"Why, to be sure I would," he rejoined. "Bein' a literary

cove I know summat o' history, and a king's life weren't all

lavender--not by no manner o' means, nor yet a bed o' roses."

"Yet there's much to be said for a king."

"Very little, I think," said the Tinker.

"A king has great advantages."

"Which he generally abuses," said the Tinker.

"There have been some great and noble kings."

"But a great many more bad 'uns!" said the Tinker.

"And then, look how often they got theirselves pisoned, or

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stabbed, or 'ad their 'eads chopped off! No--if you axes me, I

prefer to tinker a kettle under a hedge."

"Then you are contented?"

"Not quite," he answered, his face falling; "me being a literary

cove (as I think I've mentioned afore), it has always been my

wish to be a scholar."

"Far better be a tinker," said I.

"Young fellow," said the Tinker, shaking his head reprovingly,

"you're off the mark there--knowledge is power; why, Lord love my

eyes and limbs! what's finer than to be able to read in the Greek

and Latin?"

"To possess the capacity of earning an honest livelihood," said

I.

"Why, I tell you," continued the Tinker, unheeding my remark,

"I'd give this here left hand o' mine to be able to read the very

words of such men as Plato, Aristotle, Epictetus, Xenophon, and

all the rest of 'em."

"There are numerous translations," said I.

"Ah, to be sure!" sighed the Tinker, "but then, they are

translations."

"There are good translations as well as bad," said I.

"Maybe," returned the Tinker, "maybe, but a translation's only a

echo, after all, however good it be." As he spoke, he dived into

his pack and brought forth a book, which he handed to me. It was

a smallish volume in battered leathern covers, and had evidently

seen much long and hard service. Opening it at the title-page, I

read:

Epictetus

his

ENCHIRIDION

with

Simplicius

his

COMMENT.

Made English from the Greek

By

George Stanhope, late Fellow

Of King's College in Camb.

LONDON

Printed for Richard Sare at Gray's Inn Gate in Holborn

And Joseph Hindmarsh against the Exchange in Cornhill.

1649.

"You've read Epictetus, perhaps?" inquired the Tinker.

"I have."

"Not in the Greek, of course."

"Yes," said I, smiling, "though by dint of much labor."




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