should Have Preferred Taking Her With Me To
London, But I Was Aware How Much More Expensive It Would Be To Provide
For Her There; And As The Distance From The Metropolis Was But Twenty
Miles, I Could Easily Run Down To See Her Occasionally. I Desired The
Little Girl To Call Me Her Brother, As Such I Intended To Be To Her In
Future, And Not To Answer Every Question They Might Put To Her. There
Was, However, Little Occasion For This Caution; For Fleta Was, As I
Before Observed, Very Unlike Children In General. I Then Went Out With
Timothy To Look For A Tailor, That I Might Order Our Clothes, As What We
Had On Were Not Either Of The Very Best Taste, Or In The Very Best
Condition. We Walked Up The Main Street, And Soon Fell In With A
Tailor'S Shop, Over Which Was Written In Large Letters--"Feodor
Shneider, Tailor To His Royal Highness The Prince Of Darmstadt."
"Will That Do, Japhet?" Said Timothy, Pointing To The Announcement.
"Why Yes," Replied I; "But How The Deuce The Prince Of Darmstadt Should
Have Employed A Man In a Small Country Town As His Tailor, Is To Me
Rather A Puzzle."
"Perhaps He Made His Clothes When He Was In Germany," Replied Tim.
"Perhaps He Did; But, However, He Shall Have The Honour Of Making Mine."
We Entered The Shop, And I Ordered A Suit Of The Most Fashionable
Clothes, Choosing My Colours, And Being Very Minute In My Directions To
The Foreman, Who Measured Me; But As I Was Leaving The Shop The Master,
Judging By My Appearance, Which Was Certainly Not Exactly That Of A
Gentleman, Ventured To Observe That It Was Customary With _Gentlemen_,
Whom They Had Not The Honour Of Knowing, To Leave A Deposit. Although
The Very Proposal Was An Attack Upon My Gentility, I Made No Reply; But
Pulling Out A Handful Of Guineas, Laid Down Two On The Counter, And
Walked Away, That I Might Find Another Shop At Which We Might Order The
Livery Of Timothy; But This Was Only As A Reconnoitre, As I Did Not
Intend To Order His Liveries Until I Could Appear In My Own Clothes,
Which Were Promised On The Afternoon Of The Next Day. There Were,
However, Several Other Articles To Be Purchased, Such As A Trunk,
Portmanteau, Hat, Gloves, &C., All Which We Procured, And Then Went Back
Part 1 Chapter 17 Pg 86To The Inn. On My Return I Ordered Dinner. Fleta Was Certainly Clad In
Her Best Frock, But Bad Was The Best; And The Landlady, Who Could
Extract Little From The Child, Could Not Imagine Who We Could Be. I Had,
However, Allowed Her To See More Than Sufficient Money To Warrant Our
Expenses; And So Far Her Scruples Were, Although Her Curiosity Was Not,
Removed.
That Evening I Had A Long Conversation With Fleta. I Told Her That We
Were To Part, That She Must Go To School, And That I Would Very Often
Come Down To See Her. At First, She Was Inconsolable At The Idea; But I
Reasoned With Her, And The Gentle, Intelligent Creature Acknowledged
That It Was Right. The Next Day My Clothes Came Home, And I Dressed
Myself. "Without Flattery, Japhet," Said Timothy, "You Do Look Very Much
Like A Gentleman." Fleta Smiled, And Said The Same. I Thought So Too,
But Said Nothing. Putting On My Hat And Gloves, And Accompanied By
Timothy, I Descended To Go Out And Order Tim'S Liveries, As Well As A
Fit-Out For Fleta.
