Not that I mean to assert that the judges
 of Portugal Street are hard upon the
embarrassed tradesman, or the involved young
 gentleman whose ignorance of the world and
 refined tastes have led him into temporary
 pecuniary difficulties: common gratitude, if
 no higher feeling, restrains me from spreading
such an erroneous and unjust impression.
 Portugal Street is good, but—and I speak
from experience, for I have tried both—
White Washerton is better. I should not
recommend Harrogate for medicinal waters; I
 should not recommend Melton Mowbray for
 pork pies—Banbury for tarts—Epping for
 sausages—or Chichester for rumpsteak
puddings; but, for a perfect, easy, and rapid
 relief from a mass of insolvent debt,
combined with rural life, field sports, and the
advantages of neighbouring marine bathing, I
 know of no place like White Washerton under
 the sun. To call the judge who presides over
 White Washerton insolvents, kind, gentlemanly,
and lenient, is to use terms too weak
 to convey the proper idea of his treatment of
 them. He is thoughtful for the debtor;
 sympathising for the debtor; and fatherly to
 the debtor. It may be—and report says it is
—that he has himself suffered from the
obtrusive competition of trade, and knows how
 difficult it is to resist the overwhelming
 flood of wines, clothes, jewels, and cash, that
 sweeps over the young man of position. In
 every dashing young insolvent who comes
 before him, he sees a reflected picture of his
 own youth; in every opposing creditor, a
 copy of the two-faced harpies—fawning on
 one side, snarling on the other—who
alternately wheedled and threatened him when
 he was a petitioner in a similar court to that
 in which he now presides as a judge. It
 may be, that the receipt of a large annual
 salary for little work, developes the benevolent
side of a man's character, and causes
 him to serve out large quantities of that
 unstrained mercy which blesses the giver,
 without taking anything out of his pocket.
 Any way, explain it how we will, or leave it
 unexplained, White Washerton, in
addition to all its various local advantages,
 possesses an insolvent commissioner whose
 Christian charity requires only to be fully
 known, to leave Portugal Street a barren
 waste, and the metropolitan Dracos biting
 their solitary nails in the awful silence of a
 deserted law-court. I may be unwise in
 communicating my knowledge to the indebted
 public in general; but a strong desire to
 benefit my fellow-creatures has overcome
 every selfish consideration, and I record my
 experiences regardless of the results.
At ten, thirty, A.M., this morning, I stood
 in the streets of White Washerton a debtor
 to the extent of from forty to fifty thousand
 pounds. At six, thirty, P.M., this evening, I
 am sitting waiting for dinner, in the bow
 window of the Racket Club, as free from
 debt as the crossing-sweeper before the door.
 There has been no personal annoyance from
 the idle curiosity of friends; there is no
irritating report in the copy of the evening
 newspaper which I hold in my hand: I have
 drunk the legal waters of oblivion, far from
 the prying eyes of obtruding witnesses, in
 the tree-shadowed Court of the rural city of
 White Washerton; and as I left an altered
 man, in a first-class express carriage in the
 middle of the day, I saw in an over-due
Parliamentary train, the stern faces of some of
 my dilatory creditors, who had made up
 their minds to oppose at the eleventh hour,
 when my examination had closed soon
 after the tenth. The way in which all
 this was arranged shall be immediately
 explained.
When I was in a most embarrassing
 position; with so many writs served upon
 me, that I could not distinguish the several
 suits; those for wine, from those for jewels;
 those for money debts of my own, from
liabilities entered into to oblige obliging friends—
my eye rested, one morning at breakfast,
 upon the following advertisement in the
 colums of a leading paper:
To THE EMBARRASSED.—How many a noble-hearted
 young man has sunk into an early grave under the
 oppressive load of accumulated debt, and all for the
 want of a little timely advice and assistance! Let all
 those who are suffering from pecuniary embarrassments,
and who wish to be relieved without
publicity or personal annoyance, apply at once to Mr.
 Ledger, negotiator, No. 2, Paradise Gardens, Gray's
 Inn Lane.
I need scarcely say that I applied at once
 to Mr. Ledger, and found him a very shrewd,
 affable, agreeable, comforting, business man.
 I laid a plain statement of my affairs before
 him, and we soon found that everything
 was on what he called the debit, and
 nothing (except just enough to pay expenses)
 on what he also called the credit side.
 That night (this is only ten days ago) I went
 down by arrangement to White Washerton,
 and took prepared lodgings at the house
 of a brother of Mr. Ledger's—Mr. Erasmus
Ledger, Solicitor, Tin Square. I found
 everything very elegant and comfortable.
 Miss Ledger sang Italian songs, and played
 German sonatas to amuse us of an evening;
and, in the day, I took exercise with
 the cricket-club, or joined pic-nic parties
 with the young lady and her friends. How
 different was all this from the gloomy Jewish
 sponging-houses of Chancery Lane! I had
 all the comforts of society and a home, while
 I was acquiring by residence the rights of a
 White Washerton citizen.
Two days of this agreeable life was
sufficient to complete the first stage in the
 Ledger process; and, at the end of this time,
 it was necessary that I should be arrested.
 I was arrested at the hands of an intimate
 friend, and lodged in the clean, well-ventilated
 gaol of White Washerton for five days; which
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