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  • Project Gutenberg's Clarissa, Volume 5 (of 9), by Samuel Richardson
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  • Title: Clarissa, Volume 5 (of 9)
  • Author: Samuel Richardson
  • Release Date: January 23, 2004 [EBook #10799]
  • Language: English
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CLARISSA, VOLUME 5 (OF 9) ***
  • Produced by Julie C. Sparks
  • CLARISSA HARLOWE
  • or the
  • HISTORY OF A YOUNG LADY
  • Nine Volumes
  • Volume V.
  • CONTENTS OF VOLUME V
  • LETTER I. Lovelace to Belford.--
  • An agreeable airing with the lady. Delightfully easy she. Obsequiously
  • respectful he. Miss Howe's plot now no longer his terror. Gives the
  • particulars of their agreeable conversation while abroad.
  • LETTER II. From the same.--
  • An account of his ipecacuanha plot. Instructs Dorcas how to act surprise
  • and terror. Monosyllables and trisyllables to what likened. Politeness
  • lives not in a storm. Proclamation criers. The lady now sees she loves
  • him. Her generous tenderness for him. He has now credit for a new
  • score. Defies Mrs. Townsend.
  • LETTER III. Clarissa to Miss Howe.--
  • Acknowledged tenderness for Lovelace. Love for a man of errors
  • punishable.
  • LETTER IV. Lovelace to Belford.--
  • Suspicious inquiry after him and the lady by a servant in livery from one
  • Captain Tomlinson. Her terrors on the occasion. His alarming
  • management. She resolves not to stir abroad. He exults upon her not
  • being willing to leave him.
  • LETTER V. VI. From the same.--
  • Arrival of Captain Tomlinson, with a pretended commission from Mr. John
  • Harlowe to set on foot a general reconciliation, provided he can be
  • convinced that they are actually married. Different conversations on this
  • occasion.--The lady insists that the truth be told to Tomlinson. She
  • carries her point through to the disappointment of one of his private
  • views. He forms great hopes of success from the effects of his
  • ipecacuanha contrivance.
  • LETTER VII. Lovelace to Belford.--
  • He makes such a fair representation to Tomlinson of the situation between
  • him and the lady, behaves so plausibly, and makes an overture so
  • generous, that she is all kindness and unreserved to him. Her affecting
  • exultation on her amended prospects. His unusual sensibility upon it.
  • Reflection on the good effects of education. Pride an excellent
  • substitute to virtue.
  • LETTER VIII. From the same.--
  • Who Tomlinson is. Again makes Belford object, in order to explain his
  • designs by answering the objections. John Harlowe a sly sinner. Hard-
  • hearted reasons for giving the lady a gleam of joy. Illustrated by a
  • story of two sovereigns at war.
  • Extracts from Clarissa's letter to Miss Howe. She rejoices in her
  • present agreeable prospects. Attributes much to Mr. Hickman. Describes
  • Captain Tomlinson. Gives a character of Lovelace, [which is necessary to
  • be attended to: especially by those who have thought favourably of him
  • for some of his liberal actions, and hardly of her for the distance she
  • at first kept him at.]
  • LETTER IX. Lovelace to Belford.--
  • Letter from Lord M. His further arts and precautions. His happy day
  • promised to be soon. His opinion of the clergy, and of going to church.
  • She pities every body who wants pity. Loves every body. He owns he
  • should be the happiest of men, could he get over his prejudices against
  • matrimony. Draughts of settlements. Ludicrously accounts for the reason
  • why she refuses to hear them read to her. Law and gospel two different
  • things. Sally flings her handkerchief in his face.
  • LETTER X. From the same.--
  • Has made the lady more than once look about her. She owns that he is
  • more than indifferent to her. Checks him with sweetness of temper for
  • his encroaching freedoms. Her proof of true love. He ridicules marriage
  • purity. Severely reflects upon public freedoms between men and their
  • wives. Advantage he once made upon such an occasion. Has been after a
  • license. Difficulty in procuring one. Great faults and great virtues
  • often in the same person. He is willing to believe that women have no
  • souls. His whimsical reasons.
  • LETTER XI. Lovelace to Belford.--
  • Almost despairs of succeeding (as he had hoped) by love and gentleness.
  • Praises her modesty. His encroaching freedoms resented by her. The
  • woman, he observes, who resents not initiatory freedoms, must be lost.
  • He reasons, in his free way, upon her delicacy. Art of the Eastern
  • monarchs.
  • LETTER XII. From the same.--
  • A letter from Captain Tomlinson makes all up. Her uncle Harlowe's
  • pretended proposal big with art and plausible delusion. She acquiesces
  • in it. He writes to the pretended Tomlinson, on an affecting hint of
  • her's, requesting that her uncle Harlowe would, in person, give his niece
  • to him; or permit Tomlinson to be his proxy on the occasion.--And now for
  • a little of mine, he says, which he has ready to spring.
  • LETTER XIII. Belford to Lovelace.--
  • Again earnestly expostulates with him in the lady's favour. Remembers
  • and applauds the part she bore in the conversation at his collation. The
  • frothy wit of libertines how despicable. Censures the folly, the
  • weakness, the grossness, the unpermanency of sensual love. Calls some of
  • his contrivances trite, stale, and poor. Beseeches him to remove her
  • from the vile house. How many dreadful stories could the horrid Sinclair
  • tell the sex! Serious reflections on the dying state of his uncle.
  • LETTER XIV. Lovelace to Belford.--
  • Cannot yet procure a license. Has secured a retreat, if not victory.
  • Defends in anger the simplicity of his inventive contrivances. Enters
  • upon his general defence, compared with the principles and practices of
  • other libertines. Heroes and warlike kings worse men than he. Epitome
  • of his and the lady's story after ten years' cohabitation. Caution to
  • those who would censure him. Had the sex made virtue a recommendation to
  • their favour, he says, he should have had a greater regard to his morals
  • than he has had.
  • LETTER XV. From the same.--
  • Preparative to his little mine, as he calls it. Loves to write to the
  • moment. Alarm begins. Affectedly terrified.
  • LETTER XVI. From the same.--
  • The lady frighted out of her bed by dreadful cries of fire. She awes him
  • into decency. On an extorted promise of forgiveness, he leaves her.
  • Repenting, he returns; but finds her door fastened. What a triumph has
  • her sex obtained by her virtue! But how will she see him next morning,
  • as he has given her.
  • LETTER XVII. Lovelace to Belford.--
  • Dialogue with Clarissa, the door between them. Her letter to him. She
  • will not see him for a week.
  • LETTER XVIII. From the same.--
  • Copies of letters that pass between them. Goes to the commons to try to
  • get the license. She shall see him, he declares, on his return. Love
  • and compassion hard to be separated. Her fluctuating reasons on their
  • present situation. Is jealous of her superior qualities. Does justice
  • to her immovable virtue.
  • LETTER XIX. From the same.--
  • The lady escaped. His rage. Makes a solemn vow of revenge, if once more
  • he gets her into his power. His man Will. is gone in search of her. His
  • hopes; on what grounded. He will advertise her. Describes her dress.
  • Letter left behind her. Accuses her (that is to say, LOVELACE accuses
  • her,) of niceness, prudery, affectation.
  • LETTER XX. From the same.--
  • A letter from Miss Howe to Clarissa falls into his hands; which, had it
  • come to her's, would have laid open and detected all his designs. In it
  • she acquits Clarissa of prudery, coquetry, and undue reserve. Admires,
  • applauds, blesses her for the example she has set for her sex, and for
  • the credit she has done it, by her conduct in the most difficult
  • situations.
  • [This letter may be considered as a kind of summary of Clarissa's trials,
  • her persecutions, and exemplary conduct hitherto; and of Mr. Lovelace's
  • intrigues, plots, and views, so far as Miss Howe could be supposed to
  • know them, or to guess at them.]
  • A letter from Lovelace, which farther shows the fertility of his
  • contriving genius.
  • LETTER XXI. Clarissa to Miss Howe.--
  • Informs her of Lovelace's villany, and of her escape. Her only concern,
  • what. The course she intends to pursue.
  • LETTER XXII. Lovelace to Belford.--
  • Exults on hearing, from his man Will., that the lady has refuged herself
  • at Hampstead. Observations in a style of levity on some passages in the
  • letter she left behind her. Intimates that Tomlinson is arrived to aid
  • his purposes. The chariot is come; and now, dressed like a bridegroom,
  • attended by a footman she never saw, he is already, he says, at
  • Hampstead.
  • LETTER XXIII. XXIV. Lovelace to Belford.--
  • Exults on his contrivances.--By what means he gets into the lady's
  • presence at Mrs. Moore's. Her terrors, fits, exclamations. His
  • plausible tales to Mrs. Moore and Miss Rawlins. His intrepid behaviour
  • to the lady. Copies of letters from Tomlinson, and of pretended ones
  • from his own relations, calculated to pacify and delude her.
  • LETTER XXV. XXVI. From the same.--
  • His farther arts, inventions, and intrepidity. She puts home questions
  • to him. 'Ungenerous and ungrateful she calls him. He knows not the
  • value of the heart he had insulted. He had a plain path before him,
  • after he had tricked her out of her father's house! But that now her
  • mind was raised above fortune, and above him.' His precautionary
  • contrivances.
  • LETTER XXVII. XXVIII. XXX. XXXI. XXXII. From the same.--
  • Character of widow Bevis. Prepossesses the women against Miss Howe.
  • Leads them to think she is in love with him. Apt himself to think so;
  • and why. Women like not novices; and why. Their vulgar aphorism
  • animadverted on. Tomlinson arrives. Artful conversation between them.
  • Miss Rawlins's prudery. His forged letter in imitation of Miss Howe's,
  • No. IV. Other contrivances to delude the lady, and attach the women to
  • his party.
  • LETTER XXXIII. XXXIV. XXXV. XXXVI. From the same.--
  • Particulars of several interesting conversations between himself,
  • Tomlinson, and the lady. Artful management of the two former. Her noble
  • spirit. He tells Tomlinson before her that he never had any proof of
  • affection from her. She frankly owns the regard she once had for him.
  • 'He had brought her,' she tells Tomlinson and him, 'more than once to own
  • it to him. Nor did his own vanity, she was sure, permit him to doubt of
  • it. He had kept her soul in suspense an hundred times.' Both men
  • affected in turn by her noble behaviour, and great sentiments. Their
  • pleas, prayers, prostrations, to move her to relent. Her distress.
  • THE HISTORY
  • OF
  • CLARISSA HARLOWE
  • LETTER I
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • FRIDAY EVENING.
  • Just returned from an airing with my charmer, complied with after great
  • importunity. She was attended by the two nymphs. They both topt their
  • parts; kept their eyes within bounds; made moral reflections now-and-
  • then. O Jack! what devils are women, when all tests are got over, and we
  • have completely ruined them!
  • The coach carried us to Hampstead, to Highgate, to Muswell-hill; back to
  • Hampstead to the Upper-Flask: there, in compliment to the nymphs, my
  • beloved consented to alight, and take a little repast. Then home early
  • by Kentish-town.
  • Delightfully easy she, and so respectful and obliging I, all the way, and
  • as we walked out upon the heath, to view the variegated prospects which
  • that agreeable elevation affords, that she promised to take now-and-then
  • a little excursion with me. I think, Miss Howe, I think, said I to
  • myself, every now-and-then as we walked, that thy wicked devices are
  • superceded.
  • But let me give thee a few particulars of our conversation in the
  • circumrotation we took, while in the coach--She had received a letter
  • from Miss Howe yesterday, I presumed?
  • She made no answer. How happy should I think myself to be admitted into
  • their correspondence? I would joyfully make an exchange of
  • communications.
  • So, though I hoped not to succeed by her consent, [and little did she
  • think I had so happily in part succeeded without it,] I thought it not
  • amiss to urge for it, for several reasons: among others, that I might
  • account to her for my constant employment at my pen; in order to take off
  • her jealousy, that she was the subject of thy correspondence and mine:
  • and that I might justify my secrecy and uncommunicativeness by her own.
  • I proceeded therefore--That I loved familiar-letter-writing, as I had
  • more than once told her, above all the species of writing: it was writing
  • from the heart, (without the fetters prescribed by method or study,) as
  • the very word cor-respondence implied. Not the heart only; the soul was
  • in it. Nothing of body, when friend writes to friend; the mind impelling
  • sovereignly the vassal-fingers. It was, in short, friendship recorded;
  • friendship given under hand and seal; demonstrating that the parties were
  • under no apprehension of changing from time or accident, when they so
  • liberally gave testimonies, which would always be ready, on failure or
  • infidelity, to be turned against them.--For my own part, it was the
  • principal diversion I had in her absence; but for this innocent
  • amusement, the distance she so frequently kept me at would have been
  • intolerable.
  • Sally knew my drift; and said, She had had the honour to see two or three
  • of my letters, and of Mr. Belford's; and she thought them the most
  • entertaining that she had ever read.
  • My friend Belford, I said, had a happy talent in the letter-writing way;
  • and upon all subjects.
  • I expected my beloved would have been inquisitive after our subject: but
  • (lying perdue, as I saw) not a word said she. So I touched upon this
  • article myself.
  • Our topics were various and diffuse: sometimes upon literary articles
  • [she was very attentive upon this]; sometimes upon the public
  • entertainments; sometimes amusing each other with the fruits of the
  • different correspondencies we held with persons abroad, with whom we
  • had contracted friendships; sometimes upon the foibles and perfections
  • of our particular friends; sometimes upon our own present and future
  • hopes; sometimes aiming at humour and raillery upon each other.--It might
  • indeed appear to savour of vanity, to suppose my letters would entertain
  • a lady of her delicacy and judgment: but yet I could not but say, that
  • perhaps she would be far from thinking so hardly of me as sometimes she
  • had seemed to do, if she were to see the letters which generally passed
  • between Mr. Belford and me [I hope, Jack, thou hast more manners, than to
  • give me the lie, though but in thy heart].
  • She then spoke: after declining my compliment in such a manner, as only a
  • person can do, who deserved it, she said, For her part, she had always
  • thought me a man of sense [a man of sense, Jack! What a niggardly
  • praise!],--and should therefore hope, that, when I wrote, it exceeded
  • even my speech: for that it was impossible, be the letters written in as
  • easy and familiar a style as they would, but that they must have that
  • advantage from sitting down to write them which prompt speech could not
  • always have. She should think it very strange therefore, if my letters
  • were barren of sentiment; and as strange, if I gave myself liberties upon
  • premeditation, which could have no excuse at all, but from a
  • thoughtlessness, which itself wanted excuse.--But if Mr. Belford's
  • letters and mine were upon subjects so general, and some of them equally
  • (she presumed) instructive and entertaining, she could not but say, that
  • she should be glad to see any of them; and particularly those which Miss
  • Martin had seen and praised.
  • This was put close.
  • I looked at her, to see if I could discover any tincture of jealousy in
  • this hint; that Miss Martin had seen what I had not shown to her. But
  • she did not look it: so I only said, I should be very proud to show her
  • not only those, but all that passed between Mr. Belford and me; but I
  • must remind her, that she knew the condition.
  • No, indeed! with a sweet lip pouted out, as saucy as pretty; implying a
  • lovely scorn, that yet can only be lovely in youth so blooming, and
  • beauty so divinely distinguished.
  • How I long to see such a motion again! Her mouth only can give it.
  • But I am mad with love--yet eternal will be the distance, at the rate I
  • go on: now fire, now ice, my soul is continually upon the hiss, as I may
  • say. In vain, however, is the trial to quench--what, after all, is
  • unquenchable.
  • Pr'ythee, Belford, forgive my nonsense, and my Vulcan-like metaphors--Did
  • I not tell thee, not that I am sick of love, but that I am mad with it?
  • Why brought I such an angel into such a house? into such company?--And
  • why do I not stop my ears to the sirens, who, knowing my aversion to
  • wedlock, are perpetually touching that string?
  • I was not willing to be answered so easily: I was sure, that what passed
  • between two such young ladies (friends so dear) might be seen by every
  • body: I had more reason than any body to wish to see the letters that
  • passed between her and Miss Howe; because I was sure they must be full of
  • admirable instruction, and one of the dear correspondents had deigned to
  • wish my entire reformation.
  • She looked at me as if she would look me through: I thought I felt eye-
  • beam, after eye-beam, penetrate my shivering reins.--But she was silent.
  • Nor needed her eyes the assistance of speech.
  • Nevertheless, a little recovering myself, I hoped that nothing unhappy
  • had befallen either Miss Howe or her mother. The letter of yesterday
  • sent by a particular hand: she opening it with great emotion--seeming to
  • have expected it sooner--were the reasons for my apprehensions.
  • We were then at Muswell-hill: a pretty country within the eye, to Polly,
  • was the remark, instead of replying to me.
  • But I was not so to be answered--I should expect some charming subjects
  • and characters from two such pens: I hoped every thing went on well
  • between Mr. Hickman and Miss Howe. Her mother's heart, I said, was set
  • upon that match: Mr. Hickman was not without his merits: he was what the
  • ladies called a SOBER man: but I must needs say, that I thought Miss Howe
  • deserved a husband of a very different cast!
  • This, I supposed, would have engaged her into a subject from which I
  • could have wiredrawn something:--for Hickman is one of her favourites--
  • why, I can't divine, except for the sake of opposition of character to
  • that of thy honest friend.
  • But she cut me short by a look of disapprobation, and another cool remark
  • upon a distant view; and, How far off, Miss Horton, do you think that
  • clump of trees may be? pointing out of the coach.--So I had done.
  • Here endeth all I have to write concerning our conversation on this our
  • agreeable airing.
  • We have both been writing ever since we came home. I am to be favoured
  • with her company for an hour, before she retires to rest.
  • All that obsequious love can suggest, in order to engage her tenderest
  • sentiments for me against tomorrow's sickness, will I aim at when we
  • meet. But at parting will complain of a disorder in my stomach.
  • ***
  • We have met. All was love and unexceptionable respect on my part. Ease
  • and complaisance on her's. She was concerned for my disorder. So
  • sudden!--Just as we parted! But it was nothing. I should be quite well
  • by the morning.
  • Faith, Jack, I think I am sick already. Is it possible for such a giddy
  • fellow as me to persuade myself to be ill! I am a better mimic at this
  • rate than I wish to be. But every nerve and fibre of me is always ready
  • to contribute its aid, whether by health or by ailment, to carry a
  • resolved-on roguery into execution.
  • Dorcas has transcribed for me the whole letter of Miss Howe, dated
  • Sunday, May 14,* of which before I had only extracts. She found no other
  • letter added to that parcel: but this, and that which I copied myself in
  • character last Sunday whilst she was at church, relating to the smuggling
  • scheme,** are enough for me.
  • * See Vol. IV. Letter XXIX.
  • ** Ibid. Letter XLII.
  • ***
  • Dorcas tells me, that her lady has been removing her papers from the
  • mahogany chest into a wainscot box, which held her linen, and which she
  • put into her dark closet. We have no key of that at present. No doubt
  • but all her letters, previous to those I have come at, are in that box.
  • Dorcas is uneasy upon it: yet hopes that her lady does not suspect her;
  • for she is sure that she laid in every thing as she found it.
  • LETTER II
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • COCOA-TREE, SATURDAY, MAY 27.
  • This ipecacuanha is a most disagreeable medicine. That these cursed
  • physical folks can find out nothing to do us good, but what would poison
  • the devil! In the other world, were they only to take physic, it would
  • be punishable enough of itself for a mis-spent life. A doctor at one
  • elbow, and an apothecary at the other, and the poor soul labouring under
  • their prescribed operations, he need no worse tormentors.
  • But now this was to take down my countenance. It has done it: for, with
  • violent reachings, having taken enough to make me sick, and not enough
  • water to carry it off, I presently looked as if I had kept my bed a
  • fortnight. Ill jesting, as I thought in the midst of the exercise, with
  • edge tools, and worse with physical ones.
  • Two hours it held me. I had forbid Dorcas to let her lady know any thing
  • of the matter; out of tenderness to her; being willing, when she knew my
  • prohibition, to let her see that I expected her to be concerned for me.--
  • Well, but Dorcas was nevertheless a woman, and she can whisper to her
  • lady the secret she is enjoined to keep!
  • Come hither, toad, [sick as the devil at the instant]; let me see what a
  • mixture of grief and surprize may be beat up together in thy puden-face.
  • That won't do. That dropt jaw, and mouth distended into the long oval,
  • is more upon the horrible than the grievous.
  • Nor that pinking and winking with thy odious eyes, as my charmer once
  • called them.
  • A little better that; yet not quite right: but keep your mouth closer.
  • You have a muscle or two which you have no command of, between your
  • cheek-bone and your lips, that should carry one corner of your mouth
  • up towards your crow's-foot, and that down to meet it.
  • There! Begone! Be in a plaguy hurry running up stair and down, to fetch
  • from the dining-room what you carry up on purpose to fetch, till motion
  • extraordinary put you out of breath, and give you the sigh natural.
  • What's the matter, Dorcas?
  • Nothing, Madam.
  • My beloved wonders she has not seen me this morning, no doubt; but is too
  • shy to say she wonders. Repeated What's the matter, however, as Dorcas
  • runs up and down stairs by her door, bring on, O Madam! my master! my
  • poor master!
  • What! How! When!--and all the monosyllables of surprize.
  • [Within parentheses let me tell thee, that I have often thought, that the
  • little words in the republic of letters, like the little folks in a nation,
  • are the most significant. The trisyllables, and the rumblers of syllables
  • more than three, are but the good-for-little magnates.]
  • I must not tell you, Madam--My master ordered me not to tell you--but he
  • is in a worse way than he thinks for!--But he would not have you
  • frighted.
  • High concern took possession of every sweet feature. She pitied me!--by
  • my soul, she pitied me!
  • Where is he?
  • Too much in a hurry for good manners, [another parenthesis, Jack! Good
  • manners are so little natural, that we ought to be composed to observe
  • them: politeness will not live in a storm]. I cannot stay to answer
  • questions, cries the wench--though desirous to answer [a third
  • parenthesis--Like the people crying proclamations, running away from the
  • customers they want to sell to]. This hurry puts the lady in a hurry to
  • ask, [a fourth, by way of establishing the third!] as the other does the
  • people in a hurry to buy. And I have in my eye now a whole street
  • raised, and running after a proclamation or express-crier, as if the
  • first was a thief, the other his pursuers.
  • At last, O Lord! let Mrs. Lovelace know!--There is danger, to be sure!
  • whispered from one nymph to another; but at the door, and so loud, that
  • my listening fair-one might hear.
  • Out she darts--As how! as how, Dorcas!
  • O Madam--A vomiting of blood! A vessel broke, to be sure!
  • Down she hastens; finds every one as busy over my blood in the entry,
  • as if it were that of the Neapolitan saint.
  • In steps my charmer, with a face of sweet concern.
  • How do you, Mr. Lovelace?
  • O my best love!--Very well!--Very well!--Nothing at all! nothing of
  • consequence!--I shall be well in an instant!--Straining again! for I was
  • indeed plaguy sick, though no more blood came.
  • In short, Belford, I have gained my end. I see the dear soul loves me.
  • I see she forgives me all that's past. I see I have credit for a new
  • score.
  • Miss Howe, I defy thee, my dear--Mrs. Townsend!--Who the devil are you?--
  • Troop away with your contrabands. No smuggling! nor smuggler, but
  • myself! Nor will the choicest of my fair-one's favours be long
  • prohibited goods to me!
  • ***
  • Every one is now sure that she loves me. Tears were in her eyes more
  • than once for me. She suffered me to take her hand, and kiss it as often
  • as I pleased. On Mrs. Sinclair's mentioning, that I too much confined
  • myself, she pressed me to take an airing; but obligingly desired me to be
  • careful of myself. Wished I would advise with a physician. God made
  • physicians, she said.
  • I did not think that, Jack. God indeed made us all. But I fancy she
  • meant physic instead of physicians; and then the phrase might mean what
  • the vulgar phrase means;--God sends meat, the Devil cooks.
  • I was well already, on taking the styptic from her dear hands.
  • On her requiring me to take the air, I asked, If I might have the honour
  • of her company in a coach; and this, that I might observe if she had an
  • intention of going out in my absence.
  • If she thought a chair were not a more proper vehicle for my case, she
  • would with all her heart!
  • There's a precious!
  • I kissed her hand again! She was all goodness!--Would to Heaven I better
  • deserved it, I said!--But all were golden days before us!--Her presence
  • and generous concern had done every thing. I was well! Nothing ailed
  • me. But since my beloved will have it so, I'll take a little airing!--
  • Let a chair be called!--O my charmer! were I to have owned this
  • indisposition to my late harasses, and to the uneasiness I have had for
  • disobliging you; all is infinitely compensated by your goodness.--All the
  • art of healing is in your smiles!--Your late displeasure was the only
  • malady!
  • While Mrs. Sinclair, and Dorcas, and Polly, and even poor silly Mabell
  • [for Sally went out, as my angel came in] with uplifted hands and eyes,
  • stood thanking Heaven that I was better, in audible whispers: See the
  • power of love, cried one!--What a charming husband, another!--Happy
  • couple, all!
  • O how the dear creature's cheek mantled!--How her eyes sparkled!--How
  • sweetly acceptable is praise to conscious merit, while it but reproaches
  • when applied to the undeserving!--What a new, what a gay creation it
  • makes all at once in a diffident or dispirited heart!
  • And now, Belford, was it not worth while to be sick? And yet I must tell
  • thee, that too many pleasanter expedients offer themselves, to make trial
  • any more of this confounded ipecacuanha.
  • LETTER III
  • MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE, TO MISS HOWE
  • SATURDAY, MAY 27.
  • Mr. Lovelace, my dear, has been very ill. Suddenly taken. With a
  • vomiting of blood in great quantities. Some vessel broken. He
  • complained of a disorder in his stomach over night. I was the
  • affected with it, as I am afraid it was occasioned by the violent
  • contentions between us.--But was I in fault?
  • How lately did I think I hated him!--But hatred and anger, I see, are but
  • temporary passions with me. One cannot, my dear, hate people in danger
  • of death, or who are in distress or affliction. My heart, I find, is not
  • proof against kindness, and acknowledgements of errors committed.
  • He took great care to have his illness concealed from me as long as he
  • could. So tender in the violence of his disorder!--So desirous to make
  • the best of it!--I wish he had not been ill in my sight. I was too much
  • affected--every body alarming me with his danger. The poor man, from
  • such high health, so suddenly taken!--and so unprepared!--
  • He is gone out in a chair. I advised him to do so. I fear that my
  • advice was wrong; since quiet in such a disorder must needs be best. We
  • are apt to be so ready, in cases of emergency, to give our advice,
  • without judgment, or waiting for it!--I proposed a physician indeed; but
  • he would not hear of one. I have great honour for the faculty; and the
  • greater, as I have always observed that those who treat the professors of
  • the art of healing contemptuously, too generally treat higher
  • institutions in the same manner.
  • I am really very uneasy. For I have, I doubt, exposed myself to him, and
  • to the women below. They indeed will excuse me, as they think us
  • married. But if he be not generous, I shall have cause to regret this
  • surprise; which (as I had reason to think myself unaccountably treated by
  • him) has taught me more than I knew of myself.
  • 'Tis true, I have owned more than once, that I could have liked Mr.
  • Lovelace above all men. I remember the debates you and I used to have on
  • this subject, when I was your happy guest. You used to say, and once you
  • wrote,* that men of his cast are the men that our sex do not naturally
  • dislike: While I held, that such were not (however that might be) the men
  • we ought to like. But what with my relations precipitating of me, on one
  • hand, and what with his unhappy character, and embarrassing ways, on the
  • other, I had no more leisure than inclination to examine my own heart in
  • this particular. And this reminds me of a transcribe, though it was
  • written in raillery. 'May it not be,' say you,** 'that you have had such
  • persons to deal with, as have not allowed you to attend to the throbs; or
  • if you had them a little now-and-then, whether, having had two accounts
  • to place them to, you have not by mistake put them to the wrong one?' A
  • passage, which, although it came into my mind when Mr. Lovelace was least
  • exceptionable, yet that I have denied any efficacy to, when he has teased
  • and vexed me, and given me cause of suspicion. For, after all, my dear,
  • Mr. Lovelace is not wise in all his ways. And should we not endeavour,
  • as much as is possible, (where we are not attached by natural ties,) to
  • like and dislike as reason bids us, and according to the merit or demerit
  • of the object? If love, as it is called, is allowed to be an excuse for
  • our most unreasonable follies, and to lay level all the fences that a
  • careful education has surrounded us by, what is meant by the doctrine of
  • subduing our passions?--But, O my dearest friend, am I not guilty of a
  • punishable fault, were I to love this man of errors? And has not my own
  • heart deceived me, when I thought it did not? And what must be that love,
  • that has not some degree of purity for its object? I am afraid of
  • recollecting some passages in my cousin Morden's letter.***--And yet why
  • fly I from subjects that, duly considered, might tend to correct and
  • purify my heart? I have carried, I doubt, my notions on this head too
  • high, not for practice, but for my practice. Yet think me not guilty of
  • prudery neither; for had I found out as much of myself before; or,
  • rather, had he given me heart's ease enough before to find it out, you
  • should have had my confession sooner.
  • * See Vol. IV. Letter XXXIV.
  • ** See Vol. I. Letter XII.
  • *** See Vol. IV. Letter XIX, & seq.
  • Nevertheless, let me tell you (what I hope I may justly tell you,) that
  • if again he give me cause to resume distance and reserve, I hope my
  • reason will gather strength enough from his imperfections to enable me to
  • keep my passions under.--What can we do more than govern ourselves by the
  • temporary lights lent us?
  • You will not wonder that I am grave on this detection--Detection, must I
  • call it? What can I call it?--
  • Dissatisfied with myself, I am afraid to look back upon what I have
  • written: yet know not how to have done writing. I never was in such an
  • odd frame of mind.--I know not how to describe it.--Was you ever so?--
  • Afraid of the censure of her you love--yet not conscious that you deserve
  • it?
  • Of this, however, I am convinced, that I should indeed deserve censure,
  • if I kept any secret of my heart from you.
  • But I will not add another word, after I have assured you, that I will
  • look still more narrowly into myself: and that I am
  • Your equally sincere and affectionate
  • CL. HARLOWE.
  • LETTER IV
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • SAT. EVENING.
  • I had a charming airing. No return of my malady. My heart was perfectly
  • easy, how could my stomach be otherwise?
  • But when I came home, I found that my sweet soul had been alarmed by a
  • new incident--The inquiry after us both, in a very suspicious manner, and
  • that by description of our persons, and not by names, by a servant in a
  • blue livery turn'd up and trimm'd with yellow.
  • Dorcas was called to him, as the upper servant; and she refusing to
  • answer any of the fellow's questions, unless he told his business, and
  • from whom he came, the fellow (as short as she) said, that if she would
  • not answer him, perhaps she might answer somebody else; and went away out
  • of humour.
  • Dorcas hurried up to her Lady, and alarmed her, not only with the fact,
  • but with her own conjectures; adding, that he was an ill-looking fellow,
  • and she was sure could come for no good.
  • The livery and the features of the servant were particularly inquired
  • after, and as particularly described--Lord bless her! no end of her
  • alarms, she thought! And then did her apprehensions anticipate every
  • evil that could happen.
  • She wished Mr. Lovelace would come in.
  • Mr. Lovelace came in soon after; all lively, grateful, full of hopes, of
  • duty, of love, to thank his charmer, and to congratulate with her upon
  • the cure she had performed. And then she told the story, with all its
  • circumstances; and Dorcas, to point her lady's fears, told us, that the
  • servant was a sun-burnt fellow, and looked as if he had been at sea.
  • He was then, no doubt, Captain Singleton's servant, and the next news she
  • should hear, was, that the house was surrounded by a whole ship's crew;
  • the vessel lying no farther off, as she understood, than Rotherhithe.
  • Impossible, I said. Such an attempt would not be ushered in by such a
  • manner of inquiry. And why may it not rather be a servant of your cousin
  • Morden, with notice of his arrival, and of his design to attend you?
  • This surmise delighted her. Her apprehensions went off, and she was at
  • leisure to congratulate me upon my sudden recovery; which she did in the
  • most obliging manner.
  • But we had not sat long together, when Dorcas again came fluttering up to
  • tell us, that the footman, the very footman, was again at the door, and
  • inquired, whether Mr. Lovelace and his lady, by name, had not lodgings in
  • this house? He asked, he told Dorcas, for no harm. But his disavowing
  • of harm, was a demonstration with my apprehensive fair-one, that harm was
  • intended. And as the fellow had not been answered by Dorcas, I proposed
  • to go down to the street-parlour, and hear what he had to say.
  • I see your causeless terror, my dearest life, said I, and your impatience
  • --Will you be pleased to walk down--and, without being observed, (for he
  • shall come no farther than the parlour-door,) you may hear all that
  • passes?
  • She consented. We went down. Dorcas bid the man come forward. Well,
  • friend, what is your business with Mr. and Mrs. Lovelace?
  • Bowing, scraping, I am sure you are the gentleman, Sir. Why, Sir, my
  • business is only to know if your honour be here, and to be spoken with;
  • or if you shall be here for any time?
  • Whom came you from?
  • From a gentleman who ordered me to say, if I was made to tell, but not
  • else, it was from a friend of Mr. John Harlowe, Mrs. Lovelace's eldest
  • uncle.
  • The dear creature was ready to sink upon this. It was but of late that
  • she had provided herself with salts. She pulled them out.
  • Do you know anything of Colonel Morden, friend? said I.
  • No; I never heard of his name.
  • Of Captain Singleton?
  • No, Sir. But the gentleman, my master, is a Captain too.
  • What is his name?
  • I don't know if I should tell.
  • There can be no harm in telling the gentleman's name, if you come upon
  • a good account.
  • That I do; for my master told me so; and there is not an honester
  • gentleman on the face of God's yearth.--His name is Captain Tomlinson,
  • Sir.
  • I don't know such a one.
  • I believe not, Sir. He was pleased to say, he don't know your honor,
  • Sir; but I heard him say as how he should not be an unwelcome visiter to
  • you for all that.
  • Do you know such a man as Captain Tomlinson, my dearest life, [aside,]
  • your uncle's friend?
  • No; but my uncle may have acquaintance, no doubt, that I don't know.--
  • But I hope [trembling] this is not a trick.
  • Well, friend, if your master has anything to say to Mr. Lovelace, you may
  • tell him, that Mr. Lovelace is here; and will see him whenever he
  • pleases.
  • The dear creature looked as if afraid that my engagement was too prompt
  • for my own safety; and away went the fellow--I wondering, that she might
  • not wonder, that this Captain Tomlinson, whoever he were, came not
  • himself, or sent not a letter the second time, when he had reason to
  • suppose that I might be here.
  • Mean time, for fear that this should be a contrivance of James Harlowe,
  • who, I said, love plotting, though he had not a head turned for it, I
  • gave some precautionary directions to the servants, and the women, whom,
  • for the greater parade, I assembled before us, and my beloved was
  • resolved not to stir abroad till she saw the issue of this odd affair.
  • And here must I close, though in so great a puzzle.
  • Only let me add, that poor Belton wants thee; for I dare not stir for my
  • life.
  • Mowbray and Tourville skulk about like vagabonds, without heads, without
  • hands, without souls; having neither you nor me to conduct them. They
  • tell me, they shall rust beyond the power of oil or action to brighten
  • them up, or give them motion.
  • How goes it with thy uncle?
  • LETTER V
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • SUNDAY, MAY 28.
  • This story of Captain Tomlinson employed us not only for the time we were
  • together last night, but all the while we sat at breakfast this morning.
  • She would still have it that it was the prelude to some mischief from
  • Singleton. I insisted (according to my former hint) that it might much
  • more probably be a method taken by Colonel Morden to alarm her, previous
  • to a personal visit. Travelled gentlemen affected to surprise in this
  • manner. And why, dearest creature, said I, must every thing that
  • happens, which we cannot immediately account for, be what we least wish?
  • She had had so many disagreeable things befall her of late, that her
  • fears were too often stronger than her hopes.
  • And this, Madam, makes me apprehensive, that you will get into so low-
  • spirited a way, that you will not be able to enjoy the happiness that
  • seems to await us.
  • Her duty and her gratitude, she gravely said, to the Dispenser of all
  • good, would secure her, she hoped, against unthankfulness. And a
  • thankful spirit was the same as a joyful one.
  • So, Belford, for all her future joys she depends entirely upon the
  • invisible Good. She is certainly right; since those who fix least upon
  • second causes are the least likely to be disappointed--And is not this
  • gravity for her gravity?
  • She had hardly done speaking, when Dorcas came running up in a hurry--
  • she set even my heart into a palpitation--thump, thump, thump, like a
  • precipitated pendulum in a clock-case--flutter, flutter, flutter, my
  • charmer's, as by her sweet bosom rising to her chin I saw.
  • This lower class of people, my beloved herself observed, were for ever
  • aiming at the stupid wonderful, and for making even common incidents
  • matter of surprise.
  • Why the devil, said I to the wench, this alarming hurry?--And with your
  • spread fingers, and your O Madams, and O Sirs!--and be cursed to you!
  • Would there have been a second of time difference, had you come up
  • slowly?
  • Captain Tomlinson, Sir!
  • Captain Devilson, what care I?--Do you see how you have disordered your
  • lady?
  • Good Mr. Lovelace, said my charmer, trembling [see, Jack, when she has an
  • end to serve, I am good Mr. Lovelace,] if--if my brother,--if Captain
  • Singleton should appear--pray now--I beseech you--let me beg of you--to
  • govern your temper--My brother is my brother--Captain Singleton is but an
  • agent.
  • My dearest life, folding my arms about her, [when she asks favours,
  • thought I, the devil's in it, if she will not allow such an innocent
  • freedom as this, from good Mr. Lovelace too,] you shall be witness of all
  • passes between us.--Dorcas, desire the gentleman to walk up.
  • Let me retire to my chamber first!--Let me not be known to be in the
  • house!
  • Charming dear!--Thou seest, Belford, she is afraid of leaving me!--O the
  • little witchcrafts! Were it not for surprises now-and-then, how would an
  • honest man know where to have them?
  • She withdrew to listen.--And though this incident has not turned out to
  • answer all I wished from it, yet is it not necessary, if I would acquaint
  • thee with my whole circulation, to be very particular in what passed
  • between Captain Tomlinson and me.
  • Enter Captain Tomlinson, in a riding-dress, whip in hand.
  • Your servant, Sir,--Mr. Lovelace, I presume?
  • My name is Lovelace, Sir.
  • Excuse the day, Sir.--Be pleased to excuse my garb. I am obliged to go
  • out of town directly, that I may return at night.
  • The day is a good day. Your garb needs no apology.
  • When I sent my servant, I did not know that I should find time to do
  • myself this honour. All that I thought I could do to oblige my friend
  • this journey, was only to assure myself of your abode; and whether there
  • was a probability of being admitted to the speech of either you, or your
  • lady.
  • Sir, you best know your own motives. What your time will permit you to do,
  • you also best know. And here I am, attending your pleasure.
  • My charmer owned afterwards her concern on my being so short. Whatever
  • I shall mingle of her emotions, thou wilt easily guess I had afterwards.
  • Sir, I hope no offence. I intend none.
  • None--None at all, Sir.
  • Sir, I have no interest in the affair I come about. I may appear
  • officious; and if I thought I should, I would decline any concern in it,
  • after I have just hinted what it is.
  • And pray, Sir, what is it?
  • May I ask you, Sir, without offence, whether you wish to be reconciled,
  • and to co-operate upon honourable terms, with one gentleman of the name
  • of Harlowe; preparative, as it may be hoped, to a general reconciliation?
  • O how my heart fluttered! cried my charmer.
  • I can't tell, Sir--[and then it fluttered still more, no doubt:] The
  • whole family have used me extremely ill. They have taken greater
  • liberties with my character than are justifiable; and with my family too;
  • which I can less forgive.
  • Sir, Sir, I have done. I beg pardon for this intrusion.
  • My beloved was then ready to sink, and thought very hardly of me.
  • But, pray, Sir, to the immediate purpose of your present commission;
  • since a commission it seems to be?
  • It is a commission, Sir; and such a one, as I thought would be agreeable
  • to all parties, or I should not have given myself concern about it.
  • Perhaps it may, Sir, when known. But let me ask you one previous
  • question--Do you know Colonel Morden, Sir?
  • No, Sir. If you mean personally, I do not. But I have heard my good
  • friend Mr. John Harlowe talk of him with great respect; and such a
  • co-trustee with him in a certain trust.
  • Lovel. I thought it probable, Sir, that the Colonel might be arrived;
  • that you might be a gentleman of his acquaintance; and that something of
  • an agreeable surprise might be intended.
  • Capt. Had Colonel Morden been in England, Mr. John Harlowe would have
  • known it; and then I should not have been a stranger to it.
  • Lovel. Well but, Sir, have you then any commission to me from Mr. John
  • Harlowe?
  • Capt. Sir, I will tell you, as briefly as I can, the whole of what I
  • have to say; but you'll excuse me also in a previous question, for what
  • curiosity is not my motive; but it is necessary to be answered before I
  • can proceed; as you will judge when you hear it.
  • Lovel. What, pray, Sir, is your question?
  • Capt. Briefly, whether you are actually, and bonâ fide, married to Miss
  • Clarissa Harlowe?
  • I started, and, in a haughty tone, is this, Sir, a question that must be
  • answered before you can proceed in the business you have undertaken?
  • I mean no offence, Mr. Lovelace. Mr. Harlowe sought to me to undertake
  • this office. I have daughters and nieces of my own. I thought it a good
  • office, or I, who have many considerable affairs upon my hands, had not
  • accepted of it. I know the world; and will take the liberty to say, that
  • if the young lady--
  • Captain Tomlinson, I think you are called?
  • My name is Tomlinson.
  • Why then, Tomlinson, no liberty, as you call it, will be taken well, that
  • is not extremely delicate, when that lady is mentioned.
  • When you had heard me out, Mr. Lovelace, and had found I had so behaved,
  • as to make the caution necessary, it would have been just to have given
  • it.--Allow me to say, I know what is due to the character of a woman of
  • virtue, as well as any man alive.
  • Why, Sir! Why, Captain Tomlinson, you seem warm. If you intend any
  • thing by this, [O how I trembled! said the lady, when she took notice of
  • this part of our conversation afterwards,] I will only say, that this is
  • a privileged place. It is at present my home, and an asylum for any
  • gentleman who thinks it worth his while to inquire after me, be the
  • manner or end of his inquiry what it will.
  • I know not, Sir, that I have given occasion for this. I make no scruple
  • to attend you elsewhere, if I am troublesome here. I was told, I had a
  • warm young gentleman to deal with: but as I knew my intention, and that
  • my commission was an amicable one, I was the less concerned about that.
  • I am twice your age, Mr. Lovelace, I dare say: but I do assure you, that
  • if either my message or my manner gives you offence, I can suspend the
  • one or the other for a day, or for ever, as you like. And so, Sir, any
  • time before eight tomorrow morning, you will let me know your further
  • commands.--And was going to tell me where he might be found.
  • Captain Tomlinson, said I, you answer well. I love a man of spirit.
  • Have you not been in the army?
  • I have, Sir; but have turned my sword into a ploughshare, as the
  • scripture has it,--[there was a clever fellow, Jack!--he was a good man
  • with somebody, I warrant! O what a fine coat and cloke for an hypocrite
  • will a text of scripture, properly applied, make at any time in the eyes
  • of the pious!--how easily are the good folks taken in!]--and all my
  • delight, added he, for some years past, has been in cultivating my
  • paternal estate. I love a brave man, Mr. Lovelace, as well as ever I did
  • in my life. But let me tell you, Sir, that when you come to my time of
  • life, you will be of opinion, that there is not so much true bravery in
  • youthful choler, as you may now think there is.
  • A clever fellow again, Belford!--Ear and heart, both at once, he took in
  • my charmer!--'Tis well, she says, there are some men who have wisdom in
  • their anger.
  • Well, Captain, that is reproof for reproof. So we are upon a footing.
  • And now give me the pleasure of hearing the import of your commission.
  • Sir, you must first allow me to repeat my question: Are you really, and
  • bonâ fide, married to Miss Clarissa Harlowe? or are you not yet married?
  • Bluntly put, Captain. But if I answer that I am, what then?
  • Why then, Sir, I shall say, that you are a man of honour.
  • That I hope I am, whether you say it or not, Captain Tomlinson.
  • Sir, I will be very frank in all I have to say on this subject--Mr. John
  • Harlowe has lately found out, that you and his niece are both in the same
  • lodgings; that you have been long so; and that the lady was at the play
  • with you yesterday was se'nnight; and he hopes that you are actually
  • married. He has indeed heard that you are; but as he knows your
  • enterprising temper, and that you have declared, that you disdain a
  • relation to their family, he is willing by me to have your marriage
  • confirmed from your own mouth, before he take the steps he is inclined to
  • take in his niece's favour. You will allow me to say, Mr. Lovelace, that
  • he will not be satisfied with an answer that admits of the least doubt.
  • Let me tell you, Captain Tomlinson, that it is a high degree of vileness
  • for any man to suppose--
  • Sir--Mr. Lovelace--don't put yourself into a passion. The lady's
  • relations are jealous of the honour of their family. They have
  • prejudices to overcome as well as you--advantage may have been taken--and
  • the lady, at the time, not to blame.
  • This lady, Sir, could give no such advantages: and if she had, what must
  • the man be, Captain Tomlinson, who could have taken them?--Do you know
  • the lady, Sir?
  • I never had the honour to see her but once; and that was at a church; and
  • should not know her again.
  • Not know her again, Sir!--I thought there was not a man living who had
  • once seen her, and would not know her among a thousand.
  • I remember, Sir, that I thought I never saw a finer woman in my life.
  • But, Mr. Lovelace, I believe, you will allow, that it is better that her
  • relations should have wronged you, than you the lady, I hope, Sir, you
  • will permit me to repeat my question.
  • Enter Dorcas, in a hurry.
  • A gentleman, this minute, Sir, desires to speak with your honour--[My
  • lady, Sir!--Aside.]
  • Could the dear creature put Dorcas upon telling this fib, yet want to
  • save me one?
  • Desire the gentleman to walk into one of the parlours. I will wait upon
  • him presently.
  • [Exit Dorcas.
  • The dear creature, I doubted not, wanted to instruct me how to answer
  • the Captain's home put. I knew how I intended to answer it--plumb, thou
  • may'st be sure--but Dorcas's message staggered me. And yet I was upon
  • one of my master-strokes--which was, to take advantage of the captain's
  • inquiries, and to make her own her marriage before him, as she had done
  • to the people below; and if she had been brought to that, to induce her,
  • for her uncle's satisfaction, to write him a letter of gratitude; which
  • of course must have been signed Clarissa Lovelace. I was loth,
  • therefore, thou may'st believe, to attend her sudden commands: and yet,
  • afraid of pushing matters beyond recovery with her, I thought proper to
  • lead him from the question, to account for himself and for Mr. Harlowe's
  • coming to the knowledge of where we are; and for other particulars which
  • I knew would engage her attention; and which might possibly convince her
  • of the necessity there was for her to acquiesce in the affirmative I was
  • disposed to give. And this for her own sake; For what, as I asked her
  • afterwards, is it to me, whether I am ever reconciled to her family?--A
  • family, Jack, which I must for ever despise.
  • You think, Captain, that I have answered doubtfully to the question you
  • put. You may think so. And you must know, that I have a good deal of
  • pride; and, only that you are a gentleman, and seem in this affair to be
  • governed by generous motives, or I should ill brook being interrogated as
  • to my honour to a lady so dear to me.--But before I answer more directly
  • to the point, pray satisfy me in a question or two that I shall put to
  • you.
  • With all my heart, Sir. Ask me what questions you please, I will answer
  • them with sincerity and candour.
  • You say, Mr. Harlowe has found out that we were at a play together: and
  • that we were both in the same lodgings--How, pray, came he at his
  • knowledge?--for, let me tell you, that I have, for certain
  • considerations, (not respecting myself, I will assure you,) condescended
  • that our abode should be kept secret. And this has been so strictly
  • observed, that even Miss Howe, though she and my beloved correspond, knows
  • not directly where to send to us.
  • Why, Sir, the person who saw you at the play, was a tenant of Mr. John
  • Harlowe. He watched all your motions. When the play was done, he
  • followed your coach to your lodgings. And early the next day, Sunday,
  • he took horse, and acquainted his landlord with what he had observed.
  • Lovel. How oddly things come about!--But does any other of the Harlowes
  • know where we are?
  • Capt. It is an absolute secret to every other person of the family; and
  • so it is intended to be kept: as also that Mr. John Harlowe is willing to
  • enter into treaty with you, by me, if his niece be actually married; for
  • perhaps he is aware, that he shall have difficulty enough with some
  • people to bring about the desirable reconciliation, although he could
  • give them this assurance.
  • I doubt it not, Captain--to James Harlowe is all the family folly owing.
  • Fine fools! [heroically stalking about] to be governed by one to whom
  • malice and not genius, gives the busy liveliness that distinguishes him
  • from a natural!--But how long, pray, Sir, has Mr. John Harlowe been in
  • this pacific disposition?
  • I will tell you, Mr. Lovelace, and the occasion; and be very explicit
  • upon it, and upon all that concerns you to know of me, and of the
  • commission I have undertaken to execute; and this the rather, as when
  • you have heard me out, you will be satisfied, that I am not an officious
  • man in this my present address to you.
  • I am all attention, Captain Tomlinson.
  • And so I doubt not was my beloved.
  • Capt. 'You must know, Sir, that I have not been many months in Mr. John
  • Harlowe's neighbourhood. I removed from Northamptonshire, partly for the
  • sake of better managing one of two executorship, which I could not avoid
  • engaging in, (the affairs of which frequently call me to town, and are
  • part of my present business;) and partly for the sake of occupying a
  • neglected farm, which has lately fallen into my hands. But though an
  • acquaintance of no longer standing, and that commencing on the bowling-
  • green, [uncle John is a great bowler, Belford,] (upon my decision of a
  • point to every one's satisfaction, which was appealed to me by all the
  • gentlemen, and which might have been attended with bad consequences,) no
  • two brothers have a more cordial esteem for each other. You know, Mr.
  • Lovelace, that there is a consent, as I may call it, in some minds, which
  • will unite them stronger together in a few hours, than years can do with
  • others, whom yet we see not with disgust.'
  • Lovel. Very true, Captain.
  • Capt. 'It was on the foot of this avowed friendship on both sides, that
  • on Monday the 15th, as I very well remember, Mr. Harlowe invited himself
  • home with me. And when there, he acquainted me with the whole of the
  • unhappy affair that had made them all so uneasy. Till then I knew it
  • only by report; for, intimate as we were, I forbore to speak of what was
  • so near his heart, till he began first. And then he told me, that he had
  • had an application made to him, two or three days before, by a gentleman
  • whom he named,* to induce him not only to be reconciled himself to his
  • niece, but to forward for her a general reconciliation.
  • * See Vol. IV. Letters XXIII and XXIX.
  • 'A like application, he told me, had been made to his sister Harlowe, by
  • a good woman, whom every body respected; who had intimated, that his
  • niece, if encouraged, would again put herself into the protection of her
  • friends, and leave you: but if not, that she must unavoidably be your's.'
  • I hope, Mr. Lovelace, I make no mischief.--You look concerned--you sigh,
  • Sir.
  • Proceed, Captain Tomlinson. Pray proceed.--And I sighed still more
  • profoundly.
  • Capt. 'They all thought it extremely particular, that a lady should
  • decline marriage with a man she had so lately gone away with.'
  • Pray, Captain--pray, Mr. Tomlinson--no more of this subject. My beloved
  • is an angel. In every thing unblamable. Whatever faults there have
  • been, have been theirs and mine. What you would further say, is, that
  • the unforgiving family rejected her application. They did. She and I
  • had a misunderstanding. The falling out of lovers--you know, Captain.
  • --We have been happier ever since.
  • Capt. 'Well, Sir; but Mr. John Harlowe could not but better consider
  • the matter afterwards. And he desired my advice how to act in it. He
  • told me that no father ever loved a daughter as he loved this niece of
  • his; whom, indeed, he used to call his daughter-niece. He said, she had
  • really been unkindly treated by her brother and sister: and as your
  • alliance, Sir, was far from being a discredit to their family, he would
  • do his endeavour to reconcile all parties, if he could be sure that ye
  • were actually man and wife.'
  • Lovel. And what, pray, Captain, was your advice?
  • Capt. 'I gave it as my opinion, that if his niece were unworthily
  • treated, and in distress, (as he apprehended from the application to
  • him,) he would soon hear of her again: but that it was likely, that this
  • application was made without expecting it would succeed; and as a salvo
  • only, to herself, for marrying without their consent. And the rather
  • thought I so, as he had told me, that it came from a young lady her
  • friend, and not in a direct way from herself; which young lady was no
  • favourite of the family; and therefore would hardly have been employed,
  • had success been expected.'
  • Lovel. Very well, Captain Tomlinson--pray proceed.
  • Capt. 'Here the matter rested till last Sunday evening, when Mr. John
  • Harlowe came to me with the man who had seen you and your lady (as I
  • presume she is) at the play; and who had assured him, that you both
  • lodged in the same house.--And then the application having been so lately
  • made, which implied that you were not then married, he was so uneasy for
  • his niece's honour, that I advised him to dispatch to town some one in
  • whom he could confide, to make proper inquiries.'
  • Lovel. Very well, Captain--And was such a person employed on such an
  • errand by her uncle?
  • Capt. 'A trusty and discreet person was accordingly sent; and last
  • Tuesday, I think it was, (for he returned to us on the Wednesday,) he
  • made the inquiries among the neighbours first.' [The very inquiry, Jack,
  • that gave us all so much uneasiness.*] 'But finding that none of them
  • could give any satisfactory account, the lady's woman was come at, who
  • declared, that you were actually married. But the inquirist keeping
  • himself on the reserve as to his employers, the girl refused to tell the
  • day, or to give him other particulars.'
  • * See Vol. IV. Letter L.
  • Lovel. You give a very clear account of every thing, Captain Tomlinson.
  • Pray proceed.
  • Capt. 'The gentleman returned; and, on his report, Mr. Harlowe, having
  • still doubts, and being willing to proceed on some grounds in so
  • important a point, besought me (as my affairs called me frequently to
  • town) to undertake this matter. "You, Mr. Tomlinson, he was pleased to
  • say, have children of your own: you know the world: you know what I drive
  • at: you will proceed, I am sure, with understanding and spirit: and
  • whatever you are satisfied with shall satisfy me."'
  • Enter Dorcas again in a hurry.
  • Sir, the gentleman is impatient.
  • I will attend him presently.
  • The Captain then accounted for his not calling in person, when he had
  • reason to think us here.
  • He said he had business of consequence a few miles out of town, whither
  • he thought he must have gone yesterday, and having been obliged to put
  • off his little journey till this day, and understanding that we were
  • within, not knowing whether he should have such another opportunity, he
  • was willing to try his good fortune before he set out; and this made him
  • come booted and spurred, as I saw him.
  • He dropped a hint in commendation of the people of the house; but it was
  • in such a way, as to give no room to suspect that he thought it necessary
  • to inquire after the character of persons, who make so genteel an
  • appearance, as he observed they do.
  • And here let me remark, that my beloved might collect another
  • circumstance in favour of the people below, had she doubted their
  • characters, from the silence of her uncle's inquirist on Tuesday among
  • the neighbours.
  • Capt. 'And now, Sir, that I believe I have satisfied you in every thing
  • relating to my commission, I hope you will permit me to repeat my
  • question--which is--'
  • Enter Dorcas again, out of breath.
  • Sir, the gentleman will step up to you. [My lady is impatient. She
  • wonders at your honour's delay. Aside.]
  • Excuse me, Captain, for one moment.
  • I have staid my full time, Mr. Lovelace. What may result from my
  • question and your answer, whatever it shall be, may take us up time.--
  • And you are engaged. Will you permit me to attend you in the morning,
  • before I set out on my return?
  • You will then breakfast with me, Captain?
  • It must be early if I do. I must reach my own house to-morrow night, or
  • I shall make the best of wives unhappy. And I have two or three places
  • to call at in my way.
  • It shall be by seven o'clock, if you please, Captain. We are early
  • folks. And this I will tell you, that if ever I am reconciled to a
  • family so implacable as I have always found the Harlowes to be, it must
  • be by the mediation of so cool and so moderate a gentleman as yourself.
  • And so, with the highest civilities on both sides, we parted. But for
  • the private satisfaction of so good a man, I left him out of doubt that
  • we were man and wife, though I did not directly aver it.
  • LETTER VI
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • SUNDAY NIGHT.
  • This Captain Tomlinson is one of the happiest as well as one of the best
  • men in the world. What would I give to stand as high in my beloved's
  • opinion as he does! but yet I am as good a man as he, were I to tell my
  • own story, and have equal credit given to it. But the devil should have
  • had him before I had seen him on the account he came upon, had I thought
  • I should not have answered my principal end in it. I hinted to thee in
  • my last what that was.
  • But to the particulars of the conference between my fair-one and me, on
  • her hasty messages; which I was loth to come to, because she has had an
  • half triumph over me in it.
  • After I had attended the Captain down to the very passage, I returned to
  • the dining-room, and put on a joyful air, on my beloved's entrance into
  • it--O my dearest creature, said I, let me congratulate you on a prospect
  • so agreeable to your wishes! And I snatched her hand, and smothered it
  • with kisses.
  • I was going on; when interrupting me, You see, Mr. Lovelace, said she,
  • how you have embarrassed yourself by your obliquities! You see, that you
  • have not been able to return a direct answer to a plain and honest
  • question, though upon it depends all the happiness, on the prospect of
  • which you congratulate me!
  • You know, my best love, what my prudent, and I will say, my kind motives
  • were, for giving out that we were married. You see that I have taken no
  • advantage of it; and that no inconvenience has followed it. You see that
  • your uncle wants only to be assured from ourselves that it is so--
  • Not another word on this subject, Mr. Lovelace. I will not only risk,
  • but I will forfeit, the reconciliation so near my heart, rather than I
  • will go on to countenance a story so untrue!
  • My dearest soul--Would you have me appear--
  • I would have you appear, Sir, as you are! I am resolved that I will
  • appear to my uncle's friend, and to my uncle, as I am.
  • For one week, my dearest life! cannot you for one week--only till the
  • settlements--
  • Not for one hour, with my own consent. You don't know, Sir, how much I
  • have been afflicted, that I have appeared to the people below what I am
  • not. But my uncle, Sir, shall never have it to upbraid me, nor will I to
  • upbraid myself, that I have wilfully passed upon him in false lights.
  • What, my dear, would you have me say to the Captain to-morrow morning? I
  • have given him room to think--
  • Then put him right, Mr. Lovelace. Tell the truth. Tell him what you
  • please of the favour of your relations to me: tell him what you will
  • about the settlements: and if, when drawn, you will submit them to his
  • perusal and approbation, it will show him how much you are in earnest.
  • My dearest life!--Do you think that he would disapprove of the terms I
  • have offered?
  • No.
  • Then may I be accursed, if I willingly submit to be trampled under foot
  • by my enemies!
  • And may I, Mr. Lovelace, never be happy in this life, if I submit to
  • the passing upon my uncle Harlowe a wilful and premeditated falshood for
  • truth! I have too long laboured under the affliction which the rejection
  • of all my friends has given me, to purchase my reconciliation with them
  • now at so dear a price as this of my veracity.
  • The women below, my dear--
  • What are the women below to me?--I want not to establish myself with
  • them. Need they know all that passes between my relations and you and
  • me?
  • Neither are they any thing to me, Madam. Only, that when, for the sake
  • of preventing the fatal mischiefs which might have attended your
  • brother's projects, I have made them think us married, I would not appear
  • to them in a light which you yourself think so shocking. By my soul,
  • Madam, I had rather die, than contradict myself so flagrantly, after I
  • have related to them so many circumstances of our marriage.
  • Well, Sir, the women may believe what they please. That I have given
  • countenance to what you told them is my error. The many circumstances
  • which you own one untruth has drawn you in to relate, is a justification
  • of my refusal in the present case.
  • Don't you see, Madam, that your uncle wishes to find that we are married?
  • May not the ceremony be privately over, before his mediation can take
  • place?
  • Urge this point no further, Mr. Lovelace. If you will not tell the
  • truth, I will to-morrow morning (if I see Captain Tomlinson) tell it
  • myself. Indeed I will.
  • Will you, Madam, consent that things pass as before with the people
  • below? This mediation of Tomlinson may come to nothing. Your brother's
  • schemes may be pursued; the rather, that now he will know (perhaps from
  • your uncle) that you are not under a legal protection.--You will, at
  • least, consent that things pass here as before?--
  • To permit this, is to go on in an error, Mr. Lovelace. But as the
  • occasion for so doing (if there can be in your opinion an occasion that
  • will warrant an untruth) will, as I presume, soon be over, I shall the
  • less dispute that point with you. But a new error I will not be guilty
  • of, if I can avoid it.
  • Can I, do you think, Madam, have any dishonourable view in the step I
  • supposed you would not scruple to take towards a reconciliation with your
  • own family? Not for my own sake, you know, did I wish you to take it;
  • for what is it to me, if I am never reconciled to your family? I want no
  • favours from them.
  • I hope, Mr. Lovelace, there is no occasion, in our present not
  • disagreeable situation, to answer such a question. And let me say, that
  • I shall think my prospects still more agreeable, if, to-morrow morning
  • you will not only own the very truth, but give my uncle's friend such an
  • account of the steps you have taken, and are taking, as may keep up my
  • uncle's favourable intentions towards me. This you may do under what
  • restrictions of secrecy you please. Captain Tomlinson is a prudent man;
  • a promoter of family-peace, you find; and, I dare say, may be made a
  • friend.
  • I saw there was no help. I saw that the inflexible Harlowe spirit was
  • all up in her.--A little witch!--A little--Forgive me, Love, for calling
  • her names! And so I said, with an air, We have had too many
  • misunderstandings, Madam, for me to wish for new ones: I will obey you
  • without reserve. Had I not thought I should have obliged you by the
  • other method, (especially as the ceremony might have been over before any
  • thing could have operated from your uncle's intentions, and of
  • consequence no untruth persisted in,) I would not have proposed it. But
  • think not, my beloved creature, that you shall enjoy, without condition,
  • this triumph over my judgment.
  • And then, clasping my arms about her, I gave her averted cheek (her
  • charming lip designed) a fervent kiss.--And your forgiveness of this
  • sweet freedom [bowing] is that condition.
  • She was not mortally offended. And now must I make out the rest as well
  • as I can. But this I will tell thee, that although her triumph has not
  • diminished my love for her, yet it has stimulated me more than ever to
  • revenge, as thou wilt be apt to call it. But victory, or conquest, is
  • the more proper word.
  • There is a pleasure, 'tis true, in subduing one of these watchful
  • beauties. But by my soul, Belford, men of our cast take twenty times the
  • pains to be rogues than it would cost them to be honest; and dearly, with
  • the sweat of our brows, and to the puzzlement of our brains, (to say
  • nothing of the hazards we run,) do we earn our purchase; and ought not
  • therefore to be grudged our success when we meet with it--especially as,
  • when we have obtained our end, satiety soon follows; and leaves us little
  • or nothing to show for it. But this, indeed, may be said of all worldly
  • delights.--And is not that a grave reflection from me?
  • I was willing to write up to the time. Although I have not carried my
  • principal point, I shall make something turn out in my favour from
  • Captain Tomlinson's errand. But let me give thee this caution; that thou
  • do not pretend to judge of my devices by parts; but have patience till
  • thou seest the whole. But once more I swear, that I will not be
  • out-Norris'd by a pair of novices. And yet I am very apprehensive, at
  • times, of the consequences of Miss Howe's smuggling scheme.
  • My conscience, I should think, ought not to reproach me for a
  • contrivance, which is justified by the contrivances of two such girls as
  • these: one of whom (the more excellent of the two) I have always, with
  • her own approbation, as I imagine, proposed for my imitation.
  • But here, Jack, is the thing that concludes me, and cases my heart with
  • adamant: I find, by Miss Howe's letters, that it is owing to her, that I
  • have made no greater progress with my blooming fair-one. She loves me.
  • The ipecacuanha contrivance convinces me that she loves me. Where there
  • is love there must be confidence, or a desire of having reason to
  • confide. Generosity, founded on my supposed generosity, has taken hold
  • of her heart. Shall I not now see (since I must forever be unhappy, if I
  • marry her, and leave any trial unessayed) what I can make of her love,
  • and her newly-raised confidence?--Will it not be to my glory to succeed?
  • And to her's and to the honour of her sex, if I cannot?--Where then will
  • be the hurt to either, to make the trial? And cannot I, as I have often
  • said,
  • reward her when I will by marriage?
  • 'Tis late, or rather early; for the day begins to dawn upon me. I am
  • plaguy heavy. Perhaps I need not to have told thee that. But will only
  • indulge a doze in my chair for an hour; then shake myself, wash and
  • refresh. At my time of life, with such a constitution as I am blessed
  • with, that's all that's wanted.
  • Good night to me!--It cannot be broad day till I am
  • awake.--Aw-w-w-whaugh--pox of this yawning!
  • Is not thy uncle dead yet?
  • What's come to mine, that he writes not to my last?--Hunting after more
  • wisdom of nations, I suppose!--Yaw-yaw-yawning again!--Pen, begone!
  • LETTER VII
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • MONDAY, MAY 29.
  • Now have I established myself for ever in my charmer's heart.
  • The Captain came at seven, as promised, and ready equipped for his
  • journey. My beloved chose not to give us her company till our first
  • conversation was over--ashamed, I suppose, to be present at that part of
  • it which was to restore her to her virgin state by my confession, after
  • her wifehood had been reported to her uncle. But she took her cue,
  • nevertheless, and listened to all that passed.
