- Project Gutenberg's Clarissa, Volume 6 (of 9), by Samuel Richardson
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
- almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
- re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
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- Title: Clarissa, Volume 6 (of 9)
- The History Of A Young Lady
- Author: Samuel Richardson
- Release Date: February 28, 2004 [EBook #11364]
- Language: English
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CLARISSA, VOLUME 6 (OF 9) ***
- Produced by Produced by Julie C. Sparks.
- CLARISSA HARLOWE
- or the
- HISTORY OF A YOUNG LADY
- Nine Volumes
- Volume VI.
- CONTENTS OF VOLUME VI
- LETTER I. II. Lovelace to Belford.--
- His conditional promise to Tomlinson in the lady's favour. His pleas
- and arguments on their present situation, and on his darling and
- hitherto-baffled views. His whimsical contest with his conscience. His
- latest adieu to it. His strange levity, which he calls gravity, on the
- death of Belford's uncle.
- LETTER III. IV. From the same.--
- She favours him with a meeting in the garden. Her composure. Her
- conversation great and noble. But will not determine any thing in his
- favour. It is however evident, he says, that she has still some
- tenderness for him. His reasons. An affecting scene between them. Her
- ingenuousness and openness of heart. She resolves to go to church; but
- will not suffer him to accompany her thither. His whimsical debate with
- the God of Love, whom he introduced as pleading for the lady.
- LETTER V. VI. VII. From the same.--
- He has got the wished-for letter from Miss Howe.--Informs him of the
- manner of obtaining it.--His remarks upon it. Observations on female
- friendships. Comparison between Clarissa and Miss Howe.
- LETTER VIII. From the same.--
- Another conversation with the lady. His plausible arguments to re-obtain
- her favour ineffectual. His pride piqued. His revenge incited. New
- arguments in favour of his wicked prospects. His notice that a license
- is actually obtained.
- LETTER IX. X. From the same.--
- Copy of the license; with his observations upon it. His scheme for
- annual marriages. He is preparing with Lady Betty and Miss Montague to
- wait upon Clarissa. Who these pretended ladies are. How dressed. They
- give themselves airs of quality. Humourously instructs them how to act
- up their assumed characters.
- LETTER XI. XII. Lovelace to Belford.--
- Once more is the charmer of his soul in her old lodgings. Brief account
- of the horrid imposture. Steels his heart by revengeful recollections.
- Her agonizing apprehensions. Temporary distraction. Is ready to fall
- into fits. But all her distress, all her prayers, her innocence, her
- virtue, cannot save her from the most villanous outrage.
- LETTER XIII. Belford to Lovelace.--
- Vehemently inveighs against him. Grieves for the lady. Is now convinced
- that there must be a world after this to do justice to injured merit.
- Beseeches him, if he be a man, and not a devil, to do all the poor
- justice now in his power.
- LETTER XIV. Lovelace to Belford.--
- Regrets that he ever attempted her. Aims at extenuation. Does he not
- see that he has journeyed on to this stage, with one determined point in
- view from the first? She is at present stupified, he says.
- LETTER XV. From the same.--
- The lady's affecting behaviour in her delirium. He owns that art has
- been used to her. Begins to feel remorse.
- LETTER XVI. From the same.--
- The lady writes upon scraps of paper, which she tears, and throws under
- the table. Copies of ten of these rambling papers; and of a letter to
- him most affectingly incoherent. He attempts farther to extenuate his
- villany. Tries to resume his usual levity; and forms a scheme to decoy
- the people at Hampstead to the infamous woman's in town. The lady seems
- to be recovering.
- LETTER XVII. From the same.--
- She attempts to get away in his absence. Is prevented by the odious
- Sinclair. He exults in the hope of looking her into confusion when he
- sees her. Is told by Dorcas that she is coming into the dining-room to
- find him out.
- LETTER XVIII. From the same.--
- A high scene of her exalted, and of his depressed, behaviour. Offers to
- make her amends by matrimony. She treats his offer with contempt.
- Afraid Belford plays him false.
- LETTER XIX. From the same.--
- Wishes he had never seen her. With all the women he had known till now,
- it was once subdued, and always subdued. His miserable dejection. His
- remorse. She attempts to escape. A mob raised. His quick invention to
- pacify it. Out of conceit with himself and his contrivances.
- LETTER XX. XXI. Lovelace to Belford.--
- Lord M. very ill. His presence necessary at M. Hall. Puts Dorcas upon
- ingratiating herself with her lady.--He re-urges marriage to her. She
- absolutely, from the most noble motives, rejects him.
- LETTER XXII. From the same.--
- Reflects upon himself. It costs, he says, more pain to be wicked than to
- be good. The lady's solemn expostulation with him. Extols her greatness
- of soul. Dorcas coming into favour with her. He is alarmed by another
- attempt of the lady to get off. She is in agonies at being prevented.
- He tried to intimidate her. Dorcas pleads for her. On the point of
- drawing his sword against himself. The occasion.
- LETTER XXIII. From the same.--
- Cannot yet persuade himself but the lady will be his. Reasons for his
- opinion. Opens his heart to Belford, as to his intentions by her.
- Mortified that she refuses his honest vows. Her violation but notional.
- Her triumph greater than her sufferings. Her will unviolated. He is a
- better man, he says, than most rakes; and why.
- LETTER XXIV. XXV. From the same.--
- The lady gives a promissory note to Dorcas, to induce her to further her
- escape.--A fair trial of skill now, he says. A conversation between the
- vile Dorcas and her lady: in which she engages her lady's pity. The
- bonds of wickedness stronger than the ties of virtue. Observations on
- that subject.
- LETTER XXVI. XXVII. XXVIII. From the same.--
- A new contrivance to advantage of the lady's intended escape.--A letter
- from Tomlinson. Intent of it.--He goes out to give opportunity for the
- lady to attempt an escape. His designs frustrated.
- LETTER XXIX. From the same.--
- An interesting conversation between the lady and him. No concession in
- his favour. By his soul, he swears, this dear girl gives the lie to all
- their rakish maxims. He has laid all the sex under obligation to him;
- and why.
- LETTER XXX. Lovelace to Belford.--
- Lord M. in extreme danger. The family desire his presence. He
- intercepts a severe letter from Miss Howe to her friend. Copy of it.
- LETTER XXXI. From the same.--
- The lady, suspecting Dorcas, tries to prevail upon him to give her her
- liberty. She disclaims vengeance, and affectingly tells him all her
- future views. Denied, she once more attempts an escape. Prevented, and
- terrified with apprehensions of instant dishonour, she is obliged to make
- some concession.
- LETTER XXXII. From the same.--
- Accuses her of explaining away her concession. Made desperate, he seeks
- occasion to quarrel with her. She exerts a spirit which overawes him.
- He is ridiculed by the infamous copartnership. Calls to Belford to help
- a gay heart to a little of his dismal, on the expected death of Lord M.
- LETTER XXXIII. From the same.--
- Another message from M. Hall, to engage him to go down the next morning.
- LETTER XXXIV. XXXV. From the same.--
- The women's instigations. His farther schemes against the lady. What,
- he asks, is the injury which a church-rite will not at any time repair?
- LETTER XXXVI. From the same.--
- Himself, the mother, her nymphs, all assembled with intent to execute his
- detestable purposes. Her glorious behaviour on the occasion. He
- execrates, detests, despises himself; and admires her more than ever.
- Obliged to set out early that morning for M. Hall, he will press her with
- letters to meet him next Thursday, her uncle's birthday, at the altar.
- LETTER XXXVII. XXXVIII. XXXIX. Lovelace to Clarissa, from M. Hall.--
- Urging her accordingly, (the license in her hands,) by the most engaging
- pleas and arguments.
- LETTER XL. Lovelace to Belford.--
- Begs he will wait on the lady, and induce her to write but four words to
- him, signifying the church and the day. Is now resolved on wedlock.
- Curses his plots and contrivances; which all end, he says, in one grand
- plot upon himself.
- LETTER XLI. Belford to Lovelace. In answer.--
- Refuses to undertake for him, unless he can be sure of his honour. Why
- he doubts it.
- LETTER XLII. Lovelace. In reply.--
- Curses him for scrupulousness. Is in earnest to marry. After one more
- letter of entreaty to her, if she keep sullen silence, she must take the
- consequence.
- LETTER XLIII. Lovelace to Clarissa.--
- Once more earnestly entreats her to meet him at the altar. Not to be
- forbidden coming, he will take for leave to come.
- LETTER XLIV. Lovelace to Patrick M'Donald.--
- Ordering him to visit the lady, and instructing him what to say, and how
- to behave to her.
- LETTER XLV. To the same, as Captain Tomlinson.--
- Calculated to be shown to the lady, as in confidence.
- LETTER XLVI. M'Donald to Lovelace.--
- Goes to attend the lady according to direction. Finds the house in an
- uproar; and the lady escaped.
- LETTER XLVII. Mowbray to Lovelace.--
- With the same news.
- LETTER XLVIII. Belford to Lovelace.--
- Ample particulars of the lady's escape. Makes serious reflections on the
- distress she must be in; and on his (Lovelace's) ungrateful usage of her.
- What he takes the sum of religion.
- LETTER XLIX. Lovelace to Belford.--
- Runs into affected levity and ridicule, yet at last owns all his gayety
- but counterfeit. Regrets his baseness to the lady. Inveighs against the
- women for their instigations. Will still marry her, if she can be found
- out. One misfortune seldom comes alone; Lord M. is recovering. He had
- bespoken mourning for him.
- LETTER L. Clarissa to Miss Howe.--
- Writes with incoherence, to inquire after her health. Lets her know
- whither to direct to her. But forgets, in her rambling, her private
- address. By which means her letter falls into the hands of Miss Howe's
- mother.
- LETTER LI. Mrs. Howe to Clarissa.--
- Reproaches her for making all her friends unhappy. Forbids her to write
- any more to her daughter.
- LETTER LII. Clarissa's meek reply.
- LETTER LIII. Clarissa to Hannah Burton.
- LETTER LIV. Hannah Burton. In answer.
- LETTER LV. Clarissa to Miss Norton.--
- Excuses her long silence. Asks her a question, with a view to detect
- Lovelace. Hints at his ungrateful villany. Self-recrimination.
- LETTER LVI. Mrs. Norton to Clarissa.--
- Answers her question. Inveighs against Lovelace. Hopes she has escaped
- with her honour. Consoles her by a brief relation of her own case, and
- from motives truly pious.
- LETTER LVII. Clarissa to Lady Betty Lawrance.--
- Requests an answer to three questions, with a view farther to detect
- Lovelace.
- LETTER LVIII. Lady Betty to Clarissa.--
- Answers her questions. In the kindest manner offers to mediate between
- her nephew and her.
- LETTER LIX. LX. Clarissa to Mrs. Hodges,
- her uncle Harlowe's housekeeper; with a view of still farther detecting
- Lovelace. --- Mrs. Hodges's answer.
- LETTER LXI. Clarissa to Lady Betty Lawrance.--
- Acquaints her with her nephew's baseness. Charitably wishes his
- reformation; but utterly, and from principle, rejects him.
- LETTER LXII. Clarissa to Mrs. Norton.--
- Is comforted by her kind soothings. Wishes she had been her child. Will
- not allow her to come up to her; why. Some account of the people she is
- with; and of a worthy woman, Mrs. Lovick, who lodges in the house.
- Briefly hints to her the vile usage she has received from Lovelace.
- LETTER LXIII. Mrs. Norton to Clarissa.--
- Inveighs against Lovelace. Wishes Miss Howe might be induced to refrain
- from freedoms that do hurt, and can do no good. Farther piously consoles
- her.
- LETTER LXIV. Clarissa to Mrs. Norton.--
- A new trouble. An angry letter from Miss Howe. The occasion. Her heart
- is broken. Shall be uneasy, till she can get her father's curse revoked.
- Casts about to whom she can apply for this purpose. At last resolves to
- write to her sister to beg her mediation.
- LETTER LXV. Miss Howe to Clarissa.--
- Her angry and reproachful letter above-mentioned; demands from her the
- clearing up of her conduct.
- LETTER LXVI. Clarissa to Miss Howe.--
- Gently remonstrates upon her severity. To this hour knows not all the
- methods taken to deceive and ruin her. But will briefly, yet
- circumstantially, enter into the darker part of her sad story, though her
- heart sinks under the thoughts of a recollection so painful.
- LETTER LXVII. LXVIII. LXIX. LXX. From the same.--
- She gives the promised particulars of her story. Begs that the blackest
- parts of it may be kept secret; and why. Desires one friendly tear, and
- no more, may be dropt from her gentle eye, on the happy day that shall
- shut up all her sorrows.
- LETTER LXXI. LXXII. Miss Howe to Clarissa.--
- Execrates the abandoned profligate. She must, she tells her, look to the
- world beyond this for her reward. Unravels some of Lovelace's plots; and
- detects his forgeries. Is apprehensive for her own as well as Clarissa's
- safety. Advises her to pursue a legal vengeance. Laudable custom in the
- Isle of Man. Offers personally to attend her in a court of justice.
- LETTER LXXIII. Clarissa to Miss Howe.--
- Cannot consent to a prosecution. Discovers who it was that personated
- her at Hampstead. She is quite sick of life, and of an earth in which
- innocent and benevolent spirits are sure to be considered as aliens.
- THE HISTORY
- OF
- CLARISSA HARLOWE
- LETTER I
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- SAT. MIDNIGHT.
- No rest, says a text that I once heard preached upon, to the wicked--and
- I cannot close my eyes (yet only wanted to compound for half an hour in
- an elbow-chair)--so must scribble on.
- I parted with the Captain after another strong debate with him in
- relation to what is to be the fate of this lady. As the fellow has an
- excellent head, and would have made an eminent figure in any station of
- life, had not his early days been tainted with a deep crime, and he
- detected in it; and as he had the right side of the argument; I had a
- good deal of difficulty with him; and at last brought myself to promise,
- that if I could prevail upon her generously to forgive me, and to
- reinstate me in her favour, I would make it my whole endeavour to get off
- of my contrivances, as happily as I could; (only that Lady Betty and
- Charlotte must come;) and then substituting him for her uncle's proxy,
- take shame to myself, and marry.
- But if I should, Jack, (with the strongest antipathy to the state that
- ever man had,) what a figure shall I make in rakish annals? And can I
- have taken all this pains for nothing? Or for a wife only, that, however
- excellent, [and any woman, do I think I could make good, because I could
- make any woman fear as well as love me,] might have been obtained without
- the plague I have been at, and much more reputably than with it? And
- hast thou not seen, that this haughty woman [forgive me that I call her
- haughty! and a woman! Yet is she not haughty?] knows not how to forgive
- with graciousness? Indeed has not at all forgiven me? But holds my soul
- in a suspense which has been so grievous to her own.
- At this silent moment, I think, that if I were to pursue my former
- scheme, and resolve to try whether I cannot make a greater fault serve as
- a sponge to wipe out the less; and then be forgiven for that; I can
- justify myself to myself; and that, as the fair invincible would say, is
- all in all.
- As it is my intention, in all my reflections, to avoid repeating, at
- least dwelling upon, what I have before written to thee, though the state
- of the case may not have varied; so I would have thee to re-consider the
- old reasonings (particularly those contained in my answer to thy last*
- expostulatory nonsense); and add the new as they fall from my pen; and
- then I shall think myself invincible;--at least, as arguing rake to rake.
- * See Vol. V. Letter XIV.
- I take the gaining of this lady to be essential to my happiness: and is
- it not natural for all men to aim at obtaining whatever they think will
- make them happy, be the object more or less considerable in the eyes of
- others?
- As to the manner of endeavouring to obtain her, by falsification of
- oaths, vows, and the like--do not the poets of two thousand years and
- upwards tell us, that Jupiter laughs at the perjuries of lovers? And let
- me add, to what I have heretofore mentioned on that head, a question or
- two.
- Do not the mothers, the aunts, the grandmothers, the governesses of the
- pretty innocents, always, from their very cradles to riper years, preach
- to them the deceitfulness of men?--That they are not to regard their
- oaths, vows, promises?--What a parcel of fibbers would all these reverend
- matrons be, if there were not now and then a pretty credulous rogue taken
- in for a justification of their preachments, and to serve as a beacon
- lighted up for the benefit of the rest?
- Do we not then see, that an honest prowling fellow is a necessary evil on
- many accounts? Do we not see that it is highly requisite that a sweet
- girl should be now-and-then drawn aside by him?--And the more eminent the
- girl, in the graces of person, mind, and fortune, is not the example
- likely to be the more efficacious?
- If these postulata be granted me, who, I pray, can equal my charmer in
- all these? Who therefore so fit for an example to the rest of her sex?
- --At worst, I am entirely within my worthy friend Mandeville's assertion,
- that private vices are public benefits.
- Well, then, if this sweet creature must fall, as it is called, for the
- benefit of all the pretty fools of the sex, she must; and there's an end
- of the matter. And what would there have been in it of uncommon or rare,
- had I not been so long about it?--And so I dismiss all further
- argumentation and debate upon the question: and I impose upon thee, when
- thou writest to me, an eternal silence on this head.
- Wafer'd on, as an after-written introduction to the paragraphs which
- follow, marked with turned commas, [thus, ']:
- Lord, Jack, what shall I do now! How one evil brings on another!
- Dreadful news to tell thee! While I was meditating a simple robbery,
- here have I (in my own defence indeed) been guilty of murder!--A bl--y
- murder! So I believe it will prove. At her last gasp!--Poor impertinent
- opposer!--Eternally resisting!--Eternally contradicting! There she lies
- weltering in her blood! her death's wound have I given her!--But she was
- a thief, an impostor, as well as a tormentor. She had stolen my pen.
- While I was sullenly meditating, doubting, as to my future measures, she
- stole it; and thus she wrote with it in a hand exactly like my own; and
- would have faced me down, that it was really my own hand-writing.
- 'But let me reflect before it is too late. On the manifold perfections
- of this ever-amiable creature let me reflect. The hand yet is only held
- up. The blow is not struck. Miss Howe's next letter may blow thee up.
- In policy thou shouldest be now at least honest. Thou canst not live
- without her. Thou wouldest rather marry her than lose her absolutely.
- Thou mayest undoubtedly prevail upon her, inflexible as she seems to be,
- for marriage. But if now she finds thee a villain, thou mayest never
- more engage her attention, and she perhaps will refuse and abhor thee.
- 'Yet already have I not gone too far? Like a repentant thief, afraid of
- his gang, and obliged to go on, in fear of hanging till he comes to be
- hanged, I am afraid of the gang of my cursed contrivances.
- 'As I hope to live, I am sorry, (at the present writing,) that I have
- been such a foolish plotter, as to put it, as I fear I have done, out of
- my own power to be honest. I hate compulsion in all forms; and cannot
- bear, even to be compelled to be the wretch my choice has made me! So
- now, Belford, as thou hast said, I am a machine at last, and no free
- agent.
- 'Upon my soul, Jack, it is a very foolish thing for a man of spirit to
- have brought himself to such a height of iniquity, that he must proceed,
- and cannot help himself, and yet to be next to certain, that this very
- victory will undo him.
- 'Why was such a woman as this thrown into my way, whose very fall will
- be her glory, and, perhaps, not only my shame but my destruction?
- 'What a happiness must that man know, who moves regularly to some
- laudable end, and has nothing to reproach himself with in his progress
- to do it! When, by honest means, he attains his end, how great and
- unmixed must be his enjoyments! What a happy man, in this particular
- case, had I been, had it been given me to be only what I wished to appear
- to be!'
- Thus far had my conscience written with my pen; and see what a recreant
- she had made of me!--I seized her by the throat--There!--There, said I,
- thou vile impertinent!--take that, and that!--How often have I gave thee
- warning!--and now, I hope, thou intruding varletess, have I done thy
- business!
- Puling and low-voiced, rearing up thy detested head, in vain implorest
- thou my mercy, who, in thy day hast showed me so little!--Take that, for
- a rising blow!--And now will thy pain, and my pain for thee, soon be
- over. Lie there!--Welter on!--Had I not given thee thy death's wound,
- thou wouldest have robbed me of all my joys. Thou couldest not have
- mended me, 'tis plain. Thou couldest only have thrown me into despair.
- Didst thou not see, that I had gone too far to recede?--Welter on, once
- more I bid thee!--Gasp on!--That thy last gasp, surely!--How hard diest
- thou!
- ADIEU!--Unhappy man! ADIEU!
- 'Tis kind in thee, however, to bid me, Adieu!
- Adieu, Adieu, Adieu, to thee, O thou inflexible, and, till now,
- unconquerable bosom intruder!--Adieu to thee for ever!
- LETTER II
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- SUNDAY MORN. (JUNE 11). FOUR O'CLOCK.
- A few words to the verbal information thou sentest me last night
- concerning thy poor old man; and then I rise from my seat, shake myself,
- refresh, new-dress, and so to my charmer, whom, notwithstanding her
- reserves, I hope to prevail upon to walk out with me on the Heath this
- warm and fine morning.
- The birds must have awakened her before now. They are in full song. She
- always gloried in accustoming herself to behold the sun rise--one of
- God's natural wonders, as once she called it.
- Her window salutes the east. The valleys must be gilded by his rays, by
- the time I am with her; for already have they made the up-lands smile, and
- the face of nature cheerful.
- How unsuitable will thou find this gay preface to a subject so gloomy as
- that I am now turning to!
- I am glad to hear thy tedious expectations are at last answered.
- Thy servant tells me that thou are plaguily grieved at the old fellow's
- departure.
- I can't say, but thou mayest look as if thou wert; harassed as thou hast
- been for a number of days and nights with a close attendance upon a dying
- man, beholding his drawing-on hour--pretending, for decency's sake, to
- whine over his excruciating pangs; to be in the way to answer a thousand
- impertinent inquiries after the health of a man thou wishedest to die--to
- pray by him--for so once thou wrotest to me!--To read by him--to be
- forced to join in consultation with a crew of solemn and parading
- doctors, and their officious zanies, the apothecaries, joined with the
- butcherly tribe of scarficators; all combined to carry on the physical
- farce, and to cut out thongs both from his flesh and his estate--to have
- the superadded apprehension of dividing thy interest in what he shall
- leave with a crew of eager-hoping, never-to-be-satisfied relations,
- legatees, and the devil knows who, of private gratifiers of passions
- laudable and illaudable--in these circumstances, I wonder not that thou
- lookest before servants, (as little grieved as thou after heirship,) as
- if thou indeed wert grieved; and as if the most wry-fac'd woe had
- befallen thee.
- Then, as I have often thought, the reflection that must naturally arise
- from such mortifying objects, as the death of one with whom we have been
- familiar, must afford, when we are obliged to attend it in its slow
- approaches, and in its face-twisting pangs, that it will one day be our
- own case, goes a great way to credit the appearance of grief.
- And that it is this, seriously reflected upon, may temporally give a fine
- air of sincerity to the wailings of lively widows, heart-exulting heirs,
- and residuary legatees of all denominations; since, by keeping down the
- inward joy, those interesting reflections must sadden the aspect, and add
- an appearance of real concern to the assumed sables.
- Well, but, now thou art come to the reward of all thy watchings,
- anxieties, and close attendances, tell me what it is; tell me if it
- compensate thy trouble, and answer thy hope?
- As to myself, thou seest, by the gravity of my style, how the subject has
- helped to mortify me. But the necessity I am under of committing either
- speedy matrimony, or a rape, has saddened over my gayer prospects, and,
- more than the case itself, contributed to make me sympathize with the
- present joyful-sorrow.
- Adieu, Jack, I must be soon out of my pain; and my Clarissa shall be soon
- out of her's--for so does the arduousness of the case require.
- LETTER III
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- SUNDAY MORNING.
- I have had the honour of my charmer's company for two complete hours. We
- met before six in Mrs. Moore's garden. A walk on the Heath refused me.
- The sedateness of her aspect and her kind compliance in this meeting gave
- me hopes. And all that either the Captain and I had urged yesterday to
- obtain a full and free pardon, that re-urged I; and I told her, besides,
- that Captain Tomlinson was gone down with hopes to prevail upon her uncle
- Harlowe to come up in person, in order to present to me the greatest
- blessing that man ever received.
- But the utmost I could obtain was, that she would take no resolution in
- my favour till she received Miss Howe's next letter.
- I will not repeat the arguments I used; but I will give thee the
- substance of what she said in answer to them.
- She had considered of every thing, she told me. My whole conduct was
- before her. The house I carried her to must be a vile house. The people
- early showed what they were capable of, in the earnest attempt made to
- fasten Miss Partington upon her; as she doubted not, with my approbation.
- [Surely, thought I, she has not received a duplicate of Miss Howe's
- letter of detection!] They heard her cries. My insult was undoubtedly
- premeditated. By my whole recollected behaviour to her, previous to it,
- it must be so. I had the vilest of views, no question. And my treatment
- of her put it out of all doubt.
- Soul over all, Belford! She seems sensible of liberties that my passion
- made me insensible of having taken, or she could not so deeply resent.
- She besought me to give over all thoughts of her. Sometimes, she said,
- she thought herself cruelly treated by her nearest and dearest relations;
- at such times, a spirit of repining and even of resentment took place;
- and the reconciliation, at other times so desirable, was not then so much
- the favourite wish of her heart, as was the scheme she had formerly
- planned--of taking her good Norton for her directress and guide, and
- living upon her own estate in the manner her grandfather had intended she
- should live.
- This scheme she doubted not that her cousin Morden, who was one of her
- trustees for that estate, would enable her, (and that, as she hoped,
- without litigation,) to pursue. And if he can, and does, what, Sir, let
- me ask you, said she, have I seen in your conduct, that should make me
- prefer to it an union of interest, where there is such a disunion in
- minds?
- So thou seest, Jack, there is reason, as well as resentment, in the
- preference she makes against me!--Thou seest, that she presumes to think
- that she can be happy without me; and that she must be unhappy with me!
