Page:The Works of William Harvey (part 1 of 2).djvu/37

Rh literary arena; and he now probably resolved himself to follow the advice he had once given to his young friend Charles Scarborough, "to leave off gunning," and dedicate himself wholly to more congenial pursuits. And then Charles had long made it apparent, even to the most ardent of his adherents, that no faith was to be put in his promise, no trust to be reposed in his royal word. The wise old man, verging on the age of threescore years and ten, doubtless saw that it was better for him to retire from a responsible office, now become most irksome and thankless, and seek privacy and leisure for the remainder of his days. These Harvey found awaiting him in the houses of his affectionate brothers—now in the house of Eliab, in the City, or at Roehampton, and then in the house of Daniel, in the 'suburban' village of Lambeth, or at Combe near Croydon in Surrey, in each of which Harvey had his own apartments. The Harveys appear to have been united from first to last in the closest bonds of brotherly love, and to have had a common interest in many of their undertakings; and Eliab, as we shall see, employed the small capital,