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<!-- This page is organised in two columns --> <p> to Miaskoufka. <del>Here</del> </p> <p> Here the difficulty of getting horses recommenced:<lb/> nor could it be overcome <sic>till</sic> the mid morning <add> (Fri 12 Jan,) </add><lb/> about 3 or 4 o'clock when I set out with 6 horses<lb/> for Chechelnik. The 5 or if you please the 40 <lb/> miles between Miaskoufka and that <del><gap/.</del> town<lb/> took me <sic>till</sic> near the same hour in the afternoon.<lb/> Here as at Yassi, Religion intervened and put a<lb/> spell upon me. From one side of the Polish Ukraine<lb/> to the other not a Christian horse ever<lb/> <del><gap/></del> <add>stirs</add> without a Jew-Broker to <del> <gap/> him</del> <add> give him motion.</add><lb/> Before such an arrival could be ferreted out, <sic>tho'</sic><lb/>no time was lost in hunting him, the Sabbath<lb/> had begun: and it was not <sic>till</sic> the afternoon of the <lb/> next day (Sat: 13<hi rend="superscript">th</hi>) that <hi rend="underline">Ludwig</hi> after tugging all<lb/> night long, tore a leaf out of the book of <hi rend="underline">Mortimer,</hi><lb/> and held up to the view of the astonished<lb/> inhabitants of Chechelnik the doctrine of <hi rend="underline">"Every<lb/> "man his own Horse-broker."</hi> I arrived at <hi rend="underline">Sauran</hi>,<lb/> a stage of equal length, travelling as usual in the <lb/> night, by 2 o'clock the next morning (Sun. 15 Jan.)<lb/> There by good fortune, though not without Jew assistance,<lb/> <del>I</del> in the compass of 2 hours I got horses<lb/> for <hi rend="underline">this</hi> place. — From Chekanofka even until<lb/> Bohopol, <del>not</del> a space of not less than 144 miles<lb/> not an Inn have I <sic>enterd</sic> that has been<lb/> in any other hands than those of the race of <lb/> Israel: a people by inbred filthiness the worst <lb/> qualified, and by religious scruples, one should <lb/> think the least disposed, to engage in such a <lb/> business. — Would that our good friend, his late Lordship, <lb/> were sitting beside me (he knows what I mean)<lb/> I would relate to him at full length and in <gap/> <lb/> sort, my <del> <gap/></del> <add> entertainment</add> among these <unclear>levves</unclear>. He and <lb/> I, on reading of the scrapes they <add> used to </add> get into in Hollingshead<lb/> have often joined in lamenting their hare<lb/> <gap/>: <sic>enlighten'd</sic> by experience <gap/> familiar<lb/> <gap/> with vicarious punishment, I am now satisfied<lb/> that the sufferings of the forefathers were<lb/> no more than a just retribution for those which <lb/> the children have inflicted on me. — <foreign> <foreign>Que fit allocenas</foreign>,</foreign> that in all Poland, ( for it is the same in <lb/> other provinces as in this) a man can not get <lb/> a rag to cover him, nor a piece of black bread<lb/> to eat, <add> nor a beast to carry him</add> nor a hog-<sic>stie</sic> to lay his head in, but <lb/> he must have a Jew to help him to it? — Oh<lb/> but <del>and</del> (cried an old Polish Latin-talking Gentleman-traveller<lb/> to whom I gave a supper at <lb/> Miaskoufka) they <hi rend="underline">have</hi> a head! — Yes, replied<lb/> I, "but it is a lousy one.". — If such is the superiority<lb/> of Jewish heads, what are nature Polish<lb/> ones. I have a theory less disgraceful to the body of <lb/> the nation. These interlopers form the <foreign><<hi rend="underline"><gap/> etat</hi></foreign> standing<lb/> in the gap between a people of <del> <gap/> holders</del> <add> Lords</add> and a people<lb/> <add>of</add> </p> <pb/> | <!-- This page is organised in two columns --> <p> to Miaskoufka. <del>Here</del> </p> <p> Here the difficulty of getting horses recommenced:<lb/> nor could it be overcome <sic>till</sic> the mid morning <add> (Fri 12 Jan,) </add><lb/> about 3 or 4 o'clock when I set out with 6 horses<lb/> for Chechelnik. The 5 or if you please the 40 <lb/> miles between Miaskoufka and that <del><gap/.