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letters-第22章

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ked at  me with astonishment; and assured me that there was nothing to be  seen in the school; at which not more than half a dozen boys were  instructed; and that he himself was one of the number; but I told  him that he should show me no other place; and he at last  unwillingly attended me。  On the way he said that the schoolmaster  was one of the brothers of the convent who had lately been  expelled; and that he was a very learned man and spoke French and  Greek。  We went past a stone cross; and the boy bent and crossed  himself with much devotion:  I mention this circumstance; as it was  the first instance of devotion which I had observed amongst the  Portuguese since my arrival。  When near the house where the  schoolmaster resided; he pointed it out to me and then hid himself  behind a wall; where he waited till I returned。

On stepping over the threshold I was confronted by a short stout  man; between sixty and seventy years of age; dressed in a blue  jerkin and grey trousers; without shirt or waistcoat。  He looked at  me sternly; and enquired in the French language what was my  pleasure。  I apologised for intruding upon him; and stated that;  being informed that he occupied the situation of schoolmaster to  the place; I had come to pay my respects to him; and to beg to be  informed respecting the manner of instruction which he adopted。  He  said that whosoever told me that he was a schoolmaster lied; for  that he was a brother of the convent。  I replied that I had heard  that all the friaries had been broken up and the brothers  dismissed; whereupon he sighed; and said it was too true。  He was  then silent for a minute; and his better nature overcoming his  angry feelings he produced a snuff…box and offered it to me。  The  snuff…box is the olive…branch of the Portuguese; and he who wishes  to be on good terms with them; or to conciliate them; must never  refuse to put his finger and thumb into it when preferred; I took  therefore a large pinch; though I detest the dust; and we were soon  friendly enough。  He was eager to obtain news; especially from  Lisbon and Spain。  I told him that the officers of the regiments at  Lisbon had the day before I left that place gone in a body to the  Queen; and insisted upon her either receiving their swords or  dismissing her Ministers; whereupon he rubbed his hands and said;  'I am sure that things will not remain tranquil at Lisbon。'  Upon  my saying that the affairs of Don Carlos were on the decline; he  frowned; and said that it could not possibly be; for that God was  too just to suffer it。  I felt for the poor man; who had been  driven from his home in the noble convent close by; and from a  state of comfort and affluence reduced in his old age to indigence  and misery; for his dwelling seemed to contain scarcely an article  of furniture。  I tried twice or thrice to induce him to converse on  the school; but he always avoided the subject or said shortly that  he knew nothing about it; the idea of being a schoolmaster was  evidently humiliating to him。

On my leaving him; the boy came from his hiding…place and rejoined  me; he said his reason for hiding himself was fear that his master  might know that it was he who brought me to him; for that the old  man was ashamed of appearing in the character of a schoolmaster。  I  asked the boy whether he or his parents were acquainted with the  Scripture and ever read it; but he did not understand me。  I must  here observe that the boy was fifteen years of age; and that he was  in many respects very intelligent and had some knowledge of the  Latin language; nevertheless he knew not the Scripture even by  name; and I have no doubt that at least one half of his countrymen  are; in that respect; no wiser than himself。  I have questioned the  children of Portugal at the doors of village inns; at the hearths  of their cottages; in the fields where they labour; at the stone  Mountains by the way…sides where they water their cattle; about the  Scripture; the Bible; the Old and New Testament; and in scarcely  one instance have they known what I was alluding to or could return  me a rational answer; though in all other instances I had no reason  to complain of their want of apprehension。  Indeed nothing has  surprised me more than the free and unembarrassed manner with which  the Portuguese peasantry sustain a conversation; and the purity of  the language in which they express their thoughts; and yet very few  of them can write or read; whereas the peasantry of our own  country; whose education is in general much superior; are in their  conversation coarse and dull almost to brutality; and absurdly  ungrammatical in the language which they use; though the English  tongue; upon the whole; is more simple in its grammar than the  Portuguese。

On my way back from Mafra to Cintra I very nearly lost my life。  As  the night was closing in fast; we left the regular road by the  advice of the guide; and descending the hill on which Mafra stands  reached the bottom of the valley; from which there is a narrow  pathway winding round the next hill; exceedingly steep; with a  precipice on the left side; the horse on which I was mounted; and  which was by no means suited for such climbing; in his violent  struggles to accomplish the ascent burst the girth of the saddle;  so that I was cast violently off; with the saddle beneath me。   Fortunately; I fell on the right side; or I should have rolled down  the hill and probably have been killed; as it was; I remained  stunned and senseless for two or three minutes; when I revived; and  with the assistance of the guide and the man who waits on me;  walked up the remaining part of the hill; when; the saddle being  readjusted; I mounted again。  I was very drowsy and stupid for two  or three days; from the influence of the fall; but I am happy to  say at present; thanks to the Almighty; I have long ceased to feel  any inconvenience from it。

On my return to Lisbon I saw Mr。 Wilby; who received me with great  kindness; the next ten days were exceedingly rainy and prevented me  from making any excursions into the country; and during this time I  saw him frequently and had a good deal of conversation with him;  concerning the best means of causing God's glorious Gospel to be  read in Portugal。  He informed me that four hundred copies of the  Bible and New Testament were arrived; and he thought that we could  do no better than put them into the hands of the booksellers; but I  strongly advised that at least half of them should be entrusted to  colporteurs; to hawk about; upon receiving a certain profit on  every copy they sold。  He thought the idea a good one; as far as  regards Lisbon; but said that no colporteur would venture to carry  them about the country; as the fanatical priests would probably  cause him to be assassinated。  He was kind enough to promise to  look out for people suited to make the essay in the streets of  Lisbon; and as the lower orders are very poor I wrote to Mr。  Whiteley at Oporto; requesting to be informed whether he had any  objection to our selling the books to the populace at Lisbon at a  lower price than a CRUZADO NOVO; which he had determined to sell  them at。  I thought it but right to cons
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