Capitolo 23
converted that looks for education and suggestion. Berridge, noticing his/her foreigner
you accent, churches to him his/her nationality.
"A Swiss from the Canton to Drink of it", it was the replica.
"To Drink of it! Ah, then you can give me some account of a youth
farmer of the Your, a John Fletcher that you/he/she has lately preached some
times for the Mr. Wesleys, and of which the talents, the culture and the pity
them double they speak to terms of tall praise. Does he/she know him/it?"
"I intimately know him/it, and it made those gentlemen they know him/it how well their
he/she would not speak of him to such terms for which he is forced more
their partial friendship that to his/her his/her own worths", it was the unexpected one
replica.
"You catch me", objected Berridge "in to so coldly speak of a
farmer in which it praises them they are so warm."
"I have the best of reasons to speak of him as me I do--I am John
Fletcher."
Berridge melted to this, and he/she insisted to the his I occupy his/her pulpit
the following morning. For the Fletcher of three days he/she remained to Everton,
connected there by the Countess of Huntingdon and two notorious
ecclesiastical, Martin Madan and Henry Venn. The services were, perforce,
held in the all'aria opened, for on the the ten thousand people of third day
gathered to feel the word of God. Many fell to the overpowered earth
from the influence of the Spirit, and numbers cried for the mercy.
The life of Fletcher as a guardian now ended. The Mr. Hill was extremely anxious
trarrlo profit, and to this end he/she offered him the living one of Dunham, in
Cheshire, explaining that duty was light, the income £400 for year
(a good sum in those days), and the delicious surrounding country.
"Dunham won't be all right me", Fletcher quietly said; there is too much
money and too much few works."
"What will we do? Would it appreciate Madeley? My nephew is the patron,
and I am sure the present Vicar it would be only too happy to exchange him/it
for anything so good as Dunham."