- I had besought her, in the conclusion of my re-urged arguments, to write
- to Miss Howe before Miss Howe's answer could come, in order to lay before
- her the present state of things; and if she would pay a deference to her
- judgment, to let her have an opportunity to give it, on the full knowledge
- of the case--
- So I would, Mr. Lovelace, was the answer, if I were in doubt myself,
- which I would prefer--marriage, or the scheme I have mentioned. You
- cannot think, Sir, but the latter must be my choice. I wish to part with
- you with temper--don't put me upon repeating--
- Part with me, Madam! interrupted I--I cannot bear those words!--But let
- me beseech you, however, to write to Miss Howe. I hope, if Miss Howe is
- not my enemy--
- She is not the enemy of your person, Sir;--as you would be convinced, if
- you saw her last letter* to me. But were she not an enemy to your
- actions, she would not be my friend, nor the friend of virtue. Why will
- you provoke from me, Mr. Lovelace, the harshness of expression, which,
- however, which, however deserved by you, I am unwilling just now to use,
- having suffered enough in the two past days from my own vehemence?
- * The lady innocently means Mr. Lovelace's forged one. See Vol. V.
- Letter XXX.
- I bit my lip for vexation. And was silent.
- Miss Howe, proceeded she, knows the full state of matters already, Sir.
- The answer I expect from her respects myself, not you. Her heart is too
- warm in the cause of friendship, to leave me in suspense one moment
- longer than is necessary as to what I want to know. Nor does her answer
- absolutely depend upon herself. She must see a person first, and that
- person perhaps see others.
- The cursed smuggler-woman, Jack!--Miss Howe's Townsend, I doubt not--
- Plot, contrivance, intrigue, stratagem!--Underground-moles these women--
- but let the earth cover me!--let me be a mole too, thought I, if they
- carry their point!--and if this lady escape me now!
- She frankly owned that she had once thought of embarking out of all our
- ways for some one of our American colonies. But now that she had been
- compelled to see me, (which had been her greatest dread), and which she
- might be happiest in the resumption of her former favourite scheme, if
- Miss Howe could find her a reputable and private asylum, till her cousin
- Morden could come.--But if he came not soon, and if she had a difficulty
- to get to a place of refuge, whether from her brother or from any body
- else, [meaning me, I suppose,] she might yet perhaps go abroad; for, to
- say the truth, she could not think of returning to her father's house,
- since her brother's rage, her sister's upbraidings, her father's anger,
- her mother's still-more-affecting sorrowings, and her own consciousness
- under them all, would be unsupportable to her.
- O Jack! I am sick to death, I pine, I die, for Miss Howe's next letter!
- I would bind, gag, strip, rob, and do any thing but murder, to intercept
- it.
- But, determined as she seems to be, it was evident to me, nevertheless,
- that she had still some tenderness for me.
- She often wept as she talked, and much oftener sighed. She looked at me
- twice with an eye of undoubted gentleness, and three times with an eye
- tending to compassion and softness; but its benign rays were as often
- snatched back, as I may say, and her face averted, as if her sweet eyes
- were not to be trusted, and could not stand against my eager eyes;
- seeking, as they did, for a lost heart in her's, and endeavouring to
- penetrate to her very soul.
- More than once I took her hand. She struggled not much against the
- freedom. I pressed it once with my lips--she was not very angry. A
- frown indeed--but a frown that had more distress in it than indignation.
- How came the dear soul, (clothed as it is with such a silken vesture,) by
- all its steadiness?* Was it necessary that the active gloom of such a
- tyrant of a father, should commix with such a passive sweetness of a
- will-less mother, to produce a constancy, an equanimity, a steadiness, in
- the daughter, which never woman before could boast of? If so, she is
- more obliged to that despotic father than I could have imagined a
- creature to be, who gave distinction to every one related to her beyond
- what the crown itself can confer.
- * See Vol. I. Letters IX. XIV. and XIX. for what she herself says on that
- steadiness which Mr. Lovelace, though a deserved sufferer by it, cannot
- help admiring.
- I hoped, I said, that she would admit of the intended visit, which I had
- so often mentioned, of the two ladies.
- She was here. She had seen me. She could not help herself at present.
- She even had the highest regard for the ladies of my family, because of
- their worthy characters. There she turned away her sweet face, and
- vanquished an half-risen sigh.
- I kneeled to her then. It was upon a verdant cushion; for we were upon
- the grass walk. I caught her hand. I besought her with an earnestness
- that called up, as I could feel, my heart to my eyes, to make me, by her
- forgiveness and example, more worthy of them, and of her own kind and
- generous wishes. By my soul, Madam, said I, you stab me with your
- goodness--your undeserved goodness! and I cannot bear it!
- Why, why, thought I, as I did several times in this conversation, will
- she not generously forgive me? Why will she make it necessary for me to
- bring Lady Betty and my cousin to my assistance? Can the fortress expect
- the same advantageous capitulation, which yields not to the summons of a
- resistless conqueror, as if it gave not the trouble of bringing up and
- raising its heavy artillery against it?
- What sensibilities, said the divine creature, withdrawing her hand, must
- thou have suppressed! What a dreadful, what a judicial hardness of heart
- must thine be! who canst be capable of such emotions, as sometimes thou
- hast shown; and of such sentiments, as sometimes have flowed from thy
- lips; yet canst have so far overcome them all as to be able to act as
- thou hast acted, and that from settled purpose and premeditation; and
- this, as it is said, throughout the whole of thy life, from infancy to
- this time!
- I told her, that I had hoped, from the generous concern she had expressed
- for me, when I was so suddenly and dangerously taken ill--[the
- ipecacuanha experiment, Jack!]
- She interrupted me--Well have you rewarded me for the concern you speak
- of!--However, I will frankly own, now that I am determined to think no
- more of you, that you might, (unsatisfied as I nevertheless was with
- you,) have made an interest--
- She paused. I besought her to proceed.
- Do you suppose, Sir, and turned away her sweet face as we walked,--Do you
- suppose that I had not thought of laying down a plan to govern myself by,
- when I found myself so unhappily over-reached and cheated, as I may say,
- out of myself--When I found, that I could not be, and do, what I wished
- to be, and to do, do you imagine that I had not cast about, what was the
- next proper course to take?--And do you believe that this next course has
- not caused me some pain to be obliged to--
- There again she stopt.
- But let us break off discourse, resumed she. The subject grows too--She
- sighed--Let us break off discourse--I will go in--I will prepare for
- church--[The devil! thought I.] Well, as I can appear in those
- every-day-worn clothes--looking upon herself--I will go to church.
- She then turned from me to go into the house.
- Bless me, my beloved creature, bless me with the continuance of this
- affecting conversation.--Remorse has seized my heart!--I have been
- excessively wrong--give me farther cause to curse my heedless folly, by
- the continuance of this calm but soul-penetrating conversation.
- No, no, Mr. Lovelace: I have said too much. Impatience begins to break
- in upon me. If you can excuse me to the ladies, it will be better for
- my mind's sake, and for your credit's sake, that I do not see them. Call
- me to them over-nice, petulant, prudish--what you please call me to them.
- Nobody but Miss Howe, to whom, next to the Almighty, and my own mother, I
- wish to stand acquitted of wilful error, shall know the whole of what has
- passed. Be happy, as you may!--Deserve to be happy, and happy you will
- be, in your own reflection at least, were you to be ever so unhappy in
- other respects. For myself, if I ever shall be enabled, on due
- reflection, to look back upon my own conduct, without the great reproach
- of having wilfully, and against the light of my own judgment, erred, I
- shall be more happy than if I had all that the world accounts desirable.
- The noble creature proceeded; for I could not speak.
- This self-acquittal, when spirits are lent me to dispel the darkness
- which at present too often over-clouds my mind, will, I hope, make me
- superior to all the calamities that can befal me.
- Her whole person was informed by her sentiments. She seemed to be taller
- than before. How the God within her exalted her, not only above me, but
- above herself!
- Divine creature! (as I thought her,) I called her. I acknowledged the
- superiority of her mind; and was proceeding--but she interrupted me--All
- human excellence, said she, is comparative only. My mind, I believe, is
- indeed superior to your's, debased as your's is by evil habits: but I had
- not known it to be so, if you had not taken pains to convince me of the
- inferiority of your's.
- How great, how sublimely great, this creature!--By my soul I cannot
- forgive her for her virtues! There is no bearing the consciousness of
- the infinite inferiority she charged me with.--But why will she break
- from me, when good resolutions are taking place? The red-hot iron she
- refuses to strike--O why will she suffer the yielding wax to harden?
- We had gone but a few paces towards the house, when we were met by the
- impertinent women, with notice, that breakfast was ready. I could only,
- with uplifted hands, beseech her to give me hope of a renewed
- conversation after breakfast.
- No--she would go to church.
- And into the house she went, and up stairs directly. Nor would she
- oblige me with her company at the tea-table.
- I offered, by Mrs. Moore, to quit both the table and the parlour, rather
- than she should exclude herself, or deprive the two widows of the favour
- of her company.
- That was not all the matter, she told Mrs. Moore. She had been
- struggling to keep down her temper. It had cost her some pains to do it.
- She was desirous to compose herself, in hopes to receive benefit by the
- divine worship she was going to join in.
- Mrs. Moore hoped for her presence at dinner.
- She had rather be excused. Yet, if she could obtain the frame of mind
- she hoped for, she might not be averse to show, that she had got above
- those sensibilities, which gave consideration to a man who deserved not
- to be to her what he had been.
- This said, no doubt, to let Mrs. Moore know, that the garden-conversation
- had not been a reconciling one.
- Mrs. Moore seemed to wonder that we were not upon a better foot of
- understanding, after so long a conference; and the more, as she believed
- that the lady had given in to the proposal for the repetition of the
- ceremony, which I had told them was insisted upon by her uncle Harlowe.--
- But I accounted for this, by telling both widows that she was resolved to
- keep on the reserve till she heard from Captain Tomlinson, whether her
- uncle would be present in person at the solemnity, or would name that
- worthy gentleman for his proxy.
- Again I enjoined strict secresy, as to this particular; which was
- promised by the widows, as well as for themselves, as for Miss Rawlins;
- of whose taciturnity they gave me such an account, as showed me, that she
- was secret-keeper-general to all the women of fashion at Hampstead.
- The Lord, Jack! What a world of mischief, at this rate, must Miss
- Rawlins know!--What a Pandora's box must her bosom be!--Yet, had I
- nothing that was more worthy of my attention to regard, I would engage to
- open it, and make my uses of the discovery.
- And now, Belford, thou perceivest, that all my reliance is upon the
- mediation of Lady Betty and Miss Montague, and upon the hope of
- intercepting Miss Howe's next letter.
- LETTER IV
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- This fair inexorable is actually gone to church with Mrs. Moore and Mrs.
- Bevis; but Will. closely attends her motions; and I am in the way to
- receive any occasional intelligence from him.
- She did not choose, [a mighty word with the sex! as if they were always
- to have their own wills!] that I should wait upon her. I did not much
- press it, that she might not apprehend that I thought I had reason to
- doubt her voluntary return.
- I once had it in my head to have found the widow Bevis other employment.
- And I believe she would have been as well pleased with my company as to
- go to church; for she seemed irresolute when I told her that two out of
- a family were enough to go to church for one day. But having her things
- on, (as the women call every thing,) and her aunt Moore expecting her
- company, she thought it best to go--lest it should look oddly, you know,
- whispered she, to one who was above regarding how it looked.
- So here am I in my dining-room; and have nothing to do but to write till
- they return.
- And what will be my subject thinkest thou? Why, the old beaten one to be
- sure; self-debate--through temporary remorse: for the blow being not
- struck, her guardian angel is redoubling his efforts to save her.
- If it be not that, [and yet what power should her guardian angel have
- over me?] I don't know what it is that gives a check to my revenge,
- whenever I meditate treason against so sovereign a virtue. Conscience is
- dead and gone, as I told thee; so it cannot be that. A young conscience
- growing up, like the phoenix, from the ashes of the old one, it cannot
- be, surely. But if it were, it would be hard, if I could not overlay a
- young conscience.
- Well, then, it must be LOVE, I fancy. LOVE itself, inspiring love of an
- object so adorable--some little attention possibly paid likewise to thy
- whining arguments in her favour.
- Let LOVE then be allowed to be the moving principle; and the rather, as
- LOVE naturally makes the lover loth to disoblige the object of its flame;
- and knowing, that to an offence of the meditated kind will be a mortal
- offence to her, cannot bear that I should think of giving it.
- Let LOVE and me talk together a little on this subject--be it a young
- conscience, or love, or thyself, Jack, thou seest that I am for giving
- every whiffler audience. But this must be the last debate on this
- subject; for is not her fate in a manner at its crisis? And must not my
- next step be an irretrievable one, tend it which way it will?
- ***
- And now the debate is over.
- A thousand charming things, (for LOVE is gentler than CONSCIENCE,) has
- this little urchin suggested in her favour. He pretended to know both
- our hearts: and he would have it, that though my love was a prodigious
- strong and potent love; and though it has the merit of many months,
- faithful service to plead, and has had infinite difficulties to struggle
- with; yet that it is not THE RIGHT SORT OF LOVE.
- Right sort of love!--A puppy!--But, with due regard to your deityship,
- said I, what merits has she with YOU, that you should be of her party?
- Is her's, I pray you, a right sort of love? Is it love at all? She
- don't pretend that it is. She owns not your sovereignty. What a d---l
- I moves you, to plead thus earnestly for a rebel, who despises your
- power?
- And then he came with his If's and And's--and it would have been, and
- still, as he believed, would be, love, and a love of the exalted kind, if
- I would encourage it by the right sort of love he talked of: and, in
- justification of his opinion, pleaded her own confessions, as well those
- of yesterday, as of this morning: and even went so far back as to my
- ipecacuanha illness.
- I never talked so familiarly with his godship before: thou mayest think,
- therefore, that his dialect sounded oddly in my ears. And then he told
- me, how often I had thrown cold water upon the most charming flame that
- ever warmed a lady's bosom, while but young and rising.
- I required a definition of this right sort of love, he tried at it: but
- made a sorry hand of it: nor could I, for the soul of me, be convinced,
- that what he meant to extol was LOVE.
- Upon the whole, we had a noble controversy upon this subject, in which
- he insisted upon the unprecedented merit of the lady. Nevertheless I got
- the better of him; for he was struck absolutely dumb, when (waving her
- present perverseness, which yet was a sufficient answer to all his pleas)
- I asserted, and offered to prove it, by a thousand instances impromptu,
- that love was not governed by merit, nor could be under the dominion of
- prudence, or any other reasoning power: and if the lady were capable of
- love, it was of such a sort as he had nothing to do with, and which never
- before reigned in a female heart.
- I asked him, what he thought of her flight from me, at a time when I was
- more than half overcome by the right sort of love he talked of?--And then
- I showed him the letter she wrote, and left behind her for me, with an
- intention, no doubt, absolutely to break my heart, or to provoke me to
- hang, drown, or shoot myself; to say nothing of a multitude of
- declarations from her, defying his power, and imputing all that looked
- like love in her behaviour to me, to the persecution and rejection of her
- friends; which made her think of me but as a last resort.
- LOVE then gave her up. The letter, he said, deserved neither pardon nor
- excuse. He did not think he had been pleading for such a declared rebel.
- And as to the rest, he should be a betrayer of the rights of his own
- sovereignty, if what I had alleged were true, and he were still to plead
- for her.
- I swore to the truth of all. And truly I swore: which perhaps I do not
- always do.
- And now what thinkest thou must become of the lady, whom LOVE itself
- gives up, and CONSCIENCE cannot plead for?
- LETTER V
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- SUNDAY AFTERNOON.
- O Belford! what a hair's-breadth escape have I had!--Such a one, that I
- tremble between terror and joy, at the thought of what might have
- happened, and did not.
- What a perverse girl is this, to contend with her fate; yet has reason
- to think, that her very stars fight against her! I am the luckiest of
- me!--But my breath almost fails me, when I reflect upon what a slender
- thread my destiny hung.
- But not to keep thee in suspense; I have, within this half-hour, obtained
- possession of the expected letter from Miss Howe--and by such an
- accident! But here, with the former, I dispatch this; thy messenger
- waiting.
- LETTER VI
- MR. LOVELACE
- [IN CONTINUATION.]
- Thus it was--My charmer accompanied Mrs. Moore again to church this
- afternoon. I had been in very earnest, in the first place, to obtain her
- company at dinner: but in vain. According to what she had said to Mrs.
- Moore,* I was too considerable to her to be allowed that favour. In the
- next place, I besought her to favour me, after dinner, with another
- garden-walk. But she would again go to church. And what reason have I
- to rejoice that she did!
- * See Letter III. of this volume.
- My worthy friend, Mrs. Bevis, thought one sermon a day, well observed,
- enough; so staid at home to bear me company.
- The lady and Mrs. Moore had not been gone a quarter of an hour, when a
- young country-fellow on horseback came to the door, and inquired for Mrs.
- Harriot Lucas. The widow and I (undetermined how we were to entertain
- each other) were in the parlour next the door; and hearing the fellow's
- inquiry, O my dear Mrs. Bevis, said I, I am undone, undone for ever, if
- you don't help me out!--Since here, in all probability, is a messenger
- from that implacable Miss Howe with a letter; which, if delivered to Mrs.
- Lovelace, may undo all we have been doing.
- What, said she, would you have me do?
- Call the maid in this moment, that I may give her her lesson; and if it
- be as I imagined, I'll tell you what you shall do.
- Wid. Margaret!--Margaret! come in this minute.
- Lovel. What answer, Mrs. Margaret, did you give the man, upon his
- asking for Mrs. Harriot Lucas?
- Peggy. I only asked, What was his business, and who he came from? (for,
- Sir, your honour's servant had told me how things stood): and I came at
- your call, Madam, before he answered me.
- Lovel. Well, child, if ever you wish to be happy in wedlock yourself,
- and would have people disappointed who want to make mischief between you
- and your husband, get out of him his message, or letter if he has one,
- and bring it to me, and say nothing to Mrs. Lovelace, when she comes in;
- and here is a guinea for you.
- Peggy. I will do all I can to serve your honour's worship for nothing:
- [nevertheless, with a ready hand, taking the guinea:] for Mr. William
- tells me what a good gentleman you be.
- Away went Peggy to the fellow at the door.
- Peggy. What is your business, friend, with Mrs. Harry Lucas?
- Fellow. I must speak to her her own self.
- Lovel. My dearest widow, do you personate Mrs. Lovelace--for Heaven's
- sake do you personate Mrs. Lovelace.
- Wid. I personate Mrs. Lovelace, Sir! How can I do that?--She is fair;
- I am brown. She is slender: I am plump--
- Lovel. No matter, no matter--The fellow may be a new-come servant: he
- is not in livery, I see. He may not know her person. You can but be
- bloated and in a dropsy.
- Wid. Dropsical people look not so fresh and ruddy as I do.
- Lovel. True--but the clown may not know that. 'Tis but for a present
- deception. Peggy, Peggy, call'd I, in a female tone, softly at the door.
- Madam, answer'd Peggy; and came up to me to the parlour-door.
- Lovel. Tell him the lady is ill; and has lain down upon the couch. And
- get his business from him, whatever you do.
- Away went Peggy.
- Lovel. Now, my dear widow, lie along the settee, and put your
- handkerchief over your face, that, if he will speak to you himself, he
- may not see your eyes and your hair.--So--that's right.--I'll step into
- the closet by you.
- I did so.
- Peggy. [Returning.] He won't deliver his business to me. He will
- speak to Mrs. Harriot Lucas her own self.
- Lovel. [Holding the door in my hand.] Tell him that this is Mrs.
- Harriot Lucas; and let him come in. Whisper him (if he doubts) that she
- is bloated, dropsical, and not the woman she was.
- Away went Margery.
- Lovel. And now, my dear widow, let me see what a charming Mrs. Lovelace
- you'll make!--Ask if he comes from Miss Howe. Ask if he lives with her.
- Ask how she does. Call her, at every word, your dear Miss Howe. Offer
- him money--take this half-guinea for him--complain of your head, to have
- a pretence to hold it down; and cover your forehead and eyes with your
- hand, where your handkerchief hides not your face.--That's right--and
- dismiss the rascal--[here he comes]--as soon as you can.
- In came the fellow, bowing and scraping, his hat poked out before him
- with both his hands.
- Fellow. I am sorry, Madam, an't please you, to find you ben't well.
- Widow. What is your business with me, friend?
- Fellow. You are Mrs. Harriot Lucas, I suppose, Madam?
- Widow. Yes. Do you come from Miss Howe?
- Fellow. I do, Madam.
- Widow. Dost thou know my right name, friend?
- Fellow. I can give a shrewd guess. But that is none of my business.
- Widow. What is thy business? I hope Miss Howe is well?
- Fellow. Yes, Madam; pure well, I thank God. I wish you were so too.
- Widow. I am too full of grief to be well.
- Fellow. So belike I have hard to say.
- Widow. My head aches so dreadfully, I cannot hold it up. I must beg
- of you to let me know your business.
- Fellow. Nay, and that be all, my business is soon known. It is but to
- give this letter into your own partiklar hands--here it is.
- Widow. [Taking it.] From my dear friend Miss Howe?--Ah, my head!
- Fellow. Yes, Madam: but I am sorry you are so bad.
- Widow. Do you live with Miss Howe?
- Fellow. No, Madam: I am one of her tenants' sons. Her lady-mother must
- not know as how I came of this errand. But the letter, I suppose, will
- tell you all.
- Widow. How shall I satisfy you for this kind trouble?
- Fellow. No how at all. What I do is for love of Miss Howe. She will
- satisfy me more than enough. But, may-hap, you can send no answer, you
- are so ill.
- Widow. Was you ordered to wait for an answer?
- Fellow. No, I cannot say as that I was. But I was bidden to observe
- how you looked, and how you was; and if you did write a line or two, to
- take care of it, and give it only to our young landlady in secret.
- Widow. You see I look strangely. Not so well as I used to do.
- Fellow. Nay, I don't know that I ever saw you but once before; and that
- was at a stile, where I met you and my young landlady; but knew better
- than to stare a gentlewoman in the face; especially at a stile.
- Widow. Will you eat, or drink, friend?
- Fellow. A cup of small ale, I don't care if I do.
- Widow. Margaret, take the young man down, and treat him with what the
- house affords.
- Fellow. Your servant, Madam. But I staid to eat as I come along, just
- upon the Heath yonder; or else, to say the truth, I had been here sooner.
- [Thank my stars, thought I, thou didst.] A piece of powdered beef was
- upon the table, at the sign of the Castle, where I stopt to inquire for
- this house: and so, thoff I only intended to wet my whistle, I could not
- help eating. So shall only taste of your ale; for the beef was woundily
- corned.
- Prating dog! Pox on thee! thought I.
- He withdrew, bowing and scraping.
- Margaret, whispered I, in a female voice [whispering out of the closet,
- and holding the parlour-door in my hand] get him out of the house as fast
- as you can, lest they come from church, and catch him here.
- Peggy. Never fear, Sir.
- The fellow went down, and it seems, drank a large draught of ale; and
- Margaret finding him very talkative, told him, she begged his pardon, but
- she had a sweetheart just come from sea, whom she was forced to hide in
- the pantry; so was sure he would excuse her from staying with him.
- Ay, ay, to be sure, the clown said: for if he could not make sport, he
- would spoil none. But he whispered her, that one 'Squire Lovelace was a
- damnation rogue, if the truth might be told.
- For what? said Margaret. And could have given him, she told the widow
- (who related to me all this) a good dowse of the chaps.
- For kissing all the women he came near.
- At the same time, the dog wrapped himself round Margery, and gave her a
- smack, that, she told Mrs. Bevis afterwards, she might have heard into
- the parlour.
- Such, Jack, is human nature: thus does it operate in all degrees; and so
- does the clown, as well as his practises! Yet this sly dog knew not but
- the wench had a sweetheart locked up in the pantry! If the truth were
- known, some of the ruddy-faced dairy wenches might perhaps call him a
- damnation rogue, as justly as their betters of the same sex might 'Squire
- Lovelace.
- The fellow told the maid, that, by what he discovered of the young lady's
- face, it looked very rosy to what he took it to be; and he thought her a
- good deal fatter, as she lay, and not so tall.
- All women are born to intrigue, Jack; and practise it more or less, as
- fathers, guardians, governesses, from dear experience, can tell; and in
- love affairs are naturally expert, and quicker in their wits by half than
- men. This ready, though raw wench, gave an instance of this, and
- improved on the dropsical hint I had given her. The lady's seeming
- plumpness was owing to a dropsical disorder, and to the round posture she
- lay in--very likely, truly. Her appearing to him to be shorter, he might
- have observed, was owing to her drawing her feet up from pain, and
- because the couch was too short, she supposed--Adso, he did not think of
- that. Her rosy colour was owing to her grief and head-ache.--Ay, that
- might very well be--but he was highly pleased that he had given the
- letter into Mrs. Harriot's own hand, as he should tell Miss Howe.
- He desired once more to see the lady at his going away, and would not be
- denied. The widow therefore sat up, with her handkerchief over her face,
- leaning her head against the wainscot.
- He asked if she had any partiklar message?
- No: she was so ill she could not write; which was a great grief to her.
- Should he call the next day? for he was going to London, now he was so
- near; and should stay at a cousin's that night, who lived in a street
- called Fetter-Lane.
- No: she would write as soon as able, and send by the post.
- Well, then, if she had nothing to send by him, mayhap he might stay in
- town a day or two; for he had never seen the lions in the Tower, nor
- Bedlam, nor the tombs; and he would make a holiday or two, as he had
- leave to do, if she had no business or message that required his posting
- down next day.
- She had not.
- She offered him the half-guinea I had given her for him; but he refused
- it with great professions of disinterestedness, and love, as he called
- it, to Miss Howe; to serve whom, he would ride to the world's-end, or
- even to Jericho.