</del> town<lb/> took me <sic>till</sic> near the same hour in the afternoon.<lb/> Here as at Yassi, Religion intervened and put a<lb/> spell upon me. From one side of the Polish Ukraine<lb/> to the other not a Christian horse ever<lb/> <del><gap/></del> <add>stirs</add> without a Jew-Broker to <del> <gap/> him</del> <add> give him motion.</add><lb/> Before such an arrival could be ferreted out, <sic>tho'</sic><lb/>no time was lost in hunting him, the Sabbath<lb/> had begun: and it was not <sic>till</sic> the afternoon of the <lb/> next day (Sat: 13<hi rend="superscript">th</hi>) that <hi rend="underline">Ludwig</hi> after tugging all<lb/> night long, tore a leaf out of the book of <hi rend="underline">Mortimer,</hi><lb/> and held up to the view of the astonished<lb/> inhabitants of Chechelnik the doctrine of <hi rend="underline">"Every<lb/> "man his own Horse-broker."</hi> I arrived at <hi rend="underline">Sauran</hi>,<lb/> a stage of equal length, travelling as usual in the <lb/> night, by 2 o'clock the next morning (Sun. 15 Jan.)<lb/> There by good fortune, though not without Jew assistance,<lb/> <del>I</del> in the compass of 2 hours I got horses<lb/> for <hi rend="underline">this</hi> place. — From Chekanofka even until<lb/> Bohopol, <del>not</del> a space of not less than 144 miles<lb/> not an Inn have I <sic>enterd</sic> that has been<lb/> in any other hands than those of the race of <lb/> Israel: a people by inbred filthiness the worst <lb/> qualified, and by religious scruples, one should <lb/> think the least disposed, to engage in such a <lb/> business. — Would that our good friend, his late Lordship, <lb/> were sitting beside me (he knows what I mean)<lb/> I would relate to him at full length and in <gap/> <lb/> sort, my <del> <gap/></del> <add> entertainment</add> among these <unclear>levves</unclear>. He and <lb/> I, on reading of the scrapes they <add> used to </add> get into in Hollingshead<lb/> have often joined in lamenting their hare<lb/> <gap/>: <sic>enlighten'd</sic> by experience <gap/> familiar<lb/> <gap/> with vicarious punishment, I am now satisfied<lb/> that the sufferings of the forefathers were<lb/> no more than a just retribution for those which <lb/> the children have inflicted on me. — <foreign> <foreign>Que fit allocenas</foreign>,</foreign> that in all Poland, ( for it is the same in <lb/> other provinces as in this) a man can not get <lb/> a rag to cover him, nor a piece of black bread<lb/> to eat, <add> nor a beast to carry him</add> nor a hog-<sic>stie</sic> to lay his head in, but <lb/> he must have a Jew to help him to it? — Oh<lb/> but <del>and</del> (cried an old Polish Latin-talking Gentleman-traveller<lb/> to whom I gave a supper at <lb/> Miaskoufka) they <hi rend="underline">have</hi> a head! — Yes, replied<lb/> I, "but it is a lousy one.". — If such is the superiority<lb/> of Jewish heads, what are nature Polish<lb/> ones. I have a theory less disgraceful to the body of <lb/> the nation. These interlopers form the <foreign><<hi rend="underline"><gap/> etat</hi></foreign> standing<lb/> in the gap between a people of <del> <gap/> holders</del> <add> Lords</add> and a people<lb/> <add>of</add> </p> <pb/> <!-- second column --> <p> of slaves, in a country not inviting enough to allure better<lb/> capitalists.