Page:Beautiful and interesting account of the shepherd of Salisbury Plain.pdf/17

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go on quietly with their dinner, he could sit down. Though a good deal ashamed, they thought it most respect to obey the gentleman, who having cast his eye on their slender provisions, gently rebuked the Shepherd for not having indulged himself, as it was Sunday, with a morsel of bacon to relish his potatoes. The Shepherd said nothing, but poor Mary coloured and hung down her head, saying, indeed Sir, it is not my fault, I did beg my husband to allow himself a bit of meat out of your honours bounty, but he was too good to do it, and it is all for my fare. The Shepherd seemed unwilling to come to an explanation, but Mr Johnson desired Mary to go on. So she continued: You must know, Sir, that both of us, next to sin, dread a debt, and indeed, in some cases, a debt is a sin; but with all our care and pains we have never been able to quite pay off the doctor's bill, for that bad fit of the rheumatism which I had last winter.