- And so the shocking rascal went away: and glad at my heart was I when he
- was gone; for I feared nothing so much as that he would have staid till
- they came from church.
- Thus, Jack, got I my heart's ease, the letter of Miss Howe; ad through
- such a train of accidents, as makes me say, that the lady's stars fight
- against her. But yet I must attribute a good deal to my own precaution,
- in having taken right measures. For had I not secured the widow by my
- stories, and the maid by my servant, all would have signified nothing.
- And so heartily were they secured, the one by a single guinea, the other
- by half a dozen warm kisses, and the aversion they both had to such
- wicked creatures as delighted in making mischief between man and wife,
- that they promised, that neither Mrs. Moore, Miss Rawlins, Mrs. Lovelace,
- nor any body living, should know any thing of the matter.
- The widow rejoiced that I had got the mischief-maker's letter. I excused
- myself to her, and instantly withdrew with it; and, after I had read it,
- fell to my short-hand, to acquaint thee with my good luck: and they not
- returning so soon as church was done, (stepping, as it proved, into Miss
- Rawlins's, and tarrying there awhile, to bring that busy girl with them
- to drink tea,) I wrote thus far to thee, that thou mightest, when thou
- camest to this place, rejoice with me upon the occasion.
- They are all three just come in.
- I hasten to them.
- LETTER VII
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- I have begun another letter to thee, in continuation of my narrative: but
- I believe I shall send thee this before I shall finish that. By the
- enclosed thou wilt see, that neither of the correspondents deserve mercy
- from me: and I am resolved to make the ending with one the beginning with
- the other.
- If thou sayest that the provocations I have given to one of them will
- justify her freedoms; I answer, so they will, to any other person but
- myself. But he that is capable of giving those provocations, and has the
- power to punish those who abuse him for giving them, will show his
- resentment; and the more remorselessly, perhaps, as he has deserved the
- freedoms.
- If thou sayest, it is, however, wrong to do so; I reply, that it is
- nevertheless human nature:--And wouldst thou not have me to be a man,
- Jack?
- Here read the letter, if thou wilt. But thou art not my friend, if thou
- offerest to plead for either of the saucy creatures, after thou hast read
- it.
- TO MRS. HARRIOT LUCAS,
- AT MRS. MOORE'S, AT HAMPSTEAD.
- JUNE 10.
- After the discoveries I had made of the villanous machinations of the
- most abandoned of men, particularized in my long letter of Wednesday*
- last, you will believe, my dearest friend, that my surprise upon perusing
- your's of Thursday evening from Hampstead** was not so great as my
- indignation. Had the villain attempted to fire a city instead of a
- house, I should not have wondered at it. All that I am amazed at is,
- that he (whose boast, as I am told, it is, that no woman shall keep him
- out of her bed-chamber, when he has made a resolution to be in it) did
- not discover his foot before. And it is as strange to me, that, having
- got you at such a shocking advantage, and in such a horrid house, you
- could, at the time, escape dishonour, and afterwards get from such a set
- of infernals.
- * See Vol. V. Letter XX.
- ** Ibid. See Letter XXI.
- I gave you, in my long letter of Wednesday and Thursday last, reasons why
- you ought to mistrust that specious Tomlinson. That man, my dear, must
- be a solemn villain. May lightning from Heaven blast the wretch, who has
- set him and the rest of his REMORSELESS GANG at work, to endeavour to
- destroy the most consummate virtue!--Heaven be praised! you have escaped
- from all their snares, and now are out of danger.--So I will not trouble
- you at present with the particulars I have further collected relating to
- this abominable imposture.
- For the same reason, I forbear to communicate to you some new stories of
- the abhorred wretch himself which have come to my ears. One, in
- particular, of so shocking a nature!--Indeed, my dear, the man's a devil.
- The whole story of Mrs. Fretchville, and her house, I have no doubt to
- pronounce, likewise, an absolute fiction.--Fellow!--How my soul spurns
- the villain!
- Your thought of going abroad, and your reasons for so doing, most
- sensibly affect me. But be comforted, my dear; I hope you will not be
- under a necessity of quitting your native country. Were I sure that that
- must be the cruel case, I would abandon all my better prospects, and soon
- be with you. And I would accompany you whithersoever you went, and share
- fortunes with you: for it is impossible that I should be happy, if I knew
- that you were exposed not only to the perils of the sea, but to the
- attempts of other vile men; your personal graces attracting every eye;
- and exposing you to those hourly dangers, which others, less
- distinguished by the gifts of nature, might avoid.--All that I know that
- beauty (so greatly coveted, and so greatly admired) is good for.
- O my dear, were I ever to marry, and to be the mother of a CLARISSA,
- [Clarissa must be the name, if promisingly lovely,] how often would my
- heart ache for the dear creature, as she grew up, when I reflected that a
- prudence and discretion, unexampled in woman, had not, in you, been a
- sufficient protection to that beauty, which had drawn after it as many
- admirers as beholders!--How little should I regret the attacks of that
- cruel distemper, as it is called, which frequently makes the greatest
- ravages in the finest faces!
- SAT. AFTERNOON.
- I have just parted with Mrs. Townsend.* I thought you had once seen her
- with me; but she says she never had the honour to be personally known to
- you. She has a manlike spirit. She knows the world. And her two
- brothers being in town, she is sure she can engage them in so good a
- cause, and (if there should be occasion) both their ships' crews, in your
- service.
- * For the account of Mrs. Townsend, &c. see Vol. IV. Letter XLII.
- Give your consent, my dear; and the horrid villain shall be repaid with
- broken bones, at least, for all his vileness!
- The misfortune is, Mrs. Townsend cannot be with you till Thursday next,
- or Wednesday, at soonest: Are you sure you can be safe where you are till
- then? I think you are too near London; and perhaps you had better be in
- it. If you remove, let me, the very moment, know whither.
- How my heart is torn, to think of the necessity so dear a creature is
- driven to of hiding herself! Devilish fellow! He must have been
- sportive and wanton in his inventions--yet that cruel, that savage
- sportiveness has saved you from the sudden violence to which he has had
- recourse in the violation of others, of names and families not
- contemptible. For such the villain always gloried to spread his snares.
- The vileness of this specious monster has done more, than any other
- consideration could do, to bring Mr. Hickman into credit with me. Mr.
- Hickman alone knows (from me) of your flight, and the reason of it. Had
- I not given him the reason, he might have thought still worse of the vile
- attempt. I communicated it to him by showing him your letter from
- Hampstead. When he had read it, [and he trembled and reddened, as he
- read,] he threw himself at my feet, and besought me to permit him to
- attend you, and to give you the protection of his house. The
- good-natured man had tears in his eyes, and was repeatedly earnest on this
- subject; proposing to take his chariot-and-four, or a set, and in person,
- in the face of all the world, give himself the glory of protecting such
- an oppressed innocent.
- I could not but be pleased with him. And I let him know that I was. I
- hardly expected so much spirit from him. But a man's passiveness to a
- beloved object of our sex may not, perhaps, argue want of courage on
- proper occasions.
- I thought I ought, in return, to have some consideration for his safety,
- as such an open step would draw upon him the vengeance of the most
- villanous enterpriser in the world, who has always a gang of fellows,
- such as himself, at his call, ready to support one another in the vilest
- outrages. But yet, as Mr. Hickman might have strengthened his hands by
- legal recourses, I should not have stood upon it, had I not known your
- delicacy, [since such a step must have made a great noise, and given
- occasion for scandal, as if some advantage had been gained over you,] and
- were there not the greatest probability that all might be more silently,
- and more effectually, managed, by Mrs. Townsend's means.
- Mrs. Townsend will in person attend you--she hopes, on Wednesday--her
- brothers, and some of their people, will scatteringly, and as if they
- knew nothing of you, [so we have contrived,] see you safe not only to
- London, but to her house at Deptford.
- She has a kinswoman, who will take your commands there, if she herself
- be obliged to leave you. And there you may stay, till the wretch's fury,
- on losing you, and his search, are over.
- He will very soon, 'tis likely, enter upon some new villany, which may
- engross him: and it may be given out, that you are gone to lay claim to
- the protection of your cousin Morden at Florence.
- Possibly, if he can be made to believe it, he will go over, in hopes to
- find you there.
- After a while, I can procure you a lodging in one of our neighbouring
- villages, where I may have the happiness to be your daily visiter. And
- if this Hickman be not silly and apish, and if my mother do not do
- unaccountable things, I may the sooner think of marrying, that I may,
- without controul, receive and entertain the darling of my heart.
- Many, very many, happy days do I hope we shall yet see together; and as
- this is my hope, I expect that it will be your consolation.
- As to your estate, since you are resolved not to litigate for it, we will
- be patient, either till Colonel Morden arrives, or till shame compels
- some people to be just.
- Upon the whole, I cannot but think your prospects now much happier than
- they could have been, had you been actually married to such a man as
- this. I must therefore congratulate you upon your escape, not only from
- a horrid libertine, but from so vile a husband, as he must have made to
- any woman; but more especially to a person of your virtue and delicacy.
- You hate him, heartily hate him, I hope, my dear--I am sure you do. It
- would be strange, if so much purity of life and manners were not to abhor
- what is so repugnant to itself.
- In your letter before me, you mention one written to me for a feint.* I
- have not received any such. Depend upon it, therefore, that he must have
- it. And if he has, it is a wonder that he did not likewise get my long
- one of the 7th. Heaven be praised that he did not; and that it came safe
- to your hands!
- * See Vol. V. Letters XXI. and XXII.
- I send this by a young fellow, whose father is one of our tenants, with
- command to deliver it to no other hands but your's. He is to return
- directly, if you give him any letter. If not, he will proceed to London
- upon his own pleasures. He is a simple fellow; but very honest. So you
- may say anything to him. If you write not by him, I desire a line or
- two, as soon as possible.
- My mother knows nothing of his going to you; nor yet of your abandoning
- the fellow. Forgive me! But he is not entitled to good manners.
- I shall long to hear how you and Mrs. Townsend order matters. I wish
- she could have been with you sooner. But I have lost no time in engaging
- her, as you will suppose. I refer to her, what I have further to say and
- advise. So shall conclude with my prayers, that Heaven will direct and
- protect my dearest creature, and make your future days happy!
- ANNA HOWE.
- And now, Jack, I will suppose that thou hast read this cursed letter.
- Allow me to make a few observations upon some of its contents.
- It is strange to Miss Howe, that having got her friend at such a shocking
- advantage, &c. And it is strange to me, too. If ever I have such
- another opportunity given to me, the cause of both our wonder, I believe,
- will cease.
- So thou seest Tomlinson is further detected.--No such person as Mrs.
- Fretchville.--May lightning from Heaven--O Lord, O Lord, O Lord!--What a
- horrid vixen is this!--My gang, my remorseless gang, too, is brought in--
- and thou wilt plead for these girls again; wilt thou? heaven be praised,
- she says, that her friend is out of danger--Miss Howe should be sure of
- that, and that she herself is safe.--But for this termagant, (as I often
- said,) I must surely have made a better hand of it.--
- New stories of me, Jack!--What can they be?--I have not found that my
- generosity to my Rose-bud ever did me due credit with this pair of
- friends. Very hard, Belford, that credits cannot be set against debits,
- and a balance struck in a rake's favour, as well as in that of every
- common man!--But he, from whom no good is expected, is not allowed the
- merit of the good he does.
- I ought to have been a little more attentive to character than I have
- been. For, notwithstanding that the measures of right and wrong are said
- to be so manifest, let me tell thee, that character biases and runs away
- with all mankind. Let a man or woman once establish themselves in the
- world's opinion, and all that either of them do will be sanctified. Nay,
- in the very courts of justice, does not character acquit or condemn as
- often as facts, and sometimes even in spite of facts?--Yet, [impolitic
- that I have been and am!] to be so careless of mine!--And now, I doubt,
- it is irretrievable.--But to leave moralizing.
- Thou, Jack, knowest almost all my enterprises worth remembering. Can
- this particular story, which this girl hints at, be that of Lucy Villars?
- --Or can she have heard of my intrigue with the pretty gipsey, who met me
- in Norwood, and of the trap I caught her cruel husband in, [a fellow as
- gloomy and tyrannical as old Harlowe,] when he pursued a wife, who would
- not have deserved ill of him, if he had deserved well of her!--But he was
- not quite drowned. The man is alive at this day, and Miss Howe mentions
- the story as a very shocking one. Besides, both these are a twelve-month
- old, or more.
- But evil fame and scandal are always new. When the offender has forgot a
- vile fact, it is often told to one and to another, who, having never
- heard of it before, trumpet it about as a novelty to others. But well
- said the honest corregidor at Madrid, [a saying with which I encroached
- Lord M.'s collection,]--Good actions are remembered but for a day: bad
- ones for many years after the life of the guilty. Such is the relish
- that the world has for scandal. In other words, such is the desire which
- every one has to exculpate himself by blackening his neighbour. You and
- I, Belford, have been very kind to the world, in furnishing it with
- opportunities to gratify its devil.
- [Miss Howe will abandon her own better prospects, and share fortunes with
- her, were she to go abroad.]--Charming romancer!--I must set about this
- girl, Jack. I have always had hopes of a woman whose passions carry her
- to such altitudes.--Had I attacked Miss Howe first, her passions,
- (inflamed and guided as I could have managed them,) would have brought
- her into my lure in a fortnight.
- But thinkest thou, [and yet I think thou dost,] that there is any thing
- in these high flights among the sex?--Verily, Jack, these vehement
- friendships are nothing but chaff and stubble, liable to be blown away by
- the very wind that raises them. Apes, mere apes of us! they think the
- word friendship has a pretty sound with it; and it is much talked of--a
- fashionable word. And so, truly, a single woman, who thinks she has a
- soul, and knows that she wants something, would be thought to have found
- a fellow-soul for it in her own sex. But I repeat, that the word is a
- mere word, the thing a mere name with them; a cork-bottomed shuttle-cock,
- which they are fond of striking to and fro, to make one another glow in
- the frosty weather of a single-state; but which, when a man comes in
- between the pretended inseparables, is given up, like their music and
- other maidenly amusements; which, nevertheless, may be necessary to keep
- the pretty rogues out of active mischief. They then, in short, having
- caught the fish, lay aside the net.*
- * He alludes here to the story of a pope, who, (once a poor fisherman,)
- through every preferment he rose to, even to that of the cardinalate,
- hung up in view of all his guests his net, as a token of humility. But,
- when he arrived at the pontificate, he took it down, saying, that there
- was no need of the net, when he had caught the fish.
- Thou hast a mind, perhaps, to make an exception for these two ladies.--
- With all my heart. My Clarissa has, if woman has, a soul capable of
- friendship. Her flame is bright and steady. But Miss Howe's, were it
- not kept up by her mother's opposition, is too vehement to endure. How
- often have I known opposition not only cement friendship, but create
- love? I doubt not but poor Hickman would fare the better with this
- vixen, if her mother were as heartily against him, as she is for him.
- Thus much, indeed, as to these two ladies, I will grant thee, that the
- active spirit of the one, and the meek disposition of the other, may make
- their friendship more durable than it would otherwise be; for this is
- certain, that in every friendship, whether male or female, there must be
- a man and a woman spirit, (that is to say, one of them must be a
- forbearing one,) to make it permanent.
- But this I pronounce, as a truth, which all experience confirms, that
- friendship between women never holds to the sacrifice of capital
- gratifications, or to the endangering of life, limb, or estate, as it
- often does in our nobler sex.
- Well, but next comes an indictment against poor beauty! What has beauty
- done that Miss Howe should be offended at it?--Miss Howe, Jack, is a
- charming girl. She has no reason to quarrel with beauty!--Didst ever see
- her?--Too much fire and spirit in her eye, indeed, for a girl!--But
- that's no fault with a man that can lower that fire and spirit at
- pleasure; and I know I am the man that can.
- For my own part, when I was first introduced to this lady, which was by
- my goddess when she herself was a visiter at Mrs. Howe's, I had not been
- half an hour with her, but I even hungered and thirsted after a romping
- 'bout with the lively rogue; and, in the second or third visit, was more
- deterred by the delicacy of her friend, than by what I apprehended from
- her own. This charming creature's presence, thought I, awes us both.
- And I wished her absence, though any other woman were present, that I
- might try the differences in Miss Howe's behaviour before her friend's
- face, or behind her back.
- Delicate women make delicate women, as well as decent men. With all Miss
- Howe's fire and spirit, it was easy to see, by her very eye, that she
- watched for lessons and feared reproof from the penetrating eye of her
- milder dispositioned friend;* and yet it was as easy to observe, in the
- candour and sweet manners of the other, that the fear which Miss Howe
- stood in of her, was more owing to her own generous apprehension that she
- fell short of her excellencies, than to Miss Harlowe's consciousness of
- excellence over her. I have often since I came at Miss Howe's letters,
- revolved this just and fine praise contained in one of them:** 'Every one
- saw that the preference they gave you to themselves exalted you not into
- any visible triumph over them; for you had always something to say, on
- every point you carried, that raised the yielding heart, and left every
- one pleased and satisfied with themselves, though they carried not off
- the palm.'
- * Miss Howe, in Vol. III. Letter XIX. says, That she was always more
- afraid of Clarissa than of her mother; and, in Vol. III. Letter XLIV.
- That she fears her almost as much as she loves her; and in many other
- places, in her letters, verifies this observation of Lovelace.
- ** See Vol. IV. Letter XXXI.
- As I propose, in a more advanced life, to endeavour to atone for my
- useful freedoms with individuals of the sex, by giving cautions and
- instructions to the whole, I have made a memorandum to enlarge upon this
- doctrine;--to wit, that it is full as necessary to direct daughters in
- the choice of their female companions, as it is to guard them against the
- designs of men.
- I say not this, however, to the disparagement of Miss Howe. She has from
- pride, what her friend has from principle. [The Lord help the sex, if
- they had not pride!] But yet I am confident, that Miss Howe is indebted
- to the conversation and correspondence of Miss Harlowe for her highest
- improvements. But, both these ladies out of the question, I make no
- scruple to aver, [and I, Jack, should know something of the matter,] that
- there have been more girls ruined, at least prepared for ruin, by their
- own sex, (taking in servants, as well as companions,) than directly by
- the attempts and delusions of men.
- But it is time enough when I am old and joyless, to enlarge upon this
- topic.
- As to the comparison between the two ladies, I will expatiate more on
- that subject, (for I like it,) when I have had them both. Which this
- letter of the vixen girl's, I hope thou wilt allow, warrants me to try
- for.
- I return to the consideration of a few more of its contents, to justify
- my vengeances so nearly now in view.
- As to Mrs. Townsend,--her manlike spirit--her two brothers--and the
- ships' crews--I say nothing but this to the insolent threatening--Let 'em
- come!--But as to her sordid menace--To repay the horrid villain, as she
- calls me, for all my vileness by BROKEN BONES!--Broken bones, Belford!--
- Who can bear this porterly threatening!--Broken bones, Jack!--D--n the
- little vulgar!--Give me a name for her--but I banish all furious
- resentment. If I get these two girls into my power, Heaven forbid that I
- should be a second Phalaris, who turned his bull upon the artist!--No
- bones of their's will I break--They shall come off with me upon much
- lighter terms!--
- But these fellows are smugglers, it seems. And am not I a smuggler too?
- --I am--and have not the least doubt but I shall have secured my goods
- before Thursday, or Wednesday either.
- But did I want a plot, what a charming new one does this letter of Miss
- Howe strike me out! I am almost sorry, that I have fixed upon one.--For
- here, how easy would it be for me to assemble a crew of swabbers, and to
- create a Mrs. Townsend (whose person, thou seest, my beloved knows not)
- to come on Tuesday, at Miss Howe's repeated solicitations, in order to
- carry my beloved to a warehouse of my own providing?
- This, however, is my triumphant hope, that at the very time that these
- ragamuffins will be at Hampstead (looking for us) my dear Miss Harlowe
- and I [so the Fates I imagine have ordained] shall be fast asleep in
- each other's arms in town.--Lie still, villain, till the time comes.--
- My heart, Jack! my heart!--It is always thumping away on the remotest
- prospects of this nature.
- But it seems that the vileness of this specious monster [meaning me,
- Jack!] has brought Hickman into credit with her. So I have done some
- good! But to whom I cannot tell: for this poor fellow, should I permit
- him to have this termagant, will be punished, as many times we all are,
- by the enjoyment of his own wishes--nor can she be happy, as I take it,
- with him, were he to govern himself by her will, and have none of his
- own; since never was there a directing wife who knew where to stop: power
- makes such a one wanton--she despises the man she can govern. Like
- Alexander, who wept, that he had no more worlds to conquer, she will be
- looking out for new exercises for her power, till she grow uneasy to
- herself, a discredit to her husband, and a plague to all about her.
- But this honest fellow, it seems, with tears in his eyes, and with humble
- prostration, besought the vixen to permit him to set out in his
- chariot-and-four, in order to give himself the glory of protecting such an
- oppressed innocent, in the face of the whole world. Nay, he reddened, it
- seems: and trembled too! as he read the fair complainant's letter.--How
- valiant is all this!--Women love brave men; and no wonder that his tears,
- his trembling, and his prostration, gave him high reputation with the meek
- Miss Howe.
- But dost think, Jack, that I in the like case (and equally affected with
- the distress) should have acted thus? Dost think, that I should not
- first have rescued the lady, and then, if needful, have asked excuse for
- it, the lady in my hand?--Wouldst not thou have done thus, as well as I?
- But, 'tis best as it is. Honest Hickman may now sleep in a whole skin.
- And yet that is more perhaps than he would have done (the lady's
- deliverance unattempted) had I come at this requested permission of his
- any other way than by a letter that it must not be known that I have
- intercepted.
- Miss Howe thinks I may be diverted from pursuing my charmer, by some
- new-started villany. Villany is a word that she is extremely fond of.
- But I can tell her, that it is impossible I should, till the end of this
- villany be obtained. Difficulty is a stimulus with such a spirit as mine.
- I thought Miss Howe knew me better. Were she to offer herself, person for
- person, in the romancing zeal of her friendship, to save her friend, it
- should not do, while the dear creature is on this side the moon.
- She thanks Heaven, that her friend has received her letter of the 7th.
- We are all glad of it. She ought to thank me too. But I will not at
- present claim her thanks.
- But when she rejoices that the letter went safe, does she not, in effect,
- call out for vengeance, and expect it!--All in good time, Miss Howe.
- When settest thou out for the Isle of Wight, love?
- I will close at this time with desiring thee to make a list of the
- virulent terms with which the enclosed letter abounds: and then, if thou
- supposest that I have made such another, and have added to it all the
- flowers of the same blow, in the former letters of the same saucy
- creature, and those in that of Miss Harlowe, which she left for me on her
- elopement, thou wilt certainly think, that I have provocations sufficient
- to justify me in all that I shall do to either.
- Return the enclosed the moment thou hast perused it.
- LETTER VIII
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- SUNDAY NIGHT--MONDAY MORNING.
- I went down with revenge in my heart, the contents of Miss Howe's letter
- almost engrossing me, the moment that Miss Harlowe and Mrs. Moore
- (accompanied by Miss Rawlins) came in: but in my countenance all the
- gentle, the placid, the serene, that the glass could teach; and in my
- behaviour all the polite, that such an unpolite creature, as she has
- often told me I am, could put on.
- Miss Rawlins was sent for home almost as soon as she came in, to
- entertain an unexpected visiter; to her great regret, as well as to the
- disappointment of my fair-one, as I could perceive from the looks of
- both: for they had agreed, it seems, if I went to town, as I said I
- intended to do, to take a walk upon the Heath, at least in Mrs. Moore's
- garden; and who knows, what might have been the issue, had the spirit of
- curiosity in the one met with the spirit of communication in the other?
- Miss Rawlins promised to return, if possible: but sent to excuse herself:
- her visiter intending to stay with her all night.
- I rejoiced in my heart at her message; and, after much supplication,
- obtained the favour of my beloved's company for another walk in the
- garden, having, as I told her, abundance of things to say, to propose,
- and to be informed of, in order ultimately to govern myself in my future
- steps.
- She had vouchsafed, I should have told thee, with eyes turned from me,
- and in a half-aside attitude, to sip two dishes of tea in my company--
- Dear soul!--How anger unpolishes the most polite! for I never saw Miss
- Harlowe behave so awkwardly. I imagined she knew not how to be awkward.
- When we were in the garden, I poured my whole soul into her attentive
- ear; and besought her returning favour.
- She told me, that she had formed her scheme for her future life: that,
- vile as the treatment was which she had received from me, that was not
- all the reason she had for rejecting my suit: but that, on the maturest
- deliberation, she was convinced that she could neither be happy with me,
- nor make me happy; and she injoined me, for both our sakes, to think no
- more of her.
- The Captain, I told her, was rid down post, in a manner, to forward my
- wishes with her uncle.--Lady Betty and Miss Montague were undoubtedly
- arrived in town by this time. I would set out early in the morning to
- attend them. They adored her. They longed to see her. They would see
- her.--They would not be denied her company in Oxfordshire. Whither could
- she better go, to be free from her brother's insults?--Whither, to be
- absolutely made unapprehensive of any body else?--Might I have any hopes
- of her returning favour, if Miss Howe could be prevailed upon to
- intercede for me?
- Miss Howe prevailed upon to intercede for you! repeated she, with a
- scornful bridle, but a very pretty one.--And there she stopt.
- I repeated the concern it would be to me to be under a necessity of
- mentioning the misunderstanding to Lady Betty and my cousin, as a
- misunderstanding still to be made up; and as if I were of very little
- consequence to a dear creature who was of so much to me; urging, that
- these circumstances would extremely lower me not only in my own opinion,
- but in that of my relations.
- But still she referred to Miss Howe's next letter; and all the concession
- I could bring her to in this whole conference, was, that she would wait
- the arrival and visit of the two ladies, if they came in a day or two, or
- before she received the expected letter from Miss Howe.