  • The modestest women, Jack, must think, and think deeply sometimes. I
  • wonder whether they ever blush at those things by themselves, at which
  • they have so charming a knack of blushing in company. If not; and if
  • blushing be a sign of grace or modesty; have not the sex as great a
  • command over their blushes as they are said to have over their tears?
  • This reflection would lead me a great way into female minds, were I
  • disposed to pursue it.
  • I told the Captain, that I would prevent his question; and accordingly
  • (after I had enjoined the strictest secrecy, that no advantage might be
  • given to James Harlowe, and which he had answered for as well on Mr.
  • Harlowe's part as his own) I acknowledged nakedly and fairly the whole
  • truth--to wit, 'That we were not yet married. I gave him hints of the
  • causes of procrastination. Some of them owing to unhappy
  • misunderstandings: but chiefly to the Lady's desire of previous
  • reconciliation with her friends; and to a delicacy that had no example.'
  • Less nice ladies than this, Jack, love to have delays, wilful and studied
  • delays, imputed to them in these cases--yet are indelicate in their
  • affected delicacy: For do they not thereby tacitly confess, that they
  • expect to be the greatest estgainers in wedlock; and that there is
  • self-denial in the pride they take in delaying?
  • 'I told him the reason of our passing to the people below as married--yet
  • as under a vow of restriction, as to consummation, which had kept us both
  • to the height, one of forbearing, the other of vigilant punctilio; even
  • to the denial of those innocent freedoms, which betrothed lovers never
  • scruple to allow and to take.
  • 'I then communicated to him a copy of my proposal of settlement; the
  • substance of her written answer; the contents of my letter of invitation
  • to Lord M. to be her nuptial-father; and of my Lord's generous reply.
  • But said, that having apprehensions of delay from his infirmities, and my
  • beloved choosing by all means (and that from principles of unrequited
  • duty) a private solemnization, I had written to excuse his Lordship's
  • presence; and expected an answer every hour.
  • 'The settlements, I told him, were actually drawing by Counsellor
  • Williams, of whose eminence he must have heard--'
  • He had.
  • 'And of the truth of this he might satisfy himself before he went out of
  • town.
  • 'When these were drawn, approved, and engrossed, nothing, I said, but
  • signing, and the nomination of my happy day, would be wanting. I had a
  • pride, I declared, in doing the highest justice to so beloved a creature,
  • of my own voluntary motion, and without the intervention of a family from
  • whom I had received the greatest insults. And this being our present
  • situation, I was contented that Mr. John Harlowe should suspend his
  • reconciliatory purposes till our marriage were actually solemnized.'
  • The Captain was highly delighted with all I said: Yet owned, that as his
  • dear friend Mr. Harlowe had expressed himself greatly pleased to hear
  • that we were actually married, he could have wished it had been so. But,
  • nevertheless, he doubted not that all would be well.
  • He saw my reasons, he said, and approved of them, for making the
  • gentlewomen below [whom again he understood to be good sort of people]
  • believe that the ceremony had passed; which so well accounted for what
  • the lady's maid had told Mr. Harlowe's friend. Mr. James Harlowe, he
  • said, had certainly ends to answer in keeping open the breach; and as
  • certainly had formed a design to get his sister out of my hands.
  • Wherefore it as much imported his worthy friend to keep this treaty as
  • secret, as it did me; at least till he had formed his party, and taken
  • his measures. Ill will and passion were dreadful misrepresenters. It
  • was amazing to him, that animosity could be carried so high against a man
  • capable of views so pacific and so honourable, and who had shown such a
  • command of his temper, in this whole transaction, as I had done.
  • Generosity, indeed, in every case, where love of stratagem and intrigue
  • (I would excuse him) were not concerned, was a part of my character.
  • He was proceeding, when, breakfast being ready, in came the empress of my
  • heart, irradiating all around her, as with a glory--a benignity and
  • graciousness in her aspect, that, though natural to it, had been long
  • banished from it.
  • Next to prostration lowly bowed the Captain. O how the sweet creature
  • smiled her approbation of him! Reverence from one begets reverence from
  • another. Men are more of monkeys in imitation than they think
  • themselves.--Involuntarily, in a manner, I bent my knee--My dearest
  • life--and made a very fine speech on presenting the Captain to her. No
  • title myself, to her lip or cheek, 'tis well he attempted not either. He
  • was indeed ready to worship her;--could only touch her charming hand.
  • I have told the Captain, my dear creature--and then I briefly repeated
  • (as if I had supposed she had not heard it) all I had told him.
  • He was astonished, that any body could be displeased one moment with such
  • an angel. He undertook her cause as the highest degree of merit to
  • himself.
  • Never, I must need say, did an angel so much look the angel. All placid,
  • serene, smiling, self-assured: a more lovely flush than usual heightening
  • her natural graces, and adding charms, even to radiance, to her charming
  • complexion.
  • After we had seated ourselves, the agreeable subject was renewed, as we
  • took our chocolate. How happy should she be in her uncle's restored
  • favour!
  • The Captain engaged for it--No more delays, he hoped, on her part! Let
  • the happy day be but once over, all would then be right. But was it
  • improper to ask for copies of my proposals, and of her answer, in order
  • to show them to his dear friend, her uncle?
  • As Mr. Lovelace pleased.--O that the dear creature would always say so!
  • It must be in strict confidence then, I said. But would it not be better
  • to show her uncle the draught of the settlements, when drawn?
  • And will you be so good as to allow of this, Mr. Lovelace?
  • There, Belford! We were once the quarrelsome, but now we are the polite,
  • lovers.
  • Indeed, my dear creature, I will, if you desire it, and if Captain
  • Tomlinson will engage that Mr. Harlowe shall keep them absolutely a
  • secret; that I may not be subjected to the cavil and controul of any
  • others of a family that have used me so very ill.
  • Now, indeed, Sir, you are very obliging.
  • Dost think, Jack, that my face did not now also shine?
  • I held out my hand, (first consecrating it with a kiss,) for her's. She
  • condescended to give it me. I pressed it to my lips: You know not
  • Captain Tomlinson, (with an air,) all storms overblown, what a happy
  • man--
  • Charming couple! [his hands lifted up,] how will my good friend rejoice!
  • O that he were present! You know not, Madam, how dear you still are to
  • your uncle Harlowe!
  • I am still unhappy ever to have disobliged him!
  • Not too much of that, however, fairest, thought I!
  • The Captain repeated his resolution of service, and that in so acceptable
  • a manner, that the dear creature wished that neither he, nor any of his,
  • might ever want a friend of equal benevolence.
  • Nor any of this, she said; for the Captain brought it in, that he had
  • five children living, by one of the best wives and mothers, whose
  • excellent management made him as happy as if his eight hundred pounds a
  • year (which was all he had to boast of) were two thousand.
  • Without economy, the oracular lady said, no estate was large enough.
  • With it, the least was not too small.
  • Lie still, teasing villain! lie still.--I was only speaking to my
  • conscience, Jack.
  • And let me ask you, Mr. Lovelace, said the Captain; yet not so much from
  • doubt, as that I may proceed upon sure grounds--You are willing to
  • co-operate with my dear friend in a general reconciliation?
  • Let me tell you, Mr. Tomlinson, that if it can be distinguished, that my
  • readiness to make up with a family, of whose generosity I have not had
  • reason to think highly, is entirely owing to the value I have for this
  • angel of a woman, I will not only co-operate with Mr. John Harlowe, as
  • you ask; but I will meet with Mr. James Harlowe senior, and his lady, all
  • the way. And furthermore, to make the son James and his sister Arabella
  • quite easy, I will absolutely disclaim any further interest, whether
  • living or dying, in any of the three brothers' estates; contenting myself
  • with what my beloved's grandfather had bequeathed to her: for I have
  • reason to be abundantly satisfied with my own circumstances and
  • prospects--enough rewarded, were she not to bring a shilling in dowry, in
  • a woman who has a merit superior to all the goods of fortune.--True as
  • the Gospel, Belford!--Why had not this scene a real foundation?
  • The dear creature, by her eyes, expressed her gratitude, before her lips
  • could utter it. O Mr. Lovelace, said she--you have infinitely--And there
  • she stopt.
  • The Captain run over in my praise. He was really affected.
  • O that I had not such a mixture of revenge and pride in my love, thought
  • I!--But, (my old plea,) cannot I make her amends at any time? And is not
  • her virtue now in the height of its probation?--Would she lay aside, like
  • the friends of my uncontending Rosebud, all thoughts of defiance--Would
  • she throw herself upon my mercy, and try me but one fortnight in the life
  • of honour--What then?--I cannot say, What then--
  • Do not despise me, Jack, for my inconsistency--in no two letters perhaps
  • agreeing with myself--Who expects consistency in men of our
  • character?--But I am mad with love--fired by revenge--puzzled with my own
  • devices--my invention is my curse--my pride my punishment--drawn five or
  • six ways at once, can she possibly be so unhappy as I?--O why, why, was
  • this woman so divinely excellent!--Yet how know I that she is? What have
  • been her trials? Have I had the courage to make a single one upon her
  • person, though a thousand upon her temper?--Enow, I hope, to make her
  • afraid of ever more disobliging me more!--
  • ***
  • I must banish reflection, or I am a lost man. For these two hours past
  • have I hated myself for my own contrivances. And this not only from what
  • I have related to thee; but for what I have further to relate. But I
  • have now once more steeled my heart. My vengeance is uppermost; for I
  • have been reperusing some of Miss Howe's virulence. The contempt they
  • have both held me in I cannot bear.
  • The happiest breakfast-time, my beloved owned, that she had ever known
  • since she had left her father's house. [She might have let this alone.]
  • The Captain renewed all his protestations of service. He would write me
  • word how his dear friend received the account he should give him of the
  • happy situation of our affairs, and what he thought of the settlements,
  • as soon as I should send him the draughts so kindly promised. And we
  • parted with great professions of mutual esteem; my beloved putting up
  • vows for the success of his generous mediation.
  • When I returned from attending the Captain down stairs, which I did to
  • the outward door, my beloved met me as I entered the dining-room;
  • complacency reigning in every lovely feature.
  • 'You see me already,' said she, 'another creature. You know not, Mr.
  • Lovelace, how near my heart this hoped-for reconciliation is. I am now
  • willing to banish every disagreeable remembrance. You know not, Sir, how
  • much you have obliged me. And O Mr. Lovelace, how happy I shall be, when
  • my heart is lightened from the all-sinking weight of a father's curse!
  • When my dear mamma--You don't know, Sir, half the excellencies of my dear
  • mamma! and what a kind heart she has, when it is left to follow its own
  • impulses--When this blessed mamma shall once more fold me to her
  • indulgent bosom! When I shall again have uncles and aunts, and a brother
  • and sister, all striving who shall show most kindness and favour to the
  • poor outcast, then no more an outcast--And you, Mr. Lovelace, to behold
  • all this, with welcome--What though a little cold at first? when they
  • come to know you better, and to see you oftener, no fresh causes of
  • disgust occurring, and you, as I hope, having entered upon a new course,
  • all will be warmer and warmer love on both sides, till every one will
  • perhaps wonder, how they came to set themselves against you.'
  • Then drying her tears with her handkerchief, after a few moments pausing,
  • on a sudden, as if recollecting that she had been led by her joy to an
  • expression of it which she had not intended I should see, she retired to
  • her chamber with precipitation; leaving me almost as unable to stand it
  • as herself.
  • In short, I was--I want words to say how I was--my nose had been made to
  • tingle before; my eyes have before been made to glisten by this
  • soul-moving beauty; but so very much affected, I never was--for, trying
  • to check my sensibility, it was too strong for me, and I even sobbed--
  • Yes, by my soul, I audibly sobbed, and was forced to turn from her before
  • she had well finished her affecting speech.
  • I want, methinks, now I have owned the odd sensation, to describe it to
  • thee--the thing was so strange to me--something choking, as it were, in
  • my throat--I know not how--yet, I must needs say, though I am out of
  • countenance upon the recollection, that there was something very pretty
  • in it; and I wish I could know it again, that I might have a more perfect
  • idea of it, and be better able to describe it to thee.
  • But this effect of her joy on such an occasion gives me a high notion of
  • what that virtue must be [What other name can I call it?] which in a mind
  • so capable of delicate transport, should be able to make so charming a
  • creature, in her very bloom, all frost and snow to every advance of love
  • from the man she hates not. This must be all from education too--Must it
  • not, Belford? Can education have stronger force in a woman's heart than
  • nature?--Sure it cannot. But if it can, how entirely right are parents
  • to cultivate their daughters' minds, and to inspire them with notions of
  • reserve and distance to our sex: and indeed to make them think highly of
  • their own! for pride is an excellent substitute, let me tell thee, where
  • virtue shines not out, as the sun, in its own unborrowed lustre.
  • LETTER VIII
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • And now it is time to confess (and yet I know that thy conjectures are
  • aforehand with my exposition) that this Captain Tomlinson, who is so
  • great a favourite with my charmer, and who takes so much delight in
  • healing breaches, and reconciling differences, is neither a greater man
  • nor a less than honest Patrick M'Donald, attended by a discarded footman
  • of his own finding out.
  • Thou knowest what a various-lifed rascal he is; and to what better hopes
  • born and educated. But that ingenious knack of forgery, for which he was
  • expelled the Dublin-University, and a detection since in evidenceship,
  • have been his ruin. For these have thrown him from one country to
  • another; and at last, into the way of life, which would make him a fit
  • husband for Miss Howe's Townsend with her contrabands. He is, thou
  • knowest, admirably qualified for any enterprize that requires adroitness
  • and solemnity. And can there, after all, be a higher piece of justice,
  • than to keep one smuggler in readiness to play against another?
  • 'Well, but, Lovelace, (methinks thou questionest,) how camest thou to
  • venture upon such a contrivance as this, when, as thou hast told me, the
  • Lady used to be a month at a time at this uncle's; and must therefore, in
  • all probability, know, that there was not a Captain Tomlinson in all the
  • neighbourhood, at least no one of the name so intimate with him as this
  • man pretends to be?'
  • This objection, Jack, is so natural a one, that I could not help
  • observing to my charmer, that she must surely have heard her uncle speak
  • of this gentleman. No, she said, she never had. Besides she had not
  • been at her uncle Harlowe's for near ten months [this I had heard from
  • her before]: and there were several gentlemen who used the same green,
  • whom she knew not.
  • We are all very ready, thou knowest, to believe what she likes.
  • And what was the reason, thinkest thou, that she had not been of so long
  • a time at this uncle's?--Why, this old sinner, who imagines himself
  • entitled to call me to account for my freedoms with the sex, has lately
  • fallen into familiarities, as it is suspected, with his housekeeper; who
  • assumes airs upon it.--A cursed deluding sex!--In youth, middle age, or
  • dotage, they take us all in.
  • Dost thou not see, however, that this housekeeper knows nothing, nor is
  • to know any thing, of the treaty of reconciliation designed to be set on
  • foot; and therefore the uncle always comes to the Captain, the Captain
  • goes not to the uncle? And this I surmised to the lady. And then it was
  • a natural suggestion, that the Captain was the rather applied to, as he
  • is a stranger to the rest of the family--Need I tell thee the meaning of
  • all this?
  • But this intrigue of the antient is a piece of private history, the truth
  • of which my beloved cares not to own, and indeed affects to disbelieve:
  • as she does also some puisny gallantries of her foolish brother; which,
  • by way of recrimination, I have hinted at, without naming my informant in
  • their family.
  • 'Well but, methinks, thou questionest again, Is it not probable that Miss
  • Howe will make inquiry after such a man as Tomlinson?--And when she
  • cannot--'
  • I know what thou wouldst say--but I have no doubt, that Wilson will be so
  • good, if I desire it, as to give into my own hands any letter that may be
  • brought by Collins to his house, for a week to come. And now I hope thou
  • art satisfied.
  • I will conclude with a short story.
  • 'Two neighbouring sovereigns were at war together, about some pitiful
  • chuck-farthing thing or other; no matter what; for the least trifles will
  • set princes and children at loggerheads. Their armies had been drawn up
  • in battalia some days, and the news of a decisive action was expected
  • every hour to arrive at each court. At last, issue was joined; a bloody
  • battle was fought; and a fellow who had been a spectator of it, arriving,
  • with the news of a complete victory, at the capital of one of the princes
  • some time before the appointed couriers, the bells were set a ringing,
  • bonfires and illuminations were made, and the people went to bed
  • intoxicated with joy and good liquor. But the next day all was reversed:
  • The victorious enemy, pursuing his advantage, was expected every hour at
  • the gates of the almost defenceless capital. The first reporter was
  • hereupon sought for, and found; and being questioned, pleaded a great
  • deal of merit, in that he had, in so dismal a situation, taken such a
  • space of time from the distress of his fellow-citizens, and given it to
  • festivity, as were the hours between the false good news and the real
  • bad.'
  • Do thou, Belford, make the application. This I know, that I have given
  • greater joy to my beloved, than she had thought would so soon fall to her
  • share. And as the human life is properly said to be chequerwork, no
  • doubt but a person of her prudence will make the best of it, and set off
  • so much good against so much bad, in order to strike as just a balance as
  • possible.
  • [The Lady, in three several letters, acquaints her friend with the most
  • material passages and conversations contained in those of Mr. Lovelace's
  • preceding. These are her words, on relating what the commission of the
  • pretended Tomlinson was, after the apprehensions that his distant inquiry
  • had given her:]
  • At last, my dear, all these doubts and fears were cleared up, and
  • banished; and, in their place, a delightful prospect was opened to me.
  • For it comes happily out, (but at present it must be an absolute secret,
  • for reasons which I shall mention in the sequel,) that the gentleman was
  • sent by my uncle Harlowe [I thought he could not be angry with me for
  • ever]: all owing to the conversation that passed between your good Mr.
  • Hickman and him. For although Mr. Hickman's application was too harshly
  • rejected at the time, my uncle could not but think better of it
  • afterwards, and of the arguments that worthy gentleman used in my favour.
  • Who, upon a passionate repulse, would despair of having a reasonable
  • request granted?--Who would not, by gentleness and condescension,
  • endeavour to leave favourable impressions upon an angry mind; which, when
  • it comes cooly to reflect, may induce it to work itself into a
  • condescending temper? To request a favour, as I have often said, is one
  • thing; to challenge it as our due, is another. And what right has a
  • petitioner to be angry at a repulse, if he has not a right to demand what
  • he sues for as a debt?
  • [She describes Captain Tomlinson, on his breakfast-visit, to be, a grave,
  • good sort of man. And in another place, a genteel man of great gravity,
  • and a good aspect; she believes upwards of fifty years of age. 'I liked
  • him, says she, as soon as I saw him.'
  • As her projects are now, she says, more favourable than heretofore, she
  • wishes, that her hopes of Mr. Lovelace's so-often-promised reformation
  • were better grounded than she is afraid they can be.]
  • We have both been extremely puzzled, my dear, says she, to reconcile some
  • parts of Mr. Lovelace's character with other parts of it: his good with
  • his bad; such of the former, in particular, as his generosity to his
  • tenants; his bounty to the innkeeper's daughter; his readiness to put me
  • upon doing kind things by my good Norton, and others.
  • A strange mixture in his mind, as I have told him! for he is certainly
  • (as I have reason to say, looking back upon his past behaviour to me in
  • twenty instances) a hard-hearted man.--Indeed, my dear, I have thought
  • more than once, that he had rather see me in tears than give me reason to
  • be pleased with him.
  • My cousin Morden says, that free livers are remorseless.* And so they
  • must be in the very nature of things.
  • * See Vol. IV. Letter XIX. See also Mr. Lovelace's own confession of the
  • delight he takes in a woman's tears, in different parts of his letters.
  • Mr. Lovelace is a proud man. We have both long ago observed that he is.
  • And I am truly afraid, that his very generosity is more owing to his
  • pride and his vanity, that that philanthropy (shall I call it?) which
  • distinguishes a beneficent mind.
  • Money he values not, but as a mean to support his pride and his
  • independence. And it is easy, as I have often thought, for a person to
  • part with a secondary appetite, when, by so doing, he can promote or
  • gratify a first.
  • I am afraid, my dear, that there must have been some fault in his
  • education. His natural bias was not, perhaps (as his power was likely to
  • be large) to do good and beneficent actions; but not, I doubt, from
  • proper motives.
  • If he had, his generosity would not have stopt at pride, but would have
  • struck into humanity; and then would he not have contented himself with
  • doing praiseworthy things by fits and starts, or, as if relying on the
  • doctrine of merits, he hoped by a good action to atone for a bad one;*
  • but he would have been uniformly noble, and done the good for its own
  • sake.
  • * That the Lady judges rightly of him in this place, see Vol. I. Letter
  • XXXIV. where, giving the motive for his generosity to his Rosebud, he
  • says--'As I make it my rule, whenever I have committed a very capital
  • enormity, to do some good by way of atonement; and as I believe I am a
  • pretty deal indebted on that score; I intend to join an hundred pounds to
  • Johnny's aunt's hundred pounds, to make one innocent couple happy.'--
  • Besides which motive, he had a further view in answer in that instance of
  • his generosity; as may be seen in Vol. II. Letters XXVI. XXVII. XXVIII.
  • See also the note, Vol. II. pp. 170, 171.
  • To show the consistence of his actions, as they now appear, with his
  • views and principles, as he lays them down in his first letters, it may
  • be not amiss to refer the reader to his letters, Vol. I. No. XXXIV. XXXV.
  • See also Vol. I. Letter XXX.--and Letter XL. for Clarissa's early opinion
  • of Mr. Lovelace.--Whence the coldness and indifference to him, which he
  • so repeatedly accuses her of, will be accounted for, more to her glory,
  • than to his honour.
  • O my dear! what a lot have I drawn! pride, this poor man's virtue; and
  • revenge, his other predominating quality!--This one consolation, however,
  • remains:--He is not an infidel, and unbeliever: had he been an infidel,
  • there would have been no room at all for hope of him; (but priding
  • himself, as he does, in his fertile invention) he would have been utterly
  • abandoned, irreclaimable, and a savage.
  • [When she comes to relate those occasions, which Mr. Lovelace in his
  • narrative acknowledges himself to be affected by, she thus expresses
  • herself:]
  • He endeavoured, as once before, to conceal his emotion. But why, my
  • dear, should these men (for Mr. Lovelace is not singular in this) think
  • themselves above giving these beautiful proofs of a feeling heart? Were
  • it in my power again to choose, or to refuse, I would reject the man with
  • contempt, who sought to suppress, or offered to deny, the power of being
  • visibly affected upon proper occasions, as either a savage-hearted
  • creature, or as one who was so ignorant of the principal glory of the
  • human nature, as to place his pride in a barbarous insensibility.
  • These lines translated from Juvenal by Mr. Tate, I have been often
  • pleased with:
  • Compassion proper to mankind appears:
  • Which Nature witness'd, when she lent us tears.
  • Of tender sentiments we only give
  • These proofs: To weep is our prerogative:
  • To show by pitying looks, and melting eyes,
  • How with a suff'ring friend we sympathise.
  • Who can all sense of other ills escape,
  • Is but a brute at best, in human shape.
  • It cannot but yield me some pleasure, hardly as I have sometimes thought
  • of the people of the house, that such a good man as Captain Tomlinson had
  • spoken well of them, upon inquiry.
  • And here I stop a minute, my dear, to receive, in fancy, your kind
  • congratulation.
  • My next, I hope, will confirm my present, and open still more agreeable
  • prospects. Mean time be assured, that there cannot possibly any good
  • fortune befal me, which I shall look upon with equal delight to that I
  • have in your friendship.
  • My thankful compliments to your good Mr. Hickman, to whose kind invention
  • I am so much obliged on this occasion, conclude me, my dearest Miss Howe,
  • Your ever affectionate and grateful
  • CL. HARLOWE.
  • LETTER IX
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • TUESDAY, MAY 30.
  • I have a letter from Lord M. Such a one as I would wish for, if I
  • intended matrimony. But as matters are circumstanced, I cannot think of
  • showing it to my beloved.
  • My Lord regrets, 'that he is not to be the Lady's nuptial father. He
  • seems apprehensive that I have still, specious as my reasons are, some
  • mischief in my head.'
  • He graciously consents, 'that I may marry when I please; and offers one
  • or both of my cousins to assist my bride, and to support her spirits on
  • the occasion; since, as he understands, she is so much afraid to venture
  • with me.
  • 'Pritchard, he tells me, has his final orders to draw up deeds for
  • assigning over to me, in perpetuity, 1000£. per annum: which he will
  • execute the same hour that the lady in person owns her marriage.'
  • He consents, 'that the jointure be made from my own estate.'
  • He wishes, 'that the Lady would have accepted of his draught; and
  • commends me for tendering it to her. But reproaches me for my pride in
  • not keeping it myself. What the right side gives up, the left, he says,
  • may be the better for.'
  • The girls, the left-sided girls, he means.
  • With all my heart. If I can have my Clarissa, the devil take every thing
  • else.
  • A good deal of other stuff writes the stupid peer; scribbling in several
  • places half a dozen lines, apparently for no other reason but to bring in
  • as many musty words in an old saw.
  • If thou sawest, 'How I can manage, since my beloved will wonder that I
  • have not an answer from my Lord to such a letter as I wrote to him; and
  • if I own I have one, will expect that I should shew it to her, as I did
  • my letter?--This I answer--'That I can be informed by Pritchard, that my
  • Lord has the gout in his right-hand; and has ordered him to attend me in
  • form, for my particular orders about the transfer:' And I can see
  • Pritchard, thou knowest, at the King's Arms, or wherever I please, at an
  • hour's warning; though he be at M. Hall, I in town; and he, by word of
  • mouth, can acquaint me with every thing in my Lord's letter that is
  • necessary for my charmer to know.
  • Whenever it suits me, I can resolve the old peer to his right hand, and
  • then can make him write a much more sensible letter than this that he has
  • now sent me.
  • Thou knowest, that an adroitness in the art of manual imitation, was one
  • of my earliest attainments. It has been said, on this occasion, that had
  • I been a bad man in meum and tuum matters, I should not have been fit to
  • live. As to the girls, we hold it no sin to cheat them. And are we not
  • told, that in being well deceived consists the whole of human happiness?
  • WEDNESDAY, MAY 31.
  • All still happier and happier. A very high honour done me: a chariot,
  • instead of a coach, permitted, purposely to indulge me in the subject of
  • subjects.
  • Our discourse in this sweet airing turned upon our future manner of life.
  • The day is bashfully promised me. Soon was the answer to my repeated
  • urgency. Our equipage, our servants, our liveries, were parts of the
  • delightful subject. A desire that the wretch who had given me
  • intelligence out of the family (honest Joseph Leman) might not be one of
  • our menials; and her resolution to have her faithful Hannah, whether
  • recovered or not; were signified; and both as readily assented to.
  • Her wishes, from my attentive behaviour, when with her at St. Paul's,*
  • that I would often accompany her to the Divine Service, were greatly
  • intimated, and as readily engaged for. I assured her, that I ever had
  • respected the clergy in a body; and some individuals of them (her Dr.
  • Lewen for one) highly: and that were not going to church an act of
  • religion, I thought it [as I told thee once] a most agreeable sight to
  • see rich and poor, all of a company, as I might say, assembled once a
  • week in one place, and each in his or her best attire, to worship the God
  • that made them. Nor could it be a hardship upon a man liberally
  • educated, to make one on so solemn an occasion, and to hear the harangue
  • of a man of letters, (though far from being the principal part of the
  • service, as it is too generally looked upon to be,) whose studies having
  • taken a different turn from his own, he must always have something new to
  • say.
  • * See Vol. IV. Letter V.
  • ** Ibid.
  • She shook her head, and repeated the word new: but looked as if willing
  • to be satisfied for the present with this answer. To be sure, Jack, she
  • means to do great despight to his Satanic majesty in her hopes of
  • reforming me. No wonder, therefore, if he exerts himself to prevent her,
  • and to be revenged. But how came this in!--I am ever of party against
  • myself.--One day, I fancy, I shall hate myself on recollecting what I am
  • about at this instant. But I must stay till then. We must all of us do
  • something to repent of.
  • The reconciliation-prospect was enlarged upon. If her uncle Harlowe will
  • but pave the way to it, and if it can be brought about, she shall be
  • happy.--Happy, with a sigh, as it is now possible she can be!
  • She won't forbear, Jack!
  • I told her, that I had heard from Pritchard, just before we set out on
  • our airing, and expected him in town to-morrow from Lord M. to take my
  • directions. I spoke with gratitude of my Lord's kindness to me; and with
  • pleasure of Lady Sarah's, Lady Betty's, and my two cousins Montague's
  • veneration for her: as also of his Lordship's concern that his gout
  • hindered him from writing a reply with his own hand to my last.
  • She pitied my Lord. She pitied poor Mrs. Fretchville too; for she had
  • the goodness to inquire after her. The dear creature pitied every body
  • that seemed to want pity. Happy in her own prospects, she had leisure to
  • look abroad, and wishes every body equally happy.
  • It is likely to go very hard with Mrs. Fretchville. Her face, which she
  • had valued herself upon, will be utterly ruined. 'This good, however, as
  • I could not but observe, she may reap from so great an evil--as the
  • greater malady generally swallows up the less, she may have a grief on
  • this occasion, that may diminish the other grief, and make it tolerable.'
  • I had a gentle reprimand for this light turn on so heavy an evil--'For
  • what was the loss of beauty to the loss of a good husband?'--Excellent
  • creature!
  • Her hopes (and her pleasure upon those hopes) that Miss Howe's mother
  • would be reconciled to her, were also mentioned. Good Mrs. Howe was her
  • word, for a woman so covetous, and so remorseless in her covetousness,
  • that no one else will call her good. But this dear creature has such an
  • extension in her love, as to be capable of valuing the most insignificant
  • animal related to those whom she respects. Love me, and love my dog, I
  • have heard Lord M. say.--Who knows, but that I may in time, in compliment
  • to myself, bring her to think well of thee, Jack?
  • But what am I about? Am I not all this time arraigning my own heart?--I
  • know I am, by the remorse I feel in it, while my pen bears testimony to
  • her excellence. But yet I must add (for no selfish consideration shall
  • hinder me from doing justice to this admirable creature) that in this
  • conversation she demonstrated so much prudent knowledge in every thing
  • that relates to that part of the domestic management which falls under
  • the care of a mistress of a family, that I believe she has no equal of
  • her years in the world.
  • But, indeed, I know not the subject on which she does not talk with
  • admirable distinction; insomuch that could I but get over my prejudices
  • against matrimony, and resolve to walk in the dull beaten path of my
  • ancestors, I should be the happiest of men--and if I cannot, I may be ten
  • times more to be pitied than she.
  • My heart, my heart, Belford, is not to be trusted--I break off, to
  • re-peruse some of Miss Howe's virulence.
  • ***
  • Cursed letters, these of Miss Howe, Jack!--Do thou turn back to those of
  • mine, where I take notice of them--I proceed--
  • Upon the whole, my charmer was all gentleness, all ease, all serenity,
  • throughout this sweet excursion. Nor had she reason to be otherwise: for
  • it being the first time that I had the honour of her company alone, I was
  • resolved to encourage her, by my respectfulness, to repeat the favour.
  • On our return, I found the counsellor's clerk waiting for me, with a
  • draught of the marriage-settlements.
  • They are drawn, with only the necessary variations, from those made for
  • my mother. The original of which (now returned by the counsellor) as
  • well as the new draughts, I have put into my beloved's hands.
  • These settlements of my mother made the lawyer's work easy; nor can she
  • have a better precedent; the great Lord S. having settled them, at the
  • request of my mother's relations; all the difference, my charmer's are
  • 100l. per annum more than my mother's.
  • I offered to read to her the old deed, while she looked over the draught;
  • for she had refused her presence at the examination with the clerk: but
  • this she also declined.
  • I suppose she did not care to hear of so many children, first, second,
  • third, fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh sons, and as many daughters, to
  • be begotten upon the body of the said Clarissa Harlowe.
  • Charming matrimonial recitativoes!--though it is always said lawfully
  • begotten too--as if a man could beget children unlawfully upon the body
  • of his own wife.--But thinkest thou not that these arch rogues the
  • lawyers hereby intimate, that a man may have children by his wife before
  • marriage?--This must be what they mean. Why will these sly fellows put
  • an honest man in minds of such rogueries?--but hence, as in numberless
  • other instances, we see, that law and gospel are two very different
  • things.
  • Dorcas, in our absence, tried to get at the wainscot-box in the dark
  • closet. But it cannot be done without violence. And to run a risk of
  • consequence now, for mere curiosity-sake, would be inexcusable.
  • Mrs. Sinclair and the nymphs are all of opinion, that I am now so much a
  • favourite, and have such a visible share in her confidence, and even in
  • her affections, that I may do what I will, and plead for excuse violence
  • of passion; which, they will have it, makes violence of action pardonable
  • with their sex; as well as allowed extenuation with the unconcerned of
  • both sexes; and they all offer their helping hands. Why not? they say:
  • Has she not passed for my wife before them all?--And is she not in a fine
  • way of being reconciled to her friends?--And was not the want of that
  • reconciliation the pretence for postponing the consummation?
  • They again urge me, since it is so difficult to make night my friend, to
  • an attempt in the day. They remind me, that the situation of their house
  • is such, that no noises can be heard out of it; and ridicule me for
  • making it necessary for a lady to be undressed. It was not always so
  • with me, poor old man! Sally told me; saucily flinging her handkerchief
  • in my face.
  • LETTER X
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • FRIDAY, JUNE 2.
  • Notwithstanding my studied-for politeness and complaisance for some days
  • past; and though I have wanted courage to throw the mask quite aside; yet
  • I have made the dear creature more than once look about her, by the warm,
  • though decent expression of my passion. I have brought her to own, that
  • I am more than indifferent with her: but as to LOVE, which I pressed her
  • to acknowledge, what need of acknowledgments of that sort, when a woman
  • consents to marrying?--And once repulsing me with displeasure, the proof
  • of true love I was vowing for her, was RESPECT, not FREEDOM. And
  • offering to defend myself, she told me, that all the conception she had
  • been able to form of a faulty passion, was, that it must demonstrate
  • itself as mine sought to do.
  • I endeavoured to justify my passion, by laying over-delicacy at her door.
  • Over-delicacy, she said, was not my fault, if it were her's. She must
  • plainly tell me, that I appeared to her incapable of distinguishing what
  • were the requisites of a pure mind. Perhaps, had the libertine
  • presumption to imagine, that there was no difference in heart, nor any
  • but what proceeded from difference of education and custom, between the
  • pure and impure--and yet custom alone, as she observed, if I did so
  • think, would make a second nature, as well in good as in bad habits.
  • ***
  • I have just now been called to account for some innocent liberties which
  • I thought myself entitled to take before the women; as they suppose us to
  • be married, and now within view of consummation.
  • I took the lecture very hardly; and with impatience wished for the happy
  • day and hour when I might call her all my own, and meet with no check
  • from a niceness that had no example.
  • She looked at me with a bashful kind of contempt. I thought it contempt,
  • and required the reason for it; not being conscious of offence, as I told
  • her.
  • This is not the first time, Mr. Lovelace, said she, that I have had cause
  • to be displeased with you, when you, perhaps, have not thought yourself
  • exceptionable.--But, Sir, let me tell you, that the married state, in my
  • eye, is a state of purity, and [I think she told me] not of
  • licentiousness; so, at least, I understood her.
  • Marriage-purity, Jack!--Very comical, 'faith--yet, sweet dears, half the
  • female world ready to run away with a rake, because he is a rake; and for
  • no other reason; nay, every other reason against their choice of such a
  • one.
  • But have not you and I, Belford, seen young wives, who would be thought
  • modest! and, when maids, were fantastically shy; permit freedoms in
  • public from their uxorious husbands, which have shown, that both of them
  • have forgotten what belongs either to prudence or decency? while every
  • modest eye has sunk under the shameless effrontery, and every modest face
  • been covered with blushes for those who could not blush.
  • I once, upon such an occasion, proposed to a circle of a dozen, thus
  • scandalized, to withdraw; since they must needs see that as well the
  • lady, as the gentleman, wanted to be in private. This motion had its
  • effect upon the amorous pair; and I was applauded for the check given to
  • their licentiousness.
  • But, upon another occasion of this sort, I acted a little more in
  • character. For I ventured to make an attempt upon a bride, which I
  • should not have had the courage to make, had not the unblushing
  • passiveness with which she received her fond husband's public toyings
  • (looking round her with triumph rather than with shame, upon every lady
  • present) incited my curiosity to know if the same complacency might not
  • be shown to a private friend. 'Tis true, I was in honour obliged to keep
  • the secret. But I never saw the turtles bill afterwards, but I thought
  • of number two to the same female; and in my heart thanked the fond
  • husband for the lesson he had taught his wife.
  • From what I have said, thou wilt see, that I approve of my beloved's
  • exception to public loves. That, I hope, is all the charming icicle
  • means by marriage-purity, but to return.
  • From the whole of what I have mentioned to have passed between my beloved
  • and me, thou wilt gather, that I have not been a mere dangler, a Hickman,
  • in the passed days, though not absolutely active, and a Lovelace.
  • The dear creature now considers herself as my wife-elect. The unsaddened
  • heart, no longer prudish, will not now, I hope, give the sable turn to
  • every address of the man she dislikes not. And yet she must keep up so
  • much reserve, as will justify past inflexibilities. 'Many and many a
  • pretty soul would yield, were she not afraid that the man she favoured
  • would think the worse of her for it.' That is also a part of the rake's
  • creed. But should she resent ever so strongly, she cannot now break with
  • me; since, if she does, there will be an end of the family
  • reconciliation; and that in a way highly discreditable to herself.
  • SATURDAY, JUNE 3.
  • Just returned from Doctors Commons. I have been endeavouring to get a
  • license. Very true, Jack. I have the mortification to find a
  • difficulty, as the lady is of rank and fortune, and as there is no
  • consent of father or next friend, in obtaining this all-fettering
  • instrument.
  • I made report of this difficulty. 'It is very right,' she says, 'that
  • such difficulties should be made.'--But not to a man of my known fortune,
  • surely, Jack, though the woman were the daughter of a duke.
  • I asked, if she approved of the settlements? She said, she had compared
  • them with my mother's, and had no objection to them. She had written to
  • Miss Howe upon the subject, she owned; and to inform her of our present
  • situation.*
  • * As this letter of the Lady to Miss Howe contains no new matter, but
  • what may be collected from one of those of Mr. Lovelace, it is omitted.
  • ***
  • Just now, in high good humour, my beloved returned me the draughts of the
  • settlements: a copy of which I have sent to Captain Tomlinson. She
  • complimented me, 'that she never had any doubt of my honour in cases of
  • this nature.'
  • In matters between man and man nobody ever had, thou knowest.
  • I had need, thou wilt say, to have some good qualities.
  • Great faults and great virtues are often found in the same person. In
  • nothing very bad, but as to women: and did not one of them begin with
  • me.*
  • * See Vol. I. Letter XXXI.
  • We have held, that women have no souls. I am a very Turk in this point,
  • and willing to believe they have not. And if so, to whom shall I be
  • accountable for what I do to them? Nay, if souls they have, as there is
  • no sex in ethereals, nor need of any, what plea can a lady hold of
  • injuries done her in her lady-state, when there is an end of her
  • lady-ship?
  • LETTER XI
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • MONDAY, JUNE 5.
  • I am now almost in despair of succeeding with this charming frost-piece
  • by love or gentleness.--A copy of the draughts, as I told thee, has been
  • sent to Captain Tomlinson; and that by a special messenger. Engrossments
  • are proceeding with. I have been again at the Commons.--Should in all
  • probability have procured a license by Mallory's means, had not Mallory's
  • friend, the proctor, been suddenly sent for to Chestnut, to make an old
  • lady's will. Pritchard has told me by word of mouth, though my charmer
  • saw him not, all that was necessary for her to know in the letter my Lord
  • wrote, which I could not show her: and taken my directions about the
  • estates to be made over to me on my nuptials.--Yet, with all these
  • favourable appearances, no conceding moment to be found, no improvable
  • tenderness to be raised.
  • But never, I believe, was there so true, so delicate a modesty in the
  • human mind as in that of this lady. And this has been my security all
  • along; and, in spite of Miss Howe's advice to her, will be so still;
  • since, if her delicacy be a fault, she can no more overcome it than I can
  • my aversion to matrimony. Habit, habit, Jack, seest thou not? may
  • subject us both to weaknesses. And should she not have charity for me,
  • as I have for her?
  • Twice indeed with rapture, which once she called rude, did I salute her;
  • and each time resenting the freedom, did she retire; though, to do her
  • justice, she favoured me again with her presence at my first entreaty,
  • and took no notice of the cause of her withdrawing.
  • Is it policy to show so open a resentment for innocent liberties, which,
  • in her situation, she must so soon forgive?
  • Yet the woman who resents not initiatory freedoms must be lost. For love
  • is an encroacher. Love never goes backward. Love is always aspiring.
  • Always must aspire. Nothing but the highest act of love can satisfy an
  • indulged love. And what advantages has a lover, who values not breaking
  • the peace, over his mistress who is solicitous to keep it!
  • I have now at this instant wrought myself up, for the dozenth time, to a
  • half-resolution. A thousand agreeable things I have to say to her. She
  • is in the dining-room. Just gone up. She always expects me when there.
  • ***
  • High displeasure!--followed by an abrupt departure.
  • I sat down by her. I took both her hands in mine. I would have it so.
  • All gentle my voice. Her father mentioned with respect. Her mother with
  • reverence. Even her brother amicably spoken of. I never thought I could
  • have wished so ardently, as I told her I did wish, for a reconciliation
  • with her family.
  • A sweet and grateful flush then overspread her fair face; a gentle sigh
  • now-and-then heaved her handkerchief.
  • I perfectly longed to hear from Captain Tomlinson. It was impossible for
  • the uncle to find fault with the draught of the settlements. I would
  • not, however, be understood, by sending them down, that I intended to put
  • it in her uncle's power to delay my happy day. When, when was it to be?
  • I would hasten again to the Commons; and would not return without the
  • license.
  • The Lawn I proposed to retire to, as soon as the happy ceremony was over.
  • This day and that day I proposed.
  • It was time enough to name the day, when the settlements were completed,
  • and the license obtained. Happy should she be, could the kind Captain
  • Tomlinson obtain her uncle's presence privately.
  • A good hint!--It may perhaps be improved upon--either for a delay or a
  • pacifier.
  • No new delays for Heaven's sake, I besought her; and reproached her
  • gently for the past. Name but the day--(an early day, I hoped it would
  • be, in the following week)--that I might hail its approach, and number
  • the tardy hours.
  • My cheek reclined on her shoulder--kissing her hands by turns. Rather
  • bashfully than angrily reluctant, her hands sought to be withdrawn; her
  • shoulder avoiding my reclined cheek--apparently loth, and more loth to
  • quarrel with me; her downcast eye confessing more than her lips can
  • utter. Now surely, thought I, is my time to try if she can forgive a
  • still bolder freedom than I had ever yet taken.
  • I then gave her struggling hands liberty. I put one arm round her waist:
  • I imprinted a kiss on her sweet lip, with a Be quiet only, and an averted
  • face, as if she feared another.
  • Encouraged by so gentle a repulse, the tenderest things I said; and then,
  • with my other hand, drew aside the handkerchief that concealed the beauty
  • of beauties, and pressed with my burning lips the most charming breast
  • that ever my ravished eyes beheld.
  • A very contrary passion to that which gave her bosom so delightful a
  • swell, immediately took place. She struggled out of my encircling arms
  • with indignation. I detained her reluctant hand. Let me go, said she.
  • I see there is no keeping terms with you. Base encroacher! Is this the
  • design of your flattering speeches? Far as matters have gone, I will for
  • ever renounce you. You have an odious heart. Let me go, I tell you.
  • I was forced to obey, and she flung from me, repeating base, and adding
  • flattering, encroacher.
  • ***
  • In vain have I urged by Dorcas for the promised favour of dining with her.
  • She would not dine at all. She could not.
  • But why makes she every inch of her person thus sacred?--So near the time
  • too, that she must suppose, that all will be my own by deed of purchase
  • and settlement?
  • She has read, no doubt, of the art of the eastern monarchs, who sequester
  • themselves from the eyes of their subjects, in order to excite their
  • adoration, when, upon some solemn occasions, they think fit to appear in
  • public.
  • But let me ask thee, Belford, whether (on these solemn occasions) the
  • preceding cavalcade; here a greater officer, and there a great minister,
  • with their satellites, and glaring equipages; do not prepare the eyes of
  • the wondering beholders, by degrees, to bear the blaze of canopy'd
  • majesty (what though but an ugly old man perhaps himself? yet) glittering
  • in the collected riches of his vast empire?
  • And should not my beloved, for her own sake, descend, by degrees, from
  • goddess-hood into humanity? If it be pride that restrains her, ought not
  • that pride to be punished? If, as in the eastern emperors, it be art as
  • well as pride, art is what she of all women need not use. If shame, what
  • a shame to be ashamed to communicate to her adorer's sight the most
  • admirable of her personal graces?
  • Let me perish, Belford, if I would not forego the brightest diadem in the
  • world, for the pleasure of seeing a twin Lovelace at each charming
  • breast, drawing from it his first sustenance; the pious task, for
  • physical reasons,* continued for one month and no more!
  • * In Pamela, Vol. III. Letter XXXII. these reasons are given, and are
  • worthy of every parent's consideration, as is the whole Letter, which
  • contains the debate between Mr. B. and his Pamela, on the important
  • subject of mothers being nurses to their own children.
  • I now, methinks, behold this most charming of women in this sweet office:
  • her conscious eye now dropt on one, now on the other, with a sigh of
  • maternal tenderness, and then raised up to my delighted eye, full of
  • wishes, for the sake of the pretty varlets, and for her own sake, that I
  • would deign to legitimate; that I would condescend to put on the nuptial
  • fetters.
  • LETTER XII
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • MONDAY AFTERNOON.
  • A letter received from the worthy Captain Tomlinson has introduced me
  • into the presence of my charmer sooner than perhaps I should otherwise
  • have been admitted.
  • Sullen her brow, at her first entrance into the dining-room. But I took
  • no notice of what had passed, and her anger of itself subsided.
  • 'The Captain, after letting me know that he chose not to write till he
  • had promised the draught of the settlements, acquaint me, that his friend
  • Mr. John Harlowe, in their first conference (which was held as soon as he
  • got down) was extremely surprised, and even grieved (as he feared he
  • would be) to hear that we were not married. The world, he said, who knew
  • my character, would be very censorious, were it owned, that we had lived
  • so long together unmarried in the same lodgings; although our marriage
  • were now to be ever so publicly celebrated.
  • 'His nephew James, he was sure, would make a great handle of it against
  • any motion that might be made towards a reconciliation; and with the
  • greater success, as there was not a family in the kingdom more jealous of
  • their honour than theirs.'
  • This is true of the Harlowes, Jack: they have been called The proud
  • Harlowes: and I have ever found, that all young honour is supercilious
  • and touchy.
  • But seest thou not how right I was in my endeavour to persuade my fair-
  • one to allow her uncle's friend to think us married; especially as he
  • came prepared to believe it; and as her uncle hoped it was so?--But
  • nothing on earth is so perverse as a woman, when she is set upon carrying
  • a point, and has a meek man, or one who loves his peace, to deal with.
  • My beloved was vexed. She pulled out her handkerchief: but was more
  • inclined to blame me than herself.
  • Had you kept your word, Mr. Lovelace, and left me when we came to
  • town--And there she stopt; for she knew, that it was her own fault that
  • we were not married before we left the country; and how could I leave her
  • afterwards, while her brother was plotting to carry her off by violence?
  • Nor has this brother yet given over his machinations.
  • For, as the Captain proceeds, 'Mr. John Harlowe owned to him (but in
  • confidence) that his nephew is at this time busied in endeavouring to
  • find out where we are; being assured (as I am not to be heard of at any
  • of my relations, or at my usual lodgings) that we are together. And that
  • we are not married is plain, as he will have it, from Mr. Hickman's
  • application so lately made to her uncle; and which was seconded by Mrs.
  • Norton to her mother. And her brother cannot bear that I should enjoy
  • such a triumph unmolested.'
  • A profound sigh, and the handkerchief again lifted to the eye. But did
  • not the sweet soul deserve this turn upon her, for feloniously resolving
  • to rob me of herself, had the application made by Hickman succeeded?
  • I read on to the following effect:
  • 'Why (asked Mr. Harlowe) was it said to his other inquiring friend, that
  • we were married; and that by his niece's woman, who ought to know? who
  • could give convincing reasons, no doubt'--
  • Here again she wept; took a turn across the room; then returned--Read on,
  • says she--
  • Will you, my dearest life, read it yourself?
  • I will take the letter with me, by-and-by--I cannot see to read it just
  • now, wiping her eyes--read on--let me hear it all--that I may know your
  • sentiments upon this letter, as well as give my own.
  • 'The Captain then told uncle John the reasons that induced me to give out
  • that we were married; and the conditions on which my beloved was brought
  • to countenance it; which had kept us at the most punctilious distance.
  • 'But still Mr. Harlowe objected my character. And went away
  • dissatisfied. And the Captain was also so much concerned, that he cared
  • not to write what the result of his first conference was.
  • 'But in the next, which was held on receipt of the draughts, at the
  • Captain's house, (as the former was, for the greater secrecy,) when the
  • old gentleman had read them, and had the Captain's opinion, he was much
  • better pleased. And yet he declared, that it would not be easy to
  • persuade any other person of his family to believe so favourably of the
  • matter, as he was now willing to believe, were they to know that we had
  • lived so long together unmarried.
  • 'And then the Captain says, his dear friend made a proposal:--It was
  • this--That we should marry out of hand, but as privately as possible, as
  • indeed he found we intended, (for he could have no objection to the
  • draughts)--but yet, he expected to have present one trusty friend of his
  • own, for his better satisfaction'--
  • Here I stopt, with a design to be angry--but she desiring me to read on,
  • I obeyed.
  • '--But that it should pass to every one living, except to that trusty
  • person, to himself, and to the Captain, that we were married from the
  • time that we had lived together in one house; and that this time should
  • be made to agree with that of Mr. Hickman's application to him from Miss
  • Howe.'
  • This, my dearest life, said I, is a very considerate proposal. We have
  • nothing to do but to caution the people below properly on this head. I
  • did not think your uncle Harlowe capable of hitting upon such a charming
  • expedient as this. But you see how much his heart is in the
  • reconciliation.
  • This was the return I met with--You have always, as a mark of your
  • politeness, let me know how meanly you think of every one in my family.
  • Yet thou wilt think, Belford, that I could forgive her for the reproach.
  • 'The Captain does not know, says he, how this proposal will be relished
  • by us. But for his part, he thinks it an expedient that will obviate
  • many difficulties, and may possibly put an end to Mr. James Harlowe's
  • further designs: and on this account he has, by the uncle's advice,
  • already declared to two several persons, by whose means it may come to
  • that young gentleman's, that he [Captain Tomlinson] has very great reason
  • to believe that we were married soon after Mr. Hickman's application was
  • rejected.
  • 'And this, Mr. Lovelace, (says the Captain,) will enable you to pay a
  • compliment to the family, that will not be unsuitable to the generosity
  • of some of the declarations you were pleased to make to the lady before
  • me, (and which Mr. John Harlowe may make some advantage of in favour of a
  • reconciliation,) in that you were entitled to make the demand.' An
  • excellent contriver, surely, she must think this worthy Mr. Tomlinson to
  • be!
  • But the Captain adds, 'that if either the lady or I disapprove of his
  • report of our marriage, he will retract it. Nevertheless, he must tell
  • me, that Mr. John Harlowe is very much set upon this way of proceeding;
  • as the only one, in his opinion, capable of being improved into a general
  • reconciliation. But if we do acquiesce in it, he beseeches my fair-one
  • not to suspend my day, that he may be authorized in what he says, as to
  • the truth of the main fact. [How conscientious this good man!] Nor must
  • it be expected, he says, that her uncle will take one step towards the
  • wished-for reconciliation, till the solemnity is actually over.'
  • He adds, 'that he shall be very soon in town on other affairs; and then
  • proposes to attend us, and give us a more particular account of all that
  • has passed, or shall further pass, between Mr. Harlowe and him.'
  • Well, my dearest life, what say you to your uncle's expedient? Shall I
  • write to the Captain, and acquaint him, that we have no objection to it?
  • She was silent for a few minutes. At last, with a sigh, See, Mr.
  • Lovelace, said she, what you have brought me to, by treading after you in
  • such crooked paths!--See what disgrace I have incurred!--Indeed you have
  • not acted like a wise man.
  • My beloved creature, do you not remember, how earnestly I besought the
  • honour of your hand before we came to town?--Had I been then favoured--
  • Well, well, Sir; there has been much amiss somewhere; that's all I will
  • say at present. And since what's past cannot be recalled, my uncle must
  • be obeyed, I think.
  • Charmingly dutiful!--I had nothing then to do, that I might not be
  • behind-hand with the worthy Captain and her uncle, but to press for the
  • day. This I fervently did. But (as I might have expected) she repeated
  • her former answer; to wit, That when the settlements were completed; when
  • the license was actually obtained; it would be time enough to name the
  • day: and, O Mr. Lovelace, said she, turning from me with a grace
  • inimitably tender, her handkerchief at her eyes, what a happiness, if my
  • dear uncle could be prevailed upon to be personally a father, on this
  • occasion, to the poor fatherless girl!
  • What's the matter with me!--Whence this dew-drop!--A tear!--As I hope to
  • be saved, it is a tear, Jack!--Very ready methinks!--Only on
  • reciting!--But her lovely image was before me, in the very attitude she
  • spoke the words--and indeed at the time she spoke them, these lines of
  • Shakespeare came into my head:
  • Thy heart is big. Get thee apart and weep!
  • Passion, I see, is catching:--For my eye,
  • Seeing those beads of sorrow stand in thine,
  • Begin to water--
  • I withdrew, and wrote to the Captain to the following effect--'I desired
  • that he would be so good as to acquaint his dear friend that we entirely
  • acquiesced with what he had proposed; and had already properly cautioned
  • the gentlewomen of the house, and their servants, as well as our own: and
  • to tell him, That if he would in person give me the blessing of his dear
  • niece's hand, it would crown the wishes of both. In this case, I
  • consented, that his own day, as I presumed it would be a short one,
  • should be ours: that by this means the secret would be with fewer
  • persons: that I myself, as well as he, thought the ceremony could not be
  • too privately performed; and this not only for the sake of the wise end
  • he had proposed to answer by it, but because I would not have Lord M.
  • think himself slighted; since that nobleman, as I had told him [the
  • Captain] had once intended to be our nuptial-father; and actually made
  • the offer; but that we had declined to accept of it, and that for no
  • other reason than to avoid a public wedding; which his beloved niece
  • would not come into, while she was in disgrace with her friends. But
  • that if he chose not to do us this honour, I wished that Captain
  • Tomlinson might be the trusty person whom he would have be present on the
  • happy occasion.'
  • I showed this letter to my fair-one. She was not displeased with it.
  • So, Jack, we cannot now move too fast, as to settlements and license: the
  • day is her uncle's day, or Captain Tomlinson's, perhaps, as shall best
  • suit the occasion. Miss Howe's smuggling scheme is now surely provided
  • against in all events.
  • But I will not by anticipation make thee a judge of all the benefits that
  • may flow from this my elaborate contrivance. Why will these girls put me
  • upon my master-strokes?
  • And now for a little mine which I am getting ready to spring. The first
  • that I have sprung, and at the rate I go on (now a resolution, and now a
  • remorse) perhaps the last that I shall attempt to spring.
  • A little mine, I call it. But it may be attended with great effects. I
  • shall not, however, absolutely depend upon the success of it, having much
  • more effectual ones in reserve. And yet great engines are often moved by
  • small springs. A little spark falling by accident into a powder-magazine,
  • hath done more execution in a siege, than an hundred cannon.
  • Come the worst, the hymeneal torch, and a white sheet, must be my amende
  • honorable, as the French have it.
  • LETTER XIII
  • MR. BELFORD, TO ROBERT LOVELACE, ESQ.
  • TUESDAY, JUNE 6.
  • Unsuccessful as hitherto my application to you has been, I cannot for the
  • heart of me forbear writing once more in behalf of this admirable woman:
  • and yet am unable to account for the zeal which impels me to take her
  • part with an earnestness so sincere.
  • But all her merit thou acknowledgest; all thy own vileness thou
  • confessest, and even gloriest in it: What hope then of moving so hardened
  • a man?--Yet, as it is not too late, and thou art nevertheless upon the
  • crisis, I am resolved to try what another letter will do. It is but my
  • writing in vain, if it do no good; and if thou wilt let me prevail, I
  • knowthou wilt hereafter think me richly entitled to thy thanks.
  • To argue with thee would be folly. The case cannot require it. I will
  • only entreat thee, therefore, that thou wilt not let such an excellence
  • lose the reward of her vigilant virtue.
  • I believe there never were libertines so vile, but purposed, at some
  • future period of their lives, to set about reforming: and let me beg of
  • thee, that thou wilt, in this great article, make thy future repentance
  • as easy, as some time hence thou wilt wish thou hadst made it.
  • If thou proceedest, I have no doubt that this affair will end tragically,
  • one way or another. It must. Such a woman must interest both gods and
  • men in her cause. But what I most apprehend is, that with her own hand,
  • in resentment of the perpetrated outrage, she (like another Lucretia)
  • will assert the purity of her heart: or, if her piety preserve her from
  • this violence, that wasting grief will soon put a period to her days.
  • And, in either case, will not the remembrance of thy ever-during guilt,
  • and transitory triumph, be a torment of torments to thee?
  • 'Tis a seriously sad thing, after all, that so fine a creature should
  • have fallen into such vile and remorseless hands: for, from thy cradle,
  • as I have heard thee own, thou ever delightedst to sport with and torment
  • the animal, whether bird or beast, that thou lovedst, and hadst a power
  • over.
  • How different is the case of this fine woman from that of any other whom
  • thou hast seduced!--I need not mention to thee, nor insist upon the
  • striking difference: justice, gratitude, thy interest, thy vows, all
  • engaging thee; and thou certainly loving her, as far as thou art capable
  • of love, above all her sex. She not to be drawn aside by art, or to be
  • made to suffer from credulity, nor for want of wit and discernment, (that
  • will be another cutting reflection to so fine a mind as her's:) the
  • contention between you only unequal, as it is between naked innocence and
  • armed guilt. In every thing else, as thou ownest, her talents greatly
  • superior to thine!--What a fate will her's be, if thou art not at last
  • overcome by thy reiterated remorses!
  • At first, indeed, when I was admitted into her presence,* (and till I
  • observed her meaning air, and heard her speak,) I supposed that she had
  • no very uncommon judgment to boast of: for I made, as I thought, but just
  • allowances for her blossoming youth, and for that loveliness of person,
  • and for that ease and elegance in her dress, which I imagined must have
  • taken up half her time and study to cultivate; and yet I had been
  • prepared by thee to entertain a very high opinion of her sense and her
  • reading. Her choice of this gay fellow, upon such hazardous terms,
  • (thought I,) is a confirmation that her wit wants that maturity which
  • only years and experience can give it. Her knowledge (argued I to
  • myself) must be all theory; and the complaisance ever consorting with an
  • age so green and so gay, will make so inexperienced a lady at least
  • forbear to show herself disgusted at freedoms of discourse in which those
  • present of her own sex, and some of ours, (so learned, so well read, and
  • so travelled,) allow themselves.
  • * See Vol. IV. Letter VII.
  • In this presumption I ran on; and having the advantage, as I conceited,
  • of all the company but you, and being desirous to appear in her eyes a
  • mighty clever fellow, I thought I showed away, when I said any foolish
  • things that had more sound than sense in them; and when I made silly
  • jests, which attracted the smiles of thy Sinclair, and the specious
  • Partington: and that Miss Harlowe did not smile too, I thought was owing
  • to her youth or affectation, or to a mixture of both, perhaps to a
  • greater command of her features.--Little dreamt I, that I was incurring
  • her contempt all the time.
  • But when, as I said, I heard her speak, which she did not till she had
  • fathomed us all; when I heard her sentiments on two or three subjects,
  • and took notice of the searching eye, darting into the very inmost cells
  • of our frothy brains; by my faith, it made me look about me; and I began
  • to recollect, and be ashamed of all I had said before; in short, was
  • resolved to sit silent, till every one had talked round, to keep my folly
  • in countenance. And then I raised the subjects that she could join in,
  • and which she did join in, so much to the confusion and surprise of every
  • one of us!--For even thou, Lovelace, so noted for smart wit, repartee,
  • and a vein of raillery, that delighteth all who come near thee, sattest
  • in palpable darkness, and lookedst about thee, as well as we.
  • One instance only of this shall I remind thee of.
  • We talked of wit, and of it, and aimed at it, bandying it like a ball
  • from one to another, and resting it chiefly with thee, who wert always
  • proud enough and vain enough of the attribute; and then more especially
  • as thou hadst assembled us, as far as I know, principally to show the
  • lady thy superiority over us; and us thy triumph over her. And then
  • Tourville (who is always satisfied with wit at second-hand; wit upon
  • memory: other men's wit) repeated some verses, as applicable to the
  • subject; which two of us applauded, though full of double entendre.
  • Thou, seeing the lady's serious air on one of those repetitions,
  • appliedst thyself to her, desiring her notions of wit: a quality, thou
  • saidst, which every one prized, whether flowing from himself, or found in
  • another.
  • Then it was that she took all our attention. It was a quality much
  • talked of, she said, but, she believed, very little understood. At
  • least, if she might be so free as to give her judgment of it from what
  • had passed in the present conversation, she must say, that wit with men
  • was one thing; with women another.
  • This startled us all:--How the women looked!--How they pursed their
  • mouths; a broad smile the moment before upon each, from the verses they
  • had heard repeated, so well understood, as we saw, by their looks! While
  • I besought her to let us know, for our instruction, what wit with women:
  • for such I was sure it ought to be with men.
  • Cowley, she said, had defined it prettily by negatives. Thou desiredst
  • her to repeat his definition.
  • She did; and with so much graceful ease, and beauty, and propriety of
  • accent, as would have made bad poetry delightful.
  • A thousand diff'rent shapes it bears;
  • Comely in thousand shapes appears.
  • 'Tis not a tale, 'tis not a jest,
  • Admir'd with laughter at a feast,
  • Nor florid talk, which must this title gain:
  • The proofs of wit for ever must remain.
  • Much less can that have any place
  • At which a virgin hides her face.
  • Such dross the fire must purge away:--'Tis just
  • The author blush there, where the reader must.
  • Here she stopt, looking round upon her upon us all with conscious
  • superiority, as I thought. Lord, how we stared! Thou attemptedst to
  • give us thy definition of wit, that thou mightest have something to say,
  • and not seem to be surprised into silent modesty.
  • But as if she cared not to trust thee with the subject, referring to the
  • same author as for his more positive decision, she thus, with the same
  • harmony of voice and accent, emphatically decided upon it.
  • Wit, like a luxurious vine,
  • Unless to virtue's prop it join,
  • Firm and erect, tow'rd heaven bound,
  • Tho' it with beauteous leaves and pleasant fruit be crown'd,
  • It lies deform'd, and rotting on the ground.
  • If thou recollectest this part of the conversation, and how like fools we
  • looked at one another; how much it put us out of conceit with ourselves,
  • and made us fear her, when we found our conversation thus excluded from
  • the very character which our vanity had made us think unquestionably
  • ours; and if thou profitest properly by the recollection; thou wilt be of
  • my mind, that there is not so much wit in wickedness as we had flattered
  • ourselves there was.
  • And after all, I have been of opinion ever since that conversation, that
  • the wit of all the rakes and libertines down to little Johnny Hartop the
  • punster, consists mostly in saying bold and shocking things, with such
  • courage as shall make the modest blush, the impudent laugh, and the
  • ignorant stare.
  • And why dost thou think I mention these things, so mal-a-propos, as it
  • may seem!--Only, let me tell thee, as an instance (among many that might
  • be given from the same evening's conversation) of this fine woman's
  • superiority in those talents which ennoble nature, and dignify her
  • sex--evidenced not only to each of us, as we offended, but to the
  • flippant Partington, and the grosser, but egregiously hypocritical
  • Sinclair, in the correcting eye, the discouraging blush, in which was
  • mixed as much displeasure as modesty, and sometimes, as the occasion
  • called for it, (for we were some of us hardened above the sense of
  • feeling delicate reproof,) by the sovereign contempt, mingled with a
  • disdainful kind of pity, that showed at once her own conscious worth, and
  • our despicable worthlessness.
  • O Lovelace! what then was the triumph, even in my eye, and what is it
  • still upon reflection, of true jest, laughing impertinence, and an
  • obscenity so shameful, even to the guilty, that they cannot hint at it
  • but under a double meaning!
  • Then, as thou hast somewhere observed,* all her correctives avowed by her
  • eye. Not poorly, like the generality of her sex, affecting ignorance of
  • meanings too obvious to be concealed; but so resenting, as to show each
  • impudent laugher the offence given to, and taken by a purity, that had
  • mistaken its way, when it fell into such company.
  • * See Vol. IV. Letter XLVIII.
  • Such is the woman, such is the angel, whom thou hast betrayed into thy
  • power, and wouldst deceive and ruin.---Sweet creature! did she but know
  • how she is surrounded, (as I then thought, as well as now think,) and
  • what is intended, how much sooner would death be her choice, than so
  • dreadful a situation!--'And how effectually would her story, were it
  • generally known, warn all the sex against throwing themselves into the
  • power of ours, let our vows, oaths, and protestations, be what they
  • will!'
  • But let me beg of thee, once more, my dear Lovelace, if thou hast any
  • regard for thine own honour, for the honour of thy family, for thy future
  • peace, or for my opinion of thee, (who yet pretend not to be so much
  • moved by principle, as by that dazzling merit which ought still more to
  • attract thee,) to be prevailed upon--to be--to be humane, that's all--
  • only, that thou wouldst not disgrace our common humanity!