</p> <p> Before I take leave of Checkelnik it would be <gap/> <lb/> gratitude not to commemorate a Russian Major, of <lb/> the name of <hi rend="underline">Bibicoff,</hi> who redeemed me out of Jewish<lb/> Purgatory, and entertained me with the politeness of <lb/> a gentleman and the cordiality of a friend. He has <lb/> been stationed there these two years by the Admiralty <lb/> at Cherson, purveying wood from the <unclear>Pemeones</unclear> of <lb/> Prince Lubomirski; (who by the bye <del>who</del> has <del>not<lb/> an</del> <add> a not</add> inelegant palace built within these 4 or 5 years<lb/> in the middle of the town, but locked up <add> the family being absent</add> and invisible<lb/> in the inside.) Over night, as an article <lb/> of news, <hi rend="underline">Ludwig</hi> had apprised me of his existence: <lb/> it struck me immediately, in spite of Ludwig's <sic>controuling</sic><lb/>judgment that a Russian Officer serving in <lb/> an inferior rank within the sphere on my Brother's <lb/> connections might be willing as well as able to be <lb/> of use to me. Having <gap/> station in the <gap/> <lb/> ample enough to receive my narrow bed, except the <lb/> State bedstead, a kind of portable trough, litter'd with <lb/> <sic>chopt</sic> straw, <del><gap/></del> which the Landlady <add> I have supposed</add> empty of <lb/> two children to receive me. I abandoned this luxury<lb/> to my faithful attendant, leaving him to bask in the <lb/> stove inhaling the fumes of <gap/> and in <gap/> <lb/> of his remonstrance <gap/> to a chamber place<lb/> Stable. there, climbing up into my <gap/> <lb/> wrapping me in my <gap/> around me<gap/> <lb/> as perfect a night's sleep as ever I enjoyed <gap/> <lb/> Lincolns Inn. He objected a frosty night <gap/><lb/> imperfect roof at least fifty feet high, in<lb/> the company of cattle: but I had already <gap/> <lb/> more time one night's sleep in colder-night's without<lb/> any other roof than that of the <hi rend="underline">Waggon</hi>, <lb/> and I him <hi rend="underline">Gulliver</hi> enough to prefer <hi rend="underline">Houkynms</hi> to <hi rend="underline">Yakvos</hi>. In the morning having taken<lb/> a breakfast of Yafrie bread and Yassi Coffee with <lb/> some <del><gap/></del> <add> rich</add> Chich<gap/> <gap/> <gap/> by a Jewish<lb/> pipkin, I dragged <hi rend="underline">Ludwig</hi> with me to the <lb/> <hi rend="underline">Major</hi>: he was not yet stirring but <unclear>rationing</unclear> a <lb/> while after to the charge, I found him visible.<lb/> He detained me to dinner while he bestirred himself<lb/> with great zeal to find out horses for me, though <lb/> eventually without effect. The company consisted of <lb/> his wife, <del><gap/></del> a Clerk called in Russian <sic>stile</sic> his <lb/><hi rend="underline">Cancillier</hi>, and I know not what Russian visitor:<lb/> a little Italian, of which our stick was equally<lb/> slender, enabled him and me to maintain some <lb/> sort of conversation. At parting, he gave me of his <lb/> own notion a letter to a person in authority at <unclear>Savira</unclear><lb/> to find me horses, and another of general recommendation<lb/> to a dependant of his <add> here</add> one Lictka, a <lb/> Jew, with whom <add> having a room to myself</add> I am much better lodged than <lb/> I could have been at any other house either here<lb/> or at Olviopol.</p> | ||
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{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} |
to Miaskoufka. Here
Here the difficulty of getting horses recommenced:
nor could it be overcome till the mid morning (Fri 12 Jan,)
about 3 or 4 o'clock when I set out with 6 horses
for Chechelnik. The 5 or if you please the 40
miles between Miaskoufka and that <gap/. town
took me till near the same hour in the afternoon.
Here as at Yassi, Religion intervened and put a
spell upon me. From one side of the Polish Ukraine
to the other not a Christian horse ever
stirs without a Jew-Broker to him give him motion.
Before such an arrival could be ferreted out, tho'
no time was lost in hunting him, the Sabbath
had begun: and it was not till the afternoon of the
next day (Sat: 13th) that Ludwig after tugging all
night long, tore a leaf out of the book of Mortimer,
and held up to the view of the astonished
inhabitants of Chechelnik the doctrine of "Every
"man his own Horse-broker." I arrived at Sauran,
a stage of equal length, travelling as usual in the
night, by 2 o'clock the next morning (Sun. 15 Jan.)
