part8-第2节
按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
that I had forfeited all hope of any happiness in the eternity
that I was just going to enter into; and on the contrary was
entitled to all that was miserable; or had been conceived of
misery; and all this with the frightful addition of its being
also eternal。
I am not capable of reading lectures of instruction to anybody;
but I relate this in the very manner in which things then
appeared to me; as far as I am able; but infinitely short of the
lively impressions which they made on my soul at that time;
indeed; those impressions are not to be explained by words;
or if they are; I am not mistress of words enough to express
them。 It must be the work of every sober reader to make just
reflections on them; as their own circumstances may direct;
and; without question; this is what every one at some time or
other may feel something of; I mean; a clearer sight into things
to come than they had here; and a dark view of their own
concern in them。
But I go back to my own case。 The minister pressed me to
tell him; as far as I though convenient; in what state I found
myself as to the sight I had of things beyond life。 He told me
he did not come as ordinary of the place; whose business it
is to extort confessions from prisoners; for private ends; or
for the further detecting of other offenders; that his business
was to move me to such freedom of discourse as might serve
to disburthen my own mind; and furnish him to administer
comfort to me as far as was in his power; and assured me;
that whatever I said to him should remain with him; and be
as much a secret as if it was known only to God and myself;
and that he desired to know nothing of me; but as above to
qualify him to apply proper advice and assistance to me; and
to pray to God for me。
This honest; friendly way of treating me unlocked all the
sluices of my passions。 He broke into my very soul by it; and
I unravelled all the wickedness of my life to him。 In a word; I
gave him an abridgment of this whole history; I gave him a
picture of my conduct for fifty years in miniature。
I hid nothing from him; and he in return exhorted me to sincere
repentance; explained to me what he meant by repentance; and
then drew out such a scheme of infinite mercy; proclaimed
from heaven to sinners of the greatest magnitude; that he left
me nothing to say; that looked like despair; or doubting of
being accepted; and in this condition he left me the first night。
He visited me again the next morning; and went on with his
method of explaining the terms of divine mercy; which
according to him consisted of nothing more; or more difficult;
than that of being sincerely desirous of it; and willing to accept
it; only a sincere regret for; and hatred of; those things I had
done; which rendered me so just an object of divine vengeance。
I am not able to repeat the excellent discourses of this
extraordinary man; 'tis all that I am able to do; to say that he
revived my heart; and brought me into such a condition that
I never knew anything of in my life before。 I was covered
with shame and tears for things past; and yet had at the same
time a secret surprising joy at the prospect of being a true
penitent; and obtaining the comfort of a penitentI mean; the
hope of being forgiven; and so swift did thoughts circulate;
and so high did the impressions they had made upon me run;
that I thought I could freely have gone out that minute to
execution; without any uneasiness at all; casting my soul
entirely into the arms of infinite mercy as a penitent。
The good gentleman was so moved also in my behalf with a
view of the influence which he saw these things had on me;
that he blessed God he had come to visit me; and resolved not
to leave me till the last moment; that is; not to leave visiting me。
It was no less than twelve days after our receiving sentence
before any were ordered for execution; and then upon a
Wednesday the dead warrant; as they call it; came down; and
I found my name was among them。 A terrible blow this was
to my new resolutions; indeed my heart sank within me; and
I swooned away twice; one after another; but spoke not a word。
The good minister was sorely afflicted for me; and did what he
could to comfort me with the same arguments; and the same
moving eloquence that he did before; and left me not that
evening so long as the prisonkeepers would suffer him to stay
in the prison; unless he would be locked up with me all night;
which he was not willing to be。
I wondered much that I did not see him all the next day; it
being the day before the time appointed for execution; and I
was greatly discouraged; and dejected in my mind; and indeed
almost sank for want of the comfort which he had so often;
and with such success; yielded me on his former visits。 I
waited with great impatience; and under the greatest oppressions
of spirits imaginable; till about four o'clock he came to my
apartment; for I had obtained the favour; by the help of money;
nothing being to be done in that place without it; not to be
kept in the condemned hole; as they call it; among the rest of
the prisoners who were to die; but to have a little dirty
chamber to myself。
My heart leaped within me for joy when I heard his voice at
the door; even before I saw him; but let any one judge what
kind of motion I found in my soul; when after having made a
short excuse for his not coming; he showed me that his time
had been employed on my account; that he had obtained a
favourable report from the Recorder to the Secretary of State
in my particular case; and; in short; that he had brought me
a reprieve。
He used all the caution that he was able in letting me know
a thing which it would have been a double cruelty to have
concealed; and yet it was too much for me; for as grief had
overset me before; so did joy overset me now; and I fell into
a much more dangerous swooning than I did at first; and it
was not without a great difficulty that I was recovered at all。
The good man having made a very Christian exhortation to
me; not to let the joy of my reprieve put the remembrance of
my past sorrow out of my mind; and having told me that he
must leave me; to go and enter the reprieve in the books; and
show it to the sheriffs; stood up just before his going away;
and in a very earnest manner prayed to God for me; that my
repentance might be made unfeigned and sincere; and that
my coming back; as it were; into life again; might not be a
returning to the follies of life which I had made such solemn
resolutions to forsake; and to repent of them。 I joined heartily
in the petition; and must needs say I had deeper impressions
upon my mind all that night; of the mercy of God in sparing
my life; and a greater detestation of my past sins; from a sense
of the goodness which I had tasted in this case; than I had in
all my sorrow before。
This may be thought inconsistent in itself; and wide from the
business of this book; particularly; I reflect that many of those
who may be pleased and diverted with the relation of the wild
and wicked part of my story may not relish this; which is
really the best part of my life; the most advantageous to myself;
and the most instructive to others。 Such; however; will; I hope;
allow me the liberty to make my story complete。 It would be
a severe satire on such to say they do not relish the repentance
as much as they do the crime; and that they had rather the
history were a complete tragedy; as it was very likely to have been。
But I go on with my relation。 The next morning there was a
sad scene indeed in the prison。 The first thing I was saluted
with in the morning was the tolling of the great bell at St。
Sepulchre's; as they call it; which ushered in the day。 As soon
as it began to toll; a dismal groaning and crying was heard
from the condemned hole; where there lay six poor souls who
were to be executed that day; some from one crime; some for
another; and two of them for murder。
This was followed by a confused clamour in the house; among
the several sorts of prisoners; expressing their awkward sorrows
for the poor creatures that were to die; but in a manner extremely
differing one from another。 Some cried for them; some huzzaed;
and wished them a good journey; some damned and cursed those
that had brought them to itthat is; meaning the evidence; or
prosecutorsmany pitying them; and some few; but very few;
praying for them。
There was hardly room for so much composure of mind as
was required for me to bless the merciful Providence that had;
as it were; snatched me out of the jaws of this destruction。 I
remained; as it were; dumb and silent; overcome with the
sense of it; and not able to express what I had in my heart; for
the