  • Hardened as thou art, I know that they are the abandoned people in the
  • house who keep thee up to a resolution against her. O that the sagacious
  • fair-one (with so much innocent charity in her own heart) had not so
  • resolutely held those women at distance!--that as she boarded there, she
  • had oftener tabled with them! Specious as they are, in a week's time,
  • she would have seen through them; they could not have been always so
  • guarded, as they were when they saw her but seldom, and when they
  • prepared themselves to see her; and she would have fled their house as a
  • place infected. And yet, perhaps, with so determined an enterprizer,
  • this discovery might have accelerated her ruin.
  • I know that thou art nice in thy loves. But are there not hundreds of
  • women, who, though not utterly abandoned, would be taken with thee for
  • mere personal regards! Make a toy, if thou wilt, of principle, with
  • respect to such of the sex as regard it as a toy; but rob not an angel of
  • those purities, which, in her own opinion, constitute the difference
  • between angelic and brutal qualities.
  • With regard to the passion itself, the less of soul in either man or
  • woman, the more sensual are they. Thou, Lovelace, hast a soul, though a
  • corrupted one; and art more intent (as thou even gloriest) upon the
  • preparative stratagem, that upon the end of conquering.
  • See we not the natural bent of idiots and the crazed? The very appetite
  • is body; and when we ourselves are most fools, and crazed, then are we
  • most eager in these pursuits. See what fools this passion makes the
  • wisest men! What snivellers, what dotards, when they suffer themselves
  • to be run away with by it!--An unpermanent passion! Since, if (ashamed
  • of its more proper name) we must call it love, love gratified, is love
  • satisfied--and where consent on one side adds to the obligation on the
  • other. What then but remorse can follow a forcible attempt?
  • Do not even chaste lovers choose to be alone in their courtship
  • preparations, ashamed to have even a child to witness to their foolish
  • actions, and more foolish expressions? Is this deified passion, in its
  • greatest altitudes, fitted to stand the day? Do not the lovers, when
  • mutual consent awaits their wills, retire to coverts, and to darkness, to
  • complete their wishes? And shall such a sneaking passion as this, which
  • can be so easily gratified by viler objects, be permitted to debase the
  • noblest?
  • Were not the delays of thy vile purposes owing more to the awe which her
  • majestic virtue has inspired thee with, than to thy want of adroitness in
  • villany? [I must write my free sentiments in this case; for have I not
  • seen the angel?] I should be ready to censure some of thy contrivances
  • and pretences to suspend the expected day, as trite, stale, and (to me,
  • who know thy intention) poor; and too often resorted to, as nothing comes
  • of them to be gloried in; particularly that of Mennell, the vapourish
  • lady, and the ready-furnished house.
  • She must have thought so too, at times, and in her heart despised thee
  • for them, or love thee (ungrateful as thou art!) to her misfortune; as
  • well as entertain hope against probability. But this would afford
  • another warning to the sex, were they to know her story; 'as it would
  • show them what poor pretences they must seem to be satisfied with, if
  • once they put themselves into the power of a designing man.'
  • If trial only was thy end, as once was thy pretence,* enough surely hast
  • thou tried this paragon of virtue and vigilance. But I knew thee too
  • well, to expect, at the time, that thou wouldest stop there. 'Men of our
  • cast put no other bound to their views upon any of the sex, than what want
  • of power compels them to put.' I knew that from one advantage gained,
  • thou wouldest proceed to attempt another. Thy habitual aversion to
  • wedlock too well I knew; and indeed thou avowest thy hope to bring her to
  • cohabitation, in that very letter in which thou pretendest trial to be
  • thy principal view.**
  • * See Vol. III. Letter XVIII.
  • ** Ibid. See also Letters XVI. and XVII. of that volume.
  • But do not even thy own frequent and involuntary remorses, when thou hast
  • time, place, company, and every other circumstance, to favour thee in thy
  • wicked design, convince thee, that there can be no room for a hope so
  • presumptuous?--Why then, since thou wouldest choose to marry her rather
  • than lose her, wilt thou make her hate thee for ever?
  • But if thou darest to meditate personal trial, and art sincere in thy
  • resolution to reward her, as she behaves in it, let me beseech thee to
  • remove her from this vile house. That will be to give her and thy
  • conscience fair play. So entirely now does the sweet deluded excellence
  • depend upon her supposed happier prospects, that thou needest not to fear
  • that she will fly from thee, or that she will wish to have recourse to
  • that scheme of Miss Howe, which has put thee upon what thou callest thy
  • master-strokes.
  • But whatever be thy determination on this head; and if I write not in
  • time, but that thou hast actually pulled off the mask; let it not be one
  • of the devices, if thou wouldest avoid the curses of every heart, and
  • hereafter of thy own, to give her, no not for one hour, (be her
  • resentment ever so great,) into the power of that villanous woman, who
  • has, if possible, less remorse than thyself; and whose trade it is to
  • break the resisting spirit, and utterly to ruin the heart unpractised in
  • evil.--O Lovelace, Lovelace, how many dreadful stories could this horrid
  • woman tell the sex! And shall that of a Clarissa swell the guilty list?
  • But this I might have spared. Of this, devil as thou art, thou canst not
  • be capable. Thou couldst not enjoy a triumph so disgraceful to thy
  • wicked pride, as well as to humanity.
  • Shouldest thou think, that the melancholy spectacle hourly before me has
  • made me more serious than usual, perhaps thou wilt not be mistaken. But
  • nothing more is to be inferred from hence (were I even to return to my
  • former courses) but that whenever the time of cool reflection comes,
  • whether brought on by our own disasters, or by those of others, we shall
  • undoubtedly, if capable of thought, and if we have time for it, think in
  • the same manner.
  • We neither of us are such fools as to disbelieve a futurity, or to think,
  • whatever be our practice, that we came hither by chance, and for no end
  • but to do all the mischief we have it in our power to do. Nor am I
  • ashamed to own, that in the prayers which my poor uncle makes me read to
  • him, in the absence of a very good clergyman who regularly attends him, I
  • do not forget to put in a word or two for myself.
  • If, Lovelace, thou laughest at me, thy ridicule will be more conformable
  • to thy actions than to thy belief.--Devils believe and tremble. Canst
  • thou be more abandoned than they?
  • And here let me add, with regard to my poor old man, that I often wish
  • thee present but for one half hour in a day, to see the dregs of a gay
  • life running off in the most excruciating tortures that the cholic, the
  • stone, and the surgeon's knife can unitedly inflict, and to hear him
  • bewail the dissoluteness of his past life, in the bitterest anguish of a
  • spirit every hour expecting to be called to its last account.--Yet, by
  • all his confessions, he has not to accuse himself, in sixty-seven years
  • of life, of half the very vile enormities which you and I have committed
  • in the last seven only.
  • I conclude with recommending to your serious consideration all I have
  • written, as proceeding from the heart and soul of
  • Your assured friend,
  • JOHN BELFORD
  • LETTER XIV
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 6.
  • Difficulties still to be got over in procuring this plaguy license. I
  • ever hated, and ever shall hate, these spiritual lawyers, and their
  • court.
  • And now, Jack, if I have not secured victory, I have a retreat.
  • But hold--thy servant with a letter--
  • ***
  • A confounded long one, though not a narrative one--Once more in behalf of
  • this lady?--Lie thee down, oddity! What canst thou write that can have
  • force upon me at this crisis?--And have I not, as I went along, made thee
  • to say all that was necessary for thee to say?
  • ***
  • Yet once more I will take thee up.
  • Trite, stale, poor, (sayest thou,) are some of my contrivances; that of
  • the widow particularly!--I have no patience with thee. Had not that
  • contrivance its effect at that time, for a procrastination? and had I not
  • then reason to fear, that the lady would find enough to make her dislike
  • this house? and was it not right (intending what I intended) to lead her
  • on from time to time with a notion that a house of her own would be ready
  • for her soon, in order to induce her to continue here till it was?
  • Trite, stale, and poor!--Thou art a silly fellow, and no judge, when thou
  • sayest this. Had I not, like a blockhead, revealed to thee, as I went
  • along, the secret purposes of my heart, but had kept all in till the event
  • had explained my mysteries, I would have defied thee to have been able,
  • any more than the lady, to have guessed at what was to befall her, till
  • it had actually come to pass. Nor doubt I, in this case, that, instead
  • of presuming to reflect upon her for credulity, as loving me to her
  • misfortune, and for hoping against probability, thou wouldest have been
  • readier, by far, to censure her for nicety and over-scrupulousness. And,
  • let me tell thee, that had she loved me as I wished her to love me, she
  • could not possibly have been so very apprehensive of my designs, nor so
  • ready to be influenced by Miss Howe's precautions, as she has always
  • been, although my general character made not for me with her.
  • But, in thy opinion, I suffer for that simplicity in my contrivances,
  • which is their principal excellence. No machinery make I necessary. No
  • unnatural flights aim I at. All pure nature, taking advantage of nature,
  • as nature tends; and so simple my devices, that when they are known,
  • thou, even thou, imaginest thou couldest have thought of the same. And
  • indeed thou seemest to own, that the slight thou puttest upon them is
  • owing to my letting thee into them before-hand--undistingushing as well
  • as ungrateful as thou art!
  • Yet, after all, I would not have thee think that I do not know my weak
  • places. I have formerly told thee, that it is difficult for the ablest
  • general to say what he will do, or what he can do, when he is obliged to
  • regulate his motions by those of a watchful enemy.* If thou givest due
  • weight to this consideration, thou wilt not wonder that I should make
  • many marches and countermarches, some of which may appear, to a slight
  • observer, unnecessary.
  • * See Vol. III. Letter XXXIX.
  • But let me cursorily enter into debate with thee on this subject, now I
  • am within sight of my journey's end.
  • Abundance of impertinent things thou tellest me in this letter; some of
  • which thou hadst from myself; others that I knew before.
  • All that thou sayest in this charming creature's praise is short of what
  • I have said and written on the inexhaustible subject.
  • Her virtue, her resistance, which are her merits, are my stimulatives.
  • have I not told thee so twenty times over?
  • Devil, as these girls between them call me, what of devil am I, but in my
  • contrivances? I am not more a devil than others in the end I aim at; for
  • when I have carried my point, it is still but one seduction. And I have
  • perhaps been spared the guilt of many seductions in the time.
  • What of uncommon would there be in this case, but for her
  • watchfulness!--As well as I love intrigue and stratagem, dost think that
  • I had not rather have gained my end with less trouble and less guilt?
  • The man, let me tell thee, who is as wicked as he can be, is a worse man
  • than I am. Let me ask any rake in England, if, resolving to carry his
  • point, he would have been so long about it? or have had so much
  • compunction as I have had?
  • Were every rake, nay, were every man, to sit down, as I do, and write all
  • that enters into his head, or into his heart, and to accuse himself with
  • equal freedom and truth, what an army of miscreants should I have to keep
  • me in countenance!
  • It is a maxim with some, that if they are left alone with a woman, and
  • make not an attempt upon her, she will think herself affronted--Are not
  • such men as these worse than I am? What an opinion must they have of the
  • whole sex!
  • Let me defend the sex I so dearly love. If these elder brethren of ours
  • think they have general reason for their assertion, they must have kept
  • very bad company, or must judge of women's hearts by their own. She must
  • be an abandoned woman, who will not shrink as a snail into its shell at a
  • gross and sudden attempt. A modest woman must be naturally cold,
  • reserved, and shy. She cannot be so much and so soon affected as
  • libertines are apt to imagine. She must, at least, have some confidence
  • in the honour and silence of a man, before desire can possibly put forth
  • in her, to encourage and meet his flame. For my own part, I have been
  • always decent in the company of women, till I was sure of them. Nor have
  • I ever offered a great offence, till I have found little ones passed
  • over; and that they shunned me not, when they knew my character.
  • My divine Clarissa has puzzled me, and beat me out of my play: at one
  • time, I hope to overcome by intimidating her; at another, by love; by the
  • amorous see-saw, as I have called it.* And I have only now to join
  • surprise to the other two, and see what can be done by all three.
  • * See Vol. III. Letter XVI.
  • And whose property, I pray thee, shall I invade, if I pursue my schemes
  • of love and vengeance? Have not those who have a right to her renounced
  • that right? Have they not wilfully exposed her to dangers? Yet must
  • know, that such a woman would be considered as lawful prize by as many as
  • could have the opportunity to attempt her?--And had they not thus cruelly
  • exposed her, is she not a single woman? And need I tell thee, Jack, that
  • men of our cast, the best of them [the worst stick at nothing] think it a
  • great grace and favour done to the married men, if they leave them their
  • wives to themselves; and compound for their sisters, daughters, wards
  • and nieces? Shocking as these principles must be to a reflecting mind,
  • yet such thou knowest are the principles of thousands (who would not act
  • so generously as I have acted by almost all of the sex, over whom I have
  • obtained a power); and as often carried into practice, as their
  • opportunities or courage will permit.--Such therefore have no right to
  • blame me.
  • Thou repeatedly pleadest her sufferings from her family. But I have too
  • often answered this plea, to need to say any more now, than that she has
  • not suffered for my sake. For has she not been made the victim of the
  • malice of her rapacious brother and envious sister, who only waited for
  • an occasion to ruin her with her other relations; and took this as the
  • first to drive her out of the house; and, as it happened, into my arms?--
  • Thou knowest how much against her inclination.
  • As for her own sins, how many has the dear creature to answer for to love
  • and to me!--Twenty times, and twenty times twenty, has she not told me,
  • that she refused not the odious Solmes in favour to me? And as often has
  • she not offered to renounce me for the single life, if the implacables
  • would have received her on that condition?--Of what repetitions does thy
  • weak pity make me guilty?
  • To look a litter farther back: Canst thou forget what my sufferings were
  • from this haughty beauty in the whole time of my attendance upon her
  • proud motions, in the purlieus of Harlowe-place, and at the little White
  • Hart, at Neale, as we called it?--Did I not threaten vengeance upon her
  • then (and had I not reason?) for disappointing me of a promised
  • interview?
  • O Jack! what a night had I in the bleak coppice adjoining to her father's
  • paddock! My linen and wig frozen; my limbs absolutely numbed; my fingers
  • only sensible of so much warmth as enabled me to hold a pen; and that
  • obtained by rubbing the skin off, and by beating with my hands my
  • shivering sides! Kneeling on the hoar moss on one knee, writing on the
  • other, if the stiff scrawl could be called writing! My feet, by the time
  • I had done, seeming to have taken root, and actually unable to support me
  • for some minutes!--Love and rage then kept my heart in motion, [and only
  • love and rage could do it,] or how much more than I did suffer must I
  • have suffered!
  • I told thee, at my melancholy return, what were the contents of the
  • letter I wrote.* And I showed thee afterwards her tyrannical answer to
  • it.** Thou, then, Jack, lovedst thy friend; and pitiedst thy poor
  • suffering Lovelace. Even the affronted God of Love approved then of my
  • threatened vengeance against the fair promiser; though of the night of my
  • sufferings, he is become an advocate for her.
  • * See Vol. II. Letter XX.
  • ** Ibid.
  • Nay, was it not he himself that brought to me my adorable Nemesis; and
  • both together put me upon this very vow, 'That I would never rest till I
  • had drawn in this goddess-daughter of the Harlowes to cohabit with me;
  • and that in the face of all their proud family?'
  • Nor canst thou forget this vow. At this instant I have thee before me,
  • as then thou sorrowfully lookedst. Thy strong features glowing with
  • compassion for me; thy lips twisted; thy forehead furrowed; thy whole
  • face drawn out from the stupid round into the ghastly oval; every muscle
  • contributing its power to complete the aspect grievous; and not one word
  • couldst thou utter, but Amen! to my vow.
  • And what of distinguishing love, or favour, or confidence, have I had
  • from her since, to make me forego this vow!
  • I renewed it not, indeed, afterwards; and actually, for a long season,
  • was willing to forget it; till repetitions of the same faults revived the
  • remembrance of the former. And now adding to those the contents of some
  • of Miss Howe's virulent letters, so lately come at, what canst thou say
  • for the rebel, consistent with thy loyalty to thy friend?
  • Every man to his genius and constitution. Hannibal was called The father
  • of warlike stratagems. Had Hannibal been a private man, and turned his
  • plotting head against the other sex; or had I been a general, and, turned
  • mine against such of my fellow-creatures of my own, as I thought myself
  • entitled to consider as my enemies, because they were born and lived in a
  • different climate; Hannibal would have done less mischief; Lovelace
  • more.--That would have been the difference.
  • Not a sovereign on earth, if he be not a good man, and if he be of a
  • warlike temper, but must do a thousand times more mischief than I. And
  • why? Because he has it in his power to do more.
  • An honest man, perhaps thou'lt say, will not wish to have it in his power
  • to do hurt. He ought not, let me tell him: for, if he have it, a
  • thousand to one but it makes him both wanton and wicked.
  • In what, then, am I so singularly vile?
  • In my contrivances thou wilt say, (for thou art my echo,) if not in my
  • proposed end of them.
  • How difficult does every man find it, as well as I, to forego a
  • predominant passion! I have three passions that sway me by turns; all
  • imperial ones--love, revenge, ambition or a desire of conquest.
  • As to this particular contrivance of Tomlinson and the uncle, which
  • perhaps thou wilt think a black one; that had been spared, had not these
  • innocent ladies put me upon finding a husband for their Mrs. Townsend:
  • that device, therefore, is but a preventive one. Thinkest thou that I
  • could bear to be outwitted? And may not this very contrivance save a
  • world of mischief? for dost thou think I would have tamely given up the
  • lady to Townsend's tars?
  • What meanest thou, except to overthrow thy own plea, when thou sayest,
  • that men of our cast know no other bound to their wickedness, but want of
  • power; yet knowest this lady to be in mine?
  • Enough, sayest thou, have I tried this paragon of virtue. Not so; for I
  • have not tried her at all--all I have been doing is but preparation to a
  • trial.
  • But thou art concerned for the means that I may have recourse to in the
  • trial, and for my veracity.
  • Silly fellow!--Did ever any man, thinkest thou, deceive a woman, but at
  • the expense of his veracity; how, otherwise, can he be said to deceive?
  • As to the means, thou dost not imagine that I expect a direct consent.
  • My main hope is but in a yielding reluctance; without which I will be
  • sworn, whatever rapes have been attempted, none ever were committed, one
  • person to one person. And good Queen Bess of England, had she been
  • living, and appealed to, would have declared herself of my mind.
  • It would not be amiss for the sex to know what our opinions are upon this
  • subject. I love to warn them. I wish no man to succeed with them but
  • myself. I told thee once, that though a rake, I am not a rake's friend.*
  • * See Vol. III. Letter XVIII.
  • Thou sayest, that I ever hated wedlock. And true thou sayest. And yet
  • as true, when thou tellest me, that I would rather marry than lose this
  • lady. And will she detest me for ever, thinkest thou, if I try her, and
  • succeed not?--Take care--take care, Jack!--Seest thou not that thou
  • warnest me that I do not try without resolving to conquer?
  • I must add, that I have for some time been convinced that I have done
  • wrong to scribble to thee so freely as I have done (and the more so, if I
  • make the lady legally mine); for has not every letter I have written to
  • thee been a bill of indictment against myself? I may partly curse my
  • vanity for it; and I think I will refrain for the future; for thou art
  • really very impertinent.
  • A good man, I own, might urge many of the things thou urgest; but, by my
  • soul, they come very awkwardly from thee. And thou must be sensible,
  • that I can answer every tittle of what you writest, upon the foot of the
  • maxims we have long held and pursued.--By the specimen above, thou wilt
  • see that I can.
  • And pr'ythee tell me, Jack, what but this that follows would have been
  • the epitome of mine and my beloved's story, after ten years'
  • cohabitation, had I never written to thee upon the subject, and had I not
  • been my own accuser?
  • 'Robert Lovelace, a notorious woman-eater, makes his addresses in an
  • honourable way to Miss Clarissa Harlowe; a young lady of the highest
  • merit--fortunes on both sides out of the question.
  • 'After encouragement given, he is insulted by her violent brother; who
  • thinks it his interest to discountenance the match; and who at last
  • challenging him, is obliged to take his worthless life at his hands.
  • 'The family, as much enraged, as if he had taken the life he gave, insult
  • him personally, and find out an odious lover for the young lady.
  • 'To avoid a forced marriage, she is prevailed upon to take a step which
  • throws her into Mr. Lovelace's protection.
  • 'Yet, disclaiming any passion for him, she repeatedly offers to renounce
  • him for ever, if, on that condition, her relations will receive her, and
  • free her from the address of the man she hates.
  • 'Mr. Lovelace, a man of strong passions, and, as some say, of great
  • pride, thinks himself under very little obligation to her on this
  • account; and not being naturally fond of marriage, and having so much
  • reason to hate her relations, endeavours to prevail upon her to live with
  • him what he calls the life of honour; and at last, by stratagem, art, and
  • contrivance, prevails.
  • 'He resolves never to marry any other woman: takes a pride to have her
  • called by his name: a church-rite all the difference between them: treats
  • her with deserved tenderness. Nobody questions their marriage but those
  • proud relations of her's, whom he wishes to question it. Every year a
  • charming boy. Fortunes to support the increasing family with splendor.
  • A tender father. Always a warm friend; a generous landlord; and a
  • punctual paymaster. Now-and-then however, perhaps, indulging with a new
  • object, in order to bring him back with greater delight to his charming
  • Clarissa--his only fault, love of the sex--which, nevertheless, the women
  • say, will cure itself--defensible thus far, that he breaks no contracts
  • by his rovings.'--
  • And what is there so very greatly amiss, AS THE WORLD GOES, in all this?
  • Let me aver, that there are thousands and ten thousands, who have worse
  • stories to tell than this would appear to be, had I not interested thee
  • in the progress to my great end. And besides, thou knowest that the
  • character I gave myself to Joseph Leman, as to my treatment of my
  • mistress, is pretty near the truth.*
  • * See Vol. III. Letter XLVIII.
  • Were I to be as much in earnest in my defence, as thou art warm in my
  • arraignment, I could convince thee, by other arguments, observations, and
  • comparisons, [Is not all human good and evil comparative?] that though
  • from my ingenuous temper (writing only to thee, who art master of every
  • secret of my heart) I am so ready to accuse myself in my narrations, yet
  • I have something to say for myself to myself, as I go along; though no
  • one else, perhaps, that was not a rake, would allow any weight to it.--
  • And this caution might I give to thousands, who would stoop for a stone
  • to throw at me: 'See that your own predominant passions, whatever they
  • be, hurry you not into as much wickedness as mine do me. See, if ye
  • happen to be better than I in some things, that ye are not worse in
  • others; and in points too, that may be of more extensive bad consequence,
  • than that of seducing a girl, (and taking care of her afterwards,) who,
  • from her cradle, is armed with cautions against the delusions of men.'
  • And yet I am not so partial to my own follies as to think lightly of this
  • fault, when I allow myself to think.
  • Another grave thing I will add, now my hand is in: 'So dearly do I love
  • the sex, that had I found that a character for virtue had been generally
  • necessary to recommend me to them, I should have had a much greater
  • regard to my morals, as to the sex, than I have had.'
  • To sum all up--I am sufficiently apprized, that men of worthy and honest
  • hearts, who never allowed themselves in premeditated evil, and who take
  • into the account the excellencies of this fine creature, will and must
  • not only condemn, but abhor me, were they to know as much of me as thou
  • dost. But, methinks, I would be glad to escape the censure of those men,
  • and of those women too, who have never known what capital trials and
  • temptations are; of those who have no genius for enterprise; of those who
  • want rather courage than will; and most particularly of those who have
  • only kept their secret better than I have kept, or wish to keep, mine.
  • Were those exceptions to take place, perhaps, Jack, I should have ten to
  • acquit to one that should condemn me. Have I not often said, that human
  • nature is a rogue?
  • ***
  • I threatened above to refrain writing to thee. But take it not to heart,
  • Jack--I must write on, and cannot help it.
  • LETTER XV
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • WEDNESDAY NIGHT, ELEVEN O'CLOCK.
  • Faith, Jack, thou hadst half undone me with thy nonsense, though I would
  • not own it on my yesterday's letter: my conscience of thy party before.--
  • But I think I am my own man again.
  • So near to execution my plot; so near springing my mine; all agreed upon
  • between the women and me; or I believe thou hadst overthrown me.
  • I have time for a few lines preparative to what is to happen in an hour
  • or two; and I love to write to the moment.
  • We have been extremely happy. How many agreeable days have we known
  • together!--What may the next two hours produce.
  • When I parted with my charmer, (which I did, with infinite reluctance,
  • half an hour ago,) it was upon her promise that she would not sit up to
  • write or read. For so engaging was the conversation to me, (and indeed
  • my behaviour throughout the whole of it was confessedly agreeable to
  • her,) that I insisted, if she did not directly retire to rest, that she
  • should add another happy hour to the former.
  • To have sat up writing or reading half the night, as she sometimes does,
  • would have frustrated my view, as thou wilt observe, when my little plot
  • unravels.
  • ***
  • What--What--What now!--Bounding villain! wouldst thou choke me?--
  • I was speaking to my heart, Jack!--It was then at my throat.--And what is
  • all this for?--These shy women, how, when a man thinks himself near the
  • mark, do they tempest him!
  • ***
  • Is all ready, Dorcas? Has my beloved kept her word with me?--Whether are
  • these billowy heavings owing more to love or to fear? I cannot tell, for
  • the soul of me, of which I have most. If I can but take her before her
  • apprehension, before her eloquence, is awake--
  • Limbs, why thus convulsed?--Knees, till now so firmly knit, why thus
  • relaxed? why beat you thus together? Will not these trembling fingers,
  • which twice have refused to direct the pen, fail me in the arduous
  • moment?
  • Once again, why and for what all these convulsions? This project is not
  • to end in matrimony, surely!
  • But the consequences must be greater than I had thought of till this
  • moment--my beloved's destiny or my own may depend upon the issue of the
  • two next hours!
  • I will recede, I think!--
  • ***
  • Soft, O virgin saint, and safe as soft, be thy slumbers!
  • I will now once more turn to my friend Belford's letter. Thou shalt have
  • fair play, my charmer. I will reperuse what thy advocate has to say for
  • thee. Weak arguments will do, in the frame I am in!--
  • But, what, what's the matter!--What a double--But the uproar abates!--What
  • a double coward am I!--Or is it that I am taken in a cowardly minute? for
  • heroes have their fits of fear; cowards their brave moments; and virtuous
  • women, all but my Clarissa, their moment critical--
  • But thus coolly enjoying the reflection in a hurricane!--Again the
  • confusion is renewed--
  • What! Where!--How came it!
  • Is my beloved safe--
  • O wake not too roughly, my beloved!
  • LETTER XVI
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • THURSDAY MORNING, FIVE O'CLOCK, (JUNE 8.)
  • Now is my reformation secure; for I never shall love any other woman! Oh!
  • she is all variety! She must ever be new to me! Imagination cannot
  • form; much less can the pencil paint; nor can the soul of painting,
  • poetry, describe an angel so exquisitely, so elegantly lovely!--But I
  • will not by anticipation pacify thy impatience. Although the subject is
  • too hallowed for profane contemplation, yet shalt thou have the whole
  • before thee as it passed: and this not from a spirit wantoning in
  • description upon so rich a subject; but with a design to put a bound to
  • thy roving thoughts. It will be iniquity, greater than a Lovelace was
  • ever guilty of, to carry them farther than I shall acknowledge.
  • Thus then, connecting my last with the present, I lead to it.
  • Didst thou not, by the conclusion of my former, perceive the
  • consternation I was in, just as I was about to reperuse thy letter, in
  • order to prevail upon myself to recede from my purpose of awaking in
  • terrors my slumbering charmer? And what dost think was the matter?
  • I'll tell thee--
  • At a little after two, when the whole house was still, or seemed to be
  • so, and, as it proved, my Clarissa in bed, and fast asleep; I also in a
  • manner undressed (as indeed I was for an hour before) and in my gown and
  • slippers, though, to oblige thee, writing on!--I was alarmed by a
  • trampling noise over head, and a confused buz of mixed voices, some
  • louder than others, like scolding, and little short of screaming. While
  • I was wondering what could be the matter, down stairs ran Dorcas, and at
  • my door, in an accent rather frightedly and hoarsely inward than shrilly
  • clamorous, she cried out Fire! Fire! And this the more alarmed me, as
  • she seemed to endeavour to cry out louder, but could not.
  • My pen (its last scrawl a benediction on my beloved) dropped from my
  • fingers; and up started I; and making but three steps to the door,
  • opening it, cried out, Where! Where! almost as much terrified as the
  • wench; while she, more than half undrest, her petticoats in her hand,
  • unable to speak distinctly, pointed up stairs.
  • I was there in a moment, and found all owing to the carelessness of Mrs.
  • Sinclair's cook-maid, who having sat up to read the simple History of
  • Dorastus and Faunia, when she should have been in bed, had set fire to an
  • old pair of calico window-curtains.
  • She had had the presence of mind, in her fright, to tear down the half-
  • burnt vallens, as well as curtains, and had got them, though blazing,
  • into the chimney, by the time I came up; so that I had the satisfaction
  • to find the danger happily over.
  • Mean time Dorcas, after she had directed me up stairs, not knowing the
  • worst was over, and expecting every minute the house would be in a blaze,
  • out of tender regard for her lady, [I shall for ever love the wench for
  • it,] ran to her door, and rapping loudly at it, in a recovered voice,
  • cried out, with a shrillness equal to her love, Fire! Fire! The house is
  • on fire!--Rise, Madam!--This instant rise--if you would not be burnt in
  • your bed!
  • No sooner had she made this dreadful out-cry, but I heard her lady's
  • door, with hasty violence, unbar, unbolt, unlock, and open, and my
  • charmer's voice sounding like that of one going into a fit.
  • Thou mayest believe that I was greatly affected. I trembled with concern
  • for her, and hastened down faster than the alarm of fire had made me run
  • up, in order to satisfy her that all the danger was over.
  • When I had flown down to her chamber-door, there I beheld the most
  • charming creature in the world, supporting herself on the arm of the
  • gasping Dorcas, sighing, trembling, and ready to faint, with nothing on
  • but an under petticoat, her lovely bosom half open, and her feet just
  • slipped into her shoes. As soon as she saw me, she panted, and
  • struggled to speak; but could only say, O Mr. Lovelace! and down was
  • ready to sink.
  • I clasped her in my arms with an ardour she never felt before: My dearest
  • life! fear nothing: I have been up--the danger is over--the fire is got
  • under--and how, foolish devil, [to Dorcas,] could you thus, by your
  • hideous yell, alarm and frighten my angel!
  • O Jack! how her sweet bosom, as I clasped her to mine, heaved and panted!
  • I could even distinguish her dear heart flutter, flutter, against mine;
  • and, for a few minutes, I feared she would go into fits.
  • Lest the half-lifeless charmer should catch cold in this undress, I
  • lifted her to her bed, and sat down by her upon the side of it,
  • endeavouring with the utmost tenderness, as well of action as expression,
  • to dissipate her terrors.
  • But what did I get by this my generous care of her, and my successful
  • endeavour to bring her to herself?--Nothing (ungrateful as she was!) but
  • the most passionate exclamations: for we had both already forgotten the
  • occasion, dreadful as it was, which had thrown her into my arms: I, from
  • the joy of encircling the almost disrobed body of the loveliest of her
  • sex; she, from the greater terrors that arose from finding herself in my
  • arms, and both seated on the bed, from which she had been so lately
  • frighted.
  • And now, Belford, reflect upon the distance at which the watchful charmer
  • had hitherto kept me: reflect upon my love, and upon my sufferings for
  • her: reflect upon her vigilance, and how long I had laid in wait to elude
  • it; the awe I had stood in, because of her frozen virtue and
  • over-niceness; and that I never before was so happy with her; and then
  • think how ungovernable must be my transports in those happy moments!--And
  • yet, in my own account, I was both decent and generous.
  • But, far from being affected, as I wished, by an address so fervent,
  • (although from a man from whom she had so lately owned a regard, and with
  • whom, but an hour or two before, she had parted with so much
  • satisfaction,) I never saw a bitterer, or more moving grief, when she
  • came fully to herself.
  • She appealed to Heaven against my treachery, as she called it; while I,
  • by the most solemn vows, pleaded my own equal fright, and the reality of
  • the danger that had alarmed us both.
  • She conjured me, in the most solemn and affecting manner, by turns
  • threatening and soothing, to quit her apartment, and permit her to hide
  • herself from the light, and from every human eye.
  • I besought her pardon, yet could not avoid offending; and repeatedly
  • vowed, that the next morning's sun should witness our espousals. But
  • taking, I suppose, all my protestations of this kind as an indication
  • that I intended to proceed to the last extremity, she would hear nothing
  • that I said; but, redoubling her struggles to get from me, in broken
  • accents, and exclamations the most vehement, she protested, that she
  • would not survive what she called a treatment so disgraceful and
  • villanous; and, looking all wildly round her, as if for some instrument
  • of mischief, she espied a pair of sharp-pointed scissors on a chair by
  • the bed-side, and endeavoured to catch them up, with design to make her
  • words good on the spot.
  • Seeing her desperation, I begged her to be pacified; that she would hear
  • me speak but one word; declaring that I intended no dishonour to her: and
  • having seized the scissors, I threw them into the chimney; and she still
  • insisting vehemently upon my distance, I permitted her to take the chair.
  • But, O the sweet discomposure!--Her bared shoulders, and arms so
  • inimitably fair and lovely: her spread hands crossed over her charming
  • neck; yet not half concealing its glossy beauties: the scanty coat, as
  • she rose from me, giving the whole of her admirable shape, and fine-
  • turn'd limbs: her eyes running over, yet seeming to threaten future
  • vengeance:
  • and at last her lips uttering what every indignant look and glowing
  • feature portended: exclaiming as if I had done the worst I could do, and
  • vowing never to forgive me; wilt thou wonder if I resumed the incensed,
  • the already too-much-provoked fair-one?
  • I did; and clasped her once more to my bosom: but, considering the
  • delicacy of her frame, her force was amazing, and showed how much in
  • earnest she was in her resentment; for it was with the utmost difficulty
  • that I was able to hold her: nor could I prevent her sliding through my
  • arms, to fall upon her knees: which she did at my feet: and there in the
  • anguish of her soul, her streaming eyes lifted up to my face with
  • supplicating softness, hands folded, dishevelled hair; for her night
  • head-dress having fallen off in her struggling, her charming tresses fell
  • down in naturally shining ringlets, as if officious to conceal the
  • dazzling beauties of her neck and shoulders; her lovely bosom too heaving
  • with sighs, and broken sobs, as if to aid her quivering lips in pleading
  • for her--in this manner, but when her grief gave way to her speech, in
  • words pronounced with that emphatical propriety, which distinguishes this
  • admirable creature in her elocution from all the women I ever heard
  • speak, did she implore my compassion and my honour.
  • 'Consider me, dear Lovelace,' [dear was her charming word!] 'on my knees
  • I beg you to consider me as a poor creature who has no protector but you;
  • who has no defence but your honour: by that honour! by your humanity! by
  • all you have vowed! I conjure you not to make me abhor myself! not to
  • make me vile in my own eyes!'
  • I mentioned to-morrow as the happiest day of my life.
  • Tell me not of to-morrow. If indeed you mean me honourably, now, this
  • very instant NOW! you must show it, and be gone! you can never in a whole
  • long life repair the evils you NOW make me suffer!
  • Wicked wretch!--Insolent villain!--yes, she called me insolent villain,
  • although so much in my power! And for what!--only for kissing (with
  • passion indeed) her inimitable neck, her lips, her cheeks, her forehead,
  • and her streaming eyes, as this assemblage of beauties offered itself at
  • once to my ravished sight; she continuing kneeling at my feet as I sat.
  • If I am a villain, Madam!--And then my grasping, but trembling hand--I
  • hope I did not hurt the tenderest and loveliest of all her beauties--If I
  • am a villain, Madam--
  • She tore my ruffle, shrunk from my happy hand, with amazing force and
  • agility, as with my other arm I would have encircled her waist.
  • Indeed you are!--the worst of villains!--Help! dear, blessed people! and
  • screamed out--No help for a poor creature!
  • Am I then a villain, Madam?--Am I then a villain, say you?--and clasped
  • both my arms about her, offering to raise her to my bounding heart.
  • Oh! no!--And yet you are!--And again I was her dear Lovelace!--her hands
  • again clasped over her charming bosom:--Kill me! kill me!--if I am odious
  • enough in your eyes to deserve this treatment: and I will thank you!--Too
  • long, much too long has my life been a burden to me!--Or, (wildly looking
  • all round her,) give me but the means, and I will instantly convince you
  • that my honour is dearer to me than my life!
  • Then, with still folded hands, and fresh streaming eyes, I was her
  • blessed Lovelace; and she would thank me with her latest breath if I
  • would permit her to make that preference, or free her from farther
  • indignities.
  • I sat suspended for a moment: by my soul, thought I, thou art, upon full
  • proof, an angel and no woman! still, however, close clasping her to my
  • bosom, as I raised her from her knees, she again slid through my arms,
  • and dropped upon them.--'See, Mr. Lovelace!--Good God! that I should live
  • to see this hour, and to bear this treatment!--See at your feet a poor
  • creature, imploring your pity; who, for your sake, is abandoned of all
  • the world. Let not my father's curse thus dreadfully operate! be not you
  • the inflicter, who have been the cause of it: but spare me, I beseech
  • you, spare me!--for how have I deserved this treatment from you? for your
  • own sake, if not for my sake, and as you would that God Almighty, in your
  • last hour, should have mercy upon you, spare me!'
  • What heart but must have been penetrated!
  • I would again have raised the dear suppliant from her knees; but she
  • would not be raised, till my softened mind, she said, had yielded to her
  • prayer, and bid her rise to be innocent.
  • Rise then, my angel! rise, and be what you are, and all you wish to be!
  • only pronounce me pardoned for what has passed, and tell me you will
  • continue to look upon me with that eye of favour and serenity which I
  • have been blessed with for some days past, and I will submit to my
  • beloved conqueress, whose power never was at so great an height with me,
  • as now, and retire to my apartment.
  • God Almighty, said she, hear your prayers in your most arduous moments,
  • as you have heard mine! and now leave me, this moment leave me, to my own
  • recollection: in that you will leave me to misery enough, and more than
  • you ought to wish to your bitterest enemy.
  • Impute not every thing, my best beloved, to design, for design it was
  • not--
  • O Mr. Lovelace!
  • Upon my soul, Madam, the fire was real--[and so it was, Jack!]--The
  • house, my dearest life, might have been consumed by it, as you will be
  • convinced in the morning by ocular demonstration.
  • O Mr. Lovelace!--
  • Let my passion for you, Madam, and the unexpected meeting of you at your
  • chamber-door, in an attitude so charming--
  • Leave me, leave me, this moment!--I beseech you leave me; looking wildly
  • and in confusion about her, and upon herself.
  • Excuse me, my dearest creature, for those liberties which, innocent as
  • they were, your too great delicacy may make you take amiss--
  • No more! no more!--leave me, I beseech you! again looking upon herself,
  • and round her, in a sweet confusion--Begone! begone!
  • Then weeping, she struggled vehemently to withdraw her hands, which all
  • the while I held between mine.--Her struggles!--O what additional charms,
  • as I now reflect, did her struggles give to every feature, every limb, of
  • a person so sweetly elegant and lovely!
  • Impossible, my dearest life, till you pronounce my pardon!--Say but you
  • forgive me!--say but you forgive me!
  • I beseech you to be gone! leave me to myself, that I may think what I can
  • do, and what I ought to do.
  • That, my dearest creature, is not enough. You must tell me that I am
  • forgiven; that you will see me to-morrow as if nothing had happened.
  • And then I clasped her again in my arms, hoping she would not forgive
  • me--
  • I will--I do forgive you--wretch that you are!
  • Nay, my Clarissa! and is it such a reluctant pardon, mingled with a word
  • so upbraiding, that I am to be put off with, when you are thus (clasping
  • her close to me) in my power?
  • I do, I do forgive you!
  • Heartily?
  • Yes, heartily!
  • And freely?
  • Freely!
  • And will you look upon me to-morrow as if nothing had passed?
  • Yes, yes!
  • I cannot take these peevish affirmatives, so much like intentional
  • negatives!--Say, you will, upon your honour.
  • Upon my honour, then--Oh! now, begone! begone!--and never never--
  • What! never, my angel!--Is this forgiveness?
  • Never, said she, let what has passed be remembered more!
  • I insisted upon one kiss to seal my pardon--and retired like a fool, a
  • woman's fool, as I was!--I sneakingly retired!--Couldst thou have
  • believed it?
  • But I had no sooner entered my own apartment, than reflecting upon the
  • opportunity I had lost, and that all I had gained was but an increase of
  • my own difficulties; and upon the ridicule I should meet with below upon
  • a weakness so much out of my usual character; I repented, and hastened
  • back, in hope that, through the distress of mind which I left her in, she
  • had not so soon fastened the door; and I was fully resolved to execute
  • all my purposes, be the consequence what it would; for, thought I, I have
  • already sinned beyond cordial forgiveness, I doubt; and if fits and
  • desperation ensue, I can but marry at last, and then I shall make her
  • amends.
  • But I was justly punished; for her door was fast: and hearing her sigh
  • and sob, as if her heart would burst, My beloved creature, said I,
  • rapping gently, [the sobbings then ceasing,] I want but to say three
  • words to you, which must be the most acceptable you ever heard from me.
  • Let me see you out for one moment.
  • I thought I heard her coming to open the door, and my heart leapt in that
  • hope; but it was only to draw another bolt, to make it still the faster;
  • and she either could not or would not answer me, but retired to the
  • farther end of her apartment, to her closet, probably; and, more like a
  • fool than before, again I sneaked away.
  • This was mine, my plot! and this was all I made of it!--I love her more
  • than ever!--And well I may!--never saw I polished ivory so beautiful as
  • her arms and shoulders; never touched I velvet so soft as her skin: her
  • virgin bosom--O Belford, she is all perfection! then such an elegance!--
  • In her struggling losing her shoe, (but just slipt on, as I told thee,)
  • her pretty foot equally white and delicate as the hand of any other
  • woman, or even her own hand!
  • But seest thou not that I have a claim of merit for a grace that every
  • body hitherto had denied me? and that is for a capacity of being moved by
  • prayers and tears--Where, where, on this occasion, was the callous, where
  • the flint, by which my heart was said to be surrounded?
  • This, indeed, is the first instance, in the like case, that ever I was
  • wrought upon. But why? because, I never before encountered a resistance
  • so much in earnest: a resistance, in short, so irresistible.
  • What a triumph has her sex obtained in my thoughts by this trial, and
  • this resistance?
  • But if she can now forgive me--can!--she must. Has she not upon her
  • honour already done it?--But how will the dear creature keep that part of
  • her promise which engages her to see me in the morning as if nothing had
  • happened?
  • She would give the world, I fancy, to have the first interview over!--She
  • had not best reproach me--yet not to reproach me!--what a charming
  • puzzle!--Let her break her word with me at her peril. Fly me she
  • cannot--no appeals lie from my tribunal--What friend has she in the
  • world, if my compassion exert not itself in her favour?--and then the
  • worthy Captain Tomlinson, and her uncle Harlowe, will be able to make all
  • up for me, be my next offence what it may.
  • As to thy apprehensions of her committing any rashness upon herself,
  • whatever she might have done in her passion, if she could have seized
  • upon her scissors, or found any other weapon, I dare say there is no fear
  • of that from her deliberate mind. A man has trouble enough with these
  • truly pious, and truly virtuous girls; [now I believe there are such;] he
  • had need to have some benefit from, some security in, the rectitude of
  • their minds.
  • In short, I fear nothing in this lady but grief: yet that's a slow
  • worker, you know; and gives time to pop in a little joy between its
  • sullen fits.
  • LETTER XVII
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • THURSDAY MORNING, EIGHT O'CLOCK.
  • Her chamber-door has not yet been opened. I must not expect she will
  • breakfast with me. Nor dine with me, I doubt. A little silly soul, what
  • troubles does she make to herself by her over-niceness!--All I have done
  • to her, would have been looked upon as a frolic only, a romping bout, and
  • laughed off by nine parts in ten of the sex accordingly. The more she
  • makes of it, the more painful to herself, as well as to me.
  • Why now, Jack, were it not better, upon her own notions, that she seemed
  • not so sensible as she will make herself to be, if she is very angry?
  • But perhaps I am more afraid than I need. I believe I am. From her
  • over-niceness arises my fear, more than from any extraordinary reason for
  • resentment. Next time, she may count herself very happy, if she come off
  • no worse.
  • The dear creature was so frightened, and so fatigued, last night, no
  • wonder she lies it out this morning.
  • I hope she has had more rest than I have had. Soft and balmy, I hope,
  • have been her slumbers, that she may meet me in tolerable temper. All
  • sweetly blushing and confounded--I know how she will look!--But why
  • should she, the sufferer, be ashamed, when I, the trespasser, am not?
  • But custom is a prodigious thing. The women are told how much their
  • blushes heighten their graces: they practise for them therefore: blushes
  • come as hastily when they call for them, as their tears: aye, that's it!
  • While we men, taking blushes for a sign of guilt or sheepishness, are
  • equally studious to suppress them.
  • ***
  • By my troth, Jack, I am half as much ashamed to see the women below, as
  • my fair-one can be to see me. I have not yet opened my door, that I may
  • not be obtruded upon my them.
  • After all, what devils may one make of the sex! To what a height of--
  • what shall I call it?--must those of it be arrived, who once loved a man
  • with so much distinction, as both Polly and Sally loved me; and yet can
  • have got so much above the pangs of jealousy, so much above the
  • mortifying reflections that arise from dividing and sharing with new
  • objects the affections of them they prefer to all others, as to wish for,
  • and promote a competitorship in his love, and make their supreme delight
  • consist in reducing others to their level!--For thou canst not imagine,
  • how even Sally Martin rejoiced last night in the thought that the lady's
  • hour was approaching.
  • PAST TEN O'CLOCK.
  • I never longed in my life for any thing with so much impatience as to see
  • my charmer. She has been stirring, it seems, these two hours.
  • Dorcas just now tapped at her door, to take her morning commands.
  • She had none for her, was the answer.
  • She desired to know, if she would not breakfast?
  • A sullen and low-voiced negative received Dorcas.
  • I will go myself.
  • ***
  • Three different times tapped I at the door, but had no answer.
  • Permit me, dearest creature, to inquire after your health. As you have
  • not been seen to-day, I am impatient to know how you do.
  • Not a word of answer; but a deep sigh, even to sobbing.
  • Let me beg of you, Madam, to accompany me up another pair of stairs--
  • you'll rejoice to see what a happy escape we have all had.
  • A happy escape indeed, Jack!--For the fire had scorched the window-board,
  • singed the hangings, and burnt through the slit-deal linings of the
  • window-jambs.
  • No answer, Madam!--Am I not worthy of one word?--Is it thus you keep your
  • promise with me?--Shall I not have the favour of your company for two
  • minutes [only for two minutes] in the dining-room?
  • Hem!--and a deep sigh!--were all the answer.
  • Answer me but how you do! Answer me but that you are well! Is this the
  • forgiveness that was the condition of my obedience?
  • Then, with a faintish, but angry voice, begone from my door!--Wretch!
  • inhuman, barbarous, and all that is base and treacherous! begone from my
  • door! Nor tease thus a poor creature, entitled to protection, not
  • outrage.
  • I see, Madam, how you keep your word with me--if a sudden impulse, the
  • effects of an unthought-of accident, cannot be forgiven--
  • O the dreadful weight of a father's curse, thus in the very letter of
  • it--
  • And then her voice dying away in murmurs inarticulate, I looked through
  • the key-hole, and saw her on her knees, her face, though not towards me,
  • lifted up, as well as hands, and these folded, depreciating, I suppose,
  • that gloomy tyrant's curse.
  • I could not help being moved.
  • My dearest life! admit me to your presence but for two minutes, and
  • confirm your promised pardon; and may lightning blast me on the spot, if
  • I offer any thing but my penitence, at a shrine so sacred!--I will
  • afterwards leave you for a whole day; till to-morrow morning; and then
  • attend you with writings, all ready to sign, a license obtained, or if it
  • cannot, a minister without one. This once believe me! When you see the
  • reality of the danger that gave occasion for this your unhappy
  • resentment, you will think less hardly of me. And let me beseech you to
  • perform a promise on which I made a reliance not altogether ungenerous.
  • I cannot see you! Would to Heaven I never had! If I write, that's all I
  • can do.
  • Let your writing then, my dearest life, confirm your promise: and I will
  • withdraw in expectation of it.
  • PAST ELEVEN O'CLOCK.
  • She rung her bell for Dorcas; and, with her door in her hand, only half
  • opened, gave her a billet for me.
  • How did the dear creature look, Dorcas?
  • She was dressed. She turned her face quite from me; and sighed, as if
  • her heart would break.
  • Sweet creature:--I kissed the wet wafer, and drew it from the paper with
  • my breath.
  • These are the contents.--No inscriptive Sir! No Mr. Lovelace!
  • I cannot see you: nor will I, if I can help it. Words cannot express the
  • anguish of my soul on your baseness and ingratitude.
  • If the circumstances of things are such, that I can have no way for
  • reconciliation with those who would have been my natural protectors from
  • such outrages, but through you, [the only inducement I have to stay a
  • moment longer in your knowledge,] pen and ink must be, at present, the
  • only means of communication between us.
  • Vilest of men, and most detestable of plotters! how have I deserved from
  • you the shocking indignities--but no more--only for your own sake, wish
  • not, at least for a week to come, to see
  • The undeservedly injured and insulted
  • CLARISSA HARLOWE
  • ***
  • So thou seest, nothing could have stood me in stead, but this plot of
  • Tomlinson and her uncle! To what a pretty pass, nevertheless, have I
  • brought myself!--Had Caesar been such a fool, he had never passed the
  • rubicon. But after he had passed it, had he retreated re infecta,
  • intimidated by a senatorial edict, what a pretty figure would he have
  • made in history!--I might have known, that to attempt a robbery, and put
  • a person in bodily fear, is as punishable as if the robbery had been
  • actually committed.
  • But not to see her for a week!--Dear, pretty soul! how she anticipates me
  • in every thing! The counsellor will have finished the writings to-day or
  • to-morrow, at furthest: the license with the parson, or the parson
  • without the license, must also be procured within the next four-and-
  • twenty hours; Pritchard is as good as ready with his indentures
  • tripartite: Tomlinson is at hand with a favourable answer from her uncle
  • --yet not to see her for a week!----Dear sweet soul;--her good angel is
  • gone a journey: is truanting at least. But nevertheless, in thy week's
  • time, or in much less, my charmer, I doubt not to complete my triumph!
  • But what vexes me of all things is, that such an excellent creature
  • should break her word:--Fie, fie, upon her!--But nobody is absolutely
  • perfect! 'Tis human to err, but not to persevere--I hope my charmer
  • cannot be inhuman!
  • LETTER XVIII
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • KING'S ARMS, PALL-MALL, THURSDAY, TWO O'CLOCK.
  • Several billets passed between us before I went out, by the
  • internuncioship of Dorcas: for which reason mine are superscribed by her
  • married name.--She would not open her door to receive them; lest I should
  • be near it, I suppose: so Dorcas was forced to put them under the door
  • (after copying them for thee); and thence to take the answers. Read
  • them, if thou wilt, at this place.
  • ***
  • TO MRS. LOVELACE
  • Indeed, my dearest life, you carry this matter too far. What will the
  • people below, who suppose us one as to the ceremony, think of so great a
  • niceness? Liberties so innocent! the occasion so accidental!--You will
  • expose yourself as well as me.--Hitherto they know nothing of what has
  • passed. And what indeed has passed to occasion all this resentment?--I
  • am sure you will not, by a breach of your word of honour, give me reason
  • to conclude that, had I not obeyed you, I could have fared no worse.
  • Most sincerely do I repent the offence given to your delicacy--But must
  • I, for so accidental an occurrence, be branded by such shocking names?--
  • Vilest of men, and most detestable of plotters, are hard words!--From the
  • pen of such a lady too.
  • If you step up another pair of stairs, you will be convinced, that,
  • however detestable I may be to you, I am no plotter in this affair.
  • I must insist upon seeing you, in order to take your directions upon some
  • of the subjects we talked of yesterday in the evening.
  • All that is more than necessary is too much. I claim your promised
  • pardon, and wish to plead it on my knees.
  • I beg your presence in the dining-room for one quarter of an hour, and I
  • will then leave you for the day, I am,
  • My dearest life,
  • Your ever adoring and truly penitent
  • LOVELACE.
  • ***
  • TO MR. LOVELACE
  • I will not see you. I cannot see you. I have no directions to give you.
  • Let Providence decide for me as it pleases.
  • The more I reflect upon your vileness, your ungrateful, your barbarous
  • vileness, the more I am exasperated against you.
  • You are the last person whose judgment I will take upon what is or is not
  • carried too far in matters of decency.
  • 'Tis grievous to me to write, or even to think of you at present. Urge
  • me no more then. Once more, I will not see you. Nor care I, now you
  • have made me vile to myself, what other people think of me.
  • ***
  • TO MRS. LOVELACE
  • Again, Madam, I remind you of your promise: and beg leave to say, I
  • insist upon the performance of it.
  • Remember, dearest creature, that the fault of a blameable person cannot
  • warrant a fault in one more perfect. Overniceness may be underniceness!
  • I cannot reproach myself with any thing that deserves this high
  • resentment.
  • I own that the violence of my passion for you might have carried me
  • beyond fit bounds--but that your commands and adjurations had power over
  • me at such a moment, I humbly presume to say, deserves some
  • consideration.
  • You enjoin me not to see you for a week. If I have not your pardon
  • before Captain Tomlinson comes to town, what shall I say to him?
  • I beg once more your presence in the dining-room. By my soul, Madam, I
  • must see you.
  • I want to consult you about the license, and other particulars of great
  • importance. The people below think us married; and I cannot talk to you
  • upon such subjects with the door between us.
  • For Heaven's sake, favour me with your presence for a few minutes: and I
  • will leave you for the day.
  • If I am to be forgiven, according to your promise, the earlier
  • forgiveness will be most obliging, and will save great pain to yourself,
  • as well as to
  • Your truly contrite and afflicted
  • LOVELACE.
  • ***
  • TO MR. LOVELACE
  • The more you tease me, the worse it will be for you.
  • Time is wanted to consider whether I ever should think of you at all.
  • At present, it is my sincere wish, that I may never more see your face.
  • All that can afford you the least shadow of favour from me, arises from
  • the hoped-for reconciliation with my real friends, not my Judas
  • protector.
  • I am careless at present of consequences. I hate myself: And who is it I
  • have reason to value?--Not the man who could form a plot to disgrace his
  • own hopes, as well as a poor friendless creature, (made friendless by
  • himself,) by insults not to be thought of with patience.
  • ***
  • TO MRS. LOVELACE
  • MADAM,
  • I will go to the Commons, and proceed in every particular as if I had not
  • the misfortune to be under your displeasure.
  • I must insist upon it, that however faulty my passion, on so unexpected
  • an incident, made me appear to a lady of your delicacy, yet my compliance
  • with your entreaties at such a moment [as it gave you an instance of your
  • power over me, which few men could have shown] ought, duly considered, to
  • entitle me to the effects of that solemn promise which was the condition
  • of my obedience.
  • I hope to find you in a kinder, and, I will say, juster disposition on my
  • return. Whether I get the license, or not, let me beg of you to make the
  • soon you have been pleased to bid me hope for, to-morrow morning. This
  • will reconcile every thing, and make me the happiest of men.
  • The settlements are ready to sign, or will be by night.
  • For Heaven's sake, Madam, do not carry your resentment into a displeasure
  • so disproportionate to the offence. For that would be to expose us both
  • to the people below; and, what is of infinite more consequence to us, to
  • Captain Tomlinson. Let us be able, I beseech you, Madam, to assure him,
  • on his next visit, that we are one.
  • As I have no hope to be permitted to dine with you, I shall not return
  • till evening: and then, I presume to say, I expect [your promise
  • authorizes me to use the word] to find you disposed to bless, by your
  • consent for to-morrow,
  • Your adoring
  • LOVELACE.
  • ***
  • What pleasure did I propose to take, how to enjoy the sweet confusion in
  • which I expected to find her, while all was so recent!--But she must, she
  • shall, see me on my return. It were better to herself, as well as for
  • me, that she had not made so much ado about nothing. I must keep my anger
  • alive, lest it sink into compassion. Love and compassion, be the
  • provocation ever so great, are hard to be separated: while anger converts
  • what would be pity, without it, into resentment. Nothing can be lovely
  • in a man's eye with which he is thoroughly displeased.
  • I ordered Dorcas, on putting the last billet under the door, and finding
  • it taken up, to tell her, that I hoped an answer to it before I went out.
  • Her reply was verbal, tell him that I care not whither he goes, nor what
  • he does.--And this, re-urged by Dorcas, was all she had to say to me.
  • I looked through the key-hole at my going by her door, and saw her on her
  • knees, at her bed's feet, her head and bosom on the bed, her arms
  • extended; [sweet creature how I adore her!] and in an agony she seemed to
  • be, sobbing, as I heard at that distance, as if her heart would break.--
  • By my soul, Jack, I am a pityful fellow! Recollection is my enemy!--
  • Divine excellence!--Happy with her for so many days together! Now so
  • unhappy!--And for what?--But she is purity herself. And why, after all,
  • should I thus torment--but I must not trust myself with myself, in the
  • humour I am in.
  • ***
  • Waiting here for Mowbray and Mallory, by whose aid I am to get the
  • license, I took papers out of my pocket, to divert myself; and thy last
  • popt officiously the first into my hand. I gave it the honour of a
  • re-perusal; and this revived the subject with me, with which I had
  • resolved not to trust myself.
  • I remember, that the dear creature, in her torn answer to my proposals,
  • says, condescension is not meanness. She better knows how to make this
  • out, than any mortal breathing. Condescension indeed implies dignity:
  • and dignity ever was there in her condescension. Yet such a dignity as
  • gave grace to the condescension; for there was no pride, no insult, no
  • apparent superiority, indicated by it.--This, Miss Howe confirms to be a
  • part of her general character.*
  • * See Vol. IV. Letter XXIII.
  • I can tell her, how she might behave, to make me her own for ever. She
  • knows she cannot fly me. She knows she must see me sooner or later; the
  • sooner the more gracious.--I would allow her to resent [not because the
  • liberties I took with her require resentment, were she not a CLARISSA;
  • but as it becomes her particular niceness to resent]: but would she show
  • more love than abhorrence of me in her resentment; would she seem, if it
  • were but to seem, to believe the fire no device, and all that followed
  • merely accidental; and descend, upon it, to tender expostulation, and
  • upbraiding for the advantage I would have taken of her surprise; and
  • would she, at last, be satisfied (as well she may) that it was attended
  • with no further consequence; and place some generous confidence in my
  • honour, [power loves to be trusted, Jack;] I think I would put an end to
  • all her trials, and pay her my vows at the altar.
  • Yet, to have taken such bold steps, as with Tomlinson and her uncle--to
  • have made such a progress--O Belford, Belford, how I have puzzled myself,
  • as well as her!--This cursed aversion to wedlock how it has entangled
  • me!--What contradictions has it made me guilty of!
  • How pleasing to myself, to look back upon the happy days I gave her;
  • though mine would doubtless have been unmixedly so, could I have
  • determined to lay aside my contrivances, and to be as sincere all the
  • time, as she deserved that I should be!
  • If I find this humour hold but till to-morrow morning, [and it has now
  • lasted two full hours, and I seem, methinks, to have pleasure in
  • encouraging it,] I will make thee a visit, I think, or get thee to come
  • to me; and then will I--consult thee upon it.
  • But she will not trust me. She will not confide in my honour. Doubt, in
  • this case, is defiance. She loves me not well enough to forgive me
  • generously. She is so greatly above me! How can I forgive her for a
  • merit so mortifying to my pride! She thinks, she knows, she has told me,
  • that she is above me. These words are still in my ears, 'Be gone,
  • Lovelace!--My soul is above thee, man!--Thou hast a proud heart to
  • contend with!--My soul is above thee, man!'* Miss Howe thinks her above
  • me too. Thou, even thou, my friend, my intimate friend and companion,
  • art of the same opinion. Then I fear her as much as I love her.--How
  • shall my pride bear these reflections? My wife (as I have often said,
  • because it so often recurs to my thoughts) to be so much my superior!--
  • Myself to be considered but as the second person in my own family!--Canst
  • thou teach me to bear such a reflection as this!--To tell me of my
  • acquisition in her, and that she, with all her excellencies, will be mine
  • in full property, is a mistake--it cannot be so--for shall I not be
  • her's; and not my own?--Will not every act of her duty (as I cannot
  • deserve it) be a condescension, and a triumph over me?--And must I owe
  • it merely to her goodness that she does not despise me?--To have her
  • condescend to bear with my follies!--To wound me with an eye of pity!--A
  • daughter of the Harlowes thus to excel the last, and as I have heretofore
  • said, not the meanest of the Lovelaces**--forbid it!
  • * See Vol. IV. Letter XLVII.
  • ** See Vol. III. Letter XVIII.
  • Yet forbid it not--for do I not now--do I not every moment--see her
  • before me all over charms, and elegance and purity, as in the struggles
  • of the past midnight? And in these struggles, heart, voice, eyes, hand,
  • and sentiments, so greatly, so gloriously consistent with the character
  • she has sustained from her cradle to the present hour?
  • But what advantages do I give thee?
  • Yet have I not always done her justice? Why then thy teasing
  • impertinence?
  • However, I forgive thee, Jack--since (so much generous love am I capable
  • of!) I had rather all the world should condemn me, than that her
  • character should suffer the least impeachment.
  • The dear creature herself once told me, that there was a strange mixture
  • in my mind.* I have been called Devil and Beelzebub, between the two
  • proud beauties: I must indeed be a Beelzebub, if I had not some tolerable
  • qualities.
  • * See Vol. III. Letter XXXIII.
  • But as Miss Howe says, the suffering time of this excellent creature is
  • her shining time.* Hitherto she has done nothing but shine.
  • * See Vol. IV. Letter XXIII.
  • She called me villain, Belford, within these few hours. And what is the
  • sum of the present argument; but that had I not been a villain in her
  • sense of the word, she had not been such an angel?
  • O Jack, Jack! This midnight attempt has made me mad; has utterly undone
  • me! How can the dear creature say, I have made her vile in her own eyes,
  • when her behaviour under such a surprise, and her resentment under such
  • circumstances, have so greatly exalted her in mine?
  • Whence, however, this strange rhapsody?--Is it owing to my being here?
  • That I am not at Sinclair's? But if there be infection in that house,
  • how has my beloved escaped it?
  • But no more in this strain!--I will see what her behaviour will be on my
  • return--yet already do I begin to apprehend some little sinkings, some
  • little retrogradations: for I have just now a doubt arisen, whether, for
  • her own sake, I should wish her to forgive me lightly, or with
  • difficulty?
  • ***
  • I am in a way to come at the wished-for license.
  • I have now given every thing between my beloved and me a full
  • consideration; and my puzzle is over. What has brought me to a speedier
  • determination is, that I think I have found out what she means by the
  • week's distance at which she intends to hold me. It is, that she may
  • have time to write to Miss Howe, to put in motion that cursed scheme of
  • her's, and to take measures upon it which shall enable her to abandon and
  • renounce me for ever. Now, Jack, if I obtain not admission to her
  • presence on my return; but am refused with haughtiness; if her week be
  • insisted upon (such prospects before her); I shall be confirmed in my
  • conjecture; and it will be plain to me, that weak at best was that love,
  • which could give place to punctilio, at a time when that all-reconciling
  • ceremony, as she must think, waits her command:--then will I recollect
  • all her perversenesses; then will I re-peruse Miss Howe's letters, and
  • the transcripts from others of them; give way to my aversion to the life
  • of shackles: and then shall she be mine in my own way.
  • But, after all, I am in hopes that she will have better considered of
  • every thing by the evening; that her threat of a week's distance was
  • thrown out in the heat of passion; and that she will allow, that I have
  • as much cause to quarrel with her for breach of her word, as she has with
  • me for breach of the peace.
  • These lines of Rowe have got into my head; and I shall repeat them very
  • devoutly all the way the chairman shall poppet me towards her by-and-by.
  • Teach me, some power, the happy art of speech,
  • To dress my purpose up in gracious words;
  • Such as may softly steal upon her soul,
  • And never waken the tempestuous passions.
  • LETTER XIX
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • THURSDAY EVENING, JUNE 8.
  • O for a curse to kill with!--Ruined! Undone! Outwitted!
  • Tricked!--Zounds, man, the lady has gone off!--Absolutely gone off!
  • Escaped!--
  • Thou knowest not, nor canst conceive, the pangs that wring my heart!--
  • What can I do!--O Lord, O Lord, O Lord!
  • And thou, too, who hast endeavoured to weaken my hands, wilt but clap thy
  • dragon's wings at the tidings!
  • Yet I must write, or I shall go distracted! Little less have I been
  • these two hours; dispatching messengers to every stage, to every inn, to
  • every waggon or coach, whether flying or creeping, and to every house
  • with a bill up, for five miles around.
  • The little hypocrite, who knows not a soul in this town, [I thought I was
  • sure of her at any time,] such an unexperienced traitress--giving me hope
  • too, in her first billet, that her expectation of the family-
  • reconciliation would withhold her from taking such a step as this--curse
  • upon her contrivances!--I thought, that it was owing to her bashfulness,
  • to her modesty, that, after a few innocent freedoms, she could not look
  • me in the face; when, all the while, she was impudently [yes, I say,
  • impudently, though she be Clarissa Harlowe] contriving to rob me of the
  • dearest property I had ever purchased--purchased by a painful servitude
  • of many months; fighting through the wild-beasts of her family for her,
  • and combating with a wind-mill virtue, which hath cost me millions of
  • perjuries only to attempt; and which now, with its damn'd air-fans, has
  • tost me a mile and a half beyond hope!--And this, just as I had arrived
  • within view of the consummation of all my wishes!