- Thank Heaven for this! thought I. And now may I go to town with hopes at
- my return to find thee, dearest, where I shall leave thee.
- But yet, as she may find reasons to change her mind in my absence, I
- shall not entirely trust to this. My fellow, therefore, who is in the
- house, and who, by Mrs. Bevis's kind intelligence, will know every step
- she can take, shall have Andrew and a horse ready, to give me immediate
- notice of her motions; and moreover, go whither she will, he shall be one
- of her retinue, though unknown to herself, if possible.
- This was all I could make of the fair inexorable. Should I be glad of
- it, or sorry for it?--
- Glad I believe: and yet my pride is confoundedly abated, to think that I
- had so little hold in the affections of this daughter of the Harlowes.
- Don't tell me that virtue and principle are her guides on this occasion!
- --'Tis pride, a greater pride than my own, that governs her. Love, she
- has none, thou seest; nor ever had; at least not in a superior degree.
- Love, that deserves the name, never was under the dominion of prudence,
- or of any reasoning power. She cannot bear to be thought a woman, I
- warrant! And if, in the last attempt, I find her not one, what will she
- be the worse for the trial?--No one is to blame for suffering an evil he
- cannot shun or avoid.
- Were a general to be overpowered, and robbed by a highwayman, would he be
- less fit for the command of an army on that account?--If indeed the
- general, pretending great valour, and having boasted that he never would
- be robbed, were to make but faint resistance when he was brought to the
- test, and to yield his purse when he was master of his own sword, then
- indeed will the highwayman who robs him be thought the braver man.
- But from these last conferences am I furnished with one argument in
- defence of my favourite purpose, which I never yet pleaded.
- O Jack! what a difficulty must a man be allowed to have to conquer a
- predominant passion, be it what it will, when the gratifying of it is in
- his power, however wrong he knows it to be to resolve to gratify it!
- Reflect upon this; and then wilt thou be able to account for, if not to
- excuse, a projected crime, which has habit to plead for it, in a breast
- as stormy as uncontroulable!
- This that follows is my new argument--
- Should she fail in the trial; should I succeed; and should she refuse to
- go on with me; and even resolve not to marry me (of which I can have no
- notion); and should she disdain to be obliged to me for the handsome
- provision I should be proud to make for her, even to the half of my
- estate; yet cannot she be altogether unhappy--Is she not entitled to an
- independent fortune? Will not Col. Morden, as her trustee, put her in
- possession of it? And did she not in our former conference point out the
- way of life, that she always preferred to the married life--to wit, 'To
- take her good Norton for her directress and guide, and to live upon her
- own estate in the manner her grandfather desired she should live?'*
- * See Letter III. of this volume.
- It is moreover to be considered that she cannot, according to her own
- notions, recover above one half of her fame, were we not to intermarry;
- so much does she think she has suffered by her going off with me. And
- will she not be always repining and mourning for the loss of the other
- half?--And if she must live a life of such uneasiness and regret for
- half, may she not as well repine and mourn for the whole?
- Nor, let me tell thee, will her own scheme or penitence, in this case, be
- half so perfect, if she do not fall, as if she does: for what a foolish
- penitent will she make, who has nothing to repent of!--She piques
- herself, thou knowest, and makes it matter of reproach to me, that she
- went not off with me by her own consent; but was tricked out of herself.
- Nor upbraid thou me upon the meditated breach of vows so repeatedly made.
- She will not, thou seest, permit me to fulfil them. And if she would,
- this I have to say, that, at the time I made the most solemn of them, I
- was fully determined to keep them. But what prince thinks himself
- obliged any longer to observe the articles of treaties, the most sacredly
- sworn to, than suits with his interest or inclination; although the
- consequence of the infraction must be, as he knows, the destruction of
- thousands.
- Is not this then the result of all, that Miss Clarissa Harlowe, if it be
- not her own fault, may be as virtuous after she has lost her honour, as
- it is called, as she was before? She may be a more eminent example to
- her sex; and if she yield (a little yield) in the trial, may be a
- completer penitent. Nor can she, but by her own wilfulness, be reduced
- to low fortunes.
- And thus may her old nurse and she; an old coachman; and a pair of old
- coach-horses; and two or three old maid-servants, and perhaps a very old
- footman or two, (for every thing will be old and penitential about her,)
- live very comfortably together; reading old sermons, and old
- prayer-books; and relieving old men and old women; and giving old lessons,
- and old warnings, upon new subjects, as well as old ones, to the young
- ladies of her neighbourhood; and so pass on to a good old age, doing a
- great deal of good both by precept and example in her generation.
- And is a woman who can live thus prettily without controul; who ever did
- prefer, and who still prefers, the single to the married life; and who
- will be enabled to do every thing that the plan she had formed will
- direct her to do; to be said to be ruined, undone, and such sort of
- stuff?--I have no patience with the pretty fools, who use those strong
- words, to describe a transitory evil; an evil which a mere church-form
- makes none?
- At this rate of romancing, how many flourishing ruins dost thou, as well
- as I, know? Let us but look about us, and we shall see some of the
- haughtiest and most censorious spirits among out acquaintance of that sex
- now passing for chaste wives, of whom strange stories might be told; and
- others, whose husbands' hearts have been made to ache for their gaieties,
- both before and after marriage; and yet know not half so much of them, as
- some of us honest fellows could tell them.
- But, having thus satisfied myself in relation to the worst that can
- happen to this charming creature; and that it will be her own fault, if
- she be unhappy; I have not at all reflected upon what is likely to be my
- own lot.
- This has always been my notion, though Miss Howe grudges us rakes the
- best of the sex, and says, that the worst is too good for us,* that the
- wife of a libertine ought to be pure, spotless, uncontaminated. To what
- purpose has such a one lived a free life, but to know the world, and to
- make his advantages of it!--And, to be very serious, it would be a
- misfortune to the public for two persons, heads of a family, to be both
- bad; since, between two such, a race of varlets might be propagated
- (Lovelaces and Belfords, if thou wilt) who might do great mischief in the
- world.
- Thou seest at bottom that I am not an abandoned fellow; and that there is
- a mixture of gravity in me. This, as I grow older, may increase; and
- when my active capacity begins to abate, I may sit down with the
- preacher, and resolve all my past life into vanity and vexation of
- spirit.
- This is certain, that I shall never find a woman so well suited to my
- taste as Miss Clarissa Harlowe. I only wish that I may have such a lady
- as her to comfort and adorn my setting sun. I have often thought it very
- unhappy for us both, that so excellent a creature sprang up a little too
- late for my setting out, and a little too early in my progress, before I
- can think of returning. And yet, as I have picked up the sweet traveller
- in my way, I cannot help wishing that she would bear me company in the
- rest of my journey, although she were stepping out of her own path to
- oblige me. And then, perhaps, we could put up in the evening at the same
- inn; and be very happy in each other's conversation; recounting the
- difficulties and dangers we had passed in our way to it.
- I imagine that thou wilt be apt to suspect that some passages in this
- letter were written in town. Why, Jack, I cannot but say that the
- Westminster air is a little grosser than that at Hampstead; and the
- conversation of Mrs. Sinclair and the nymphs less innocent than Mrs.
- Moore's and Miss Rawlins's. And I think in my heart I can say and write
- those things at one place which I cannot at the other, nor indeed any
- where else.
- I came to town about seven this morning--all necessary directions and
- precautions remembered to be given.
- I besought the favour of an audience before I set out. I was desirous
- to see which of her lovely faces she was pleased to put on, after another
- night had passed. But she was resolved, I found, to leave our quarrel
- open. She would not give me an opportunity so much as to entreat her
- again to close it, before the arrival of Lady Betty and my cousin.
- I had notice from my proctor, by a few lines brought by a man and horse,
- just before I set out, that all difficulties had been for two days past
- surmounted; and that I might have the license for fetching.
- I sent up the letter to my beloved, by Mrs. Bevis, with a repeated
- request for admittance to her presence upon it; but neither did this
- stand me in stead. I suppose she thought it would be allowing of the
- consequences that were naturally to be expected to follow the obtaining
- of this instrument, if she had consented to see me on the contents of
- this letter, having refused me that honour before I sent it up to her.--
- No surprising her.--No advantage to be taken of her inattention to the
- nicest circumstances.
- And now, Belford, I set out upon business.
- LETTER IX
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- MONDAY, JUNE 12.
- Durst ever see a license, Jack?
- 'Edmund, by divine permission, Lord Bishop of London, to our well-beloved
- in Christ, Robert Lovelace, [your servant, my good Lord! What have I
- done to merit so much goodness, who never saw your Lordship in my life?]
- of the parish of St. Martin's in the Fields, bachelor, and Clarissa
- Harlowe, of the same parish, spinster, sendeth greeting.--WHEREAS ye are,
- as is alleged, determined to enter into the holy state of Matrimony [this
- is only alleged, thou observest] by and with the consent of, &c. &c. &c.
- and are very desirous of obtaining your marriage to be solemnized in the
- face of the church: We are willing that your honest desires [honest
- desires, Jack!] may more speedily have their due effect: and therefore,
- that ye may be able to procure such Marriage to be freely and lawfully
- solemnized in the parish church of St. Martin's in the Fields, or St.
- Giles's in the Fields, in the county of Middlesex, by the Rector, Vicar,
- or Curate thereof, at any time of the year, [at ANY time of the year,
- Jack!] without publication of bans: Provided, that by reason of any
- pre-contract, [I verily think that I have had three or four pre-contracts
- in my time; but the good girls have not claimed upon them of a long
- while,] consanguinity, affinity, or any other lawful cause whatsoever,
- there be no lawful impediment on this behalf; and that there be not at
- this time any action, suit, plaint, quarrel, or demand, moved or depending
- before any judge ecclesiastical or temporal, for or concerning any
- marriage contracted by or with either of you; and that the said marriage
- be openly solemnized in the church above-mentioned, between the hours of
- eight and twelve in the forenoon; and without prejudice to the minister of
- the place where the said woman is a parishioner: We do hereby, for good
- causes, [it cost me--let me see, Jack--what did it cost me?] give and
- grant our License, as well to you as to the parties contracting, as to the
- Rector, Vicar, or Curate of the said church, where the said marriage is
- intended to be solemnized, to solemnize the same, in manner and form above
- specified, according to the rites and ceremonies prescribed in the Book of
- Common Prayer in that behalf published by authority of Parliament.
- Provided always, that if hereafter any fraud shall appear to have been
- committed, at the time of granting this License, either by false
- suggestions, or concealment of the truth, [now this, Belford, is a little
- hard upon us; for I cannot say that every one of our suggestions is
- literally true:--so, in good conscience, I ought not to marry under this
- License;] the License shall be void to all intents and purposes, as if the
- same had not been granted. And in that case we do inhibit all ministers
- whatsoever, if any thing of the premises shall come to their knowledge,
- from proceeding to the celebration of the said Marriage; without first
- consulting Us, or our Vicar-general. Given,' &c.
- Then follow the register's name, and a large pendent seal, with these
- words round it--SEAL OF THE VICAR-GENERAL AND OFFICIAL PRINCIPAL OF THE
- DIOCESE OF LONDON.
- A good whimsical instrument, take it altogether! But what, thinkest
- thou, are the arms to this matrimonial harbinger?--Why, in the first
- place, two crossed swords; to show that marriage is a state of offence
- as well as defence; three lions; to denote that those who enter into the
- state ought to have a triple proportion of courage. And [couldst thou
- have imagined that these priestly fellows, in so solemn a case, would cut
- their jokes upon poor souls who came to have their honest desires put in
- a way to be gratified;] there are three crooked horns, smartly
- top-knotted with ribands; which being the ladies' wear, seem to indicate
- that they may very probably adorn, as well as bestow, the bull's feather.
- To describe it according to heraldry art, if I am not mistaken--gules,
- two swords, saltire-wise, or; second coat, a chevron sable between three
- bugle-horns, OR [so it ought to be]: on a chief of the second, three
- lions rampant of the first--but the devil take them for their
- hieroglyphics, should I say, if I were determined in good earnest to
- marry!
- And determined to marry I would be, were it not for this consideration,
- that once married, and I am married for life.
- That's the plague of it!--Could a man do as the birds do, change every
- Valentine's day, [a natural appointment! for birds have not the sense,
- forsooth, to fetter themselves, as we wiseacre men take great and solemn
- pains to do,] there would be nothing at all in it. And what a glorious
- time would the lawyers have, on the one hand, with their noverini
- universi's, and suits commenceable on restitution of goods and chattels;
- and the parsons, on the other, with their indulgencies [renewable
- annually, as other licenses] to the honest desires of their clients?
- Then, were a stated mullet, according to rank or fortune, to be paid on
- every change, towards the exigencies of the state [but none on renewals
- with the old lives, for the sake of encouraging constancy, especially
- among the minores] the change would be made sufficiently difficult, and
- the whole public would be the better for it; while those children, which
- the parents could not agree about maintaining, might be considered as the
- children of the public, and provided for like the children of the antient
- Spartans; who were (as ours would in this case be) a nation of heroes.
- How, Jack, could I have improved upon Lycurgus's institutions had I been
- a lawgiver!
- Did I never show thee a scheme which I drew up on such a notion as this?
- --In which I demonstrated the conveniencies, and obviated the
- inconveniencies, of changing the present mode to this? I believe I never
- did.
- I remember I proved to a demonstration, that such a change would be a
- mean of annihilating, absolutely annihilating, four or five very
- atrocious and capital sins.--Rapes, vulgarly so called; adultery, and
- fornication; nor would polygamy be panted after. Frequently would it
- prevent murders and duelling; hardly any such thing as jealousy (the
- cause of shocking violences) would be heard of: and hypocrisy between man
- and wife be banished the bosoms of each. Nor, probably, would the
- reproach of barrenness rest, as it now too often does, where it is least
- deserved.--Nor would there possibly be such a person as a barren woman.
- Moreover, what a multitude of domestic quarrels would be avoided, where
- such a scheme carried into execution? Since both sexes would bear with
- each other, in the view that they could help themselves in a few months.
- And then what a charming subject for conversation would be the gallant
- and generous last partings between man and wife! Each, perhaps, a new
- mate in eye, and rejoicing secretly in the manumission, could afford to
- be complaisantly sorrowful in appearance. 'He presented her with this
- jewel, it will be said by the reporter, for example sake: she him with
- that. How he wept! How she sobb'd! How they looked after one another!'
- Yet, that's the jest of it, neither of them wishing to stand another
- twelvemonth's trial.
- And if giddy fellows, or giddy girls, misbehave in a first marriage,
- whether from noviceship, having expected to find more in the matter than
- can be found; or from perverseness on her part, or positiveness on his,
- each being mistaken in the other [a mighty difference, Jack, in the same
- person, an inmate or a visiter]; what a fine opportunity will each have,
- by this scheme, of recovering a lost character, and of setting all right
- in the next adventure?
- And, O Jack! with what joy, with what rapture, would the changelings (or
- changeables, if thou like that word better) number the weeks, the days,
- the hours, as the annual obligation approached to its desirable period!
- As for the spleen or vapours, no such malady would be known or heard of.
- The physical tribe would, indeed, be the sufferers, and the only
- sufferers; since fresh health and fresh spirits, the consequences of
- sweet blood and sweet humours (the mind and body continually pleased with
- each other) would perpetually flow in; and the joys of expectation, the
- highest of all our joys, would invigorate and keep all alive.
- But, that no body of men might suffer, the physicians, I thought, might
- turn parsons, as there would be a great demand for parsons. Besides, as
- they would be partakers in the general benefit, they must be sorry
- fellows indeed if they preferred themselves to the public.
- Every one would be married a dozen times at least. Both men and women
- would be careful of their characters and polite in their behaviour, as
- well as delicate in their persons, and elegant in their dress, [a great
- matte each of these, let me tell thee, to keep passion alive,] either to
- induce a renewal with the old love, or to recommend themselves to a new.
- While the newspapers would be crowded with paragraphs; all the world
- their readers, as all the world would be concerned to see who and who's
- together--
- 'Yesterday, for instance, entered into the holy state of matrimony,' [we
- should all speak reverently of matrimony, then,] 'the right Honourable
- Robert Earl Lovelace' [I shall be an earl by that time,] 'with her Grace
- the Duchess Dowager of Fifty-manors; his Lordship's one-and-thirtieth
- wife.'--I shall then be contented, perhaps, to take up, as it is called,
- with a widow. But she must not have had more than one husband neither.
- Thou knowest that I am nice in these particulars.
- I know, Jack, that thou for thy part, wilt approve of my scheme.
- As Lord M. and I, between us, have three or four boroughs at command, I
- think I will get into parliament, in order to bring in a bill for this
- good purpose.
- Neither will the house of parliament, nor the houses of convocation, have
- reason to object it. And all the courts, whether spiritual or sensual,
- civil or uncivil, will find their account in it when passed into a law.
- By my soul, Jack, I should be apprehensive of a general insurrection, and
- that incited by the women, were such a bill to be thrown out.--For here
- is the excellency of the scheme: the women will have equal reason with
- the men to be pleased with it.
- Dost think, that old prerogative Harlowe, for example, must not, if such
- a law were in being, have pulled in his horns?--So excellent a wife as he
- has, would never else have renewed with such a gloomy tyrant: who, as
- well as all other married tyrants, must have been upon good behaviour
- from year to year.
- A termagant wife, if such a law were to pass, would be a phoenix.
- The churches would be the only market-place for the fair sex; and
- domestic excellence the capital recommendation.
- Nor would there be an old maid in Great Britain, and all its territories.
- For what an odd soul must she be who could not have her twelvemonth's
- trial?
- In short, a total alteration for the better, in the morals and way of
- life in both sexes, must, in a very few years, be the consequence of such
- a salutary law.
- Who would have expected such a one from me! I wish the devil owe me not
- a spite for it.
- The would not the distinction be very pretty, Jack? as in flowers;--such
- a gentleman, or such a lady, is an ANNUAL--such a one is a PERENNIAL.
- One difficulty, however, as I remember, occurred to me, upon the
- probability that a wife might be enceinte, as the lawyers call it. But
- thus I obviated it--
- That no man should be allowed to marry another woman without his then
- wife's consent, till she were brought-to-bed, and he had defrayed all
- incident charges; and till it was agreed upon between them whether the
- child should be his, her's, or the public's. The women in this case to
- have what I call the coercive option; for I would not have it in the
- man's power to be a dog neither.
- And, indeed, I gave the turn of the scale in every part of my scheme in
- the women's favour: for dearly do I love the sweet rogues.
- How infinitely more preferable this my scheme to the polygamy one of the
- old patriarchs; who had wives and concubines without number!--I believe
- David and Solomon had their hundreds at a time. Had they not, Jack?
- Let me add, that annual parliaments, and annual marriages, are the
- projects next my heart. How could I expatiate upon the benefits that
- would arise from both!
- LETTER X
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- Well, but now my plots thicken; and my employment of writing to thee on
- this subject will soon come to a conclusion. For now, having got the
- license; and Mrs. Townsend with her tars, being to come to Hampstead next
- Wednesday or Thursday; and another letter possibly, or message from Miss
- Howe, to inquire how Miss Harlowe does, upon the rustic's report of her
- ill health, and to express her wonder that she has not heard form her in
- answer to her's on her escape; I must soon blow up the lady, or be blown
- up myself. And so I am preparing, with Lady Betty and my cousin
- Montague, to wait upon my beloved with a coach-and-four, or a sett; for
- Lady Betty will not stir out with a pair for the world; though but for
- two or three miles. And this is a well-known part of her character.
- But as to the arms and crest upon the coach and trappings?
- Dost thou not know that a Blunt's must supply her, while her own is new
- lining and repairing? An opportunity she is willing to take now she is
- in town. Nothing of this kind can be done to her mind in the country.
- Liveries nearly Lady Betty's.
- Thou hast seen Lady Betty Lawrance several times--hast thou not, Belford?
- No, never in my life.
- But thou hast--and lain with her too; or fame does thee more credit than
- thou deservest--Why, Jack, knowest thou not Lady Betty's other name?
- Other name!--Has she two?
- She has. And what thinkest thou of Lady Bab. Wallis?
- O the devil!
- Now thou hast it. Lady Barbara thou knowest, lifted up in circumstances,
- and by pride, never appears or produces herself, but on occasions special
- --to pass to men of quality or price, for a duchess, or countess, at
- least. She has always been admired for a grandeur in her air, that few
- women of quality can come up to; and never was supposed to be other than
- what she passed for; though often and often a paramour for lords.
- And who, thinkest thou, is my cousin Montague?
- Nay, how should I know?
- How indeed! Why, my little Johanetta Golding, a lively, yet
- modest-looking girl, is my cousin Montague.
- There, Belford, is an aunt!--There's a cousin!--Both have wit at will.
- Both are accustomed to ape quality.--Both are genteelly descended.
- Mistresses of themselves, and well educated--yet past pity.--True Spartan
- dames; ashamed of nothing but detection--always, therefore, upon their
- guard against that. And in their own conceit, when assuming top parts,
- the very quality they ape.
- And how dost think I dress them out?--I'll tell thee.
- Lady Betty in a rich gold tissue, adorned with jewels of high price.
- My cousin Montague in a pale pink, standing on end with silver flowers of
- her own working. Charlotte as well as my beloved is admirable at her
- needle. Not quite so richly jewell'd out as Lady Betty; but ear-rings
- and solitaire very valuable, and infinitely becoming.
- Johanetta, thou knowest, has a good complexion, a fine neck, and ears
- remarkably fine--so has Charlotte. She is nearly of Charlotte's stature
- too.
- Laces both, the richest that could be procured.
- Thou canst not imagine what a sum the loan of the jewels cost me, though
- but for three days.
- This sweet girl will half ruin me. But seest thou not, by this time,
- that her reign is short!--It must be so. And Mrs. Sinclair has already
- prepared every thing for her reception once more.
- ***
- Here come the ladies--attended by Susan Morrison, a tenant-farmer's
- daughter, as Lady Betty's woman; with her hands before her, and
- thoroughly instructed.
- How dress advantages women!--especially those who have naturally a
- genteel air and turn, and have had education.
- Hadst thou seen how they paraded it--Cousin, and Cousin, and Nephew, at
- every word; Lady Betty bridling and looking haughtily-condescending.--
- Charlotte galanting her fan, and swimming over the floor without touching
- it.
- How I long to see my niece-elect! cries one--for they are told that we
- are not married; and are pleased that I have not put the slight upon them
- that they had apprehended from me.
- How I long to see my dear cousin that is to be, the other!
- Your La'ship, and your La'ship, and an awkward courtesy at every address
- --prim Susan Morrison.
- Top your parts, ye villains!--You know how nicely I distinguish. There
- will be no passion in this case to blind the judgment, and to help on
- meditated delusion, as when you engage with titled sinners. My charmer
- is as cool and as distinguishing, though not quite so learned in her own
- sex, as I am. Your commonly-assumed dignity won't do for me now. Airs
- of superiority, as if born to rank.--But no over-do!--Doubting nothing.
- Let not your faces arraign your hearts.
- Easy and unaffected!--Your very dresses will give you pride enough.
- A little graver, Lady Betty.--More significance, less bridling in your
- dignity.
- That's the air! Charmingly hit----Again----You have it.
- Devil take you!--Less arrogance. You are got into airs of young quality.
- Be less sensible of your new condition. People born to dignity command
- respect without needing to require it.
- Now for your part, Cousin Charlotte!--
- Pretty well. But a little too frolicky that air.--Yet have I prepared my
- beloved to expect in you both great vivacity and quality-freedom.
- Curse those eyes!--Those glancings will never do. A down-cast bashful
- turn, if you can command it. Look upon me. Suppose me now to be my
- beloved.
- Devil take that leer. Too significantly arch!--Once I knew you the girl
- I would now have you to be.
- Sprightly, but not confident, cousin Charlotte!--Be sure forget not to
- look down, or aside, when looked at. When eyes meet eyes, be your's the
- retreating ones. Your face will bear examination.
- O Lord! Lord! that so young a creature can so soon forget the innocent
- appearance she first charmed by; and which I thought born with you all!--
- Five years to ruin what twenty had been building up! How natural the
- latter lesson! How difficult to regain the former!
- A stranger, as I hope to be saved, to the principal arts of your sex!--
- Once more, what a devil has your heart to do in your eyes?
- Have I not told you, that my beloved is a great observer of the eyes?
- She once quoted upon me a text,* which showed me how she came by her
- knowledge--Dorcas's were found guilty of treason the first moment she
- saw her.
- * Eccles. xxvi. The whoredom of a woman may be known in her haughty
- looks and eye-lids. Watch over an impudent eye, and marvel not if it
- trespass against thee.
- Once more, suppose me to be my charmer.--Now you are to encounter my
- examining eye, and my doubting heart--
- That's my dear!
- Study that air in the pier-glass!--
- Charmingly!--Perfectly right!
- Your honours, now, devils!--
- Pretty well, Cousin Charlotte, for a young country lady! Till form
- yields to familiarity, you may courtesy low. You must not be supposed
- to have forgot your boarding-school airs.
- But too low, too low Lady Betty, for your years and your quality. The
- common fault of your sex will be your danger: aiming to be young too
- long!--The devil's in you all, when you judge of yourselves by your
- wishes, and by your vanity! Fifty, in that case, is never more than
- fifteen.
- Graceful ease, conscious dignity, like that of my charmer, Oh! how hard
- to hit!
- Both together now--
- Charming!--That's the air, Lady Betty!--That's the cue, Cousin Charlotte,
- suited to the character of each!--But, once more, be sure to have a guard
- upon your eyes.
- Never fear, Nephew!--
- Never fear, Cousin.
- A dram of Barbadoes each--
- And now we are gone--
- LETTER XI
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- AT MRS. SINCLAIR'S, MONDAY AFTERNOON.
- All's right, as heart can wish!--In spite of all objection--in spite of a
- reluctance next to faintings--in spite of all foresight, vigilance,
- suspicion--once more is the charmer of my soul in her old lodgings!
