To the Revd. Mr JONATHAN DUSTWICH, atโ
SIR,
I received yours in course of post, and shall be glad to treat with you for the M.S. which I have delivered to your friend Mr Behn; but can by no means comply with the terms proposed. Those things are so uncertainโWriting is all a lotteryโI have been a loser by the works of the greatest men of the ageโI could mention particulars, and name names; but donโt choose itโThe taste of the town is so changeable. Then there have been so many letters upon travels lately publishedโWhat between Smollettโs, Sharpโs, Derrickโs, Thicknesseโs, Baltimoreโs, and Barettiโs, together with Shandyโs Sentimental Travels, the public seems to be cloyed with that kind of entertainmentโNevertheless, I will, if you please, run the risque of printing and publishing, and you shall have half the profits of the impressionโYou need not take the trouble to bring up your sermons on my accountโNo body reads sermons but Methodists and DissentersโBesides, for my own part, I am quite a stranger to that sort of reading; and the two persons, whose judgment I depended upon in those matters, are out of the way; one is gone abroad, carpenter of a man of war; and the other, has been silly enough to abscond, in order to avoid a prosecution for blasphemyโIโm a great loser by his going offโHe has left a manual of devotion half finished on my hands, after having received money for the whole copyโHe was the soundest divine, and had the most orthodox pen of all my people; and I never knew his judgment fail, but in flying from his bread and butter on this occasion.
By owning you was not put in bodily fear by Lismahago, you preclude yourself from the benefit of a good plea, over and above the advantage of binding him over. In the late war, I inserted in my evening paper, a paragraph that came by the post, reflecting upon the behaviour of a certain regiment in battle. An officer of said regiment came to my shop, and, in the presence of my wife and journeyman, threatened to cut off my earsโAs I exhibited marks of bodily fear more ways than one, to the conviction of the byestanders, I bound him over; my action lay, and I recovered. As for flagellation, you have nothing to fear, and nothing to hope, on that headโThere has been but one printer flogged at the cartโs tail these thirty years; that was Charles Watson; and he assured me it was no more than a flea-bite. Cโ Sโ has been threatened several times by the House of Lโ; but it came to nothing. If an information should be moved for, and granted against you, as the editor of those Letters, I hope you will have honesty and wit enough to appear and take your trialโIf you should be sentenced to the pillory, your fortune is madeโAs times go, thatโs a sure step to honour and preferment. I shall think myself happy if I can lend you a lift; and am, very sincerely,
Yours,
HENRY DAVIS. LONDON, Aug. 10th.
Please my kind service to your neighbour, my cousin MadocโI have sent an Almanack and Court-kalendar, directed for him at Mr Suttonโs, bookseller, in Gloucester, carriage paid, which he will please to accept as a small token of my regard. My wife, who is very fond of toasted cheese, presents her compliments to him, and begs to know if thereโs any of that kind, which he was so good as to send us last Christmas, to be sold in London.
H. D.