  • O Devil of Love! God of Love no more--how have I deserved this of
  • thee!--Never before the friend of frozen virtue?--Powerless demon, for
  • powerless thou must be, if thou meanedest not to frustrate my hopes; who
  • shall henceforth kneel at thy altars!--May every enterprising heart
  • abhor, despise, execrate, renounce thee, as I do!--But, O Belford,
  • Belford, what signifies cursing now!
  • ***
  • How she could effect this her wicked escape is my astonishment; the whole
  • sisterhood having charge of her;--for, as yet, I have not had patience
  • enough to inquire into the particulars, nor to let a soul of them
  • approach me.
  • Of this I am sure, or I had not brought her hither, there is not a
  • creature belonging to this house, that could be corrupted either by
  • virtue or remorse: the highest joy every infernal nymph, of this worse
  • than infernal habitation, could have known, would have been to reduce
  • this proud beauty to her own level.--And as to my villain, who also had
  • charge of her, he is such a seasoned varlet, that he delights in mischief
  • for the sake of it: no bribe could seduce him to betray his trust, were
  • there but wickedness in it!--'Tis well, however, he was out of my way
  • when the cursed news was imparted to me!--Gone, the villain! in quest of
  • her: not to return, nor to see my face [so it seems he declared] till he
  • has heard some tidings of her; and all the out-of-place varlets of his
  • numerous acquaintance are summoned and employed in the same business.
  • To what purpose brought I this angel (angel I must yet call her) to this
  • hellish house?--And was I not meditating to do her deserved honour? By
  • my soul, Belford, I was resolved--but thou knowest what I had
  • conditionally resolved--And now, who can tell into what hands she may
  • have fallen!
  • I am mad, stark mad, by Jupiter, at the thoughts of this!--Unprovided,
  • destitute, unacquainted--some villain, worse than myself, who adores her
  • not as I adore her, may have seized her, and taken advantage of her
  • distress!--Let me perish, Belford, if a whole hecatomb of innocents, as
  • the little plagues are called, shall atone for the broken promises and
  • wicked artifices of this cruel creature!
  • ***
  • Going home, as I did, with resolutions favourable to her, judge thou of
  • my distraction, when her escape was first hinted to me, although but in
  • broken sentences. I knew not what I said, nor what I did. I wanted to
  • kill somebody. I flew out of one room into another, who broke the matter
  • to me. I charged bribery and corruption, in my first fury, upon all; and
  • threatened destruction to old and young, as they should come in my way.
  • Dorcas continues locked up from me: Sally and Polly have not yet dared to
  • appear: the vile Sinclair--
  • But here comes the odious devil. She taps at the door, thought that's
  • only a-jar, whining and snuffling, to try, I suppose, to coax me into
  • temper.
  • ***
  • What a helpless state, where a man can only execrate himself and others;
  • the occasion of his rage remaining; the evil increasing upon reflection;
  • time itself conspiring to deepen it!--O how I curs'd her!
  • I have her now, methinks, before me, blubbering--how odious does sorrow
  • make an ugly face!--Thine, Jack, and this old beldam's, in penitentials,
  • instead of moving compassion, must evermore confirm hatred; while beauty
  • in tears, is beauty heightened, and what my heart has ever delighted to
  • see.----
  • 'What excuse!--Confound you, and your cursed daughters, what excuse can
  • you make?--Is she not gone--Has she not escaped?--But before I am quite
  • distracted, before I commit half a hundred murders, let me hear how it
  • was.'----
  • ***
  • I have heard her story!--Art, damn'd, confounded, wicked, unpardonable
  • art, is a woman of her character--But show me a woman, and I'll show thee
  • a plotter!--This plaguy sex is art itself: every individual of it is a
  • plotter by nature.
  • This is the substance of the old wretch's account.
  • She told me, 'That I had no sooner left the vile house, than Dorcas
  • acquainted the syren' [Do, Jack, let me call her names!--I beseech thee,
  • Jack, to permit me to call her names!] 'that Dorcas acquainted her lady
  • with it; and that I had left word, that I was gone to doctors-commons,
  • and should be heard of for some hours at the Horn there, if inquired
  • after by the counsellor, or anybody else: that afterwards I should be
  • either at the Cocoa-tree, or King's-Arms, and should not return till
  • late. She then urged her to take some refreshment.
  • 'She was in tears when Dorcas approached her; her saucy eyes swelled with
  • weeping: she refused either to eat or drink; sighed as if her heart would
  • break.'--False, devilish grief! not the humble, silent, grief, that only
  • deserves pity!--Contriving to ruin me, to despoil me of all that I held
  • valuable, in the very midst of it.
  • 'Nevertheless, being resolved not to see me for a week at least, she
  • ordered her to bring up three or four French rolls, with a little butter,
  • and a decanter of water; telling her, she would dispense with her
  • attendance; and that should be all she should live upon in the interim.
  • So artful creature! pretending to lay up for a week's siege.'--For, as to
  • substantial food, she, no more than other angels--Angels! said I--the
  • devil take me if she be any more an angel!--for she is odious in my eyes;
  • and I hate her mortally!
  • But O Lovelace, thou liest!--She is all that is lovely. All that is
  • excellent!
  • But is she, can she be gone!--Oh! how Miss Howe will triumph!--But if
  • that little fury receive her, fate shall make me rich amends; for then
  • will I contrive to have them both.
  • I was looking back for connection--but the devil take connection; I have
  • no business with it: the contrary best befits distraction, and that will
  • soon be my lot!
  • 'Dorcas consulted the old wretch about obeying her: O yes, by all means;
  • for Mr. Lovelace knew how to come at her at any time: and directed a
  • bottle of sherry to be added.
  • 'This cheerful compliance so obliged her, that she was prevailed upon to
  • go up, and look at the damage done by the fire; and seemed not only
  • shocked by it, but, as they thought, satisfied it was no trick; as she
  • owned she had at first apprehended it to be. All this made them secure;
  • and they laughed in their sleeves, to think what a childish way of
  • showing her resentment she had found out; Sally throwing out her
  • witticisms, that Mrs. Lovelace was right, however, not to quarrel with
  • her bread and butter.'
  • Now this very childishness, as they imagined it, in such a genius, would
  • have made me suspect either her head, after what had happened the night
  • before; or her purpose, when the marriage was (so far as she knew) to be
  • completed within the week in which she was resolved to secrete herself
  • from me in the same house.
  • 'She sent Will. with a letter to Wilson's, directed to Miss Howe,
  • ordering him to inquire if there were not one for her there.
  • 'He only pretended to go, and brought word there was none; and put her
  • letter in his pocket for me.
  • 'She then ordered him to carry another (which she gave him) to the Horn
  • Tavern to me.--All this done without any seeming hurry: yet she appeared
  • to be very solemn; and put her handkerchief frequently to her eyes.
  • 'Will. pretended to come to me with this letter. But thou the dog had
  • the sagacity to mistrust something on her sending him out a second time;
  • (and to me, whom she had refused to see;) which he thought extraordinary;
  • and mentioned his mistrusts to Sally, Polly, and Dorcas; yet they made
  • light of his suspicions; Dorcas assuring them all, that her lady seemed
  • more stupid with her grief, than active; and that she really believed she
  • was a little turned in her head, and knew not what she did. But all of
  • them depended upon her inexperience, her open temper, and upon her not
  • making the least motion towards going out, or to have a coach or chair
  • called, as sometimes she had done; and still more upon the preparations
  • she had made for a week's siege, as I may call it.
  • 'Will. went out, pretending to bring the letter to me; but quickly
  • returned; his heart still misgiving him, on recollecting my frequent
  • cautions, that he was not to judge for himself, when he had positive
  • orders; but if any doubt occurred, from circumstances I could not
  • foresee, literally to follow them, as the only way to avoid blame.
  • 'But it must have been in this little interval, that she escaped; for
  • soon after his return, they made fast the street-door and hatch, the
  • mother and the two nymphs taking a little turn into the garden; Dorcas
  • going up stairs, and Will. (to avoid being seen by his lady, or his voice
  • heard) down into the kitchen.
  • 'About half an hour after, Dorcas, who had planted herself where she
  • could see her lady's door open, had the curiosity to go look through the
  • keyhole, having a misgiving, as she said, that the lady might offer some
  • violence to herself, in the mood she had been in all day; and finding the
  • key in the door, which was not very usual, she tapped at it three or four
  • times, and having no answer, opened it, with Madam, Madam, did you call?
  • --Supposing her in her closet.
  • 'Having no answer, she stept forward, and was astonished to find she was
  • not there. She hastily ran into the dining-room, then into my
  • apartments; searched every closet; dreading all the time to behold some
  • sad catastrophe.
  • 'Not finding her any where, she ran down to the old creature, and her
  • nymphs, with a Have you seen my lady?--Then she's gone!--She's no where
  • above!
  • 'They were sure she could not be gone out.
  • 'The whole house was in an uproar in an instant; some running up-stairs,
  • some down, from the upper rooms to the lower; and all screaming, How
  • should they look me in the face!
  • 'Will. cried out, he was a dead man: he blamed them; they him; and every
  • one was an accuser, and an excuser, at the same time.
  • 'When they had searched the whole house, and every closet in it, ten
  • times over, to no purpose, they took it into their heads to send to all
  • the porters, chairmen, and hackney-coachmen, that had been near the house
  • for two hours past, to inquire if any of them saw such a young lady;
  • describing her.
  • 'This brought them some light: the only dawning for hope, that I can
  • have, and which keeps me from absolute despair. One of the chairmen gave
  • them this account: That he saw such a one come out of the house a little
  • before four (in a great hurry, and as if frighted) with a little parcel
  • tied up in a handkerchief, in her hand: that he took notice to his
  • fellow, who plied her without her answering, that she was a fine young
  • lady: that he'd warrant, she had either a husband, or very cross parents;
  • for that her eyes seemed swelled with crying. Upon which, a third fellow
  • replied, that it might be a doe escaped from mother Damnable's park.
  • This Mrs. Sinclair told me with a curse, and a wish that she had a better
  • reputation; so handsomely as she lived, and so justly as she paid every
  • body for what she bought; her house visited by the best and civilest of
  • gentlemen; and no noise or brawls ever heard or known in it.
  • 'From these appearances, the fellow who gave this information, had the
  • curiosity to follow her, unperceived. She often looked back. Every body
  • who passed her, turned to look after her; passing their verdict upon her
  • tears, her hurry, and her charming person; till coming to a stand of
  • coaches, a coachman plied her; was accepted; alighted; opened the
  • coach-door in a hurry, seeing her hurry; and in it she stumbled for
  • haste; and, as the fellow believed, hurt her shin with the stumble.'
  • The devil take me, Belford, if my generous heart is not moved for her,
  • notwithstanding her wicked deceit, to think what must be her reflections
  • and apprehensions at the time:--A mind so delicate, heeding no censures;
  • yet, probably afraid of being laid hold of by a Lovelace in every one she
  • saw! At the same time, not knowing to what dangers she was about to
  • expose herself; nor of whom she could obtain shelter; a stranger to the
  • town, and to all its ways; the afternoon far gone: but little money; and
  • no clothes but those she had on!
  • It is impossible, in this little interval since last night, that Miss
  • Howe's Townsend could be co-operating.
  • But how she must abhor me to run all these risques; how heartily she must
  • detest me for my freedoms of last night! Oh! that I had given her
  • greater reason for a resentment so violent!--As to her virtue, I am too
  • much enraged to give her the merit due to that. To virtue it cannot be
  • owing that she should fly from the charming prospects that were before
  • her; but to malice, hatred, contempt, Harlowe pride, (the worst of
  • pride,) and to all the deadly passions that ever reigned in a female
  • breast--and if I can but recover her--But be still, be calm, be hushed,
  • my stormy passions; for is it not Clarissa [Harlowe must I say?] that
  • thus far I rave against?
  • 'The fellow heard her say, drive fast! very fast! Where, Madam? To
  • Holborn-bars, answered she; repeating, Drive very fast!--And up she
  • pulled both the windows: and he lost sight of the coach in a minute.
  • 'Will., as soon as he had this intelligence, speeded away in hopes to
  • trace her out; declaring, that he would never think of seeing me, till he
  • had heard some tidings of his lady.'
  • And now, Belford, all my hope is, that this fellow (who attended us in
  • our airing to Hampstead, to Highgate, to Muswell-hill, to Kentish-town)
  • will hear of her at some one or other of those places. And on this I the
  • rather build, as I remember she was once, after our return, very
  • inquisitive about the stages, and their prices; praising the conveniency
  • to passengers in their going off every hour; and this in Will.'s hearing,
  • who was then in attendance. Woe be to the villain, if he recollect not
  • this!
  • ***
  • I have been traversing her room, meditating, or taking up every thing she
  • but touched or used: the glass she dressed at, I was ready to break, for
  • not giving me the personal image it was wont to reflect of her, whose
  • idea is for ever present with me. I call for her, now in the tenderest,
  • now in the most reproachful terms, as if within hearing: wanting her, I
  • want my own soul, at least every thing dear to it. What a void in my
  • heart! what a chilness in my blood, as if its circulation was arrested!
  • From her room to my own; in the dining-room, and in and out of every
  • place where I have seen the beloved of my heart, do I hurry; in none can
  • I tarry; her lovely image in every one, in some lively attitude, rushing
  • cruelly upon me, in differently remembered conversations.
  • But when in my first fury, at my return, I went up two pairs of stairs,
  • resolved to find the locked-up Dorcas, and beheld the vainly-burnt
  • window-board, and recollected my baffled contrivances, baffled by my own
  • weak folly, I thought my distraction completed; and down I ran as one
  • frighted at a spectre, ready to howl for vexation; my head and my temples
  • shooting with a violence I had never felt before; and my back aching as
  • if the vertebrae were disjointed, and falling in pieces.
  • But now that I have heard the mother's story, and contemplated the
  • dawning hopes given by the chairman's information, I am a good deal
  • easier, and can make cooler reflections. Most heartily pray I for
  • Will.'s success, every four or five minutes. If I lose her, all my rage
  • will return with redoubled fury. The disgrace to be thus outwitted by a
  • novice, an infant in stratagem and contrivance, added to the violence of
  • my passion for her, will either break my heart, or (what saves many a
  • heart, in evils insupportable) turn my brain. What had I to do to go out
  • a license-hunting, at least till I had seen her, and made up matters with
  • her? And indeed, were it not the privilege of a principal to lay all his
  • own faults upon his underlings, and never be to blame himself, I should
  • be apt to reflect, that I am more in fault than any body. And, as the
  • sting of this reflection will sharpen upon me, if I recover her not, how
  • shall I ever be able to bear it?
  • If ever--
  • [Here Mr. Lovelace lays himself under a curse, too shocking to be
  • repeated, if he revenge not himself upon the Lady, should he once more
  • get her into his hands.]
  • ***
  • I have just now dismissed the sniveling toad Dorcas, who was introduced
  • to me for my pardon by the whining mother. I gave her a kind of negative
  • and ungracious forgiveness. Yet I shall as violently curse the two
  • nymphs, by-and-by, for the consequences of my own folly: and if this will
  • be a good way too to prevent their ridicule upon me, for losing so
  • glorious an opportunity as I had last night, or rather this morning.
  • I have corrected, from the result of the inquiries made of the chairman,
  • and from Dorcas's observations before the cruel creature escaped, a
  • description of her dress; and am resolved, if I cannot otherwise hear of
  • her, to advertise her in the gazette, as an eloped wife, both by her
  • maiden and acknowledged name; for her elopement will soon be known by
  • every enemy: why then should not my friends be made acquainted with it,
  • from whose inquiries and informations I may expect some tidings of her?
  • 'She had on a brown lustring night-gown, fresh, and looking like new, as
  • every thing she wears does, whether new or not, from an elegance natural
  • to her. A beaver hat, a black ribbon about her neck, and blue knots on
  • her breast. A quilted petticoat of carnation-coloured satin; a rose
  • diamond ring, supposed on her finger; and in her whole person and
  • appearance, as I shall express it, a dignity, as well as beauty, that
  • commands the repeated attention of every one who sees her.'
  • The description of her person I shall take a little more pains about. My
  • mind must be more at ease, before I undertake that. And I shall
  • threaten, 'that if, after a certain period given for her voluntary
  • return, she be not heard of, I will prosecute any person who presumes to
  • entertain, harbour, abet, or encourage her, with all the vengeance that
  • an injured gentleman and husband may be warranted to take by law, or
  • otherwise.'
  • ***
  • Fresh cause of aggravation!--But for this scribbling vein, or I should
  • still run mad.
  • Again going into her chamber, because it was her's, and sighing over the
  • bed, and every piece of furniture in it, I cast my eye towards the
  • drawers of the dressing-glass, and saw peep out, as it were, in one of
  • the half-drawn drawers, the corner of a letter. I snatched it out, and
  • found it superscribed, by her, To Mr. Lovelace. The sight of it made my
  • heart leap, and I trembled so, that I could hardly open the seal.
  • How does this damn'd love unman me!--but nobody ever loved as I love!--It
  • is even increased by her unworthy flight, and my disappointment.
  • Ungrateful creature, to fly from a passion thus ardently flaming! which,
  • like the palm, rises the more for being depressed and slighted.
  • I will not give thee a copy of this letter. I owe her not so much
  • service.
  • But wouldst thou think, that this haughty promise-breaker could resolve
  • as she does, absolutely and for ever to renounce me for what passed last
  • night? That she could resolve to forego all her opening prospects of
  • reconciliation; the reconciliation with a worthless family, on which she
  • has set her whole heart?--Yet she does--she acquits me of all obligation
  • to her, and herself of all expectations from me--And for what?--O that
  • indeed I had given her real cause! Damn'd confounded niceness, prudery,
  • affectation, or pretty ignorance, if not affectation!--By my soul,
  • Belford, I told thee all--I was more indebted to her struggles, than to
  • my own forwardness. I cannot support my own reflections upon a decency
  • so ill-requited.--She could not, she would not have been so much a
  • Harlowe in her resentment. All she feared had then been over; and her
  • own good sense, and even modesty, would have taught her to make the best
  • of it.
  • But if ever again I get her into my hands, art, and more art, and
  • compulsion too, if she make it necessary, [and 'tis plain that nothing
  • else will do,] shall she experience from the man whose fear of her has
  • been above even his passion for her; and whose gentleness and forbearance
  • she has thus perfidiously triumphed over. Well, says the Poet,
  • 'Tis nobler like a lion to invade
  • When appetite directs, and seize my prey,
  • Than to wait tamely, like a begging dog,
  • Till dull consent throws out the scraps of love.
  • Thou knowest what I have so lately vowed--and yet, at times [cruel
  • creature, and ungrateful as cruel!] I can subscribe with too much truth
  • to those lines of another Poet:
  • She reigns more fully in my soul than ever;
  • She garrisons my breast, and mans against me
  • Ev'n my own rebel thoughts, with thousand graces,
  • Ten thousand charms, and new-discovered beauties!
  • LETTER XX
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • A letter is put into my hands by Wilson himself.--Such a letter!
  • A letter from Miss Howe to her cruel friend!--
  • I made no scruple to open it.
  • It is a miracle that I fell not into fits at the reading of it; and at
  • the thought of what might have been the consequence, had it come into the
  • hands of this Clarissa Harlowe. Let my justly-excited rage excuse my
  • irreverence.
  • Collins, though not his day, brought it this afternoon to Wilson's, with
  • a particular desire that it might be sent with all speed to Miss
  • Beaumont's lodgings, and given, if possible, into her own hands. He had
  • before been here (at Mrs. Sinclair's with intent to deliver it to the
  • lady with his own hand; but was told [too truly told!] that she was
  • abroad; but that they would give her any thing he should leave for her
  • the moment she returned.) But he cared not to trust them with his
  • business, and went away to Wilson's, (as I find by the description of him
  • at both places,) and there left the letter; but not till he had a second
  • time called here, and found her not come in.
  • The letter [which I shall enclose; for it is too long to transcribe] will
  • account to thee for Collins's coming hither.
  • O this devilish Miss Howe;--something must be resolved upon and done with
  • that little fury!
  • ***
  • Thou wilt see the margin of this cursed letter crowded with indices
  • [>>>]. I put them to mark the places which call for vengeance upon the
  • vixen writer, or which require animadversion. Return thou it to me the
  • moment thou hast perused it.
  • Read it here; and avoid trembling for me, if thou canst.
  • TO MISS LAETITIA BEAUMONT
  • WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7.
  • MY DEAREST FRIEND,
  • You will perhaps think that I have been too
  • long silent. But I had begun two letters at differ-
  • ent times since my last, and written a great deal
  • >>> each time; and with spirit enough, I assure you;
  • incensed as I was against the abominable wretch you
  • are with; particularly on reading your's of the 21st
  • of the past month.*
  • * See Vol. IV. Letter XLVI.
  • >>> The first I intended to keep open till I could
  • give you some account of my proceedings with Mrs.
  • Townsend. It was some days before I saw her:
  • and this intervenient space giving me time to re-
  • peruse what I had written, I thought it proper to lay
  • >>> that aside, and to write in a style a little less fervent;
  • >>> for you would have blamed me, I know, for the free-
  • dom of some of my expressions. [Execrations, if
  • you please.] And when I had gone a good way
  • in the second, the change in your prospects, on his
  • communicating to you Miss Montague's letter, and
  • his better behaviour, occasioning a change in your
  • mind, I laid that aside also. And in this uncer-
  • tainty, thought I would wait to see the issue of
  • affairs between you before I wrote again; believing
  • that all would soon be decided one way or other.
  • I had still, perhaps, held this resolution, [as every
  • appearance, according to your letters, was more and
  • more promising,] had not the two passed days fur-
  • nished me with intelligence which it highly imports
  • you to know.
  • But I must stop here, and take a little walk, to
  • try to keep down that just indignation which rises
  • to my pen, when I am about to relate to you what
  • I must communicate.
  • ***
  • I am not my own mistress enough--then my
  • mother--always up and down--and watching as if
  • I were writing to a fellow. But I will try if I can
  • contain myself in tolerable bounds.
  • The women of the house where you are--O my
  • dear, the women of the house--but you never
  • thought highly of them--so it cannot be very sur-
  • >>> prising--nor would you have staid so long with
  • them, had not the notion of removing to one of your
  • own, made you less uneasy, and less curious about
  • their characters, and behaviour. Yet I could now
  • wish, that you had been less reserved among them
  • >>> --But I tease you--In short, my dear, you are
  • certainly in a devilish house!--Be assured that the
  • woman is one of the vilest women--nor does
  • she go to you by her right name--[Very true!]--
  • Her name is not Sinclair, nor is the street she lives
  • in Dover-street. Did you never go out by your-
  • self, and discharge the coach or chair, and return
  • >>> by another coach or chair? If you did, [yet I
  • don't remember that you ever wrote to me, that
  • you did,] you would never have found your way to
  • the vile house, either by the woman's name, Sin-
  • clair, or by the street's name, mentioned by that
  • Doleman in his letter about the lodgings.*
  • * Vol. III. Letters XXXVIII. and XXXIX.
  • The wretch might indeed have held out these
  • false lights a little more excusably, had the house
  • been an honest house; and had his end only been
  • to prevent mischief from your brother. But this
  • contrivance was antecedent, as I think, to your
  • brother's project; so that no excuse can be made
  • >>> for his intentions at the time--the man, whatever he
  • may now intend, was certainly then, even then, a
  • villain in his heart.
  • ***
  • >>> I am excessively concerned that I should be pre-
  • vailed upon, between your over-niceness, on one
  • hand, and my mother's positiveness, on the other, to
  • be satisfied without knowing how to direct to you
  • at your lodgings. I think too, that the proposal
  • that I should be put off to a third-hand knowledge,
  • or rather veiled in a first-hand ignorance, came from
  • him, and that it was only acquiesced in by you, as
  • it was by me,* upon needless and weak considera-
  • tions; because, truly, I might have it to say, if
  • challenged, that I knew not where to send to you!
  • I am ashamed of myself!--Had this been at first
  • excusable, it could not be a good reason for going
  • on in the folly, when you had no liking to the
  • >>> house, and when he began to play tricks, and delay
  • with you.--What! I was to mistrust myself, was
  • I? I was to allow it to be thought, that I could
  • >>> not keep my own secret?--But the house to be
  • >>> taken at this time, and at that time, led us both on
  • >>> --like fools, like tame fools, in a string. Upon my
  • life, my dear, this man is a vile, a contemptible
  • villain--I must speak out!--How has he laughed
  • in his sleeve at us both, I warrant, for I can't tell
  • how long!
  • * See Vol. III. Letter LVI. par. 12. and Letter LVIII. par. 12.--Where
  • the reader will observe, that the proposal came from herself; which, as
  • it was also mentioned by Mr. Lovelace, (towards the end of Letter I. in
  • Vol. IV.) she may be presumed to have forgotten. So that Clarissa had a
  • double inducement for acquiescing with the proposed method of carrying on
  • the correspondence between Miss Howe and herself by Wilson's conveyance,
  • and by the name of Laetitia Beaumont.
  • And yet who could have thought that a man of
  • >>> fortune, and some reputation, [this Doleman, I
  • mean--not your wretch, to be sure!] formerly a
  • rake, indeed, [I inquired after him long ago; and
  • so was the easier satisfied;] but married to a
  • woman of family--having had a palsy-blow--and,
  • >>> one would think, a penitent, should recommend
  • such a house [why, my dear, he could not inquire
  • of it, but must find it to be bad] to such a man as
  • Lovelace, to bring his future, nay, his then supposed,
  • bride to?
  • ***
  • >>> I write, perhaps, with too much violence, to be
  • clear, but I cannot help it. Yet I lay down my
  • pen, and take it up every ten minutes, in order to
  • write with some temper--my mother too, in and
  • out--What need I, (she asks me,) lock myself in,
  • if I am only reading past correspondencies? For
  • >>> that is my pretence, when she comes poking in with
  • her face sharpened to an edge, as I may say, by a
  • curiosity that gives her more pain than pleasure.--
  • >>> The Lord forgive me; but I believe I shall huff
  • her next time she comes in.
  • ***
  • Do you forgive me too, my dear--my mother
  • ought; because she says, I am my father's girl; and
  • because I am sure I am her's. I don't kow what
  • to do--I don't know what to write next--I have
  • so much to write, yet have so little patience, and so
  • little opportunity.
  • But I will tell you how I came by my intelli-
  • >>> gence. That being a fact, and requiring the less
  • attention, I will try to account to you for that.
  • Thus, then, it came about: 'Miss Lardner
  • (whom you have seen at her cousin Biddulph's)
  • saw you at St. James's Church on Sunday was fort-
  • night. She kept you in her eye during the whole
  • time; but could not once obtain the notice of your's,
  • though she courtesied to you twice. She thought to
  • pay her compliments to you when the service was
  • over, for she doubted not but you were married--
  • >>> and for an odd reason--because you came to church
  • by yourself. Every eye, (as usual, wherever you
  • are, she said,) was upon you; and this seeming to
  • give you hurry, and you being nearer the door than
  • she, you slid out, before she could get to you.--But
  • she ordered her servant to follow you till you were
  • housed. This servant saw you step into a chair,
  • which waited for you; and you ordered the men to
  • carry you to the place where they took you up.
  • 'The next day, Miss Lardner sent the same
  • servant, out of mere curiosity, to make private in-
  • quiry whether Mr. Lovelace were, or were not,
  • with you there.--And this inquiry brought out,
  • >>> from different people, that the house was suspected
  • to be one of those genteel wicked houses, which
  • receive and accommodate fashionable people of both
  • sexes.
  • 'Miss Lardner, confounded at this strange intel-
  • ligence, made further inquiry; enjoining secrecy
  • to the servant she had sent, as well as to the gentle-
  • >>> man whom she employed; who had it confirmed
  • from a rakish friend, who knew the house; and
  • told him, that there were two houses: the one in
  • which all decent appearances were preserved, and guests
  • rarely admitted; the other, the receptacle of those
  • who were absolutely engaged, and broken to the
  • vile yoke.'
  • >>> Say--my dear creature--say--Shall I not exe-
  • crate the wretch?--But words are weak--What
  • can I say, that will suitably express my abhorrence
  • of such a villain as he must have been, when he
  • meditated to carry a Clarissa to such a place!
  • 'Miss Lardner kept this to herself some days,
  • not knowing what to do; for she loves you, and
  • admires you of all women. At last she revealed it,
  • but in confidence, to Miss Biddulph, by letter.
  • Miss Biddulph, in like confidence, being afraid it
  • would distract me, were I to know it, communi-
  • cated it to Miss Lloyd; and so, like a whispered
  • scandal, it passed through several canals, and then
  • it came to me; which was not till last Monday.'
  • I thought I should have fainted upon the surpris-
  • ing communication. But rage taking place, it blew
  • away the sudden illness. I besought Miss Lloyd
  • to re-enjoin secrecy to every one. I told her that
  • >>> I would not for the world that my mother, or any
  • of your family, should know it. And I instantly
  • caused a trusty friend to make what inquiries he
  • could about Tomlinson.
  • >>> I had thoughts to have done it before I had this
  • intelligence: but not imagining it to be needful, and
  • little thinking that you could be in such a house, and
  • as you were pleased with your changed prospects, I
  • >>> forbore. And the rather forbore, as the matter is
  • so laid, that Mrs. Hodges is supposed to know
  • nothing of the projected treaty of accommodation;
  • but, on the contrary, that it was designed to be a
  • secret to her, and to every body but immediate
  • parties; and it was Mrs. Hodges that I had pro-
  • posed to sound by a second hand.
  • >>> Now, my dear, it is certain, without applying to
  • that too-much-favoured housekeeper, that there is
  • not such a man within ten miles of your uncle.--
  • Very true!--One Tomkins there is, about four miles
  • off; but he is a day-labourer: and one Thompson,
  • about five miles distant the other way; but he is a
  • parish schoolmaster, poor, and about seventy.
  • >>> A man, thought but of £.800 a year, cannot come
  • from one country to settle in another, but every
  • body in both must know it, and talk of it.
  • >>> Mrs. Hodges may yet be sounded at a distance,
  • if you will. Your uncle is an old man. Old men
  • imagine themselves under obligation to their para-
  • >>> mours, if younger than themselves, and seldom
  • keep any thing from their knowledge. But if we
  • suppose him to make secret of this designed treaty,
  • it is impossible, before that treaty was thought of,
  • but she must have seen him, at least have heard
  • your uncle speak praisefully of a man he is said to
  • be so intimate with, let him have been ever so little
  • a while in those parts.
  • >>> Yet, methinks, the story is so plausible--Tom-
  • linson, as you describe him, is so good a man, and
  • so much of a gentleman; the end to be answered
  • >>> by his being an impostor, so much more than neces-
  • sary if Lovelace has villany in his head; and as
  • >>> you are in such a house--your wretch's behaviour
  • to him was so petulant and lordly; and Tomlin-
  • son's answer so full of spirit and circumstance;
  • >>> and then what he communicated to you of Mr.
  • Hickman's application to your uncle, and of Mrs.
  • Norton's to your mother, [some of which particu-
  • >>> lars, I am satisfied, his vile agent, Joseph Leman,
  • could not reveal to his vile employer;] his press-
  • ing on the marriage-day, in the name of your
  • uncle, which it could not answer any wicked pur-
  • >>> pose for him to do; and what he writes of your
  • uncle's proposal, to have it thought that you were
  • married from the time that you have lived in one
  • house together; and that to be made to agree with
  • the time of Mr. Hickman's visit to your uncle.
  • >>> The insisting on a trusty person's being present at
  • the ceremony, at that uncle's nomination--These
  • things make me willing to try for a tolerable construc-
  • tion to be made of all. Though I am so much
  • puzzled by what occurs on both sides of the ques-
  • >>> tion, that I cannot but abhor the devilish wretch,
  • whose inventions and contrivances are for ever em-
  • ploying an inquisitive head, as mine is, without
  • affording the means of absolute detection.
  • But this is what I am ready to conjecture, that
  • Tomlinson, specious as he is, is a machine of Love-
  • >>> lace; and that he is employed for some end, which
  • has not yet been answered. This is certain, that
  • not only Tomlinson, but Mennell, who, I think,
  • attended you more than once at this vile house,
  • must know it to be a vile house.
  • What can you then think of Tomlinson's declar-
  • ing himself in favour of it upon inquiry?
  • Lovelace too must know it to be so; if not
  • before he brought you to it, soon after.
  • >>> Perhaps the company he found there, may be the
  • most probable way of accounting for his bearing
  • with the house, and for his strange suspensions of
  • marriage, when it was in his power to call such an
  • angel of a woman his.--
  • >>> O my dear, the man is a villain!--the greatest
  • of villains, in every light!--I am convinced that he
  • is.--And this Doleman must be another of his
  • implements!
  • >>> There are so many wretches who think that to
  • be no sin, which is one of the greatest and most
  • ungrateful of all sins,--to ruin young creatures of
  • our sex who place their confidence in them; that
  • the wonder is less than the shame, that people, of
  • appearance at least, are found to promote the horrid
  • purposes of profligates of fortune and interest!
  • >>> But can I think [you will ask with indignant
  • astonishment] that Lovelace can have designs upon
  • your honour?
  • >>> That such designs he has had, if he still hold
  • them or not, I can have no doubt, now that I know
  • the house he has brought you to, to be a vile one.
  • This is a clue that has led me to account for all his
  • behaviour to you ever since you have been in his
  • hands.
  • Allow me a brief retrospection of it all.
  • We both know, that pride, revenge, and a delight
  • to tread in unbeaten paths, are principal ingredients
  • in the character of this finished libertine.
  • >>> He hates all your family--yourself excepted:
  • and I have several times thought, that I have seen
  • >>> him stung and mortified that love has obliged him
  • to kneel at your footstool, because you are a Har-
  • lowe. Yet is this wretch a savage in love.--Love
  • >>> that humanizes the fiercest spirits, has not been able
  • to subdue his. His pride, and the credit which a
  • >>> few plausible qualities, sprinkled among his odious
  • ones, have given him, have secured him too good
  • a reception from our eye-judging, our undistinguish-
  • ing, our self-flattering, our too-confiding sex, to
  • make assiduity and obsequiousness, and a conquest
  • of his unruly passions, any part of his study.
  • >>> He has some reason for his animosity to all the
  • men, and to one woman of your family. He has
  • always shown you, and his own family too, that he
  • >>> prefers his pride to his interest. He is a declared
  • marriage-hater; a notorious intriguer; full of his
  • inventions, and glorying in them: he never could
  • draw you into declarations of love; nor till your
  • >>> wise relations persecuted you as they did, to receive
  • his addresses as a lover. He knew that you pro-
  • fessedly disliked him for his immoralities; he could
  • not, therefore, justly blame you for the coldness
  • and indifference of your behaviour to him.
  • >>> The prevention of mischief was your first main
  • view in the correspondence he drew you into. He
  • ought not, then, to have wondered that you declared
  • your preference of the single life to any matrimonial
  • engagement. He knew that this was always your
  • >>> preference; and that before he tricked you away
  • so artfully. What was his conduct to you
  • afterwards, that you should of a sudden change
  • it?
  • Thus was your whole behaviour regular, con-
  • sistent, and dutiful to those to whom by birth you
  • owed duty; and neither prudish, coquettish, nor
  • tyrannical to him.
  • >>> He had agreed to go on with you upon those
  • your own terms, and to rely only on his own merits
  • and future reformation for your favour.
  • >>> It was plain to me, indeed, to whom you com-
  • municated all that you knew of your own heart,
  • though not all of it that I found out, that love had
  • pretty early gained footing in it. And this you
  • yourself would have discovered sooner than you
  • >>> did, had not his alarming, his unpolite, his rough
  • conduct, kept it under.
  • >>> I knew by experience that love is a fire that is
  • not to be played with without burning one's fingers:
  • I knew it to be a dangerous thing for two single
  • persons of different sexes to enter into familiarity
  • and correspondence with each other: Since, as to
  • the latter, must not a person be capable of premedi-
  • tated art, who can sit down to write, and not write
  • from the heart?--And a woman to write her heart
  • to a man practised in deceit, or even to a man of
  • some character, what advantage does it give him
  • over her?
  • >>> As this man's vanity had made him imagine, that
  • no woman could be proof against love, when his
  • address was honourable; no wonder that he
  • struggled, like a lion held in toils, against a passion
  • that he thought not returned. And how could
  • you, at first, show a return in love, to so fierce
  • a spirit, and who had seduced you away by vile
  • artifices, but to the approval of those artifices.
  • >>> Hence, perhaps, it is not difficult to believe, that
  • it became possible for such a wretch as this to give
  • way to his old prejudices against marriage; and to
  • that revenge which had always been a first passion
  • with him.
  • This is the only way, I think, to account for his
  • horrid views in bringing you to a vile house.
  • And now may not all the rest be naturally
  • accounted for?--His delays--his teasing ways--
  • his bringing you to bear with his lodging in the
  • same house--his making you pass to the people of
  • >>> it as his wife, though restrictively so, yet with hope,
  • no doubt, (vilest of villains as he is!) to take you
  • >>> at an advantage--his bringing you into the com-
  • pany of his libertine companions--the attempt of
  • imposing upon you that Miss Partington for a
  • bedfellow, very probably his own invention for
  • the worst of purposes--his terrifying you at many
  • different times--his obtruding himself upon you
  • when you went out to church; no doubt to prevent
  • your finding out what the people of the house were
  • --the advantages he made of your brother's foolish
  • project with Singleton.
  • See, my dear, how naturally all this follows from
  • >>> the discovery made by Miss Lardner. See how
  • the monster, whom I thought, and so often called,
  • >>> a fool, comes out to have been all the time one of
  • the greatest villains in the world!
  • But if this is so, what, [it would be asked by
  • an indifferent person,] has hitherto saved you?
  • Glorious creature!--What, morally speaking, but
  • your watchfulness! What but that, and the
  • majesty of your virtue; the native dignity, which,
  • in a situation so very difficult, (friendless, destitute,
  • passing for a wife, cast into the company of crea-
  • tures accustomed to betray and ruin innocent hearts,)
  • has hitherto enabled you to baffle, over-awe, and
  • confound, such a dangerous libertine as this; so
  • habitually remorseless, as you have observed him
  • to be; so very various in his temper, so inventive,
  • so seconded, so supported, so instigated, too pro-
  • bably, as he has been!--That native dignity, that
  • heroism, I will call it, which has, on all proper
  • occasions, exerted itself in its full lustre, unmingled
  • >>> with that charming obligingness and condescending
  • sweetness, which is evermore the softener of that
  • dignity, when your mind is free and unapprehen-
  • sive!
  • >>> Let me stop to admire, and to bless my beloved
  • friend, who, unhappily for herself, at an age so
  • tender, unacquainted as she was with the world, and
  • with the vile arts of libertines, having been called
  • upon to sustain the hardest and most shocking trials,
  • from persecuting relations on one hand, and from
  • a villanous lover on the other, has been enabled to
  • give such an illustrious example of fortitude and
  • prudence as never woman gave before her; and
  • who, as I have heretofore observed,* has made a
  • far greater figure in adversity, than she possibly
  • could have made, had all her shining qualities been
  • exerted in their full force and power, by the con-
  • >>> tinuance of that prosperous run of fortune which
  • attended her for eighteen years of life out of
  • nineteen.
  • * See Vol. IV. Letters XXIV.
  • ***
  • >>> But now, my dear, do I apprehend, that you
  • are in greater danger than ever yet you have been
  • in; if you are not married in a week; and yet stay
  • in this abominable house. For were you out of it,
  • I own I should not be much afraid for you.
  • These are my thoughts, on the most deliberate
  • >>> consideration: 'That he is now convinced, that
  • he has not been able to draw you off your guard:
  • that therefore, if he can obtain no new advantage
  • over you as he goes along, he is resolved to do you
  • all the poor justice that it is in the power of such a
  • wretch as he to do you. He is the rather induced to
  • this, as he sees that all his own family have warmly
  • engaged themselves in your cause: and that it is
  • >>> his highest interest to be just to you. Then the
  • horrid wretch loves you (as well he may) above all
  • women. I have no doubt of this: with such a love
  • >>> as such a wretch is capable of: with such a love as
  • Herod loved his Marianne. He is now therefore,
  • very probably, at last, in earnest.'
  • I took time for inquiries of different natures, as
  • I knew, by the train you are in, that whatever his
  • designs are, they cannot ripen either for good or
  • >>> evil till something shall result from this device
  • of his about Tomlinson and your uncle.
  • Device I have no doubt that it is, whatever this
  • dark, this impenetrable spirit intends by it.
  • >>> And yet I find it to be true, that Counsellor
  • Williams (whom Mr. Hickman knows to be a man
  • of eminence in his profession) has actually as good
  • >>> as finished the settlements: that two draughts of
  • them have been made; one avowedly to be sent to
  • one Captain Tomlinson, as the clerk says:--and I
  • find that a license has actually been more than once
  • endeavoured to be obtained; and that difficulties
  • have hitherto been made, equally to Lovelace's
  • >>> vexation and disappointment. My mother's proctor,
  • who is very intimate with the proctor applied to
  • by the wretch, has come at this information in
  • confidence; and hints, that, as Mr. Lovelace is a
  • man of high fortunes, these difficulties will probably
  • be got over.
  • But here follow the causes of my apprehension of
  • your danger; which I should not have had a thought
  • >>> of (since nothing very vile has yet been attempted)
  • but on finding what a house you are in, and, on that
  • discovery, laying together and ruminating on past
  • occurrences.
  • 'You are obliged, from the present favourable
  • >>> appearances, to give him your company whenever
  • he requests it.--You are under a necessity of for-
  • getting, or seeming to forget, past disobligations;
  • and to receive his addresses as those of a betrothed
  • lover.--You will incur the censure of prudery and
  • affectation, even perhaps in your own apprehension,
  • if you keep him at that distance which has hitherto
  • >>> been your security.--His sudden (and as suddenly
  • recovered) illness has given him an opportunity to
  • find out that you love him. [Alas! my dear, I
  • knew you loved him!] He is, as you relate, every
  • >>> hour more and more an encroacher upon it. He
  • has seemed to change his nature, and is all love and
  • >>> gentleness. The wolf has put on the sheep's cloth-
  • ing; yet more than once has shown his teeth, and
  • his hardly-sheathed claws. The instance you have
  • given of his freedom with your person,* which you
  • could not but resent; and yet, as matters are
  • circumstanced between you, could not but pass
  • over, when Tomlinson's letter called you into his
  • >>> company,** show the advantage he has now over
  • you; and also, that if he can obtain greater, he
  • will.--And for this very reason (as I apprehend) it
  • >>> is, that Tomlinson is introduced; that is to say, to
  • give you the greater security, and to be a mediator,
  • if mortal offence be given you by any villanous
  • attempt.--The day seems not now to be so much
  • in your power as it ought to be, since that now
  • partly depends on your uncle, whose presence, at
  • your own motion, he has wished on the occasion.
  • A wish, were all real, very unlikely, I think, to be
  • granted.'
  • * She means the freedom Mr. Lovelace took with her before the fire-plot.
  • See Vol. V. Letter XI. When Miss Howe wrote this letter she could not
  • know of that.
  • ** See Vol. V. Letter XII.
  • >>> And thus situated, should he offer greater free-
  • doms, must you not forgive him?
  • I fear nothing (as I know who has said) that
  • devil carnate or incarnate can fairly do against a
  • >>> virtue so established.*--But surprizes, my dear, in
  • such a house as you are in, and in such circum-
  • stances as I have mentioned, I greatly fear! the
  • >>> man one who has already triumphed over persons
  • worthy of his alliance.
  • >>> What then have you to do, but to fly this house,
  • this infernal house!--O that your heart would let
  • you fly the man!
  • >>> If you should be disposed so to do, Mrs. Towns-
  • end shall be ready at your command.--But if you
  • meet with no impediments, no new causes of doubt,
  • I think your reputation in the eye of the world,
  • >>> though not your happiness, is concerned, that you
  • should be his--and yet I cannot bear that these
  • libertines should be rewarded for their villany with
  • the best of the sex, when the worst of it are too
  • good for them.
  • But if you meet with the least ground for
  • suspicion; if he would detain you at the odious
  • house, or wish you to stay, now you know what
  • >>> the people are; fly him, whatever your prospects
  • are, as well as them.
  • In one of your next airings, if you have no other
  • >>> way, refuse to return with him. Name me for your
  • intelligencer, that you are in a bad house, and if you
  • think you cannot now break with him, seem rather
  • >>> to believe that he may not know it to be so; and
  • that I do not believe he does: and yet this belief
  • in us both must appear to be very gross.
  • But suppose you desire to go out of town for the
  • air, this sultry weather, and insist upon it? You
  • may plead your health for so doing. He dare not
  • >>> resist such a plea. Your brother's foolish scheme,
  • I am told, is certainly given up; so you need not
  • be afraid on that account.
  • If you do not fly the house upon reading of this,
  • or some way or other get out of it, I shall judge of
  • his power over you, by the little you will have over
  • either him or yourself.
  • >>> One of my informers has made such slight inquiries
  • concerning Mrs. Fretchville. Did he ever name
  • to you the street or square she lived in?--I don't
  • >>> remember that you, in any of your's, mentioned the
  • place of her abode to me. Strange, very strange,
  • this, I think! No such person or house can be
  • found, near any of the new streets or squares, where
  • the lights I had from your letters led me to imagine
  • >>> her house might be.--Ask him what street the
  • house is in, if he has not told you; and let me
  • >>> know. If he make a difficulty of that circumstance,
  • it will amount to a detection.--And yet, I think,
  • you will have enough without this.
  • I shall send this long letter by Collins, who
  • changes his day to oblige me; and that he may try
  • (now I know where you are) to get it into your
  • own hands. If he cannot, he will leave it at
  • Wilson's. As none of our letters by that convey-
  • ance have miscarried when you have been in more
  • apparently disagreeable situations than you are in at
  • present. I hope that this will go safe, if Collins
  • should be obliged to leave it there.
  • >>> I wrote a short letter to you in my first agitations.
  • It contained not above twenty lines, all full of fright,
  • alarm, and execration. But being afraid that my
  • vehemence would too much affect you, I thought it
  • better to wait a little, as well for the reasons already
  • hinted at, as to be able to give you as many par-
  • ticulars as I could, and my thoughts upon all. And
  • as they have offered, or may offer, you will be
  • sufficiently armed to resist all his machinations, be
  • what they will.
  • >>> One word more. Command me up, if I can be
  • of the least service or pleasure to you. I value
  • not fame; I value not censure; nor even life itself,
  • I verily think, as I do your honour, and your friend-
  • ship--For, is not your honour my honour? And
  • is not your friendship the pride of my life?
  • May Heaven preserve you, my dearest creature,
  • in honour and safety, is the prayer, the hourly
  • prayer, of
  • Your ever-faithful and affectionate
  • ANNA HOWE.
  • THURSDAY MORN. 5. I have
  • written all night
  • ***
  • TO MISS HOWE
  • MY DEAREST CREATURE,
  • How you have shocked, confounded, surprised, astonished me, by your
  • dreadful communication!--My heart is too weak to bear up against such a
  • stroke as this!--When all hope was with me! When my prospects were so
  • much mended!--But can there be such villany in men, as in this vile
  • principal, and equally vile agent!
  • I am really ill--very ill--grief and surprise, and, now I will say,
  • despair, have overcome me!--All, all, you have laid down as conjecture,
  • appears to me now to be more than conjecture!
  • O that your mother would have the goodness to permit me the presence of
  • the only comforter that my afflicted, my half-broken heart, could be
  • raised by. But I charge you, think not of coming up without her
  • indulgent permission. I am too ill at present, my dear, to think of
  • combating with this dreadful man; and of flying from this horrid house!--
  • My bad writing will show you this.--But my illness will be my present
  • security, should he indeed have meditated villany.--Forgive, O forgive
  • me, my dearest friend, the trouble I have given you!--All must soon--But
  • why add I grief to grief, and trouble to trouble?--But I charge you, my
  • beloved creature, not to think of coming up without your mother's love,
  • to the truly desolate and broken-spirited
  • CLARISSA HARLOWE.
  • ***
  • Well, Jack!--And what thinkest thou of this last letter? Miss Howe
  • values not either fame or censure; and thinkest thou, that this letter
  • will not bring the little fury up, though she could procure no other
  • conveyance than her higgler's panniers, one for herself, the other for
  • her maid? She knows whither to come now. Many a little villain have I
  • punished for knowing more than I would have her know, and that by adding
  • to her knowledge and experience. What thinkest thou, Belford, if, by
  • getting hither this virago, and giving cause for a lamentable letter from
  • her to the fair fugitive, I should be able to recover her? Would she not
  • visit that friend in her distress, thinkest thou, whose intended visit to
  • her in her's brought her into the condition from which she herself had so
  • perfidiously escaped?
  • Let me enjoy the thought!
  • Shall I send this letter?--Thou seest I have left room, if I fail in the
  • exact imitation of so charming a hand, to avoid too strict a scrutiny.
  • Do they not both deserve it of me? Seest thou now how the raving girl
  • threatens her mother? Ought she not to be punished? And can I be a
  • worse devil, or villain, or monster, that she calls me in the long letter
  • I enclose (and has called me in her former letters) were I to punish them
  • both as my vengeance urges me to punish them? And when I have executed
  • that my vengeance, how charmingly satisfied may they both go down into
  • the country and keep house together, and have a much better reason than
  • their pride could give them, for living the single life they have both
  • seemed so fond of!
  • I will set about transcribing it this moment, I think. I can resolve
  • afterwards. Yet what has poor Hickman done to deserve this of me!--But
  • gloriously would it punish the mother (as well as daughter) for all her
  • sordid avarice; and for her undutifulness to honest Mr. Howe, whose heart
  • she actually broke. I am on tiptoe, Jack, to enter upon this project.
  • Is not one country as good to me as another, if I should be obliged to
  • take another tour upon it?
  • ***
  • But I will not venture. Hickman is a good man, they tell me. I love a
  • good man. I hope one of these days to be a good man myself. Besides, I
  • have heard within this week something of this honest fellow that shows he
  • has a soul; when I thought, if he had one, that it lay a little of the
  • deepest to emerge to notice, except on very extraordinary occasions; and
  • that then it presently sunk again into its cellula adiposa.--The man is a
  • plump man.--Didst ever see him, Jack?
  • But the principal reason that withholds me [for 'tis a tempting project!]
  • is, for fear of being utterly blown up, if I should not be quick enough
  • with my letter, or if Miss Howe should deliberate on setting out, to try
  • her mother's consent first; in which time a letter from my frighted
  • beauty might reach her; for I have no doubt, wherever she has refuged,
  • but her first work was to write to her vixen friend. I will therefore go
  • on patiently; and take my revenge upon the little fury at my leisure.
  • But in spite of my compassion for Hickman, whose better character is
  • sometimes my envy, and who is one of those mortals that bring clumsiness
  • into credit with the mothers, to the disgrace of us clever fellows, and
  • often to our disappointment, with the daughters; and who has been very
  • busy in assisting these double-armed beauties against me; I swear by all
  • the dii majores, as well as minores, that I will have Miss Howe, if I
  • cannot have her more exalted friend! And then, if there be as much
  • flaming love between these girls as they pretend, will my charmer profit
  • by her escape?
  • And now, that I shall permit Miss Howe to reign a little longer, let me
  • ask thee, if thou hast not, in the enclosed letter, a fresh instance,
  • that a great many of my difficulties with her sister-toast are owing to
  • this flighty girl?--'Tis true that here was naturally a confounded sharp
  • winter air; and if a little cold water was thrown into the path, no
  • wonder that it was instantly frozen; and that the poor honest traveller
  • found it next to impossible to keep his way; one foot sliding back as
  • fast as the other advanced, to the endangering of his limbs or neck. But
  • yet I think it impossible that she should have baffled me as she has done
  • (novice as she is, and never before from under her parents' wings) had
  • she not been armed by a virago, who was formerly very near showing that
  • she could better advise than practise. But this, I believe, I have said
  • more than once before.
  • I am loth to reproach myself, now the cruel creature has escaped me; For
  • what would that do, but add to my torment? since evils self-caused, and
  • avoidable, admit not of palliation or comfort. And yet, if thou tellest
  • me, that all her strength was owing to my weakness, and that I have been
  • a cursed coward in this whole affair; why, then, Jack, I may blush, and
  • be vexed; but, by my soul, I cannot contradict thee.
  • But this, Belford, I hope--that if I can turn the poison of the enclosed
  • letter into wholesome ailment; that is to say, if I can make use of it to
  • my advantage; I shall have thy free consent to do it.
  • I am always careful to open covers cautiously, and to preserve seals
  • entire. I will draw out from this cursed letter an alphabet. Nor was
  • Nick Rowe ever half so diligent to learn Spanish, at the Quixote
  • recommendation of a certain peer, as I will be to gain the mastery of
  • this vixen's hand.
  • LETTER XXI
  • MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE, TO MISS HOWE
  • THURSDAY EVENING, JUNE 8.
  • After my last, so full of other hopes, the contents of this will surprise
  • you. O my dearest friend, the man has at last proved himself to be a
  • villain!
  • It was with the utmost difficulty last night, that I preserved myself from
  • the vilest dishonour. He extorted from me a promise of forgiveness,
  • and that I would see him next day, as if nothing had happened: but if it
  • were possible to escape from a wretch, who, as I have too much reason to
  • believe, formed a plot to fire the house, to frighten me, almost naked,
  • into his arms, how could I see him next day?
  • I have escaped--Heaven be praised that I have!--And now have no other
  • concern, than that I fly from the only hope that could have made such a
  • husband tolerable to me; the reconciliation with my friends, so agreeably
  • undertaken by my uncle.
  • All my present hope is, to find some reputable family, or person of my
  • own sex, who is obliged to go beyond sea, or who lives abroad; I care not
  • whether; but if I might choose, in some one of our American colonies--
  • never to be heard of more by my relations, whom I have so grievously
  • offended.
  • Nor let your generous heart be moved at what I write. If I can escape
  • the dreadfullest part of my father's malediction, (for the temporary part
  • is already, in a manner, fulfilled, which makes me tremble in
  • apprehension of the other,) I shall think the wreck of my worldly
  • fortunes a happy composition.
  • Neither is there need of the renewal of your so-often-tendered goodness
  • to me: for I have with me rings and other valuables, that were sent me
  • with my clothes, which will turn into money to answer all I can want,
  • till Providence shall be pleased to put me into some want to help myself,
  • if, for my further punishment, my life is to be lengthened beyond my
  • wishes.
  • Impute not this scheme, my beloved friend, either to dejection on one
  • hand, or to that romantic turn on the other, which we have supposed
  • generally to obtain with our sex, from fifteen to twenty-two: for, be
  • pleased to consider my unhappy situation, in the light in which it really
  • must appear to every considerate person who knows it. In the first
  • place, the man, who has endeavoured to make me, his property, will hunt
  • me as a stray: and he knows he may do so with impunity; for whom have I
  • to protect me from him?
  • Then as to my estate, the envied estate, which has been the original
  • cause of all my misfortunes, it shall never be mine upon litigated terms.
  • What is there in being enabled to boast, that I am worth more than I can
  • use, or wish to use? And if my power is circumscribed, I shall not have
  • that to answer for, which I should have, if I did not use it as I ought:
  • which very few do. I shall have no husband, of whose interest I ought to
  • be so regardful, as to prevent me doing more than justice to others, that
  • I may not do less for him. If therefore my father will be pleased (as I
  • shall presume, in proper time, to propose to him) to pay two annuities
  • out of it, one to my dear Mrs. Norton, which may make her easy for the
  • remainder of her life, as she is now growing into years; the other of
  • 50£. per annum, to the same good woman, for the use of my poor, as I had
  • the vanity to call a certain set of people, concerning whom she knows all
  • my mind; that so as few as possible may suffer by the consequences of my
  • error; God bless them, and give them heart's ease and content, with the
  • rest!
  • Other reasons for my taking the step I have hinted at, are these.
  • This wicked man knows I have no friend in the world but you: your
  • neighbourhood therefore would be the first he would seek for me in, were
  • you to think it possible for me to be concealed in it: and in this case
  • you might be subjected to inconveniencies greater even than those which
  • you have already sustained on my account.
  • From my cousin Morden, were he to come, I could not hope protection;
  • since, by his letter to me, it is evident, that my brother has engaged him
  • in his party: nor would I, by any means, subject so worthy a man to
  • danger; as might be the case, from the violence of this ungovernable
  • spirit.
  • These things considered, what better method can I take, than to go abroad
  • to some one of the English colonies; where nobody but yourself shall know
  • any thing of me; nor you, let me tell you, presently, nor till I am
  • fixed, and (if it please God) in a course of living tolerably to my mind?
  • For it is no small part of my concern, that my indiscretions have laid so
  • heavy a tax upon you, my dear friend, to whom, once, I hoped to give more
  • pleasure than pain.
  • I am at present at one Mrs. Moore's at Hampstead. My heart misgave me at
  • coming to this village, because I had been here with him more than once:
  • but the coach hither was so ready a conveniency, that I knew not what to
  • do better. Then I shall stay here no longer than till I can receive your
  • answer to this: in which you will be pleased to let me know, if I cannot
  • be hid, according to your former contrivance, [happy, had I given into it
  • at the time!] by Mrs. Townsend's assistance, till the heat of his search
  • be over. The Deptford road, I imagine, will be the right direction to
  • hear of a passage, and to get safely aboard.
  • O why was the great fiend of all unchained, and permitted to assume so
  • specious a form, and yet allowed to conceal his feet and his talons, till
  • with the one he was ready to trample upon my honour, and to strike the
  • other into my heart!--And what had I done, that he should be let loose
  • particularly upon me!
  • Forgive me this murmuring question, the effect of my impatience, my
  • guilty impatience, I doubt: for, as I have escaped with my honour, and
  • nothing but my worldly prospects, and my pride, my ambition, and my
  • vanity, have suffered in this wretch of my hopefuller fortunes, may I not
  • still be more happy than I deserve to be? And is it not in my own power
  • still, by the Divine favour, to secure the greatest stake of all? And
  • who knows but that this very path into which my inconsideration has
  • thrown me, strewed as it is with briers and thorns, which tear in pieces
  • my gaudier trappings, may not be the right path to lead me into the great
  • road to my future happiness; which might have been endangered by evil
  • communication?
  • And after all, are there not still more deserving persons than I, who
  • never failed in any capital point of duty, than have been more humbled
  • than myself; and some too, by the errors of parents and relations, by the
  • tricks and baseness of guardians and trustees, and in which their own
  • rashness or folly had no part?
  • I will then endeavour to make the best of my present lot. And join with
  • me, my best, my only friend, in praying, that my punishment may end here;
  • and that my present afflictions may be sanctified to me.
  • This letter will enable you to account for a line or two, which I sent to
  • Wilson's, to be carried to you, only for a feint, to get his servant out
  • of the way. He seemed to be left, as I thought, for a spy upon me. But
  • he returning too soon, I was forced to write a few lines for him to carry
  • to his master, to a tavern near Doctors Commons, with the same view: and
  • this happily answered my end.
  • I wrote early in the morning a bitter letter to the wretch, which I left
  • for him obvious enough; and I suppose he has it by this time. I kept no
  • copy of it. I shall recollect the contents, and give you the particulars
  • of all, at more leisure.
  • I am sure you will approve of my escape--the rather, as the people of the
  • house must be very vile: for they, and that Dorcas too, did hear me (I
  • know they did) cry out for help: if the fire had been other than a
  • villanous plot (although in the morning, to blind them, I pretended to
  • think it otherwise) they would have been alarmed as much as I; and have
  • run in, hearing me scream, to comfort me, supposing my terror was the
  • fire; to relieve me, supposing it was any thing else. But the vile
  • Dorcas went away as soon as she saw the wretch throw his arms about me!--
  • Bless me, my dear, I had only my slippers and an under-petticoat on. I
  • was frighted out of my bed, by her cries of fire; and that I should be
  • burnt to ashes in a moment--and she to go away, and never to return, nor
  • any body else! And yet I heard women's voices in the next room; indeed
  • I did--an evident contrivance of them all:--God be praised, I am out of
  • their house!
  • My terror is not yet over: I can hardly think myself safe: every well-
  • dressed man I see from my windows, whether on horseback or on foot, I
  • think to be him.
  • I know you will expedite an answer. A man and horse will be procured me
  • to-morrow early, to carry this. To be sure, you cannot return an answer
  • by the same man, because you must see Mrs. Townsend first: nevertheless,
  • I shall wait with impatience till you can; having no friend but you to
  • apply to; and being such a stranger to this part of the world, that I
  • know not which way to turn myself; whither to go; nor what to do--What a
  • dreadful hand have I made of it!
  • Mrs. Moore, at whose house I am, is a widow, and of good character: and
  • of this one of her neighbours, of whom I bought a handkerchief, purposely
  • to make inquiry before I would venture, informed me.
  • I will not set my foot out of doors, till I have your direction: and I am
  • the more secure, having dropt words to the people of the house where the
  • coach set me down, as if I expected a chariot to meet me in my way to
  • Hendon; a village a little distance from this. And when I left their
  • house, I walked backward and forward upon the hill; at first, not knowing
  • what to do; and afterwards, to be certain that I was not watched before I
  • ventured to inquire after a lodging.
  • You will direct for me, my dear, by the name of Mrs. Harriot Lucas.
  • Had I not made my escape when I did, I was resolved to attempt it again
  • and again. He was gone to the Commons for a license, as he wrote me
  • word; for I refused to see him, notwithstanding the promise he extorted
  • from me.
  • How hard, how next to impossible, my dear, to avoid many lesser
  • deviations, when we are betrayed into a capital one!
  • For fear I should not get away at my first effort, I had apprized him,
  • that I would not set eye upon him under a week, in order to gain myself
  • time for it in different ways. And were I so to have been watched as to
  • have made it necessary, I would, after such an instance of the connivance
  • of the women of the house, have run out into the street, and thrown
  • myself into the next house I could have entered, or claim protection from
  • the first person I had met--Women to desert the cause of a poor creature
  • of their own sex, in such a situation, what must they be!--Then, such
  • poor guilty sort of figures did they make in the morning after he was
  • gone out--so earnest to get me up stairs, and to convince me, by the
  • scorched window-boards, and burnt curtains and vallens, that the fire was
  • real--that (although I seemed to believe all they would have me believe)
  • I was more and more resolved to get out of their house at all adventures.
  • When I began, I thought to write but a few lines. But, be my subject
  • what it will, I know not how to conclude when I write to you. It was
  • always so: it is not therefore owing peculiarly to that most interesting
  • and unhappy situation, which you will allow, however, to engross at
  • present the whole mind of
  • Your unhappy, but ever-affectionate
  • CLARISSA HARLOWE.
  • LETTER XXII
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • FRIDAY MORNING, PAST TWO O'CLOCK.
  • Io Triumphe!--Io Clarissa, sing!--Once more, what a happy man thy
  • friend!--A silly dear novice, to be heard to tell the coachman where to
  • carry her!--And to go to Hampstead, of all the villages about London!--
  • The place where we had been together more than once!
  • Methinks I am sorry she managed no better!--I shall find the recovery of
  • her too easy a task, I fear! Had she but known how much difficulty
  • enhances the value of any thing with me, and had she the least notion of
  • obliging me by it, she would never have stopt short at Hampstead, surely.
  • Well, but after al this exultation, thou wilt ask, If I have already got
  • back my charmer?--I have not;--But knowing where she is, is almost the
  • same thing as having her in my power. And it delights me to think how
  • she will start and tremble when I first pop upon her! How she will look
  • with conscious guilt, that will more than wipe off my guilt of Wednesday
  • night, when she sees her injured lover, and acknowledged husband, from
  • whom, the greatest of felonies, she would have stolen herself.
  • But thou wilt be impatient to know how I came by my lights. Read the
  • enclosed letter, as I have told thee, I have given my fellow, in
  • apprehension of such an elopement; and that will tell thee all, and what
  • I may reasonably expect from the rascal's diligence and management, if he
  • wishes ever to see my face again.
  • I received it about half an hour ago, just as I was going to lie down in
  • my clothes, and it has made me so much alive, that, midnight as it is, I
  • have sent for a Blunt's chariot, to attend me here by day peep, with my
  • usual coachman, if possible; and knowing not what else to do with myself,
  • I sat down, and, in the joy of my heart, have not only written thus far,
  • but have concluded upon the measures I shall take when admitted to her
  • presence: for well am I aware of the difficulties I shall have to contend
  • with from her perverseness.
  • HONNERED SIR,
  • This is to sertifie your Honner, as how I am heer at Hamestet, where I
  • have found out my lady to be in logins at one Mrs. Moore's, near upon
  • Hamestet-Hethe. And I have so ordered matters, that her ladyship cannot
  • stur but I must have notice of her goins and comins. As I knowed I durst
  • not look into your Honner's fase, if I had not found out my lady, thoff
  • she was gone off the prems's in a quarter of an hour, as a man may say;
  • so I knowed you would be glad at hart to know I have found her out: and
  • so I send thiss Petur Patrick, who is to have 5 shillings, it being now
  • near 12 of the clock at nite; for he would not stur without a hearty
  • drink too besides: and I was willing all shulde be snug likeways at the
  • logins before I sent.
  • I have munny of youre Honner's; but I thought as how, if the man was
  • payed by me beforend, he mought play trix; so left that to your Honner.
  • My lady knows nothing of my being hereaway. But I thoute it best not to
  • leve the plase, because she has taken the logins but for a fue nites.