- Now throbs away every pulse! Now thump, thump, thumps my bounding heart
- for something!
- But I have not time for the particulars of our management.
- My beloved is now directing some of her clothes to be packed up--never
- more to enter this house! Nor ever more will she, I dare say, when once
- again out of it!
- Yet not so much as a condition of forgiveness!--The Harlowe-spirited
- fair-one will not deserve my mercy!--She will wait for Miss Howe's next
- letter; and then, if she find a difficulty in her new schemes, [Thank her
- for nothing,]--will--will what? Why even then will take time to
- consider, whether I am to be forgiven, or for ever rejected. An
- indifference that revives in my heart the remembrance of a thousand of
- the like nature.--And yet Lady Betty and Miss Montague, [a man would be
- tempted to think, Jack, that they wish her to provoke my vengeance,]
- declare, that I ought to be satisfied with such a proud suspension!
- They are entirely attached to her. Whatever she says, is, must be,
- gospel! They are guarantees for her return to Hampstead this night.
- They are to go back with her. A supper bespoken by Lady Betty at Mrs.
- Moore's. All the vacant apartments there, by my permission, (for I had
- engaged them for a month certain,) to be filled with them and their
- attendants, for a week at least, or till they can prevail upon the dear
- perverse, as they hope they shall, to restore me to her favour, and to
- accompany Lady Betty to Oxfordshire.
- The dear creature has thus far condescended--that she will write to Miss
- Howe and acquaint her with the present situation of things.
- If she write, I shall see what she writes. But I believe she will have
- other employment soon.
- Lady Betty is sure, she tells her, that she shall prevail upon her to
- forgive me; though she dares say, that I deserve not forgiveness. Lady
- Betty is too delicate to inquire strictly into the nature of my offence.
- But it must be an offence against herself, against Miss Montague, against
- the virtuous of the whole sex, or it could not be so highly resented.
- Yet she will not leave her till she forgive me, and till she see our
- nuptials privately celebrated. Mean time, as she approves of her uncle's
- expedient, she will address her as already my wife before strangers.
- Stedman, her solicitor, may attend her for orders in relation to her
- chancery affair, at Hampstead. Not one hour they can be favoured with,
- will they lose from the company and conversation of so dear, so charming
- a new relation.
- Hard then if she had not obliged them with her company in their
- coach-and-four, to and from their cousin Leeson's, who longed, (as they
- themselves had done,) to see a lady so justly celebrated.
- 'How will Lord M. be raptured when he sees her, and can salute her as his
- niece!
- 'How will Lady Sarah bless herself!--She will now think her loss of the
- dear daughter she mourns for happily supplied!'
- Miss Montague dwells upon every word that falls from her lips. She
- perfectly adores her new cousin--'For her cousin she must be. And her
- cousin will she call her! She answers for equal admiration in her sister
- Patty.
- 'Ay, cry I, (whispering loud enough for her to hear,) how will my cousin
- Patty's dove's eyes glisten and run over, on the very first interview!--
- So gracious, so noble, so unaffected a dear creature!'
- 'What a happy family,' chorus we all, 'will our's be!'
- These and such like congratulatory admirations every hour repeated. Her
- modesty hurt by the ecstatic praises:--'Her graces are too natural to
- herself for her to be proud of them: but she must be content to be
- punished for excellencies that cast a shade upon the most excellent!'
- In short, we are here, as at Hampstead, all joy and rapture--all of us
- except my beloved; in whose sweet face, [her almost fainting reluctance
- to re-enter these doors not overcome,] reigns a kind of anxious serenity!
- --But how will even that be changed in a few hours!
- Methinks I begin to pity the half-apprehensive beauty!--But avaunt, thou
- unseasonably-intruding pity! Thou hast more than once already well nigh
- undone me! And, adieu, reflection! Begone, consideration! and
- commiseration! I dismiss ye all, for at least a week to come!--But
- remembered her broken word! Her flight, when my fond soul was meditating
- mercy to her!--Be remembered her treatment of me in her letter on her
- escape to Hampstead! Her Hampstead virulence! What is it she ought not
- to expect from an unchained Beelzebub, and a plotting villain?
- Be her preference of the single life to me also remembered!--That she
- despises me!--That she even refuses to be my WIFE!--A proud Lovelace to
- be denied a wife!--To be more proudly rejected by a daughter of the
- Harlowes!--The ladies of my own family, [she thinks them the ladies of
- my family,] supplicating in vain for her returning favour to their
- despised kinsman, and taking laws from her still prouder punctilio!
- Be the execrations of her vixen friend likewise remembered, poured out
- upon me from her representations, and thereby made her own execrations!
- Be remembered still more particularly the Townsend plot, set on foot
- between them, and now, in a day or two, ready to break out; and the
- sordid threatening thrown out against me by that little fury!
- Is not this the crisis for which I have been long waiting? Shall
- Tomlinson, shall these women be engaged; shall so many engines be set
- at work, at an immense expense, with infinite contrivance; and all to
- no purpose?
- Is not this the hour of her trial--and in her, of the trial of the virtue
- of her whole sex, so long premeditated, so long threatened?--Whether her
- frost be frost indeed? Whether her virtue be principle? Whether, if
- once subdued, she will not be always subdued? And will she not want the
- crown of her glory, the proof of her till now all-surpassing excellence,
- if I stop short of the ultimate trial?
- Now is the end of purposes long over-awed, often suspended, at hand. And
- need I go throw the sins of her cursed family into the too-weighty scale?
- [Abhorred be force!--be the thoughts of force!--There's no triumph over
- the will in force!] This I know I have said.* But would I not have
- avoided it, if I could? Have I not tried every other method? And have I
- any other resource left me? Can she resent the last outrage more than
- she has resented a fainter effort?--And if her resentments run ever so
- high, cannot I repair by matrimony?--She will not refuse me, I know,
- Jack: the haughty beauty will not refuse me, when her pride of being
- corporally inviolate is brought down; when she can tell no tales, but
- when, (be her resistance what it will,) even her own sex will suspect a
- yielding in resistance; and when that modesty, which may fill her bosom
- with resentment, will lock up her speech.
- * Vol. IV. Letter XLVIII.
- But how know I, that I have not made my own difficulties? Is she not a
- woman! What redress lies for a perpetuated evil? Must she not live?
- Her piety will secure her life.--And will not time be my friend! What,
- in a word, will be her behaviour afterwards?--She cannot fly me!--She
- must forgive me--and as I have often said, once forgiven, will be for
- ever forgiven.
- Why then should this enervating pity unsteel my foolish heart?
- It shall not. All these things will I remember; and think of nothing
- else, in order to keep up a resolution, which the women about me will
- have it I shall be still unable to hold.
- I'll teach the dear, charming creature to emulate me in contrivance; I'll
- teach her to weave webs and plots against her conqueror! I'll show her,
- that in her smuggling schemes she is but a spider compared to me, and
- that she has all this time been spinning only a cobweb!
- ***
- What shall we do now! we are immersed in the depth of grief and
- apprehension! How ill do women bear disappointment!--Set upon going to
- Hampstead, and upon quitting for ever a house she re-entered with
- infinite reluctance; what things she intended to take with her ready
- packed up, herself on tiptoe to be gone, and I prepared to attend her
- thither; she begins to be afraid that she shall not go this night; and in
- grief and despair has flung herself into her old apartment; locked
- herself in; and through the key-hole Dorcas sees her on her knees,
- praying, I suppose, for a safe deliverance.
- And from what? and wherefore these agonizing apprehensions?
- Why, here, this unkind Lady Betty, with the dear creature's knowledge,
- though to her concern, and this mad-headed cousin Montague without it,
- while she was employed in directing her package, have hurried away in the
- coach to their own lodgings, [only, indeed, to put up some night-clothes,
- and so forth, in order to attend their sweet cousin to Hampstead;] and,
- no less to my surprise than her's, are not yet returned.
- I have sent to know the meaning of it.
- In a great hurry of spirits, she would have had me to go myself. Hardly
- any pacifying her! The girl, God bless her! is wild with her own idle
- apprehensions! What is she afraid of?
- I curse them both for their delay. My tardy villain, how he stays!
- Devil fetch them! let them send their coach, and we'll go without them.
- In her hearing I bid the fellow tell them so. Perhaps he stays to bring
- the coach, if any thing happens to hinder the ladies from attending my
- beloved this night.
- ***
- Devil take them, again say I! They promised too they would not stay,
- because it was but two nights ago that a chariot was robbed at the foot
- of Hampstead-hill, which alarmed my fair-one when told of it!
- Oh! here's Lady Betty's servant, with a billet.
- TO ROBERT LOVELACE, ESQ.
- MONDAY NIGHT.
- Excuse us, my dear Nephew, I beseech you, to my dearest kinswoman. One
- night cannot break squares: for here Miss Montague has been taken
- violently ill with three fainting fits, one after another. The hurry of
- her joy, I believe, to find your dear lady so much surpass all
- expectations, [never did family love, you know, reign so strong as among
- us,] and the too eager desire she had to attend her, have occasioned it!
- For she has but weak spirits, poor girl! well as she looks.
- If she be better, we will certainly go with you tomorrow morning, after
- we have breakfasted with her, at your lodgings. But whether she be, or
- not, I will do myself the pleasure to attend your lady to Hampstead; and
- will be with you for that purpose about nine in the morning. With due
- compliments to your most worthily beloved, I am
- Your's affectionately,
- ELIZAB. LAWRANCE.
- ***
- Faith and troth, Jack, I know not what to do with myself; for here, just
- now having sent in the above note by Dorcas, out came my beloved with it
- in her hand, in a fit of phrensy!--true, by my soul!
- She had indeed complained of her head all the evening.
- Dorcas ran to me, out of breath, to tell me, that her lady was coming in
- some strange way; but she followed her so quick, that the frighted wench
- had not time to say in what way.
- It seems, when she read the billet--Now indeed, said she, am I a lost
- creature! O the poor Clarissa Harlowe!
- She tore off her head-clothes; inquired where I was; and in she came, her
- shining tresses flowing about her neck; her ruffles torn, and hanging in
- tatters about her snowy hands, with her arms spread out--her eyes wildly
- turned, as if starting from their orbits--down sunk she at my feet, as
- soon as she approached me; her charming bosom heaving to her uplifted
- face; and clasping her arms about my knees, Dear Lovelace, said she, if
- ever--if ever--if ever--and, unable to speak another word, quitting her
- clasping hold--down--prostrate on the floor sunk she, neither in a fit
- nor out of one.
- I was quite astonished.--All my purposes suspended for a few moments, I
- knew neither what to say, nor what to do. But, recollecting myself, am I
- again, thought I, in a way to be overcome, and made a fool of!--If I now
- recede, I am gone for ever.
- I raised her; but down she sunk, as if quite disjointed--her limbs
- failing her--yet not in a fit neither. I never heard of or saw such a
- dear unaccountable; almost lifeless, and speechless too for a few
- moments; what must her apprehensions be at that moment?--And for what?--
- An high-notioned dear soul!--Pretty ignorance!--thought I.
- Never having met with so sincere, so unquestionable a repugnance, I was
- staggered--I was confounded--yet how should I know that it would be so
- till I tried?--And how, having proceeded thus far, could I stop, were I
- not to have had the women to goad me on, and to make light of
- circumstances, which they pretended to be better judges of than I?
- I lifted her, however, into a chair, and in words of disordered passion,
- told her, all her fears were needless--wondered at them--begged of her to
- be pacified--besought her reliance on my faith and honour--and revowed
- all my old vows, and poured forth new ones.
- At last, with a heart-breaking sob, I see, I see, Mr. Lovelace, in broken
- sentences she spoke--I see, I see--that at last--I am ruined!--Ruined, if
- your pity--let me implore your pity!--and down on her bosom, like a
- half-broken-stalked lily top-heavy with the overcharging dews of the
- morning, sunk her head, with a sigh that went to my heart.
- All I could think of to re-assure her, when a little recovered, I said.
- Why did I not send for their coach, as I had intimated? It might return
- in the morning for the ladies.
- I had actually done so, I told her, on seeing her strange uneasiness.
- But it was then gone to fetch a doctor for Miss Montague, lest his
- chariot should not be so ready.
- Ah! Lovelace! said she, with a doubting face; anguish in her imploring
- eye.
- Lady Betty would think it very strange, I told her, if she were to know
- it was so disagreeable to her to stay one night for her company in the
- house where she had passed so many.
- She called me names upon this--she had called me names before.--I was
- patient.
- Let her go to Lady Betty's lodgings then; directly go; if the person I
- called Lady Betty was really Lady Betty.
- If, my dear! Good Heaven! What a villain does that IF show you believe
- me to be!
- I cannot help it--I beseech you once more, let me go to Mrs. Leeson's, if
- that IF ought not to be said.
- Then assuming a more resolute spirit--I will go! I will inquire my way!
- --I will go by myself!--and would have rushed by me.
- I folded my arms about her to detain her; pleading the bad way I heard
- poor Charlotte was in; and what a farther concern her impatience, if she
- went, would give to poor Charlotte.
- She would believe nothing I said, unless I would instantly order a coach,
- (since she was not to have Lady Betty's, nor was permitted to go to Mrs.
- Leeson's,) and let her go in it to Hampstead, late as it was, and all
- alone, so much the better; for in the house of people of whom Lady Betty,
- upon inquiry, had heard a bad character, [Dropt foolishly this, by my
- prating new relation, in order to do credit to herself, by depreciating
- others,] every thing, and every face, looking with so much meaning
- vileness, as well as my own, [thou art still too sensible, thought I, my
- charmer!] she was resolved not to stay another night.
- Dreading what might happen as to her intellects, and being very
- apprehensive that she might possibly go through a great deal before
- morning, (though more violent she could not well be with the worst she
- dreaded,) I humoured her, and ordered Will. to endeavour to get a coach
- directly, to carry us to Hampstead; I cared not at what price.
- Robbers, with whom I would have terrified her, she feared not--I was all
- her fear, I found; and this house her terror: for I saw plainly that she
- now believed that Lady Betty and Miss Montague were both impostors.
- But her mistrust is a little of the latest to do her service!
- And, O Jack, the rage of love, the rage of revenge is upon me! by turns
- they tear me! The progress already made--the women's instigations--the
- power I shall have to try her to the utmost, and still to marry her, if
- she be not to be brought to cohabitation--let me perish, Belford, if she
- escape me now!
- ***
- Will. is not yet come back. Near eleven.
- ***
- Will. is this moment returned. No coach to be got, either for love or
- money.
- Once more she urges--to Mrs. Leeson's, let me go, Lovelace! Good
- Lovelace, let me go to Mrs. Leeson's? What is Miss Montague's illness
- to my terror?---For the Almighty's sake, Mr. Lovelace!--her hands
- clasped.
- O my angel! What a wildness is this! Do you know, do you see, my
- dearest life, what appearances your causeless apprehensions have given
- you?--Do you know it is past eleven o'clock?
- Twelve, one, two, three, four--any hour, I care not--If you mean me
- honourably, let me go out of this hated house!
- Thou'lt observe, Belford, that though this was written afterwards, yet,
- (as in other places,) I write it as it was spoken and happened, as if I
- had retired to put down every sentence spoken. I know thou likest this
- lively present-tense manner, as it is one of my peculiars.
- Just as she had repeated the last words, If you mean me honourably, let
- me go out of this hated house, in came Mrs. Sinclair, in a great ferment
- --And what, pray, Madam, has this house done to you? Mr. Lovelace, you
- have known me some time; and, if I have not the niceness of this lady, I
- hope I do not deserve to be treated thus!
- She set her huge arms akimbo: Hoh! Madam, let me tell you that I am
- amazed at your freedoms with my character! And, Mr. Lovelace, [holding
- up, and violently shaking her head,] if you are a gentleman, and a man of
- honour----
- Having never before seen any thing but obsequiousness in this woman,
- little as she liked her, she was frighted at her masculine air, and
- fierce look--God help me! cried she--what will become of me now! Then,
- turning her head hither and thither, in a wild kind of amaze. Whom have
- I for a protector! What will become of me now!
- I will be your protector, my dearest love!--But indeed you are
- uncharitably severe upon poor Mrs. Sinclair! Indeed you are!--She is a
- gentlewoman born, and the relict of a man of honour; and though left in
- such circumstance as to oblige her to let lodgings, yet would she scorn
- to be guilty of a wilful baseness.
- I hope so--it may be so--I may be mistaken--but--but there is no crime, I
- presume, no treason, to say I don't like her house.
- The old dragon straddled up to her, with her arms kemboed again--her
- eye-brows erect, like the bristles upon a hog's back, and, scouling over
- her shortened nose, more than half-hid her ferret eyes. Her mouth was
- distorted. She pouted out her blubber-lips, as if to bellows up wind and
- sputter into her horse-nostrils; and her chin was curdled, and more than
- usually prominent with passion.
- With two Hoh-Madams she accosted the frighted fair-one; who, terrified,
- caught hold of my sleeve.
- I feared she would fall into fits; and, with a look of indignation, told
- Mrs. Sinclair that these apartments were mine; and I could not imagine
- what she meant, either by listening to what passed between me and my
- spouse, or to come in uninvited; and still more I wondered at her giving
- herself these strange liberties.
- I may be to blame, Jack, for suffering this wretch to give herself these
- airs; but her coming in was without my orders.
- The old beldam, throwing herself into a chair, fell a blubbering and
- exclaiming. And the pacifying of her, and endeavouring to reconcile the
- lady to her, took up till near one o'clock.
- And thus, between terror, and the late hour, and what followed, she was
- diverted from the thoughts of getting out of the house to Mrs. Leeson's,
- or any where else.
- LETTER XII
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- TUESDAY MORNING, JUNE 13.
- And now, Belford, I can go no farther. The affair is over. Clarissa
- lives. And I am
- Your humble servant,
- R. LOVELACE.
- [The whole of this black transaction is given by the injured lady to Miss
- Howe, in her subsequent letters, dated Thursday, July 6. See Letters
- LXVII. LXVIII. LXIX.]
- LETTER XIII
- MR. BELFORD, TO ROBERT LOVELACE, ESQ.
- WATFORD, WEDN. JAN. 14.
- O thou savage-hearted monster! What work hast thou made in one guilty
- hour, for a whole age of repentance!
- I am inexpressibly concerned at the fate of this matchless lady! She
- could not have fallen into the hands of any other man breathing, and
- suffered as she has done with thee.
- I had written a great part of another long letter to try to soften thy
- flinty heart in her favour; for I thought it but too likely that thou
- shouldst succeed in getting her back again to the accursed woman's. But
- I find it would have been too late, had I finished it, and sent it away.
- Yet cannot I forbear writing, to urge thee to make the only amends thou
- now canst make her, by a proper use of the license thou hast obtained.
- Poor, poor lady! It is a pain to me that I ever saw her. Such an adorer
- of virtue to be sacrificed to the vilest of her sex; and thou their
- implement in the devil's hand, for a purpose so base, so ungenerous, so
- inhumane!--Pride thyself, O cruellest of men! in this reflection; and
- that thy triumph over a woman, who for thy sake was abandoned of every
- friend she had in the world, was effected; not by advantages taken of her
- weakness and credulity; but by the blackest artifice; after a long course
- of studied deceits had been tried to no purpose.
- I can tell thee, it is well either for thee or for me, that I am not the
- brother of the lady. Had I been her brother, her violation must have
- been followed by the blood of one of us.
- Excuse me, Lovelace; and let not the lady fare the worse for my concern
- for her. And yet I have but one other motive to ask thy excuse; and that
- is, because I owe to thy own communicative pen the knowledge I have of
- thy barbarous villany, since thou mightest, if thou wouldst, have passed
- it upon me for a common seduction.
- CLARISSA LIVES, thou sayest. That she does is my wonder: and these words
- show that thou thyself (though thou couldst, nevertheless, proceed)
- hardly expectedst she would have survived the outrage. What must have
- been the poor lady's distress (watchful as she had been over her honour)
- when dreadful certainty took place of cruel apprehension!--And yet a man
- may guess what must have been, by that which thou paintest, when she
- suspected herself tricked, deserted, and betrayed, by the pretended
- ladies.
- That thou couldst behold her phrensy on this occasion, and her
- half-speechless, half-fainting prostration at thy feet, and yet retain thy
- evil purposes, will hardly be thought credible, even by those who know
- thee, if they have seen her.
- Poor, poor lady! With such noble qualities as would have adorned the
- most exalted married life, to fall into the hands of the only man in the
- world, who could have treated her as thou hast treated her!--And to let
- loose the old dragon, as thou properly callest her, upon the
- before-affrighted innocent, what a barbarity was that! What a poor piece
- of barbarity! in order to obtain by terror, what thou dispairedst to gain
- by love, though supported by stratagems the most insidious!
- O LOVELACE! LOVELACE! had I doubted it before, I should now be
- convinced, that there must be a WORLD AFTER THIS, to do justice to
- injured merit, and to punish barbarous perfidy! Could the divine
- SOCRATES, and the divine CLARISSA, otherwise have suffered?
- But let me, if possible, for one moment, try to forget this villanous
- outrage on the most excellent of women.
- I have business here which will hold me yet a few days; and then perhaps
- I shall quit this house for ever.
- I have had a solemn and tedious time of it. I should never have known
- that I had half the respect I really find I had for the old gentleman,
- had I not so closely, at his earnest desire, attended him, and been a
- witness of the tortures he underwent.
- This melancholy occasion may possibly have contributed to humanize me:
- but surely I never could have been so remorseless a caitiff as thou hast
- been, to a woman of half this lady's excellence.
- But pr'ythee, dear Lovelace, if thou'rt a man, and not a devil, resolve,
- out of hand, to repair thy sin of ingratitude, by conferring upon thyself
- the highest honour thou canst receive, in making her lawfully thine.
- But if thou canst not prevail upon thyself to do her this justice, I
- think I should not scruple a tilt with thee, [an everlasting rupture at
- least must follow] if thou sacrificest her to the accursed women.
- Thou art desirous to know what advantage I reap by my uncle's demise. I
- do not certainly know; for I have not been so greedily solicitous on this
- subject as some of the kindred have been, who ought to have shown more
- decency, as I have told them, and suffered the corpse to have been cold
- before they had begun their hungry inquiries. But, by what I gathered
- from the poor man's talk to me, who oftener than I wished touched upon
- the subject, I deem it will be upwards of 5000£. in cash, and in the
- funds, after all legacies paid, besides the real estate, which is a clear
- 1000£. a-year.
- I wish, from my heart, thou wert a money-lover! Were the estate to be of
- double the value, thou shouldst have it every shilling; only upon one
- condition [for my circumstances before were as easy as I wish them to be
- while I am single]--that thou wouldst permit me the honour of being this
- fatherless lady's father, as it is called, at the altar.
- Think of this! my dear Lovelace! be honest: and let me present thee with
- the brightest jewel that man ever possessed; and then, body and soul,
- wilt thou bind to thee for ever thy
- BELFORD.
- LETTER XIV
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- THURSDAY, JUNE 15.
- Let me alone, you great dog, you!--let me alone!--have I heard a lesser
- boy, his coward arms held over his head and face, say to a bigger, who
- was pommeling him, for having run away with his apple, his orange, or his
- ginger-bread.
- So say I to thee, on occasion of thy severity to thy poor friend, who, as
- thou ownest, has furnished thee (ungenerous as thou art!) with the
- weapons thou brandishest so fearfully against him.--And to what purpose,
- when the mischief is done? when, of consequence, the affair is
- irretrievable? and when a CLARISSA could not move me?
- Well, but, after all, I must own, that there is something very singular
- in this lady's case: and, at times, I cannot help regretting that ever I
- attempted her; since not one power either of body or soul could be moved
- in my favour; and since, to use the expression of the philosopher, on a
- much graver occasion, there is no difference to be found between the
- skull of King Philip and that of another man.
- But people's extravagant notions of things alter not facts, Belford: and,
- when all's done, Miss Clarissa Harlowe has but run the fate of a thousand
- others of her sex--only that they did not set such a romantic value upon
- what they call their honour; that's all.
- And yet I will allow thee this--that if a person sets a high value upon
- any thing, be it ever such a trifle in itself, or in the eye of others,
- the robbing of that person of it is not a trifle to him. Take the matter
- in this light, I own I have done wrong, great wrong, to this admirable
- creature.
- But have I not known twenty and twenty of the sex, who have seemed to
- carry their notions of virtue high; yet, when brought to the test, have
- abated of their severity? And how should we be convinced that any of
- them are proof till they are tried?
- A thousand times have I said, that I never yet met with such a woman as
- this. If I had, I hardly ever should have attempted Miss Clarissa
- Harlowe. Hitherto she is all angel: and was not that the point which at
- setting out I proposed to try?* And was not cohabitation ever my darling
- view? And am I not now, at last, in the high road to it?--It is true,
- that I have nothing to boast of as to her will. The very contrary. But
- now are we come to the test, whether she cannot be brought to make the
- best of an irreparable evil. If she exclaim, [she has reason to exclaim,
- and I will sit down with patience by the hour together to hear her
- exclamations, till she is tired of them,] she will then descend to
- expostulation perhaps: expostulation will give me hope: expostulation
- will show that she hates me not. And, if she hate me not, she will
- forgive: and, if she now forgive, then will all be over; and she will be
- mine upon my own terms: and it shall then be the whole study of my future
- life to make her happy.
- * See Vol. III. Letter XVIII.
- So, Belford, thou seest that I have journeyed on to this stage [indeed,
- through infinite mazes, and as infinite remorses] with one determined
- point in view from the first. To thy urgent supplication then, that I
- will do her grateful justice by marriage, let me answer in Matt. Prior's
- two lines on his hoped-for auditorship; as put into the mouths of his St.
- John and Harley;
- ---Let that be done, which Matt. doth say.
- YEA, quoth the Earl--BUT NOT TO-DAY.
