THE NOVELS AND MISCELLANEOUS WORKS OF DANIEL DE FOR volume THE SIXTEENTH. THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR, VOL. ii. THE NOVELS AND MISCELLANEOUS WORKS OF DANIEL DE FOE. WITH A BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR, LITERARY PREFACES TO THE VARIOUS PIECES, ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES, ETC, INCLUDING ALL CONTAINED IN THE EDITION ATTRIBUTED TO THE LATE SIR "WALTER SCOTT, WITH CONSIDERABLE ADDITIONS. VOL. XVI. THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR, OXFORD; printed by d. a. talboys, for THOMAS tegg, 73, cheapside, london, 1841. THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. IN TWO PARTS. I. RELATING TO FAMILY BREACHES, AND THEIR OBSTRUCTING RELIGIOUS DUTIES. II. TO THE GREAT MISTAKE OF MIXING THE PASSIONS IN THE MANAGING AND CORRECTING OF CHILDREN. WITH A GREAT VARIETY OF CASES, RELATING TO SETTING ILL EXAMPLES TO CHILDREN AND SERVANTS. IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. II. OXFORD: printed by d. a. ta1.boys, for thomas tegg, 73, cheapside, london. 1841. PREFACE. I am not ignorant that as times and the humour of people go, it is a bold adventure to write a second volume of anything; nor is the success of a first part any rule to expect success to a second. On the contrary, it is rather a rule to obstruct it. The modern readers of books having a general opinion5 which they entertain like a fundamental principle in reading, that second parts never come up to the spirit of the first; though perhaps here they may find an exception to that rule. This was the fate of that excellent poem of Mr. Milton's, called Paradise Regained; which, by the error of common fame, could never obtain to be named with the first. Mr. Milton himself differed from the world upon the question, and affirmed the latter was the better poem ; adding this reason for the general dislike, viz., that the people had a general sense of the loss of paradise, but not an equal gust for the regaining of it; but his judgment, however good, could not prevail. I shall say but little of the reason why people viii preface. may like or dislike the present work. It would be scandalously foolish and unjust to take exceptions at my beginning with a story of two very bad wives, as if I was partial against the sex; but because some may be weak enough to do so, for want of understanding the connection of the story, such are desired to observe the reason of it, as follows :� The reproof is upon husbands for omitting family worship, and especially for charging the fault upon their wives: it was absolutely necessary then to represent the wives eminent for their opposition to everything that was good in their husbands ; and, in a word, inimitably bad; to show that, even in these extraordinary cases, the husband ought not to omit his duty ; intimating, that if not in these cases, certainly not in cases less difficult, and consequently in no case at all. This is the true and only reason of bringing two such bad wives upon the stage, as is noted at large in the story, to which I refer. If novelty had only recommended the first part, then indeed we might suggest, that the thought of the reader being once entertained, could not be pleased again with the same scheme; but this can no way affect us here: for if novelty, the modern vice of the reading palate, is to judge of our performance, the whole scene now presented is so entirely differing from all that went before, and so eminently directed to another species of readers, that it seems to be as perfectly new as if no other part had been published before it. preface. ix If we would but duly reflect upon the different scenes of human life, and the several stations we are placed in, and parts we act, while we are passing over this stage; we should see there are follies to be exposed, dangers to be cautioned against, and advices to be given, particularly adapted to every part of it. Upon this account, instead of suggesting that a second volume of this work should be less necessary than the first, I cannot but think they would either of them be imperfect without the other ; and if the Turkish Spy, and such other books, from the known variety of them, have pleased and diverted the world, even to the seventh or eighth volume, if this subject is less pleasing, and fails of running the same length with those looser works, it must be because we have less pleasure in things instructing, than in things merely humouring and diverting ; less patience in bearing a just reproof; and less humility in applying it, than we ought to have. Doubtless there are duties in all our relative stations one to another ; duties from parents to children, and from masters to servants, as well as from children to parents, and from servants to masters ; and it must be owned by all that look narrowly into these things, that as on the one hand there are great mistakes committed in the government of themselves and their families, by parents and masters, so there is perhaps less said upon these necessary heads in public than upon any other ; even x preface. the best writers, upon the relative duties, have seemed to be wholly silent upon this subject; whether they did not see into the want of it, or thought it was a point too nice for their readers, or what other thing has been the hindrance, I know not. Correction, the most necessary part of family government, and the best part of education, how difficult a thing is it I How little understood! How generally wrong applied! Omitted in necessary, and administered in unnecessary cases ! The nature, reason, and end of it mistaken! The measure of it taken not from the circumstances of the children's offences, but from our own tempers at that time ! How is it mingled with our passions, smothered by our affections, and in either case the use of it entirely destroyed ! And what advantage, to get above correction, do children make of the mistakes of their parents in correcting them ! Mistaken parents may here be set to rights in some of the most dangerous parts of that difficult duty of correcting their children; here will be shown how inconsistent it is with the great and weighty office of a parent, to concern their passions in their rebukes, or to let their want of temper add to the weight of their hands ; here they will be instructed in what frame they ought to be when they correct, and from what principle their hands must be lifted up to strike their own flesh and blood; how they are to exhort, instruct, expostulate, persuade, with the utmost testimonies of affec- preface. xi tion, all the while they are correcting; how inconsistent with correcting a child, the noise, the rage, the fury of our passions are; and how often the true parent corrects with more tears in his own eyes than he brings from the eyes of the child he chastises ; and yet here he will see too, that his tenderness must not be suffered to prevent or withhold that correction, which duty to the child calls for, and which, if it be withheld, destroys the force of every other part of his education. I shall say nothing more of what is here published, but this: the same desire of doing good, which moved the first part, has been sincerely the occasion of the second. With all possible humility and thankfulness, I acknowledge and believe 1 have had the same presence and assistance, and I cannot but hope for the same blessings and success; and with the comfort and confidence of this, I cheerfully send it into the world, not concerned at all at the opposition it shall meet with from the infirmities and unworthiness of its author. THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. PART I. DIALOGUE I. This discourse is too much a history ; it is founded upon an unhappy quarrel between a man and his wife, both sober, religious persons, about their religious conduct in their family. The husband, provoked by some rash wTords of his wife's, and especially by her speaking slightly of his performing family worship, takes the worst method in the world with himself, flinging away in a passion, without calling his reason, or conscience, or duty to his assistance; and having not called his family together to morning prayer, as was before his constant practice. In this fury he walks out into a field near his house, where he had the advantage of conversing with himself without being heard; and his passion being not much abated, as you may suppose, he fell to reasoning himself out of his duty, instead of into it, and to forming the arguments to justify his laying aside the thoughts of it for the future. What can I do, says he, when a woman is arrived to such a height as to make a mock of me in my own family? She has brought things to such a pass, I do not think it is my duty to pray among them any more; she openly told me before my children, that I need not give myself the trouble to f. i. ii. b 2 the family instructor. keep up the ceremony; that they none of them value it; that they hate the offering for the sake of the priest; that they care not to join with me; and they can serve God to more purpose without me. Why, I do not think it is my duty; certainly God does not expect I should worship him in such company; I am not to cast my pearls before swine ; besides, where there is no charity, no unity, what signifies duty ? What worship can there be that can be acceptable to God or comfortable to me ? I'll trouble myself no more about them. And as to its being my duty, I think I am fairly discharged of it; at her door be the sin, who has been the cause of it; as I am not the occasion of the breach, so neither will the consequence lie at my door ; I'll perform my duty by myself, and let them take their own course. With this kind of discourse he satisfied himself for the present; the devil, no doubt, assisting ; and coming home took no notice at the usual time of family worship, but went unconcerned about his business ; sat down to dinner at noon, and at night stayed out till it was time to go to supper. After supper, his wife (who kept up her resentment as high as he) calls her maid to bring her a candle, and away she goes to bed, taking no notice of him, or of the usual family order. It was a little unnatural to him, as it had been unusual, to close the day thus, without either his duty to God, or any society with his wife ; and, as he said afterwards, had she spoken but one kind word to him, or given him but a sociable look, he had forgot all, and gone on again in his duty as he used to have done ; but she unwarily and imprudently prompting his disgust, and throwing oil instead of water into the fire, enraged him further, the family instructor. 3 assisted the temptation, and confirmed him in the wicked resolution of neglecting his duty. The breach was now made, and everything contributed to make it wider; the man went to bed some time after, but as she was asleep when he came to bed, so he was asleep when she arose ; and they had no interval or opportunity of conversation to allay their heat, or bring them together. Thus they went on with their discontent, and continued two or three days hardly in speaking terms one with another; during this time, as there were no healing steps taken on either side, so it may be supposed there was no compliance in the matter of of religious duty. Now the family orders dropped, religion seemed wholly laid aside, and that which was still worse, the disorder of their minds was so great that it broke in upon their private duties, as well as their public, and one was neglected as well as the other. Indeed it might have been concluded, that had either of them retired to their private duties, had they gone into their closets and looked up for direction what to do, the secret ejaculation would have strongly moved them to another frame, would have returned them to their duty, and restored them to one another. A little time, it is true, did restore them to better terms of living together; the passionate part cooled again, and they conversed a little more friendly. But the blow was given, the religion of the family was overthrown ; and as the woman, on one hand, showed no concern about it, seemed of the same temper as to charity, as before, and not to desire his performance; so he, bolstering up his neglect, and checking his convictions with this notion, that the breach was upon his wife, and not upon him ; that she had refused him, and that now it was not his duty. Persuading himself, I b 2 4 the family instructor. say, in this manner, he seemed to be satisfied in the omission, and to think of his duty no more. It was very observable, that as they laid aside their family worship, so in the nature of the thing, their family peace vanished ; they were continually quarrelling and falling out with one another; their humours jostled in every trifle, upbraiding one another's sincerity, affection, and integrity, on every little occasion ; reviling one another with bitterness, and forgetting nothing that might make them disagreeable to one another; in a word, waspish and fretful even when they agreed best, and scandalously furious and hot when they fell out. Hardly any discourse happened between them, however mildly it began, but it ended in a broil; she would thwart him in everything he said, and he contradict her as often. The orders in the house clashed so in everything, the children knew not how to behave, or servants to obey; whilst the father commanded this and the mother that, it was impossible to preserve any harmony among the children ; two of them, one son and one daughter, taking part with the father ; and another son and two daughters with the mother; so that as the father and mother differed, the children differed, and that with such heat as filled the house with disorder. It happened once that a discourse began between the -father and mother about the eclipse of the sun, which fell out on April 22nd, 1715. The eclipse of the sun was the subject of all conversation at that time, having been, as is well known, so total, and the darkness so great, as that the like had not been known in some hundred years before. The wife had inquired of the husband what the nature of the thing was, and he was describing it to the family instructor. 