  • If your Honner come to the Upper Flax, I will be in site all the day
  • about the tapp-house or the Hethe. I have borrowed another cote, instead
  • of your Honner's liferie, and a blacke wigg; so cannot be knoen by my
  • lady, iff as howe she shuld see me: and have made as if I had the tooth-
  • ake; so with my hancriffe at my mothe, the teth which your Honner was
  • pleased to bett out with your Honner's fyste, and my dam'd wide mothe, as
  • your Honner notifys it to be, cannot be knoen to be mine.
  • The two inner letters I had from my lady, before she went off the prems's.
  • One was to be left at Mr. Wilson's for Miss Howe. The next was
  • to be for your Honner. But I knowed you was not at the plase directed;
  • and being afear'd of what fell out, so I kept them for your Honner, and
  • so could not give um to you, until I seed you. Miss How's I only made
  • belief to her ladyship as I carried it, and sed as how there was nothing
  • left for hur, as she wished to knoe: so here they be bothe.
  • I am, may it please your Honner,
  • Your Honner's must dutiful,
  • And, wonce more, happy servant,
  • WM. SUMMERS.
  • ***
  • The two inner letters, as Will. calls them, 'tis plain, were written for
  • no other purpose, but to send him out of the way with them, and one of
  • them to amuse me. That directed to Miss Howe is only this:--
  • THURSDAY, JUNE 8.
  • I write this, my dear Miss Howe, only for a feint, and to see if it will
  • go current. I shall write at large very soon, if not miserably
  • prevented!!!
  • CL. H.
  • ***
  • Now, Jack, will not her feints justify mine! Does she not invade my
  • province, thinkest thou? And is it not now fairly come to--Who shall
  • most deceive and cheat the other? So, I thank my stars, we are upon a
  • par at last, as to this point, which is a great ease to my conscience,
  • thou must believe. And if what Hudibras tells us is true, the dear
  • fugitive has also abundance of pleasure to come.
  • Doubtless the pleasure is as great
  • In being cheated, as to cheat.
  • As lookers-on find most delight,
  • Who least perceive the juggler's sleight;
  • And still the less they understand,
  • The more admire the slight of hand.
  • ***
  • This my dear juggler's letter to me; the other inner letter sent by Will.
  • THURSDAY, JUNE 8.
  • MR. LOVELACE,
  • Do not give me cause to dread your return. If you would not that I
  • should hate you for ever, send me half a line by the bearer, to assure me
  • that you will not attempt to see me for a week to come. I cannot look
  • you in the face without equal confusion and indignation. The obliging me
  • in this, is but a poor atonement for your last night's vile behaviour.
  • You may pass this time in a journey to Lord M.'s; and I cannot doubt, if
  • the ladies of your family are as favourable to me, as you have assured me
  • they are, but that you will have interest enough to prevail with one of
  • them to oblige me with their company. After your baseness of last night,
  • you will not wonder, that I insist upon this proof of your future honour.
  • If Captain Tomlinson comes mean time, I can hear what he has to say, and
  • send you an account of it.
  • But in less than a week if you see me, it must be owing to a fresh act of
  • violence, of which you know not the consequence.
  • Send me the requested line, if ever you expect to have the forgiveness
  • confirmed, the promise of which you extorted from
  • The unhappy
  • CL. H.
  • ***
  • Now, Belford, what canst thou say in behalf of this sweet rogue of a
  • lady? What canst thou say for her? 'Tis apparent, that she was fully
  • determined upon an elopement when she wrote it. And thus would she make
  • me of party against myself, by drawing me in to give her a week's time to
  • complete it. And, more wicked still, send me upon a fool's errand to
  • bring up one of my cousins.--When we came to have the satisfaction of
  • finding her gone off, and me exposed for ever!--What punishment can be
  • bad enough for such a little villain of a lady?
  • But mind, moreover, how plausibly she accounts by this billet, (supposing
  • she should not find an opportunity of eloping before I returned,) for the
  • resolution of not seeing me for a week; and for the bread and butter
  • expedient!--So childish as we thought it!
  • The chariot is not come; and if it were, it is yet too soon for every
  • thing but my impatience. And as I have already taken all my measures,
  • and can think of nothing but my triumph, I will resume her violent
  • letter, in order to strengthen my resolutions against her. I was before
  • in too gloomy a way to proceed with it. But now the subject is all alive
  • to me, and my gayer fancy, like the sunbeams, will irradiate it, and turn
  • the solemn deep-green into a brighter verdure.
  • When I have called upon my charmer to explain some parts of her letter,
  • and to atone for others, I will send it, or a copy of it, to thee.
  • Suffice it at present to tell thee, in the first place, that she is
  • determined never to be my wife.--To be sure there ought to be no
  • compulsion in so material a case. Compulsion was her parents' fault,
  • which I have censured so severely, that I shall hardly be guilty of the
  • same. I am therefore glad I know her mind as to this essential point.
  • I have ruined her! she says.--Now that's a fib, take it her own way--if I
  • had, she would not, perhaps, have run away from me.
  • She is thrown upon the wide world! Now I own that Hampstead-heath
  • affords very pretty and very extensive prospects; but 'tis not the wide
  • world neither. And suppose that to be her grievance, I hope soon to
  • restore her to a narrower.
  • I am the enemy of her soul, as well as of her honour!--Confoundedly
  • severe! Nevertheless, another fib!--For I love her soul very well; but
  • think no more of it in this case than of my own.
  • She is to be thrown upon strangers!--And is not that her own fault?--Much
  • against my will, I am sure!
  • She is cast from a state of independency into one of obligation. She
  • never was in a state of independency; nor is it fit a woman should, of
  • any age, or in any state of life. And as to the state of obligation,
  • there is no such thing as living without being beholden to somebody.
  • Mutual obligation is the very essence and soul of the social and
  • commercial life:--Why should she be exempt from it? I am sure the person
  • she raves at desires not such an exemption; has been long dependent upon
  • her; and would rejoice to owe further obligations to her than he can
  • boast of hitherto.
  • She talks of her father's curse!--But have I not repaid him for it an
  • hundred fold in the same coin? But why must the faults of other people
  • be laid at my door? Have I not enow of my own?
  • But the grey-eyed dawn begins to peep--let me sum up all.
  • In short, then, the dear creature's letter is a collection of invectives
  • not very new to me: though the occasion for them, no doubt is new to her.
  • A little sprinkling of the romantic and contradictory runs through it.
  • She loves, and she hates; she encourages me to pursue her, by telling me
  • I safely may; and yet she begs I will not. She apprehends poverty and
  • want, yet resolves to give away her estate; To gratify whom?--Why, in
  • short, those who have been the cause of her misfortunes. And finally,
  • though she resolves never to be mine, yet she has some regrets at leaving
  • me, because of the opening prospects of a reconciliation with her
  • friends.
  • But never did morning dawn so tardily as this!--Neither is the chariot
  • yet come.
  • ***
  • A gentleman to speak with me, Dorcas?--Who can want me thus early?
  • Captain Tomlinson, sayest thou? Surely he must have traveled all night!
  • Early riser as I am, how could he think to find me up thus early?
  • Let but the chariot come, and he shall accompany me in it to the bottom
  • of the hill, (though he return to town on foot; for the Captain is all
  • obliging goodness,) that I may hear all he has to say, and tell him all
  • my mind, and lose no time.
  • Well, now I am satisfied that this rebellious flight will turn to my
  • advantage, as all crushed rebellions do to the advantage of a sovereign
  • in possession.
  • ***
  • Dear Captain, I rejoice to see you--just in the nick of time--See! See!
  • The rosy-finger'd morn appears,
  • And from her mantle shakes her tears:
  • The sun arising mortals cheers,
  • And drives the rising mists away,
  • In promise of a glorious day.
  • Excuse me, Sir, that I salute you from my favourite bard. He that rises
  • with the lark will sing with the lark. Strange news since I saw you,
  • Captain!--Poor mistaken lady!--But you have too much goodness, I know, to
  • reveal to her uncle Harlowe the error of this capricious beauty. It will
  • all turn out for the best. You must accompany me part of the way. I
  • know the delight you take in composing differences. But 'tis the task of
  • the prudent to heal the breaches made by the rashness and folly of the
  • imprudent.
  • ***
  • And now, (all around me so still and so silent,) the rattling of the
  • chariot-wheels at a street's distance do I hear! And to this angel of a
  • woman I fly!
  • Reward, O God of Love! [The cause is thy own!] Reward thou, as it
  • deserves, my suffering perseverance!--Succeed my endeavours to bring back
  • to thy obedience this charming fugitive! Make her acknowledge her
  • rashness; repent her insults; implore my forgiveness; beg to be
  • reinstated in my favour, and that I will bury in oblivion the remembrance
  • of her heinous offence against thee, and against me, thy faithful votary.
  • ***
  • The chariot at the door!--I come! I come!
  • I attend you, good Captain--
  • Indeed, Sir--
  • Pray, Sir--civility is not ceremony.
  • And now, dressed as a bridegroom, my heart elated beyond that of the most
  • desiring one, (attended by a footman whom my beloved never saw,) I am
  • already at Hampstead!
  • LETTER XXIII
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • UPPER-FLASK, HAMPSTEAD.
  • FRI. MORN. 7 O'CLOCK. (JUNE 9.)
  • I am now here, and here have been this hour and half.--What an
  • industrious spirit have I!--Nobody can say that I eat the bread of
  • idleness. I take true pains for all the pleasure I enjoy. I cannot
  • but admire myself strangely; for certainly, with this active soul, I
  • should have made a very great figure in whatever station I had filled.
  • But had I been a prince, (to be sure I should have made a most noble
  • prince!) I should have led up a military dance equal to that of the great
  • Macedonian. I should have added kingdom to kingdom, and despoiled all
  • my neighbour sovereigns, in order to have obtained the name of Robert the
  • Great! And I would have gone to war with the Great Turk, and the
  • Persian, and Mogul, for the seraglios; for not one of those eastern
  • monarchs should have had a pretty woman to bless himself with till I had
  • done with her.
  • And now I have so much leisure upon my hands, that, after having informed
  • myself of all necessary particulars, I am set to my short-hand writing in
  • order to keep up with time as well as I can; for the subject is now
  • become worthy of me; and it is yet too soon, I doubt, to pay my
  • compliments to my charmer, after all her fatigues for two or three days
  • past. And, moreover, I have abundance of matters preparative to my
  • future proceedings to recount, in order to connect and render all
  • intelligible.
  • I parted with the Captain at the foot of the hill, trebly instructed;
  • that is to say, as to the fact, to the probable, and to the possible. If
  • my beloved and I can meet, and make up without the mediating of this
  • worthy gentleman, it will be so much the better. As little foreign aid
  • as possible in my amorous conflicts has always been a rule with me;
  • though here I have been obliged to call in so much. And who knows but it
  • may be the better for the lady the less she makes necessary? I cannot
  • bear that she should sit so indifferent to me as to be in earnest to part
  • with me for ever upon so slight, or even upon any occasion. If I find
  • she is--but no more threatenings till she is in my power--thou knowest
  • what I have vowed.
  • All Will.'s account, from the lady's flight to his finding her again, all
  • the accounts of the people of the house, the coachman's information to
  • Will., and so forth, collected together, stand thus:
  • 'The Hampstead coach, when the dear fugitive came to it, had but two
  • passengers in it. But she made the fellow to go off directly, paying for
  • the vacant places.
  • 'The two passengers directing the coachman to set them down at the Upper
  • Flask, she bid him set her down there also.
  • 'They took leave of her, [very respectfully, no doubt,] and she went into
  • the house, and asked, if she could not have a dish of tea, and a room to
  • herself for half an hour.
  • 'They showed her up to the very room where I now am. She sat at the very
  • table I now write upon; and, I believe, the chair I sit in was her's.' O
  • Belford, if thou knowest what love is, thou wilt be able to account for
  • these minutiae.
  • 'She seemed spiritless and fatigued. The gentlewoman herself chose to
  • attend so genteel and lovely a guest. She asked her if she would have
  • bread and butter with her tea?
  • 'No. She could not eat.
  • 'They had very good biscuits.
  • 'As she pleased.
  • 'The gentlewoman stept out for some, and returning on a sudden, she
  • observed the sweet little fugitive endeavouring to restrain a violent
  • burst of grief to which she had given way in the little interval.
  • 'However, when the tea came, she made the landlady sit down with her,
  • and asked her abundance of questions, about the villages and roads in
  • the neighbourhood.
  • 'The gentlewoman took notice to her, that she seemed to be troubled in
  • mind.
  • 'Tender spirits, she replied, could not part with dear friends without
  • concern.'
  • She meant me, no doubt.
  • 'She made no inquiry about a lodging, though by the sequel, thou'lt
  • observe, that she seemed to intend to go no farther that night than
  • Hampstead. But after she had drank two dishes, and put a biscuit in
  • her pocket, [sweet soul! to serve for her supper, perhaps,] she laid
  • down half-a-crown; and refusing change, sighing, took leave, saying she
  • would proceed towards Hendon; the distance to which had been one of her
  • questions.
  • 'They offered to send to know if a Hampstead coach were not to go to
  • Hendon that evening.
  • 'No matter, she said--perhaps she might meet the chariot.'
  • Another of her feints, I suppose: for how, or with whom, could any thing
  • of this sort have been concerted since yesterday morning?
  • 'She had, as the people took notice to one another, something so
  • uncommonly noble in her air, and in her person and behaviour, that they
  • were sure she was of quality. And having no servant with her of either
  • sex, her eyes, [her fine eyes, the gentlewoman called them, stranger as
  • she was, and a woman!] being swelled and red, they were sure there was an
  • elopement in the case, either from parents or guardians; for they
  • supposed her too young and too maidenly to be a married lady; and were
  • she married, no husband would let such a fine young creature to be
  • unattended and alone; nor give her cause for so much grief, as seemed to
  • be settled in her countenance. Then at times she seemed to be so
  • bewildered, they said, that they were afraid she had it in her head to
  • make away with herself.
  • 'All these things put together, excited their curiosity; and they engaged
  • a peery servant, as they called a footman who was drinking with Kit. the
  • hostler, at the tap-house, to watch all her motions. This fellow
  • reported the following particulars, as they re-reported to me:
  • 'She indeed went towards Hendon, passing by the sign of the Castle on the
  • Heath; then, stopping, looked about her, and down into the valley before
  • her. Then, turning her face towards London, she seemed, by the motion of
  • her handkerchief to her eyes, to weep; repenting [who knows?] the rash
  • step she had taken, and wishing herself back again.'
  • Better for her, if she do, Jack, once more I say!--Woe be to the girl who
  • could think of marrying me, yet to be able to run away from me, and
  • renounce me for ever!
  • 'Then, continuing on a few paces, she stopt again--and, as if disliking
  • her road, again seeming to weep, directed her course back towards
  • Hampstead.'
  • I am glad she wept so much, because no heart bursts, (be the occasion for
  • the sorrow what it will,) which has that kindly relief. Hence I hardly
  • ever am moved at the sight of these pellucid fugitives in a fine woman.
  • How often, in the past twelve hours, have I wished that I could cry most
  • confoundedly?
  • 'She then saw a coach-and-four driving towards her empty. She crossed
  • the path she was in, as if to meet it, and seemed to intend to speak to
  • the coachman, had he stopt or spoken first. He as earnestly looked at
  • her.--Every one did so who passed her, (so the man who dogged her was the
  • less suspected.')--Happy rogue of a coachman, hadst thou known whose
  • notice thou didst engage, and whom thou mightest have obliged!--It was
  • the divine Clarissa Harlowe at whom thou gazest!--Mine own Clarissa
  • Harlowe!--But it was well for me that thou wert as undistinguishing as
  • the beasts thou drovest; otherwise, what a wild-goose chace had I been
  • led?
  • 'The lady, as well as the coachman, in short, seemed to want resolution;
  • --the horses kept on--[the fellow's head and eyes, no doubt, turned
  • behind him,] and the distance soon lengthened beyond recall. With a
  • wistful eye she looked after him; sighed and wept again; as the servant
  • who then slyly passed her, observed.
  • 'By this time she had reached the houses. She looked up at every one as
  • she passed; now and then breathing upon her bared hand, and applying it
  • to her swelled eyes, to abate the redness, and dry the tears. At last,
  • seeing a bill up for letting lodgings, she walked backwards and forwards
  • half a dozen times, as if unable to determine what to do. And then went
  • farther into the town, and there the fellow, being spoken to by one of
  • his familiars, lost her for a few minutes: but he soon saw her come out
  • of a linen-drapery shop, attended with a servant-maid, having, as it
  • proved, got that maid-servant to go with her to the house she is now at.*
  • * See Letter XXI. of this volume.
  • 'The fellow, after waiting about an hour, and not seeing her come out,
  • returned, concluding that she had taken lodgings there.'
  • And here, supposing my narrative of the dramatic kind, ends Act the
  • first. And now begins
  • ACT II
  • SCENE.--Hampstead Heath continued.
  • ENTER MY RASCAL.
  • Will. having got at all these particulars, by exchanging others as
  • frankly against them, with which I had formerly prepared him both
  • verbally and in writing.--I found the people already of my party, and
  • full of good wishes for my success, repeating to me all they told him.
  • But he had first acquainted me with the accounts he had given them of his
  • lady and me. It is necessary that I give thee the particulars of his
  • tale, and I have a little time upon my hands: for the maid of the house,
  • who had been out of an errand, tells us, that she saw Mrs. Moore, [with
  • whom must be my first business,] go into the house of a young gentleman,
  • within a few doors of her, who has a maiden sister, Miss Rawlins by name,
  • so notified for prudence, that none of her acquaintance undertake any
  • thing of consequence without consulting her.
  • Meanwhile my honest coachman is walking about Miss Rawlin's door, in
  • order to bring me notice of Mrs. Moore's return to her own house. I hope
  • her gossip's-tale will be as soon told as mine--which take as follows:--
  • Will. told them, before I came, 'That his lady was but lately married to
  • one of the finest gentlemen in the world. But that he, being very gay
  • and lively, she was mortal jealous of him; and, in a fit of that sort,
  • had eloped from him. For although she loved him dearly, and he doated
  • upon her, (as well he might, since, as they had seen, she was the finest
  • creature that ever the sun shone upon,) yet she was apt to be very wilful
  • and sullen, if he might take liberty to say so--but truth was truth;--and
  • if she could not have her own way in every thing, would be for leaving
  • him. That she had three or four times played his master such tricks; but
  • with all the virtue and innocence in the world; running away to an
  • intimate friend of her's, who, though a young lady of honour, was but too
  • indulgent to her in this only failing; for which reason his master has
  • brought her to London lodgings; their usual residence being in the
  • country: and that, on his refusing to satisfy her about a lady he had
  • been seen with in St. James's Park, she had, for the first time since she
  • came to town, served his master thus, whom he had left half-distracted on
  • this account.'
  • And truly well he might, poor gentleman! cried the honest folks, pitying
  • me before they saw me.
  • 'He told them how he came by his intelligence of her; and made himself
  • such an interest with them, that they helped him to a change of clothes
  • for himself; and the landlord, at his request, privately inquired, if the
  • lady actually remained at Mrs. Moore's, and for how long she had taken
  • the lodgings?--which he found only to be for a week certain; but she had
  • said, that she believed she should hardly stay so long. And then it was
  • that he wrote his letter, and sent it by honest Peter Patrick, as thou
  • hast heard.'
  • When I came, my person and dress having answered Will.'s description, the
  • people were ready to worship me. I now-and-then sighed, now-and-then put
  • on a lighter air; which, however, I designed should show more of vexation
  • ill-disguised, than of real cheerfulness; and they told Will. it was such
  • a thousand pities so fine a lady should have such skittish tricks;
  • adding, that she might expose herself to great dangers by them; for that
  • there were rakes every where--[Lovelaces in every corner, Jack!] and many
  • about that town, who would leave nothing unattempted to get into her
  • company; and although they might not prevail upon her, yet might they
  • nevertheless hurt her reputation; and, in time, estrange the affections
  • of so fine a gentleman from her.
  • Good sensible people these!--Hey, Jack!
  • Here, Landlord, one word with you.--My servant, I find, has acquainted
  • you with the reason of my coming this way.--An unhappy affair, Landlord!
  • --A very unhappy affair!--But never was there a more virtuous woman.
  • So, Sir, she seems to be. A thousand pities her ladyship has such ways--
  • and to so good-humoured a gentleman as you seem to be, Sir.
  • Mother-spoilt, Landlord!--Mother-spoilt!--that's the thing!--But
  • [sighing] I must make the best of it. What I want you to do for me is to
  • lend me a great-coat.--I care not what it is. If my spouse should see me
  • at a distance, she would make it very difficult for me to get at her
  • speech. A great-coat with a cape, if you have one. I must come upon her
  • before she is aware.
  • I am afraid, Sir, I have none fit for such a gentleman as you.
  • O, any thing will do!--The worse the better.
  • Exit Landlord.--Re-enter with two great-coats.
  • Ay, Landlord, this will be best; for I can button the cape over the lower
  • part of my face. Don't I look devilishly down and concerned, Landlord?
  • I never saw a gentleman with a better-natured look.--'Tis pity you should
  • have such trials, Sir.
  • I must be very unhappy, no doubt of it, Landlord.--And yet I am a little
  • pleased, you must needs think, that I have found her out before any great
  • inconvenience has arisen to her. However, if I cannot break her of these
  • freaks, she'll break my heart; for I do love her with all her failings.
  • The good woman, who was within hearing of all this, pitied me much.
  • Pray, your Honour, said she, if I may be so bold, was madam ever a mamma?
  • No--[and I sighed.]--We have been but a little while married; and as I
  • may say to you, it is her own fault that she is not in that way. [Not a
  • word of a lie in this, Jack.] But to tell you truth, Madam, she may be
  • compared to the dog in the manger--
  • I understand you, Sir, [simpering,] she is but young, Sir. I have heard
  • of one or two such skittish young ladies, in my time, Sir.--But when
  • madam is in that way, I dare say, as she loves you, (and it would be
  • strange if she did not!) all this will be over, and she may make the best
  • of wives.
  • That's all my hope.
  • She is a fine lady as I ever beheld.--I hope, Sir, you won't be too
  • severe. She'll get over all these freaks, if once she be a mamma, I
  • warrant.
  • I can't be severe to her--she knows that. The moment I see her, all
  • resentment is over with me, if she gives me but one kind look.
  • All this time I was adjusting the horseman's coat, and Will. was putting
  • in the ties of my wig,* and buttoning the cape over my chin.
  • * The fashionable wigs at that time.
  • I asked the gentlewoman for a little powder. She brought me a powder-
  • box, and I slightly shook the puff over my hat, and flapt one side of it,
  • though the lace looked a little too gay for my covering; and, slouching
  • it over my eyes, Shall I be known, think you, Madam?
  • Your Honour is so expert, Sir!--I wish, if I may be so bold, your lady
  • has not some cause to be jealous. But it will be impossible, if you keep
  • your laced clothes covered, that any body should know you in that dress
  • to be the same gentleman--except they find you out by your clocked
  • stockings.
  • Well observed--Can't you, Landlord, lend or sell me a pair of stockings,
  • that will draw over these? I can cut off the feet, if they won't go into
  • my shoes.
  • He could let me have a pair of coarse, but clean, stirrup stockings, if I
  • pleased.
  • The best in the world for the purpose.
  • He fetch'd them. Will. drew them on; and my legs then made a good gouty
  • appearance.
  • The good woman smiling, wished me success; and so did the landlord. And
  • as thou knowest that I am not a bad mimic, I took a cane, which I
  • borrowed of the landlord, and stooped in the shoulders to a quarter of a
  • foot less height, and stumped away cross to the bowling-green, to
  • practise a little the hobbling gait of a gouty man.--The landlady
  • whispered her husband, as Will. tells me, He's a good one, I warrant him
  • --I dare say the fault lies not at all of one side. While mine host
  • replied, That I was so lively and so good-natured a gentleman, that he
  • did not know who could be angry with me, do what I would. A sensible
  • fellow!--I wish my charmer were of the same opinion.
  • And now I am going to try if I can't agree with goody Moore for lodgings
  • and other conveniencies for my sick wife.
  • 'Wife, Lovelace?' methinks thou interrogatest.
  • Yes, wife, for who knows what cautions the dear fugitive may have given
  • in apprehension of me?
  • 'But has goody Moore any other lodgings to let?'
  • Yes, yes; I have taken care of that; and find that she has just such
  • conveniencies as I want. And I know that my wife will like them. For,
  • although married, I can do every thing I please; and that's a bold word,
  • you know. But had she only a garret to let, I would have liked it; and
  • been a poor author afraid of arrests, and made that my place of refuge;
  • yet would have made shift to pay beforehand for what I had. I can suit
  • myself to any condition, that's my comfort.
  • ***
  • The widow Moore returned! say you?--Down, down, flutterer!--This
  • impertinent heart is more troublesome to me than my conscience, I think.
  • --I shall be obliged to hoarsen my voice, and roughen my character, to
  • keep up with its puppily dancings.
  • But let me see, shall I be angry or pleased when I am admitted to my
  • beloved's presence?
  • Angry to be sure.--Has she not broken her word with me?--At a time too
  • when I was meditating to do her grateful justice?--And is not breach of
  • word a dreadful crime in good folks?--I have ever been for forming my
  • judgment of the nature of things and actions, not so much from what they
  • are in themselves, as from the character of the actors. Thus it would be
  • as odd a thing in such as we to keep our words with a woman, as it would
  • be wicked in her to break her's to us.
  • Seest thou not that this unseasonable gravity is admitted to quell the
  • palpitations of this unmanageable heart? But still it will go on with
  • its boundings. I'll try as I ride in my chariot to tranquilize.
  • 'Ride, Bob! so little a way?'
  • Yes, ride, Jack; for am I not lame? And will it not look well to have a
  • lodger who keeps his chariot? What widow, what servant, asks questions
  • of a man with an equipage?
  • My coachman, as well as my other servant, is under Will.'s tuition.
  • Never was there such a hideous rascal as he has made himself. The devil
  • only and his other master can know him. They both have set their marks
  • upon him. As to my honour's mark, it will never be out of his dam'd wide
  • mothe, as he calls it. For the dog will be hanged before he can lose the
  • rest of his teeth by age.
  • I am gone.
  • LETTER XXIV
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • HAMPSTEAD, FRIDAY NIGHT, JUNE 9.
  • Now, Belford, for the narrative of narratives. I will continue it as I
  • have opportunity; and that so dexterously, that, if I break off twenty
  • times, thou shalt not discern where I piece my thread.
  • Although grievously afflicted with the gout, I alighted out of my chariot
  • (leaning very hard on my cane with one hand, and on my new servant's
  • shoulder with the other) the same instant almost that he had knocked at
  • the door, that I might be sure of admission into the house.
  • I took care to button my great coat about me, and to cover with it even
  • the pummel of my sword, it being a little too gay for my years. I knew
  • not what occasion I might have for my sword. I stooped forward; blinked
  • with my eyes to conceal their lustre (no vanity in saying that, Jack); my
  • chin wrapt up for the tooth-ache; my slouched, laced hat, and so much of
  • my wig as was visible, giving me, all together, the appearance of an
  • antiquated beau.
  • My wife, I resolved beforehand, should have a complication of disorders.
  • The maid came to the door. I asked for her mistress. She showed me into
  • one of the parlours; and I sat down with a gouty Oh!--
  • ENTER GOODY MOORE.
  • Your servant, Madam--but you must excuse me; I cannot well stand--I find
  • by the bill at the door, that you have lodgings to let [mumbling my words
  • as if, like my man Will., I had lost some of my fore-teeth]: be pleased
  • to inform me what they are; for I like your situation--and I will tell
  • you my family--I have a wife, a good old woman--older than myself, by the
  • way, a pretty deal. She is in a bad state of health, and is advised into
  • the Hampstead air. She will have two maid servants and a footman. The
  • coach or chariot (I shall not have them put up both together) we can put
  • up any where, and the coachman will be with his horses.
  • When, Sir, shall you want to come in?
  • I will take them from this very day; and, if convenient, will bring my
  • wife in the afternoon.
  • Perhaps, Sir, you would board, as well as lodge?
  • That as you please. It will save me the trouble of bringing my cook, if
  • we do. And I suppose you have servants who know how to dress a couple of
  • dishes. My wife must eat plain food, and I don't love kickshaws.
  • We have a single lady, who will be gone in two or three days. She has
  • one of the best apartments: that will then be at liberty.
  • You have one or two good ones mean time, I presume, Madam, just to
  • receive my wife; for we have lost time--these damn'd physicians--excuse
  • me, Madam, I am not used to curse; but it is owing to the love I have for
  • my wife--they have kept her in hand, till they are ashamed to take more
  • fees, and now advise her to the air. I wish we had sent her hither at
  • first. But we must now make the best of it.
  • Excuse me, Madam, [for she looked hard at me,] that I am muffled up in
  • this warm weather. I am but too sensible that I have left my chamber
  • sooner that I ought, and perhaps shall have a return of my gout for it.
  • I came out thus muffled up with a dreadful pain in my jaws; an ague in
  • them, I believe. But my poor dear will not be satisfied with any body's
  • care but mine. And, as I told thee, we have lost time.
  • You shall see what accommodations I have, if you please, Sir. But I
  • doubt you are too lame to walk up stairs.
  • I can make shift to hobble up now I have rested a little. I'll just look
  • upon the apartment my wife is to have. Any thing may do for the
  • servants: and as you seem to be a good sort of gentlewoman, I shan't
  • stand for a price, and will pay well besides for the trouble I shall
  • give.
  • She led the way; and I, helping myself by the banisters, made shift to
  • get up with less fatigue than I expected from ancles so weak. But oh!
  • Jack, what was Sixtus the Vth.'s artful depression of his natural powers
  • to mine, when, as this half-dead Montalto, he gaped for the pretendedly
  • unsought pontificate, and the moment he was chosen leapt upon the
  • prancing beast, which it was thought by the amazed conclave he was not
  • able to mount, without help of chairs and men? Never was there a more
  • joyful heart and lighter heels than mine joined together; yet both denied
  • their functions; the one fluttering in secret, ready to burst its bars
  • for relief-ful expression, the others obliged to an hobbling motion;
  • when, unrestrained, they would, in their master's imagination, have
  • mounted him to the lunar world without the help of a ladder.
  • There were three rooms on a floor: two of them handsome; and the third,
  • she said, still handsomer; but the lady was in it.
  • I saw, I saw she was! for as I hobbled up, crying out upon my weak
  • ancles, in the hoarse mumbling voice I had assumed, I beheld a little
  • piece of her as she just cast an eye (with the door a-jar, as they call
  • it) to observe who was coming up; and, seeing such an old clumsy fellow,
  • great coated in weather so warm, slouched and muffled up, she withdrew,
  • shutting the door without any emotion. But it was not so with me; for
  • thou canst not imagine how my heart danced to my mouth, at the very
  • glimpse of her; so that I was afraid the thump, thump, thumping villain,
  • which had so lately thumped as much to no purpose, would have choked me.
  • I liked the lodging well; and the more as she said the third room was
  • still handsomer. I must sit down, Madam, [and chose the darkest part of
  • the room]: Won't you take a seat yourself?--No price shall part us--but I
  • will leave the terms to you and my wife, if you please. And also whether
  • for board or not. Only please to take this for earnest, putting a guinea
  • into her hand--and one thing I will say; my poor wife loves money; but is
  • not an ill-natured woman. She was a great fortune to me: but, as the real
  • estate goes away at her death, I would fain preserve her for that reason,
  • as well as for the love I bear her as an honest man. But if she makes
  • too close a bargain with you, tell me; and, unknown to her, I will make
  • it up. This is my constant way: she loves to have her pen'orths; and I
  • would not have her vexed or made uneasy on any account.
  • She said, I was a very considerate gentleman; and, upon the condition I
  • had mentioned, she was content to leave the terms to my lady.
  • But, Madam, cannot a body just peep into the other apartment; that I may
  • be more particular to my wife in the furniture of it?
  • The lady desires to be private, Sir--but--and was going to ask her leave.
  • I caught hold of her arm--However, stay, stay, Madam: it mayn't be
  • proper, if the lady loves to be private. Don't let me intrude upon the
  • lady--
  • No intrusion, Sir, I dare say: the lady is good-humoured. She will be so
  • kind as to step down into the parlour, I dare say. As she stays so
  • little a while, I am sure she will not wish to stand in my way.
  • No, Madam, that's true, if she be good-humoured, as you say--Has she been
  • with you long, Madam?
  • She came but yesterday, Sir--
  • I believe I just now saw the glimpse of her. She seems to be an elderly
  • lady.
  • No, Sir! you're mistaken. She's a young lady; and one of the handsomest
  • I ever saw.
  • Cot so, I beg her pardon! Not but that I should have liked her the
  • better, were she to stay longer, if she had been elderly. I have a
  • strange taste, Madam, you'll say; but I really, for my wife's sake, love
  • every elderly woman. Indeed I ever thought age was to be reverenced,
  • which made me (taking the fortune into the scale too, that I own) make my
  • addresses to my present dear.
  • Very good of you, Sir, to respect age: we all hope to live to be old.
  • Right, Madam.--But you say the lady is beautiful. Now you must know,
  • that though I choose to converse with the elderly, yet I love to see a
  • beautiful young woman, just as I love to see fine flowers in a garden.
  • There's no casting an eye upon her, is there, without her notice? For in
  • this dress, and thus muffled up about my jaws, I should not care to be
  • seen any more than she, let her love privacy as much as she will.
  • I will go and ask if I may show a gentleman the apartment, Sir; and, as
  • you are a married gentleman, and not over young, she'll perhaps make the
  • less scruple.
  • Then, like me, she loves elderly folks best perhaps. But it may be she
  • has suffered by young ones.
  • I fancy she has, Sir, or is afraid she shall. She desired to be very
  • private; and if by description inquired after, to be denied.
  • Thou art a true woman, goody Moore, thought I.
  • Good lack--good lack!--What may be her story then, I pray?
  • She is pretty reserved in her story: but, to tell you my thoughts, I
  • believe love is in the case: she is always in tears, and does not much
  • care for company.
  • Nay, Madam, it becomes not me to dive into ladies' secrets; I want not to
  • pry into other people's affairs. But, pray, how does she employ
  • herself?--Yet she came but yesterday; so you can't tell.
  • Writing continually, Sir.
  • These women, Jack, when you ask them questions by way of information,
  • don't care to be ignorant of any thing.
  • Nay, excuse me, Madam, I am very far from being an inquisitive man. But
  • if her case be difficult, and not merely love, as she is a friend of
  • your's, I would give her my advice.
  • Then you are a lawyer, Sir--
  • Why, indeed, Madam, I was some time at the bar; but I have long left
  • practice; yet am much consulted by my friends in difficult points. In a
  • pauper case I frequently give money; but never take any from the richest.
  • You are a very good gentleman, then, Sir.
  • Ay, Madam, we cannot live always here; and we ought to do what good we
  • can--but I hate to appear officious. If the lady stay any time, and
  • think fit, upon better acquaintance, to let me into her case, it may be a
  • happy day for her, if I find it a just one; for, you must know, that when
  • I was at the bar, I never was such a sad fellow as to undertake, for the
  • sake of a paltry fee, to make white black, and black white: For what
  • would that have been, but to endeavour to establish iniquity by quirks,
  • while I robbed the innocent?
  • You are an excellent gentleman, Sir: I wish [and then she sighed] I had
  • had the happiness to know there was such a lawyer in the world; and to
  • have been acquainted with him.
  • Come, come, Mrs. Moore, I think your name is, it may not be too late--
  • when you and I are better acquainted, I may help you perhaps.--But
  • mention nothing of this to the lady: for, as I said, I hate to appear
  • officious.
  • This prohibition, I knew, if goody Moore answered the specimen she had
  • given of her womanhood, would make her take the first opportunity to
  • tell, were it to be necessary to my purpose that she should.
  • I appeared, upon the whole, so indifferent about seeing the room, or the
  • lady, that the good woman was the more eager I should see both. And the
  • rather, as I, to stimulate her, declared, that there was more required in
  • my eye to merit the character of a handsome woman, than most people
  • thought necessary; and that I had never seen six truly lovely women in my
  • life.
  • To be brief, she went in; and after a little while came out again. The
  • lady, Sir, is retired to her closet. So you may go in and look at the
  • room.
  • Then how my heart began again to play its pug's tricks!
  • I hobbled in, and stumped about, and liked it very much; and was sure my
  • wife would. I begged excuse for sitting down, and asked, who was the
  • minister of the place? If he were a good preacher? Who preached at the
  • Chapel? And if he were a good preacher, and a good liver too, Madam--I
  • must inquire after that: for I love, but I must needs say, that the
  • clergy should practise what they preach.
  • Very right, Sir; but that is not so often the case as were to be wished.
  • More's the pity, Madam. But I have a great veneration for the clergy in
  • general. It is more a satire upon human nature than upon the cloth, if
  • we suppose those who have the best opportunities to do good, less perfect
  • than other people. For my part, I don't love professional any more than
  • national reflections.--But I keep the lady in her closet. My gout makes
  • me rude.
  • Then up from my seat stumped I--what do you call these window-curtains,
  • Madam?
  • Stuff-damask, Sir.
  • It looks mighty well, truly. I like it better than silk. It is warmer
  • to be sure, and much fitter for lodgings in the country; especially for
  • people in years. The bed is in a pretty state.
  • It is neat and clean, Sir: that's all we pretend to.
  • Ay, mighty well--very well--a silk camblet, I think--very well, truly!--I
  • am sure my wife will like it. But we would not turn the lady out of her
  • lodgings for the world. The other two apartments will do for us at
  • present.
  • Then stumping towards the closet, over the door of which hung a
  • picture--What picture is that--Oh! I see; a St. Cecilia!
  • A common print, Sir!
  • Pretty well, pretty well! It is after an Italian master.--I would not
  • for the world turn the lady out of her apartment. We can make shift with
  • the other two, repeated I, louder still: but yet mumblingly hoarse: for I
  • had as great regard to uniformity in accent, as to my words.
  • O Belford! to be so near my angel, think what a painful constraint I was
  • under.
  • I was resolved to fetch her out, if possible: and pretending to be
  • going--you can't agree as to any time, Mrs. Moore, when we can have this
  • third room, can you?--Not that [whispered I, loud enough to be heard in
  • the next room; not that] I would incommode the lady: but I would tell my
  • wife when abouts--and women, you know, Mrs. Moore, love to have every
  • thing before them of this nature.
  • Mrs. Moore (said my charmer) [and never did her voice sound so harmonious
  • to me: Oh! how my heart bounded again! It even talked to me, in a
  • manner; for I thought I heard, as well as felt, its unruly flutters; and
  • every vein about me seemed a pulse; Mrs. Moore] you may acquaint the
  • gentleman, that I shall stay here only for two or three days at most,
  • till I receive an answer to a letter I have written into the country; and
  • rather than be your hindrance, I will take up with any apartment a pair
  • of stairs higher.
  • Not for the world!--Not for the world, young lady! cried I.--My wife, as
  • I love her, should lie in a garret, rather than put such a considerate
  • young lady, as you seem to be, to the least inconveniency.
  • She opened not the door yet; and I said, but since you have so much
  • goodness, Madam, if I could but just look into the closet as I stand, I
  • could tell my wife whether it is large enough to hold a cabinet she much
  • values, and ill have with her wherever she goes.
  • Then my charmer opened the door, and blazed upon me, as it were, in a
  • flood of light, like what one might imagine would strike a man, who, born
  • blind, had by some propitious power been blessed with his sight, all at
  • once, in a meridian sun.
  • Upon my soul, I never was so strangely affected before. I had much ado
  • to forbear discovering myself that instant: but, hesitatingly, and in
  • great disorder, I said, looking into the closet and around it, there is
  • room, I see, for my wife's cabinet; and it has many jewels in it of high
  • price; but, upon my soul, [for I could not forbear swearing, like a
  • puppy: habit is a cursed thing, Jack--] nothing so valuable as a lady I
  • see, can be brought into it.
  • She started, and looked at me with terror. The truth of the compliment,
  • as far as I know, had taken dissimulation from my accent.
  • I saw it was impossible to conceal myself longer from her, any more than
  • (from the violent impulses of my passion) to forbear manifesting myself.
  • I unbuttoned therefore my cape, I pulled off my flapt slouched hat; I
  • threw open my great coat, and, like the devil in Milton [an odd
  • comparison though!]--
  • I started up in my own form divine,
  • Touch'd by the beam of her celestial eye,
  • More potent than Ithuriel's spear!--
  • Now, Belford, for a similitude--now for a likeness to illustrate the
  • surprising scene, and the effect it had upon my charmer, and the
  • gentlewoman!--But nothing was like it, or equal to it. The plain fact
  • can only describe it, and set it off--thus then take it.
  • She no sooner saw who it was, than she gave three violent screams; and,
  • before I could catch her in my arms, (as I was about to do the moment I
  • discovered myself,) down she sunk at my feet in a fit; which made me
  • curse my indiscretion for so suddenly, and with so much emotion,
  • revealing myself.
  • The gentlewoman, seeing so strange an alteration in my person, and
  • features, and voice, and dress, cried out, Murder, help! murder, help! by
  • turns, for half a dozen times running. This alarmed the house, and up
  • ran two servant maids, and my servant after them. I cried out for water
  • and hartshorn, and every one flew a different way, one of the maids as
  • fast down as she came up; while the gentlewoman ran out of one room into
  • another, and by turns up and down the apartment we were in, without
  • meaning or end, wringing her foolish hands, and not knowing what she did.
  • Up then came running a gentleman and his sister, fetched, and brought in
  • by the maid, who had run down, and having let in a cursed crabbed old
  • wretch, hobbling with his gout, and mumbling with his hoarse
  • broken-toothed voice, who was metamorphosed all at once into a lively,
  • gay young fellow, with a clear accent, and all his teeth, she would have
  • it, that I was neither more nor less than the devil, and could not keep
  • her eye from my foot, expecting, no doubt, every minute to see it
  • discover itself to be cloven.
  • For my part, I was so intent upon restoring my angel, that I regarded
  • nobody else. And, at last, she slowly recovering motion, with bitter
  • sighs and sobs, (only the whites of her eyes however appearing for some
  • moments,) I called upon her in the tenderest accent, as I kneeled by her,
  • my arm supporting her head, My angel! my charmer! my Clarissa! look upon
  • me, my dearest life!--I am not angry with you; I will forgive you, my
  • best beloved.
  • The gentleman and his sister knew not what to make of all this: and the
  • less, when my fair-one, recovering her sight, snatched another look at
  • me; and then again groaned, and fainted away.
  • I threw up the closet-sash for air, and then left her to the care of the
  • young gentlewoman, the same notable Miss Rawlins, who I had heard of at
  • the Flask: and to that of Mrs. Moore; who by this time had recovered
  • herself; and then retiring to one corner of the room, I made my servant
  • pull off my gouty stockings, brush my hat, and loop it up into the usual
  • smart cock.
  • I then stept to the closet to Mr. Rawlins, whom, in the general
  • confusion, I had not much minded before.--Sir, said I, you have an
  • uncommon scene before you. The lady is my wife, and no gentleman's
  • presence is necessary here but my own.
  • I beg pardon, Sir; if the lady be your wife, I have no business here.
  • But, Sir, by her concern at seeing you--
  • Pray, Sir, none of your if's and but's, I beseech you: nor your concern
  • about the lady's concern. You are a very unqualified judge in this
  • cause; and I beg of you, Sir, to oblige me with your absence. The women
  • only are proper to be present on this occasion, added I; and I think
  • myself obliged to them for their care and kind assistance.
  • 'Tis well he made not another word: for I found my choler begin to rise.
  • I could not bear, that the finest neck, and arms, and foot, in the world,
  • should be exposed to the eyes of any man living but mine.
  • I withdrew once more from the closet, finding her beginning to recover,
  • lest the sight of me too soon should throw her back again.
  • The first words she said, looking round her with great emotion, were, Oh!
  • hide me, hide me! Is he gone?--Oh! hide me!--Is he gone?
  • Sir, said Miss Rawlins, coming to me with an air both peremptory and
  • assured, This is some surprising case. The lady cannot bear the sight of
  • you. What you have done is best known to yourself. But another such fit
  • will probably be her last. It would be but kind therefore for you to
  • retire.
  • It behoved me to have so notable a person of my party; and the rather as
  • I had disobliged her impertinent brother.
  • The dear creature, said I, may well, be concerned to see me. If you,
  • Madam, had a husband who loved you as I love her, you would not, I am
  • confident, fly from him, and expose yourself to hazards, as she does
  • whenever she has not all her way--and yet with a mind not capable of
  • intentional evil--but mother-spoilt!--This is her fault, and all her
  • fault: and the more inexcusable it is, as I am the man of her choice, and
  • have reason to think she loves me above all the men in the world.
  • Here, Jack, was a story to support to the lady; face to face too!*
  • * And here, Belford, lest thou, through inattention, should be surprised
  • at my assurance, let me remind thee (and that, thus, by way of marginal
  • observation, that I may not break in upon my narrative) that this my
  • intrepidity concerted (as I have from time to time acquainted thee) in
  • apprehension of such an event as has fallen out. For had not the dear
  • creature already passed for my wife before no less than four worthy
  • gentlemen of family and fortune?** and before Mrs. Sinclair, and her
  • household, and Miss Partington? And had she not agreed to her uncle's
  • expedient, that she should pass for such, from the time of Mr. Hickman's
  • application to that uncle;*** and that the worthy Capt. Tomlinson should
  • be allowed to propagate that belief: as he had actually reported to two
  • families (they possibly to more); purposely that it might come to the
  • ears of James Harlowe; and serve for a foundation for uncle John to build
  • his reconciliation-scheme upon?† And canst thou think that nothing was
  • meant by all this contrivance? and that I am not still further prepared
  • to support my story?
  • ** See Vol. IV. Letter IV. towards the conclusion.
  • *** Ibid. Letter XVI.
  • † Ibid.
  • Indeed, I little thought, at the time that I formed these precautionary
  • schemes, that she would ever have been able, if willing, to get out of my
  • hands. All that I hoped I should have occasion to have recourse to them
  • for, was only, in case I should have the courage to make the grand
  • attempt, and should succeed in it, to bring the dear creature [and this
  • out of tenderness to her, for what attention did I ever yet pay to the
  • grief, the execrations, the tears of a woman I had triumphed over?] to
  • bear me in her sight: to expostulate with me, to be pacified by my pleas,
  • and by my own future hopes, founded upon the reconciliatory-project, upon
  • my reiterated vows, and upon the Captain's assurances. Since in that
  • case, to forgive me, to have gone on with me, for a week, would have been
  • to forgive me, to have gone on with me, for ever. And that, had my
  • eligible life of honour taken place, her trials would all have been then
  • over: and she would have known nothing but gratitude, love, and joy, to
  • the end of one of our lives. For never would I, never could I, have
  • abandoned such an admirable creature as this. Thou knowest I never was a
  • sordid villain to any of her inferiors--Her inferiors, I may say--For who
  • is not her inferior?
  • You speak like a gentleman; you look like a gentleman, said Miss
  • Rawlins--but, Sir, this is a strange case; the lady sees to dread the
  • sight of you.
  • No wonder, Madam; taking her a little on one side, nearer to Mrs. Moore.
  • I have three times already forgiven the dear creature--but this is
  • jealousy!--There is a spice of that in it--and of phrensy too [whispered
  • I, that it might have the face of a secret, and of consequence the more
  • engage their attention]--but our story is too long.
  • I then made a motion to go to my beloved. But they desired that I would
  • walk into the next room; and they would endeavour to prevail upon her to
  • lie down.
  • I begged that they would not suffer her to talk; for that she was
  • accustomed to fits, and, when in this way, would talk of any thing that
  • came uppermost: and the more she was suffered to run on, the worse she
  • was; and if not kept quiet, would fall into ravings: which might possibly
  • hold her a week.
  • They promised to keep her quiet; and I withdrew into the next room;
  • ordering every one down but Mrs. Moore and Miss Rawlins.
  • She was full of exclamations! Unhappy creature! miserable! ruined! and
  • undone! she called herself; wrung her hands, and begged they would assist
  • her to escape from the terrible evils she should otherwise be made to
  • suffer.
  • They preached patience and quietness to her; and would have had her to
  • lie down: but she refused; sinking, however, into an easy chair; for she
  • trembled so she could not stand.
  • By this time, I hoped, that she was enough recovered to bear a presence
  • that it behoved me to make her bear; and fearing she would throw out
  • something in her exclamations, that would still more disconcert me, I
  • went into the room again.
  • O there he is! said she, and threw her apron over her face--I cannot see
  • him!--I cannot look upon him!--Begone, begone! touch me not!--
  • For I took her struggling hand, beseeching her to be pacified; and
  • assuring her, that I would make all up with her upon her own terms and
  • wishes.
  • Base man! said the violent lady, I have no wishes, but never to behold
  • you more! Why must I be thus pursued and haunted? Have you not made me
  • miserable enough already?--Despoiled of all succour and help, and of
  • every friend, I am contented to be poor, low, and miserable, so I may
  • live free from your persecutions.
  • Miss Rawlins stared at me [a confident slut this Miss Rawlins, thought
  • I]: so did Mrs. Moore. I told you so! whispering said I, turning to the
  • women; shaking my head with a face of great concern and pity; and then to
  • my charmer, My dear creature, how you rave! You will not easily recover
  • from the effects of this violence. Have patience, my love. Be pacified;
  • and we will coolly talk this matter over: for you expose yourself, as
  • well as me: these ladies will certainly think you have fallen among
  • robbers, and that I am the chief of them.
  • So you are! so you are! stamping, her face still covered [she thought of
  • Wednesday night, no doubt]; and, sighing as if her heart were breaking,
  • she put her hand to her forehead--I shall be quite distracted!
  • I will not, my dearest love, uncover your face. You shall not look upon
  • me, since I am so odious to you. But this is a violence I never thought
  • you capable of.
  • And I would have pressed her hand, as I held it, with my lips; but she
  • drew it from me with indignation.
  • Unhand me, Sir, said she. I will not be touched by you. Leave me to my
  • fate. What right, what title, have you to persecute me thus?
  • What right, what title, my dear!--But this is not a time--I have a letter
  • from Captain Tomlinson--here it is--offering it to her--
  • I will receive nothing from your hands--tell me not of Captain
  • Tomlinson--tell me not of any body--you have no right to invade me thus--
  • once more leave me to my fate--have you not made me miserable enough?
  • I touched a delicate string, on purpose to set her in such a passion
  • before the women, as might confirm the intimation I had given of a
  • phrensical disorder.
  • What a turn is here!--Lately so happy--nothing wanting but a
  • reconciliation between you and your friends!--That reconciliation in such
  • a happy train--shall so slight, so accidental an occasion be suffered to
  • overturn all our happiness?
  • She started up with a trembling impatience, her apron falling from her
  • indignant face--now, said she, that thou darest to call the occasion
  • slight and accidental, and that I am happily out of thy vile hands, and
  • out of a house I have reason to believe as vile, traitor and wretch as
  • thou art, I will venture to cast an eye upon thee--and Oh! that it were
  • in my power, in mercy to my sex, to look thee first into shame and
  • remorse, and then into death!
  • This violent tragedy-speech, and the high manner in which she uttered it,
  • had its desired effect. I looked upon the women, and upon her by turns,
  • with a pitying eye; and they shook their wise heads, and besought me to
  • retire, and her to lie down to compose herself.
  • This hurricane, like other hurricanes, was presently allayed by a shower.
  • She threw herself once more into her armed chair, and begged pardon of
  • the women for her passionate excess; but not of me: yet I was in hopes,
  • that when compliments were stirring, I should have come in for a share.
  • Indeed, Ladies, said I, [with assurance enough, thou'lt say,] this
  • violence is not natural to my beloved's temper--misapprehension--
  • Misapprehension, wretch!--And want I excuses from thee!
  • By what a scorn was every lovely feature agitated!
  • Then turning her face from me, I have not patience, O thou guileful
  • betrayer, to look upon thee! Begone! Begone! With a face so
  • unblushing, how darest thou appear in my presence?
  • I thought then, that the character of a husband obliged me to be angry.
  • You may one day, Madam, repent this treatment:--by my soul, you may. You
  • know I have not deserved it of you--you know--I have not.
  • Do I know you have not?--Wretch! Do I know--
  • You do, Madam--and never did man of my figure and consideration, [I
  • thought it was proper to throw that in] meet with such treatment--
  • She lifted up her hands: indignation kept her silent.
  • But all is of a piece with the charge you bring against me of despoiling
  • you of all succour and help, of making you poor and low, and with other
  • unprecedented language. I will only say, before these two gentlewomen,
  • that since it must be so, and since your former esteem for me is turned
  • into so riveted an aversion, I will soon, very soon, make you entirely
  • easy. I will be gone:--I will leave you to your own fate, as you call
  • it; and may that be happy!--Only, that I may not appear to be a spoiler,
  • a robber indeed, let me know whither I shall send your apparel, and every
  • thing that belongs to you, and I will send it.
  • Send it to this place; and assure me, that you will never molest me more;
  • never more come near me; and that is all I ask of you.
  • I will do so, Madam, said I, with a dejected air. But did I ever think I
  • should be so indifferent to you?--However, you must permit me to insist
  • on your reading this letter; and on your seeing Captain Tomlinson, and
  • hearing what he has to say from your uncle. He will be here by-and-by.
  • Don't trifle with me, said she in an imperious tone--do as you offer. I
  • will not receive any letter from your hands. If I see Captain Tomlinson,
  • it shall be on his own account, not on your's. You tell me you will send
  • me my apparel--if you would have me believe any thing you say, let this
  • be the test of your sincerity.--Leave me now, and send my things.
  • The women started.--They did nothing but stare; and appeared to be more
  • and more at a loss what to make of the matter between us.
  • I pretended to be going from her in a pet; but, when I had got to the
  • door, I turned back; and, as if I had recollected myself--One word more,
  • my dearest creature!--Charming, even in your anger!--O my fond soul! said
  • I, turning half round, and pulling out my handkerchief.--
  • I believe, Jack, my eyes did glisten a little. I have no doubt but they
  • did. The women pitied me--honest souls! They showed they had each of
  • them a handkerchief as well as I. So, has thou not observed (to give a
  • familiar illustration,) every man in a company of a dozen, or more,
  • obligingly pull out his watch, when some one has asked what's o'clock?--
  • As each man of a like number, if one talks of his beard, will fall to
  • stroking his chin with his four fingers and thumb.
  • One word only, Madam, repeated I, (as soon as my voice had recovered its
  • tone,) I have represented to Captain Tomlinson in the most favourable
  • light the cause of our present misunderstanding. You know what your
  • uncle insists upon, and with which you have acquiesced.--The letter in my
  • hand, [and again I offered it to her,] will acquaint you with what you
  • have to apprehend from your brother's active malice.
  • She was going to speak in a high accent, putting the letter from her,
  • with an open palm--Nay, hear me out, Madam--The Captain, you know, has
  • reported our marriage to two different persons. It is come to your
  • brother's ears. My own relations have also heard of it.--Letters were
  • brought me from town this morning, from Lady Betty Lawrance, and Miss
  • Montague. Here they are. [I pulled them out of my pocket, and offered
  • them to her, with that of the Captain; but she held back her still open
  • palm, that she might not receive them.] Reflect, Madam, I beseech you,
  • reflect upon the fatal consequences with which this, your high
  • resentment, may be attended.
  • Ever since I knew you, said she, I have been in a wilderness of doubt
  • and error. I bless God that I am out of your hands. I will transact for
  • myself what relates to myself. I dismiss all your solicitude for me.--
  • Am I not my own mistress?--Have you any title?--
  • The women stared--[the devil stare ye, thought I!--Can ye do nothing but
  • stare?]--It was high time to stop her here.
  • I raised my voice to drown her's.--You used, my dearest creature, to have
  • a tender and apprehensive heart.--You never had so much reason for such a
  • one as now.
  • Let me judge for myself, upon what I shall see, not upon what I shall
  • hear.--Do you think I shall ever?--
  • I dreaded her going on--I must be heard, Madam, (raising my voice still
  • higher,)--you must let me read one paragraph or two out of this letter to
  • you, if you will not read it yourself--
  • Begone from me, Man!--Begone from me with thy letters! What pretence
  • hast thou for tormenting me thus? What right?--What title?--
  • Dearest creature! what questions you ask!--Questions that you can as well
  • answer yourself--
  • I can, I will, and thus I answer them--
  • Still louder I raised my voice.--She was overborne.--Sweet soul! It
  • would be hard, thought I, [and yet I was very angry with her,] if such a
  • spirit as thine cannot be brought to yield to such a one as mine!
  • I lowered my voice on her silence. All gentle, all intreative, my
  • accent. My head bowed--one hand held out--the other on my honest heart.
  • --For heaven's sake, my dearest creature, resolve to see Captain
  • Tomlinson with temper. He would have come along with me, but I was
  • willing to try to soften your mind first on this fatal misapprehension,
  • and this for the same of your own wishes. For what is it otherwise to
  • me, whether your friends are, or are not, reconciled to us?--Do I want
  • any favour from them?--For your own mind's sake, therefore, frustrate not
  • Captain Tomlinson's negociation. That worthy gentleman will be here in
  • the afternoon; Lady Betty will be in town, with my cousin Montague, in a
  • day or two.--They will be your visiters. I beseech you do not carry this
  • misunderstanding so far, as that Lord M. and Lady Betty, and Lady Sarah,
  • may know it. [How considerable this made me look to the women!] Lady
  • Betty will not let you rest till you consent to accompany her to her own
  • seat--and to that lady may you safely intrust your cause.
  • Again, upon my pausing a moment, she was going to break out. I liked not
  • the turn of her countenance, nor the tone of her voice--'And thinkest
  • thou, base wretch,' were the words she did utter: I again raised my
  • voice, and drowned her's.--Base wretch, Madam?--You know that I have not
  • deserved the violent names you have called me. Words so opprobrious from
  • a mind so gentle!--But this treatment is from you, Madam?--From you, whom
  • I love more than my own soul!--By that soul, I swear that I do.--[The
  • women looked upon each other--they seemed pleased with my ardour.--Women,
  • whether wives, maids, or widows, love ardours: even Miss Howe, thou
  • knowest, speaks up for ardours,*]--Nevertheless, I must say, that you
  • have carried matters too far for the occasion. I see you hate me--
  • * See Vol. IV. Letters XXIX. and XXXIV.
  • She was just going to speak--If we are to separate for ever, in a strong
  • and solemn voice, proceeded I, this island shall not long be troubled
  • with me. Mean time, only be pleased to give these letters a perusal, and
  • consider what is to be said to your uncle's friend, and what he is to say
  • to your uncle.--Any thing will I come into, (renounce me, if you will,)
  • that shall make for your peace, and for the reconciliation your heart was
  • so lately set upon. But I humbly conceive, that it is necessary that you
  • should come into better temper with me, were it but to give a favourable
  • appearance to what has passed, and weight to any future application to
  • your friends, in whatever way you shall think proper to make it.
  • I then put the letters into her lap, and retired into the next apartment
  • with a low bow, and a very solemn air.
  • I was soon followed by the two women. Mrs. Moore withdrew to give the
  • fair perverse time to read them: Miss Rawlins for the same reason, and
  • because she was sent for home.
  • The widow besought her speedy return. I joined in the same request; and
  • she was ready enough to promise to oblige us.
  • I excused myself to Mrs. Moore for the disguise I had appeared in at
  • first, and for the story I had invented. I told her that I held myself
  • obliged to satisfy her for the whole floor we were upon; and for an upper
  • room for my servant, and that for a month certain.
  • She made many scruples, and begged she might not be urged, on this head,
  • till she had consulted Miss Rawlins.
  • I consented; but told her, that she had taken my earnest, and I hoped
  • there was no room for dispute.
  • Just then Miss Rawlins returned, with an air of eager curiosity; and
  • having been told what had passed between Mrs. Moore and me, she gave
  • herself airs of office immediately: which I humoured, plainly perceiving
  • that if I had her with me I had the other.
  • She wished, if there were time for it, and if it were not quite
  • impertinent in her to desire it, that I would give Mrs. Moore and her a
  • brief history of an affair, which, as she said, bore the face of novelty,
  • mystery, and surprise. For sometimes it looked to her as if we were
  • married; at other times that point appeared doubtful; and yet the lady
  • did not absolutely deny it, but, upon the whole, thought herself highly
  • injured.
  • I said that our's was a very particular case.--That, were I to acquaint
  • them with it, some part of it would hardly appear credible. But,
  • however, as they seemed hardly to be persons of discretion, I would give
  • them a brief account of the whole; and this in so plain and sincere a
  • manner, that it should clear up, to their satisfaction, every thing that
  • had passed, or might hereafter pass between us.
  • They sat down by me and threw every feature of their faces into
  • attention. I was resolved to go as near the truth as possible, lest any
  • thing should drop from my spouse to impeach my veracity; and yet keep in
  • view what passed at the Flask.
  • It is necessary, although thou knowest my whole story, and a good deal of
  • my views, that thou shouldst be apprized of the substance of what I told
  • them.
  • 'I gave them, in as concise a manner as I was able, this history of our
  • families, fortunes, alliances, antipathies, her brother's and mine
  • particularly. I averred the truth of our private marriage.' The
  • Captain's letter, which I will enclose, will give thee my reasons for
  • that. And, besides, the women might have proposed a parson to me by way
  • of compromise. 'I told them the condition my spouse had made me swear
  • to; and to which she held me, in order, I said, to induce me the sooner
  • to be reconciled to her relations.
  • 'I owned, that this restraint made me sometimes ready to fly out.' And
  • Mrs. Moore was so good as to declare, that she did not much wonder at it.
  • Thou art a very good sort of woman, Mrs. Moore, thought I.
  • As Miss Howe has actually detected our mother, and might possibly find
  • some way still to acquaint her friend with her discoveries, I thought it
  • proper to prepossess them in favour of Mrs. Sinclair and her two nieces.
  • I said, 'they were gentlewomen born; that they had not bad hearts; that
  • indeed my spouse did not love them; they having once taken the liberty to
  • blame her for her over-niceness with regard to me. People, I said, even
  • good people, who knew themselves to be guilty of a fault they had no
  • inclination to mend, were too often least patient when told of it; as
  • they could less bear than others to be thought indifferently of.'
  • Too often the case, they owned.
  • 'Mrs. Sinclair's house was a very handsome house, and fit to receive the
  • first quality, [true enough, Jack!] Mrs. Sinclair was a woman very easy
  • in her circumstances:--A widow gentlewoman, as you, Mrs. Moore, are.--
  • Lets lodgings, as you, Mrs. Moore, do.--Once had better prospects as you,
  • Mrs. Moore, may have had: the relict of Colonel Sinclair;--you, Mrs.
  • Moore, might know Colonel Sinclair--he had lodgings at Hampstead.'
  • She had heard of the name.
  • 'Oh! he was related to the best families in Scotland!--And his widow is
  • not to be reflected upon because she lets lodgings you know, Mrs. Moore--
  • you know, Miss Rawlins.'
  • Very true, and very true.--And they must needs say, it did not look quite
  • so pretty, in such a lady as my spouse, to be so censorious.
  • A foundation here, thought I, to procure these women's help to get back
  • the fugitive, or their connivance, at least, at my doing so; as well as
  • for anticipating any future information from Miss Howe.
  • I gave them a character of that virago; and intimated, 'that for a head
  • to contrive mischief, and a heart to execute it, she had hardly her equal
  • in her sex.'
  • To this Miss Howe it was, Mrs. Moore said, she supposed, that my spouse
  • was so desirous to dispatch a man and horse, by day-dawn, with a letter
  • she wrote before she went to bed last night, proposing to stay no longer
  • than till she had received an answer to it.
  • The very same, said I; I knew she would have immediate recourse to her.
  • I should have been but too happy, could I have prevented such a letter
  • from passing, or so to have it managed, as to have it given into Mrs.
  • Howe's hands, instead of her daughter's. Women who had lived some time
  • in the world knew better, than to encourage such skittish pranks in young
  • wives.
  • Let me just stop to tell thee, while it is in my head, that I have since
  • given Will. his cue to find out where the man lives who is gone with the
  • fair fugitive's letter; and, if possible, to see him on his return,
  • before he sees her.
  • I told the women, 'I despaired that it would ever be better with us while
  • Miss Howe had so strange an ascendancy over my spouse, and remained
  • herself unmarried. And until the reconciliation with her friends could
  • be effected; or a still happier event--as I should think it, who am the
  • last male of my family; and which my foolish vow, and her rigour, had
  • hitherto'--
  • Here I stopt, and looked modest, turning my diamond ring round my finger;
  • while goody Moore looked mighty significant, calling it a very particular
  • case; and the maiden fanned away, and primm'd, and purs'd, to show that
  • what I had said needed no farther explanantion.
  • 'I told them the occasion of our present difference. I avowed the
  • reality of the fire; but owned, that I would have made no scruple of
  • breaking the unnatural oath she had bound me in, (having a husband's
  • right on my side,) when she was so accidentally frighted into my arms;
  • and I blamed myself excessively, that I did not; since she thought fit to
  • carry her resentment so high, and had the injustice to suppose the fire
  • to be a contrivance of mine.'
  • Nay, for that matter, Mrs. Moore said, as we were married, and madam was
  • so odd--every gentleman would not--and stopt there Mrs. Moore.
  • 'To suppose I should have recourse to such a poor contrivance, said I,
  • when I saw the dear creature every hour.'--Was not this a bold put, Jack?
  • A most extraordinary case, truly, cried the maiden; fanning, yet coming
  • in with her Well-but's!--and her sifting Pray, Sir's!--and her
  • restraining Enough, Sir's.--flying from the question to the question--her
  • seat now-and-then uneasy, for fear my want of delicacy should hurt her
  • abundant modesty; and yet it was difficult to satisfy her super-abundant
  • curiosity.
  • 'My beloved's jealousy, [and jealousy of itself, to female minds,
  • accounts for a thousand unaccountablenesses,] and the imputation of her
  • half-phrensy, brought upon her by her father's wicked curse, and by the
  • previous persecutions she had undergone from all her family, were what I
  • dwelt upon, in order to provide against what might happen.'
