Mr. Pepys to the Lord Mayor upon the present state of Christ-Hospital. To the Right Honourable Sir Humphry Edwin, Lord Mayor Pepys, Samuel, 1633-1703. 1698 Approx. 11 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 3 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2005-12 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). A54295 Wing P1451A ESTC R222471 99833638 99833638 38116 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A54295) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 38116) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 2175:13) Mr. Pepys to the Lord Mayor upon the present state of Christ-Hospital. To the Right Honourable Sir Humphry Edwin, Lord Mayor Pepys, Samuel, 1633-1703. Edwin, Humphrey, Sir, 1642-1707, recipient. [4] p. s.n., [London : 1698] Signatures: A.̲, Caption title. Signed: S. Pepys. Dated at head: Tuesday, Octob. 25. 1698. York-Buildings. Imprint from Wing. Copy stained. Reproduction of the original in the Bodleian Library, Oxford. Created by converting TCP files to TEI P5 using tcp2tei.xsl, TEI @ Oxford. Re-processed by University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Northwestern, with changes to facilitate morpho-syntactic tagging. Gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. 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Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Keying and markup guidelines are available at the Text Creation Partnership web site . eng Christ's Hospital (London, England) -- Early works to 1800. Orphans -- England -- London -- Early works to 1800. Charities -- England -- London -- Early works to 1800. 2005-05 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2005-06 Aptara Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2005-07 Mona Logarbo Sampled and proofread 2005-07 Mona Logarbo Text and markup reviewed and edited 2005-10 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion upon the State of Christ-Hospital . 〈…〉 per 1 Mr. PEPYS to the Lord Mayor Upon the Present State of CHRIST-HOSPITAL . To the Right Honourable Sir Humphry Edwin , Lord Mayor . Tuesday , Octob. 25. 1698. York-Buildings . My Lord , ANother Three Months are now run-out , and the whole twelve of your Lordship's Great Office at the Eve of their Expiring ; while our poor Orphans remain in the same reliefless State I left them in with your Lordship , in my Letter of the 5th . of April last . Wherein nothing more was propos'd of Trouble to your Lordship towards the remedying it ( and that too of your Lordship 's own seeking ) than the accompanying with your Authority my Report thereof to the Gentlemen of Christ-Hospital ( to whom it was specially directed ) and to the Body-Corporate of the City , which , as I have heretofore noted , stands originally answerable for the same , to the Crown . In neither of which , though abundantly apply'd-to in both , has your Lordship thought fit to express any regard to your Vndertaking to me . But so much the contrary ; as to have arraign'd my late Memorial to you concerning it ( even after your Own and the Court of Aldermen's solemn Thanks to me for it ) as a Libel , and the only Occasion of the No-Voice given your Lordship , at the late Parliament-Election for the City . And this deliver'd me from your Lordship , and my Lady Mayoress too , as your Joint-Message , by the same Worthy Citizen , and Member both of your Common Council and Hospital , whom your self was first pleased to employ to me , on those Pious Errands I was misled by , to the submitting the Execution of this Matter singly to your Lordship . My Lord , I shall not offer at the asking-after , or even aiming at the Ground of this your so extraordinary Dealing , in a Cause of so Religious an Import ; as leaving that to God , the City , and your Self , to be reckon'd-for . It shall suffice me , My Lord , to observe , That it has arisen from neither of those Causes , whereto the Court of Aldermen were led to joyn with your Lordship in the assigning it , and in the yet unperform'd Undertaking for its Recovery ; your Sickness , I mean , My Lord , and Sir Tho. Stamp's Absence . Give me leave only , to bewail the Consequences of it to the Poor ; whatever it may end-in to the City . Namely , the Continuance hereby occasion'd to the Imposure upon the Gentlemen of the Hospital ; whose better Information could not but e're this have produc'd some good Effects towards its Relief . Next , the more confirm'd Admission of their Methods , whose Interest ( and therefore Business ) it seems to be , to suppress that Information . And lastly , the rend'ring the Poverty , Disorders , and Impieties of the Place , so much less superable than they appear'd to me when first laid before your Lordship ; as to put me beyond all Hopes of their Redress , from any lower Hand than that of a Royal Visitation . The Power of which ( after so glorious a Proof of it as I have lately seen , to the lasting Honour of his Lordship , the present Lord Chancellor , in the Case