[The Romany Rye by George Borrow]@TWC D-Link bookThe Romany Rye CHAPTER XLI 16/29
He begged me to give over all unlawful pursuits, saying, that if persisted in, they were sure of bringing a person to destruction.
I advised him to try and make his escape: proposing, that when the turnkey came to let me out, he should knock him down, and fight his way out, offering to assist him; showing him a small saw, with which one of our companions, who was in the neighbourhood, had provided me, and with which he could have cut through his fetters in five minutes; but he told me he had no wish to escape, and was quite willing to die.
I was rather hard at that time; I am not very soft now; and I felt rather ashamed of my father's want of what I called spirit.
He was not executed after all; for the chaplain, who was connected with a great family, stood his friend, and got his sentence commuted, as they call it, to transportation; and in order to make the matter easy, he induced my father to make some valuable disclosures with respect to the smashers' system.
I confess that I would have been hanged before I would have done so, after having reaped the profit of it; that is, I think so now, seated comfortably in my inn, with my bottle of champagne before me.
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