  • In short, 'I owned against myself most of the offences which I did not
  • doubt but she would charge me with in their hearing; and as every cause
  • has a black and white side, I gave the worst parts of our story the
  • gentlest turn. And when I had done, acquainted them with some of the
  • contents of that letter of Captain Tomlinson which I left with the lady.
  • I concluded with James Harlowe, and of Captain Singleton, or of any
  • sailor-looking men.'
  • This thou wilt see, from the letter itself, was necessary to be done.
  • Here, therefore, thou mayest read it. And a charming letter to my
  • purpose wilt thou find it to be, if thou givest the least attention to
  • its contents.
  • TO ROBERT LOVELACE, ESQ.
  • WEDN. JUNE 7.
  • DEAR SIR,
  • Although I am obliged to be in town to-morrow, or next day at farthest,
  • yet I would not dispense with writing to you, by one of my servants,
  • (whom I send up before upon a particular occasion,) in order to advertise
  • you, that it is probable you will hear from some of your own relations on
  • your [supposed*] nuptials. One of the persons, (Mr. Lilburne by name,)
  • to whom I hinted my belief of your marriage, happens to be acquainted
  • with Mr. Spurrier, Lady Betty Lawrance's steward, and (not being under
  • any restriction) mentioned it to Mr. Spurrier, and he to Lady Betty, as a
  • thing certain; and this, (though I have not the honour to be personally
  • known to her Ladyship,) brought on an inquiry from her Ladyship to me by
  • her gentleman; who coming to me in company with Mr. Lilburne, I had no
  • way but to confirm the report.--And I understand, that Lady Betty takes
  • it amiss that she was not acquainted with so desirable a piece of news
  • from yourself.
  • * What is between hooks [ ] thou mayest suppose, Jack, I sunk upon the
  • women, in the account I gave them of the contents of this letter.
  • Her Ladyship, it seems, has business that calls her to town [and you will
  • possibly choose to put her right. If you do, it will, I presume, be in
  • confidence; that nothing may transpire from your own family to contradict
  • what I have given out.]
  • [I have ever been of opinion, That truth ought to be strictly adhered to
  • on all occasions: and am concerned that I have, (though with so good a
  • view,) departed from my old maxim. But my dear friend Mr. John Harlowe
  • would have it so. Yet I never knew a departure of this kind a single
  • departure. But, to make the best of it now, allow me, Sir, once more to
  • beg the lady, as soon as possible, to authenticate the report given out.]
  • When both you and the lady join in the acknowledgement of your marriage,
  • it will be impertinent in any one to be inquisitive as to the day or
  • week. [And if as privately celebrated as you intend, (while the
  • gentlewomen with whom you lodge are properly instructed, as you say they
  • are, and who shall actually believe you were married long ago,) who shall
  • be able to give a contradiction to my report?]
  • And yet it is very probable, that minute inquiries will be made; and this
  • is what renders precaution necessary; for Mr. James Harlowe will not
  • believe that you are married; and is sure, he says, that you both lived
  • together when Mr. Hickman's application was made to Mr. John Harlowe: and
  • if you lived together any time unmarried, he infers from your character,
  • Mr. Lovelace, that it is not probable that you would ever marry. And he
  • leaves it to his two uncles to decide, if you even should be married,
  • whether there be not room to believe, that his sister was first
  • dishonoured; and if so, to judge of the title she will have to their
  • favour, or to the forgiveness of any of her family.--I believe, Sir, this
  • part of my letter had best be kept from the lady.
  • Young Mr. Harlowe is resolved to find this out, and to come at his
  • sister's speech likewise: and for that purpose sets out to-morrow, as I
  • am well informed, with a large attendance armed; and Mr. Solmes is to be
  • of the party. And what makes him the more earnest to find it out is
  • this:--Mr. John Harlowe has told the whole family that he will alter, and
  • new-settle his will. Mr. Antony Harlowe is resolved to do the same by
  • his; for, it seems, he has now given over all thoughts of changing his
  • condition, having lately been disappointed in a view he had of that sort
  • with Mrs. Howe. These two brothers generally act in concert; and Mr.
  • James Harlowe dreads (and let me tell you, that he has reason for it, on
  • my Mr. Harlowe's account) that his younger sister will be, at last, more
  • benefited than he wishes for, by the alteration intended. He has already
  • been endeavouring to sound his uncle Harlowe on this subject; and wanted
  • to know whether any new application had been made to him on his sister's
  • part. Mr. Harlowe avoided a direct answer, and expressed his wishes for
  • a general reconciliation, and his hopes that his niece were married.
  • This offended the furious young man, and he reminded his uncle of
  • engagements they had all entered into at his sister's going away, not to
  • be reconciled but by general consent.
  • Mr. John Harlowe complains to me often of the uncontroulableness of his
  • nephew; and says, that now that the young man has not any body of whose
  • superior sense he stands in awe, he observes not decency in his behaviour
  • to any of them, and this makes my Mr. Harlowe still more desirous than
  • ever of bringing his younger niece into favour again. I will not say all
  • I might of this young man's extraordinary rapaciousness:--but one would
  • think, that these grasping men expect to live for ever!
  • 'I took the liberty but within these two hours to propose to set on foot
  • (and offered my cover to) a correspondence between my friend and his
  • daughter-niece, as she still sometimes fondly calls her. She was
  • mistress of so much prudence, I said, that I was sure she could better
  • direct every thing to its desirable end, than any body else could. But
  • he said, he did not think himself entirely at liberty to take such a step
  • at present; and that it was best that he should have it in his power to
  • say, occasionally, that he had not any correspondence with her, or letter
  • from her.
  • 'You will see, Sir, from all this, the necessity of keeping our treaty an
  • absolute secret; and if the lady has mentioned it to her worthy friend
  • Miss Howe, I hope it is in confidence.'
  • [And now, Sir, a few lines in answer to your's of Monday last.]
  • [Mr. Harlowe was very well pleased with your readiness to come into his
  • proposal. But as to what you both desire, that he will be present at the
  • ceremony, he said, that his nephew watched all his steps so narrowly,
  • that he thought it was not practicable (if he were inclinable) to oblige
  • you: but that he consented, with all his heart, that I should be the
  • person whom he had stipulated should be privately present at the ceremony
  • on his part.]
  • [However, I think, I have an expedient for this, if your lady continues
  • to be very desirous of her uncle's presence (except he should be more
  • determined than his answer to me seemed to import); of which I shall
  • acquaint you, and perhaps of what he says to it, when I have the pleasure
  • to see you in town. But, indeed, I think you have no time to lose. Mr.
  • Harlowe is impatient to hear, that you are actually one; and I hope I may
  • carry him down word, when I leave you next, that I saw the ceremony
  • performed.]
  • [If any obstacle arises from the lady, (from you it cannot,) I shall be
  • tempted to think a little hardly of her punctilio.]
  • Mr. Harlowe hopes, Sir, that you will rather take pains to avoid, than to
  • meet, this violent young man. He has the better opinion of you, let me
  • tell you, Sir, from the account I gave him of your moderation and
  • politeness; neither of which are qualities with his nephew. But we have
  • all of us something to amend.
  • You cannot imagine how dearly my friend still loves this excellent niece
  • of his.--I will give you an instance of it, which affected me a good
  • deal---'If once more, said he, (the last time but one we were together,)
  • I can but see this sweet child gracing the upper end of my table, as
  • mistress of my house, in my allotted month; all the rest of my family
  • present but as her guests; for so I formerly would have it; and had her
  • mother's consent for it--' There he stopt; for he was forced to turn his
  • reverend face from me. Tears ran down his cheeks. Fain would he have
  • hid them: but he could not--'Yet--yet, said he--how--how--' [poor
  • gentleman, he perfectly sobbed,] 'how shall I be able to bear the first
  • meeting!'
  • I bless God I am no hard-hearted man, Mr. Lovelace: my eyes showed to my
  • worthy friend, that he had no reason to be ashamed of his humanity before
  • me.
  • I will put an end to this long epistle. Be pleased to make my
  • compliments acceptable to the most excellent of women; as well as believe
  • me to be,
  • Dear Sir,
  • Your faithful friend, and humble servant,
  • ANTONY TOMLINSON.
  • ***
  • During the conversation between me and the women, I had planted myself at
  • the farthest end of the apartment we were in, over against the door,
  • which was open; and opposite to the lady's chamber-door, which was shut.
  • I spoke so low that it was impossible for her, at that distance, to hear
  • what we said; and in this situation I could see if her door was opened.
  • I told the women, that what I had mentioned to my spouse of Lady Betty's
  • coming to town with her niece Montague, and of their intention to visit
  • my beloved, whom they had never seen, nor she them, was real; and that I
  • expected news of their arrival every hour. I then showed them copies of
  • the other two letters, which I had left with her; the one from Lady
  • Betty, the other from my cousin Montague.--And here thou mayest read them
  • if thou wilt.
  • Eternally reproaching, eternally upbraiding me, are my impertinent
  • relations. But they are fond of occasions to find fault with me. Their
  • love, their love, Jack, and their dependence on my known good humour, are
  • their inducements.
  • TO ROBERT LOVELACE, ESQ.
  • WED. MORN. JUNE 7.
  • DEAR NEPHEW,
  • I understand that at length all our wishes are answered in your happy
  • marriage. But I think we might as well have heard of it directly from
  • you, as from the round-about way by which we have been made acquainted
  • with it. Methinks, Sir, the power and the will we have to oblige you,
  • should not expose us the more to your slights and negligence. My brother
  • had set his heart upon giving to you the wife we have all so long wished
  • you to have. But if you were actually married at the time you made him
  • that request (supposing, perhaps, that his gout would not let him attend
  • you) it is but like you.*--If your lady had her reasons to wish it to be
  • private while the differences between her family and self continue, you
  • might nevertheless have communicated it to us with that restriction; and
  • we should have forborne the public manifestations of our joy upon an
  • event we have so long desired.
  • * I gave Mrs. Moore and Miss Rawlins room to think this reproach just,
  • Jack.
  • The distant way we have come to know it is by my steward; who is
  • acquainted with a friend of Captain Tomlinson, to whom that gentleman
  • revealed it: and he, it seems, had it from yourself and lady, with such
  • circumstances as leave it not to be doubted.
  • I am, indeed, very much disobliged with you: so is Lady Sarah. But I
  • have a very speedy opportunity to tell you so in person; being obliged to
  • go to town to my old chancery affair. My cousin Leeson, who is, it
  • seems, removed to Albemarle-street, has notice of it. I shall be at her
  • house, where I bespeak your attendance of Sunday night. I have written
  • to my cousin Charlotte for either her, or her sister, to meet me at
  • Reading, and accompany me to town. I shall stay but a few days; my
  • business being matter of form only. On my return I shall pop upon Lord
  • M. at M. Hall, to see in what way his last fit has left him.
  • Mean time, having told you my mind on your negligence, I cannot help
  • congratulating you both on the occasion.--Your fair lady particularly,
  • upon her entrance into a family which is prepared to admire and love her.
  • My principal intention of writing to you (dispensing with the necessary
  • punctilio) is, that you may acquaint my dear new niece, that I will not
  • be denied the honour of her company down with me into Oxfordshire. I
  • understand that your proposed house and equipages cannot be soon ready.
  • She shall be with me till they are. I insist upon it. This shall make
  • all up. My house shall be her own. My servants and equipages her's.
  • Lady Sarah, who has not been out of her own house for months, will oblige
  • me with her company for a week, in honour of a niece so dearly beloved,
  • as I am sure she will be of us all.
  • Being but in lodgings in town, neither you nor your lady can require much
  • preparation.
  • Some time on Monday I hope to attend the dear young lady, to make her my
  • compliments; and to receive her apology for your negligence: which, and
  • her going down with me, as I said before, shall be full satisfaction.
  • Mean time, God bless her for her courage, (tell her I say so;) and bless
  • you both in each other; and that will be happiness to us all--
  • particularly to
  • Your truly affectionate Aunt,
  • ELIZ. LAWRANCE.
  • TO ROBERT LOVELACE, ESQ.
  • DEAR COUSIN,
  • At last, as we understand, there is some hope of you. Now does my good
  • Lord run over his bead-roll of proverbs; of black oxen, wild oats, long
  • lanes, and so forth.
  • Now, Cousin, say I, is your time come; and you will be no longer, I hope,
  • an infidel either to the power or excellence of the sex you have
  • pretended hitherto so much as undervalue; nor a ridiculer or scoffer at
  • an institution which all sober people reverence, and all rakes, sooner or
  • later, are brought to reverence, or to wish they had.
  • I want to see how you become your silken fetters: whether the charming
  • yoke sits light upon your shoulders. If with such a sweet yoke-fellow it
  • does not, my Lord, and my sister, as well as I, think that you will
  • deserve a closer tie about your neck.
  • His Lordship is very much displeased, that you have not written him word
  • of the day, the hour, the manner, and every thing. But I ask him, how he
  • can already expect any mark of deference or politeness from you? He must
  • stay, I tell him, till that sign of reformation, among others, appear
  • from the influence and example of your lady: but that, if ever you will
  • be good for any thing, it will be quickly seen. And, O Cousin, what a
  • vast, vast journey have you to take from the dreary land of libertinism,
  • through the bright province of reformation, into the serene kingdom of
  • happiness!--You had need to lose no time. You have many a weary step to
  • tread, before you can overtake those travellers who set out for it from a
  • less remote quarter. But you have a charming pole-star to guide you;
  • that's your advantage. I wish you joy of it: and as I have never yet
  • expected any highly complaisant thing from you, I make no scruple to
  • begin first; but it is purely, I must tell you, in respect to my new
  • cousin; whose accession into our family we most heartily congratulate and
  • rejoice in.
  • I have a letter from Lady Betty. She commands either my attendance or my
  • sister's to my cousin Leeson's. She puts Lord M. in hopes, that she
  • shall certainly bring down with her our lovely new relation; for she
  • says, she will not be denied. His Lordship is the willinger to let me be
  • the person, as I am in a manner wild to see her; my sister having two
  • years ago had that honour at Sir Robert Biddulph's. So get ready to
  • accompany us in our return; except your lady had objections strong enough
  • to satisfy us all. Lady Sarah longs to see her; and says, This accession
  • to the family will supply to it the loss of her beloved daughter.
  • I shall soon, I hope, pay my compliments to the dear lady in person: so
  • have nothing to add, but that I am
  • Your old mad Playfellow and Cousin,
  • CHARLOTTE MONTAGUE.
  • ***
  • The women having read the copies of these two letters, I thought that I
  • might then threaten and swagger--'But very little heart have I, said I,
  • to encourage such a visit from Lady Betty and Miss Montague to my spouse.
  • For after all, I am tired out with her strange ways. She is not what she
  • was, and (as I told her in your hearing, Ladies) I will leave this plaguy
  • island, though the place of my birth, and though the stake I have in it
  • is very considerable, and go and reside in France or Italy, and never
  • think of myself as a married man, nor live like one.'
  • O dear! said one.
  • That would be a sad thing! said the other.
  • Nay, Madam, [turning to Mrs. Moore,]--Indeed, Madam, [to Miss Rawlins,]--
  • I am quite desperate. I can no longer bear such usage. I have had the
  • good fortune to be favoured by the smiles of very fine ladies, though I
  • say it [and I looked very modest] both abroad and at home--[Thou knowest
  • this to be true, Jack]. With regard to my spouse here, I have but one
  • hope left, (for as to the reconciliation with her friends, I left, I
  • scorn them all too much to value that, but for her sake,) and that was,
  • that if it pleased God to bless us with children, she might entirely
  • recover her usual serenity; and we might then be happy. But the
  • reconciliation her heart was so much set upon, is now, as I hinted
  • before, entirely hopeless--made so, by this rash step of her's, and by
  • the rash temper she is in; since (as you will believe) her brother and
  • sister, when they come to know it, will make a fine handle of it against
  • us both;--affecting, as they do at present, to disbelieve our marriage--
  • and the dear creature herself too ready to countenance such a disbelief
  • --as nothing more than the ceremony--as nothing more--hem!--as nothing
  • more than the ceremony--
  • Here, as thou wilt perceive, I was bashful; for Miss Rawlins, by her
  • preparatory primness, put me in mind that it was proper to be so--
  • I turned half round; then facing the fan-player, and the matron--you
  • yourselves, Ladies, knew not what to believe till now, that I have told
  • you our story; and I do assure you, that I shall not give myself the same
  • trouble to convince people I hate; people from whom I neither expect nor
  • desire any favour; and who are determined not to be convinced. And what,
  • pray, must be the issue, when her uncle's friend comes, although he seems
  • to be a truly worthy man? It is not natural for him to say, 'To what
  • purpose, Mr. Lovelace, should I endeavour to bring about a reconciliation
  • between Mrs. Lovelace and her friends, by means of her elder uncle, when
  • a good understanding is wanting between yourselves?'--A fair inference,
  • Mrs. Moore!--A fair inference, Miss Rawlins.--And here is the
  • unhappiness--till she is reconciled to them, this cursed oath, in her
  • notion, is binding.
  • The women seemed moved; for I spoke with great earnestness, though
  • low--and besides, they love to have their sex, and its favours, appear of
  • importance to us. They shook their deep heads at each other, and looked
  • sorrowful: and this moved my tender heart too.
  • 'Tis an unheard-of case, Ladies--had she not preferred me to all
  • mankind--There I stopped--and that, resumed I, feeling for my
  • handkerchief, is what staggered Captain Tomlinson when he heard of her
  • flight; who, the last time he saw us together, saw the most affectionate
  • couple on earth!--the most affectionate couple on earth!--in the
  • accent-grievous, repeated I.
  • Out then I pulled my handkerchief, and putting it to my eyes, arose, and
  • walked to the window--It makes me weaker than a woman, did I not love
  • her, as never man loved his wife! [I have no doubt but I do, Jack.]
  • There again I stopt; and resuming--Charming creature, as you see she is,
  • I wish I had never beheld her face!--Excuse me, Ladies; traversing the
  • room, and having rubbed my eyes till I supposed them red, I turned to the
  • women; and, pulling out my letter-case, I will show you one letter--here
  • it is--read it, Miss Rawlins, if you please--it will confirm to you how
  • much all my family are prepared to admire her. I am freely treated in
  • it;--so I am in the two others: but after what I have told you, nothing
  • need be a secret to you two.
  • She took it, with an air of eager curiosity, and looked at the seal,
  • ostentatiously coroneted; and at the superscription, reading out, To
  • Robert Lovelace, Esq.--Ay, Madam--Ay, Miss, that's my name, [giving
  • myself an air, though I had told it to them before,] I am not ashamed of
  • it. My wife's maiden name--unmarried name, I should rather say--fool
  • that I am!--and I rubbed my cheek for vexation [Fool enough in
  • conscience, Jack!] was Harlowe--Clarissa Harlowe--you heard me call her
  • my Clarissa--
  • I did--but thought it to be a feigned or love-name, said Miss Rawlins.
  • I wonder what is Miss Rawlins's love-name, Jack. Most of the fair
  • romancers have in their early womanhood chosen love-names. No parson
  • ever gave more real names, than I have given fictitious ones. And to
  • very good purpose: many a sweet dear has answered me a letter for the
  • sake of owning a name which her godmother never gave her.
  • No--it was her real name, I said.
  • I bid her read out the whole letter. If the spelling be not exact, Miss
  • Rawlins, said I, you will excuse it; the writer is a lord. But, perhaps,
  • I may not show it to my spouse; for if those I have left with her have no
  • effect upon her, neither will this: and I shall not care to expose my
  • Lord M. to her scorn. Indeed I begin to be quite careless of
  • consequences.
  • Miss Rawlins, who could not but be pleased with this mark of my
  • confidence, looked as if she pitied me.
  • And here thou mayest read the letter, No. III.
  • ***
  • TO ROBERT LOVELACE, ESQ.
  • M. HALL, WEDN. JUNE 7.
  • COUSIN LOVELACE,
  • I think you might have found time to let us know of your nuptials being
  • actually solemnized. I might have expected this piece of civility from
  • you. But perhaps the ceremony was performed at the very time that you
  • asked me to be your lady's father--but I should be angry if I proceed in
  • my guesses--and little said is soon amended.
  • But I can tell you, that Lady Betty Lawrance, whatever Lady Sarah does,
  • will not so soon forgive you, as I have done. Women resent slights
  • longer than men. You that know so much of the sex (I speak it not,
  • however, to your praise) might have known that. But never was you before
  • acquainted with a lady of such an amiable character. I hope there will
  • be but one soul between you. I have before now said, that I will
  • disinherit you, and settle all I can upon her, if you prove not a good
  • husband to her.
  • May this marriage be crowned with a great many fine boys (I desire no
  • girls) to build up again a family so antient! The first boy shall take
  • my surname by act of parliament. That is my will.
  • Lady Betty and niece Charlotte will be in town about business before you
  • know where you are. They long to pay their compliments to your fair
  • bride. I suppose you will hardly be at The Lawn when they get to town;
  • because Greme informs me, you have sent no orders there for your lady's
  • accommodation.
  • Pritchard has all things in readiness for signing. I will take no
  • advantage of your slights. Indeed I am too much used to them--more
  • praise to my patience than to your complaisance, however.
  • One reason for Lady Betty's going up, as I may tell you under the rose,
  • is, to buy some suitable presents for Lady Sarah and all of us to make
  • on this agreeable occasion.
  • We would have blazed it away, could we have had timely notice, and
  • thought it would have been agreeable to all round. The like occasions
  • don't happen every day.
  • My most affectionate compliments and congratulations to my new niece,
  • conclude me, for the present, in violent pain, that with all your
  • heroicalness would make you mad,
  • Your truly affectionate uncle,
  • M.
  • ***
  • This letter clench'd the nail. Not but that, Miss Rawlins said, she saw
  • I had been a wild gentleman; and, truly she thought so the moment she
  • beheld me.
  • They began to intercede for my spouse, (so nicely had I turned the
  • tables;) and that I would not go abroad and disappoint a reconciliation
  • so much wished for on one side, and such desirable prospects on the other
  • in my own family.
  • Who knows, thought I to myself, but more may come of this plot, than I
  • had even promised myself? What a happy man shall I be, if these women
  • can be brought to join to carry my marriage into consummation!
  • Ladies, you are exceedingly good to us both. I should have some hopes,
  • if my unhappily nice spouse could be brought to dispense with the
  • unnatural oath she has laid me under. You see what my case is. Do you
  • think I may not insist upon her absolving me from this abominable oath?
  • Will you be so good as to give your advice, that one apartment may serve
  • for a man and his wife at the hour of retirement?--[Modestly put,
  • Belford!--And let me here observe, that few rakes would find a language
  • so decent as to engage modest women to talk with him in, upon such
  • subjects.]
  • They both simpered, and looked upon one another.
  • These subjects always make women simper, at least. No need but of the
  • most delicate hints to them. A man who is gross in a woman's company,
  • ought to be knocked down with a club: for, like so many musical
  • instruments, touch but a single wire, and the dear souls are sensible
  • all over.
  • To be sure, Miss Rawlins learnedly said, playing with her fan, a casuist
  • would give it, that the matrimonial vow ought to supercede any other
  • obligation.
  • Mrs. Moore, for her part, was of opinion, that, if the lady owned herself
  • to be a wife, she ought to behave like one.
  • Whatever be my luck, thought I, with this all-eyed fair-one, any other
  • woman in the world, from fifteen to five-and-twenty, would be mine upon
  • my own terms before the morning.
  • And now, that I may be at hand to take all advantages, I will endeavour,
  • said I to myself, to make sure of good quarters.
  • I am your lodger, Mrs. Moore, in virtue of the earnest I have given you
  • for these apartments, and for any one you can spare above for my
  • servants. Indeed for all you have to spare--For who knows what my
  • spouse's brother may attempt? I will pay you to your own demand; and
  • that for a month or two certain, (board included,) as I shall or shall
  • not be your hindrance. Take that as a pledge; or in part of payment--
  • offering her a thirty pound bank note.
  • She declined taking it; desiring she might consult the lady first;
  • adding, that she doubted not my honour; and that she would not let her
  • apartments to any other person, whom she knew not something of, while I
  • and the lady were here.
  • The Lady! The Lady! from both women's mouth's continually (which still
  • implied a doubt in their hearts): and not Your Spouse, and Your Lady,
  • Sir.
  • I never met with such women, thought I:--so thoroughly convinced but this
  • moment, yet already doubting--I am afraid I have a couple of skeptics to
  • deal with.
  • I knew no reason, I said, for my wife to object to my lodging in the same
  • house with her here, any more than in town, at Mrs. Sinclair's. But were
  • she to make such objection, I would not quit possession since it was not
  • unlikely that the same freakish disorder which brought her to Hampstead,
  • might carry her absolutely out of my knowledge.
  • They both seemed embarrassed; and looked upon one another; yet with such
  • an air, as if they thought there was reason in what I said. And I
  • declared myself her boarder, as well as lodger; and dinner-time
  • approaching, was not denied to be the former.
  • LETTER XXV
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • I thought it was now high time to turn my whole mind to my beloved; who
  • had had full leisure to weigh the contents of the letters I had left with
  • her.
  • I therefore requested Mrs. Moore to step in, and desire to know whether
  • she would be pleased to admit me to attend her in her apartment, on
  • occasion of the letters I had left with her; or whether she would favour
  • me with her company in the dining-room?
  • Mrs. Moore desired Miss Rawlins to accompany her in to the lady. They
  • tapped at the door, and were both admitted.
  • I cannot but stop here for one minute to remark, though against myself,
  • upon that security which innocence gives, that nevertheless had better
  • have in it a greater mixture of the serpent with the dove. For here,
  • heedless of all I could say behind her back, because she was satisfied
  • with her own worthiness, she permitted me to go on with my own story,
  • without interruption, to persons as great strangers to her as me; and
  • who, as strangers to both, might be supposed to lean to the side most
  • injured; and that, as I managed it, was to mine. A dear, silly soul,
  • thought I, at the time, to depend upon the goodness of her own heart,
  • when the heart cannot be seen into but by its actions; and she, to
  • appearance, a runaway, an eloper, from a tender, a most indulgent
  • husband!--To neglect to cultivate the opinion of individuals, when the
  • whole world is governed by appearance!
  • Yet what can be expected of an angel under twenty?--She has a world of
  • knowledge:--knowledge speculative, as I may say, but no experience.--How
  • should she?--Knowledge by theory only is a vague, uncertain light: a Will
  • o' the Wisp, which as often misleads the doubting mind, as puts it right.
  • There are many things in the world, could a moralizer say, that would
  • afford inexpressible pleasure to a reflecting mind, were it not for the
  • mixture they come to us with. To be graver still, I have seen parents,
  • [perhaps my own did so,] who delighted in those very qualities in their
  • children while young, the natural consequences of which, (too much
  • indulged and encouraged,) made them, as they grew up, the plague of their
  • hearts.--To bring this home to my present purpose, I must tell thee, that
  • I adore this charming creature for her vigilant prudence; but yet I would
  • not, methinks, wish her, by virtue of that prudence, which is, however,
  • necessary to carry her above the devices of all the rest of the world, to
  • be too wise for mine.
  • My revenge, my sworn revenge, is, nevertheless, (adore her as I will,)
  • uppermost in my heart.--Miss Howe says that my love is a Herodian love.*
  • By my soul, that girl's a witch! I am half sorry to say, that I find a
  • pleasure in playing the tyrant over what I love. Call it an ungenerous
  • pleasure, if thou wilt: softer hearts than mine know it. The women, to a
  • woman, know it, and show it too, whenever they are trusted with power.
  • And why should it be thought strange, that I, who love them so dearly,
  • and study them so much, should catch the infection of them?
  • * See Letter XX. of this volume.
  • LETTER XXVI
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • I will now give thee the substance of the dialogue that passed between
  • the two women and the lady. Wonder not, that a perverse wife makes a
  • listening husband. The event, however, as thou wilt find, justified the
  • old observation, That listners seldom hear good of themselves. Conscious
  • of their own demerits, if I may guess by myself, [There's ingenuousness,
  • Jack!] and fearful of censure, they seldom find themselves disappointed.
  • There is something of sense, after all in these proverbs, in these
  • phrases, in this wisdom of nations.
  • Mrs. Moore was to be the messenger, but Miss Rawlins began the dialogue.
  • Your SPOUSE, Madam,--[Devil!--only to fish for a negative or affirmative
  • declaration.]
  • Cl. My spouse, Madam--
  • Miss R. Mr. Lovelace, Madam, avers that you are married to him; and
  • begs admittance, or your company in the dining-room, to talk upon the
  • subject of the letters he left with you.
  • Cl. He is a poor wicked wretch. Let me beg of you, Madam, to favour me
  • with your company as often as possible while he is hereabouts, and I
  • remain here.
  • Miss R. I shall with pleasure attend you, Madam: but, methinks, I could
  • wish you would see the gentleman, and hear what he has to say on the
  • subject of the letters.
  • Cl. My case is a hard, a very hard one--I am quite bewildered!-I know
  • not what to do!--I have not a friend in the world that can or will help
  • me! Yet had none but friends till I knew that man!
  • Miss R. The gentleman neither looks nor talks like a bad man.--Not a
  • very bad man, as men go.
  • As men go! Poor Miss Rawlins, thought I; and dost thou know how men go?
  • Cl. O Madam, you know him not! He can put on the appearance of an
  • angel of light; but has a black, a very black heart!
  • Poor I!--
  • Miss R. I could not have thought it, truly! But men are very
  • deceitful, now-a-days.
  • Now-a-days!--A fool!--Have not her history-books told her that they were
  • always so?
  • Mrs. Moore, sighing. I have found it so, I am sure, to my cost!--
  • Who knows but in her time poor goody Moore may have met with a Lovelace,
  • or a Belford, or some such vile fellow? My little harum-scarum beauty
  • knows not what strange histories every woman living, who has had the
  • least independence of will, could tell her, were such to be as
  • communicative as she is. But here's the thing--I have given her cause
  • enough of offence; but not enough to make her hold her tongue.
  • Cl. As to the letters he has left with me, I know not what to say to
  • them: but am resolved never to have any thing to say to him.
  • Miss R. If, Madam, I may be allowed to say so, I think you carry
  • matters very far.
  • Cl. Has he been making a bad cause a good one with you, Madam?--That he
  • can do with those who know him not. Indeed I heard him talking, thought
  • not what he said, and am indifferent about it.--But what account does he
  • give of himself?
  • I was pleased to hear this. To arrest, to stop her passion, thought I,
  • in the height of its career, is a charming presage.
  • Then the busy Miss Rawlins fished on, to find out from her either a
  • confirmation or disavowal of my story--Was Lord M. my uncle? Did I court
  • her at first with the allowance of her friends, her brother excepted?
  • Had I a rencounter with that brother? Was she so persecuted in favour of
  • a very disagreeable man, one Solmes, as to induce her to throw herself
  • into my protection?
  • None of these were denied. All the objections she could have made, were
  • stifled, or kept in, by the considerations, (as she mentioned,) that she
  • should stay there but a little while, and that her story was too long;
  • but Miss Rawlins would not be thus easily answered.
  • Miss R. He says, Madam, that he could not prevail for marriage, till he
  • had consented, under a solemn oath, to separate beds, while your family
  • remained unreconciled.
  • Cl. O the wretch! What can be still in his head, to endeavour to pass
  • these stories upon strangers?
  • So no direct denial, thought I.--Admirable!--All will do by-and-by.
  • Miss R. He has owned that an accidental fire had frightened you very
  • much on Wednesday night--and that--and that--an accidental fire had
  • frightened you--very much frightened you--last Wednesday night!
  • Then, after a short pause--In short, he owned, that he had taken some
  • innocent liberties, which might have led to a breach of the oath you had
  • imposed upon him; and that this was the cause of your displeasure.
  • I would have been glad to see how my charmer then looked.--To be sure she
  • was at a loss in her own mind, to justify herself for resenting so highly
  • an offence so trifling.--She hesitated--did not presently speak.--When
  • she did, she wished that she, (Miss Rawlins,) might never meet with any
  • man who would take such innocent liberties with her.
  • Miss Rawlins pushed further.
  • Your case, to be sure, Madam, is very particular: but if the hope of a
  • reconciliation with your own friends is made more distant by your leaving
  • him, give me leave to say, that 'tis pity--'tis pity--[I suppose the
  • maiden then primm'd, fann'd, and blush'd--'tis pity] the oath cannot be
  • dispensed with; especially as he owns he has not been so strict a liver.
  • I could have gone in and kissed the girl.
  • Cl. You have heard his story. Mine, as I told you before, is too long,
  • and too melancholy: my disorder on seeing the wretch is too great; and my
  • time here is too short, for me to enter upon it. And if he has any end
  • to serve by his own vindication, in which I shall not be a personal
  • sufferer, let him make himself appear as white as an angel, with all my
  • heart.
  • My love for her, and the excellent character I gave her, were then
  • pleaded.
  • Cl. Specious seducer!--Only tell me if I cannot get away from him by
  • some back way?
  • How my heart then went pit-a-pat, to speak in the female dialect.
  • Cl. Let me look out--[I heard the sash lifted up.]--Whither does that
  • path lead? Is there no possibility of getting to a coach? Surely he
  • must deal with some fiend, or how could he have found me out? Cannot I
  • steal to some neighbouring house, where I may be concealed till I can get
  • quite away? You are good people!--I have not been always among such!--
  • O help me, help me, Ladies! [with a voice of impatience,] or I am ruined!
  • Then pausing, Is that the way to Hendon? [pointing, I suppose.] Is
  • Hendon a private place?--The Hampstead coach, I am told, will carry
  • passengers thither.
  • Mrs. Moore. I have an honest friend at Mill-Hill, [Devil fetch her!
  • thought I,] where, if such be your determination, Madam, and if you think
  • yourself in danger, you may be safe, I believe.
  • Cl. Any where, if I can but escape from this man! Whither does that
  • path lead, out yonder?--What is that town on the right hand called?
  • Mrs. Moore. Highgate, Madam.
  • Miss R. On the side of the heath is a little village, called North-end.
  • A kinswoman of mine lives there. But her house is small. I am not sure
  • she could accommodate such a lady.
  • Devil take her too! thought I,--I imagined that I had made myself a
  • better interest in these women. But the whole sex love plotting--and
  • plotters too, Jack.
  • Cl. A barn, an outhouse, a garret, will be a palace to me, if it will
  • but afford me a refuge from this man!
  • Her senses, thought I, are much livelier than mine.--What a devil have
  • I done, that she should be so very implacable? I told thee, Belford, all
  • I did: Was there any thing in it so very much amiss? Such prospects of a
  • family reconciliation before her too! To be sure she is a very sensible
  • lady!
  • She then espied my new servant walking under the window, and asked if he
  • were not one of mine?
  • Will. was on the look-out for old Grimes, [so is the fellow called whom
  • my beloved has dispatched to Miss Howe.] And being told that the man she
  • saw was my servant; I see, said she, that there is no escaping, unless
  • you, Madam, [to Miss Rawlins, I suppose,] can befriend me till I can get
  • farther. I have no doubt that the fellow is planted about the house to
  • watch my steps. But the wicked wretch his master has no right to
  • controul me. He shall not hinder me from going where I please. I will
  • raise the town upon him, if he molests me. Dear Ladies, is there no
  • back-door for me to get out at while you hold him in talk?
  • Miss R. Give me leave to ask you, Madam, Is there no room to hope for
  • accommodation? Had you not better see him? He certainly loves you
  • dearly: he is a fine gentleman; you may exasperate him, and make matters
  • more unhappy for yourself.
  • Cl. O Mrs. Moore! O Miss Rawlins! you know not the man! I wish not to
  • see his face, nor to exchange another word with him as long as I live.
  • Mrs. Moore. I don't find, Miss Rawlins, that the gentleman has
  • misrepresented any thing. You see, Madam, [to my Clarissa,] how
  • respectful he is; not to come in till permitted. He certainly loves you
  • dearly. Pray, Madam, let him talk to you, as he wishes to do, on the
  • subject of his letters.
  • Very kind of Mrs. Moore!--Mrs. Moore, thought I, is a very good woman. I
  • did not curse her then.
  • Miss Rawlins said something; but so low that I could not hear what it
  • was. Thus it was answered.
  • Cl. I am greatly distressed! I know not what to do!--But, Mrs. Moore,
  • be so good as to give his letters to him--here they are.--Be pleased to
  • tell him, that I wish him and Lady Betty and Miss Montague a happy
  • meeting. He never can want excuses to them for what has happened, any
  • more than pretences to those he would delude. Tell him, that he has
  • ruined me in the opinion of my own friends. I am for that reason the
  • less solicitous how I appear to his.
  • Mrs. Moore then came to me; and I, being afraid that something would pass
  • mean time between the other two, which I should not like, took the
  • letters, and entered the room, and found them retired into the closet; my
  • beloved whispering with an air of earnestness to Miss Rawlins, who was
  • all attention.
  • Her back was towards me; and Miss Rawlins, by pulling her sleeve, giving
  • intimation of my being there--Can I have no retirement uninvaded, Sir,
  • said she, with indignation, as if she were interrupted in some talk her
  • heart was in?--What business have you here, or with me?--You have your
  • letters; have you not?
  • Lovel. I have, my dear; and let me beg of you to consider what you are
  • about. I every moment expect Captain Tomlinson here. Upon my soul, I
  • do. He has promised to keep from your uncle what has happened: but what
  • will he think if he find you hold in this strange humour?
  • Cl. I will endeavour, Sir, to have patience with you for a moment or
  • two, while I ask you a few questions before this lady, and before Mrs.
  • Moore, [who just then came in,] both of whom you have prejudiced in your
  • favour by your specious stories:--Will you say, Sir, that we are married
  • together? Lay your hand upon your heart, and answer me, am I your wedded
  • wife?
  • I am gone too far, thought I, to give up for such a push as this, home
  • one as it is.
  • My dearest soul! how can you put such a question? It is either for your
  • honour or my own, that it should be doubted?--Surely, surely, Madam, you
  • cannot have attended to the contents of Captain Tomlinson's letter.
  • She complained often of want of spirits throughout our whole contention,
  • and of weakness of person and mind, from the fits she had been thrown
  • into: but little reason had she for this complaint, as I thought, who was
  • able to hold me to it, as she did. I own that I was excessively
  • concerned for her several times.
  • You and I! Vilest of Men!--
  • My name is Lovelace, Madam--
  • Therefore it is that I call you the vilest of men. [Was this pardonable,
  • Jack!]--You and I know the truth, the whole truth.--I want not to clear
  • up my reputation with these gentlewomen:--that is already lost with every
  • one I had most reason to value: but let me have this new specimen of what
  • you are capable of--say, wretch, (say, Lovelace, if thou hadst rather,)
  • art thou really and truly my wedded husband?--Say; answer without
  • hesitation.
  • She trembled with impatient indignation; but had a wildness in her
  • manner, which I took some advantage of, in order to parry this cursed
  • thrust. And a cursed thrust it was; since, had I positively averred it,
  • she would never have believed any thing I said: and had I owned that I
  • was not married, I had destroyed my own plot, as well with the women as
  • with her; and could have no pretence for pursuing her, or hindering her
  • from going wheresoever she pleased. Not that I was ashamed to aver it,
  • had it been consistent with policy. I would not have thee think me such
  • a milk-sop neither.
  • Lovel. My dearest love, how wildly you talk! What would you have me
  • answer? It is necessary that I should answer? May I not re-appeal this
  • to your own breast, as well as to Captain Tomlinson's treaty and letter?
  • You know yourself how matters stand between us.--And Captain Tomlinson--
  • Cl. O wretch! Is this an answer to my question? Say, are we married,
  • or are we not?
  • Lovel. What makes a marriage, we all know. If it be the union of two
  • hearts, [there was a turn, Jack!] to my utmost grief, I must say that we
  • are not; since now I see you hate me. If it be the completion of
  • marriage, to my confusion and regret, I must own we are not. But, my
  • dear, will you be pleased to consider what answer half a dozen people
  • whence you came, could give to your question? And do not now, in the
  • disorder of your mind, and the height of passion, bring into question
  • before these gentlewomen a point you have acknowledged before those who
  • know us better.
  • I would have whispered her about the treaty with her uncle, and about the
  • contents of the Captain's letter; but, retreating, and with a rejecting
  • hand, Keep thy distance, man, cried the dear insolent--to thine own heart
  • I appeal, since thou evadest me thus pitifully!--I own no marriage with
  • thee!--Bear witness, Ladies, I do not. And cease to torment me, cease to
  • follow me.--Surely, surely, faulty as I have been, I have not deserved to
  • be thus persecuted!--I resume, therefore, my former language: you have no
  • right to pursue me: you know you have not: begone then, and leave me to
  • make the best of my hard lot. O my dear, cruel father! said she, in a
  • violent fit of grief [falling upon her knees, and clasping her uplifted
  • hands together] thy heavy curse is completed upon thy devoted daughter!
  • I am punished, dreadfully punished, by the very wretch in whom I had
  • placed my wicked confidence!
  • By my soul, Belford, the little witch with her words, but more by her
  • manner, moved me! Wonder not then that her action, her grief, her tears,
  • set the women into the like compassionate manifestations.
  • Had I not a cursed task of it?
  • The two women withdrew to the further end of the room, and whispered, a
  • strange case! There is no phrensy here--I just heard said.
  • The charming creature threw her handkerchief over her head and neck,
  • continuing kneeling, her back towards me, and her face hid upon a chair,
  • and repeatedly sobbed with grief and passion.
  • I took this opportunity to step to the women to keep them steady.
  • You see, Ladies, [whispering,] what an unhappy man I am! You see what a
  • spirit this dear creature has!--All, all owing to her implacable
  • relations, and to her father's curse.--A curse upon them all! they have
  • turned the head of the most charming woman in the world!
  • Ah! Sir, Sir, replied Miss Rawlins, whatever be the fault of her
  • relations, all is not as it should be between you and her. 'Tis plain
  • she does not think herself married: 'tis plain she does not: and if you
  • have any value for the poor lady, and would not totally deprive her of
  • her senses, you had better withdraw, and leave to time and cooler
  • consideration the event in your favour.
  • She will compel me to this at last, I fear, Miss Rawlins; I fear she
  • will; and then we are both undone: for I cannot live without her; she
  • knows it too well: and she has not a friend who will look upon her: this
  • also she knows. Our marriage, when her uncle's friend comes, will be
  • proved incontestably. But I am ashamed to think I have given her room
  • to believe it no marriage: that's what she harps upon!
  • Well, 'tis a strange case, a very strange one, said Miss Rawlins; and was
  • going to say further, when the angry beauty, coming towards the door,
  • said, Mrs. Moore, I beg a word with you. And they both stepped into the
  • dining-room.
  • I saw her just before put a parcel into her pocket; and followed them
  • out, for fear she should slip away; and stepping to the stairs, that she
  • might not go by me, Will., cried I, aloud [though I knew he was not near]
  • --Pray, child, to a maid, who answered, call either of my servants to me.
  • She then came up to me with a wrathful countenance: do you call your
  • servant, Sir, to hinder me, between you, from going where I please?
  • Don't, my dearest life, misinterpret every thing I do. Can you think me
  • so mean and unworthy as to employ a servant to constrain you?--I call him
  • to send to the public-houses, or inns in this town, to inquire after
  • Captain Tomlinson, who may have alighted at some one of them, and be now,
  • perhaps, needlessly adjusting his dress; and I would have him come, were
  • he to be without clothes, God forgive me! for I am stabbed to the heart
  • by your cruelty.
  • Answer was returned, that neither of my servants was in the way.
  • Not in the way, said I!--Whither can the dogs be gone?
  • O Sir! with a scornful air; not far, I'll warrant. One of them was under
  • the window just now; according to order, I suppose, to watch my steps--
  • but I will do what I please, and go where I please; and that to your
  • face.
  • God forbid, that I should hinder you in any thing that you may do with
  • safety to yourself!
  • Now I verily believe that her design was to slip out, in pursuance of the
  • closet-whispering between her and Miss Rawlins; perhaps to Miss Rawlins's
  • house.
  • She then stept back to Mrs. Moore, and gave her something, which proved
  • to be a diamond ring, and desired her [not whisperingly, but with an air
  • of defiance to me] that that might be a pledge for her, till she defrayed
  • her demands; which she should soon find means to do; having no more money
  • about her than she might have occasion for before she came to an
  • acquaintance's.
  • Mrs. Moore would have declined taking it; but she would not be denied;
  • and then, wiping her eyes, she put on her gloves--nobody has a right to
  • stop me, said she!--I will go!--Whom should I be afraid of?--Her very
  • question, charming creature! testifying her fear.
  • I beg pardon, Madam, [turning to Mrs. Moore, and courtesying,] for the
  • trouble I have given you.--I beg pardon, Madam, to Miss Rawlins,
  • [courtesying likewise to her,]--you may both hear of me in a happier
  • hour, if such a one fall to my lot--and God bless you both!--struggling
  • with her tears till she sobbed--and away was tripping.
  • I stepped to the door: I put it to; and setting my back against it, took
  • her struggling hand--My dearest life! my angel! said I, why will you thus
  • distress me?--Is this the forgiveness which you so solemnly promised?--
  • Unhand me, Sir!--You have no business with me! You have no right over
  • me! You know you have not.
  • But whither, whither, my dearest love, would you go!--Think you not that
  • I will follow you, were it to the world's end!--Whither would you go?
  • Well do you ask me, whither I would go, who have been the occasion that I
  • have not a friend left!--But God, who knows my innocence, and my upright
  • intentions, will not wholly abandon me when I am out of your power; but
  • while I am in it, I cannot expect a gleam of the divine grace or favour
  • to reach me.
  • How severe is this!--How shockingly severe!--Out of your presence, my
  • angry fair-one, I can neither hope for the one nor the other. As my
  • cousin Montague, in the letter you have read, observes, You are my polar
  • star and my guide, and if ever I am to be happy, either here or
  • hereafter, it must be in and by you.
  • She would then have opened the door. But I, respectfully opposing her,
  • Begone, man! Begone, Mr. Lovelace! said she, stop not in my way. If you
  • would not that I should attempt the window, give me passage by the door;
  • for, once more, you have no right to detain me.
  • Your resentments, my dearest life, I will own to be well grounded. I
  • will acknowledge that I have been all in fault. On my knee, [and down I
  • dropt,] I ask your pardon. And can you refuse to ratify your own
  • promise? Look forward to the happy prospect before us. See you not my
  • Lord M. and Lady Sarah longing to bless you, for blessing me, and their
  • whole family? Can you take no pleasure in the promised visit of Lady
  • Betty and my cousin Montague? And in the protection they offer you, if
  • you are dissatisfied with mine? Have you no wish to see your uncle's
  • friend? Stay only till Captain Tomlinson comes. Receive from him the
  • news of your uncle's compliance with the wishes of both.
  • She seemed altogether distressed; was ready to sink; and forced to lean
  • against the wainscot, as I kneeled at her feet. A stream of tears at
  • last burst from her less indignant eyes. Good heaven! said she, lifting
  • up her lovely face, and clasped hands, what is at last to be my destiny?
  • Deliver me from this dangerous man; and direct me--I know not what to do,
  • what I can do, nor what I ought to do!
  • The women, as I had owned our marriage to be but half completed, heard
  • nothing in this whole scene to contradict (not flagrantly to contradict)
  • what I had asserted. They believed they saw in her returning temper, and
  • staggered resolution, a love for me, which her indignation had before
  • suppressed; and they joined to persuade her to tarry till the Captain
  • came, and to hear his proposals; representing the dangers to which she
  • would be exposed; the fatigues she might endure; a lady of her
  • appearance, unguarded, unprotected. On the other hand they dwelt upon my
  • declared contrition, and on my promises; for the performance of which
  • they offered to be bound. So much had my kneeling humility affected
  • them.
  • Women, Jack, tacitly acknowledge the inferiority of their sex, in the
  • pride they take to behold a kneeling lover at their feet.
  • She turned from me, and threw herself into a chair.
  • I arose and approached her with reverence. My dearest creature, said I,
  • and was proceeding, but, with a face glowing with conscious dignity, she
  • interrupted me--Ungenerous, ungrateful Lovelace! You know not the value
  • of the heart you have insulted! Nor can you conceive how much my soul
  • despises your meanness. But meanness must ever be the portion of the
  • man, who can act vilely!
  • The women believing we were likely to be on better terms, retired. The
  • dear perverse opposed their going; but they saw I was desirous of their
  • absence; and when they had withdrawn, I once more threw myself at her
  • feet, and acknowledged my offences; implored her forgiveness for this one
  • time, and promised the most exact circumspection for the future.
  • It was impossible for her she said to keep her memory and forgive me.
  • What hadst thou seen in the conduct of Clarissa Harlowe, that should
  • encourage such an insult upon her as thou didst dare to make? How meanly
  • must thou think of her, that thou couldst presume to be so guilty, and
  • expect her to be so weak as to forgive thee?
  • I besought her to let me read over to her Captain Tomlinson's letter. I
  • was sure it was impossible she could have given it the requisite
  • attention.
  • I have given it the requisite attention, said she; and the other letters
  • too. So that what I say is upon deliberation. And what have I to fear
  • from my brother and sister? They can but complete the ruin of my
  • fortunes with my father and uncles. Let them and welcome. You, Sir, I
  • thank you, have lowered my fortunes; but, I bless God, that my mind is
  • not sunk with my fortunes. It is, on the contrary, raised above fortune,
  • and above you; and for half a word they shall have the estate they envied
  • me for, and an acquittal from me of all the expectations from my family
  • that may make them uneasy.
  • I lifted up my hands and eyes in silent admiration of her.
  • My brother, Sir, may think me ruined; to the praise of your character, he
  • may think it impossible to be with you and be innocent. You have but too
  • well justified their harshest censures by every part of your conduct.
  • But now that I have escaped from you, and that I am out of the reach of
  • your mysterious devices, I will wrap myself up in mine own innocence,
  • [and then the passionate beauty folded her arms about herself,] and leave
  • to time, and to my future circumspection, the re-establishment of my
  • character. Leave me then, Sir, pursue me not!--
  • Good Heaven! [interrupting her]--and all this, for what?--Had I not
  • yielded to your entreaties, (forgive me, Madam,) you could not have
  • carried farther your resentments--
  • Wretch! Was it not crime enough to give occasion for those entreaties?
  • Wouldst thou make a merit to me, that thou didst not utterly ruin her
  • whom thou oughtest to have protected? Begone, man! (turning from me, her
  • face crimsoned over with passion.)--See me no more!--I cannot bear thee
  • in my sight!--
  • Dearest, dearest creature!
  • If I forgive thee, Lovelace--And there she stopped.--To endeavour,
  • proceeded she, to endeavour by premeditation, by low contrivances, by
  • cries of Fire! to terrify a poor creature who had consented to take a
  • wretched chance with thee for life!
  • For Heaven's sake,--offering to take her repulsing hand, as she was
  • flying from me towards the closet.
  • What hast thou to do to plead for the sake of Heaven in thy favour!--O
  • darkest of human minds!
  • Then turning from me, wiping her eyes, and again turning towards me, but
  • her sweet face half aside, What difficulties hast thou involved me in!
  • That thou hadst a plain path before thee, after thou hadst betrayed me
  • into thy power.--At once my mind takes in the whole of thy crooked
  • behaviour; and if thou thinkest of Clarissa Harlowe as her proud heart
  • tells her thou oughtest to think of her, thou wilt seek thy fortunes
  • elsewhere. How often hast thou provoked me to tell thee, that my soul
  • is above thee!
  • For Heaven's sake, Madam, for a soul's sake, which it is in your power
  • to save from perdition, forgive me the past offence. I am the greatest
  • villain on earth if it was a premeditated one; yet I presume not to
  • excuse myself. On your mercy I throw myself. I will not offer at any
  • plea but that of penitence. See but Captain Tomlinson.--See but Lady
  • Betty and my cousin; let them plead for me; let them be guarantees for
  • my honour.
  • If Captain Tomlinson come while I stay here, I may see him; but as for
  • you, Sir--
  • Dearest creature! let me beg of you not to aggravate my offence to the
  • Captain when he comes. Let me beg of you--
  • What askest thou? It is not that I shall be of party against myself?
  • That I shall palliate--
  • Do not charge me, Madam, interrupted I, with villainous premeditation!
  • --Do not give such a construction to my offence as may weaken your
  • uncle's opinion--as may strengthen your brother's--
  • She flung from me to the further end of the room, [she could go no
  • further,] and just then Mrs. Moore came up, and told her that dinner was
  • ready, and that she had prevailed upon Miss Rawlins to give her her
  • company.
  • You must excuse me, Mrs. Moore, said she. Miss Rawlins I hope also will
  • --but I cannot eat--I cannot go down. As for you, Sir, I suppose you
  • will think it right to depart hence; at least till the gentleman comes
  • whom you expect.
  • I respectfully withdrew into the next room, that Mrs. Moore might
  • acquaint her, (I durst not myself,) that I was her lodger and boarder,
  • as, whisperingly, I desired that she would; and meeting Miss Rawlins in
  • the passage, Dearest Miss Rawlins, said I, stand my friend; join with Mrs.
  • Moore to pacify my spouse, if she has any new flights upon my having
  • taken lodgings, and intending to board here. I hope she will have more
  • generosity than to think of hindering a gentlewoman from letting her
  • lodgings.
  • I suppose Mrs. Moore, (whom I left with my fair-one,) had apprized her of
  • this before Miss Rawlins went in; for I heard her say, while I withheld
  • Miss Rawlins,--'No, indeed: he is much mistaken--surely he does not think
  • I will.'
  • They both expostulated with her, as I could gather from bits and scraps
  • of what they said; for they spoke so low, that I could not hear any
  • distinct sentence, but from the fair perverse, whose anger made her
  • louder. And to this purpose I heard her deliver herself in answer to
  • different parts of their talk to her:--'Good Mrs. Moore, dear Miss
  • Rawlins, press me no further:--I cannot sit down at table with him!'
  • They said something, as I suppose in my behalf--'O the insinuating
  • wretch! What defence have I against a man, who, go where I will, can
  • turn every one, even of the virtuous of my sex, in his favour?'
  • After something else said, which I heard not distinctly--'This is
  • execrable cunning!--Were you to know his wicked heart, he is not without
  • hope of engaging you two good persons to second him in the vilest of his
  • machinations.'
  • How came she, (thought I, at the instant,) by all this penetration? My
  • devil surely does not play me booty. If I thought he did, I would marry,
  • and live honest, to be even with him.
  • I suppose then they urged the plea which I hinted to Miss Rawlins at
  • going in, that she would not be Mrs. Moore's hindrance; for thus she
  • expressed herself--'He will no doubt pay you your own price. You need
  • not question his liberality; but one house cannot hold us.--Why, if it
  • would, did I fly from him, to seek refuge among strangers?'
  • Then, in answer to somewhat else they pleaded--''Tis a mistake, Madam;
  • I am not reconciled to him, I will believe nothing he says. Has he not
  • given you a flagrant specimen of what a man he is, and of what his is
  • capable, by the disguises you saw him in? My story is too long, and my
  • stay here will be but short; or I could convince you that my resentments
  • against him are but too well founded.'
  • I suppose that they pleaded for her leave for my dining with them; for
  • she said--'I have nothing to say to that: it is your own house, Mrs.
  • Moore--it is your own table--you may admit whom you please to it, only
  • leave me at my liberty to choose my company.'
  • Then, in answer, as I suppose, to their offer of sending her up a plate--
  • 'A bit of bread, if you please, and a glass of water; that's all I can
  • swallow at present. I am really very much discomposed. Saw you not how
  • bad I was? Indignation only could have supported my spirits!--
  • 'I have no objections to his dining with you, Madam;' added she, in
  • reply, I suppose, to a farther question of the same nature--'But I will
  • not stay a night in the same house where he lodges.'
  • I presume Miss Rawlins had told her that she would not stay dinner: for
  • she said,--'Let me not deprive Mrs. Moore of your company, Miss Rawlins.
  • You will not be displeased with his talk. He can have no design upon
  • you.'
  • Then I suppose they pleaded what I might say behind her back, to make my
  • own story good:--'I care not what he says or what he thinks of me.
  • Repentance and amendment are all the harm I wish him, whatever becomes of
  • me!'
  • By her accent she wept when she spoke these last words.
  • They came out both of them wiping their eyes; and would have persuaded me
  • to relinquish the lodgings, and to depart till her uncle's friend came.
  • But I knew better. I did not care to trust the Devil, well as she and
  • Miss Howe suppose me to be acquainted with him, for finding her out
  • again, if once more she escaped me.
  • What I am most afraid of is, that she will throw herself among her own
  • relations; and, if she does, I am confident they will not be able to
  • withstand her affecting eloquence. But yet, as thou'lt see, the
  • Captain's letter to me is admirably calculated to obviate my
  • apprehensions on this score; particularly in that passage where it is
  • said, that her uncle thinks not himself at liberty to correspond directly
  • with her, or to receive applications from her--but through Captain
  • Tomlinson, as is strongly implied.*
  • * See Letter XXIV. of this volume.
  • I must own, (notwithstanding the revenge I have so solemnly vowed,) that
  • I would very fain have made for her a merit with myself in her returning
  • favour, and have owed as little as possible to the mediation of Captain
  • Tomlinson. My pride was concerned in this: and this was one of my
  • reasons for not bringing him with me.--Another was, that, if I were
  • obliged to have recourse to his assistance, I should be better able, (by
  • visiting without him,) to direct him what to say or do, as I should find
  • out the turn of her humour.
  • I was, however, glad at my heart that Mrs. Moore came up so seasonably
  • with notice that dinner was ready. The fair fugitive was all in all.
  • She had the excuse for withdrawing, I had time to strengthen myself; the
  • Captain had time to come; and the lady to cool.--Shakspeare advises
  • well:
  • Oppose not rage, whilst rage is in its force;
  • But give it way awhile, and let it waste.
  • The rising deluge is not stopt with dams;
  • Those it o'erbears, and drowns the hope of harvest.
  • But, wisely manag'd, its divided strength
  • Is sluic'd in channels, and securely drain'd:
  • And when its force is spent, and unsupply'd,
  • The residue with mounds may be restrain'd,
  • And dry-shod we may pass the naked ford.
  • I went down with the women to dinner. Mrs. Moore sent her fair boarder
  • up a plate, but she only ate a little bit of bread, and drank a glass of
  • water. I doubted not but she would keep her word, when it was once gone
  • out. Is she not an Harlowe? She seems to be enuring herself to
  • hardships, which at the worst she can never know; since, though she
  • should ultimately refuse to be obliged to me, or (to express myself more
  • suitable to my own heart,) to oblige me, every one who sees her must
  • befriend her.
  • But let me ask thee, Belford, Art thou not solicitous for me in relation
  • to the contents of the letter which the angry beauty had written and
  • dispatched away by man and horse; and for what may be Miss Howe's answer
  • to it? Art thou not ready to inquire, Whether it be not likely that Miss
  • Howe, when she knows of her saucy friend's flight, will be concerned
  • about her letter, which she must know could not be at Wilson's till after
  • that flight, and so, probably, would fall into my hands?--
  • All these things, as thou'lt see in the sequel, are provided for with as
  • much contrivance as human foresight can admit.
  • I have already told thee that Will. is upon the lookout for old Grimes--
  • old Grimes is, it seems, a gossiping, sottish rascal; and if Will. can
  • but light of him, I'll answer for the consequence; For has not Will. been
  • my servant upwards of seven years?
  • LETTER XXVII
  • MR. LOVELACE
  • [IN CONTINUATION.]
  • We had at dinner, besides Miss Rawlins, a young widow-niece of Mrs.
  • Moore, who is come to stay a month with her aunt--Bevis her name; very
  • forward, very lively, and a great admirer of me, I assure you;--hanging
  • smirkingly upon all I said; and prepared to approve of every word before
  • I spoke: and who, by the time we had half-dined, (by the help of what she
  • had collected before,) was as much acquainted with our story as either of
  • the other two.
  • As it behoved me to prepare them in my favour against whatever might come
  • from Miss Howe, I improved upon the hint I had thrown out above-stairs
  • against that mischief-making lady. I represented her to be an arrogant
  • creature, revengeful, artful, enterprising, and one who, had she been a
  • man, would have sworn and cursed, and committed rapes, and played the
  • devil, as far as I knew: [I have no doubt of it, Jack!] but who, by
  • advantage of a female education, and pride and insolence, I believed was
  • personally virtuous.
  • Mrs. Bevis allowed, that there was a vast deal in education--and in
  • pride too, she said. While Miss Rawlins came with a prudish God forbid
  • that virtue should be owing to education only! However, I declared that
  • Miss Howe was a subtle contriver of mischief; one who had always been my
  • enemy: her motives I knew not: but despised the man whom her mother was
  • desirous she should have, one Hickman; although I did not directly aver
  • that she would rather have had me; yet they all immediately imagined that
  • that was the ground of her animosity to me, and of her envy to my
  • beloved: and it was pity, they said, that so fine a young lady did not
  • see through such a pretended friend.
  • And yet nobody [added I] has more reason than she to know by experience
  • the force of a hatred founded in envy; as I hinted to you above, Mrs.
  • Moore, and to you, Miss Rawlins, in the case of her sister Arabella.
  • I had compliments made to my person and talents on this occasion: which
  • gave me a singular opportunity of displaying my modesty, by disclaiming
  • the merit of them, with a No, indeed!--I should be very vain, Ladies, if
  • I thought so. While thus abusing myself, and exalting Miss Howe, I got
  • their opinion both for modesty and generosity; and had all the graces
  • which I disclaimed thrown in upon me besides.
  • In short, they even oppressed that modesty, which (to speak modestly of
  • myself) their praises created, by disbelieving all I said against myself.
  • And, truly, I must needs say, they have almost persuaded even me myself,
  • that Miss Howe is actually in love with me. I have often been willing to
  • hope this. And who knows but she may? The Captain and I have agreed,
  • that it shall be so insinuated occasionally--And what's thy opinion,
  • Jack? She certainly hates Hickman; and girls who are disengaged seldom
  • hate, though they may not love: and if she had rather have another, why
  • not that other ME? For am I not a smart fellow, and a rake? And do not
  • your sprightly ladies love your smart fellow, and your rakes? And where
  • is the wonder, that the man who could engage the affections of Miss
  • Harlowe, should engage those of a lady (with her* alas's) who would be
  • honoured in being deemed her second?
  • * See Letter XX. of this volume, where Miss Howe says, Alas! my dear, I
  • know you loved him!
  • Nor accuse thou me of SINGULAR vanity in this presumption, Belford. Wert
  • thou to know the secret vanity that lurks in the hearts of those who
  • disguise or cloke it best, thou wouldst find great reason to acquit, at
  • least, to allow for me: since it is generally the conscious over-fulness
  • of conceit, that makes the hypocrite most upon his guard to conceal it.
  • Yet with these fellows, proudly humble as they are, it will break out
  • sometimes in spite of their clokes, though but in self-denying,
  • compliment-begging self-degradation.
  • But now I have undervalued myself, in apologizing to thee on this
  • occasion, let me use another argument in favour of my observation, that
  • the ladies generally prefer a rake to a sober man; and of my presumption
  • upon it, that Miss Howe is in love with me: it is this: common fame says,
  • That Hickman is a very virtuous, a very innocent fellow--a male-virgin, I
  • warrant!--An odd dog I always thought him. Now women, Jack, like not
  • novices. Two maidenheads meeting together in wedlock, the first child
  • must be a fool, is their common aphorism. They are pleased with a love
  • of the sex that is founded in the knowledge of it. Reason good; novices
  • expect more than they can possibly find in the commerce with them. The
  • man who knows them, yet has ardours for them, to borrow a word from Miss
  • Howe,* though those ardours are generally owing more to the devil within
  • him, than to the witch without him, is the man who makes them the highest
  • and most grateful compliment. He knows what to expect, and with what to
  • be satisfied.
  • * See Vol. IV. Letters XXIX. and XXXIV.
  • Then the merit of a woman, in some cases, must be ignorance, whether real
  • or pretended. The man, in these cases, must be an adept. Will it then
  • be wondered at, that a woman prefers a libertine to a novice?--While she
  • expects in the one the confidence she wants, she considers the other and
  • herself as two parallel lines, which, though they run side by side, can
  • never meet.
  • Yet in this the sex is generally mistaken too; for these sheepish fellows
  • are sly. I myself was modest once; and this, as I have elsewhere hinted
  • to thee,* has better enabled me to judge of both sexes.
  • * See Vol. III. Letter XXIII.
  • But to proceed with my narrative:
  • Having thus prepared every one against any letter should come from Miss
  • Howe, and against my beloved's messenger returns, I thought it proper to
  • conclude that subject with a hint, that my spouse could not bear to have
  • any thing said that reflected upon Miss Howe; and, with a deep sigh,
  • added, that I had been made very unhappy more than once by the ill-will
  • of ladies whom I had never offended.
  • The widow Bevis believed that might very easily be. Will. both without
  • and within, [for I intend he shall fall in love with widow Moore's maid,
  • and have saved one hundred pounds in my service, at least,] will be great
  • helps, as things may happen.
  • LETTER XXVIII
  • MR. LOVELACE
  • [IN CONTINUATION.]
  • We had hardly dined, when my coachman, who kept a look-out for Captain
  • Tomlinson, as Will. did for old Grimes, conducted hither that worthy
  • gentleman, attended by one servant, both on horseback. He alighted. I
  • went out to meet him at the door.
  • Thou knowest his solemn appearance, and unblushing freedom; and yet canst
  • not imagine what a dignity the rascal assumed, nor how respectful to him
  • I was.
  • I led him into the parlour, and presented him to the women, and them to
  • him. I thought it highly imported me (as they might still have some
  • diffidences about our marriage, from my fair-one's home-pushed questions
  • on that head) to convince them entirely of the truth of all I had
  • asserted. And how could I do this better, than by dialoguing a little
  • with him before them?