5 her and her children in a familiar way; and, as I said, that unkind reflections upon one another were the usual issue of their common discourse, so it was here ; the husband tells her that the moon was like a cross wife, that, when she was out of humour, could thwart and eclipse her husband whenever she pleased ; and that if an ill wife stood in the way, the brightest husband could not shine. She flew in a passion at this, and being of a sharp wit; You do well, says she, to carry your emblem to a suitable height; I warrant you think a wife, like the moon, has no light but what she borrows from her husband, and that we can only shine by reflection; it is necessary then you should know, she can eclipse him when she pleases. Ay, ay, says the husband, but you see when she does, she darkens the whole house, she can give no light without him. (Upon this she came closer to him.) Wife* I suppose you think you have been eclipsed lately; we don't see the house is the darker for it. Husb. That is because of your own darkness ; I think the house has been much the darker. Wife. None of the family are made sensible of it \ we don't miss your light. Husb. It is strange if they do not, for I see no light you give in the room of it. Wife. We are but as dark as we were before; for we were none of us the better for all your hypocritical shining. Husb. Well, I have done shining, you see; the darkness be at your door. (It is evident that both meant here his having left off family ivorship ; and it is apparent by it, that both were come to a dreadful extremity in their quarrel.) 6 the family instructor. Wife. At my door ! am I the master of the family ? do not lay your sins to my charge. Husb. But your own T may : it is the retrogade motion of the moon that causes an eclipse. Wife. Where all was dark before there can be no eclipse. Husb. Your sin is, that my light is your darkness. Wife. That won't excuse you, if you think it a sin ; can you not do what you please without me ? Husb. I do not think it a sin in me to refrain my duty among those that contemn it, and who reject it for my sake; I am forbid to cast pearls before swine. Wife. Yes, yes, your wife and children are all swine with you, and are treated like such by you ; and because you want an excuse for neglect of your duty, therefore we are all swine. The comparison is something swinish, I think, on your part. . Husb. My authority is good, it is the Scripture comparison of those that trample religion under their feet, and fly in the faces of those that officiate; they are swine in both, for they make dirt of religion, and turn again and rend those who offer it; that is, despise them and assault them ; which is my case exactly. Wife. What matter is it what I think, cannot you pray with them that will hear you ? Husb. Do you know the nature of family worship ? Is it not that the whole family may show their agreement and harmony, in acknowledging and serving God; if part of the family separate, it is a schism in the house; and the unity being broke, the rest is but private worship, and may as well be done alone. I do not think I am at all re- the family instructor. 7 quired to perform family worship, if my family refuses to join. Wife. A fine elusion of the devil! an artifice to throw your burden upon me; there is nothing in it; when you reform your life, nobody will slight your performances. Husb. And yet you have no crime to charge me with but want of obedience to my wife. When you first return to your duty, I shall think myself obliged to return to mine. All this while here was no abatement on one side or other, and both of them dreadfully mistaken about their duty; they wrangled thus upon every occasion, and this last dialogue is only given as a sketch of their almost daily conversation. Their communication was poisoned by the breach in their affection; and as the sweet dews of heaven falling into the sea, become salt like the ocean, so the most casual innocent discourse between them generally issued in a broil. Yet none of these discourses brought them together, or convinced them that they were wrong; much less did they produce any return to their duty, and to their religious performance. But passion prevailing, they continued in a dreadful course of irreligion, and restraining prayer before God. It was also observable that while thus they laid aside the appearance of religion in their families, it abated in the rest of their conversation, and they grew entirely careless, living as it were without God in the world; the decay of family worship, like a gangrene in the religious body, spread itself from one limb to another, till it affected the vitals, and proved mortal. In a word, it destroyed the sense of duty and religion in their whole lives. Now as sin entered in by this breach, so it made 8 the family instructor. way for every other folly; it ruined their temper, made them apt to quarrel and snarl on the least occasion, removed all that sweetness of conversation and harmony of affection that was between them before; and, in short, the house became destitute, not of religion only, but of every pleasant thing. It happened, after some time, this gentleman had an intimate friend, who lived in the country, and who had lately married a wife that unhappily brought him almost into the same difficulty, though from a different oocasion; for she was a profane, irreligious person, from her original; a mocker and despiser of all that was good, and who did her utmost to discourage her husband (who was a good man) in all his measures for the religious government of himself or of his family. He had had a great quarrel with his wife about her own conduct, and her reproaching him for his religion; and she had said some such shocking things to him, that almost conquered his resolutions in the matter of his duty; almost the same temptation offering to him as had been the case of the other person mentioned before. But his sense of duty returned upon him too strongly to be resisted, and he mastered all the difficulties that were before him; resolved, that let the devil and a perverse woman do their utmost, he would not live without the worship and service of God in his house; and and so he went on with his duty in spite of all his wife's clamour, made his whole house submit to it, and condemn her for opposing it, as we shall hear more particularly presently. This good man coming to town, and meeting with his old friend, of whom we have been speaking, and both being intimate Christians as well as acquaintance, it was not long before they began to converse about religious affairs, both being also too full of the family instructor. 9 their respective family grievances, to be long together before they unbosomed themselves to one another, which produced the following discourse :� Says the citizen to his friend, Well, old friend, I hear you have been married since we met last, and I must give you joy; I hope it is to your satisfaction. Friend. Truly, my good friend, I am married, but I cannot say it is much to my satisfaction, for I am disappointed in the main happiness of a married state. Citizen. I am very sorry to hear you have a bad wife. Fr. Nay, I cannot say I have a bad wife neither, in the common acceptation of the word. Cit. Well, I am very sorry then, be it how it will, that you are disappointed. Fr. Truly, upon a further reflection, I ought not to have said I am disappointed neither, for it needs explanation. Cit. Pray explain it then, for you amuse me now; it looks as if you had only a mind I should inquire further into the particulars. Fr. Truly, I ought to be ashamed of the particulars, and yet I cannot say but I have longed a great while to unbosom my sorrows to somebody; and I know no friend I can trust better than yourself. Cit. Be free with me, then. Fr. I know not where to begin, for my grief is very great. Cit. You are willing to speak and yet loath to begin; as if you would have me screw it out of you; Prithee, what have you got for a wife? is she a drunkard, a whore, a scold, or what is she ? Fr. None of them all. Cit Shall I be free with you, then? Are not 10 the family instructor. your wife's faults to be found on your side ? Are you sure she would not alter, if you could mend her husband ? for I must own, many of us that find such fault with our wives, make sometimes a very unhappy mistake; viz., we forget that they have bad husbands. Fr. I wont defend my part of the charge; and perhaps you know your own part to be just? if you do, pray reprove me when you have reformed yourself; but at present my case is too sad to be jested with. Cit. You must describe it a little, or how can a friend give you comfort or counsel ? Fr. Why, in short, my wife is sober, virtuous, peaceable. You see I oppose the heads of her character to your suggestion of drunken, immodest, turbulent, &c. She is housewifely, frugal, quiet, mannerly, tender, kind, and has all the qualifications needful to make her a comfortable relation. But- Cit. I can see but one thing you have left out, and that is, religious. Fr. You have said it all in a word; she is perfectly void of any sense of or concern about God, or her soul, or the souls of any that belong to her. Cit. Nay, if she is unconcerned about herself, you can't expect she should be concerned for any one else. Fr. No, indeed, she is so far from it, that my heart trembles to think what will become of my poor children when they grow up; for I have one already, and another coming. Cit. It is a sad disappointment, indeed; but had you any apprehensions of it before you married ? Fr. There indeed you touch me to the soul; there is the blot with which I reproach myself, and which gives me no peace; I read my sin in my the family instructor. 11 punishment; I looked another way, I troubled not my thoughts about religion, I looked at the money, I went for it, and I had it; and now I feel the curse that came with it. Cit. Why, though you did look at the money, sure there are women of fortune that have the blessing of a religious education; they are not all atheists that have money; nor are all the religious women beggars. Certainly you were in great haste, and looked little before you in your choice. Fr. Indeed I ran into the devil's mouth; I singled out a family where nothing was to be expected; a house where I may say, without breach of charity, God had not been within the doors for some ages. I tell you, I ought to say I am not disappointed. Cit. You ought indeed to blame your own conduct ; for I know nothing more uncomfortable than for a man that knows anything of religion to be matched to a woman that has no notion of her duty. Fr. Blame my conduct! do you carry it no further? Without doubt I committed the greatest sin of its kind that I was capable of; and most justly provoked God to make that relation, which ought to have been my comfort and blessing, be my snare, my temptation, and, at best, my constant affliction. Cit. It is, indeed, against the express rule which the apostle lays down, Be not unequally yoked. I believe, for a man or woman that is religiously inclined, to marry a person of no religion, or to marry a person of different principles in religion from themselves, is positively forbidden in that text. Fr. Alas! it is not only against the apostle's rule, but it is against all the rules of religion, of nature, and of common sense; what communication can there be between God and Belial ? 