- Thou seest, Jack, that I make no resolutions, however, against doing her,
- one time or other, the wished-for justice, even were I to succeed in my
- principal view, cohabitation. And of this I do assure thee, that, if I
- ever marry, it must, it shall be Miss Clarissa Harlowe.--Nor is her
- honour at all impaired with me, by what she has so far suffered: but the
- contrary. She must only take care that, if she be at last brought to
- forgive me, she show me that her Lovelace is the only man on earth whom
- she could have forgiven on the like occasion.
- But ah, Jack! what, in the mean time, shall I do with this admirable
- creature? At present--[I am loth to say it--but, at present] she is
- quite stupified.
- I had rather, methinks, she should have retained all her active powers,
- though I had suffered by her nails and her teeth, than that she should be
- sunk into such a state of absolute--insensibility (shall I call it?) as
- she has been in every since Tuesday morning. Yet, as she begins a little
- to revive, and now-and-then to call names, and to exclaim, I dread almost
- to engage with the anguish of a spirit that owes its extraordinary
- agitations to a niceness that has no example either in ancient or modern
- story. For, after all, what is there in her case that should stupify
- such a glowing, such a blooming charmer?--Excess of grief, excess of
- terror, have made a person's hair stand on end, and even (as we have
- read) changed the colour of it. But that it should so stupify, as to
- make a person, at times, insensible to those imaginary wrongs, which
- would raise others from stupifaction, is very surprising!
- But I will leave this subject, least it should make me too grave.
- I was yesterday at Hampstead, and discharged all obligations there, with
- no small applause. I told them that the lady was now as happy as myself:
- and that is no great untruth; for I am not altogether so, when I allow
- myself to think.
- Mrs. Townsend, with her tars, had not been then there. I told them what
- I would have them say to her, if she came.
- Well, but, after all [how many after-all's have I?] I could be very
- grave, were I to give way to it.--The devil take me for a fool! What's
- the matte with me, I wonder!--I must breathe a fresher air for a few
- days.
- But what shall I do with this admirable creature the while?--Hang me, if
- I know!--For, if I stir, the venomous spider of this habitation will want
- to set upon the charming fly, whose silken wings are already so entangled
- in my enormous web, that she cannot move hand or foot: for so much has
- grief stupified her, that she is at present destitute of will, as she
- always seemed to be of desire. I must not therefore think of leaving her
- yet for two days together.
- LETTER XV
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- I have just now had a specimen of what the resentment of this dear
- creature will be when quite recovered: an affecting one!--For entering
- her apartment after Dorcas; and endeavouring to soothe and pacify her
- disordered mind; in the midst of my blandishments, she held up to Heaven,
- in a speechless agony, the innocent license (which she has in her own
- power); as the poor distressed Catalans held up their English treaty,
- on an occasion that keeps the worst of my actions in countenance.
- She seemed about to call down vengeance upon me; when, happily the leaden
- god, in pity to her trembling Lovelace, waved over her half-drowned eyes
- his somniferous want, and laid asleep the fair exclaimer, before she
- could go half through with her intended imprecation.
- Thou wilt guess, by what I have written, that some little art has been
- made use of: but it was with a generous design (if thou'lt allow me the
- word on such an occasion) in order to lessen the too-quick sense she was
- likely to have of what she was to suffer. A contrivance I never had
- occasion for before, and had not thought of now, if Mrs. Sinclair had not
- proposed it to me: to whom I left the management of it: and I have done
- nothing but curse her ever since, lest the quantity should have for ever
- dampened her charming intellects.
- Hence my concern--for I think the poor lady ought not to have been so
- treated. Poor lady, did I say?--What have I to do with thy creeping
- style?--But have not I the worst of it; since her insensibility has made
- me but a thief to my own joys?
- I did not intend to tell thee of this little innocent trick; for such I
- designed it to be; but that I hate disingenuousness: to thee, especially:
- and as I cannot help writing in a more serious vein than usual, thou
- wouldst perhaps, had I not hinted the true cause, have imagined that I
- was sorry for the fact itself: and this would have given thee a good deal
- of trouble in scribbling dull persuasives to repair by matrimony; and me
- in reading thy cruel nonsense. Besides, one day or other, thou mightest,
- had I not confessed it, have heard of it in an aggravated manner; and I
- know thou hast such an high opinion of this lady's virtue, that thou
- wouldst be disappointed, if thou hadst reason to think that she was
- subdued by her own consent, or any the least yielding in her will. And
- so is she beholden to me in some measure, that, at the expense of my
- honour, she may so justly form a plea, which will entirely salve her's.
- And now is the whole secret out.
- Thou wilt say I am a horrid fellow!--As the lady does, that I am the
- unchained Beelzebub, and a plotting villain: and as this is what you both
- said beforehand, and nothing worse can be said, I desire, if thou wouldst
- not have me quite serious with thee, and that I should think thou meanest
- more by thy tilting hint than I am willing to believe thou dost, that
- thou wilt forbear thy invectives: For is not the thing done?--Can it be
- helped?--And must I not now try to make the best of it?--And the rather
- do I enjoin to make thee this, and inviolable secrecy; because I begin
- to think that my punishment will be greater than the fault, were it to be
- only from my own reflection.
- LETTER XVI
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- FRIDAY, JUNE 16.
- I am sorry to hear of thy misfortune; but hope thou wilt not long lie by
- it. Thy servant tells me what narrow escape thou hadst with thy neck, I
- wish it may not be ominous: but I think thou seemest not to be in so
- enterprising a way as formerly; and yet, merry or sad, thou seest a
- rake's neck is always in danger, if not from the hangman, from his own
- horse. But, 'tis a vicious toad, it seems; and I think thou shouldst
- never venture upon his back again; for 'tis a plaguy thing for rider and
- horse both to be vicious.
- The fellow tells me, thou desirest me to continue to write to thee in
- order to divert thy chagrin on thy forced confinement: but how can I
- think it in my power to divert, when my subject is not pleasing to
- myself?
- Caesar never knew what it was to be hipped, I will call it, till he
- came to be what Pompey was; that is to say, till he arrived at the
- height of his ambition: nor did thy Lovelace know what it was to be
- gloomy, till he had completed his wishes upon the most charming
- creature in the world.
- And yet why say I completed? when the will, the consent, is
- wanting--and I have still views before me of obtaining that?
- Yet I could almost join with thee in the wish, which thou sendest me up
- by thy servant, unfriendly as it is, that I had had thy misfortune
- before Monday night last: for here, the poor lady has run into a
- contrary extreme to that I told thee of in my last: for now is she as
- much too lively, as before she was too stupid; and 'bating that she has
- pretty frequent lucid intervals, would be deemed raving mad, and I
- should be obliged to confine her.
- I am most confoundedly disturbed about it: for I begin to fear that her
- intellects are irreparably hurt.
- Who the devil could have expected such strange effects from a cause so
- common and so slight?
- But these high-souled and high-sensed girls, who had set up for shining
- lights and examples to the rest of the sex, are with such difficulty
- brought down to the common standard, that a wise man, who prefers his
- peace of mind to his glory, in subduing one of that exalted class,
- would have nothing to say to them.
- I do all in my power to quiet her spirits, when I force myself into her
- presence.
- I go on, begging pardon one minute; and vowing truth and honour another.
- I would at first have persuaded her, and offered to call witnesses to
- the truth of it, that we were actually married. Though the license was
- in her hands, I thought the assertion might go down in her disorder;
- and charming consequences I hoped would follow. But this would not
- do.--
- I therefore gave up that hope: and now I declare to her, that it is my
- resolution to marry her, the moment her uncle Harlowe informs me that
- he will grace the ceremony with his presence.
- But she believes nothing I say; nor, (whether in her senses, or not)
- bears me with patience in her sight.
- I pity her with all my soul; and I curse myself, when she is in her
- wailing fits, and when I apprehend that intellects, so charming, are
- for ever damped.
- But more I curse these women, who put me upon such an expedient! Lord!
- Lord! what a hand have I made of it!--And all for what?
- Last night, for the first time since Monday night, she got to her pen
- and ink; but she pursues her writing with such eagerness and hurry, as
- show too evidently her discomposure.
- I hope, however, that this employment will help to calm her spirits.
- ***
- Just now Dorcas tells me, that what she writes she tears, and throws
- the paper in fragments under the table, either as not knowing what she
- does, or disliking it: then gets up, wrings her hands, weeps, and
- shifts her seat all round the room: then returns to her table, sits
- down, and writes again.
- ***
- One odd letter, as I may call it, Dorcas has this moment given me from
- her--Carry this, said she, to the vilest of men. Dorcas, a toad,
- brought it, without any further direction to me. I sat down, intending
- (though 'tis pretty long) to give thee a copy of it: but, for my life,
- I cannot; 'tis so extravagant. And the original is too much an
- original to let it go out of my hands.
- But some of the scraps and fragments, as either torn through, or flung
- aside, I will copy, for the novelty of the thing, and to show thee how
- her mind works now she is in the whimsical way. Yet I know I am still
- furnishing thee with new weapons against myself. But spare thy comments.
- My own reflections render them needless. Dorcas thinks her lady will
- ask for them: so wishes to have them to lay again under the table.
- By the first thou'lt guess that I have told her that Miss Howe is very
- ill, and can't write; that she may account the better for not having
- received the letter designed for her.
- PAPER I
- (Torn in two pieces.)
- MY DEAREST MISS HOWE,
- O what dreadful, dreadful things have I to tell you! But yet I cannot
- tell you neither. But say, are you really ill, as a vile, vile
- creature informs me you are?
- But he never yet told me truth, and I hope has not in this: and yet, if
- it were not true, surely I should have heard from you before now!--But
- what have I to do to upbraid?--You may well be tired of me!--And if you
- are, I can forgive you; for I am tired of myself: and all my own
- relations were tired of me long before you were.
- How good you have always been to me, mine own dear Anna Howe!--But how
- I ramble!
- I sat down to say a great deal--my heart was full--I did not know what
- to say first--and thought, and grief, and confusion, and (O my poor
- head) I cannot tell what--and thought, and grief and confusion, came
- crowding so thick upon me; one would be first; another would be first;
- all would be first; so I can write nothing at all.--Only that, whatever
- they have done to me, I cannot tell; but I am no longer what I was-in
- any one thing did I say? Yes, but I am; for I am still, and I ever
- will be,
- Your true----
- Plague on it! I can write no more of this eloquent nonsense myself;
- which rather shows a raised, than a quenched, imagination: but Dorcas
- shall transcribe the others in separate papers, as written by the
- whimsical charmer: and some time hence when all is over, and I can
- better bear to read them, I may ask thee for a sight of them. Preserve
- them, therefore; for we often look back with pleasure even upon the
- heaviest griefs, when the cause of them is removed.
- PAPER II
- (Scratch'd through, and thrown under the table.)
- --And can you, my dear, honoured Papa, resolve for ever to reprobate
- your poor child?--But I am sure you would not, if you knew what she has
- suffered since her unhappy--And will nobody plead for your poor suffering
- girl?--No one good body?--Why then, dearest Sir, let it be an act of your
- own innate goodness, which I have so much experienced, and so much
- abused. I don't presume to think you should receive me--No, indeed!--My
- name is--I don't know what my name is!--I never dare to wish to come into
- your family again!--But your heavy curse, my Papa--Yes, I will call you
- Papa, and help yourself as you can--for you are my own dear Papa, whether
- you will or not--and though I am an unworthy child--yet I am your child--
- PAPER III
- A Lady took a great fancy to a young lion, or a bear, I forget
- which--but a bear, or a tiger, I believe it was. It was made her a
- present of when a whelp. She fed it with her own hand: she nursed up
- the wicked cub with great tenderness; and would play with it without
- fear or apprehension of danger: and it was obedient to all her commands:
- and its tameness, as she used to boast, increased with its growth; so
- that, like a lap-dog, it would follow her all over the house. But mind
- what followed: at last, some how, neglecting to satisfy its hungry maw,
- or having otherwise disobliged it on some occasion, it resumed its
- nature; and on a sudden fell upon her, and tore her in pieces.--And who
- was most to blame, I pray? The brute, or the lady? The lady, surely!--
- For what she did was out of nature, out of character, at least: what it
- did was in its own nature.
- PAPER IV
- How art thou now humbled in the dust, thou proud Clarissa Harlowe!
- Thou that never steppedst out of thy father's house but to be admired!
- Who wert wont to turn thine eye, sparkling with healthful life, and
- self-assurance, to different objects at once as thou passedst, as if
- (for so thy penetrating sister used to say) to plume thyself upon the
- expected applauses of all that beheld thee! Thou that usedst to go to
- rest satisfied with the adulations paid thee in the past day, and couldst
- put off every thing but thy vanity!---
- PAPER V
- Rejoice not now, my Bella, my Sister, my Friend; but pity the humbled
- creature, whose foolish heart you used to say you beheld through the thin
- veil of humility which covered it.
- It must have been so! My fall had not else been permitted--
- You penetrated my proud heart with the jealousy of an elder sister's
- searching eye.
- You knew me better than I knew myself.
- Hence your upbraidings and your chidings, when I began to totter.
- But forgive now those vain triumphs of my heart.
- I thought, poor, proud wretch that I was, that what you said was owing to
- your envy.
- I thought I could acquit my intention of any such vanity.
- I was too secure in the knowledge I thought I had of my own heart.
- My supposed advantages became a snare to me.
- And what now is the end of all?--
- PAPER VI
- What now is become of the prospects of a happy life, which once I thought
- opening before me?--Who now shall assist in the solemn preparations? Who
- now shall provide the nuptial ornaments, which soften and divert the
- apprehensions of the fearful virgin? No court now to be paid to my
- smiles! No encouraging compliments to inspire thee with hope of laying a
- mind not unworthy of thee under obligation! No elevation now for
- conscious merit, and applauded purity, to look down from on a prostrate
- adorer, and an admiring world, and up to pleased and rejoicing parents
- and relations!
- PAPER VII
- Thou pernicious caterpillar, that preyest upon the fair leaf of virgin
- fame, and poisonest those leaves which thou canst not devour!
- Thou fell blight, thou eastern blast, thou overspreading mildew, that
- destroyest the early promises of the shining year! that mockest the
- laborious toil, and blastest the joyful hopes, of the painful husbandman!
- Thou fretting moth, that corruptest the fairest garment!
- Thou eating canker-worm, that preyest upon the opening bud, and turnest
- the damask-rose into livid yellowness!
- If, as religion teaches us, God will judge us, in a great measure, by our
- benevolent or evil actions to one another--O wretch! bethink thee, in
- time bethink thee, how great must be thy condemnation!
- PAPER VIIII
- At first, I saw something in your air and person that displeased me
- not. Your birth and fortunes were no small advantages to you.--You
- acted not ignobly by my passionate brother. Every body said you were
- brave: every body said you were generous: a brave man, I thought, could
- not be a base man: a generous man, could not, I believed, be ungenerous,
- where he acknowledged obligation. Thus prepossessed, all the rest that
- my soul loved and wished for in your reformation I hoped!--I knew not,
- but by report, any flagrant instances of your vileness. You seemed
- frank, as well as generous: frankness and generosity ever attracted me:
- whoever kept up those appearances, I judged of their hearts by my own;
- and whatever qualities I wished to find in them, I was ready to find;
- and, when found, I believed them to be natives of the soil.
- My fortunes, my rank, my character, I thought a further security. I
- was in none of those respects unworthy of being the niece of Lord M.
- and of his two noble sisters.--Your vows, your imprecations--But, Oh!
- you have barbarously and basely conspired against that honour, which
- you ought to have protected: and now you have made me--What is it of
- vile that you have not made me?--
- Yet, God knows my heart, I had no culpable inclinations!--I honoured
- virtue!--I hated vice!--But I knew not, that you were vice itself!
- PAPER IX
- Had the happiness of any of the poorest outcast in the world, whom I
- had neveer seen, never known, never before heard of, lain as much in my
- power, as my happiness did in your's, my benevolent heart would have
- made me fly to the succour of such a poor distressed--with what pleasure
- would I have raised the dejected head, and comforted the desponding
- heart!--But who now shall pity the poor wretch, who has increased,
- instead of diminished, the number of the miserable!
- PAPER X
- Lead me, where my own thoughts themselves may lose me;
- Where I may dose out what I've left of life,
- Forget myself, and that day's guile!----
- Cruel remembrance!----how shall I appease thee?
- [Death only can be dreadful to the bad;*
- To innocence 'tis like a bugbear dress'd
- To frighten children. Pull but off the mask,
- And he'll appear a friend.]
- * Transcriber's note: Portions set off in square brackets [ ] are written
- at angles to the majority of the text, as if squeezed into margins.
- ----Oh! you have done an act
- That blots the face and blush of modesty;
- Takes off the rose
- From the fair forehead of an innocent love,
- And makes a blister there!
- Then down I laid my head,
- Down on cold earth, and for a while was dead;
- And my freed soul to a strange somewhere fled!
- Ah! sottish soul! said I,
- When back to its cage again I saw it fly;
- Fool! to resume her broken chain,
- And row the galley here again!
- Fool! to that body to return,
- Where it condemn'd and destin'd is to mourn!
- [I could a tale unfold----
- Would harrow up thy soul----]
- O my Miss Howe! if thou hast friendship, help me,
- And speak the words of peace to my divided soul,
- That wars within me,
- And raises ev'ry sense to my confusion.
- I'm tott'ring on the brink
- Of peace; an thou art all the hold I've left!
- Assist me----in the pangs of my affliction!
- When honour's lost, 'tis a relief to die:
- Death's but a sure retreat from infamy.
- [By swift misfortunes
- How I am pursu'd!
- Which on each other
- Are, like waves, renew'd!]
- The farewell, youth,
- And all the joys that dwell
- With youth and life!
- And life itself, farewell!
- For life can never be sincerely blest.
- Heav'n punishes the bad, and proves the best.
- ***
- After all, Belford, I have just skimmed over these transcriptions of
- Dorcas: and I see there are method and good sense in some of them, wild
- as others of them are; and that her memory, which serves her so well
- for these poetical flights, is far from being impaired. And this gives
- me hope, that she will soon recover her charming intellects--though I
- shall be the sufferer by their restoration, I make no doubt.
- But, in the letter she wrote to me, there are yet greater extravagancies;
- and though I said it was too affecting to give thee a copy of it, yet,
- after I have let thee see the loose papers enclosed, I think I may throw
- in a transcript of that. Dorcas therefore shall here transcribe it. I
- cannot. The reading of it affected me ten times more than the severest
- reproaches of a regular mind could do.
- TO MR. LOVELACE
- I never intended to write another line to you. I would not see you, if I
- could help it--O that I never had!
- But tell me, of a truth, is Miss Howe really and truly ill?--Very ill?-
- And is not her illness poison? And don't you know who gave it to her?
- What you, or Mrs. Sinclair, or somebody (I cannot tell who) have done to
- my poor head, you best know: but I shall never be what I was. My head is
- gone. I have wept away all my brain, I believe; for I can weep no more.
- Indeed I have had my full share; so it is no matter.
- But, good now, Lovelace, don't set Mrs. Sinclair upon me again.--I never
- did her any harm. She so affrights me, when I see her!--Ever since--when
- was it? I cannot tell. You can, I suppose. She may be a good woman, as
- far as I know. She was the wife of a man of honour--very likely--though
- forced to let lodgings for a livelihood. Poor gentlewoman! Let her know
- I pity her: but don't let her come near me again--pray don't!
- Yet she may be a very good woman--
- What would I say!--I forget what I was going to say.
- O Lovelace, you are Satan himself; or he helps you out in every thing;
- and that's as bad!
- But have you really and truly sold yourself to him? And for how long?
- What duration is your reign to have?
- Poor man! The contract will be out: and then what will be your fate!
- O Lovelace! if you could be sorry for yourself, I would be sorry too--but
- when all my doors are fast, and nothing but the key-hole open, and the
- key of late put into that, to be where you are, in a manner without
- opening any of them--O wretched, wretched Clarissa Harlowe!
- For I never will be Lovelace--let my uncle take it as he pleases.
- Well, but now I remember what I was going to say--it is for your good--
- not mine--for nothing can do me good now!--O thou villanous man! thou
- hated Lovelace!
- But Mrs. Sinclair may be a good woman--if you love me--but that you don't
- --but don't let her bluster up with her worse than mannish airs to me
- again! O she is a frightful woman! If she be a woman! She needed not
- to put on that fearful mask to scare me out of my poor wits. But don't
- tell her what I say--I have no hatred to her--it is only fright, and
- foolish fear, that's all.--She may not be a bad woman--but neither are
- all men, any more than all women alike--God forbid they should be like
- you!
- Alas! you have killed my head among you--I don't say who did it!--God
- forgive you all!--But had it not been better to have put me out of all
- your ways at once? You might safely have done it! For nobody would
- require me at your hands--no, not a soul--except, indeed, Miss Howe would
- have said, when she should see you, What, Lovelace, have you done with
- Clarissa Harlowe?--And then you could have given any slight, gay answer--
- sent her beyond sea; or, she has run away from me, as she did from her
- parents. And this would have been easily credited; for you know,
- Lovelace, she that could run away from them, might very well run away
- from you.
- But this is nothing to what I wanted to say. Now I have it.
- I have lost it again--This foolish wench comes teasing me--for what
- purpose should I eat? For what end should I wish to live?--I tell thee,
- Dorcas, I will neither eat nor drink. I cannot be worse than I am.
- I will do as you'd have me--good Dorcas, look not upon me so fiercely--
- but thou canst not look so bad as I have seen somebody look.
- Mr. Lovelace, now that I remember what I took pen in hand to say, let me
- hurry off my thoughts, lest I lose them again--here I am sensible--and
- yet I am hardly sensible neither--but I know my head is not as it should
- be, for all that--therefore let me propose one thing to you: it is for
- your good--not mine; and this is it:
- I must needs be both a trouble and an expense to you. And here my uncle
- Harlowe, when he knows how I am, will never wish any man to have me: no,
- not even you, who have been the occasion of it--barbarous and ungrateful!
- --A less complicated villany cost a Tarquin--but I forget what I would
- say again--
- Then this is it--I never shall be myself again: I have been a very wicked
- creature--a vain, proud, poor creature, full of secret pride--which I
- carried off under an humble guise, and deceived every body--my sister
- says so--and now I am punished--so let me be carried out of this house,
- and out of your sight; and let me be put into that Bedlam privately,
- which once I saw: but it was a sad sight to me then! Little as I thought
- what I should come to myself!--That is all I would say: this is all I
- have to wish for--then I shall be out of all your ways; and I shall be
- taken care of; and bread and water without your tormentings, will be
- dainties: and my straw-bed the easiest I have lain in--for--I cannot tell
- how long!
- My clothes will sell for what will keep me there, perhaps as long as I
- shall live. But, Lovelace, dear Lovelace, I will call you; for you have
- cost me enough, I'm sure!--don't let me be made a show of, for my
- family's sake; nay, for your own sake, don't do that--for when I know all
- I have suffered, which yet I do not, and no matter if I never do--I may
- be apt to rave against you by name, and tell of all your baseness to a
- poor humbled creature, that once was as proud as any body--but of what I
- can't tell--except of my own folly and vanity--but let that pass--since
- I am punished enough for it--
- So, suppose, instead of Bedlam, it were a private mad-house, where nobody
- comes!--That will be better a great deal.
- But, another thing, Lovelace: don't let them use me cruelly when I am
- there--you have used me cruelly enough, you know!--Don't let them use me
- cruelly; for I will be very tractable; and do as any body would have me
- to do--except what you would have me do--for that I never will.--Another
- thing, Lovelace: don't let this good woman, I was going to say vile
- woman; but don't tell her that--because she won't let you send me to this
- happy refuge, perhaps, if she were to know it--
- Another thing, Lovelace: and let me have pen, and ink, and paper, allowed
- me--it will be all my amusement--but they need not send to any body I
- shall write to, what I write, because it will but trouble them: and
- somebody may do you a mischief, may be--I wish not that any body do any
- body a mischief upon my account.
- You tell me, that Lady Betty Lawrance, and your cousin Montague, were
- here to take leave of me; but that I was asleep, and could not be waked.
- So you told me at first I was married, you know, and that you were my
- husband--Ah! Lovelace! look to what you say.--But let not them, (for they
- will sport with my misery,) let not that Lady Betty, let not that Miss
- Montague, whatever the real ones may do; nor Mrs. Sinclair neither, nor
- any of her lodgers, nor her nieces, come to see me in my place--real
- ones, I say; for, Lovelace, I shall find out all your villanies in time--
- indeed I shall--so put me there as soon as you can--it is for your good--
- then all will pass for ravings that I can say, as, I doubt no many poor
- creatures' exclamations do pass, though there may be too much truth in
- them for all that--and you know I began to be mad at Hampstead--so you
- said.--Ah! villanous man! what have you not to answer for!
- ***
- A little interval seems to be lent me. I had begun to look over what I
- have written. It is not fit for any one to see, so far as I have been
- able to re-peruse it: but my head will not hold, I doubt, to go through
- it all. If therefore I have not already mentioned my earnest desire, let
- me tell you it is this: that I be sent out of this abominable house
- without delay, and locked up in some private mad-house about this town;
- for such, it seems, there are; never more to be seen, or to be produced
- to any body, except in your own vindication, if you should be charged
- with the murder of my person; a much lighter crime than that of
- honour, which the greatest villain on earth has robbed me of. And deny
- me not this my last request, I beseech you; and one other, and that is,
- never to let me see you more! This surely may be granted to
- The miserably abused
- CLARISSA HARLOWE.
- ***
- I will not bear thy heavy preachments, Belford, upon this affecting
- letter. So, not a word of that sort! The paper, thou'lt see, is
- blistered with the tears even of the hardened transcriber; which has
- made her ink run here and there.
- Mrs. Sinclair is a true heroine, and, I think, shames us all. And she is
- a woman too! Thou'lt say, the beset things corrupted become the worst.