After I Was Out In The Street I Discovered That I Had Left My
Handkerchief, And Returned To Fetch It. The Landlady, Seeing A Gentleman
About To Enter The Inn, Made A Very Low Courtesy, And It Was Not Until I
Looked Hard At Her That She Recognised Me. Then I Was Satisfied; It Was
An Involuntary Tribute To My Appearance, Worth All The Flattering
Assertions In The World. We Now Proceeded To The Other Tailor'S In The
Main Street. I Entered The Shop With A Flourishing, Important Air, And
Was Received With Many Bows. "I Wish," Said I, "To Have A Suit Of Livery
Made For This Young Man, Who Is About To Enter Into My Service. I Cannot
Take Him Up To Town This Figure." The Livery Was Chosen, And As I
Expressed My Wish To Be Off The Next Evening, It Was Promised To Be
Ready By An Hour Appointed.
I Then Went To A Milliner'S, And Desired That She Would Call At The Inn
To Fit Out A Little Girl For School, Whose Wardrobe Had Been Left Behind
By Mistake. On The Fourth Day All Was Ready. I Had Made Inquiries, And
Found Out A Very Respectable School, Kept By A Widow Lady. I Asked For
References, Which Were Given, And I Was Satisfied. The Terms Were
Low--Twenty Pounds Per Annum. I Paid The First Half Year In advance, And
Lodged Fifty Guineas More In The Hands Of A Banker, Taking A Receipt For
It, And Giving Directions That It Was To Be Paid To The Schoolmistress
As It Became Due. I Took This Precaution, That Should I Be In Poverty
Myself, At All Events Fleta Might Be Provided In clothes And Schooling
For Three Years At Least. The Poor Child Wept Bitterly At The
Separation, And I Could With Difficulty Detach Her Little Arms From My
Neck, And I Felt When I Left Her As If I Had Parted With The Only
Valuable Object To Me On Earth.
All Was Now Ready; But Timothy Did Not, As Yet, Assume His New Clothes.
It Would Have Appeared Strange That One Who Sat At My Table Should
Afterwards Put On My Livery; And As, In a Small Town There Is Always
Plenty Of Scandal, For Fleta'S Sake, If For No Other Reason, It Was
Deferred Until Our Arrival In London. Wishing The Landlady Good-Bye, Who
I Really Believed Would Have Given Up Her Bill To Have Known Who We
Could Possibly Be, We Got On The Outside Of The Stage-Coach, And In The
Evening Arrived In The Metropolis. I Have Been Particular In describing
All These Little Circumstances, As It Proves How Very Awkward It Is To
Part 1 Chapter 17 Pg 87Jump, Without Observation, From One Station In Society To Another.
Part 1 Chapter 18 Pg 88I Receive A Letter From My Uncle By Which I Naturally Expect To
Find Out Who Is My Father--Like Other Outcasts, I Am Warned By A
Dream.
But I Have Omitted To Mention A Circumstance Of Great Importance, Which
Occurred At The Inn The Night Before I Placed Fleta At The
Boarding-School. In Looking Over My Portmanteau, I Perceived The Present
Of Nattee To Fleta, Which I Had Quite Forgotten. I Took It To Fleta, And
Told Her From Whom It Came. On Opening The Paper, It Proved To Contain A
Long Chain Of Round Coral And Gold Beads, Strung Alternately; The Gold
Beads Were Not So Large As The Coral, But Still The Number Of Them, And
The Purity Of The Metal, Made Them Of Considerable Value. Fleta Passed
The Beads Through Her Fingers, And Then Threw It Round Her Neck, And Sat
In Deep Thought For Some Minutes. "Japhet," Said She At Last, "I Have
Seen This--I Have Worn This Before--I Recollect That I Have; It Rushes
Into My Memory As An Old Friend, And I Think That Before Morning It Will
Bring To My Mind Something That I Shall Recollect About It."
"Try All You Can, Fleta, And Let Me Know To-Morrow."
"It'S No Use Trying; If I Try, I Never Can Recollect Anything. I Must
Wear It To-Night, And Then I Shall Have Something Come Into My Mind All
Of A Sudden; Or Perhaps I May Dream Something. Good-Night."
It Immediately Occurred
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