12 the family instructor. Cit It was the reason given in Scripture, why God commanded the Israelites not to give their daughters to the heathen, nor take their daughters to wife, lest they should be draivn in to serve their gods, and to forsake the Lord their God; Judges i. Fr. Nor has it failed to be a curse to all the families that ever I have heard of that practised it; the Scripture is full of it, particularly in Solomon, in Ahab, and once in a whole nation, as in the case of the Midianitish woman. And all this I knew. Cit. Well, but 1 hope you have not married an idolater ; your wife is not a heathen, is she ? Fr. But I think she is worse; for she despises all worship, whether of the false gods or of the true; she has no sense of any religion at all, other than to make a mock at it, to make all serious things her sport, and to banter those that dare not do so too. Cit That is a dreadful case, indeed! I beseech you, does she not go to church ? Where was she bred ? Is she a protestant ? Fr. Yes, yes, she goes to church, and is a protestant, such a kind of protestant as this age is too full of; I think she had as good be a papist, for then she would make some profession, and might, in time, be brought over to right principles; but as she is, I think there is more hopes of a heathen, for he worships something, but she neither fears God nor devil. Cit But you say she goes to church; what does she do there ? Fr. Do there ? why, stare about her, or sleep, or furnish herself to banter the infirmities of the minister. I never heard her talk a word of what she hears, except it be to ridicule and expose it. The unhappy wit she is mistress of, and which she might make a much better use of, exerts itself this way; the family instructor. 13 and when she can no longer run down religion itself, revealed or natural, then the failings, slips, and mistakes of the professors of religion employ her tongue; which makes my house a temple of the devil to me, where I can hear nothing but abuses upon God, the worship and servants of God, and everything that is good, till I am made to abhor the conversation of my own family. Cit. And no question it is a great obstruction to you in the way of your own duty, or a temptation to you wholly to neglect it. Fr. How came you to reach my case so effectually and so very particularly. Cit. Not that I know anything of it, I assure you; but I am too much concerned; I know one too like it. Fr. It is my case exactly, as I will tell you at large. Cit. But before you come to that part, pray tell me how you came to link yourself to such a family of heathens ? I know you had been otherwise taught. Fr. I'll answer you in one word, money ! money ! this was the snare; the devil laid the hook, and I bit at the bait. It is true, I was better taught, and my father had proposed several tolerable matches for me ; agreeable women, valuable for their virtue, of religious education, and with good portions too, with whom I might have been very happy; but I rejected them all. Cit. You have been very ill advised. Fr. No indeed, I have not been advised at all; but I got the cant of your town gentlemen at my tongue's end, and made it my catchword for a long time, viz., that I cared not what religion my wife was of, or whether she had any religion or no, if she had but money; and now I am filled with my own 14 the family instructor. desires. Nor were my measures for furnishing myself with a wife less extravagant than the humour I professed to act by; for I cared not whom I took, so I cared not where I found her; and as he that abandons himself, is justly abandoned by Providence, so in pursuit of the idol I worshipped, I went to the temple of wickedness, the playhouse, a thing I had not been bred to I assure you; and when the devil had me in his bonds, he took care to hold me fast: there I chose my wife. Cit. I thought you said you chose for money ? Fr. Yes, yes, so I did too; I was showed her there for a fortune. Cit. And perhaps missed your aim too. Fr. No, no, I have the idol and the idolatry too; I have the money and the woman, but not the wife : she is no wife to me, nor does she concern herself about the duty of a wife to do it, or to know it. Cit. Then I find she has very little love for you. Fr. I cannot say but that if I would have conformed to her wicked abominable loose way of living she would have loved me well enough; but as soon as she found my way was different from what she expected, she became so uneasy and indifferent, that it grew up to a perfect contempt; and it often makes such breaches between us, as in time must certainly root out all manner of conjugal affection on either side. Cit. It is no doubt very afflicting to you, especially if you have a real love for her. Fr. I confess, I cannot say but it wears out what love I had for her apace; it is impossible while I abhor her conduct, and cannot reclaim her, that I can preserve my affection: virtuous love is founded upon two things only, both which are wanting in her, merit and suitability. What merit can there be in the family instructor. 15 one who appears to have a general contempt of all that is good ? and what suitability can there be in two tempers so extremely opposite ? Cit Well, but it is afflicting to you too, I dare say. Fr. Indeed it is so, many ways. Cit. And without doubt, as I observed before, it is a strange obstruction to you in the exercise of your duty in your family ; for what performance of duty, what good government of servants or children, what religious order can there be in a family, where constant breaches obstruct the charity and understanding between those upon whom the performance and support of those duties lie? I know it by myself; there can be no family worship, where there is no family love. Who can kneel down to pray with those that ridicule and contemn it ? for my part, I do not think it a husband's duty in such a case; let the blame be on those who are the cause. Fr. Though you say true in part, yet I cannot go your length neither; I acknowledge it is a sad obstruction to the carrying on a religious government in the family, and the first beginnings of this refractory carriage of my wife were a great snare to me that way; nay, I had almost thrown up all family religion, in compliment to her folly; and doubtless, if I had, all personal religion had gone after it; but, I bless God, I got the better of her in that point. Cit. I wish you would give me some account of your management then, for a reason that I will tell you afterward. Fr. Alas! it is a long melancholy story, and will be but of small use to you. Cit It will be of great use, I assure you; and may do more good than you imagine: there are other people in the world in your case, and example is often a caution and direction to others. 16 the family instructor. Fr. Nay, you will make sad work if you propose me for an example to anybody; I am fit for nothing but a memento mori, a beacon or buoy, to show where the rock lies that I have split upon. Cit. Leave that part to further discourse, and pray let me into the story, that I may know how you managed yourself in the matter of religious worship in your family; I assure you there is a great deal depends upon the question, and more upon the answer. Fr. Why then I will tell you as distinctly as I can, not to make the story too long; when first I married, I continued some time in the family of sir Richard--, whose sister my wife was, and with whom she lived, her father and mother being dead. The family, you know, had never been famous for anything of religion ; as for sir Richard, he was no hypocrite, for, to give him his due, as he practised nothing, so he professed nothing; he really made no pretence to religion; nay, so far are they from any sense of religion in that family, that I never heard any one, till very lately, say grace at the table, or return thanks after meat, or ask anybody else to do it; except in compliment, when any clergyman happened to be there, or except as I shall have occasion to tell you in the consequence of this story. Cit That is a strange family indeed! Fr. It would be strange if they should be otherwise,, in a house where you have nothing but luxury, rioting, gaming, swearing, and drinking, all day and all night; master and mistress, and servants, all alike. Cit How could you think of tying yourself to such a family ? Fr. Nay, that is unkind, after what I have said already; the thing is done and over; I told you the the family instructor. 17 wretched reason of it, the business now is to tell you the story. Cit. I ask your pardon, pray go on. Fr. I lived there, as 1 tell you, near half a year, till some apartments which my wife desired to have added to my own house were finished. Cit. And were you not heartily tired of such a heathenish life ? Fr. Let me tell you, my friend, with sorrow, I really cannot say I was at first; and let all wise men beware how they make an irreligious way of living too familiar to them; T can assure them, by sad experience, it is very dangerous, and they will run great risk of their principles; for habits of levity grow insensibly natural, sapping the foundation of all religious inclination, and preparing the mind to approve the practice. I was new married ; this circumstance joined with the usage of the family, and it seemed to be a time when mirth and diversion might be reasonably indulged. Cit. That is true, but not so as to exclude religion. Fr. I know that very well; but what could I do? I was not master of the house, it was none of my business to meddle with things there, and it was too soon to begin to dictate to my wife; and besides, do I not confess to you, that my heart was devoured with pleasure, and engrossed with the mirth and usual jollity of the occasion, and that it began to make all their levity natural to me ? do I not say, every man should take heed of the example ? I am sure it was a dreadful one to me. . Cit. Well, but you were there but half a year. Fr. Do you say, but half a year. Is that but a little time to live without a sense of duty, without fear, as I may say, of God or devil ? but as if it were but a little time, I must tell you it did not end there ; I have worse yet behind. f. i. ii. c 18 the family instructor. Cit. But pray let me interrupt you a little ; did you never discourse with your wife all that while about it, or inquire how she liked it ? Fr. Yes, yes, I did; but I received poor, sorry, empty answers, such as evidently showed she made no great matter of it, and would never complain if she lived so all her days. Cit. Pray be particular in that part if you can. Fr. Why, I will give you a passage or two. You must know, that for three or four days, while our wedding was upon the wheel, and a pretty many friends in the house, some of the neighbouring clergy were continually there; either the minister of the parish, or the next parish, or a gentleman's chaplain that lived about a mile off; and once or twice a presbyterian clergyman, who kept the meeting-house in the town, and to whom I found not sir Richard-only, but even the minister of the parish, behaved very respectfully; and as he was a man of worth and a very good scholar, they were very intimate together. While these were there, as I said, there was always some or other to say the grace, as they call it, at table; but as for prayers at night that was never offered, or perhaps thought on. But it happened once we all went to dinner without a chaplain, and as sir Richard made no offer to stand up, so no sooner was the dinner served up, and the ladies placed, but my lady �� had her knife in a boiled turkey, and we all fell to work as decently, and with as little regard to Him whose bounty filled and fed us, as any pack of hounds in the country. Cit. I never heard the like ? pray was it so always ? Fr. Constantly; never otherwise, except as before. the family instructor. 