The hermit: or, The unparalleled sufferings, and surprising adventures, of Philip Quarll, an Englishman: who was discovered by Mr. Dorrington, a Bristol merchant, upon an uninhabited island, in the South-Sea; where he lived about fifty years, without any human assistance Containing I. His conference with those who found him out; to whom he recites the most material circumstances of his life: as that he was born in the parish of St. Giles, educated by the charitable contribution of a lady, and put apprentice to a lock-smith. II. How he left his master, and took up with a notorious house breaker, who was hanged; how, after his escape, he went to sea a cabin boy, married a famous whore, listed himself a common soldier, turned a singing master, and married three wives, for which he was tried and condemned at the Baily. III. How he was pardoned by K. Charles II turned merchant, and was shipwrecked on a desolate island on the coast of Mexico.

People / Organizations
Imprint
[Boston]: Printed at the Apollo Press, in Boston, by Joseph Belknap, MDCCXCV. [1795]
Publication year
1795-1795
ESTC No.
W20437
Grub Street ID
330111
Description
208p. ; 12⁰
Note
Caption title: The English hermit.

Signed on p. 208: Ed. Dorrington. Attributed to Longueville in: Esdail, Arundell. "Author and publisher in 1727. 'The English hermit."' The library, 4th ser., v. 2, p. 185-192. Attributed to Alexander Bicknell by Evans.

"On the hermit's solitude."--p. [3]-4, in verse.
Uncontrolled note
Signatures: A-M? N-Q?