  • Dear Captain, I thought you long; for I have had a terrible conflict with
  • my spouse.
  • Capt. I am sorry that I am later than my intention--my account with my
  • banker--[There's a dog, Jack!] took me up longer time to adjust than I
  • had foreseen [all the time pulling down and stroking his ruffles]: for
  • there was a small difference between us--only twenty pounds, indeed,
  • which I had taken no account of.
  • The rascal has not seen twenty pounds of his own these ten years.
  • Then had we between us the character of the Harlowe family; I railed
  • against them all; the Captain taking his dear friend Mr. John Harlowe's
  • part; with a Not so fast!--not so fast, young gentleman!--and the like
  • free assumptions.
  • He accounted for their animosity by my defiances: no good family, having
  • such a charming daughter, would care to be defied, instead of courted: he
  • must speak his mind: never was a double-tongued man.--He appealed to the
  • ladies, if he were not right?
  • He got them on his side.
  • The correction I had given the brother, he told me, must have aggravated
  • matters.
  • How valiant this made me look to the women!--The sex love us mettled
  • fellows at their hearts.
  • Be that as it would, I should never love any of the family but my spouse;
  • and wanting nothing from them, I would not, but for her sake, have gone
  • so far as I had gone towards a reconciliation.
  • This was very good of me; Mrs. Moore said.
  • Very good indeed; Miss Rawlins.
  • Good;--It is more than good; it is very generous; said the widow.
  • Capt. Why so it is, I must needs say: for I am sensible that Mr.
  • Lovelace has been rudely treated by them all--more rudely, than it could
  • have been imagined a man of his quality and spirit would have put up
  • with. But then, Sir, [turning to me,] I think you are amply rewarded in
  • such a lady; and that you ought to forgive the father for the daughter's
  • sake.
  • Mrs. Moore. Indeed so I think.
  • Miss R. So must every one think who has seen the lady.
  • Widow B. A fine lady, to be sure! But she has a violent spirit; and
  • some very odd humours too, by what I have heard. The value of good
  • husbands is not known till they are lost!
  • Her conscience then drew a sigh from her.
  • Lovel. Nobody must reflect upon my angel!--An angel she is--some little
  • blemishes, indeed, as to her over-hasty spirit, and as to her unforgiving
  • temper. But this she has from the Harlowes; instigated too by that Miss
  • Howe.--But her innumerable excellencies are all her own.
  • Capt. Ay, talk of spirit, there's a spirit, now you have named Miss
  • Howe! [And so I led him to confirm all I had said of that vixen.] Yet
  • she was to be pitied too; looking with meaning at me.
  • As I have already hinted, I had before agreed with him to impute secret
  • love occasionally to Miss Howe, as the best means to invalidate all that
  • might come from her in my disfavour.
  • Capt. Mr. Lovelace, but that I know your modesty, or you could give a
  • reason--
  • Lovel. Looking down, and very modest--I can't think so, Captain--but
  • let us call another cause.
  • Every woman present could look me in the face, so bashful was I.
  • Capt. Well, but as to our present situation--only it mayn't be proper--
  • looking upon me, and round upon the women.
  • Lovel. O Captain, you may say any thing before this company--only,
  • Andrew, [to my new servant, who attended us at table,] do you withdraw:
  • this good girl [looking at the maid-servant] will help us to all we want.
  • Away went Andrew: he wanted not his cue; and the maid seemed pleased at
  • my honour's preference of her.
  • Capt. As to our present situation, I say, Mr. Lovelace--why, Sir, we
  • shall be all untwisted, let me tell you, if my friend Mr. John Harlowe
  • were to know what that is. He would as much question the truth of your
  • being married, as the rest of the family do.
  • Here the women perked up their ears; and were all silent attention.
  • Capt. I asked you before for particulars, Mr. Lovelace; but you
  • declined giving them.--Indeed it may not be proper for me to be
  • acquainted with them.--But I must own, that it is past my comprehension,
  • that a wife can resent any thing a husband can do (that is not a breach
  • of the peace) so far as to think herself justified for eloping from him.
  • Lovel. Captain Tomlinson:--Sir--I do assure you, that I shall be
  • offended--I shall be extremely concerned--if I hear that word eloping
  • mentioned again--
  • Capt. Your nicety and your love, Sir, may make you take offence--but it
  • is my way to call every thing by its proper name, let who will be
  • offended--
  • Thou canst not imagine, Belford, how brave and how independent the rascal
  • looked.
  • Capt. When, young gentleman, you shall think proper to give us
  • particulars, we will find a word for this rash act in so admirable a
  • lady, that shall please you better.--You see, Sir, that being the
  • representative of my dear friend Mr. John Harlowe, I speak as freely as I
  • suppose he would do, if present. But you blush, Sir--I beg your pardon,
  • Mr. Lovelace: it becomes not a modest man to pry into those secrets,
  • which a modest man cannot reveal.
  • I did not blush, Jack; but denied not the compliment, and looked down:
  • the women seemed delighted with my modesty: but the widow Bevis was more
  • inclined to laugh at me than praise me for it.
  • Capt. Whatever be the cause of this step, (I will not again, Sir, call
  • it elopement, since that harsh word wounds your tenderness,) I cannot but
  • express my surprise upon it, when I recollect the affectionate behaviour,
  • to which I was witness between you, when I attended you last. Over-love,
  • Sir, I think you once mention--but over-love [smiling] give me leave to
  • say, Sir, it is an odd cause of quarrel--few ladies--
  • Lovel. Dear Captain!--And I tried to blush.
  • The women also tried; and being more used to it, succeeded better.--Mrs.
  • Bevis indeed has a red-hot countenance, and always blushes.
  • Miss R. It signifies nothing to mince the matter: but the lady above as
  • good as denies her marriage. You know, Sir, that she does; turning to
  • me.
  • Capt. Denies her marriage! Heavens! how then have I imposed upon my
  • dear friend Mr. John Harlowe!
  • Lovel. Poor dear!--But let not her veracity be called into question.
  • She would not be guilty of a wilful untruth for the world.
  • Then I had all their praises again.
  • Lovel. Dear creature!--She thinks she has reason for her denial. You
  • know, Mrs. Moore; you know, Miss Rawlins; what I owned to you above as my
  • vow.
  • I looked down, and, as once before, turned round my diamond ring.
  • Mrs. Moore looked awry, and with a leer at Miss Rawlins, as to her
  • partner in the hinted-at reference.
  • Miss Rawlins looked down as well as I; her eyelids half closed, as if
  • mumbling a pater-noster, meditating her snuff-box, the distance between
  • her nose and chin lengthened by a close-shut mouth.
  • She put me in mind of the pious Mrs. Fetherstone at Oxford, whom I
  • pointed out to thee once, among other grotesque figures, at St. Mary's
  • church, whither we went to take a view of her two sisters: her eyes shut,
  • not daring to trust her heart with them open; and but just half-rearing
  • her lids, to see who the next comer was; and falling them again, when her
  • curiosity was satisfied.
  • The widow Bevis gazed, as if on the hunt for a secret.
  • The Captain looked archly, as if half in the possession of one.
  • Mrs. Moore at last broke the bashful silence. Mrs. Lovelace's behaviour,
  • she said, could be no otherwise so well accounted for, as by the ill
  • offices of that Miss Howe; and by the severity of her relations; which
  • might but too probably have affected her head a little at times: adding,
  • that it was very generous in me to give way to the storm when it was up,
  • rather than to exasperate at such a time.
  • But let me tell you, Sirs, said the widow Bevis, that is not what one
  • husband in a thousand would have done.
  • I desired, that no part of this conversation might be hinted to my
  • spouse; and looked still more bashfully. Her great fault, I must own,
  • was over-delicacy.
  • The Captain leered round him; and said, he believed he could guess from
  • the hints I had given him in town (of my over-love) and from what had now
  • passed, that we had not consummated our marriage.
  • O Jack! how sheepishly then looked, or endeavoured to look, thy friend!
  • how primly goody Moore! how affectedly Miss Rawlins!--while the honest
  • widow Bevis gazed around her fearless; and though only simpering with her
  • mouth, her eyes laughed outright, and seemed to challenge a laugh from
  • every eye in the company.
  • He observed, that I was a phoenix of a man, if so; and he could not but
  • hope that all matters would be happily accommodated in a day or two; and
  • that then he should have the pleasure to aver to her uncle, that he was
  • present, as he might say, on our wedding-day.
  • The women seemed all to join in the same hope.
  • Ah, Captain! Ah, Ladies! how happy should I be, if I could bring my dear
  • spouse to be of the same mind!
  • It would be a very happy conclusion of a very knotty affair, said the
  • widow Bevis; and I see not why we may not make this very night a merry
  • one.
  • The Captain superciliously smiled at me. He saw plainly enough, he said,
  • that we had been at children's play hitherto. A man of my character, who
  • could give way to such a caprice as this, must have a prodigious value
  • for his lady. But one thing he would venture to tell me; and that was
  • this--that, however desirous young skittish ladies might be to have their
  • way in this particular, it was a very bad setting-out for the man; as it
  • gave his bride a very high proof of the power she had over him: and he
  • would engage, that no woman, thus humoured, ever valued the man the more
  • for it; but very much the contrary--and there were reasons to be given
  • why she should not.
  • Well, well, Captain, no more of this subject before the ladies.--One
  • feels [shrugging my shoulders in a bashful try-to-blush manner] that one
  • is so ridiculous--I have been punished enough for my tender folly.
  • Miss Rawlins had taken her fan, and would needs hide her face behind it--
  • I suppose because her blush was not quite ready.
  • Mrs. Moore hemmed, and looked down; and by that gave her's over.
  • While the jolly widow, laughing out, praised the Captain as one of
  • Hudibras's metaphysicians, repeating,
  • He knew what's what, and that's as high
  • As metaphysic wit can fly.
  • This made Miss Rawlins blush indeed:--Fie, fie, Mrs. Bevis! cried she,
  • unwilling, I suppose, to be thought absolutely ignorant.
  • Upon the whole, I began to think that I had not made a bad exchange of
  • our professing mother, for the unprofessing Mrs. Moore. And indeed the
  • women and I, and my beloved too, all mean the same thing: we only differ
  • about the manner of coming at the proposed end.
  • LETTER XXIX
  • MR. LOVELACE
  • [IN CONTINUATION.]
  • It was now high time to acquaint my spouse, that Captain Tomlinson was
  • come. And the rather, as the maid told us, that the lady had asked her
  • if such a gentleman [describing him] was not in the parlour?
  • Mrs. Moore went up, and requested, in my name, that she would give us
  • audience.
  • But she returned, reporting my beloved's desire, that Captain Tomlinson
  • would excuse her for the present. She was very ill. Her spirits were
  • too weak to enter into conversation with him; and she must lie down.
  • I was vexed, and at first extremely disconcerted. The Captain was vexed
  • too. And my concern, thou mayest believe, was the greater on his
  • account.
  • She had been very much fatigued, I own. Her fits in the morning must
  • have disordered her: and she had carried her resentment so high, that it
  • was the less wonder she should find herself low, when her raised spirits
  • had subsided. Very low, I may say; if sinkings are proportioned to
  • risings; for she had been lifted up above the standard of a common
  • mortal.
  • The Captain, however, sent up his own name, that if he could be admitted
  • to drink one dish of tea with her, he should take it for a favour: and
  • would go to town, and dispatch some necessary business, in order, if
  • possible, to leave his morning free to attend her.
  • But she pleaded a violent head-ache; and Mrs. Moore confirmed the plea to
  • be just.
  • I would have had the Captain lodge there that night, as well in
  • compliment to him, as introductory to my intention of entering myself
  • upon my new-taken apartment: but his hours were of too much importance to
  • him to stay the evening.
  • It was indeed very inconvenient for him, he said, to return in the
  • morning; but he is willing to do all in his power to heal this breach,
  • and that as well for the sakes of me and my lady, as for that of his dear
  • friend Mr. John Harlowe; who must not know how far this misunderstanding
  • had gone. He would therefore only drink one dish of tea with the ladies
  • and me.
  • And accordingly, after he had done so, and I had had a little private
  • conversation with him, he hurried away.
  • His fellow had given him, in the interim, a high character to Mrs.
  • Moore's servants: and this reported by the widow Bevis (who being no
  • proud woman, is hail fellow well met, as the saying is, with all her
  • aunt's servants) he was a fine gentleman, a discreet gentleman, a man of
  • sense and breeding, with them all: and it was pity, that, with such great
  • business upon his hands, he should be obliged to come again.
  • My life for your's, audibly whispered the widow Bevis, there is humour as
  • well as head-ache in somebody's declining to see this worthy gentleman.--
  • Ah, Lord! how happy might some people be if they would!
  • No perfect happiness in this world, said I, very gravely, and with a
  • sigh; for the widow must know that I heard her. If we have not real
  • unhappiness, we can make it, even from the overflowings of our good
  • fortune.
  • Very true, and very true, the two widows. A charming observation! Mrs.
  • Bevis. Miss Rawlins smiled her assent to it; and I thought she called me
  • in her heart charming man! for she professes to be a great admirer of
  • moral observations.
  • I had hardly taken leave of the Captain, and sat down again with the
  • women, when Will. came; and calling me out, 'Sir, Sir,' said he, grinning
  • with a familiarity in his looks as if what he had to say entitled him to
  • take liberties; 'I have got the fellow down!--I have got old Grimes--hah,
  • hah, hah, hah!--He is at the Lower Flask--almost in the condition of
  • David's sow, and please your honour--[the dog himself not much better]
  • here is his letter--from--from Miss Howe--ha, ha, ha, ha,' laughed the
  • varlet; holding it fast, as if to make conditions with me, and to excite
  • my praises, as well as my impatience.
  • I could have knocked him down; but he would have his say out--'old Grimes
  • knows not that I have the letter--I must get back to him before he misses
  • it--I only make a pretence to go out for a few minutes--but--but'--and
  • then the dog laughed again--'he must stay--old Grimes must stay--till I
  • go back to pay the reckoning.'
  • D--n the prater; grinning rascal! The letter! The letter!
  • He gathered in his wide mothe, as he calls it, and gave me the letter;
  • but with a strut, rather than a bow; and then sidled off like one of
  • widow Sorlings's dunghill cocks, exulting after a great feat performed.
  • And all the time that I was holding up the billet to the light, to try to
  • get at its contents without breaking the seal, [for, dispatched in a
  • hurry, it had no cover,] there stood he, laughing, shrugging, playing off
  • his legs; now stroking his shining chin, now turning his hat upon his
  • thumb! then leering in my face, flourishing with his head--O Christ!
  • now-and-then cried the rascal--
  • What joy has this dog in mischief!--More than I can have in the
  • completion of my most favourite purposes!--These fellows are ever happier
  • than their masters.
  • I was once thinking to rumple up this billet till I had broken the seal.
  • Young families [Miss Howe's is not an ancient one] love ostentatious
  • sealings: and it might have been supposed to have been squeezed in pieces
  • in old Grimes's breeches-pocket. But I was glad to be saved the guilt as
  • well as suspicion of having a hand in so dirty a trick; for thus much of
  • the contents (enough for my purpose) I was enabled to scratch out in
  • character without it; the folds depriving me only of a few connecting
  • words, which I have supplied between hooks.
  • My Miss Harlowe, thou knowest, had before changed her name to Miss
  • Laetitia Beaumont. Another alias now, Jack, to it; for this billet was
  • directed to her by the name of Mrs. Harriot Lucas. I have learned her to
  • be half a rogue, thou seest.
  • 'I congratulate you, my dear, with all my heart and soul, upon [your
  • escape] from the villain. [I long] for the particulars of all. [My
  • mother] is out; but, expecting her return every minute, I dispatched
  • [your] messenger instantly. [I will endeavour to come at] Mrs. Townsend
  • without loss of time; and will write at large in a day or two, if in that
  • time I can see her. [Mean time I] am excessively uneasy for a letter I
  • sent you yesterday by Collins, [who must have left it at] Wilson's after
  • you got away. [It is of very] great importance. [I hope the] villain
  • has it not. I would not for the world [that he should.] Immediately
  • send for it, if, by doing so, the place you are at [will not be]
  • discovered. If he has it, let me know it by some way [out of] hand. If
  • not, you need not send.
  • 'Ever, ever your's,
  • 'A.H.
  • 'June 9.'
  • ***
  • O Jack! what heart's-ease does this interception give me!--I sent the
  • rascal back with the letter to old Grimes, and charged him to drink no
  • deeper. He owned, that he was half-seas over, as he phrased it.
  • Dog! said I, are you not to court one of Mrs. Moore's maids to-night?--
  • Cry your mercy, Sir!--I will be sober.--I had forgot that--but old Grimes
  • is plaguy tough, I thought I should never have got him down.
  • Away, villain! Let old Grimes come, and on horseback too, to the door--
  • He shall, and please your honour, if I can get him on the saddle, and if
  • he can sit--
  • And charge him not to have alighted, nor to have seen any body--
  • Enough, Sir, familiarly nodding his head, to show he took me. And away
  • went the villain--into the parlour, to the women, I.
  • In a quarter of an hour came old Grimes on horseback, waving to his
  • saddle-bow, now on this side, now on that; his head, at others, joining
  • to that of his more sober beast.
  • It looked very well to the women that I made no effort to speak to old
  • Grimes, (though I wished, before them, that I knew the contents of what
  • he brought;) but, on the contrary, desired that they would instantly let
  • my spouse know that her messenger was returned.
  • Down she flew, violently as she had the head-ache!
  • O how I prayed for an opportunity to be revenged of her for the
  • ungrateful trouble she had given to her uncle's friend!
  • She took the letter from old Grimes with her own hands, and retired to an
  • inner parlour to read it.
  • She presently came out again to the fellow, who had much ado to sit his
  • horse--Here is your money, friend.--I thought you long: but what shall I
  • do to get somebody to go to town immediately for me? I see you cannot.
  • Old Grimes took his money, let fall his hat in doffing it; had it given
  • him, and rode away; his eyes isinglass, and set in his head, as I saw
  • through the window, and in a manner speechless--all his language hiccup.
  • My dog needed not to have gone so deep with this tough old Grimes. But
  • the rascal was in his kingdom with him.
  • The lady applied to Mrs. Moore; she mattered not the price. Could a man
  • and horse be engaged for her?--Only to go for a letter left for her, at
  • one Mr. Wilson's, in Pall-mall.
  • A poor neighbour was hired--a horse procured for him--he had his
  • directions.
  • In vain did I endeavour to engaged my beloved, when she was below. Her
  • head-ache, I suppose, returned.--She, like the rest of her sex, can be
  • ill or well when she pleases.
  • I see her drift, thought I; it is to have all her lights from Miss Howe
  • before she resolves, and to take her measures accordingly.
  • Up she went expressing great impatience about the letter she had sent
  • for; and desired Mrs. Moore to let her know if I offered to send any one
  • of my servants to town--to get at the letter, I suppose, was her fear;
  • but she might have been quite easy on that head; and yet, perhaps, would
  • not, had she known that the worthy Captain Tomlinson, (who will be in
  • town before her messenger,) will leave there the important letter, which
  • I hope will help to pacify her, and reconcile her to me.
  • O Jack, Jack! thinkest thou that I will take all this roguish pains, and
  • be so often called villain for nothing?
  • But yet, is it not taking pains to come at the finest creature in the
  • world, not for a transitory moment only, but for one of our lives! The
  • struggle only, Whether I am to have her in my own way, or in her's?
  • But now I know thou wilt be frightened out of thy wits for me--What,
  • Lovelace! wouldest thou let her have a letter that will inevitably blow
  • thee up; and blow up the mother, and all her nymphs!--yet not intend to
  • reform, nor intend to marry?
  • Patience, puppy!--Canst thou not trust thy master?
  • LETTER XXX
  • MR. LOVELACE
  • [IN CONTINUATION.]
  • I went up to my new-taken apartment, and fell to writing in character, as
  • usual. I thought I had made good my quarters, but the cruel creature,
  • understanding that I intended to take up my lodgings there, declared with
  • so much violence against it, that I was obliged to submit, and to accept
  • of another lodging, about twelve doors off, which Mrs. Moore recommended.
  • And all the advantage I could obtain was, that Will., unknown to my
  • spouse, and for fear of a freak, should lie in the house.
  • Mrs. Moore, indeed, was unwilling to disoblige either of us. But Miss
  • Rawlins was of opinion, that nothing more ought to be allowed me: and yet
  • Mrs. Moore owned, that the refusal was a strange piece of tyranny to a
  • husband, if I were a husband.
  • I had a good mind to make Miss Rawlins smart for it. Come and see Miss
  • Rawlins, Jack.--If thou likest her, I'll get her for thee with a
  • wet-finger, as the saying is!
  • The widow Bevis indeed stickled hard for me. [An innocent, or injured
  • man, will have friends every where.] She said, that to bear much with
  • some wives, was to be obliged to bear more; and I reflected, with a sigh,
  • that tame spirits must always be imposed upon. And then, in my heart, I
  • renewed my vows of revenge upon this haughty and perverse beauty.
  • The second fellow came back from town about nine o'clock, with Miss
  • Howe's letter of Wednesday last. 'Collins, it seems, when he left it,
  • had desired, that it might be safely and speedily delivered into Miss
  • Laetitia Beaumont's own hands. But Wilson, understanding that neither
  • she nor I were in town, [he could not know of our difference thou must
  • think,] resolved to take care of it till our return, in order to give it
  • into one of our own hands; and now delivered it to her messenger.'
  • This was told her. Wilson, I doubt not, is in her favour upon it.
  • She took the letter with great eagerness; opened it in a hurry, [am glad
  • she did; yet, I believe, all was right,] before Mrs. Moore and Mrs.
  • Bevis, [Miss Rawlins was gone home;] and said, she would not for the
  • world that I should have had that letter, for the sake of her dear friend
  • the writer, who had written to her very uneasily about it.
  • Her dear friend! repeated Mrs. Bevis, when she told me this:--such
  • mischief-makers are always deemed dear friends till they are found out!
  • The widow says that I am the finest gentleman she ever beheld.
  • I have found a warm kiss now-and-then very kindly taken.
  • I might be a very wicked fellow, Jack, if I were to do all the mischief
  • in my power. But I am evermore for quitting a too-easy prey to reptile
  • rakes! What but difficulty, (though the lady is an angel,) engages me to
  • so much perseverance here?--And here, conquer or die! is now the
  • determination!
  • ***
  • I have just now parted with this honest widow. She called upon me at my
  • new lodgings. I told her, that I saw I must be further obliged to her in
  • the course of this difficult affair. She must allow me to make her a
  • handsome present when all was happily over. But I desired that she would
  • take no notice of what should pass between us, not even to her aunt; for
  • that she, as I saw, was in the power of Miss Rawlins: and Miss Rawlins,
  • being a maiden gentlewoman, knew not the right and the fit in matrimonial
  • matters, as she, my dear widow, did.
  • Very true: How should she? said Mrs. Bevis, proud of knowing--nothing!
  • But, for her part, she desired no present. It was enough if she could
  • contribute to reconcile man and wife, and disappoint mischief-makers.
  • She doubted not, that such an envious creature as Miss Howe was glad that
  • Mrs. Lovelace had eloped--jealousy and love was Old Nick!
  • See, Belford, how charmingly things work between me and my new
  • acquaintance, the widow!--Who knows, but that she may, after a little
  • farther intimacy, (though I am banished the house on nights,) contrive a
  • midnight visit for me to my spouse, when all is still and fast asleep?
  • Where can a woman be safe, who has once entered the lists with a
  • contriving and intrepid lover?
  • But as to this letter, methinkest thou sayest, of Miss Howe?
  • I knew thou wouldest be uneasy for me. But did not I tell thee that I
  • had provided for every thing? That I always took care to keep seals
  • entire, and to preserve covers?* Was it not easy then, thinkest thou, to
  • contrive a shorter letter out of a longer; and to copy the very words?
  • * See Letter XX. of this volume.
  • I can tell thee, it was so well ordered, that, not being suspected to
  • have been in my hands, it was not easy to find me out. Had it been my
  • beloved's hand, there would have been no imitating it for such a length.
  • Her delicate and even mind is seen in the very cut of her letters. Miss
  • Howe's hand is no bad one, but it is not so equal and regular. That
  • little devil's natural impatience hurrying on her fingers, gave, I
  • suppose, from the beginning, her handwriting, as well as the rest of her,
  • its fits and starts, and those peculiarities, which, like strong muscular
  • lines in a face, neither the pen, nor the pencil, can miss.
  • Hast thou a mind tot see what it was I permitted Miss Howe to write to
  • her lovely friend? Why then, read it here, so extracted from her's of
  • Wednesday last, with a few additions of my own. The additions
  • underscored.*
  • * Editor's note: In place of italics, as in the original, I have
  • substituted hooks [ ].
  • MY DEAREST FRIEND,
  • You will perhaps think that I have been too long silent. But I had begun
  • two letters at different times since my last, and written a great deal
  • each time; and with spirit enough I assure you; incensed as I was against
  • the abominable wretch you are with; particularly on reading your's of the
  • 21st of the past month.
  • The FIRST I intended to keep open till I could give you some account of
  • my proceedings with Mrs. Townsend. It was some days before I saw her:
  • and this intervenient space giving me time to reperuse what I had
  • written, I thought it proper to lay that aside, and to write in a style a
  • little less fervent; for you would have blamed me, I knew, for the
  • freedom of some of my expressions, (execrations, if you please.) And
  • when I had gone a good way in the SECOND, and change your prospects, on
  • his communicating to you Miss Montague's letter, and his better
  • behaviour, occasioning a change in your mind, I laid that aside also.
  • And in this uncertainty thought I would wait to see the issue of affairs
  • between you before I wrote again; believing that all would soon be
  • decided one way or other.
  • ***
  • [Here I was forced to break off. I am too little my own mistress:--My
  • mother* is always up and down--and watching as if I were writing to a
  • fellow. What need I (she asks me,) lock myself in,** if I am only
  • reading past correspondencies? For that is my pretence, when she comes
  • poking in with her face sharpened to an edge, as I may say, by a
  • curiosity that gives her more pain than pleasure.--The Lord forgive me;
  • but I believe I shall huff her next time she comes in.]
  • * See Letter XX. of this volume.
  • ** Ibid.
  • ***
  • Do you forgive me too, my dear--my mother ought; because she says I am my
  • father's girl; and because I am sure I am her's.
  • [Upon my life, my dear, I am sometimes of opinion, that this vile man was
  • capable of meaning you dishonour. When I look back upon his past conduct,
  • I cannot help, and verily believe, that he has laid aside such thoughts.
  • My reasons for both opinions I will give you.]
  • [For the first: to-wit, that he had it once in his head to take you at
  • advantage if he could, I consider* that] pride, revenge, and a delight to
  • tread in unbeaten paths, are principal ingredients in the character of
  • this finished libertine. He hates all your family, yourself excepted--
  • yet is a savage in love. His pride, and the credit which a few plausible
  • qualities, sprinkled among his odious ones, have given him, have secured
  • him too good a reception from our eye-judging, our undistinguishing, our
  • self--flattering, our too-confiding sex, to make assiduity and
  • obsequiousness, and a conquest of his unruly passions, any part of his
  • study.
  • He has some reason for his animosity to all the men, and to one woman of
  • your family. He has always shown you, and his own family too, that he
  • prefers his pride to his interest. He is a declared marriage-hater; a
  • notorious intriguer; full of his inventions, and glorying in them.--As
  • his vanity had made him imagine that no woman could be proof against his
  • love, no wonder that he struggled like a lion held in toils,* against a
  • passion that he thought not returned.** Hence, perhaps, it is not
  • difficult to believe, that it became possible for such a wretch as this
  • to give way to his old prejudices against marriage; and to that revenge
  • which had always been a first passion with him.***
  • * See Letter XX. of this volume.
  • ** Ibid.
  • *** Ibid.
  • [And hence we may account for] his delays--his teasing ways--his bringing
  • you to bear with his lodging in the same house--his making you pass to
  • the other people of it as his wife--his bringing you into the company of
  • his libertine companions--the attempt of imposing upon you that Miss
  • Partington for a bedfellow, &c.
  • [My reasons for a contrary opinion, to wit, that he is now resolved to do
  • you all the justice in his power to do you,] are these:--That he sees
  • that all his own family* have warmly engaged themselves in your cause:
  • that the horrid wretch loves you; with such a love, however, as Herod
  • loved his Mariamne: that, on inquiry, I find it to be true, that
  • Counsellor Williams, (whom Mr. Hickman knows to be a man of eminence in
  • his profession,) has actually as good as finished the settlements: that
  • two draughts of them have been made; one avowedly to be sent to this very
  • Captain Tomlinson:--and I find, that a license has actually been more
  • than once endeavoured to be obtained, and that difficulties have hitherto
  • been made, equally to Lovelace's vexation and disappointment. My
  • mother's proctor, who is very intimate with the proctor applied to by the
  • wretch, has come at this information in confidence; and hints, that, as
  • Mr. Lovelace is a man of high fortunes, these difficulties will probably
  • be got over.
  • * See Letter XX. of this volume.
  • [I had once resolved to make strict inquiry about Tomlinson; and still,
  • if you will, your uncle's favourite housekeeper may be sounded at a
  • distance.]
  • [I know that the matter is so laid,*] that Mrs. Hodges is supposed to
  • know nothing of the treaty set on foot by means of Captain Tomlinson.
  • But your uncle is an--
  • * See Letter XX. of this volume.
  • But your uncle is an old man;* and old men imagine themselves to be under
  • obligation to their paramours, if younger than themselves, and seldom
  • keep any thing from their knowledge.--Yet, methinks, there can be no
  • need; since Tomlinson, as you describe him, is so good a man, and so much
  • of a gentleman; the end to be answered by his being an impostor so much
  • more than necessary, if Lovelace has villany in his head.--And thus what
  • he communicated to you of Mr. Hickman's application to your uncle, and of
  • Mrs. Norton's to your mother (some of which particulars I am satisfied
  • his vile agent Joseph Leman could not reveal to his viler employer); his
  • pushing on the marriage-day in the name of your uncle; which it could not
  • answer any wicked purpose for him to do; and what he writes of your
  • uncle's proposal, to have it thought that you were married from the time
  • that you had lived in one house together; and that to be made to agree
  • with the time of Mr. Hickman's visit to your uncle; the insisting on a
  • trusty person's being present at the ceremony, at that uncle's nomination
  • --these things make me [assured that he now at last means honourably.]
  • * See Letter XX. of this volume.
  • [But if any unexpected delays should happen on his side, acquaint me, my
  • dear, with the very street where Mrs. Sinclair lives; and where Mrs.
  • Fretchville's house is situated (which I cannot find that you have ever
  • mentioned in your former letters--which is a little odd); and I will make
  • strict inquiries of them, and of Tomlinson too; and I will (if your heart
  • will let you take my advice) soon procure you a refuge from him with Mrs.
  • Townsend.]
  • [But why do I now, when you seem to be in so good a train, puzzle and
  • perplex you with my retrospections? And yet they may be of use to you,
  • if any delay happen on his part.]
  • [But that I think cannot well be. What you have therefore now to do, is
  • so to behave to this proud-spirited wretch, as may banish from his mind
  • all remembrance of] past disobligations,* and to receive his addresses,
  • as those of a betrothed lover. You will incur the censure of prudery and
  • affectation, if you keep him at that distance which you have hitherto
  • [kept him at.] His sudden (and as suddenly recovered) illness has given
  • him an opportunity to find out that you love him (Alas! my dear, I knew
  • you loved him!) He has seemed to change his nature, and is all love and
  • gentleness. [And no more quarrels now, I beseech you.]
  • * See Letter XX. of this volume.
  • [I am very angry with him, nevertheless, for the freedoms which he took
  • with your person;* and I think some guard is necessary, as he is
  • certainly an encroacher. But indeed all men are so; and you are such a
  • charming creature, and have kept him at such a distance!--But no more of
  • this subject. Only, my dear, be not over-nice, now you are so near the
  • state. You see what difficulties you laid yourself under,] when
  • Tomlinson's letter called you again into [the wretch's] company.
  • * See Letter XI. of this volume.
  • If you meet with no impediments, no new causes of doubt,* your reputation
  • in the eye of the world is concerned, that you should be his, [and, as
  • your uncle rightly judges, be thought to have been his before now.] And
  • yet, [let me tell you,] I [can hardly] bear [to think,] that these
  • libertines should be rewarded for their villany with the best of the sex,
  • when the worst of it are too good for them.
  • * See Letter XX. of this volume.
  • I shall send this long letter by Collins,* who changes his day to oblige
  • me. As none of our letters by Wilson's conveyance have miscarried, when
  • you have been in more apparently-disagreeable situations than you are in
  • at present, [I have no doubt] that this will go safe.
  • * See Letter XX. of this volume.
  • Miss Lardner* (whom you have seen hat her cousin Biddulph's) saw you at
  • St. James's church on Sunday was fortnight. She kept you in her eye
  • during the whole time; but could not once obtain the notice of your's,
  • though she courtesied to you twice. She thought to pay her compliments
  • to you when the service was over; for she doubted not but you were
  • married--and for an odd reason--because you came to church by yourself.
  • Every eye, (as usual, wherever you are,) she said was upon you; and this
  • seeming to give you hurry, and you being nearer the door than she, you
  • slid out before she could get to you. But she ordered her servant to
  • follow you till you were housed. This servant saw you step into a chair
  • which waited for you; and you ordered the men to carry you to the place
  • where they took you up. She [describes the house] as a very genteel
  • house, and fit to receive people of fashion: [and what makes me mention
  • this, is, that perhaps you will have a visit from her; or message, at
  • least.]
  • * See Letter XX. of this volume.
  • [So that you have Mr. Doleman's testimony to the credit of the house
  • and people you are with; and he is] a man of fortune, and some
  • reputation; formerly a rake indeed; but married to a woman of family;
  • and having had a palsy blow, one would think a penitent.* You have [also
  • Mr. Mennell's at least passive testimony; Mr.] Tomlinson's; [and now,
  • lastly, Miss Lardner's; so that there will be the less need for inquiry:
  • but you know my busy and inquisitive temper, as well as my affection for
  • you, and my concern for your honour. But all doubt will soon be lost in
  • certainty.]
  • [Nevertheless I must add, that I would have you] command me up, if I can
  • be of the least service or pleasure to you.* I value not fame; I value
  • not censure; nor even life itself, I verily think, as I do your honour,
  • and your friendship--For is not your honour my honour? And is not your
  • friendship the pride of my life?
  • * See Letter XX. of this volume.
  • May Heaven preserve you, my dearest creature, in honour and safety, is
  • the prayer, the hourly prayer, of
  • Your ever-faithful and affectionate,
  • ANNA HOWE.
  • THURSDAY MORN. 5.
  • I have written all night. [Excuse indifferent writing; my crow-quills
  • are worn to the stumps, and I must get a new supply.]
  • ***
  • These ladies always write with crow-quills, Jack.
  • If thou art capable of taking in all my providences, in this letter, thou
  • wilt admire my sagacity and contrivance almost as much as I do myself.
  • Thou seest, that Miss Lardner, Mrs. Sinclair, Tomlinson, Mrs.
  • Fretchville, Mennell, are all mentioned in it. My first liberties with
  • her person also. [Modesty, modesty, Belford, I doubt, is more confined
  • to time, place, and occasion, even by the most delicate minds, than these
  • minds would have it believed to be.] And why all these taken notice of
  • by me from the genuine letter, but for fear some future letter from the
  • vixen should escape my hands, in which she might refer to these names?
  • And, if none of them were to have been found in this that is to pass for
  • her's, I might be routed horse and foot, as Lord M. would phrase it in a
  • like case.
  • Devilish hard (and yet I may thank myself) to be put to all this plague
  • and trouble:--And for what dost thou ask?--O Jack, for a triumph of more
  • value to me beforehand than an imperial crown!--Don't ask me the value of
  • it a month hence. But what indeed is an imperial crown itself when a man
  • is used to it?
  • Miss Howe might well be anxious about the letter she wrote. Her sweet
  • friend, from what I have let pass of her's, has reason to rejoice in the
  • thought that it fell not into my hands.
  • And now must all my contrivances be set at work, to intercept the
  • expected letter from Miss Howe: which is, as I suppose, to direct her to
  • a place of safety, and out of my knowledge. Mrs. Townsend is, no doubt,
  • in this case, to smuggle her off: I hope the villain, as I am so
  • frequently called between these two girls, will be able to manage this
  • point.
  • But what, perhaps, thou askest, if the lady should take it into her head,
  • by the connivance of Miss Rawlins, to quit this house privately in the
  • night?
  • I have thought of this, Jack. Does not Will. lie in the house? And is
  • not the widow Bevis my fast friend?
  • LETTER XXXI
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • SATURDAY, SIX O'CLOCK, JUNE 10.
  • The lady gave Will.'s sweetheart a letter last night to be carried to the
  • post-house, as this morning, directed for Miss Howe, under cover to
  • Hickman. I dare say neither cover nor letter will be seen to have been
  • opened. The contents but eight lines--To own--'The receipt of her
  • double-dated letter in safety; and referring to a longer letter, which
  • she intends to write, when she shall have a quieter heart, and less
  • trembling fingers. But mentions something to have happened [My detecting
  • her she means] which has given her very great flutters, confusions, and
  • apprehensions: but which she will wait the issue of [Some hopes for me
  • hence, Jack!] before she gives her fresh perturbation or concern on her
  • account.--She tells her how impatient she shall be for her next,' &c.
  • Now, Belford, I thought it would be but kind in me to save Miss Howe's
  • concern on these alarming hints; since the curiosity of such a spirit
  • must have been prodigiously excited by them. Having therefore so good a
  • copy to imitate, I wrote; and, taking out that of my beloved, put under
  • the same cover the following short billet; inscriptive and conclusive
  • parts of it in her own words.
  • HAMPSTEAD, TUES. EVEN.
  • MY EVER-DEAR MISS HOWE,
  • A few lines only, till calmer spirits and quieter fingers be granted me,
  • and till I can get over the shock which your intelligence has given me--
  • to acquaint you--that your kind long letter of Wednesday, and, as I may
  • say, of Thursday morning, is come safe to my hands. On receipt of your's
  • by my messenger to you, I sent for it from Wilson's. There, thank
  • Heaven! it lay. May that Heaven reward you for all your past, and for
  • all your intended goodness to
  • Your for-ever obliged,
  • CL. HARLOWE.
  • ***
  • I took great pains in writing this. It cannot, I hope, be suspected.
  • Her hand is so very delicate. Yet her's is written less beautifully than
  • she usually writes: and I hope Miss Howe will allow somewhat for hurry of
  • spirits, and unsteady fingers.
  • My consideration for Miss Howe's ease of mind extended still farther than
  • to the instance I have mentioned.
  • That this billet might be with her as soon as possible, (and before it
  • could have reached Hickman by the post,) I dispatched it away by a
  • servant of Mowbray's. Miss Howe, had there been any failure or delay,
  • might, as thou wilt think, have communicated her anxieties to her
  • fugitive friend; and she to me perhaps in a way I should not have been
  • pleased with.
  • Once more wilt thou wonderingly question--All this pains for a single
  • girl?
  • Yes, Jack--But is not this girl a CLARISSA?--And who knows, but kind
  • fortune, as a reward for my perseverance, may toss me in her charming
  • friend? Less likely things have come to pass, Belford. And to be sure I
  • shall have her, if I resolve upon it.
  • LETTER XXXII
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • EIGHT O'CLOCK, SAT. MORN. JUNE 10.
  • I am come back from Mrs. Moore's, whither I went in order to attend my
  • charmer's commands. But no admittance--a very bad night.
  • Doubtless she must be as much concerned that she has carried her
  • resentments so very far, as I have reason to be that I made such poor use
  • of the opportunity I had on Wednesday night.
  • But now, Jack, for a brief review of my present situation; and a slight
  • hint or two of my precautions.
  • I have seen the women this morning, and find them half-right, half-
  • doubting.
  • Miss Rawlins's brother tells her, that she lives at Mrs. Moore's.
  • Mrs. Moore can do nothing without Miss Rawlins.
  • People who keep lodgings at public places expect to get by every one who
  • comes into their purlieus. Though not permitted to lodge there myself, I
  • have engaged all the rooms she has to spare, to the very garrets; and
  • that, as I have told thee before, for a month certain, and at her own
  • price, board included; my spouse's and all: but she must not at present
  • know it. So I hope I have Mrs. Moore fast by the interest.
  • This, devil-like, is suiting temptations to inclinations.
  • I have always observed, and, I believe, I have hinted as much formerly,*
  • that all dealers, though but for pins, may be taken in by customers for
  • pins, sooner than by a direct bribe of ten times the value; especially if
  • pretenders to conscience: for the offer of a bribe would not only give
  • room for suspicion, but would startle and alarm their scrupulousness;
  • while a high price paid for what you buy, is but submitting to be cheated
  • in the method of the person makes a profession to get by. Have I not
  • said that human nature is a rogue?**--And do not I know that it is?
  • * See Vol. III. Letter XXXIV.
  • ** See Vol. III. Letter XXXV. and Vol. IV. Letter XXI.
  • To give a higher instance, how many proud senators, in the year 1720,
  • were induced, by presents or subscription of South-sea stock, to
  • contribute to a scheme big with national ruin; who yet would have spurned
  • the man who should have presumed to offer them even twice the sum certain
  • that they had a chance to gain by the stock?--But to return to my review
  • and to my precautions.
  • Miss Rawlins fluctuates, as she hears the lady's story, or as she hears
  • mine. Somewhat of an infidel, I doubt, is this Miss Rawlins. I have not
  • yet considered her foible. The next time I see her, I will take
  • particular notice of all the moles and freckles in her mind; and then
  • infer and apply.
  • The widow Bevis, as I have told thee, is all my own.
  • My man Will. lies in the house. My other new fellow attends upon me; and
  • cannot therefore be quite stupid.
  • Already is Will. over head and ears in love with one of Mrs. Moore's
  • maids. He was struck with her the moment he set his eyes upon her. A
  • raw country wench too. But all women, from the countess to the cook-
  • maid, are put into high good humour with themselves when a man is taken
  • with them at first sight. Be they ever so plain [no woman can be ugly,
  • Jack!] they'll find twenty good reasons, besides the great one (for
  • sake's sake) by the help of the glass without (and perhaps in spite of
  • it) and conceit within, to justify the honest fellow's caption.
  • 'The rogue has saved 150£. in my service.'--More by 50 than I bid him
  • save. No doubt, he thinks he might have done so; though I believe not
  • worth a groat. 'The best of masters I--passionate, indeed; but soon
  • appeased.'
  • The wench is extremely kind to him already. The other maid is also very
  • civil to him. He has a husband for her in his eye. She cannot but say,
  • that Mr. Andrew, my other servant [the girl is for fixing the person] is
  • a very well spoken civil young man.
  • 'We common folks have our joys, and please your honour, says honest
  • Joseph Leman, like as our betters have.'* And true says honest Joseph--
  • did I prefer ease to difficulty, I should envy these low-born sinners
  • some of their joys.
  • * See Vol. III. Letter XLVII.
  • But if Will. had not made amorous pretensions to the wenches, we all
  • know, that servants, united in one common compare-note cause, are
  • intimate the moment they see one another--great genealogists too; they
  • know immediately the whole kin and kin's kin of each other, though
  • dispersed over the three kingdoms, as well as the genealogies and kin's
  • kin of those whom they serve.
  • But my precautions end not here.
  • O Jack, with such an invention, what occasion had I to carry my beloved
  • to Mrs. Sinclair's?
  • My spouse may have farther occasion for the messengers whom she
  • dispatched, one to Miss Howe, the other to Wilson's. With one of these
  • Will. is already well-acquainted, as thou hast heard--to mingle liquor
  • is to mingle souls with these fellows; with the other messenger he will
  • soon be acquainted, if he be not already.
  • The Captain's servant has his uses and instructions assigned him. I have
  • hinted at some of them already.* He also serves a most humane and
  • considerate master. I love to make every body respected to my power.
  • * See Letter XXIX. of this volume.
  • The post, general and penny, will be strictly watched likewise.
  • Miss Howe's Collins is remembered to be described. Miss Howe's and
  • Hickman's liveries also.
  • James Harlowe and Singleton are warned against. I am to be acquainted
  • with any inquiry that shall happen to be made after my spouse, whether by
  • her married or maiden name, before she shall be told of it--and this that
  • I may have it in my power to prevent mischief.
  • I have ordered Mowbray and Tourville (and Belton, if his health permit)
  • to take their quarters at Hampstead for a week, with their fellows to
  • attend them. I spare thee for the present, because of thy private
  • concerns. But hold thyself in cheerful readiness, however, as a mark of
  • thy allegiance.
  • As to my spouse herself, has she not reason to be pleased with me for
  • having permitted her to receive Miss Howe's letter from Wilson's? A
  • plain case, either that I am no deep plotter, or that I have no farther
  • views than to make my peace with her for an offence so slight and so
  • accidental.
  • Miss Howe says, though prefaced with an alas! that her charming friend
  • loves me: she must therefore yearn after this reconciliation--prospects
  • so fair--if she showed me any compassion; seemed inclinable to spare
  • me, and to make the most favourable construction: I cannot but say, that
  • it would be impossible not to show her some. But, to be insulted and
  • defied by a rebel in one's power, what prince can bear that?
  • But I must return to the scene of action. I must keep the women steady.
  • I had no opportunity to talk to my worthy Mrs. Bevis in private.
  • Tomlinson, a dog, not come yet!
  • LETTER XXXIII
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • FROM MY APARTMENTS AT MRS. MOORE'S.
  • Miss Rawlins at her brothers; Mrs. Moore engaged in household matters;
  • widow Bevis dressing; I have nothing to do but write. This cursed
  • Tomlinson not yet arrived!--Nothing to be done without him.
  • I think he shall complain in pretty high language of the treatment he met
  • with yesterday. 'What are our affairs to him? He can have no view but
  • to serve us. Cruel to send back to town, un-audienced, unseen, a man of
  • his business and importance. He never stirs a-foot, but something of
  • consequence depends upon his movements. A confounded thing to trifle
  • thus humoursomely with such a gentleman's moments!--These women think,
  • that all the business of the world must stand still for their figaries
  • [a good female word, Jack!] the greatest triflers in the creation, to
  • fancy themselves the most important beings in it--marry come up! as I
  • have heard goody Sorlings say to her servants, when she has rated at them
  • with mingled anger and disdain.'
  • After all, methinks I want those tostications [thou seest how women, and
  • women's words, fill my mind] to be over, happily over, that I may sit
  • down quietly, and reflect upon the dangers I have passed through, and the
  • troubles I have undergone. I have a reflecting mind, as thou knowest;
  • but the very word reflecting implies all got over.
  • What briars and thorns does the wretch rush into (a scratched face and
  • tattered garments the unavoidable consequence) who will needs be for
  • striking out a new path through overgrown underwood; quitting that beaten
  • out for him by those who have travelled the same road before him!
  • ***
  • A visit from the widow Bevis, in my own apartment. She tells me, that my
  • spouse had thoughts last night, after I was gone to my lodgings, of
  • removing from Mrs. Moore's.
  • I almost wish she had attempted to do so.
  • Miss Rawlins, it seems, who was applied to upon it, dissuaded her from
  • it.
  • Mrs. Moore also, though she did not own that Will. lay in the house, (or
  • rather set up in it, courting,) set before her the difficulties, which,
  • in her opinion, she would have to get clear off, without my knowledge;
  • assuring her, that she could be no where more safe than with her, till
  • she had fixed whither to go. And the lady herself recollected, that if
  • she went, she might miss the expected letter from her dear friend Miss
  • Howe! which, as she owned, was to direct her future steps.
  • She must also surely have some curiosity to know what her uncle's friend
  • had to say to her from her uncle, contemptuously as she yesterday treated
  • a man of his importance. Nor could she, I should think, be absolutely
  • determined to put herself out of the way of receiving the visits of two
  • of the principal ladies of my family, and to break entirely with me in
  • the face of them all.--Besides, whither could she have gone?--Moreover,
  • Miss Howe's letter coming (after her elopement) so safely to her hands,
  • must surely put her into a more confiding temper with me, and with every
  • one else, though she would not immediately own it.
  • But these good folks have so little charity!--Are such severe censurers!
  • --Yet who is absolutely perfect?--It were to be wished, however, that
  • they would be so modest as to doubt themselves sometimes: then would they
  • allow for others, as others (excellent as they imagine themselves to be)
  • must for them.
  • SATURDAY, ONE O'CLOCK.
  • Tomlinson at last is come. Forced to ride five miles about (though I
  • shall impute his delay to great and important business) to avoid the
  • sight of two or three impertinent rascals, who, little thinking whose
  • affairs he was employed in, wanted to obtrude themselves upon him. I
  • think I will make this fellow easy, if he behave to my liking in this
  • affair.
  • I sent up the moment he came.
  • She desired to be excused receiving his visit till four this afternoon.
  • Intolerable!--No consideration!--None at all in this sex, when their
  • cursed humours are in the way!--Pay-day, pay-hour, rather, will come!--
  • Oh! that it were to be the next!
  • The Captain is in a pet. Who can blame him? Even the women think a man
  • of his consequence, and generously coming to serve us, hardly used.
  • Would to heaven she had attempted to get off last night! The women not
  • my enemies, who knows but the husband's exerted authority might have met
  • with such connivance, as might have concluded either in carrying her back
  • to her former lodgings, or in consummation at Mrs. Moore's, in spite of
  • exclamations, fits, and the rest of the female obsecrations?
  • My beloved has not appeared to any body this day, except to Mrs. Moore.
  • Is, it seems, extremely low: unfit for the interesting conversation that
  • is to be held in the afternoon. Longs to hear from her dear friend Miss
  • Howe--yet cannot expect a letter for a day or two. Has a bad opinion of
  • all mankind.--No wonder!--Excellent creature as she is! with such a
  • father, such uncles, such a brother, as she has!
  • How does she look?
  • Better than could be expected from yesterday's fatigue, and last night's
  • ill rest.
  • These tender doves know not, till put to it, what they can bear;
  • especially when engaged in love affairs; and their attention wholly
  • engrossed. But the sex love busy scenes. Still life is their aversion.
  • A woman will create a storm, rather than be without one. So that they
  • can preside in the whirlwind, and direct it, they are happy.--But my
  • beloved's misfortune is, that she must live in tumult; yet neither raise
  • them herself, nor be able to controul them.
  • LETTER XXXIV
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • SAT NIGHT, JUNE 10.
  • What will be the issue of all my plots and contrivances, devil take me if
  • I am able to divine. But I will not, as Lord M. would say, forestall my
  • own market.
  • At four, the appointed hour, I sent up, to desire admittance in the
  • Captain's name and my own.
  • She would wait upon the Captain presently; [not upon me!] and in the
  • parlour, if it were not engaged.
  • The dining-room being mine, perhaps that was the reason of her naming the
  • parlour--mighty nice again, if so! No good sign for me, thought I, this
  • stiff punctilio.
  • In the parlour, with me and the Captain, were Mrs. Moore, Miss Rawlins,
  • and Mrs. Bevis.
  • The women said, they would withdraw when the lady came down.
  • Lovel. Not, except she chooses you should, Ladies.--People who are so
  • much above-board as I am, need not make secrets of any of their affairs.
  • Besides, you three ladies are now acquainted with all our concerns.
  • Capt. I have some things to say to your lady, that perhaps she would
  • not herself choose that any body should hear; not even you, Mr. Lovelace,
  • as you and her family are not upon such a good foot of understanding as
  • were to be wished.
  • Lovel. Well, well, Captain, I must submit. Give us a sign to withdraw,
  • and we will withdraw.
  • It was better that the exclusion of the women should come from him, than
  • from me.
  • Capt. I will bow, and wave my hand, thus--when I wish to be alone with
  • the lady. Her uncle dotes upon her. I hope, Mr. Lovelace, you will not
  • make a reconciliation more difficult, for the earnestness which my dear
  • friend shows to bring it to bear. But indeed I must tell you, as I told
  • you more than once before, that I am afraid you have made lighter of the
  • occasion of this misunderstanding to me, than it ought to have been made.
  • Lovel. I hope, Captain Tomlinson, you do not question my veracity!
  • Capt. I beg your pardon, Mr. Lovelace--but those things which we men
  • may think lightly of, may not be light to a woman of delicacy.--And then,
  • if you have bound yourself by a vow, you ought--
  • Miss Rawlins bridling, her lips closed, (but her mouth stretched to a
  • smile of approbation, the longer for not buttoning,) tacitly showed
  • herself pleased with the Captain for his delicacy.
  • Mrs. Moore could speak--Very true, however, was all she said, with a
  • motion of her head that expressed the bow-approbatory.
  • For my part, said the jolly widow, staring with eyes as big as eggs, I
  • know what I know.--But man and wife are man and wife; or they are not
  • man and wife.--I have no notion of standing upon such niceties.
  • But here she comes! cried one, hearing her chamber-door open--Here she
  • comes! another, hearing it shut after her--And down dropt the angel among
  • us.
  • We all stood up, bowing and courtesying, and could not help it; for she
  • entered with such an air as commanded all our reverence. Yet the Captain
  • looked plaguy grave.
  • Cl. Pray keep your seats, Ladies--Pray do not go, [for they made offers
  • to withdraw; yet Miss Rawlins would have burst had she been suffered to
  • retire.] Before this time you have all heard my story, I make no doubt--
  • pray keep your seats--at least all Mr. Lovelace's.
  • A very saucy and whimsical beginning, thought I.
  • Captain Tomlinson, your servant, addressing herself to him with
  • inimitable dignity. I hope you did not take amiss my declining your
  • visit yesterday. I was really incapable of talking upon any subject that
  • required attention.
  • Capt. I am glad to see you better now, Madam. I hope I do.
  • Cl. Indeed I am not well. I would not have excused myself from
  • attending you some hours ago, but in hopes I should have been better. I
  • beg your pardon, Sir, for the trouble I have given you; and shall the
  • rather expect it, as this day will, I hope, conclude it all.
  • Thus set; thus determined; thought I,--yet to have slept upon it!--But,
  • as what she said was capable of a good, as well as a bad, construction, I
  • would not put an unfavourable one upon it.
  • Lovel. The Captain was sorry, my dear, he did not offer his attendance
  • the moment he arrived yesterday. He was afraid that you took it amiss
  • that he did not.
  • Cl. Perhaps I thought that my uncle's friend might have wished to see
  • me as soon as he came, [how we stared!]--But, Sir, [to me,] it might be
  • convenient to you to detain him.
  • The devil, thought I!--So there really was resentment as well as head-
  • ache, as my good friend Mrs. Bevis observed, in her refusing to see the
  • honest gentleman.
  • Capt. You would detain me, Mr. Lovelace--I was for paying my respects
  • to the lady the moment I came--
  • Cl. Well, Sir, [interrupting him,] to wave this; for I would not be
  • thought captious--if you have not suffered inconvenience, in being
  • obliged to come again, I shall be easy.
  • Capt. [Half disconcerted.] A little inconvenience, I can't say but I
  • have suffered. I have, indeed, too many affairs upon my hands; but the
  • desire I have to serve you and Mr. Lovelace, as well as to oblige my dear
  • friend, your uncle Harlowe, make great inconveniencies but small ones.
  • Cl. You are very obliging, Sir.--Here is a great alteration since you
  • parted with us last.
  • Capt. A great one indeed, Madam! I was very much surprised at it, on
  • Thursday evening, when Mr. Lovelace conducted me to your lodgings, where
  • we hoped to find you.
  • Cl. Have you any thing to say to me, Sir, from my uncle himself, that
  • requires my private ear!--Don't go, Ladies, [for the women stood up, and
  • offered to withdraw,]--if Mr. Lovelace stays, I am sure you may.
  • I frowned--I bit my lip--I looked at the women--and shook my head.
  • Capt. I have nothing to offer, but what Mr. Lovelace is a party to, and
  • may hear, except one private word or two, which may be postponed to the
  • last.
  • Cl. Pray, Ladies, keep your seats.--Things are altered, Sir, since I
  • saw you. You can mention nothing that relates to me now, to which that
  • gentleman can be a party.
  • Capt. You surprise me, Madam! I am sorry to hear this!--Sorry for your
  • uncle's sake!--Sorry for your sake!--Sorry for Mr. Lovelace's sake!--And
  • yet I am sure he must have given greater occasion than he has mentioned
  • to me, or--
  • Lovel. Indeed, Captain,--indeed, Ladies, I have told you great part of
  • my story!--And what I told you of my offence was the truth:--what I
  • concealed of my story was only what I apprehended would, if known, cause
  • this dear creature to be thought more censorious than charitable.
  • Cl. Well, well, Sir, say what you please. Make me as black as you
  • please--make yourself as white as you can--I am not now in your power:
  • that consideration will comfort me for all.
  • Capt. God forbid that I should offer to plead in behalf of a crime,
  • that a woman of virtue and honour cannot forgive! But surely, surely,
  • Madam, this is going too far.
  • Cl. Do not blame me, Captain Tomlinson. I have a good opinion of you,
  • as my uncle's friend; but if you are Mr. Lovelace's friend, that is
  • another thing; for my interest and Mr. Lovelace's must now be for ever
  • separated.
  • Capt. One word with you, Madam, if you please--offering to retire.
  • Cl. You may say all that you please to say before these gentlewomen.--
  • Mr. Lovelace may have secrets--I have none:--you seem to think me faulty:
  • I should be glad that all the world knew my heart. Let my enemies sit in
  • judgment upon my actions; fairly scanned, I fear not the result; let them
  • even ask me my most secret thoughts, and, whether they make for me, or
  • against me, I will reveal them.
  • Capt. Noble Lady! who can say as you say?
  • The women held up their hands and eyes; each, as if she had said,--Not I.
  • No disorder here! said Miss Rawlins:--but, (judging by her own heart,) a
  • confounded deal of improbability, I believe she thought.
  • Finely said, to be sure, said the widow Bevis, shrugging her shoulders.
  • Mrs. Moore sighed.
  • Jack Belford, thought I, knows all mine; and in this I am more ingenuous
  • than any of the three, and a fit match for this paragon.
  • Cl. How Mr. Lovelace has found me out here I cannot tell: but such mean
  • devices, such artful, such worse than Waltham disguises put on, to
  • obtrude himself into my company; such bold, such shocking untruths--
  • Capt. The favour of but one word, Madam, in private--
  • Cl. In order to support a right which he has not over me!--O Sir!--O
  • Captain Tomlinson!--I think I have reason to say, that the man, (there he
  • stands!) is capable of any vileness!--
  • The women looked upon one another, and upon me, by turns, to see how I
  • bore it. I had such dartings in my head at the instant, that I thought I
  • should have gone distracted. My brain seemed on fire. What would I have
  • given to have had her alone with me!--I traversed the room; my clenched
  • fist to my forehead. O that I had any body here, thought I, that,
  • Hercules-like, when flaming in the tortures of Dejanira's poisoned shirt,
  • I could tear in pieces!
  • Capt. Dear Lady! see you not how the poor gentleman--Lord, how have I
  • imposed upon your uncle, at this rate! How happy did I tell him I saw
  • you! How happy I was sure you would be in each other!
  • Cl. O Sir, you don't know how many premeditated offences I had forgiven
  • when I saw you last, before I could appear to you what I hoped then I
  • might for the future be!--But now you may tell my uncle, if you please,
  • that I cannot hope for his mediation. Tell him, that my guilt, in giving
  • this man an opportunity to spirit me away from my tried, my experienced,
  • my natural friends, (harshly as they treated me,) stares me every day
  • more and more in the face; and still the more, as my fate seems to be
  • drawing to a crisis, according to the malediction of my offended father!
  • And then she burst into tears, which even affected that dog, who, brought
  • to abet me, was himself all Belforded over.
  • The women, so used to cry without grief, as they are to laugh without
  • reason, by mere force of example, [confound their promptitudes;] must
  • needs pull out their handkerchiefs. The less wonder, however, as I
  • myself, between confusion, surprise, and concern, could hardly stand it.
  • What's a tender heart good for?--Who can be happy that has a feeling
  • heart?--And yet, thou'lt say, that he who has it not, must be a tiger,
  • and no man.
  • Capt. Let me beg the favour of one word with you, Madam, in private;
  • and that on my own account.
  • The women hereupon offered to retire. She insisted that, if they went,
  • I should not stay.
  • Capt. Sir, bowing to me, shall I beg--
  • I hope, thought I, that I may trust this solemn dog, instructed as he is.
  • She does not doubt him. I'll stay out no longer than to give her time to
  • spend her first fire.
  • I then passively withdrew with the women.--But with such a bow to my
  • goddess, that it won for me every heart but that I wanted most to win;
  • for the haughty maid bent not her knee in return.
  • The conversation between the Captain and the lady, when we were retired,
  • was to the following effect:--They both talked loud enough for me to hear
  • them--the lady from anger, the Captain with design; and thou mayest be
  • sure there was no listener but myself. What I was imperfect in was
  • supplied afterwards; for I had my vellum-leaved book to note all down.
  • If she had known this, perhaps she would have been more sparing of her
  • invectives--and but perhaps neither.
  • He told her that as her brother was absolutely resolved to see her; and
  • as he himself, in compliance with her uncle's expedient, had reported her
  • marriage; and as that report had reached the ears of Lord M., Lady Betty,
  • and the rest of my relations; and as he had been obliged, in consequence
  • of his first report, to vouch it; and as her brother might find out where
  • she was, and apply to the women here for a confirmation or refutation of
  • the marriage; he had thought himself obliged to countenance the report
  • before the women. That this had embarrassed him not a little, as he
  • would not for the world that she should have cause to think him capable
  • of prevarication, contrivance, or double dealing; and that this made him
  • desirous of a private conversation with her.
  • It was true, she said, she had given her consent to such an expedient,
  • believing it was her uncle's; and little thinking that it would lead to
  • so many errors. Yet she might have known that one error is frequently
  • the parent of many. Mr. Lovelace had made her sensible of the truth of
  • that observation, on more occasions than one; and it was an observation
  • that he, the Captain, had made, in one of the letters that was shown her
  • yesterday.*
  • * See Letter XXIV.
  • He hoped that she had no mistrust of him: that she had no doubt of his
  • honour. If, Madam, you suspect me--if you think me capable--what a man!
  • the Lord be merciful to me!--What a man must you think me!
  • I hope, Sir, there cannot be a man in the world who could deserve to be
  • suspected in such a case as this. I do not suspect you. If it were
  • possible there could be one such a man, I am sure, Captain Tomlinson, a
  • father of children, a man in years, of sense and experience, cannot be
  • that man.
  • He told me, that just then, he thought he felt a sudden flash from her
  • eye, an eye-beam as he called it, dart through his shivering reins; and
  • he could not help trembling.
  • The dog's conscience, Jack!--Nothing else!--I have felt half a dozen such
  • flashes, such eye-beams, in as many different conversations with this
  • soul-piercing beauty.
  • Her uncle, she must own, was not accustomed to think of such expedients;
  • but she had reconciled this to herself, as the case was unhappily
  • uncommon; and by the regard he had for her honour.
  • This set the puppy's heart at ease, and gave him more courage.
  • She asked him if he thought Lady Betty and Miss Montague intended her a
  • visit?
  • He had no doubt but they did.
  • And does he imagine, said she, that I could be brought to countenance to
  • them the report you have given out?
  • [I had hoped to bring her to this, Jack, or she had seen their letters.
  • But I had told the Captain that I believed I must give up this
  • expectation.]
  • No.--He believed that I had not such a thought. He was pretty sure, that
  • I intended, when I saw them, to tell them, (as in confidence,) the naked
  • truth.
  • He then told her that her uncle had already made some steps towards a
  • general reconciliation. The moment, Madam, that he knows you are really
  • married, he will enter into confidence with your father upon it; having
  • actually expressed to your mother his desire to be reconciled to you.
  • And what, Sir, said my mother? What said my dear mother?
  • With great emotion she asked this question; holding out her sweet face,
  • as the Captain described her, with the most earnest attention, as if she
  • would shorten the way which his words were to have to her heart.
  • Your mother, Madam, burst into tears upon it: and your uncle was so
  • penetrated by her tenderness, that he could not proceed with the subject.
  • But he intends to enter upon it with her in form, as soon as he hears
  • that the ceremony is over.
  • By the tone of her voice she wept. The dear creature, thought I, begins
  • to relent!--And I grudged the dog his eloquence. I could hardly bear the
  • thought that any man breathing should have the power which I had lost, of
  • persuading this high-souled woman, though in my own favour. And wouldest
  • thou think it? this reflection gave me more uneasiness at the moment than
  • I felt from her reproaches, violent as they were; or than I had pleasure
  • in her supposed relenting: for there is beauty in every thing she says
  • and does!--Beauty in her passion!--Beauty in her tears!--Had the Captain
  • been a young fellow, and of rank and fortune, his throat would have been
  • in danger; and I should have thought very hardly of her.
  • O Captain Tomlinson, said she, you know not what I have suffered by this
  • man's strange ways! He had, as I was not ashamed to tell him yesterday,
  • a plain path before him. He at first betrayed me into his power--but
  • when I was in it--There she stopt.--Then resuming--O Sir, you know not
  • what a strange man he has been!--An unpolite, a rough-manner'd man! In
  • disgrace of his birth, and education, and knowledge, an unpolite man!--
  • And so acting, as if his worldly and personal advantages set him above
  • those graces which distinguish a gentleman.
  • The first woman that ever said, or that ever thought so of me, that's my
  • comfort, thought I!--But this, (spoken of to her uncle's friend, behind
  • my back,) helps to heap up thy already-too-full measure, dearest!--It is
  • down in my vellum-book.
  • Cl. When I look back on his whole behaviour to a poor young creature,
  • (for I am but a very young creature,) I cannot acquit him either of great
  • folly or of deep design. And, last Wednesday--There she stopt; and I
  • suppose turned away her face.