19 Cit. I thought there had been no such people in the world, especially among protestants; nay, not a papist, as I ever met with, would fall to without crossing the table, which is in them an acknowledgment to their Saviour for the mercy of their food. Fr. Well, I assure you, there was nothing like it here. Cit. And did you take no notice of it ? Fr. Good manners forbade it me at table. Cit. But methinks you should have spoken to your wife about it. Fr. So I did, and you shall hear what return I met with. I was really surprised at the thing the first time, and spoke of it to my wife at night when we were alone, and which occasioned the following short discourse:� My dear, said I, was not something wanting among us at supper to-night ? Not as I know, said she ; what was wanting ? Nay, my dear, said I, it is none of my business. Wife. Well, but tell me what was wanting, for I cannot imagine what you mean. Husb. Won't you take it ill, my dear, if I tell you? Wife. No, not I ; what can it be that I should take it ill ? Husb. Why, did we not want a chaplain ? Pugh! says she, is that all ? Why, my dear, says I, does sir Richard never thank God for his meat ? Wife. Nay, what do I know ? We never trouble our heads about those things. Husb. I confess I never saw it so before, and I have been in very good families. Wife. Then it may be they kept chaplains ? Husb. No, indeed, my dear. c 2 20 the family instructor. No ! says she, it is an odd thing for a gentleman to meddle with it. Husb. "What, my dear, to thank God for his daily bread ? Wife. Oh ! it is perfectly ungenteel to do it publicly ; cannot they mutter it to themselves ? Husb. I am sorry to differ from you, my dear. Wife. Well, I will speak to sir Richard to-morrow, and you shall have the honour of being chaplain. Husb. No, my dear, I hope you won't make what I said to you so public ; it is no business of mine. Well, I was so unable to persuade her to forbear making a jest of me the next day at table, that I was obliged to make an excuse to be absent both at dinner and at supper; and at night I owned the reason, and was forced to tell her plainly I would dine there no more, unless she would promise me not to speak of it, which with much difficulty at last I prevailed with her to do. Cit. I would even have let her said what she would; and would have owned I was surprised at the thing. Fr. Well, you shall hear how she served me, and how handsomely she was served for it by her own brother. She kept her word with me about a week;, but one evening, as we were at supper, she made a motion to me and seemed to smile. I kept my countenance as long as she kept it from being taken notice of, but she took care to let sir Richard-� see her, who, as he was a merry man, and full of good humour, would needs know what the matter was; she points to me. Let him tell you, says she, for he won't let me. Sir Richard pressed me,'and I blushed as red as the colour of blood would allow; at length my wife said:� Nay, Mr.-it is not such a mighty thing, you may tell it. the family instructor. 21 No, no, my dear, said I, I am sure I shan't; and I am sure you won't. This made the case worse, for they were doubly importunate then ; and sir Richard, who always thought it had been some little jest or other, lays hold of his sister and swore she should tell him. I interceded with him, and persuaded him ; told him she had engaged to me not to speak of it, and I hoped he would not make her break the first promise that ever I asked her to make since she was my wife. My wife turned upon me, and would have me relinquish her promise. I told her I could not; in a word, it began to warm us on all hands, and my wife in particular told me I used her ill. My dear, said I, it is very hard you should say so, when you know you are only desired to conceal one of my faults. I know no fault in it, says she, and if it be, I desire to conceal none of your faults. But if you don't, my dear, said I, you will expose me very much, for you will find I have a great many faults worse than this that I hope nobody shall know but yourself. She was afraid I had, she said, and this had given her such a surfeit of me, that if the rest were much worse she was afraid they would give her a vomit that would bring up all her love. My dear, said I, I hope that lies too deep for such a slight operation. I was going to say more, but I saw she was in a rage, so I forbore. She answered, I do not know whether it does or no ; and with those words rose from the table and went up stairs. Sir Richard ��, the best-humoured man in the world, ran and took hold of her, swore she should not go, and dragged her back a good way, but she 22 the family instructor. flung from him; I followed her, but she was too nimble for me, and got into her room, and with flinging the door after her, and I too near her, struck me on the nose and set me a bleeding most violently. You may be sure this carriage and my bleeding spoiled our mirth, and indeed our supper; nor could my lady-, or another sister, prevail with her to come out of her chamber, or let me in, for some hours ; indeed, when she heard of my bleeding, and had opened the door after 1 was gone down, and seen how much I had bled upon the satir-head before a servant could be called with a basin and a towel, she was much concerned, and sent her maid down to see how I did. In the interim of this, sir Richard, who appeared very much concerned at what had happened, came to me, and smiling, said, Brother, I am very sorry that I should be instrumental to put my sister out of humour, especially with you; I must acknowledge I never knew her so much out in her behaviour in my life. Sir, said I, it would have been no trouble to me if it had not been that the thing itself was from something I had foolishly let fall, which if she had told in her way would have made you think me wanting in my respect to you, which of all things in the world I would give no occasion for, having been treated so obligingly by you ever since I had the honour to be related to you. Come, brother, says sir Richard, here is my hand and my word, it shall move no such imaginations in me ; besides I would not have pressed her if I had thought in the least it had related to me. Indeed, sir Richard, said I, it had not the least disrespect in it to you; yet I freely own I should not have said it, no not to my own wife. the family instructor. 23 And I freely own, says he, my sister is in the wrong if it be so, for it is hard a man cannot speak a word in his bedchamber to his own wife but she must betray him. Oh these wives ! says he, smiling, are such bosom friends! There is my wife, says he, pointing to his lady, is just such another frivy-counsel-keeper. Well, sir Richard -�-, said I, however, 1 heartily ask your pardon for what I said, whether she tells it or not; and I acknowledge it was what did not become me to say, nor was it any of my business. Says sir Richard, let it be what it will, and whether I know it or not, I give yoti my promise, brother, I will not take anything ill from you. Come, says my lady, who sat by all this while, my brother makes more of it than he needs, and his modesty in it is too much his own disadvantage ; I have the secret, and he shall give me leave to tell it. I assure you, sir Richard, neither you nor I have any reason to take it ill, though I must blame my sister too. Upon this she told the story, and told it like one that had more sense of the reproof than I expected. And was this all, says sir Richard-. Come, brother, says he, I am far from taking it ill; your remark was very just, and I assure you I am very sensible I ought not to do so; but we are a wicked crew, and have been so from father to son: I do not know when I shall mend. But this I will tell you, 1 will convince my sister to-morrow that she has been much in the wrong to you; and I will promise you I will take your admonition too. Sir, said I, all this is the consequence of sir Richard's being a man of the best temper in the world, but still it was no business of mine. Come, come, said sir R., let us talk no more of it. This passed on; we spent the evening well 24 the family instructor. enough, but no wife appeared, neither was she to be spoke with till almost bedtime. When I had admittance, she made me a bow, asked me how I did, said she was very sorry the door struck me, and behaved mighty mannerly, but not at all kindly ; she hardly knew how to differ from me; we had not been long enough married to know how to manage a broil, so we carried it awkwardly and shy. I went to her and kissed her ; she made me a curtsy, as if I had been a stranger saluting her, and thus it passed off till the next day. In the morning she asked me if I intended to dine from her again ? I said, No, my dear, and smiled; at which she seemed very well pleased. At dinner-time, being all come into the room, and just going to sit down, Hold, says sir Richard <-, turning to his sister, to let you see that I take very kindly from my brother what you took so ill, I assure you we will dine no more without a chaplain; upon which, very gravely, and in very handsome, decent expressions, he asked God's blessing, not giving his sister leave to reply*. I could easily see my wife was surprised, but she could not imagine which way her secret came out. After dinner, sir Richard-stood up, and returned thanks with the same gravity, and immediately my wife offered to withdraw. Sir Richard, who happened to sit next her, caught hold of her ; Sister, says he, I hope you are not angry still ? No, no, says she, Mr.-ought to have the telling of his secrets himself; though he need not have tied me up so closely in what he resolved to tell himself; but wives must be subject. I was going to speak; Pray, brother, says sir Richard, leave it to me; it is my quarrel, and I the family instructor. 25 will have no seconds. Indeed, sister, says he, it is bad to be mistaken once, but you have the misfortune to be twice wrong; for there is the false sister that told your story, pointing to his lady; and whether she had it from my brother or you, none knows better than yourself. She was going to reply, when sir Richard put in thus: I have but one thing to request of you, sister, says he, and that is, that you will never speak a word of the unkindness of it, as you call it, on either hand ; I am so far from taking it ill, that I am more glad it happened than if you had given me 5001. Why, sister, continued he, though I am loose enough, and wicked enough in other things, yet do we not all own that God gives us our daily bread ? And I think we should always ask him leave to eat it, and thank him when we have done ; and you shall never find me omit it again. My wife gave him no answer, but got away as soon as she could, went to her chamber and sat and cried for two hours, and afterwards was well-humoured enough ; and we never heard any more of that matter afterwards. But now, as I told you, our house being finished, we prepared to remove, and here began my difficulty ; the loose, profane life we had led began to be too familiar to me; and this, joined with the discouragements of a wife that I knew had no taste of religious things, made me cold in the matter of my duty, and we began to live at home just as we had lived abroad. It continued thus above four months; at last an odd accident, as my wife called it, but a wonderful good providence to me, as I called it, gave a turn to us, a way by which I had the least expectation of any such thing; for it made my wife, though without the least affection to the thing, be the first mover of it to me. 26 the family instructor. Cit That was a happy turn indeed! Fr. My wife had an old uncle, her father's own brother, who was a minister, and who lived further in the country, who about this time came to visit us; he had been a week or two at sir Richard's, and then came to see his niece, my wife, and to stay three or four days, as was his custom; he was rich, and had no heirs but my wife and her sister; and, as she expects a good lift from him when he dies, she was mighty observant and respectful to him. The^ old gentleman being come, and preparations being made for his lodging, my wife comes to me in the evening. My dear, says she, we must be wonderful religious now, for two or three days, for this old gentleman will make us all come to prayers every night and morning ; it may be you will not like it, but we must not disoblige him. Disoblige him, says I, I do not understand you. Why, says she, if we should not seem very well pleased, he will be uneasy, and think we are all heathens. Will he so, my dear, said I; then he will have the same thoughts of us, that we ought to have of ourselves ; for indeed we do live worse than heathens. Wife. Well, it is no matter for that, we must not let him think so ; and therefore I told you of it beforehand. Husb. My dear, if he will call us all to family-prayer, I wish he would come and live with us all his days. Wife. What do you want a chaplain again ? Why cannot you do it yourself? Husb. I wish you would say so much in earnest, as I am satisfied you do in jest. the family instructor. 