The hermit: or, the unparalleled sufferings, and surprizing adventures, of Philip Quarll, and Englishman: who was discovered by Mr. Dorrington, a Bristol merchant, upon an uninhabited island, in the South-Sea; where he lived above 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 'prentice to a locksmith. 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. With a curious frontispiece
  
  
    
      
    
    
      - People / Organizations
 
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      - Imprint
 
      - 
        London: printed for the book-sellers, 1790.
        
          The fifth edition.; ..
        
      
 
    
    
    - Publication year
 
    - 1790
 
    
      - ESTC No.
 
      - T106469
 
    
    - Grub Street ID
 
    - 159623
 
    
      - Description
 
      - iv,272p.,plate ; 12°.
 
    
    
      - Note
 
      - Purporting to be by E. Dorrington. In fact by Peter Longueville
 Sometimes also attributed to Alexander Bicknell.