- But this is certain, that whatever the sex set their hearts upon, they
- make thorough work of it. And hence it is, that a mischief which would
- end in simple robbery among men rogues, becomes murder, if a woman be in
- it.
- I know thou wilt blame me for having had recourse to art. But do not
- physicians prescribe opiates in acute cases, where the violence of the
- disorder would be apt to throw the patient into a fever or delirium? I
- aver, that my motive for this expedient was mercy; nor could it be any
- thing else. For a rape, thou knowest, to us rakes, is far from being an
- undesirable thing. Nothing but the law stands in our way, upon that
- account; and the opinion of what a modest woman will suffer rather than
- become a viva voce accuser, lessens much an honest fellow's apprehensions
- on that score. Then, if these somnivolencies [I hate the word opiates on
- this occasion,] have turned her head, that is an effect they frequently
- have upon some constitutions; and in this case was rather the fault of
- the dose than the design of the giver.
- But is not wine itself an opiate in degree?--How many women have been
- taken advantage of by wine, and other still more intoxicating viands?--
- Let me tell thee, Jack, that the experience of many of the passive sex,
- and the consciences of many more of the active, appealed to, will testify
- that thy Lovelace is not the worst of villains. Nor would I have thee
- put me upon clearing myself by comparisons.
- If she escape a settled delirium when my plots unravel, I think it is all
- I ought to be concerned about. What therefore I desire of thee, is,
- that, if two constructions may be made of my actions, thou wilt afford me
- the most favourable. For this, not only friendship, but my own
- ingenuousness, which has furnished thee with the knowledge of the facts
- against which thou art so ready to inveigh, require of thee.
- ***
- Will. is just returned from an errand to Hampstead; and acquaints me,
- that Mrs. Townsend was yesterday at Mrs. Moore's, accompanied by three or
- four rough fellows; a greater number (as supposed) at a distance. She
- was strangely surprised at the news that my spouse and I are entirely
- reconciled; and that two fine ladies, my relations, came to visit her,
- and went to town with her: where she is very happy with me. She was sure
- we were not married, she said, unless it was while we were at Hampstead:
- and they were sure the ceremony was not performed there. But that the
- lady is happy and easy, is unquestionable: and a fling was thrown out by
- Mrs. Moore and Mrs. Bevis at mischief-makers, as they knew Mrs. Townsend
- to be acquainted with Miss Howe.
- Now, since my fair-one can neither receive, nor send away letters, I am
- pretty easy as to this Mrs. Townsend and her employer. And I fancy Miss
- Howe will be puzzled to know what to think of the matter, and afraid of
- sending by Wilson's conveyance; and perhaps suppose that her friend
- slights her; or has changed her mind in my favour, and is ashamed to own
- it; as she has not had an answer to what she wrote; and will believe that
- the rustic delivered her last letter into her own hand.
- Mean time I have a little project come into my head, of a new kind; just
- for amusement-sake, that's all: variety has irresistible charms. I
- cannot live without intrigue. My charmer has no passions; that is to
- say, none of the passions that I want her to have. She engages all my
- reverence. I am at present more inclined to regret what I have done,
- than to proceed to new offences: and shall regret it till I see how she
- takes it when recovered.
- Shall I tell thee my project? 'Tis not a high one.--'Tis this--to get
- hither to Mrs. Moore, Miss Rawlins, and my widow Bevis; for they are
- desirous to make a visit to my spouse, now we are so happy together.
- And, if I can order it right, Belton, Mowbray, Tourville, and I, will
- show them a little more of the ways of this wicked town, than they at
- present know. Why should they be acquainted with a man of my character,
- and not be the better and wiser for it?--I would have every body rail
- against rakes with judgment and knowledge, if they will rail. Two of
- these women gave me a great deal of trouble: and the third, I am
- confident, will forgive a merry evening.
- Thou wilt be curious to know what the persons of these women are, to whom
- I intend so much distinction. I think I have not heretofore mentioned
- any thing characteristic of their persons.
- Mrs. Moore is a widow of about thirty-eight; a little mortified by
- misfortunes; but those are often the merriest folks, when warmed. She
- has good features still; and is what they call much of a gentlewoman, and
- very neat in her person and dress. She has given over, I believe, all
- thoughts of our sex: but when the dying embers are raked up about the
- half-consumed stump, there will be fuel enough left, I dare say, to blaze
- out, and give a comfortable warmth to a half-starved by-stander.
- Mrs. Bevis is comely; that is to say, plump; a lover of mirth, and one
- whom no grief ever dwelt with, I dare say, for a week together; about
- twenty-five years of age: Mowbray will have very little difficulty with
- her, I believe; for one cannot do every thing one's self. And yet
- sometimes women of this free cast, when it comes to the point, answer not
- the promises their cheerful forwardness gives a man who has a view upon
- them.
- Miss Rawlins is an agreeable young lady enough; but not beautiful. She
- has sense, and would be thought to know the world, as it is called; but,
- for her knowledge, is more indebted to theory than experience. A mere
- whipt-syllabub knowledge this, Jack, that always fails the person who
- trusts to it, when it should hold to do her service. For such young
- ladies have so much dependence upon their own understanding and wariness,
- are so much above the cautions that the less opinionative may be
- benefited by, that their presumption is generally their overthrow, when
- attempted by a man of experience, who knows how to flatter their vanity,
- and to magnify their wisdom, in order to take advantage of their folly.
- But, for Miss Rawlins, if I can add experience to her theory, what an
- accomplished person will she be!--And how much will she be obliged to me;
- and not only she, but all those who may be the better for the precepts
- she thinks herself already so well qualified to give! Dearly, Jack, do
- I love to engage with these precept-givers, and example-setters.
- Now, Belford, although there is nothing striking in any of these
- characters; yet may we, at a pinch, make a good frolicky half-day with
- them, if, after we have softened their wax at table by encouraging
- viands, we can set our women and them into dancing: dancing, which all
- women love, and all men should therefore promote, for both their sakes.
- And thus, when Tourville sings, Belton fiddles, Mowbray makes rough love,
- and I smooth; and thou, Jack, wilt be by that time well enough to join in
- the chorus; the devil's in't if we don't mould them into what shape we
- please--our own women, by their laughing freedoms, encouraging them to
- break through all their customary reserves. For women to women, thou
- knowest, are great darers and incentives: not one of them loving to be
- outdone or outdared, when their hearts are thoroughly warmed.
- I know, at first, the difficulty will be the accidental absence of my
- dear Mrs. Lovelace, to whom principally they will design their visit: but
- if we can exhilarate them, they won't then wish to see her; and I can
- form twenty accidents and excuses, from one hour to another, for her
- absence, till each shall have a subject to take up all her thoughts.
- I am really sick at heart for a frolic, and have no doubt but this will
- be an agreeable one. These women already think me a wild fellow; nor do
- they like me the less for it, as I can perceive; and I shall take care,
- that they shall be treated with so much freedom before one another's
- faces, that in policy they shall keep each other's counsel. And won't
- this be doing a kind thing by them? since it will knit an indissoluble
- band of union and friendship between three women who are neighbours, and
- at present have only common obligations to one another: for thou wantest
- not to be told, that secrets of love, and secrets of this nature, are
- generally the strongest cement of female friendships.
- But, after all, if my beloved should be happily restored to her
- intellects, we may have scenes arise between us that will be sufficiently
- busy to employ all the faculties of thy friend, without looking out for
- new occasions. Already, as I have often observed, has she been the means
- of saving scores of her sex, yet without her own knowledge.
- SATURDAY NIGHT.
- By Dorcas's account of her lady's behaviour, the dear creature seems to
- be recovering. I shall give the earliest notice of this to the worthy
- Capt. Tomlinson, that he may apprize uncle John of it. I must be
- properly enabled, from that quarter, to pacify her, or, at least, to
- rebate her first violence.
- LETTER XVII
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- SUNDAY AFTERNOON, SIX O'CLOCK, (JUNE 18.)
- I went out early this morning, and returned not till just now; when I was
- informed that my beloved, in my absence, had taken it into her head to
- attempt to get away.
- She tripped down, with a parcel tied up in a handkerchief, her hood on;
- and was actually in the entry, when Mrs. Sinclair saw her.
- Pray, Madam, whipping between her and the street-door, be pleased to let
- me know where you are going?
- Who has a right to controul me? was the word.
- I have, Madam, by order of your spouse: and, kemboing her arms, as she
- owned, I desire you will be pleased to walk up again.
- She would have spoken; but could not: and, bursting into tears, turned
- back, and went up to her chamber: and Dorcas was taken to task for
- suffering her to be in the passage before she was seen.
- This shows, as we hoped last night, that she is recovering her charming
- intellects.
- Dorcas says, she was visible to her but once before the whole day; and
- then she seemed very solemn and sedate.
- I will endeavour to see her. It must be in her own chamber, I suppose;
- for she will hardly meet me in the dining-room. What advantage will the
- confidence of our sex give me over the modesty of her's, if she be
- recovered!--I, the most confident of men: she, the most delicate of
- women. Sweet soul! methinks I have her before me: her face averted:
- speech lost in sighs--abashed--conscious--what a triumphant aspect will
- this give me, when I gaze on her downcast countenance!
- ***
- This moment Dorcas tells me she believes she is coming to find me out.
- She asked her after me: and Dorcas left her, drying her red-swoln eyes at
- her glass; [no design of moving me by tears!] sighing too sensibly for my
- courage. But to what purpose have I gone thus far, if I pursue not my
- principal end? Niceness must be a little abated. She knows the worst.
- That she cannot fly me; that she must see me; and that I can look her
- into a sweet confusion; are circumstances greatly in my favour. What can
- she do but rave and exclaim? I am used to raving and exclaiming--but, if
- recovered, I shall see how she behaves upon this our first sensible
- interview after what she has suffered.
- Here she comes.
- LETTER XVIII
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- SUNDAY NIGHT.
- Never blame me for giving way to have art used with this admirable
- creature. All the princes of the air, or beneath it, joining with me,
- could never have subdued her while she had her senses.
- I will not anticipate--only to tell thee, that I am too much awakened by
- her to think of sleep, were I to go to bed; and so shall have nothing to
- do but to write an account of our odd conversation, while it is so strong
- upon my mind that I can think of nothing else.
- She was dressed in a white damask night-gown, with less negligence than
- for some days past. I was sitting with my pen in my fingers; and stood
- up when I first saw her, with great complaisance, as if the day were
- still her own. And so indeed it is.
- She entered with such dignity in her manner as struck me with great awe,
- and prepared me for the poor figure I made in the subsequent
- conversation. A poor figure indeed!--But I will do her justice.
- She came up with quick steps, pretty close to me; a white handkerchief
- in her hand; her eyes neither fierce nor mild, but very earnest; and a
- fixed sedateness in her whole aspect, which seemed to be the effect of
- deep contemplation: and thus she accosted me, with an air and action that
- I never saw equalled.
- You see before you, Sir, the wretch, whose preference of you to all your
- sex you have rewarded--as it indeed deserved to be rewarded. My father's
- dreadful curse has already operated upon me in the very letter of it, as
- to this life; and it seems to me too evident that it will not be your
- fault that it is not entirely completed in the loss of my soul, as well
- as of my honour--which you, villanous man! have robbed me of, with a
- baseness so unnatural, so inhuman, that it seems you, even you, had not
- the heart to attempt it, till my senses were made the previous sacrifice.
- Here I made an hesitating effort to speak, laying down my pen: but she
- proceeded!--Hear me out, guilty wretch!--abandoned man!--Man, did I say?
- --Yet what name else can I? since the mortal worryings of the fiercest
- beast would have been more natural, and infinitely more welcome, that
- what you have acted by me; and that with a premeditation and contrivance
- worthy only of that single heart which now, base as well as ungrateful as
- thou art, seems to quake within thee.--And well may'st thou quake; well
- may'st thou tremble, and falter, and hesitate, as thou dost, when thou
- reflectest upon what I have suffered for thy sake, and upon the returns
- thou hast made me!
- By my soul, Belford, my whole frame was shaken: for not only her looks
- and her action, but her voice, so solemn, was inexpressibly affecting:
- and then my cursed guilt, and her innocence, and merit, and rank, and
- superiority of talents, all stared me at that instant in the face so
- formidably, that my present account, to which she unexpectedly called me,
- seemed, as I then thought, to resemble that general one, to which we are
- told we shall be summoned, when our conscience shall be our accuser.
- But she had had time to collect all the powers of her eloquence. The
- whole day probably in her intellects. And then I was the more
- disappointed, as I had thought I could have gazed the dear creature into
- confusion--but it is plain, that the sense she has of her wrongs sets
- this matchless woman above all lesser, all weaker considerations.
- My dear--my love--I--I--I never--no never--lips trembling, limbs quaking,
- voice inward, hesitating, broken--never surely did miscreant look so like
- a miscreant! while thus she proceeded, waving her snowy hand, with all
- the graces of moving oratory.
- I have no pride in the confusion visible in thy whole person. I have
- been all the day praying for a composure, if I could not escape from this
- vile house, that should once more enable me to look up to my destroyer
- with the consciousness of an innocent sufferer. Thou seest me, since my
- wrongs are beyond the power of words to express, thou seest me, calm
- enough to wish, that thou may'st continue harassed by the workings of thy
- own conscience, till effectual repentance take hold of thee, that so thou
- may'st not forfeit all title to that mercy which thou hast not shown to
- the poor creature now before thee, who had so well deserved to meet with
- a faithful friend where she met with the worst of enemies.
- But tell me, (for no doubt thou hast some scheme to pursue,) tell me,
- since I am a prisoner, as I find, in the vilest of houses, and have not a
- friend to protect or save me, what thou intendest shall become of the
- remnant of a life not worth the keeping!--Tell me, if yet there are more
- evils reserved for me; and whether thou hast entered into a compact with
- the grand deceiver, in the person of his horrid agent in this house; and
- if the ruin of my soul, that my father's curse may be fulfilled, is to
- complete the triumphs of so vile a confederacy?--Answer me!--Say, if thou
- hast courage to speak out to her whom thou hast ruined, tell me what
- farther I am to suffer from thy barbarity?
- She stopped here, and, sighing, turned her sweet face from me, drying up
- with her handkerchief those tears which she endeavoured to restrain; and,
- when she could not, to conceal from my sight.
- As I told thee, I had prepared myself for high passions, raving, flying,
- tearing execration; these transient violences, the workings of sudden
- grief, and shame, and vengeance, would have set us upon a par with each
- other, and quitted scores. These have I been accustomed to; and as
- nothing violent is lasting, with these I could have wished to encounter.
- But such a majestic composure--seeking me--whom, yet it is plain, by her
- attempt to get away, she would have avoided seeking--no Lucretia-like
- vengeance upon herself in her thought--yet swallowed up, her whole mind
- swallowed up, as I may say, by a grief so heavy, as, in her own words, to
- be beyond the power of speech to express--and to be able, discomposed as
- she was, to the very morning, to put such a home-question to me, as if
- she had penetrated my future view--how could I avoid looking like a fool,
- and answering, as before, in broken sentences and confusion?
- What--what-a--what has been done--I, I, I--cannot but say--must own--must
- confess--hem--hem----is not right--is not what should have been--but-a--
- but--but--I am truly--truly--sorry for it--upon my soul I am--and--and--
- will do all--do every thing--do what--whatever is incumbent upon me--all
- that you--that you--that you shall require, to make you amends!----
- O Belford! Belford! whose the triumph now! HER'S, or MINE?
- Amends! O thou truly despicable wretch! Then lifting up her eyes--Good
- Heaven! who shall pity the creature who could fall by so base a mind!--
- Yet--[and then she looked indignantly upon me!] yet, I hate thee not
- (base and low-souled as thou art!) half so much as I hate myself, that I
- saw thee not sooner in thy proper colours! That I hoped either morality,
- gratitude, or humanity, from a libertine, who, to be a libertine, must
- have got over and defied all moral sanctions.*
- * Her cousin Morden's words to her in his letter from Florence. See Vol.
- IV. Letter XIX.
- She then called upon her cousin Morden's name, as if he had warned her
- against a man of free principles; and walked towards the window; her
- handkerchief at her eyes. But, turning short towards me, with an air of
- mingled scorn and majesty, [what, at the moment, would I have given never
- to have injured her!] What amends hast thou to propose! What amends can
- such a one as thou make to a person of spirit, or common sense, for the
- evils thou hast so inhumanely made me suffer?
- As soon, Madam--as soon--as--as soon as your uncle--or--not waiting----
- Thou wouldest tell me, I suppose--I know what thou wouldest tell me--But
- thinkest thou, that marriage will satisfy for a guilt like thine?
- Destitute as thou hast made me both of friends and fortune, I too much
- despise the wretch, who could rob himself of his wife's virtue, to endure
- the thoughts of thee in the light thou seemest to hope I will accept thee
- in!--
- I hesitated an interruption; but my meaning died away upon my trembling
- lips. I could only pronounce the word marriage--and thus she proceeded:
- Let me, therefore, know whether I am to be controuled in the future
- disposal of myself? Whether, in a country of liberty, as this, where the
- sovereign of it must not be guilty of your wickedness, and where you
- neither durst have attempted it, had I one friend or relation to look
- upon me, I am to be kept here a prisoner, to sustain fresh injuries?
- Whether, in a word, you intend to hinder me from going where my destiny
- shall lead me?
- After a pause--for I was still silent:
- Can you not answer me this plain question?--I quit all claim, all
- expectation, upon you--what right have you to detain me here?
- I could not speak. What could I say to such a question?
- O wretch! wringing her uplifted hands, had I not been robbed of my
- senses, and that in the basest manner--you best know how--had I been able
- to account for myself, and your proceedings, or to have known but how the
- days passed--a whole week should not have gone over my head, as I find it
- has done, before I had told you, what I now tell you--That the man who
- has been the villain to me you have been, shall never make me his wife.--
- I will write to my uncle, to lay aside his kind intentions in my favour--
- all my prospects are shut in--I give myself up for a lost creature as to
- this world--hinder me not from entering upon a life of severe penitence,
- for corresponding, after prohibition, with a wretch who has too well
- justified all their warnings and inveteracy; and for throwing myself into
- the power of your vile artifices. Let me try to secure the only hope I
- have left. This is all the amends I ask of you. I repeat, therefore, Am
- I now at liberty to dispose of myself as I please?
- Now comes the fool, the miscreant again, hesitating his broken answer: My
- dearest love, I am confounded, quite confounded, at the thought of what--
- of what has been done; and at the thought of--to whom. I see, I see,
- there is no withstanding your eloquence!--Such irresistible proofs of the
- love of virtue, for its own sake, did I never hear of, nor meet with, in
- all my reading. And if you can forgive a repentant villain, who thus on
- his knees implores your forgiveness, [then down I dropt, absolutely in
- earnest in all I said,] I vow by all that's sacred and just, (and may a
- thunderbolt strike me dead at your feet, if I am not sincere!) that I
- will by marriage before to-morrow noon, without waiting for your uncle,
- or any body, do you all the justice I now can do you. And you shall ever
- after controul and direct me as you please, till you have made me more
- worthy of your angelic purity than now I am: nor will I presume so much
- as to touch your garment, till I have the honour to call so great a
- blessing lawfully mine.
- O thou guileful betrayer! there is a just God, whom thou invokest: yet
- the thunderbolt descends not; and thou livest to imprecate and deceive!
- My dearest life! rising; for I hoped she was relenting----
- Hadst thou not sinned beyond the possibility of forgiveness, interrupted
- she; and this had been the first time that thus thou solemnly promisest
- and invokest the vengeance thou hast as often defied; the desperateness
- of my condition might have induced me to think of taking a wretched
- chance with a man so profligate. But, after what I have suffered by
- thee, it would be criminal in me to wish to bind my soul in covenant to
- a man so nearly allied to perdition.
- Good God!--how uncharitable!--I offer not to defend--would to Heaven that
- I could recall--so nearly allied to perdition, Madam!--So profligate a
- man, Madam!----
- O how short is expression of thy crimes, and of my sufferings! Such
- premeditation is thy baseness! To prostitute the characters of persons
- of honour of thy own family--and all to delude a poor creature, whom thou
- oughtest--But why talk I to thee? Be thy crimes upon thy head! Once
- more I ask thee, Am I, or am I not, at my own liberty now?
- I offered to speak in defence of the women, declaring that they really
- were the very persons----
- Presume not, interrupted she, base as thou art, to say one word in thine
- own vindication. I have been contemplating their behaviour, their
- conversation, their over-ready acquiescences, to my declarations in thy
- disfavour; their free, yet affectedly-reserved light manners: and now
- that the sad event has opened my eyes, and I have compared facts and
- passages together, in the little interval that has been lent me, I wonder
- I could not distinguish the behaviour of the unmatron-like jilt, whom
- thou broughtest to betray me, from the worthy lady whom thou hast the
- honour to call thy aunt: and that I could not detect the superficial
- creature whom thou passedst upon me for the virtuous Miss Montague.
- Amazing uncharitableness in a lady so good herself!--That the high
- spirits those ladies were in to see you, should subject them to such
- censures!--I do must solemnly vow, Madam----
- That they were, interrupting me, verily and indeed Lady Betty Lawrance
- and thy cousin Montague!--O wretch! I see by thy solemn averment [I had
- not yet averred it,] what credit ought to be given to all the rest. Had
- I no other proof----
- Interrupting her, I besought her patient ear. 'I had found myself, I
- told her, almost avowedly despised and hated. I had no hope of gaining
- her love, or her confidence. The letter she had left behind her, on her
- removal to Hampstead, sufficiently convinced me that she was entirely
- under Miss Howe's influence, and waited but the return of a letter from
- her to enter upon measures that would deprive me of her for ever: Miss
- Howe had ever been my enemy: more so then, no doubt, from the contents of
- the letter she had written to her on her first coming to Hampstead; that
- I dared not to stand the event of such a letter; and was glad of an
- opportunity, by Lady Betty's and my cousin's means (though they knew not
- my motive) to get her back to town; far, at the time, from intending the
- outrage which my despair, and her want of confidence in me, put me so
- vilely upon'--
- I would have proceeded; and particularly would have said something of
- Captain Tomlinson and her uncle; but she would not hear me further. And
- indeed it was with visible indignation, and not without several angry
- interruptions, that she heard me say so much.
- Would I dare, she asked me, to offer at a palliation of my baseness? The
- two women, she was convinced, were impostors. She knew not but Captain
- Tomlinson and Mr. Mennell were so too. But whether they were so or not,
- I was. And she insisted upon being at her own disposal for the remainder
- of her short life--for indeed she abhorred me in every light; and more
- particularly in that in which I offered myself to her acceptance.
- And, saying this, she flung from me; leaving me absolutely shocked and
- confounded at her part of a conversation which she began with such
- uncommon, however severe, composure, and concluded with so much sincere
- and unaffected indignation.
- And now, Jack, I must address one serious paragraph particularly to thee.
- I have not yet touched upon cohabitation--her uncle's mediation she does
- not absolutely discredit, as I had the pleasure to find by one hint in
- this conversation--yet she suspects my future views, and has doubt about
- Mennell and Tomlinson.
- I do say, if she come fairly at her lights, at her clues, or what shall I
- call them? her penetration is wonderful.
- But if she do not come at them fairly, then is her incredulity, then is
- her antipathy to me evidently accounted for.
- I will speak out--thou couldst not, surely, play me booty, Jack?--Surely
- thou couldst not let thy weak pity for her lead thee to an unpardonable
- breach of trust to thy friend, who has been so unreserved in his
- communications to thee?
- I cannot believe thee capable of such a baseness. Satisfy me, however,
- upon this head. I must make a cursed figure in her eye, vowing and
- protesting, as I shall not scruple occasionally to vow and protest, if
- all the time she has had unquestionable informations of my perfidy. I
- know thou as little fearest me, as I do thee, if any point of manhood;
- and wilt scorn to deny it, if thou hast done it, when thus home-pressed.
- And here I have a good mind to stop, and write no farther, till I have
- thy answer.
- And so I will.
- MONDAY MORN. PAST THREE.
- LETTER XIX
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- MONDAY MORN. FIVE O'CLOCK (JUNE 19.)
- I must write on. Nothing else can divert me: and I think thou canst not
- have been a dog to me.
- I would fain have closed my eyes: but sleep flies me. Well says Horace,
- as translated by Cowley:
- The halcyon sleep will never build his nest
- In any stormy breast.
- 'Tis not enough that he does find
- Clouds and darkness in the mind:
- Darkness but half his work will do.
- 'Tis not enough: he must find quiet too.
- Now indeed do I from my heart wish that I had never known this lady. But
- who would have thought there had been such a woman in the world? Of all
- the sex I have hitherto known, or heard, or read of, it was once subdued,
- and always subdued. The first struggle was generally the last; or, at
- least, the subsequent struggles were so much fainter and fainter, that a
- man would rather have them than be without them. But how know I yet----
- ***
- It is now near six--the sun for two hours past has been illuminating
- every thing about me: for that impartial orb shines upon Mother
- Sinclair's house as well as upon any other: but nothing within me can it
- illuminate.
- At day-dawn I looked through the key-hole of my beloved's door. She had
- declared she would not put off her clothes any more in this house. There
- I beheld her in a sweet slumber, which I hope will prove refreshing to
- her disturbed senses; sitting in her elbow-chair, her apron over her
- head; her head supported by one sweet hand, the other hand hanging down
- upon her side, in a sleepy lifelessness; half of one pretty foot only
- visible.
- See the difference in our cases! thought I: she, the charming injured,
- can sweetly sleep, while the varlet injurer cannot close his eyes; and
- has been trying, to no purpose, the whole night to divert his melancholy,
- and to fly from himself!
- As every vice generally brings on its own punishment, even in this life;
- if any thing were to tempt me to doubt of future punishment, it would be,
- that there can hardly be a greater than that in which I at this instant
- experience in my own remorse.
- I hope it will go off. If not, well will the dear creature be avenged;
- for I shall be the most miserable of men.
- ***
- SIX O'CLOCK.