There by good fortune, though not without Jew assistance,
I in the compass of 2 hours I got horses
for this place. — From Chekanofka even until
Bohopol, not a space of not less than 144 miles
not an Inn have I enterd that has been
in any other hands than those of the race of
Israel: a people by inbred filthiness the worst
qualified, and by religious scruples, one should
think the least disposed, to engage in such a
business. — Would that our good friend, his late Lordship,
were sitting beside me (he knows what I mean)
I would relate to him at full length and in
sort, my entertainment among these levves. He and
I, on reading of the scrapes they used to get into in Hollingshead
have often joined in lamenting their hare
: enlighten'd by experience familiar
with vicarious punishment, I am now satisfied
that the sufferings of the forefathers were
no more than a just retribution for those which
the children have inflicted on me. — <foreign>Que fit allocenas,</foreign> that in all Poland, ( for it is the same in
other provinces as in this) a man can not get
a rag to cover him, nor a piece of black bread
to eat, nor a beast to carry him nor a hog-stie to lay his head in, but
he must have a Jew to help him to it? — Oh
but and (cried an old Polish Latin-talking Gentleman-traveller
to whom I gave a supper at
Miaskoufka) they have a head! — Yes, replied
I, "but it is a lousy one.". — If such is the superiority
of Jewish heads, what are nature Polish
ones. I have a theory less disgraceful to the body of
the nation. These interlopers form the < etat standing
in the gap between a people of holders Lords and a people
of
---page break---
of slaves, in a country not inviting enough to allure better
capitalists.
Before I take leave of Checkelnik it would be
gratitude not to commemorate a Russian Major, of
the name of Bibicoff, who redeemed me out of Jewish
Purgatory, and entertained me with the politeness of
a gentleman and the cordiality of a friend. He has
been stationed there these two years by the Admiralty
at Cherson, purveying wood from the Pemeones of
Prince Lubomirski; (who by the bye who has not
an a not inelegant palace built within these 4 or 5 years
in the middle of the town, but locked up the family being absent and invisible
in the inside.) Over night, as an article
of news, Ludwig had apprised me of his existence:
it struck me immediately, in spite of Ludwig's controuling
judgment that a Russian Officer serving in
an inferior rank within the sphere on my Brother's
connections might be willing as well as able to be
of use to me. Having station in the
ample enough to receive my narrow bed, except the
State bedstead, a kind of portable trough, litter'd with
chopt straw, which the Landlady I have supposed empty of
two children to receive me. I abandoned this luxury
to my faithful attendant, leaving him to bask in the
stove inhaling the fumes of and in
of his remonstrance to a chamber place
Stable. there, climbing up into my
wrapping me in my around me
as perfect a night's sleep as ever I enjoyed
Lincolns Inn. He objected a frosty night
imperfect roof at least fifty feet high, in
the company of cattle: but I had already
more time one night's sleep in colder-night's without
any other roof than that of the Waggon,
and I him Gulliver enough to prefer Houkynms to Yakvos. In the morning having taken
a breakfast of Yafrie bread and Yassi Coffee with
some rich Chich by a Jewish
pipkin, I dragged Ludwig with me to the
Major: he was not yet stirring but rationing a
while after to the charge, I found him visible.
He detained me to dinner while he bestirred himself
with great zeal to find out horses for me, though
eventually without effect. The company consisted of
his wife, a Clerk called in Russian stile his
Cancillier, and I know not what Russian visitor:
a little Italian, of which our stick was equally
slender, enabled him and me to maintain some
sort of conversation. At parting, he gave me of his
own notion a letter to a person in authority at Savira
to find me horses, and another of general recommendation
to a dependant of his here one Lictka, a
Jew, with whom having a room to myself I am much better lodged than
I could have been at any other house either here
or at Olviopol.
Identifier: | JB/540/243/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 540. |
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1786-01-16 |
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540 |
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243 |
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001 |
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Correspondence |
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Samuel Bentham |
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