Page:The Travels of Dean Mahomet.djvu/178

Rh manner, that he became a bankrupt This misfortune preyed o much on his mind, that his melancholy could riot well ecape the obervation of his mitres, from whom he endeavoured to conceal it as much as poible, dreading to be foraken by her in her poverty. After repeated entreaties on her part, he, at length, made her acquainted with his ituation: he uddenly left him, and to his great atonihment, hortly returned with money and effects, to uch an amount as enabled him to conduct his buines with more pirit and application than ever.

Here is an intance, that even the human