<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
<p>At a time when the nobility of Britain were said, by the poet
laureate, to be the admirers and protectors of the arts, and were
acknowledged by the whole nation to be the patrons of
music—William and Henry, youths under twenty years of age,
brothers, and the sons of a country shopkeeper who had lately
died insolvent, set out on foot for London, in the hope of
procuring by their industry a scanty subsistence.</p>
<p>As they walked out of their native town, each with a small
bundle at his back, each observed the other drop several tears:
but, upon the sudden meeting of their eyes, they both smiled with
a degree of disdain at the weakness in which they had been
caught.</p>
<p>“I am sure,” said William (the elder), “I
don’t know what makes me cry.”</p>
<p>“Nor I neither,” said Henry; “for though we
may never see this town again, yet we leave nothing behind us to
give us reason to lament.”</p>
<p>“No,” replied William, “nor anybody who
cares what becomes of us.”</p>
<p>“But I was thinking,” said Henry, now weeping
bitterly, “that, if my poor father were alive, <i>he</i>
would care what was to become of us: he would not have suffered
us to begin this long journey without a few more shillings in our
pockets.”</p>
<p>At the end of this sentence, William, who had with some effort
suppressed his tears while his brother spoke, now uttered, with a
voice almost inarticulate,—“Don’t say any more;
don’t talk any more about it. My father used to tell
us, that when he was gone we must take care of ourselves: and so
we must. I only wish,” continued he, giving way to
his grief, “that I had never done anything to offend him
while he was living.”</p>
<p>“That is what I wish too,” cried Henry.
“If I had always been dutiful to him while he was alive, I
would not shed one tear for him now that he is gone—but I
would thank Heaven that he has escaped from his
creditors.”</p>
<p>In conversation such as this, wherein their sorrow for their
deceased parent seemed less for his death than because he had not
been so happy when living as they ought to have made him; and
wherein their own outcast fortune was less the subject of their
grief, than the reflection what their father would have endured
could he have beheld them in their present situation;—in
conversation such as this, they pursued their journey till they
arrived at that metropolis, which has received for centuries
past, from the provincial towns, the bold adventurer of every
denomination; has stamped his character with experience and
example; and, while it has bestowed on some coronets and
mitres—on some the lasting fame of genius—to others
has dealt beggary, infamy, and untimely death.</p>
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