27 Wife. Why, let me be in earnest or in jest, I never hinder you; you may take orders, and turn parson, cannot you ? and then saying your prayers will be but part of your trade, as it is my uncle's. Husb. My dear, I doubt you are but ill prepared to be a minister's wife. Wife. Not half so well as to be a minister's widow ; I would answer for the second venture. Well, I laid up her words in my heart, viz., off, and it was not till two years after that the captain, returning again from sea, found her out and married her. Indeed she was his wife when the youth (for he was then fourteen years old) whom she had first brought up, being fatherless and motherless, as is noted above, was by the course of his father's will left to the care of the captain ; and he knowing how grateful it would be to his wife, as well as from a sincere affection to the child, took him home, and made him like one of his own. Here he was used with such affection, such tenderness, and such care, that he was far from having .374 THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. any loss either of father or mother; and after he had been furnished with all the needful parts of learning to fit him for the work, became a minister; and proved an extraordinary man, as well for piety and principle, as capacity; and the captain, to make him finally and effectually his own, married him to his eldest daughter, with whom he received a very comfortable fortune of 8000/. Thus Providence finished the work, which was in so eminent a manner begun in this child, singling him out from his infancy to be an honour and encouragement to the profession of religion, and qualifying him even in his infancy to be an instructor of others; so that he might be said to be a minister of the gospel from his cradle. I must go back now to the citizen whom I was speaking of; he had listened with great attention to this story ; and when it was finished, he says to his pious neighbour, who told it, this is a story full of admirable examples, as well among the whole family as in the servant: indeed, continued he, I have wanted such a servant in my family ; had my housekeeper been a Margy, my children had been better brought up; it was for want of early instruction that they put me to the trouble of violent correction ; if they had had such a soft teacher, I had I believe, never been such a passionate, furious father. Neigh. Without doubt such servants are a blessing to a family, wherever they are found. Fa. But when I reflect upon my conduct with my children, my wretched want of temper, my fury in correcting, and dreadful neglect of instructing, I think, if their mother had lived to teach them herself, or if I had had a Margy to educate them, I should have made a bedlam of my house in spite of it all; you can bring no instance in all your expe- THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. 375 rience, that can show me the absurdity of my conduct ; I am one of them that never learn the evil of their conduct, but by the consequences. Neigh. That is an experience that brings reflection with it, but is generally too late to give instruction. Fa. Men's eyes are open to every other people's fallings, but shut to their own infirmities. The same passion which incapacitates them to consult their reason, blinds their eyes, that they cannot see their own temper. Neigh. The best way then to convince a passionate man of his folly, is to let him see his own picture drawn to the life in another man's practice. Fa. I know not whether you can find out a parallel to represent me to myself or no ; there are few so bad as I have been. Neigh. Yes, yes, I know a man that went far beyond you, and with this addition too, that he made his whole family miserable, and himself too ; his passion destroyed everything that could be called comfort or happiness. Fa. Perhaps he had great provocations. Neigh. The least of any man living ; he had an excellent wife, dutiful and well-accomplished children, easy circumstances, everything but his own passions conspired to make him happy ; and those passions made him, and all those that belonged to him, miserable. Fa. He was then a man of no morals nor religion. Neigh. Yes, he was a man both of morals and religion, and a mighty pleasant, good-humoured man, except only in his want of temper. Fa. Easily provoked, I suppose. Neigh. Ay, ay, all tinder! fired with but one spark, and very hard to put out. Fa. How did his wife do to bear it ? 376 THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. Neigh. She was a woman of that admirable prudence, that she never added fuel to the fire of his passions; but studied, by all possible methods, to prevent the flame breaking out, and to allay and prevent the fury of it when it was raised. Fa. That was doing her duty to a perfection indeed ; but who alive is able to act that part ? Neigh. You shall judge of this when you have heard out the story. Fa. Go on then, for I am impatient to hear it. Neigh. They had several children, and generally they were sober and well inclined, notwithstanding their father's sad example. Among other instances of the passionate temper of this man, this was one, that if he met with any disappointment in his affairs abroad, if any loss happened, if any mistake was committed in his business, nay, even though it was done by himself; in a word, whatever disordered him abroad, the distemper of his passions was sure to vent itself at home; and whether it was wife, children, or servants, whoever came first in his way, he was sure to quarrel with them. Nay, so violent was the flame of his passions, when anything had thus prepared the way for them, that he was not at all in his own government, his anger was all rage, and his hlows, whether upon his children or servants, oftentimes proved dangerous to them, as you shall hear presently. And yet, after his passion was over, which was not long neither, no man was more concerned for it than he; insomuch, that if he had beaten any of his servants, he would be very anxious lest he had done them any mischief; and he had reason to be so indeed ; for he had once struck a young man that was his apprentice, an unhappy blow, which did him a very great injury, and which the parents of the youth prosecuted him at law for, and it cost him a THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. 377 great deal of money to make it up; I think it was above 200/. he paid on that account. Fa. His wife had a sad time of it, sure ; how did he carry it to her, pray ? Neigh. It is not easy to guess what a post a prudent, tender, sober woman must have, to be wife to such a fury, and what terror must be upon her thoughts when she saw him in these passions, lest in a rage he should mischief her children, or perhaps himself; for his passions would run him up sometimes to that extravagance, that if the object of his anger was out of his reach, he would vent it upon himself, and tear his very flesh for anger. Fa. He was a fury indeed, a mere madman. Neigh. It would have moved any one to pity that had observed him in any of these fits of anger, to see how he was perfectly delirious, how he would stamp upon the ground, strike himself on the face, tear his clothes ; he had no hair on his head, or he would certainly have shown his violence on that very often, but he has many times thrown his periwig and hat into the fire; and one time, one of his sons having wickedly taken up some money abroad without his order, he was so enraged at it, that not having his son at hand to show his anger upon, he snatched up a knife and stabbed it into his own belly, and it was with great difficulty that his life was saved. Fa. Such a man should have been tied up in a dark room ; he should have been put under cure to those that keep lunatics. Neigh. No, he was not lunatic; his senses were perfect and entire, except as above. Fa. Well, but as to his wife. Neigh. As I said, it is hard to guess what a con*-dition his wife and all his family were in upon these occasions; what terror it was to them, and how 378 THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. they scarce knew whom to be frighted most for, whether he that was angry, or those that he was angry with. His wife, in the first part of their time, bore great part of their weight, and many a terrible storm she went through with him; which though very grievous to her, yet she had not that concern upon her as she had after she had children; for, as I have heard her often say, she had not for twenty years one quiet day, for fear, lest in some of his passions, he should, perhaps by some unhappy blow, ruin, or perhaps kill one of his children, which would have finished the ruin of the whole. In this distress she had need of all her prudence; and indeed it required a great deal of temper, courage, and wisdom, to know how to act in these excesses of his passions, and how to screen her children from the consequences of them. While they were young, the weight of their education lay wholly upon her ; for though he was a man of good sense when he was himself, yet he was so often out of his own government, by this infirmity of his temper, that it was not to be expected he could do much in the instruction of his children, for whom he did so little by example. On the other hand, all family religion was perfectly destroyed; for though at first the man began well enough, and having been religiously educated, acted in his family like one resolved to have a well-ordered house, yet as our passions, like a strong distemper, always increase with our years, so the occasions perhaps returning oftener, as his family and business increased, and especially as they gained more upon him as he grew older, for his fits of rage returned oftener, dwelt longer upon him, made him more subject to be provoked, and longer a cooling when, heated ; till, in short, it became a mere dis- THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. 379 ease, a disorder of his constitution, and not only could not be cured, but rendered him almost unconversable. Fa. Why, you are describing a madman, a mere lunatic ; you do well to say he is possessed. Neigh. Well, call it what you will, I must describe it as it is. The man was not a lunatic; though indeed his passions had a full possession of him. Fa. Nay, then the devil may be said to have possession of him. Neigh. Not in the common acceptation of it, though in effect there may be no great difference. Fa. A man whose passions have a full dominion over him, and who is given up to the power of his own rage; what is he less than possessed with the devil ? Neigh. Well, we won't dispute that now; there is some difference, but not much, I confess. Fa. Well, go on; you say it destroyed all family religion, and well it might indeed. Neigh. It is true, it could not be otherwise, he was seldom in a temper for family worship ; and besides, when he was out of humour, he did so many extravagant things, so inconsistent with a man of religion, and so unsuitable to the practice of one who professed better, that when he was himself again, the regret at what had passed made him even ashamed to appear to call his family together to worship God ; and this returned so often, that at last it drove family prayer quite out of the house, except what was done in private by his religious and afflicted wife. Fa. What did his wife do in that case ? Neigh. You shall hear more of her by and by; she had a hard task you may be sure, first to endeavour to allay his heats and bring him to temper, in which her success was but very little; and next, as 380 THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. to her children; for, as in the first part of her time, she had the burden of their education upon her; so, as they grew up, she had it still heavier upon her to bring them to bear the excursions of their father's temper, and not retort upon him in unduti-ful speeches or behaviour, which might have had fatal effects either upon him or upon them, and perhaps upon both; besides a continual dread upon her mind, as I have said, lest some mischief should happen on these sad occasions. It happened once, upon some trivial offence, somewhat like this of your son, that he was in a violent passion with one of his sons, then but a boy, and was just going to strike him with a great bar, which he had snatched up in his haste, and which, had he struck him with it, must have killed him, or, at best, very much mischieved him. The boy was so terrified, that he cried ' murder,' in a frightful manner; and the father was so surprised at the child's crying murder, that in a moment all his passion left him; the bar fell out of his hand, and he fell into a violent trembling, as if he had been in the cold fit of an ague. His wife, who was not far off, hearing the child cry murder, came running into the room, terribly frighted, you may be sure, not doubting but he had done the child some mischief; but she soon found her husband more the object of her concern than the child ; for he stood in that posture like one amazed, stupid, and speechless for a good while. She ran immediately to fetch something to give him, and with much difficulty she got him to take what she brought him, and to sit down. It was more than an hour before he came to himself enough to speak, and when he did so, the first question he asked was, Is the child alive ? His wife, who knew from the boy himself that his father had not struck him, answered, with some surprise at the THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. 