  • I wonder she was not ashamed to hint at what she thought so shameful; and
  • that to a man, and alone with him.
  • Capt. Far be it from me, Madam, to offer to enter too closely into so
  • tender a subject. Mr. Lovelace owns, that you have reason to be
  • displeased with him. But he so solemnly clears himself of premeditated
  • offence--
  • Cl. He cannot clear himself, Captain Tomlinson. The people of the
  • house must be very vile, as well as he. I am convinced that there was a
  • wicked confederacy--but no more upon such a subject.
  • Capt. Only one word more, Madam.--He tells me, that you promised to
  • pardon him. He tells me--
  • He knew, interrupted she, that he deserved not pardon, or he had not
  • extorted the promise from me. Nor had I given it to him, but to shield
  • myself from the vilest outrage--
  • Capt. I could wish, Madam, inexcusable as his behaviour has been, since
  • he has something to plead in the reliance he made upon your promise,
  • that, for the sake of appearances to the world, and to avoid the
  • mischiefs that may follow if you absolutely break with him, you could
  • prevail upon your naturally-generous mind to lay an obligation upon him
  • by your forgiveness.
  • She was silent.
  • Capt. Your father and mother, Madam, deplore a daughter lost to them,
  • whom your generosity to Mr. Lovelace may restore: do not put it to the
  • possible chance, that they may have cause to deplore a double loss; the
  • losing of a son, as well as a daughter, who, by his own violence, which
  • you may perhaps prevent, may be for ever lost to them, and to the whole
  • family.
  • She paused--she wept--she owned that she felt the force of this argument.
  • I will be the making of this fellow, thought I.
  • Capt. Permit me, Madam, to tell you, that I do not think it would be
  • difficult to prevail upon your uncle, if you insist upon it, to come up
  • privately to town, and to give you with his own hand to Mr. Lovelace--
  • except, indeed, your present misunderstanding were to come to his ears.
  • Besides, Madam, your brother, it is likely, may at this very time be in
  • town; and he is resolved to find you out--
  • Cl. Why, Sir, should I be so much afraid of my brother? My brother has
  • injured me, not I him. Will my brother offer to me what Mr. Lovelace has
  • offered?--Wicked, ungrateful man! to insult a friendless, unprotected
  • creature, made friendless by himself!--I cannot, cannot think of him in
  • the light I once thought of him. What, Sir, to put myself into the power
  • of a wretch, who has acted by me with so much vile premeditation!--Who
  • shall pity, who shall excuse me, if I do, were I to suffer ever so much
  • from him?--No, Sir.--Let Mr. Lovelace leave me--let my brother find me.
  • I am not such a poor creature as to be afraid to face the brother who has
  • injured me.
  • Capt. Were you and your brother to meet only to confer together, to
  • expostulate, to clear up difficulties, it were another thing. But what,
  • Madam, can you think will be the issue of an interview, (Mr. Solmes with
  • him,) when he finds you unmarried, and resolved never to have Mr.
  • Lovelace; supposing Mr. Lovelace were not to interfere, which cannot be
  • imagined?
  • Cl. Well, Sir, I can only say, I am a very unhappy creature!--I must
  • resign to the will of Providence, and be patient under evils, which that
  • will not permit me to shun. But I have taken my measures. Mr. Lovelace
  • can never make me happy, nor I him. I wait here only for a letter from
  • Miss Howe--that must determine me--
  • Determine you as to Mr. Lovelace, Madam? interrupted the Captain.
  • Cl. I am already determined as to him.
  • Capt. If it be not in his favour, I have done. I cannot use stronger
  • arguments than I have used, and it would be impertinent to repeat them.
  • If you cannot forgive his offence, I am sure it must have been much
  • greater than he has owned to me. If you are absolutely determined, be
  • pleased to let me know what I shall say to your uncle? You were pleased
  • to tell me, that this day would put an end to what you called my trouble:
  • I should not have thought it any, could I have been an humble mean of
  • reconciling persons of worth and honour to each other.
  • Here I entered with a solemn air.
  • Lovel. Captain Tomlinson, I have heard a part of what has passed
  • between you and this unforgiving (however otherwise excellent) lady. I
  • am cut to the heart to find the dear creature so determined. I could
  • not have believed it possible, with such prospects, that I had so little
  • share in her esteem. Nevertheless I must do myself justice with regard
  • to the offence I was so unhappy as to give, since I find you are ready
  • to think it much greater than it really was.
  • Cl. I hear not, Sir, your recapitulations. I am, and ought to be, the
  • sole judge of insults offered to my person. I enter not into discussion
  • with you, nor hear you on the shocking subject. And was going.
  • I put myself between her and the door--You may hear all I have to say,
  • Madam. My fault is not of such a nature, but that you may. I will be a
  • just accuser of myself; and will not wound your ears.
  • I then protested that the fire was a real fire. [So it was.] I
  • disclaimed [less truly] premeditation. I owned that I was hurried on by
  • the violence of a youthful passion, and by a sudden impulse, which few
  • other persons, in the like situation, would have been able to check: that
  • I withdrew, at her command and entreaty, on the promise of pardon,
  • without having offered the least indecency, or any freedom, that would
  • not have been forgiven by persons of delicacy, surprised in an attitude
  • so charming--her terror, on the alarm of fire, calling for a soothing
  • behaviour, and personal tenderness, she being ready to fall into fits: my
  • hoped-for happy day so near, that I might be presumed to be looked upon
  • as a betrothed lover--and that this excuse might be pleaded even for the
  • women of the house, that they, thinking us actually married, might
  • suppose themselves to be the less concerned to interfere on so tender an
  • occasion.--[There, Jack, was a bold insinuation on behalf of the women!]
  • High indignation filled her disdainful eye, eye-beam after eye-beam
  • flashing at me. Every feature of her sweet face had soul in it. Yet she
  • spoke not. Perhaps, Jack, she had a thought, that this plea for the
  • women accounted for my contrivance to have her pass to them as married,
  • when I first carried her thither.
  • Capt. Indeed, Sir, I must say that you did not well to add to the
  • apprehensions of a lady so much terrified before.
  • The dear creature offered to go by me. I set my back against the door,
  • and besought her to stay a few moments. I had not said thus much, my
  • dearest creature, but for your sake, as well as for my own, that Captain
  • Tomlinson should not think I had been viler than I was. Nor will I say
  • one word more on the subject, after I have appealed to your own heart,
  • whether it was not necessary that I should say so much; and to the
  • Captain, whether otherwise he would not have gone away with a much worse
  • opinion of me, if he had judged of my offence by the violence of your
  • resentment.
  • Capt. Indeed I should. I own I should. And I am very glad, Mr.
  • Lovelace, that you are able to defend yourself thus far.
  • Cl. That cause must be well tried, where the offender takes his seat
  • upon the same bench with the judge.--I submit not mine to men--nor, give
  • me leave to say, to you, Captain Tomlinson, though I am willing to have a
  • good opinion of you. Had not the man been assured that he had influenced
  • you in his favour, he would not have brought you up to Hampstead.
  • Capt. That I am influenced, as you call it, Madam, is for the sake of
  • your uncle, and for your own sake, more (I will say to Mr. Lovelace's
  • face) than for his. What can I have in view but peace and
  • reconciliation? I have, from the first, blamed, and I now, again, blame
  • Mr. Lovelace, for adding distress to distress, and terror to terror; the
  • lady, as you acknowledge, Sir, [looking valiantly,] ready before to fall
  • into fits.
  • Lovel. Let me own to you, Captain Tomlinson, that I have been a very
  • faulty, a very foolish man; and, if this dear creature ever honoured me
  • with her love, an ungrateful one. But I have had too much reason to
  • doubt it. And this is now a flagrant proof that she never had the value
  • for me which my proud heart wished for; that, with such prospects before
  • us; a day so near; settlements approved and drawn; her uncle meditating a
  • general reconciliation which, for her sake, not my own, I was desirous to
  • give into; she can, for an offence so really slight, on an occasion so
  • truly accidental, renounce me for ever; and, with me, all hopes of that
  • reconciliation in the way her uncle had put it in, and she had acquiesced
  • with; and risque all consequences, fatal ones as they may too possibly
  • be.--By my soul, Captain Tomlinson, the dear creature must have hated me
  • all the time she was intending to honour me with her hand. And now she
  • must resolve to abandon me, as far as I know, with a preference in her
  • heart of the most odious of men--in favour of that Solmes, who, as you
  • tell me, accompanies her brother: and with what hopes, with what view,
  • accompanies him!--How can I bear to think of this?--
  • Cl. It is fit, Sir, that you should judge of my regard for you by your
  • own conscienceness of demerit. Yet you know, or you would not have dared
  • to behave to me as sometimes you did, that you had more of it than you
  • deserved.
  • She walked from us; and then returning, Captain Tomlinson, said she, I
  • will own to you, that I was not capable of resolving to give my hand, and
  • --nothing but my hand. Had I not given a flagrant proof of this to the
  • once most indulgent of parents? which has brought me into a distress,
  • which this man has heightened, when he ought, in gratitude and honour, to
  • have endeavoured to render it supportable. I had even a bias, Sir, in
  • his favour, I scruple not to own it. Long (much too long!) bore I with
  • his unaccountable ways, attributing his errors to unmeaning gaiety, and
  • to a want of knowing what true delicacy, and true generosity, required
  • from a heart susceptible of grateful impressions to one involved by his
  • means in unhappy circumstances.
  • It is now wickedness in him (a wickedness which discredits all his
  • professions) to say, that this last cruel and ungrateful insult was not
  • a premeditated one--But what need I say more of this insult, when it was
  • of such a nature, and that it has changed that bias in his favour, and
  • make me choose to forego all the inviting prospects he talks of, and to
  • run all hazards, to free myself from his power?
  • O my dearest creature! how happy for us both, had I been able to discover
  • that bias, as you condescend to call it, through such reserves as man
  • never encountered with!
  • He did discover it, Capt. Tomlinson. He brought me, more than once, to
  • own it; the more needlessly brought me to own it, as I dare say his own
  • vanity gave him no cause to doubt it; and as I had apparently no other
  • motive in not being forward to own it, than my too-justly-founded
  • apprehensions of his want of generosity. In a word, Captain Tomlinson,
  • (and now, that I am determined upon my measures, I the less scruple to
  • say,) I should have despised myself, had I found myself capable of
  • affectation or tyranny to the man I intended to marry. I have always
  • blamed the dearest friend I have in the world for a fault of this nature.
  • In a word--
  • Lovel. And had my angel really and indeed the favour for me she is
  • pleased to own?--Dearest creature, forgive me. Restore me to your good
  • opinion. Surely I have not sinned beyond forgiveness. You say that I
  • extorted from you the promise you made me. But I could not have presumed
  • to make that promise the condition of my obedience, had I not thought
  • there was room to expect forgiveness. Permit, I beseech you, the
  • prospects to take place, that were opening so agreeably before us. I
  • will go to town, and bring the license. All difficulties to the
  • obtaining of it are surmounted. Captain Tomlinson shall be witness to
  • the deeds. He will be present at the ceremony on the part of your uncle.
  • Indeed he gave me hope that your uncle himself--
  • Capt. I did, Mr. Lovelace: and I will tell you my grounds for the hope
  • I gave. I promised to my dear friend, (your uncle, Madam,) that he
  • should give out that he would take a turn with me to my little farm-house,
  • as I call it, near Northampton, for a week or so.--Poor gentleman!
  • he has of late been very little abroad!--Too visibly declining!--Change
  • of air, it might be given out, was good for him.--But I see, Madam, that
  • this is too tender a subject--
  • The dear creature wept. She knew how to apply as meant the Captain's
  • hint to the occasion of her uncle's declining state of health.
  • Capt. We might indeed, I told him, set out in that road, but turn short
  • to town in my chariot; and he might see the ceremony performed with his
  • own eyes, and be the desired father, as well as the beloved uncle.
  • She turned from us, and wiped her eyes.
  • Capt. And, really, there seem now to be but two objections to this, as
  • Mr. Harlowe discouraged not the proposal--The one, the unhappy
  • misunderstanding between you; which I would not by any means he should
  • know; since then he might be apt to give weight to Mr. James Harlowe's
  • unjust surmises.--The other, that it would necessarily occasion some
  • delay to the ceremony; which certainly may be performed in a day or two
  • --if--
  • And then he reverently bowed to my goddess.--Charming fellow!--But often
  • did I curse my stars, for making me so much obliged to his adroitness.
  • She was going to speak; but, not liking the turn of her countenance
  • (although, as I thought, its severity and indignation seemed a little
  • abated) I said, and had like to have blown myself up by it--one expedient
  • I have just thought of--
  • Cl. None of your expedients, Mr. Lovelace!--I abhor your expedients,
  • your inventions--I have had too many of them.
  • Lovel. See, Capt. Tomlinson!--See, Sir!--O how we expose ourselves to
  • you!--Little did you think, I dare say, that we have lived in such a
  • continued misunderstanding together!--But you will make the best of it
  • all. We may yet be happy. Oh! that I could have been assured that this
  • dear creature loved me with the hundredth part of the love I have for
  • her!--Our diffidences have been mutual. I presume to say that she has
  • too much punctilio: I am afraid that I have too little. Hence our
  • difficulties. But I have a heart, Captain Tomlinson, a heart, that bids
  • me hope for her love, because it is resolved to deserve it as much as man
  • can deserve it.
  • Capt. I am indeed surprised at what I have seen and heard. I defend
  • not Mr. Lovelace, Madam, in the offence he has given you--as a father of
  • daughters myself, I cannot defend him; though his fault seems to be
  • lighter than I had apprehended--but in my conscience, Madam, I think you
  • carry your resentment too high.
  • Cl. Too high, Sir!--Too high to the man that might have been happy if
  • he would! Too high to the man that has held my soul in suspense an
  • hundred times, since (by artifice and deceit) he obtained a power over
  • me!--Say, Lovelace, thyself say, art thou not the very Lovelace, who by
  • insulting me, hast wronged thine own hopes?--The wretch that appeared in
  • vile disguises, personating an old, lame creature, seeking for lodgings
  • for thy sick wife?--Telling the gentlewomen here stories all of thine own
  • invention; and asserting to them an husband's right over me, which thou
  • hast not!--And is it [turning to the Captain] to be expected, that I
  • should give credit to the protestations of such a man?
  • Lovel. Treat me, my dearest creature, as you please, I will bear it:
  • and yet your scorn and your violence have fixed daggers in my heart--But
  • was it possible, without those disguises, to come at your speech?--And
  • could I lose you, if study, if invention, would put it in my power to
  • arrest your anger, and give me hope to engage you to confirm to me the
  • promised pardon? The address I made to you before the women, as if the
  • marriage-ceremony had passed, was in consequence of what your uncle had
  • advised, and what you had acquiesced with; and the rather made, as your
  • brother, and Singleton, and Solmes, were resolved to find out whether
  • what was reported of your marriage were true or not, that they might take
  • their measures accordingly; and in hopes to prevent that mischief, which
  • I have been but too studious to prevent, since this tameness has but
  • invited insolence from your brother and his confederates.
  • Cl. O thou strange wretch, how thou talkest!--But, Captain Tomlinson,
  • give me leave to say, that, were I inclined to enter farther upon this
  • subject, I would appeal to Miss Rawlins's judgment (whom else have I to
  • appeal to?) She seems to be a person of prudence and honour; but not to
  • any man's judgment, whether I carry my resentment beyond fit bounds, when
  • I resolve--
  • Capt. Forgive, Madam, the interruption--but I think there can be no
  • reason for this. You ought, as you said, to be the sole judge of
  • indignities offered you. The gentlewomen here are strangers to you. You
  • will perhaps stay but a little while among them. If you lay the state of
  • your case before any of them, and your brother come to inquire of them,
  • your uncle's intended mediation will be discovered, and rendered abortive
  • --I shall appear in a light that I never appeared in, in my life--for these
  • women may not think themselves obliged to keep the secret.
  • Charming fellow!
  • Cl. O what difficulties has one fatal step involved me in--but there is
  • no necessity for such an appeal to any body. I am resolved on my
  • measures.
  • Capt. Absolutely resolved, Madam?
  • Cl. I am.
  • Capt. What shall I say to your uncle Harlowe, Madam?--Poor gentleman!
  • how will he be surprised!--You see, Mr. Lovelace--you see, Sir,--turning
  • to me with a flourishing hand--but you may thank yourself--and admirably
  • stalked he from us.
  • True, by my soul, thought I. I traversed the room, and bit my
  • unpersuasive lips, now upper, now under, for vexation.
  • He made a profound reverence to her--and went to the window, where lay
  • his hat and whip; and, taking them up, opened the door. Child, said he,
  • to some body he saw, pray order my servant to bring my horse to the
  • door--
  • Lovel. You won't go, Sir--I hope you won't!--I am the unhappiest man in
  • the world!--You won't go--yet, alas!--But you won't go, Sir!--there may
  • be yet hopes that Lady Betty may have some weight--
  • Capt. Dear Mr. Lovelace! and may not my worthy friend, and affectionate
  • uncle, hope for some influence upon his daughter-niece?--But I beg pardon
  • --a letter will always find me disposed to serve the lady, and that as
  • well for her sake as for the sake of my dear friend.
  • She had thrown herself into her chair: her eyes cast down: she was
  • motionless, as in a profound study.
  • The Captain bowed to her again: but met with no return to his bow. Mr.
  • Lovelace, said he, (with an air of equality and independence,) I am
  • your's.
  • Still the dear unaccountable sat as immovable as a statue; stirring
  • neither hand, foot, head, nor eye--I never before saw any one in so
  • profound a reverie in so waking a dream.
  • He passed by her to go out at the door she sat near, though the passage
  • by the other door was his direct way; and bowed again. She moved not.
  • I will not disturb the lady in her meditations, Sir.--Adieu, Mr. Lovelace
  • --no farther, I beseech you.
  • She started, sighing--Are you going, Sir?
  • Capt. I am, Madam. I could have been glad to do you service; but I see
  • it is not in my power.
  • She stood up, holding out one hand, with inimitable dignity and sweetness
  • --I am sorry you are going, Sir!--can't help it--I have no friend to
  • advise with--Mr. Lovelace has the art (or good fortune, perhaps I should
  • call it) to make himself many.--Well, Sir--if you will go, I can't help
  • it.
  • Capt. I will not go, Madam; his eyes twinkling. [Again seized with a
  • fit of humanity!] I will not go, if my longer stay can do you either
  • service or pleasure. What, Sir, [turning to me,] what, Mr. Lovelace, was
  • your expedient;--perhaps something may be offered, Madam--
  • She sighed, and was silent.
  • REVENGE, invoked I to myself, keep thy throne in my heart. If the
  • usurper LOVE once more drive thee from it, thou wilt never again regain
  • possession!
  • Lovel. What I had thought of, what I had intended to propose, [and I
  • sighed,] was this, that the dear creature, if she will not forgive me, as
  • she promised, will suspend the displeasure she has conceived against me,
  • till Lady Betty arrives.--That lady may be the mediatrix between us.
  • This dear creature may put herself into her protection, and accompany her
  • down to her seat in Oxfordshire. It is one of her Ladyship's purposes to
  • prevail on her supposed new niece to go down with her. It may pass to
  • every one but to Lady Betty, and to you, Captain Tomlinson, and to your
  • friend Mr. Harlowe (as he desires) that we have been some time married:
  • and her being with my relations will amount to a proof to James Harlowe
  • that we are; and our nuptials may be privately, and at this beloved
  • creature's pleasure, solemnized; and your report, Captain, authenticated.
  • Capt. Upon my honour, Madam, clapping his hand upon his breast, a
  • charming expedient!--This will answer every end.
  • She mused--she was greatly perplexed--at last, God direct me! said she: I
  • know not what to do--a young unfriended creature! Whom can I have to
  • advise with?--Let me retire, if I can retire.
  • She withdrew with slow and trembling feet, and went up to her chamber.
  • For Heaven's sake, said the penetrated varlet [his hands lifted up]; for
  • Heaven's sake, take compassion upon this admirable woman!--I cannot
  • proceed--she deserves all things--
  • Softly!--d--n the fellow!--the women are coming in.
  • He sobbed up his grief--turned about--hemm'd up a more manly accent--Wipe
  • thy cursed eyes--He did. The sunshine took place on one cheek, and
  • spread slowly to the other, and the fellow had his whole face again.
  • The women all three came in, led by that ever-curious Miss Rawlins. I
  • told them, that the lady was gone up to consider of every thing: that we
  • had hopes of her. And such a representation we made of all that had
  • passed, as brought either tacit or declared blame upon the fair perverse
  • for hardness of heart and over-delicacy.
  • The widow Bevis, in particular, put out one lip, tossed up her head,
  • wrinkled her forehead, and made such motions with her now lifted-up, now
  • cast-down eyes, as showed that she thought there was a great deal of
  • perverseness and affectation in the lady. Now-and-then she changed her
  • censuring looks to looks of pity of me--but (as she said) she loved not
  • to aggravate!--A poor business, God help's! shrugging up her shoulders,
  • to make such a rout about! And then her eyes laughed heartily--
  • Indulgence was a good thing! Love was a good thing!--but too much was
  • too much!
  • Miss Rawlins, however, declared, after she had called the widow Bevis,
  • with a prudish simper, a comical gentlewoman! that there must be
  • something in our story, which she could not fathom; and went from us into
  • a corner, and sat down, seemingly vexed that she could not.
  • LETTER XXXV
  • MR. LOVELACE
  • [IN CONTINUATION.]
  • The lady staid longer above than we wished; and I hoping that (lady-like)
  • she only waited for an invitation to return to us, desired the widow
  • Bevis, in the Captain's name, (who wanted to go to town,) to request the
  • favour of her company.
  • I cared not to send up either Miss Rawlins or Mrs. Moore on the errand,
  • lest my beloved should be in a communicative disposition; especially as
  • she had hinted at an appeal to Miss Rawlins; who, besides, has such an
  • unbounded curiosity.
  • Mrs. Bevis presently returned with an answer (winking and pinking at me)
  • that the lady would follow her down.
  • Miss Rawlins could not but offer to retire, as the others did. Her eyes,
  • however, intimated that she had rather stay. But they not being answered
  • as she seemed to wish, she went with the rest, but with slower feet; and
  • had hardly left the parlour, when the lady entered it by the other door;
  • a melancholy dignity in her person and air.
  • She sat down. Pray, Mr. Tomlinson, be seated.
  • He took his chair over against her. I stood behind her's that I might
  • give him agreed-upon signals, should there be occasion for them.
  • As thus--a wink of the left eye was to signify push that point, Captain.
  • A wink of the right, and a nod, was to indicate approbation of what he
  • had said.
  • My fore-finger held up, and biting my lip, get off of that, as fast as
  • possible.
  • A right-forward nod, and a frown, swear to it, Captain.
  • My whole spread hand, to take care not to say too much on that particular
  • subject.
  • A scowling brow, and a positive nod, was to bid him rise in temper.
  • And these motions I could make, even those with my hand, without holding
  • up my arm, or moving my wrist, had the women been there; as, when the
  • motions were agreed upon, I knew not but they would.
  • She hemmed--I was going to speak, to spare her supposed confusion: but
  • this lady never wants presence of mind, when presence of mind is
  • necessary either to her honour, or to that conscious dignity which
  • distinguishes her from all the women I ever knew.
  • I have been considering, said she, as well as I was able, of every thing
  • that has passed; and of all that has been said; and of my unhappy
  • situation. I mean no ill, I wish no ill, to any creature living, Mr.
  • Tomlinson. I have always delighted to draw favourable rather than
  • unfavourable conclusions; sometimes, as it has proved, for very bad
  • hearts. Censoriousness, whatever faults I have, is not naturally my
  • fault.--But, circumstanced as I am, treated as I have been, unworthily
  • treated, by a man who is full of contrivances, and glories in them--
  • Lovel. My dearest life!--But I will not interrupt you.
  • Cl. Thus treated, it becomes me to doubt--it concerns my honour to
  • doubt, to fear, to apprehend--your intervention, Sir, is so seasonable,
  • so kind, for this man--my uncle's expedient, the first of the kind he
  • ever, I believe, thought of! a plain, honest, good-minded man, as he is,
  • not affecting such expedients--your report in conformity to it--the
  • consequences of that report; the alarm taken by my brother; his rash
  • resolution upon it--the alarm taken by Lady Betty, and the rest of Mr.
  • Lovelace's relations--the sudden letters written to him upon it, which,
  • with your's, he showed me--all ceremony, among persons born observers of
  • ceremony, and entitled to value themselves upon their distinction,
  • dispensed with--all these things have happened so quick, and some of them
  • so seasonable--
  • Lovel. Lady Betty, you see, Madam, in her letter, dispenses with
  • punctilo, avowedly in compliment to you. Charlotte, in her's, professes
  • to do the same for the same reason. Good Heaven! that the respect
  • intended you by my relations, who, in every other case, are really
  • punctilious, should be thus construed! They were glad, Madam, to have an
  • opportunity to compliment you at my expense. Every one of my family
  • takes delight in rallying me. But their joy on the supposed occasion--
  • Cl. Do I doubt, Sir, that you have not something to say for any thing
  • you think fit to do? I am speaking to Captain Tomlinson, Sir. I will
  • you would be pleased to withdraw--at least to come from behind my chair.
  • And she looked at the Captain, observing, no doubt, that his eyes seemed
  • to take lessons from mine.
  • A fair match, by Jupiter!
  • The Captain was disconcerted. The dog had not had such a blush upon his
  • face for ten years before. I bit my lip for vexation: walked about the
  • room; but nevertheless took my post again; and blinked with my eyes to
  • the Captain, as a caution for him to take more care of his: and then
  • scouling with my brows, and giving the nod positive, I as good as said,
  • resent that, Captain.
  • Capt. I hope, Madam, you have no suspicion that I am capable--
  • Cl. Be not displeased with me, Captain Tomlinson. I have told you that
  • I am not of a suspicious temper. Excuse me for the sake of my sincerity.
  • There is not, I will be bold to say, a sincerer heart in the world than
  • her's before you.
  • She took out her handkerchief, and put it to her eyes.
  • I was going, at that instant, after her example, to vouch for the honesty
  • of my heart; but my conscience Mennelled upon me; and would not suffer
  • the meditated vow to pass my lips.--A devilish thing, thought I, for a
  • man to be so little himself, when he has most occasion for himself!
  • The villain Tomlinson looked at me with a rueful face, as if he begged
  • leave to cry for company. It might have been as well, if he had cried.
  • A feeling heart, or the tokens of it given by a sensible eye, are very
  • reputable things, when kept in countenance by the occasion.
  • And here let me fairly own to thee, that twenty times in this trying
  • conversation I said to myself, that could I have thought that I should
  • have had all this trouble, and incurred all this guilt, I would have been
  • honest at first. But why, Jack, is this dear creature so lovely, yet so
  • invincible?--Ever heardst thou before that the sweets of May blossomed in
  • December?
  • Capt. Be pleased--be pleased, Madam--if you have any doubts of my
  • honour--
  • A whining varlet! He should have been quite angry--For what gave I him
  • the nod positive? He should have stalked again to the window, as for his
  • whip and hat.
  • Cl. I am only making such observations as my youth, my inexperience,
  • and my present unhappy circumstances, suggest to me--a worthy heart
  • (such, I hope, as Captain Tomlinson's) need not fear an examination--
  • need not fear being looked into--whatever doubts that man, who has been
  • the cause of my errors, and, as my severe father imprecated, the punisher
  • of the errors he has caused, might have had of me, or of my honour, I
  • would have forgiven him for them, if he had fairly proposed them to me:
  • for some doubts perhaps such a man might have of the future conduct of a
  • creature whom he could induce to correspond with him against parental
  • prohibition, and against the lights which her own judgment threw in upon
  • her: and if he had propounded them to me like a man and a gentleman, I
  • would have been glad of the opportunity given me to clear my intentions,
  • and to have shown myself entitled to his good opinion--and I hope you,
  • Sir--
  • Capt. I am ready to hear all your doubts, Madam, and to clear them up--
  • Cl. I will only put it, Sir, to your conscience and honour--
  • The dog sat uneasy--he shuffled with his feet--her eye was upon him--he
  • was, therefore, after the rebuff he had met with, afraid to look at me
  • for my motions; and now turned his eyes towards me, then from me, as if
  • he would unlook his own looks.
  • Cl. That all is true, that you have written, and that you have told me.
  • I gave him a right forward nod, and a frown--as much as to say, swear to
  • it, Captain. But the varlet did not round it off as I would have had
  • him. However, he averred that it was.
  • He had hoped, he said, that the circumstances with which his commission
  • was attended, and what he had communicated to her, which he could not
  • know but from his dear friend, her uncle, might have shielded him even
  • from the shadow of suspicion. But I am contented, said he, stammering,
  • to be thought--to be thought--what--what you please to think of me--till,
  • till, you are satisfied--
  • A whore's-bird!
  • Cl. The circumstances you refer to, I must own ought to shield you,
  • Sir, from suspicion; but the man before you is a man that would make an
  • angel suspected, should that angel plead for him.
  • I came forward,--traversed the room,--was indeed in a bl--dy passion.--I
  • have no patience, Madam!--and again I bit my unpersuasive lips.
  • Cl. No man ought to be impatient at imputations he is not ashamed to
  • deserve. An innocent man will not be outrageous upon such imputations.
  • A guilty man ought not. [Most excellently would this charming creature
  • cap sentences with Lord M.!] But I am not now trying you, Sir, [to me,]
  • on the foot of your merits. I am only sorry that I am constrained to put
  • questions to this worthier gentleman, [worthier gentleman, Jack!] which,
  • perhaps, I ought not to put, so far as they regard himself. And I hope,
  • Captain Tomlinson, that you, who know not Mr. Lovelace so well, as, to my
  • unhappiness, I do, and who have children of your own, will excuse a poor
  • young creature, who is deprived of all worldly protection, and who has
  • been insulted and endangered by the most designing man in the world, and,
  • perhaps, by a confederacy of his creatures.
  • There she stopt; and stood up, and looked at me; fear, nevertheless,
  • apparently mingled with her anger.--And so it ought. I was glad,
  • however, of this poor sign of love; no one fears whom they value not.
  • Women's tongues were licensed, I was going to say; but my conscience
  • would not let me call her a woman; nor use to her so vulgar a phrase. I
  • could only rave by my motions, lift up my eyes, spread my hands, rub my
  • face, pull my wig, and look like a fool. Indeed, I had a great mind to
  • run mad. Had I been alone with her, I would; and she should have taken
  • consequences.
  • The Captain interposed in my behalf; gently, however, and as a man not
  • quite sure that he was himself acquitted. Some of the pleas we had both
  • insisted on he again enforced; and, speaking low, Poor gentleman! said
  • he, who can but pity him? Indeed, Madam, it is easy to see, with all his
  • failings, the power you have over him!
  • Cl. I have no pleasure, Sir, in distressing any one; not even him, who
  • has so much distressed me. But, Sir, when I THINK, and when I see him
  • before me, I cannot command my temper! Indeed, indeed, Captain
  • Tomlinson, Mr. Lovelace has not acted by me either as a grateful or a
  • generous man, nor even as a prudent one!--He knows not, as I told him
  • yesterday, the value of the heart he has insulted!
  • There the angel stopt; her handkerchief at her eyes.
  • O Belford, Belford! that she should so greatly excel, as to make me, at
  • times, appear as a villain in my own eyes!
  • I besought her pardon. I promised that it should be the study of my
  • whole life to deserve it. My faults, I said, whatever they had been,
  • were rather faults in her apprehension than in fact. I besought her to
  • give way to the expedient I had hit upon--I repeated it. The Captain
  • enforced it, for her uncle's sake. I, once more, for the sake of the
  • general reconciliation; for the sake of all my family; for the sake of
  • preventing further mischief.
  • She wept. She seemed staggered in her resolution--she turned from me.
  • I mentioned the letter of Lord M. I besought her to resign to Lady
  • Betty's mediation all our differences, if she would not forgive me before
  • she saw her.
  • She turned towards me--she was going to speak; but her heart was full,
  • and again she turned away her eyes,--And do you really and indeed expect
  • Lady Betty and Miss Montague?--And do you--Again she stopt.
  • I answered in a solemn manner.
  • She turned from me her whole face, and paused, and seemed to consider.
  • But, in a passionate accent, again turning towards me, [O how difficult,
  • Jack, for a Harlowe spirit to forgive!] Let her Ladyship come, if she
  • pleases, said she, I cannot, cannot, wish to see her; and if I did see
  • her, and she were to plead for you, I cannot wish to hear her! The more
  • I think, the less I can forgive an attempt, that I am convinced was
  • intended to destroy me. [A plaguy strong word for the occasion,
  • supposing she was right!] What has my conduct been, that an insult of
  • such a nature should be offered to me, and it would be a weakness in me
  • to forgive? I am sunk in my own eyes! And how can I receive a visit
  • that must depress me more?
  • The Captain urged her in my favour with greater earnestness than before.
  • We both even clamoured, as I may say, for mercy and forgiveness. [Didst
  • thou never hear the good folks talk of taking Heaven by storm?]--
  • Contrition repeatedly avowed; a total reformation promised; the happy
  • expedient again urged.
  • Cl. I have taken my measures. I have gone too far to recede, or to
  • wish to recede. My mind is prepared for adversity. That I have not
  • deserved the evils I have met with is my consolation; I have written to
  • Miss Howe what my intentions are. My heart is not with you--it is
  • against you, Mr. Lovelace. I had not written to you as I did in the
  • letter I left behind me, had I not resolved, whatever became of me, to
  • renounce you for ever.
  • I was full of hope now. Severe as her expressions were, I saw she was
  • afraid that I should think of what she had written. And, indeed, her
  • letter is violence itself.--Angry people, Jack, should never write while
  • their passion holds.
  • Lovel. The severity you have shown me, Madam, whether by pen or by
  • speech, shall never have place in my remembrance, but for your honor. In
  • the light you have taken things, all is deserved, and but the natural
  • result of virtuous resentment; and I adore you, even for the pangs you
  • have given me.
  • She was silent. She had employment enough with her handkerchief at her
  • eyes.
  • Lovel. You lament, sometimes, that you have no friends of your own sex
  • to consult with. Miss Rawlins, I must confess, is too inquisitive to be
  • confided in, [I liked not, thou mayest think, her appeal to Miss
  • Rawlins.] She may mean well. But I never in my life knew a person, who
  • was fond of prying into the secrets of others, that was fit to be
  • trusted. The curiosity of such is governed by pride, which is not
  • gratified but by whispering about a secret till it becomes public, in
  • order to show either their consequence, or their sagacity. It is so in
  • every case. What man or woman, who is covetous of power, or of making
  • a right use of it? But in the ladies of my family you may confide. It
  • is their ambition to think of you as one of themselves. Renew but your
  • consent to pass to the world, for the sake of your uncle's expedient, and
  • for the prevention of mischief, as a lady some time married. Lady Betty
  • may be acquainted with the naked truth; and you may, (as she hopes you
  • will,) accompany her to her seat; and, if it must be so, consider me as
  • in a state of penitence or probation, to be accepted or rejected, as I
  • may appear to deserve.
  • The Captain again clapt his hands on his breast, and declared, upon his
  • honour, that this was a proposal that, were the case that of his own
  • daughter, and she were not resolved upon immediate marriage, (which yet
  • he thought by far the more eligible choice,) he should be very much
  • concerned were she to refuse it.
  • Cl. Were I with Mr. Lovelace's relations, and to pass as his wife to
  • the world, I could not have any choice. And how could he be then in a
  • state of probation?--O Mr. Tomlinson, you are too much his friend to see
  • into his drift.
  • Capt. His friend, Madam, as I said before, as I am your's and your
  • uncle's, for the sake of a general reconciliation, which must begin with
  • a better understanding between yourselves.
  • Lovel. Only, my dearest life, resolve to attend the arrival and visit
  • of Lady Betty; and permit her to arbitrate between us.
  • Capt. There can be no harm in that, Madam. You can suffer no
  • inconvenience from that. If Mr. Lovelace's offence be such, that a woman
  • of Lady Betty's character judges it to be unpardonable, why then--
  • Cl. [Interrupting; and to me,] If I am not invaded by you, Sir; if I
  • am, (as I ought to be,) my own mistress, I think to stay here, in this
  • honest house, [and then had I an eye-beam, as the Captain calls it,
  • flashed at me,] till I receive a letter from Miss Howe. That, I hope,
  • will be in a day or two. If in that time the ladies come whom you
  • expect, and if they are desirous to see the creature whom you have made
  • unhappy, I shall know whether I can or cannot receive their visit.
  • She turned short to the door, and, retiring, went up stairs to her
  • chamber.
  • O Sir, said the Captain, as soon as she was gone, what an angel of a
  • woman is this! I have been, and I am a very wicked man. But if any
  • thing should happen amiss to this admirable lady, through my means, I
  • shall have more cause for self-reproach than for all the bad actions
  • of my life put together.
  • And his eyes glistened.
  • Nothing can happen amiss, thou sorrowful dog!--What can happen amiss?
  • Are we to form our opinion of things by the romantic notions of a girl,
  • who supposes that to be the greatest which is the slightest of evils?
  • Have I not told thee our whole story? Has she not broken her promise?
  • Did I not generously spare her, when in my power? I was decent, though
  • I had her at such advantage.--Greater liberties have I taken with girls
  • of character at a common romping 'bout, and all has been laughed off,
  • and handkerchief and head-clothes adjusted, and petticoats shaken to
  • rights, in my presence. Never man, in the like circumstances, and
  • resolved as I was resolved, goaded on as I was goaded on, as well by her
  • own sex, as by the impulses of a violent passion, was ever so decent.
  • Yet what mercy does she show me?
  • Now, Jack, this pitiful dog was such another unfortunate one as thyself
  • --his arguments serving to confirm me in the very purpose he brought them
  • to prevail upon me to give up. Had he left me to myself, to the
  • tenderness of my own nature, moved as I was when the lady withdrew, and
  • had he set down, and made odious faces, and said nothing--it is very
  • possible that I should have taken the chair over against him, which she
  • had quitted, and have cried and blubbered with him for half an hour
  • together. But the varlet to argue with me!--to pretend to convince a
  • man, who knows in is heart that he is doing a wrong thing!--He must needs
  • think that this would put me upon trying what I could say for myself; and
  • when the extended compunction can be carried from the heart to the lips
  • it must evaporate in words.
  • Thou, perhaps, in this place, wouldst have urged the same pleas that he
  • urged. What I answered to him therefore may do for thee, and spare thee
  • the trouble of writing, and me of reading, a good deal of nonsense.
  • Capt. You were pleased to tell me, Sir, that you only proposed to try
  • her virtue; and that you believed you should actually marry her.
  • Lovel. So I shall, and cannot help it. I have no doubt but I shall.
  • And as to trying her, is she not now in the height of her trial? Have I
  • not reason to think that she is coming about? Is she not now yielding up
  • her resentment for an attempt which she thinks she ought not to forgive?
  • And if she do, may she not forgive the last attempt?--Can she, in a word,
  • resent that more than she does this? Women often, for their own sakes,
  • will keep the last secret; but will ostentatiously din the ears of gods
  • and men with their clamours upon a successless offer. It was my folly,
  • my weakness, that I gave her not more cause for this her unsparing
  • violence!
  • Capt. O Sir, you will never be able to subdue this lady without force.
  • Lovel. Well, then, puppy, must I not endeavour to find a proper time
  • and place--
  • Capt. Forgive me, Sir! but can you think of force to such a fine
  • creature?
  • Lovel. Force, indeed, I abhor the thought of; and for what, thinkest
  • thou, have I taken all the pains I have taken, and engaged so many
  • persons in my cause, but to avoid the necessity of violent compulsion?
  • But yet, imaginest thou that I expect direct consent from such a lover of
  • forms as this lady is known to be! Let me tell thee, M'Donald, that thy
  • master, Belford, has urged on thy side of the question all that thou
  • canst urge. Must I have every sorry fellow's conscience to pacify, as
  • well as my own?--By my soul, Patrick, she has a friend here, [clapping my
  • hand on my breast,] that pleads for her with greater and more
  • irresistible eloquence than all the men in the world can plead for her.
  • And had she not escaped me--And yet how have I answered my first design
  • of trying her,* and in her the virtue of the most virtuous of the sex?--
  • Perseverance, man!--Perseverance!--What! wouldst thou have me decline a
  • trial that they make for the honour of a sex we all so dearly love?
  • * See Vol. III. Letter XVIII.
  • Then, Sir, you have no thoughts--no thoughts--[looking still more
  • sorrowfully,] of marrying this wonderful lady?
  • Yes, yes, Patrick, but I have. But let me, first, to gratify my pride,
  • bring down her's. Let me see, that she loves me well enough to forgive
  • me for my own sake. Has she not heretofore lamented that she staid not
  • in her father's house, though the consequence must have been, if she had,
  • that she would have been the wife of the odious Solmes? If now she be
  • brought to consent to be mine, seest thou not that the reconciliation
  • with her detested relations is the inducement, as it always was, and not
  • love of me?--Neither her virtue nor her love can be established but upon
  • full trial; the last trial--but if her resistance and resentment be such
  • as hitherto I have reason to expect they will be, and if I find in that
  • resentment less of hatred of me than of the fact, then shall she be mine
  • in her own way. Then, hateful as is the life of shackles to me, will I
  • marry her.
  • Well, Sir, I can only say, that I am dough in your hands, to be moulded
  • into what shape you please. But if, as I said before--
  • None of thy Said-before's, Patrick. I remember all thou saidst--and I
  • know all thou canst farther say--thou art only, Pontius Pilate like,
  • washing thine own hands, (don't I know thee?) that thou mayest have
  • something to silence thy conscience with by loading me. But we have gone
  • too far to recede. Are not all our engines in readiness? Dry up thy
  • sorrowful eyes. Let unconcern and heart's ease once more take possession
  • of thy solemn features. Thou hast hitherto performed extremely well.--
  • Shame not thy past by thy future behaviour; and a rich reward awaits
  • thee. If thou art dough be dough; and I slapt him on the shoulder--
  • Resume but thy former shape, and I'll be answerable for the event.
  • He bowed assent and compliance; went to the glass; and began to untwist
  • and unsadden his features; pulled his wig right, as if that, as well as
  • his head and heart had been discomposed by his compunction, and once more
  • became old Lucifer's and mine.
  • But didst thou think, Jack, that there was so much--What-shall-I-call-it?
  • --in this Tomlinson? Didst thou imagine that such a fellow as that had
  • bowels? That nature, so long dead and buried in him, as to all humane
  • effects, should thus revive and exert itself?--Yet why do I ask this
  • question of thee, who, to my equal surprise, hast shown, on the same
  • occasion, the like compassionate sensibilities?
  • As to Tomlinson, it looks as if poverty had made him the wicked fellow he
  • is; as plenty and wantonness have made us what we are. Necessity, after
  • all, is the test of principle. But what is there in this dull word, or
  • thing, called HONESTY, that even I, who cannot in my present views be
  • served by it, cannot help thinking even the accidental emanations of it
  • amiable in Tomlinson, though demonstrated in a female case; and judging
  • better of him for being capable of such?
  • LETTER XXXVI
  • MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
  • This debate between the Captain and me was hardly over when the three
  • women, led by Miss Rawlins, entered, hoping no intrusion, but very
  • desirous, the maiden said, to know if we were likely to accommodate.
  • O yes, I hope so. You know, Ladies, that your sex must, in these cases,
  • preserve their forms. They must be courted to comply with their own
  • happiness. A lucky expedient we have hit upon. The uncle has his doubts
  • of our marriage. He cannot believe, nor will any body, that it is
  • possible that a man so much in love, the lady so desirable--
  • They all took the hint. It was a very extraordinary case, the two widows
  • allowed. Women, Jack, [as I believe I have observed* elsewhere,] have a
  • high opinion of what they can do for us. Miss Rawlins desired, if I
  • pleased, to let them know the expedient; and looked as if there was no
  • need to proceed in the rest of my speech.
  • * See Letter XXIV. of this volume.
  • I begged that they would not let the lady know I had told them what this
  • expedient was; and they should hear it.
  • They promised.
  • It was this: that to oblige and satisfy Mr. Harlowe, the ceremony was to
  • be again performed. He was to be privately present, and to give his
  • niece to me with his own hands--and she was retired to consider of it.
  • Thou seest, Jack, that I have provided an excuse, to save my veracity to
  • the women here, in case I should incline to marriage, and she should
  • choose to have Miss Rawlins's assistance at the ceremony. Nor doubted I
  • to bring my fair-one to save my credit on this occasion, if I could get
  • her to consent to be mine.
  • A charming expedient! cried the widow. They were all three ready to clap
  • their hands for joy upon it. Women love to be married twice at least,
  • Jack; though not indeed to the same man. And all blessed the
  • reconciliatory scheme and the proposer of it; and, supposing it came from
  • the Captain, they looked at him with pleasure, while his face shined with
  • the applause implied. He should think himself very happy, if he could
  • bring about a general reconciliation; and he flourished with his head
  • like my man Will. on his victory over old Grimes; bridling by turns, like
  • Miss Rawlins in the height of a prudish fit.
  • But now it was time for the Captain to think of returning to town, having
  • a great deal of business to dispatch before morning. Nor was he certain
  • that he should be able again to attend us at Hampstead before he went
  • home.
  • And yet, as every thing was drawing towards a crisis, I did not intend
  • that he should leave Hampstead that night.
  • A message to the above effect was carried up, at my desire, by Mrs.
  • Moore; with the Captain's compliments, and to know if she had any
  • commands for him to her uncle?
  • But I hinted to the women, that it would be proper for them to withdraw,
  • if the lady did come down; lest she should not care to be so free before
  • them on a proposal so particular, as she would be to us, who had offered
  • it to her consideration.
  • Mrs. Moore brought down word that the lady was following her. They all
  • three withdrew; and she entered at one door, as they went out at the
  • other.
  • The Captain accosted her, repeating the contents of the message sent up;
  • and desired that she would give him her commands in relation to the
  • report he was to make to her uncle Harlowe.
  • I know not what to say, Sir, nor what I would have you to say, to my
  • uncle--perhaps you may have business in town--perhaps you need not see my
  • uncle till I have heard from Miss Howe; till after Lady Betty--I don't
  • know what to say.
  • I implored the return of that value which she had so generously
  • acknowledged once to have had for me. I presumed, I said, to flatter
  • myself that Lady Betty, in her own person, and in the name of all my
  • family, would be able, on my promised reformation and contrition, to
  • prevail in my favour, especially as our prospects in other respects with
  • regard to the general reconciliation wished for were so happy. But let
  • me owe to your own generosity, my dearest creature, said I, rather than
  • to the mediation of any person on earth, the forgiveness I am an humble
  • suitor for. How much more agreeable to yourself, O best beloved of my
  • soul, must it be, as well as obliging to me, that your first personal
  • knowledge of my relations, and theirs of you, (for they will not be
  • denied attending you) should not be begun in recriminations, in appeals?
  • As Lady Betty will be here soon, it will not perhaps be possible for you
  • to receive her visit with a brow absolutely serene. But, dearest,
  • dearest creature, I beseech you, let the misunderstanding pass as a
  • slight one--as a misunderstanding cleared up. Appeals give pride and
  • superiority to the persons appealed to, and are apt to lessen the
  • appellant, not only in their eye, but in her own. Exalt not into judges
  • those who are prepared to take lessons and instructions from you. The
  • individuals of my family are as proud as I am said to be. But they will
  • cheerfully resign to your superiority--you will be the first woman of the
  • family in every one's eyes.
  • This might have done with any other woman in the world but this; and yet
  • she is the only woman in the world of whom it may with truth be said.
  • But thus, angrily, did she disclaim the compliment.
  • Yes, indeed!--[and there she stopt a moment, her sweet bosom heaving with
  • a noble disdain]--cheated out of myself from the very first!--A fugitive
  • from my own family! Renounced by my relations! Insulted by you!--Laying
  • humble claim to the protection of your's!--Is not this the light in which
  • I must appear not only to the ladies of your family, but to all the
  • world?--Think you, Sir, that in these circumstances, or even had I been
  • in the happiest, that I could be affected by this plea of undeserved
  • superiority?--You are a stranger to the mind of Clarissa Harlowe, if you
  • think her capable of so poor and so undue a pride!
  • She went from us to the farther end of the room.
  • The Captain was again affected--Excellent creature! I called her; and,
  • reverently approaching her, urged farther the plea I had last made.
  • It is but lately, said I, that the opinions of my relations have been
  • more than indifferent to me, whether good or bad; and it is for your
  • sake, more than for my own, that I now wish to stand well with my whole
  • family. The principal motive of Lady Betty's coming up, is, to purchase
  • presents for the whole family to make on the happy occasion.
  • This consideration, turning to the Captain, with so noble-minded a dear
  • creature, I know, can have no weight; only as it will show their value
  • and respect. But what a damp would their worthy hearts receive, were
  • they to find their admired new niece, as they now think her, not only not
  • their niece, but capable of renouncing me for ever! They love me. They
  • all love me. I have been guilty of carelessness and levity to them,
  • indeed; but of carelessness and levity only; and that owing to a pride
  • that has set me above meanness, though it has not done every thing for
  • me.
  • My whole family will be guaranties for my good behaviour to this dear
  • creature, their niece, their daughter, their cousin, their friend, their
  • chosen companion and directress, all in one.--Upon my soul, Captain, we
  • may, we must be happy.
  • But, dearest, dearest creature, let me on my knees [and down I dropt, her
  • face all the time turned half from me, as she stood at the window, her
  • handkerchief often at her eyes] on my knees let me plead your promised
  • forgiveness; and let us not appear to them, on their visit, thus unhappy
  • with each other. Lady Betty, the next hour that she sees you, will write
  • her opinion of you, and of the likelihood of our future happiness, to
  • Lady Sarah her sister, a weak-spirited woman, who now hopes to supply to
  • herself, in my bride, the lost daughter she still mourns for!
  • The Captain then joined in, and re-urged her uncle's hopes and
  • expectations, and his resolution effectually to set about the general
  • reconciliation; the mischief that might be prevented; and the certainty
  • that there was that her uncle might be prevailed on to give her to me
  • with his own hand, if she made it her choice to wait for his coming up.
  • but, for his own part, he humbly advised, and fervently pressed her, to
  • make the very next day, or Monday at farthest, my happy day.
  • Permit me, dearest lady, said he, and I could kneel to you myself,
  • [bending his knee,] though I have no interest in my earnestness, but the
  • pleasure I should have to be able to serve you all, to beseech you to
  • give me an opportunity to assure your uncle that I myself saw with my own
  • eyes the happy knot tied!--All misunderstandings, all doubts, all
  • diffidences, will then be at an end.
  • And what, Madam, rejoined I, still kneeling, can there be in your new
  • measures, be they what they will, that can so happily, so reputably, I
  • will presume to say, for all around, obviate the present difficulties?
  • Miss Howe herself, if she love you, and if she love your fame, Madam,
  • urged the Captain, his knee still bent, must congratulate you on such
  • happy conclusion.
  • Then turning her face, she saw the Captain half-kneeling--O Sir! O Capt.
  • Tomlinson!--Why this undue condescension? extending her hand to his
  • elbow, to raise him. I cannot bear this!--Then casting her eye on me,
  • Rise, Mr. Lovelace--kneel not to the poor creature whom you have
  • insulted!--How cruel the occasion for it!--And how mean the submission!
  • Not mean to such an angel!--Nor can I rise but to be forgiven!
  • The Captain then re-urged once more the day--he was amazed, he said, if
  • she ever valued me--
  • O Captain Tomlinson, interrupted she, how much are you the friend of this
  • man!--If I had never valued him, he never would have had it in his power
  • to insult me; nor could I, if I had never regarded him, have taken to
  • heart as I do, the insult (execrable as it was) so undeservedly, so
  • ungratefully given--but let him retire--for a moment let him retire.
  • I was more than half afraid to trust the Captain by himself with her. He
  • gave me a sign that I might depend upon him. And then I took out of my
  • pocket his letter to me, and Lady Betty's and Miss Montague's, and Lord
  • M.'s letters (which last she had not then seen); and giving them to him,
  • procure for me, in the first place, Mr. Tomlinson, a re-perusal of these
  • three letters; and of this from Lord M. And I beseech you, my dearest
  • life, give them due consideration: and let me on my return find the happy
  • effects of that consideration.
  • I then withdrew; with slow feet, however, and a misgiving heart.
  • The Captain insisted upon this re-perusal previously to what she had to
  • say to him, as he tells me. She complied, but with some difficulty; as
  • if she were afraid of being softened in my favour.
  • She lamented her unhappy situation; destitute of friends, and not knowing
  • whither to go, or what to do. She asked questions, sifting-questions,
  • about her uncle, about her family, and after what he knew of Mr.
  • Hickman's fruitless application in her favour.
  • He was well prepared in this particular; for I had shown him the letters
  • and extracts of letter of Miss Howe, which I had so happily come at.*
  • Might she be assured, she asked him, that her brother, with Singleton and
  • Solmes, were actually in quest of her?
  • * Vol. IV. Letter XLIV.
  • He averred that they were.
  • She asked, if he thought I had hopes of prevailing on her to go back to
  • town?
  • He was sure I had not.
  • Was he really of opinion that Lady Betty would pay her a visit?
  • He had no doubt of it.
  • But, Sir; but, Captain Tomlinson--[impatiently turning from him, and
  • again to him] I know not what to do--but were I your daughter, Sir--were
  • you my own father--Alas! Sir, I have neither father nor mother!
  • He turned from her and wiped his eyes.
  • O Sir! you have humanity! [She wept too.] There are some men in the
  • world, thank Heaven, that can be moved. O Sir, I have met with hard-
  • hearted men--in my own family too--or I could not have been so unhappy
  • as I am--but I make every body unhappy!
  • His eyes no doubt ran over.--
  • Dearest Madam! Heavenly Lady!--Who can--who can--hesitated and blubbered
  • the dog, as he owned. And indeed I heard some part of what passed,
  • though they both talked lower than I wished; for, from the nature of
  • their conversation, there was no room for altitudes.
  • THEM, and BOTH, and THEY!--How it goes against me to include this angel
  • of a creature, and any man on earth but myself, in one world!
  • Capt. Who can forbear being affected?--But, Madam, you can be no other
  • man's.
  • Cl. Nor would I be. But he is so sunk with me!--To fire the house!--An
  • artifice so vile!--contrived for the worst of purposes!--Would you have a
  • daughter of your's--But what would I say?--Yet you see that I have nobody
  • in whom I can confide!--Mr. Lovelace is a vindictive man!--He could not
  • love the creature whom he could insult as he has insulted me!
  • She paused. And then resuming--in short, I never, never can forgive him,
  • nor he me.--Do you think, Sir, I never would have gone so far as I have
  • gone, if I had intended ever to draw with him in one yoke?--I left behind
  • me such a letter--
  • You know, Madam, he has acknowledged the justice of your resentment--
  • O Sir, he can acknowledge, and he can retract, fifty times a day--but do
  • not think I am trifling with myself and you, and want to be persuaded to
  • forgive him, and to be his. There is not a creature of my sex, who would
  • have been more explicit, and more frank, than I would have been, from the
  • moment I intended to be his, had I a heart like my own to deal with. I
  • was always above reserve, Sir, I will presume to say, where I had no
  • cause of doubt. Mr. Lovelace's conduct has made me appear, perhaps,
  • over-nice, when my heart wanted to be encouraged and assured! and when,
  • if it had been so, my whole behaviour would have been governed by it.
  • She stopt; her handkerchief at her eyes.
  • I inquired after the minutest part of her behaviour, as well as after her
  • words. I love, thou knowest, to trace human nature, and more
  • particularly female nature, through its most secret recesses.
  • The pitiful fellow was lost in silent admiration of her. And thus the
  • noble creature proceeded.
  • It is the fate in unequal unions, that tolerable creatures, through them,
  • frequently incur censure, when more happily yoked they might be entitled
  • to praise. And shall I not shun a union with a man, that might lead into
  • errors a creature who flatters herself that she is blest with an
  • inclination to be good; and who wishes to make every one happy with whom
  • she has any connection, even to her very servants?
  • She paused, taking a turn about the room--the fellow, devil fetch him, a
  • mummy all the time:--Then proceeded.
  • Formerly, indeed, I hoped to be an humble mean of reforming him. But,
  • when I have no such hope, is it right [you are a serious man, Sir] to
  • make a venture that shall endanger my own morals?
  • Still silent was the varlet. If my advocate had nothing to say for me,
  • what hope of carrying my cause?
  • And now, Sir, what is the result of all?--It is this--that you will
  • endeavour, if you have that influence over him which a man of your sense
  • and experience ought to have, to prevail upon him, and that for his own
  • sake, as well as for mine, to leave me free, to pursue my own destiny.
  • And of this you may assure him, that I will never be any other man's.
  • Impossible, Madam! I know that Mr. Lovelace would not hear me with
  • patience on such a topic. And I do assure you that I have some spirit,
  • and should not care to take an indignity from him or from any man living.
  • She paused--then resuming--and think you, Sir, that my uncle will refuse
  • to receive a letter from me? [How averse, Jack, to concede a tittle in
  • my favour!]
  • I know, Madam, as matters are circumstanced, that he would not answer it.
  • If you please I will carry one down from you.
  • And will he not pursue his intentions in my favour, nor be himself
  • reconciled to me, except I am married?
  • From what your brother gives out, and effects to believe, on Mr.
  • Lovelace's living with you in the same--
  • No more, Sir--I am an unhappy creature!
  • He then re-urged, that it would be in her power instantly, or on the
  • morrow, to put an end to all her difficulties.
  • How can that be? said she: the license still to be obtained? The
  • settlements still to be signed? Miss Howe's answer to my last
  • unreceived?--And shall I, Sir, be in such a HURRY, as if I thought my
  • honour in danger if I delayed? Yet marry the man from whom only it can
  • be endangered!--Unhappy, thrice unhappy Clarissa Harlowe!--In how many
  • difficulties has one rash step involved thee!--And she turned from him
  • and wept.
  • The varlet, by way of comfort, wept too: yet her tears, as he might have
  • observed, were tears that indicated rather a yielding than a perverse
  • temper.
  • There is a sort of stone, thou knowest, so soft in the quarry, that it
  • may in manner be cut with a knife; but if the opportunity not be taken,
  • and it is exposed to the air for any time, it will become as hard as
  • marble, and then with difficulty it yields to the chisel.* So this lady,
  • not taken at the moment, after a turn or two across the room, gained more
  • resolution! and then she declared, as she had done once before, that she
  • would wait the issue of Miss Howe's answer to the letter she had sent her
  • from hence, and take her measures accordingly--leaving it to him, mean
  • time, to make what report he thought fit to her uncle--the kindest that
  • truth could bear, she doubted not from Captain Tomlinson: and she should
  • be glad of a few lines from him, to hear what that was.
  • * The nature of the Bath stone, in particular.
  • She wished him a good journey. She complained of her head; and was about
  • to withdraw: but I stept round to the door next the stairs, as if I had
  • but just come in from the garden (which, as I entered, I called a very
  • pretty one) and took her reluctant hand as she was going out: My dearest
  • life, you are not going?--What hopes, Captain?--Have you not some hopes
  • to give me of pardon and reconciliation?
  • She said she would not be detained. But I would not let her go till she
  • had promised to return, when the Captain had reported to me what her
  • resolution was.
  • And when he had, I sent up and claimed her promise; and she came down
  • again, and repeated (as what she was determined upon) that she would wait
  • for Miss Howe's answers to the letter she had written to her, and take
  • her measures according to its contents.
  • I expostulated with her upon it, in the most submissive and earnest
  • manner. She made it necessary for me to repeat many of the pleas I had
  • before urged. The Captain seconded me with equal earnestness. At last,
  • each fell down on our knees before her.
  • She was distressed. I was afraid at one time she would have fainted.
  • Yet neither of us would rise without some concessions. I pleaded my own
  • sake; the Captain, his dear friend, her uncle's; and both re-pleaded the
  • prevention of future mischief; and the peace and happiness of the two
  • families.
  • She owned herself unequal to the conflict. She sighed. She sobbed. She
  • wept. She wrung her hands.
  • I was perfectly eloquent in my vows and protestations. Her tearful eyes
  • were cast down upon me; a glow upon each charming cheek; a visible
  • anguish in every lovely feature--at last, her trembling knees seemed to
  • fail her, she dropt into the next chair; her charming face, as if seeking
  • for a hiding place (which a mother's bosom would have best supplied)
  • sinking upon her own shoulder.
  • I forgot at the instant all my vows of revenge. I threw myself at her
  • feet, as she sat; and, snatching her hand, pressed it with my lips. I
  • besought Heaven to forgive my past offences, and prosper my future hopes,
  • as I designed honourably and justly by the charmer of my heart, if once
  • more she should restore me to her favour. And I thought I felt drops of
  • scalding water [could they be tears?] trickle down upon my cheeks; while
  • my cheeks, glowing like fire, seemed to scorch up the unwelcome
  • strangers.
  • I then arose, not doubting of an implied pardon in this silent distress.
  • I raised the Captain. I whispered him--by my soul, man, I am in earnest.
  • --Now talk of reconciliation, of her uncle, of the license, of settlement
  • --and raising my voice, If now at last, Captain Tomlinson, my angel will
  • give me leave to call so great a blessing mine, it will be impossible
  • that you should say too much to her uncle in praise of my gratitude, my
  • affection, and fidelity to his charming niece; and he may begin as soon
  • as he pleases his kind schemes for effecting the desirable
  • reconciliation!--Nor shall he prescribe any terms to me that I will not
  • comply with.
  • The Captain blessed me with his eyes and hands--Thank God! whispered he.
  • We approached the lady together.
  • Capt. What hinders, dearest Madam, what now hinders, but that Lady
  • Betty Lawrance, when she comes, may be acquainted with the truth of every
  • thing? And that then she may assist privately at your nuptials? I will
  • stay till they are celebrated; and then shall go down with the happy
  • tidings to my dear Mr. Harlowe. And all will, all must, soon be happy.
  • I must have an answer from Miss Howe, replied the still trembling fair-
  • one. I cannot change my new measures but with her advice. I will
  • forfeit all my hopes of happiness in this world, rather than forfeit her
  • good opinion, and that she should think me giddy, unsteady, or
  • precipitate. All I shall further say on the present subject is this,
  • that when I have her answer to what I have written, I will write to her
  • the whole state of the matter, as I shall then be enabled to do.
  • Lovel. Then must I despair for ever!--O Captain Tomlinson, Miss Howe
  • hates me!--Miss Howe--
  • Capt. Not so, perhaps--when Miss Howe knows your concern for having
  • offended, she will never advise that, with such prospects of general
  • reconciliation, the hopes of so many considerable persons in both
  • families should be frustrated. Some little time, as this excellent
  • lady had foreseen and hinted, will necessarily be taken up in actually
  • procuring the license, and in perusing and signing the settlements. In
  • that time Miss Howe's answer may be received; and Lady Betty may arrive;
  • and she, no doubt, will have weight to dissipate the lady's doubts, and
  • to accelerate the day. It shall be my part, mean time, to make Mr.
  • Harlowe easy. All I fear is from Mr. James Harlowe's quarter; and
  • therefore all must be conducted with prudence and privacy: as your uncle,
  • Madam, has proposed.
  • She was silent, I rejoiced in her silence. The dear creature, thought I,
  • has actually forgiven me in her heart!--But why will she not lay me under
  • obligation to her, by the generosity of an explicit declaration?--And
  • yet, as that would not accelerate any thing, while the license is not in
  • my hands, she is the less to be blamed (if I do her justice) for taking
  • more time to descend.
  • I proposed, as on the morrow night, to go to town; and doubted not to
  • bring the license up with me on Monday morning; would she be pleased to
  • assure me, that she would not depart form Mrs. Moore's.
  • She should stay at Mrs. Moore's till she had an answer from Miss Howe.
  • I told her that I hoped I might have her tacit consent at least to the
  • obtaining of the license.
  • I saw by the turn of her countenance that I should not have asked this
  • question. She was so far from tacitly consenting, that she declared to
  • the contrary.
  • As I never intended, I said, to ask her to enter again into a house, with
  • the people of which she was so much offended, would she be pleased to
  • give orders for her clothes to be brought up hither? Or should Dorcas
  • attend her for any of her commands on that head?
  • She desired not ever more to see any body belonging to that house. She
  • might perhaps get Mrs. Moore or Mrs. Bevis to go thither for her, and
  • take her keys with them.
  • I doubted not, I said, that Lady Betty would arrive by that time. I
  • hoped she had no objection to my bringing that lady and my cousin
  • Montague up with me?
  • She was silent.
  • To be sure, Mr. Lovelace, said the Captain, the lady can have no
  • objection to this.
  • She was still silent. So silence in this case was assent.
  • Would she be pleased to write to Miss Howe?--
  • Sir! Sir! peevishly interrupting--no more questions; no prescribing to me
  • --you will do as you think fit--so will I, as I please. I own no
  • obligation to you. Captain Tomlinson, your servant. Recommend me to my
  • uncle Harlowe's favour. And was going.
  • I took her reluctant hand, and besought her only to promise to meet me
  • early in the morning.
  • To what purpose meet you? Have you more to say than has been said? I
  • have had enough of vows and protestations, Mr. Lovelace. To what purpose
  • should I meet you to-morrow morning?
  • I repeated my request, and that in the most fervent manner, naming six in
  • the morning.
  • 'You know that I am always stirring before that hour, at this season of
  • the year,' was the half-expressed consent.
  • She then again recommended herself to her uncle's favour; and withdrew.
  • And thus, Belford, has she mended her markets, as Lord M. would say, and
  • I worsted mine. Miss Howe's next letter is now the hinge on which the
  • fate of both must turn. I shall be absolutely ruined and undone, if I
  • cannot intercept it.
  • END OF VOL.5
  • End of Project Gutenberg's Clarissa, Volume 5 (of 9), by Samuel Richardson
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