of St. Katherines ) I cannot , on behalf of our distress'd Orphans , and in right to their Holy Benefactors , but bless Almighty God for ; and henceforward direct my self wholly to ; without offering either your Lordship , my Lord Elect your Honourable Successor , his Brethren the Court of Aldermen , the Gentlemen of the Hospital , or my Self , the Interruptions I have been so long driven , at the end of every Three Months , fruitlesly to repeat on this Subject . But apply my self to the speedy bringing-up to this Day what is now behind of my Report , for the Six Months your Lordship has thus unhappily added to the Time I had last adjusted it to , relating to the Moral Part of this House's Misery : In order to such Vse to be made thereof , as a like Royal Inspection may , I trust , find it convertible to . It remains ; That in taking my Leave of your Lordship ( which I would do with all the Respect due to your Lordship's Just Character ) I beg you to consider , Whether what I either have done , am now doing , or may have further to do , in Exposing my Observations and Sentiments in this Matter , be either more or other , than what my Cha●ge as a Governour obliges me to ; and what my self alone , through my closer Applications to the Service of the House , am inlighten'd to do ; or otherwhere , than by my immediate Duty I am bound ; or , which is yet more , in any other manner , than what is alone left me to do it in . Especially , after the Miscarriage of all other Methods ( Personal and Written ) employ'd by me with those I thought most concern'd to improve them ; whether at their Committees and Courts , or separately as Private Governours and Superior Ministers ; viz. the Treasurer , President , and last of all your Lordship , both alone , and in Conjunction with your Brethren the Aldermen : For preventing ( if possible ) the obvious Consequences of my being compell'd to the carrying them elsewhere . And even this too , with such a degree of Tenderness , as , after all that has been said of its being made the Entertainment of Coffee-houses , ( to the Offence , I find , of my Lady Mayoress as well as your Self , and not a little to my own too , for the sake of the Poor , ) to stand ready with a Reward of Five Pounds to whoever shall shew me any one of my Printed Copies , other than what were strictly deliver'd by Mr. Town-Clerk to Your Self , the Aldermen , and the Assistants of that Court ; and those severally indors'd by a Hand of my own , with the Name of each Person intitled to the same . And if this , My Lord , be a Libel ; I shall not undertake for its being my last , where nothing gentler will be hearken'd to ; rather than be conscious of an approaching Ruin to a Foundation like this I 'm concern'd for , and be Dumb. Next , My Lord , for avoiding any unnecessary Repetition of Trouble to the Court now sitting , where Your Lordship has yet the Honour of Presiding ; permit me to pray , That in the Notice you may see reasonable to take there , of this Paper : You will please to be its Remenbrancer , in what , for the Considerations assign'd in my last , I then bespoke its Favour in reference to the disburthening me of a Charge , in which I am at the end of any Hopes of seeing my self further serviceable . Lastly , let it be no Offence to Your Lordship , that I end with an Observation , impossible for me to over-look . Namely ; That while I am here lamenting the Misfortune of our Poor , from the Suppression of this Report of mine , calculated for their Relief ; I find so much of it ( and so much only ) as seemed to me the properest Introduction to it , in Advancement of Charity ; transferr'd in terminis to the Head of a Sermon and made the Text of it , preach'd before your Lordship , and published by Your Command , in express Diminution thereof . And not that only ; but to the doing violence to the Memory of One ( scarce yet Cold in his Grave ) whose Good Works have been too many and too conspicuous , not to have covered Errors of a much greater Magnitude ( for no Man thought him Infallible ) than any I hear him charg'd with . Especially , in a Point of Faith ; wherein 't is hard to say , which raised the greater Dust , and most to the offence of Weaker Eyes : His single Departure from the Doctrine of Our Church , towards the Wrong ; or that of our own Doctors from One another , in their Determinations touching the Right . So far only I shall adventure to interpose , in the particular Doctrine advanced in this Sermon by Your Lordship's Chaplain ( whom I take to be the first that ever raised it from that Text ) as with all deference to recommend it back to Your Lordship , with this only Improvement , for the rendring it more apposite and edifying in the present Case ; Viz. That the Neglect of the Poor is as little an Evidence of a True Faith , in any Body else ; as the Care of them is a Justification of a Mistaken one , in Mr. Fermin . I am , most respectfully , My LORD , Your Lordship 's most obedient Servant , S. Pepys .