381 question, Alive, my dear ! yes, why do you ask such a question ? Why, said he, han't I killed him with that blow ? No, my dear, says she, the Lord be praised, you have not killed him. Where is he, says his father ? He is in the next room, says his wife. Let me see him, says he. His wife was sorry then that she had said he was in the next room, and was dreadfully frighted when he asked to see him ; and so was the child too, lest his passion should return ; but there was no reason for their apprehensions, for when the child came in, his father was in as great an agony as he was in before; he took the boy in his arms, and kissed him a thousand times, with all the transport of a violent affection, the tears running down his face all the while ; but was not able to speak a word to him. Fa. You have brought me the picture of a passionate man indeed ; I think nothing can come up to this; I hope you will allow this man to go beyond me. Neigh. I told you I would give you an opportunity to hate your own excess, by showing you one worse than yourself; and that at least you may see the dangerous consequence of ungoverned passion, especially in masters of families. Fa. But what made him ask if he had not killed his child, when you say he had not struck him ? Neigh. Why, the case was this; lifting up the bar to strike the boy, it struck against a door that stood open just behind him ; and his surprise at the boy's crying murder, together with the blow against the door, so stupified him, that he perfectly forgot what had passed, and thought he had knocked the child down. Fa. Another proof still of the demented state a man is in under the influence of his own violent passion; I take you right, it touches me very sensibly. 332 THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. Neigh. I hope you do not take ill the application. Fa. No, no ; it is not you that apply it, the application is natural; the knowledge I have of my own folly and weakness, forces the application upon me. Neigh. That is the true way that we should apply all practical instruction. Fa. Well, how ended the fray. Neigh. He recovered after some time, but remaining very much out of order, his wife persuaded him to go to bed, which he did, and remained indisposed two or three days. Fa. But how was he then ? Had it any effect upon him towards the future government of himself? Neigh. His wife took that opportunity, gravely, but with great caution, and in the tenderest, calmest manner in the world, to persuade him to guard against his passions; and particularly by mentioning frequently to him the good Providence that prevented his killing his own child. Fa. Well, she acted a very Christian part, but what effect had it upon him ? Neigh. A good present effect; it melted him into tears, and even into a passion at himself, for being such a slave to his furious temper ; and he made a great many vows and promises to bridle his anger. Fa. But did he keep those vows and promises ? Neigh. Truly, but a very little while! Vows and promises are a weak guard where Divine assistance does not join its power. It was not a month after, when, upon a very little provocation, he fell upon another of his sons, and was so blinded with his passion, that his wTife running in to save the child, got a great blow on her shoulder and breast, which bruised her very much, and laid her up for two months after, and it was greatly feared she would have had a cancer in her breast. THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. 383 Fa. Well, was the wife in no passion at all this ? Neigh. No, never; as she acted with tenderness for her children, so she acted with the greatest calmness towards him; never replying to him, or arguing and blaming him while the passion was warm upon him ; but reserving herself to a time proper for such work, and then she endeavoured to reason with him and persuade him, and by that prudent method, though she could not prevail to root out what was planted in his very nature, yet she allayed many a heat, quenched many a flame, prevented many an irruption by her prudence, which might otherwise have overwhelmed him and his family. Fa. But what came of the family ? You say all family religion was destroyed. Neigh. Truly all his part of it died, you may be sure ; what instruction can any parent give, that gives no example ? What weight in any reproof when his own practice would destroy the authority, and take away the very reason of it. Fa. A father indeed can ill reprove a child, when the child sees him every day practising worse things than those which he reproves for. Neigh. Besides, he was never in temper to reprove; how could he argue, persuade, convince, entreat, and then by gentle degrees enforce his persuasions by commands; threaten without anger; and- {Here he made a little stop�) Fa. I understand you though you stop : and- and what ? and correct without passion, that is what you would say. Neigh. Why indeed so it is; and what must a man do to correct a child, who when he does it must be in a passion; and in that passion does not know whether he has killed his child or no ? Fa. Nay, does not know whether he struck the 384 THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. door behind him, or his son before him; the case is lively enough to the purpose. Neigh. It is very true, such a man can never be fit to correct a child. Fa. No, nor any man in such a passion; I grant all you say. Neigh. It could not be, and therefore you cannot wonder, I say, that this violence of his temper and passion destroyed all his sense of duty, or at least utterly unfitted him for'the performance of it. Fa. The consequence is very sad to consider of; for without doubt it is so in proportion in all families, and I am sure it has been so with me. Neigh. It must be so in the nature of the thing ; a man in a rage, heated with the fumes of his own distempered blood, discomposed by the fury of his passion, what is he better than a man drunk with wine, and out of himself by the frenzy of the liquor? Can such a man pray to God ? Fa. You make me tremble at the reflection, it is so very natural, and is so much my own case; why, it has driven me from my duty, and kept off my performance for weeks together; besides the shame, the difficulty, the reluctance of coming to it again, when the whole family has known the reason of its being omitted. Neigh. Such things tend naturally to destroy the sense of duty, and must, in the nature of the thing, destroy the performance. Fa. But pray how did the good woman bear this? And how did she act ? Neigh. It was a great affliction to her, that you may be sure of, and she had a hard task of it; however, she consulted her own duty, and as she endeavoured to persuade her husband upon all occasions where she found room for it, when she found there was no hope to prevail, she kept up the settled THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. 385 worshipping of God in her own chamber or closet, where she retired with her children and maid-servants, and did her duty with them as well as she could, and as opportunity allowed. Fa. And would her husband bear her persuasions ? Neigh. Truly, very indifferently; I could give you some of their discourses together on this head ; but as they always ended with unkindness, I forbear; only telling you, that her prudence directed her so far, to avoid raising his passions, that whenever she saw him begin to fly out, she would forbear the discourse, and gave him time to cool again, and so take another opportunity with him. Fa. That was very engaging, as well as a very wise, prudent part. Was he not very sensible of it? Neigh. I cannot say he was always; for his temper grew so froward and peevish at last, that he was very impatient of the calmest reprehension, and sometimes would give her very unmanly as well as unmannerly returns for it. Fa. That was barbarous; how could she bear that? Neigh. It was always very afflicting to her to be sure; but never broke in upon her temper; neither did she return anything like it, but on the contrary, treated him with such tenderness, such obliging, and such an endearing carriage on all occasions, as made her be admired by all that knew her. Fa. Those that approved her conduct so much, must needs greatly reproach his. Neigh. You may be sure of that, it not only exposed him, but it made him be abhorred, even by those that had no sense of religion upon their minds. F. I. II. 386 THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. Fa. Nay, religion rather gained than lost by them, take them together; for if he was a reproach to Christians, she was a double honour to them ; if he caused the ways of God to be evil spoken of, she adorned the doctrine of God our Saviour. Neigh. She was one that gave a full testimony to that truth in the Scripture, that the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, long-suffering, fyc. Fa. She had great command of her temper. Neigh. She acted her reason to the highest extreme, and religion to an extraordinary degree; it was not that she was not flesn and blood, or that she had no passions to take fire; for she was of a warm temper too, in its place. Fa. How was it possible she could bear so much? Neigh. She did it by the method which you and I, and every Christian, ought to do; but by a method, which if we may guess from the view we have round us, of all the passionate foolish things done in the world, we may say, very few practise ; I mean, she fully studied her duty, and strove to perform it. Fa. You do well to add the last; there are ten know their duty to one that performs it; I acknowledge myself to be one of the first. Neigh. She knew her husband's temper ; that he had given a loose to it, and that it had entirely gotten the mastery of him ; she considered, if she should take the same liberty, they must be all ruined ; and she told me one day a passage, which I cannot but repeat to you. She had been often so provoked, that she was at the point of given up her temper, and of flying out with the like violence at him; and at that time she was moved as she thought in an insufferable manner; she knew that THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. 387 she was no way the occasion of his ill conduct, that he ought not to use her as he did, and she thought she was not obliged to bear it; but in the juncture that she was thus going to begin with him, and give vent to her passion, that scripture came into her thoughts, Prov. xiv. 1 : A wise woman buildeth her house, but a foolish womayi pulleth it down with her hands. Immediately her passions cooled, she recovered her temper, and all he could say or do to her, was not able to put her into the least disorder. Fa. She was an excellent woman, and an excellent Christian. Neigh. Indeed she was so. Fa. Such a Christian as I fear I shall never be. Neigh. I hope you do not resolve never to be so. Fa. But I despair of it. Neigh. If you would pray for it, you would hope. Fa. But what came of this human fury you speak of, and of his family ? How did it all end ? Neigh. Truly it came to a melancholy end many ways, and yet it was a better end by far than might reasonably have been expected; but it was all owing to the prudence and conduct of his wife; and she really builded her house, when he, that should have been the stay of it, pulled it down with his hands. It was by her early conduct, that her children were instructed and preserved in their duty to God; and as well kept from a contempt of their father on one hand, as from imitating him in his ungoverned conduct on the other. Fa. You give her the greatest of characters, for that part was so difficult, and so nice an article to manage, and of such consequence to the family, I should almost think it beyond the power of human prudence. Neigh. I'll give you some short instances of it, c c 2 388 THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. which may serve as well to honour the conduct of the wife, as to leave an example to all masters of families not to give way to the violence of their own ungoverned follies. Her husband, by the violence of his temper, embroiled himself on several occasions in very unhappy quarrels; I do not mean such as were to be decided by hand, or that required him to use the sword as a gentleman; for being a citizen he wore no sword, nor had he much occasion to deal with those that did. Fa. No, no ; I do not understand you so. If he had shown his passionate temper among gentlemen, as you say he did to others, he might have found a short way out of the world, and put his family soon out of their pain. Neigh. But he showed it so among other people, that he brought innumerable lawsuits upon his hands, and must have been ruined if his wife's prudence had not put a stop to it. Fa. How could she do that ? Neigh. Why she got friends to go and make up breaches and repair damages, where it was possible to make them up; and that she did so often till she was tired with it; and finding no end of the mischief, there being no hopes to put an end to the cause, she persuaded him first to take his eldest son into his business, and after some time his second son, and then to leave it quite off and retire. Fa. It was a wonder how she brought him to it. Neigh. Truly, not without many a rude scuffle with his temper, and indeed with her sons too ; for the father, though he was not insensible of his own passionate temper, yet he was often uneasy at being out of business, and seeing his two sons carry on the trade while he seemed to be set by as an invalid. Fa. Why truly it did look something hard; however, as it was done deliberately, and from a THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. 389 mature sense that he was unfit to converse with the world, by reason of his want of government of himself, and that it was finished and done some time, it could not be reasonable to turn the young men out of business again, though it was at the demand of their father. Neigh. However, his violence and their unwillingness to disoblige or obstruct their father, made all things easy that way. It happened one day that he had been at London with his sons, and in their warehouse, for he had taken a house at some distance from the town; but when he went to town used to go and sit in his sons' counting-house to do any business of his own, or divert himself with them. Here, he saw their business went on flourishing and successful, after another rate than ever it did under his management, and a strange uneasiness possessed his mind at the sight; instead of rejoicing that his sons minded their business, agreed, and went hand in hand, that they throve well, and that business flowed in upon them, I say, instead of rejoicing at this prosperity of his family, a spirit of envy and discontent seized him, and he went away chagrined and melancholy. When he came home his wife perceived a cloud of discontent sat upon his countenance, and though she was full of apprehension that he was under some violent disturbance, yet being willing to abate it as much as possible, she went cheerfully to him, and smiling, asked him how he did. He gave her little or no answer at first, but after some other little inquiries, he flew out upon her with the greatest fury imaginable, told her it was she that had supplanted him in his business, made him an invalid to his family, and a pensioner to his children; that her sons were engrossing the wealth of the family, and taking that increase which was his right; and 390 THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. that she had confederated with them to draw him into a snare; but added, that he would break all the contrivances that were made use of to abuse him. She could easily have answered every objection, and with great disadvantage to him, but she saw he was out of temper, and she had too much wisdom to throw oil into the fire; she answered calmly, that as far as she had any hand in it she could not but see that it was for his advantage; that she had acted purely with that design ; but that if it appeared otherwise, she would with the same zeal join with him to break any Contrivance that was for his hurt. Why, says he, do you talk so ? Is it not to my hurt to see my sons set above me, and as it were possessing my inheritance before it falls to them ? Could they not have stayed till my head was laid ? Wife. My dear, says she, you were satisfied of the reasons of it before you did it. Husb. What reasons do you talk of? Wife. Reasons, my dear, that I had rather you would not oblige me to repeat. Husb. No reasons but what would as well have served to have sent me to a madhouse. I have carried on my trade these twenty-four years with success; what occasion had I to throw it away at last ? Wife. Do not let us debate about the occasion. Husb. Yes, yes, I will enter into the occasion, I see nothing in it but a plot between you and your sons to get your husband more at your disposal. Wife. You are disposed to be angry, my dear; I am far from desiring to have you at anybody's disposal but your own. Husb. And I will take care to be at nobody's disposal but my own; I assure you I'll unravel all THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. 391 your contrivances, and make you all examples for trampling upon and taking advantage of the infirmities of a husband and father. {Here he raised his voice, looked pale, and greiv so very angry and hot, that his wife was even frightened; for though he had been hot with other people, he had never been so directly furious at her before.) However, she kept on her discourse with calm" ness and temper ; says she,� Wife. My dear, do not fly upon your family so, and threaten us all; you can do us no mischief, but will wound yourself. Have a little patience, and hear calmly what we have to offer, you may be assured we have none of us injured you. Husb. What! have you not injured me ? {Here he ?'ises up in a great rage, and stamped upon the ground, walking hastily, talking loud, and looking furious ; in a word, showing all the tokens of a most enraged temper.) Wife. Do not suffer yourself to fly out, my dear; consider calmly, I hope nobody has injured you. Husb. Not injured me ! Am I not turned out of business, like a lunatic that is begged out of his estate ? Wife. No, no, my dear, you are not used anything like that. Husb. What, am I not placed here like an idiot under guardians! Am I not a mere pupil to my two sons! and is not the management of the whole trade put wholly into their hands, and I fed from hand to mouth with a pension ; is not this abusing me ? But I will put an end to all immediately; I'll take the staff into my own hands again, I assure you, and I'll use you as you deserve. Wife. I pray God you may, my dear; but I see 392 THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. you are hot and in a passion, I'll withdraw, and talk of these things another time. Husb. No, no, I desire you will sit still; I am as fit to talk of them now as at another time. Pray sit still; and if you have anything to say, speak it now. (He steps to the parlour door, and shuts her in, before she could be quick enough to withdraw.) Wife. I had rather you would excuse me, my dear ; pray let us talk of it another time. Husb. No, no, just now, no delays, I will go to work with it just now. If you have anything to say for your conduct, or against what I intend to do, let me hear it. Wife. I do not know what you intend to do, how should I have anything to say to it ? Husb. I tell you, don't I ? I tell you I will unravel all you have done. Wife. Well, my dear, if you are resolved, what can I say to it ? You have often done things in your passion which you have been sorry for. I wish you may do nothing of the like kind now, that is all I can say. Husb. Nay, I know you cannot say anything for what you have done, and that is the reason why you can say nothing against what I am to do. Wife. I desire to oppose you in nothing that is for your advantage; whether this may be so I know not, because I know not what it is you intend. Husb. I'll tell you what I intend ; I'll go immediately to the warehouse, send your two sons home, and take my business into my own hands again ; and so once more I'll be my own master, and not an underling and a pensioner. Wife* My dear, I have but one thing to say to it; 1 wish you could bear to hear me. Husb. Yes, yes, I'll hear your advice, though I THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. 393 may not take it; for I suppose it will be of as much consequence as other things; let us hear it, whether I mind it or no. Wife. Why, my dear, that you may do nothing to repent of, my advice and request is, Bow your knee to God first, and though it be but two minutes, ask seriously for his direction and blessing upon what you are going to do, and then whatever you do after that I will readily acquiesce in. Husb. Well, it is nothing to you whether I do or no. (She was in a great concern all this while, lest his passion might break out to do any intemperate violent thing, and would fain have got away from him, but could not.) Wife. Yes, it is much to me on your own account. Husb. You are provided for, what is it to you ? Wife. I have some concern sure in your welfare ; you cannot be miserable without me; and I am sure, my dear, I mourn over your mistakes, and would prevent them if it were in my power. Husb. Mourn over your own ill usage of me. Wife. My dear, if I had ever used you ill I should do so ; but you will see, when your passion is over, I have not used you ill, or done anything that ought to displease or dissatisfy you, even in the very thing that now most disturbs you. Husb. Not used me ill! am I not turned out of my business, as a man not fit to carry it on; as a madman that must not be trusted with a knife, or any necessary thing that he is capable of doing harm with ? Wife. I could convince you, my dear, another time, but you are angry now ; and I care not to enter into words that may increase it. Husb. No, no, I can never be convinced; but 394 THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. I'll convince you all that I am not so easily to be imposed upon as you may believe. I'll undo all that has been done, and that immediately, before I sleep. Wife. My dear, I entreat you, though you do all you say you will do, yet do not do it in a passion ; even though you were doing well, yet doing it in such a temper, it.is odds but you do something amiss. Husb. I tell you I won't be bought and sold among you ; I have been betrayed and treacherously used, and my sons have got up in my saddle, are getting estates in my business, and in a few years will be able to say they can live without me. Wife. Well, my dear, can you repine at the prosperity of your own children ? Husb. They should have come to it in their own time. What! is the prosperity of the children to be raised upon the ruin of the father ? Wife. My dear, are you ruined, are you beneath them ? Have you not 400/. a year of your own, and do you not receive 200/. a year from them, as a consideration for the stock you have given over to them. Husb. That is all nothing; I'll have no sons be masters of my business, while I sit still and am looked upon as one incapable; I'll reduce them to their first beginning. Wife. My dear, do nothing unadvisedly; do not ruin your children without cause; have they offended you ? Husb. Is it not an offence to see myself set aside, and my sons made the heads of my business ? Wife. My dear, consider, your sons are men grown, and past being treated as children. Husb. They are not past being taught to know themselves, they want to be instructed that way; THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. 395 I'll make you all know yourselves before I have done. (He goes out of the room in a great rage?) Now it is to be observed here, that the wife had acted with such prudence in the transferring the trade and stock to her sons, as above, that she had reserved the whole stock, with all the improvements, to be their father's, and to be given up to him whenever he demanded it, and although all went in their names, yet they were obliged by writing to surrender it all into their father's hand, and only to be allowed such expenses and charges, and allowances, as had been settled between them, not letting the father know one word of it; but he having conveyed and made over everything to them, she, without telling him of it, took a declaration of trust back again from her sons, expressing the reasons of the trust also. And as she had done this because she knew his changeable disposition and fiery temper, so she was not so much concerned at the consequence of his present passion, because she knew her sons would behave as became them, when their father came to them, whatever want of temper he might show to them; however, she immediately sent them word of what had passed, and what they were to expect, that they might not be surprised. It was but a few minutes afterwards, when he came himself, and entering the warehouse, he found his sons both there, but very busy with customers; so he went into the counting-house, and sat still awhile, but his passion was too hot to be kept within bounds, and his eldest son, who saw by his countenance that his father was very much disturbed, made all the despatch possible to get clear of the people he was engaged with, lest his father should call, and should break out into a passion that might expose him. It was not long before his father, who could hold 396 THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. no longer, calls him, and he comes immediately. The dialogue was very short, but very warm on one side, and had not all possible occasion been taken away by the conduct of both his sons, the temper he was in at that time would have made an uproar even in the street. He began with the eldest son as soon as he came to the counting-house, thus:� Fa. Call your brother, I must speak with you both. Eld. Son. Sir, he is busy with a customer, but he will have done presently. Fa. I must speak with hinh, let him be busy with whom he will. Eld. Son. Then I will call him, sir. (He calls him, and sends a servant to tend the customer, upon which the youngest son comes also, and their father begins with them both thus, speaking in an angry tone, and a great deal of apparent passion in his looks:�) Fa. You go on here, sons, very boldly, and push the trade forward with a great deal of authority; pray what is it you intend to do with me ? Eld. Son. Sir, we go on by no authority but yours; we hope you are not displeased that we follow the business with as much diligence as we can. Fa. That is no answer to my question. Eld. Son. It is very difficult, sir, to answer that question, but by asking another, sir; that is, what you would please to have us do ? Fa. My question is plain ; you have put a juggle here upon your father (you and your mother in confederacy) and set yourselves at the head of my business ; I would be glad to know how long you think I must bear it ? Eld. Son. Not a moment, sir, longer than you please; your resigning the business to us, and putting us into it, was your own proposal to us ; it was THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. 397 your gift to us, and we were put in by yourself, my mother had no hand in it that we know of, but what you gave her power to have. Fa. Well, well, if my authority put you in, by the same authority I shall put you out; every power that can give life can take it away, my right to the last is derived from my right to the first. Eld. Son. Whatever right we may have by your gift, we will make no use of it without your goodwill, and therefore, sir, if it be your pleasure to suppose you have set us up too soon, we will return all back into your hands whenever you demand it. Fa. Then I demand it just now. Eld. Son If my brother is of my mind, you shall be obeyed this minute, sir. Young Son. With all my heart, for I will be nothing but what my father desires me to be; we had all by your gift, sir, and if you think it too soon, I am very willing to wait till you think it more seasonable ; I hope my father will let us be his servants, as we were before. Fa. I shall consider of that. Neigh. Well, what think you now ? Have I given you the picture of a passionate father to your purpose, or no ? Fa. Yes; but you have blest him with better children than ever mine would be. Neigh. You do not know what yours might have been, if they had had such a mother to have managed them in their infancy. Fa. Well, but pray go on with the story ; what could he say to his sons, who answered him, as I suppose, so contrary to his expectations ? Neigh. He was not touched with it at all at first, but taking his sons, as it were, at their words, he immediately took possession of the books and cash, and the sons, with the greatest calmness and ap- 398 THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. parent satisfaction, threw off their hats, and put themselves into the posture of servants. His greatest dissatisfaction, was, that he could not have the least occasion to be angry. After he had chafed his mind as much, and indeed more than the case would bear, and had thus embarrassed himself into the hurry of the world again, so that he saw himself, in a few moments, a man removed from a pleasant, agreeable retreat, engaged again in a vast crowd of encumbrances, the prospect began to appear less agreeable to him than he thought it before, and full of discontent he comes away, having been perfectly disappointed of the quarrel which he expected to have with his two sons. Being come home, he thinks to gratify the fury of his temper upon his wife; his spirits were in agitation, and nature required to give them a vent somewhere. The submissive, respectful conduct of his sons had effectually disappointed him, and even for want of an object, he resolves to fall upon his wife; so he begins with her, very hot and angry, thus:� Husb. Well, I have blown you all up, I have broke all your measures. Wife. My dear, it is unkind to speak of measures of mine; if you have done no injury to yourself, you can have done none to me, I have no interest but yours, nor any measures but what you have been all along acquainted with, unless it has been to prevent your hurting yourself. Husb. Have you not had private projects to erect your sons on the ruin of their father ? Wife. No, indeed, my dear, nor can I be capable of such a thing; can a husband be ruined without his wife ? Husb. Whatever you have been capable of, thank God, I am capable of disappointing you. Wife. You will speak kindlier when your passion THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. 399 is over, your charge is very heavy, and it is a sad case where the judge has not temper to hear the prisoner. Husb. I your judge! I am none of your judge; there is one above will judge you all. Wife. If you condemn me, you make yourself my judge, and I ought to be calmly heard. Husb. Well, what have you to say, if I should hear you calmly ? Wife. I desire you would take time till to-morrow morning ; you are too warm for it to-day. Husb. O ho ! you want to talk with your counsellors; I have dispossessed them of their authority; and I'll take care to keep them from caballing with you. Wife. If we had caballed against you, as we did for you, you could not have dispossessed them ; you treat me as your enemy, my dear, but you will find I have been your friend, and a faithful friend too, even in this very thing. Husb. I value neither your friendship nor your enmity ; I am master of my business again once more, and I'll be so as long as I live. Wife. I wish, my dear, you were master of yourself, as much as we all desire you should be master of everything in your family. Husb. That is to myself, and the hurt is my own. Wife. My dear, you can do nothing to hurt your* self, but we are all hurt by it too ; we have but one bottom ; we cannot swim if you sink. Husb. But you have made an attempt to swim and let me sink, if I had not disappointed you all. Wife. My dear, your words are very bitter; I know not what you have done, I am sure I have done nothing to your prejudice, and you cannot have-disappointed me in anything, unless it be in hurting yourself and your family. 400 THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. Husb. Yes, I have disappointed you; I have turned out your own two partners, and made my two masters my two servants again, as they ought to be. Wife. Well, my dear, I hope they submitted dutifully and respectfully to you in it all, howsoever you have acted by them. Husb. Yes, yes, they gave it up with readiness enough, that is true. Wife. Why then, my dear, they have shown themselves very full of duty and regard to their father, you must own that; for you know you could not have obliged them to it. Husb. I am the less obliged to you, however, who took care to put it so much out of my power, that if they had been less dutiful than they are, I might have been used bad enough. Wife. Do not strive, my dear, to load me with reproaches, I have affliction enough. Husb. What are your great afflictions ? I know none you have but this, that I have taken the power out of your hands to govern your husband. Wife. Can I have a greater affliction than to have one that should protect me from the injuries of all the world, injure and oppress me himself! Husb. How do I injure you, or oppress you ? Wife. You injure me in charging me wrongfully, and you oppress me in falling upon me in a passion, that I cannot have room to speak or be heard. Husb. I charge you wrongfully! Is it not apparent that you juggled with your two sons to get me to put all my trade into their hands, and set myself by to be laughed at for a fool. Wife. No, it is evident I did not, because you say that you have turned them out; if I had given the power entirely into their hands, as you know I might then have done, and, as for aught you know, I the family instructor. 401 did, you could not have turned them out, I assure you. Hush, Yes, yes, you see I have turned them out, notwithstanding all the power they had. Wife. You will acknowledge all that to your wife my dear, when you come to think calmly, and know a little more of it; but I'll take another opportunity to convince you of it; perhaps in a little time you will repent your present proceedings. Hush. Never, while you live; what, a husband repent his being master! No, no, I'll have no more family directors, no more sons set up to be my masters, I'll assure you. Wife. You are disposed to be angry, my dear, I'll come again when your passion is over. (She goes out of the room.) Husb. Ay, ay, fare you well; I shall be of the same mind to-morrow, I promise you. Fa. Well, of all the rude, ill-natured, and fiery creatures that ever I heard of, this is the foremost; pray what came of it ? Neigh. Came of it! why the next morning, after a little calmer discourse, she fetched him in a writing signed by both his sons, whereby, though they had the management of the trade in appearance, yet they had bound themselves, by an acknowledgment of trust, to account for all the profits of the whole trade to their father, expenses and incident charges being allowed, and to quit it all again whenever he demanded it. Fa. What could he say to it ? Neigh. She withdrew, and left him to read it over, and when she came in again she found him all in tears, and in a violent passion at himself for having ill treated her; he took her in his arms and told her, she had been a faithful steward to him and all f. i. ii. d d 402 THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. the family, adding all the kind things that could be expressed, and reproaching himself for his passions, in a manner that she could no more bear than she could the other. Fa. Passion guides us into all extremes; but how did he go on ? Neigh. He came to terms with his sons, and made them partners with him; but alas! his fiery disposition, which grew worse every day, brought him into a dreadful disaster; for being in a passion at some people he employed, that did not do his business as he would have it done, and a porter, or some such sort of fellow, giving him saucy language, he struck the poor man an unhappy blow, that was thought by all that stood by had killed him, and which put this poor passionate creature afterwards into an inexpressible confusion. Fa. But you say the man was not killed. Neigh. No, he did not die; but he was crippled by it as long as he lived. Fa. And what said he for it ? Neigh. Alas! he was the greatest penitent for it that ever you heard of, and continued so as long as he lived; but what was that to the poor man ? Fa. As you say, he could never restore the poor man, but he might make some amends. Neigh. Yes, yes, he provided for him and for his family too; but though that was a great weight upon his own family, yet it was no satisfaction to the complaint of his own conscience; the crime called for repentance, whatever amends he had made the poor man. Fa. Ay, ay, passion always makes work for repentance. Neigh. It does so, and this man found it so; for he never enjoyed himself an hour afterwards; he THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. 403 quite threw off his business, retired from the town, and, in a word, he went mourning for that one action as long as he lived. Fa. And did he govern himself better afterwards? Neigh. He kept himself from the occasions of anger, struggled with it whenever anything moved him; but in short, as the seeds were sown in his very constitution, he never effectually conquered them to his last breath. Fa. Passion is a dreadful master where it once has the government of the temper. Neigh. It is true; but of all the kinds, I think, family passions are the worst, they generally are in their beginnings more extravagant, rise to the greatest height, are acted with the greatest violence, and attended with the worst consequences ; as I could show you by many sad examples within the compass of my own knowledge; but the stories are too long to relate now. Fa. It is enough; these you have told are so affecting to me, and so nearly touch my own case, that I am fully satisfied, if I do not in particular master my passionate, furious temper, and take quite new measures with myself, my family will be utterly ruined, and myself eternally undone. THE END OF THE FAMILY INSTRUCTOR. OXFORD : PRINTED BY D. A. TALBOYS.