- Just now Dorcas tells me, that her lady is preparing openly, and without
- disguise, to be gone. Very probable. The humour she flew away from me
- in last night has given me expectation of such an enterprize.
- Now, Jack, to be thus hated and despised!--And if I have sinned beyond
- forgiveness----
- But she has sent me a message by Dorcas, that she will meet me in the
- dining-room; and desires [odd enough] that the wretch may be present at
- the conversation that shall pass between us. This message gives me hope.
- NINE O'CLOCK.
- Confounded art, cunning villany!--By my soul, she had like to have
- slipped through my fingers! She meant nothing by her message but to get
- Dorcas out of the way, and a clear coast. Is a fancied distress,
- sufficient to justify this lady for dispensing with her principles? Does
- she not show me that she can wilfully deceive, as well as I?
- Had she been in the fore-house, and no passage to go through to get at
- the street-door, she had certainly been gone. But her haste betrayed
- her: for Sally Martin happening to be in the fore-parlour, and hearing a
- swifter motion than usual, and a rustling of silks, as if from somebody
- in a hurry, looked out; and seeing who it was, stept between her and the
- door, and set her back against it.
- You must not go, Madam. Indeed you must not.
- By what right?--And how dare you?--And such-like imperious airs the dear
- creature gave herself.--While Sally called out for her aunt; and half a
- dozen voiced joined instantly in the cry, for me to hasten down, to
- hasten down in a moment.
- I was gravely instructing Dorcas above stairs, and wondering what would
- be the subject of the conversation to which the wench was to be a
- witness, when these outcries reached my ears. And down I flew.--And
- there was the charming creature, the sweet deceiver, panting for breath,
- her back against the partition, a parcel in her hand, [women make no
- excursions without their parcels,] Sally, Polly, (but Polly obligingly
- pleaded for her,) the mother, Mabell, and Peter, (the footman of the
- house,) about her; all, however, keeping their distance; the mother and
- Sally between her and the door--in her soft rage the dear soul repeating,
- I will go--nobody has a right--I will go--if you kill me, women, I won't
- go up again!
- As soon as she saw me, she stept a pace or two towards me; Mr. Lovelace,
- I will go! said she--do you authorize these women--what right have they,
- or you either, to stop me?
- Is this, my dear, preparative to the conversation you led me to expect in
- the dining-room? And do you thing [sic] I can part with you thus?--Do
- you think I will.
- And am I, Sir, to be thus beset?--Surrounded thus?--What have these women
- to do with me?
- I desired them to leave us, all but Dorcas, who was down as soon as I. I
- then thought it right to assume an air of resolution, having found my
- tameness so greatly triumphed over. And now, my dear, said I, (urging
- her reluctant feet,) be pleased to walk into the fore-parlour. Here,
- since you will not go up stairs, here we may hold our parley; and Dorcas
- will be witness to it. And now, Madam, seating her, and sticking my
- hands in my sides, your pleasure!
- Insolent villain! said the furious lady. And rising, ran to the window,
- and threw up the sash, [she knew not, I suppose, that there were iron
- rails before the windows.] And, when she found she could not get out
- into the street, clasping her uplifted hands together, having dropt her
- parcel--For the love of God, good honest man!--For the love of God,
- mistress--[to two passers by,] a poor, a poor creature, said she, ruined!
- ----
- I clasped her in my arms, people beginning to gather about the window:
- and then she cried out Murder! help! help! and carried her up to the
- dining-room, in spite of her little plotting heart, (as I may now call
- it,) although she violently struggled, catching hold of the banisters
- here and there, as she could. I would have seated her there; but she
- sunk down half-motionless, pale as ashes. And a violent burst of tears
- happily relieved her.
- Dorcas wept over her. The wench was actually moved for her!
- Violent hysterics succeeded. I left her to Mabell, Dorcas, and Polly;
- the latter the most supportable to her of the sisterhood.
- This attempt, so resolutely made, alarmed me not a little.
- Mrs. Sinclair and her nymphs, are much more concerned; because of the
- reputation of their house as they call it, having received some insults
- (broken windows threatened) to make them produce the young creature who
- cried out.
- While the mobbish inquisitors were in the height of their office, the
- women came running up to me, to know what they should do; a constable
- being actually fetched.
- Get the constable into the parlour, said I, with three or four of the
- forwardest of the mob, and produce one of the nymphs, onion-eyed, in a
- moment, with disordered head-dress and handkerchief, and let her own
- herself the person: the occasion, a female skirmish: but satisfied with
- the justice done her. Then give a dram or two to each fellow, and all
- will be well.
- ELEVEN O'CLOCK.
- All done as I advised; and all is well.
- Mrs. Sinclair wishes she had never seen the face of so skittish a lady;
- and she and Sally are extremely pressing with me, to leave the perverse
- beauty to their breaking, as they call it, for four or five days. But I
- cursed them into silence; only ordering double precaution for the future.
- Polly, though she consoled the dear perverse one all she could, when with
- her, insists upon it to me, that nothing but terror will procure me
- tolerable usage.
- Dorcas was challenged by the women upon her tears. She owned them real.
- Said she was ashamed of herself: but could not help it. So sincere, so
- unyielding a grief, in so sweet a lady!--
- The women laughed at her; but I bid her make no apologies for her tears,
- nor mind their laughing. I was glad to see them so ready. Good use
- might be made of such strangers. In short, I would not have her indulge
- them often, and try if it were not possible to gain her lady's confidence
- by her concern for her.
- She said that her lady did take kind notice of them to her; and was glad
- to see such tokens of humanity in her.
- Well then, said I, your part, whether any thing come of it or not, is to
- be tender-hearted. It can do no harm, if no good. But take care you are
- not too suddenly, or too officiously compassionate.
- So Dorcas will be a humane, good sort of creature, I believe, very
- quickly with her lady. And as it becomes women to be so, and as my
- beloved is willing to think highly of her own sex; it will the more
- readily pass with her.
- I thought to have had one trial (having gone so far) for cohabitation.
- But what hope can there be of succeeding?--She is invincible!--Against
- all my motions, against all my conceptions, (thinking of her as a woman,
- and in the very bloom of her charms,) she is absolutely invincible. My
- whole view, at the present, is to do her legal justice, if I can but once
- more get her out of her altitudes.
- The consent of such a woman must make her ever new, ever charming. But
- astonishing! Can the want of a church-ceremony make such a difference!
- She owes me her consent; for hitherto I have had nothing to boast of.
- All of my side, has been deep remorse, anguish of mind, and love
- increased rather than abated.
- How her proud rejection stings me!--And yet I hope still to get her to
- listen to my stories of the family-reconciliation, and of her uncle and
- Capt. Tomlinson--and as she has given me a pretence to detain her against
- her will, she must see me, whether in temper or not.--She cannot help it.
- And if love will not do, terror, as the women advise, must be tried.
- A nice part, after all, has my beloved to act. If she forgive me easily,
- I resume perhaps my projects:--if she carry her rejection into violence,
- that violence may make me desperate, and occasion fresh violence. She
- ought, since she thinks she has found the women out, to consider where
- she is.
- I am confoundedly out of conceit with myself. If I give up my
- contrivances, my joy in stratagem, and plot, and invention, I shall be
- but a common man; such another dull heavy creature as thyself. Yet what
- does even my success in my machinations bring me but regret, disgrace,
- repentance? But I am overmatched, egregiously overmatched, by this
- woman. What to do with her, or without her, I know not.
- LETTER XX
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- I have this moment intelligence from Simon Parsons, one of Lord M.'s
- stewards, that his Lordship is very ill. Simon, who is my obsequious
- servant, in virtue of my presumptive heirship, gives me a hint in his
- letter, that my presence at M. Hall will not be amiss. So I must
- accelerate, whatever be the course I shall be allowed or compelled to
- take.
- No bad prospects for this charming creature, if the old peer would be so
- kind as to surrender; and many a summons has this gout given him. A good
- 8000£. a-year, and perhaps the title reversionary, or a still higher,
- would help me up with her.
- Proudly as this lady pretends to be above all pride, grandeur will have
- its charms with her; for grandeur always makes a man's face shine in a
- woman's eye. I have a pretty good, because a clear, estate, as it is.
- But what a noble variety of mischief will 8000£. a-year, enable a man to
- do?
- Perhaps thou'lt say, I do already all that comes into my head; but that's
- a mistake--not one half I will assure thee. And even good folks, as I
- have heard, love to have the power of doing mischief, whether they make
- use of it or not. The late Queen Anne, who was a very good woman, was
- always fond of prerogative. And her ministers, in her name, in more
- instances than one, made a ministerial use of this her foible.
- ***
- But now, at last, am I to be admitted to the presence of my angry
- fair-one; after three denials, nevertheless; and a peremptory from me, by
- Dorcas, that I must see her in her chamber, if I cannot see her in the
- dining-room.
- Dorcas, however, tells me that she says, if she were at her own liberty,
- she would never see me more; and that she had been asking after the
- characters and conditions of the neighbours. I suppose, now she has
- found her voice, to call out for help from them, if there were any to
- hear her.
- She will have it now, it seems, that I had the wickedness from the very
- beginning, to contrive, for her ruin, a house so convenient for dreadful
- mischief.
- Dorcas begs of her to be pacified--entreats her to see me with patience--
- tells her that I am one of the most determined of men, as she has heard
- say. That gentleness may do with me; but that nothing else will, she
- believes. And what, as her ladyship (as she always styles her,) is
- married, if I had broken my oath, or intended to break it!--
- She hinted plain enough to the honest wench, that she was not married.
- But Dorcas would not understand her.
- This shows she is resolved to keep no measures. And now is to be a trial
- of skill, whether she shall or not.
- Dorcas has hinted to her my Lord's illness, as a piece of intelligence
- that dropt in conversation from me.
- But here I stop. My beloved, pursuant to my peremptory message, is just
- gone up into the dining-room.
- LETTER XXI
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- MONDAY AFTERNOON.
- Pity me, Jack, for pity's sake; since, if thou dost not, nobody else
- will: and yet never was there a man of my genius and lively temper that
- wanted it more. We are apt to attribute to the devil every thing happens
- to us, which we would not have happen: but here, being, (as perhaps
- thou'lt say,) the devil myself, my plagues arise from an angel. I
- suppose all mankind is to be plagued by its contrary.
- She began with me like a true woman, [she in the fault, I to be blamed,]
- the moment I entered the dining-room: not the least apology, not the
- least excuse, for the uproar she had made, and the trouble she had given
- me.
- I come, said she, into thy detested presence, because I cannot help it.
- But why am I to be imprisoned here?--Although to no purpose, I cannot
- help----
- Dearest Madam, interrupted I, give not way to so much violence. You must
- know, that your detention is entirely owing to the desire I have to make
- you all the amends that is in my power to make you. And this, as well for
- your sake as my own. Surely there is still one way left to repair
- the wrongs you have suffered----
- Canst thou blot out the past week! Several weeks past, I should say;
- ever since I have been with thee? Canst thou call back time?--If thou
- canst----
- Surely, Madam, again interrupting her, if I may be permitted to call you
- legally mine, I might have but anticip----
- Wretch, that thou art! Say not another word upon this subject. When
- thou vowedst, when thou promisedst at Hampstead, I had begun to think
- that I must be thine. If I had consented, at the request of those I
- thought thy relations, this would have been a principal inducement, that
- I could then have brought thee, what was most wanted, an unsullied honour
- in dowry, to a wretch destitute of all honour; and could have met the
- gratulations of a family to which thy life has been one continued
- disgrace, with a consciousness of deserving their gratulations. But
- thinkest thou, that I will give a harlot niece to thy honourable uncle,
- and to thy real aunts; and a cousin to thy cousins from a brothel? for
- such, in my opinion, is this detested house!--Then, lifting up her
- clasped hands, 'Great and good God of Heaven,' said she, 'give me
- patience to support myself under the weight of those afflictions, which
- thou, for wise and good ends, though at present impenetrable by me, hast
- permitted!'
- Then, turning towards me, who knew neither what to say to her, nor for
- myself, I renounce thee for ever, Lovelace!--Abhorred of my soul! for
- ever I renounce thee!--Seek thy fortunes wheresoever thou wilt!--only
- now, that thou hast already ruined me!--
- Ruined you, Madam--the world need not--I knew not what to say.
- Ruined me in my own eyes; and that is the same to me as if all the world
- knew it--hinder me not from going whither my mysterious destiny shall
- lead me.
- Why hesitate you, Sir? What right have you to stop me, as you lately
- did; and to bring me up by force, my hands and arms bruised by your
- violence? What right have you to detain me here?
- I am cut to the heart, Madam, with invectives so violent. I am but too
- sensible of the wrong I have done you, or I could not bear your
- reproaches. The man who perpetrates a villany, and resolves to go on
- with it, shows not the compunction I show. Yet, if you think yourself
- in my power, I would caution you, Madam, not to make me desperate. For
- you shall be mine, or my life shall be the forfeit! Nor is life worth
- having without you!--
- Be thine!--I be thine!--said the passionate beauty. O how lovely in her
- violence!
- Yes, Madam, be mine! I repeat you shall be mine! My very crime is your
- glory. My love, my admiration of you is increased by what has passed--
- and so it ought. I am willing, Madam, to court your returning favour;
- but let me tell you, were the house beset by a thousand armed men,
- resolved to take you from me, they should not effect their purpose, while
- I had life.
- I never, never will be your's, said she, clasping her hands together, and
- lifting up her eyes!--I never will be your's!
- We may yet see many happy years, Madam. All your friends may be
- reconciled to you. The treaty for that purpose is in greater forwardness
- than you imagine. You know better than to think the worse of yourself
- for suffering what you could not help. Enjoin but the terms I can make
- my peace with you upon, and I will instantly comply.
- Never, never, repeated she, will I be your's!
- Only forgive me, my dearest life, this one time!--A virtue so invincible!
- what further view can I have against you?--Have I attempted any further
- outrage?--If you will be mine, your injuries will be injuries done to
- myself. You have too well guessed at the unnatural arts that have been
- used. But can a greater testimony be given of your virtue?--And now I
- have only to hope, that although I cannot make you complete amends, yet
- you will permit me to make you all the amends that can possibly be made.
- Here [sic] me out, I beseech you, Madam; for she was going to speak with
- an aspect unpacifiedly angry: the God, whom you serve, requires but
- repentance and amendment. Imitate him, my dearest love, and bless me
- with the means of reforming a course of life that begins to be hateful to
- me. That was once your favourite point. Resume it, dearest creature, in
- charity to a soul, as well as body, which once, as I flattered myself,
- was more than indifferent to you, resume it. And let to-morrow's sun
- witness to our espousals.
- I cannot judge thee, said she; but the GOD to whom thou so boldly
- referrest can, and, assure thyself, He will. But, if compunction has
- really taken hold of thee--if, indeed, thou art touched for thy
- ungrateful baseness, and meanest any thing by this pleading the holy
- example thou recommendest to my imitation; in this thy pretended
- repentant moment, let me sift thee thoroughly, and by thy answer I shall
- judge of the sincerity of thy pretended declarations.
- Tell me, then, is there any reality in the treaty thou has pretended to
- be on foot between my uncle and Capt. Tomlinson, and thyself?--Say, and
- hesitate not, is there any truth in that story?--But, remember, if there
- be not, and thou avowest that there is, what further condemnation attends
- to thy averment, if it be as solemn as I require it to be!
- This was a cursed thrust! What could I say!--Surely this merciless lady
- is resolved to d--n me, thought I, and yet accuses me of a design against
- her soul!--But was I not obliged to proceed as I had begun?
- In short, I solemnly averred that there was!--How one crime, as the good
- folks say, brings on another!
- I added, that the Captain had been in town, and would have waited on her,
- had she not been indisposed; that he went down much afflicted, as well on
- her account, as on that of her uncle; though I had not acquainted him
- either with the nature of her disorder, or the ever-to-be-regretted
- occasion of it, having told him that it was a violent fever; That he had
- twice since, by her uncle's desire, sent up to inquire after her health;
- and that I had already dispatched a man and horse with a letter, to
- acquaint him, (and her uncle through him,) with her recovery; making it
- my earnest request, that he would renew his application to her uncle for
- the favour of his presence at the private celebrations of our nuptials;
- and that I expected an answer, if not this night, as to-morrow.
- Let me ask thee next, said she, (thou knowest the opinion I have of the
- women thou broughtest to me at Hampstead; and who have seduced me hither
- to my ruin; let me ask thee,) If, really and truly, they were Lady Betty
- Lawrance and thy cousin Montague?--What sayest thou--hesitate not--what
- sayest thou to this question?
- Astonishing, my dear, that you should suspect them!--But, knowing your
- strange opinion of them, what can I say to be believed?
- And is this the answer thou returnest me? Dost thou thus evade my
- question? But let me know, for I am trying thy sincerity now, and all
- shall judge of thy new professions by thy answer to this question; let me
- know, I repeat, whether those women be really Lady Betty Lawrance and thy
- cousin Montague?
- Let me, my dearest love, be enabled to-morrow to call you lawfully mine,
- and we will set out the next day, if you please, to Berkshire to my Lord
- M.'s, where they both are at this time; and you shall convince yourself
- by your own eyes, and by your own ears; which you will believe sooner
- than all I can say or swear.
- Now, Belford, I had really some apprehension of treachery from thee;
- which made me so miserably evade; for else, I could as safely have sworn
- to the truth of this, as to that of the former: but she pressing me still
- for a categorical answer, I ventured plumb; and swore to it, [lover's
- oaths, Jack!] that they were really and truly Lady Betty Lawrance and my
- cousin Montague.
- She lifted up her hands and eyes--What can I think!--what can I think!
- You think me a devil, Madam; a very devil! or you could not after you
- have put these questions to me, seem to doubt the truth of answers so
- solemnly sworn to.
- And if I do think thee so, have I not cause? Is there another man in the
- world, (I hope for the sake of human nature, there is not,) who could act
- by any poor friendless creature as thou hast acted by me, whom thou hast
- made friendless--and who, before I knew thee, had for a friend every one
- who knew me?
- I told you, Madam, before that Lady Betty and my cousin were actually
- here, in order to take leave of you, before they set out for Berkshire:
- but the effects of my ungrateful crime, (such, with shame and remorse, I
- own it to be,) were the reason you could not see them. Nor could I be
- fond that they should see you; since they never would have forgiven me,
- had they known what had passed--and what reason had I to expect your
- silence on the subject, had you been recovered?
- It signifies nothing now, that the cause of their appearance has been
- answered in my ruin, who or what they are: but if thou hast averred thus
- solemnly to two falsehoods, what a wretch do I see before me!
- I thought she had now reason to be satisfied; and I begged her to allow
- me to talk to her of to-morrow, as of the happiest day of my life. We
- have the license, Madam--and you must excuse me, that I cannot let you go
- hence till I have tried every way I can to obtain your forgiveness.
- And am I then, [with a kind of frantic wildness,] to be detained a
- prisoner in this horrid house--am I, Sir?--Take care! take care! holding
- up her hand, menacing, how you make me desperate! If I fall, though by
- my own hand, inquisition will be made for my blood; and be not out in thy
- plot, Lovelace, if it should be so--make sure work, I charge thee--dig a
- hole deep enough to cram in and conceal this unhappy body; for, depend
- upon it, that some of those who will not stir to protect me living, will
- move heaven and earth to avenge me dead!
- A horrid dear creature!--By my soul she made me shudder! She had need
- indeed to talk of her unhappiness in falling into the hands of the only
- man in the world, who could have used her as I have used her--she is the
- only woman in the world, who could have shocked and disturbed me as she
- has done. So we are upon a foot in that respect. And I think I have the
- worst of it by much: since very little has been my joy--very much my
- trouble. And her punishment, as she calls it, is over: but when mine
- will, or what it may be, who can tell?
- Here, only recapitulating, (think, then, how I must be affected at the
- time,) I was forced to leave off, and sing a song to myself. I aimed at
- a lively air; but I croaked rather than sung. And fell into the old
- dismal thirtieth of January strain; I hemmed up for a sprightlier note;
- but it would not do; and at last I ended, like a malefactor, in a dead
- psalm melody.
- Heigh-ho!--I gape like an unfledged kite in its nest, wanting to swallow
- a chicken, bobbed at its mouth by its marauding dam!--
- What a-devil ails me?--I can neither think nor write!
- Lie down, pen, for a moment!
- LETTER XXII
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- There is certainly a good deal in the observation, that it costs a man
- ten times more pains to be wicked, than it would cost him to be good. What
- a confounded number of contrivances have I had recourse to, in order
- to carry my point with this charming creature; and yet after all, how
- have I puzzled myself by it; and yet am near tumbling into the pit which
- it was the end of all my plots to shun! What a happy man had I been with
- such an excellence, could I have brought my mind to marry when I first
- prevailed upon her to quit her father's house! But then, as I have often
- reflected, how had I known, that a but blossoming beauty, who could carry
- on a private correspondence, and run such risques with a notorious wild
- fellow, was not prompted by inclination, which one day might give such a
- free-liver as myself as much pain to reflect upon, as, at the time it
- gave me pleasure? Thou rememberest the host's tale in Ariosto. And thy
- experience, as well as mine, can furnish out twenty Fiametta's in proof
- of the imbecility of the sex.
- But to proceed with my narrative.
- The dear creature resumed the topic her heart was so firmly fixed upon;
- and insisted upon quitting the odious house, and that in very high terms.
- I urged her to meet me the next day at the altar in either of the two
- churches mentioned in the license. And I besought her, whatever was her
- resolution, to let me debate this matter calmly with her.
- If, she said, I would have her give what I desired the least moment's
- consideration, I must not hinder her from being her own mistress. To
- what purpose did I ask her consent, if she had not a power over either
- her own person or actions?
- Will you give me your honour, Madam, if I consent to your quitting a
- house so disagreeable to you?--
- My honour, Sir! said the dear creature--Alas!--And turned weeping from
- me with inimitable grace--as if she had said--Alas!--you have robbed me
- of my honour!
- I hoped then, that her angry passions were subsiding; but I was mistaken;
- for, urging her warmly for the day; and that for the sake of our mutual
- honour, and the honour of both our families; in this high-flown and
- high-souled strain she answered me:
- And canst thou, Lovelace, be so mean--as to wish to make a wife of the
- creature thou hast insulted, dishonoured, and abused, as thou hast me?
- Was it necessary to humble me down to the low level of thy baseness,
- before I could be a wife meet for thee? Thou hadst a father, who was a
- man of honour: a mother, who deserved a better son. Thou hast an uncle,
- who is no dishonour to the Peerage of a kingdom, whose peers are more
- respectable than the nobility of any other country. Thou hast other
- relations also, who may be thy boast, though thou canst not be theirs--
- and canst thou not imagine, that thou hearest them calling upon thee; the
- dead from their monuments; the living from their laudable pride; not to
- dishonour thy ancient and splendid house, by entering into wedlock with a
- creature whom thou hast levelled with the dirt of the street, and classed
- with the vilest of her sex?
- I extolled her greatness of soul, and her virtue. I execrated myself for
- my guilt: and told her, how grateful to the manes of my ancestors, as
- well as to the wishes of the living, the honour I supplicated for would
- be.
- But still she insisted upon being a free agent; of seeing herself in
- other lodgings before she would give what I urged the least
- consideration. Nor would she promise me favour even then, or to permit
- my visits. How then, as I asked her, could I comply, without resolving
- to lose her for ever?
- She put her hand to her forehead often as she talked; and at last,
- pleading disorder in her head, retired; neither of us satisfied with the
- other. But she ten times more dissatisfied with me, than I with her.
- Dorcas seems to be coming into favour with her--
- What now!--What now!
- MONDAY NIGHT.
- How determined is this lady!--Again had she like to have escaped us!--
- What a fixed resentment!--She only, I find, assumed a little calm, in
- order to quiet suspicion. She was got down, and actually had unbolted
- the street-door, before I could get to her; alarmed as I was by Mrs.
- Sinclair's cookmaid, who was the only one that saw her fly through the
- passage: yet lightning was not quicker than I.
- Again I brought her back to the dining-room, with infinite reluctance on
- her part. And, before her face, ordered a servant to be placed
- constantly at the bottom of the stairs for the future.
- She seemed even choked with grief and disappointment.
- Dorcas was exceedingly assiduous about her; and confidently gave it as
- her own opinion, that her dear lady should be permitted to go to another
- lodging, since this was so disagreeable to her: were she to be killed for
- saying so, she would say it. And was good Dorcas for this afterwards.
- But for some time the dear creature was all passion and violence--
- I see, I see, said she, when I had brought her up, what I am to expect
- from your new professions, O vilest of men!--
- Have I offered t you, my beloved creature, any thing that can justify
- this impatience after a more hopeful calm?
- She wrung her hands. She disordered her head-dress. She tore her
- ruffles. She was in a perfect phrensy.
- I dreaded her returning malady: but, entreaty rather exasperating, I
- affected an angry air.--I bid her expect the worst she had to fear--and
- was menacing on, in hopes to intimidate her; when, dropping to my feet,
- 'Twill be a mercy, said she, the highest act of mercy you can do, to kill
- me outright upon this spot--this happy spot, as I will, in my last
- moments, call it!--Then, baring, with a still more frantic violence, part
- of her enchanting neck--Here, here, said the soul-harrowing beauty, let
- thy pointed mercy enter! and I will thank thee, and forgive thee for all
- the dreadful past!--With my latest gasp will I forgive and thank thee!--
- Or help me to the means, and I will myself put out of the way so
- miserable a wretch! And bless thee for those means!
- Why all this extravagant passion? Why all these exclamations? Have I
- offered any new injury to you, my dearest life? What a phrensy is this!
- Am I not ready to make you all the reparation that I can make you? Had I
- not reason to hope--
- No, no, no, no, as before, shaking her head with wild impatience, as
- resolved not to attend to what I said.
- My resolutions are so honourable, if you will permit them to take effect,
- that I need not be solicitous where you go, if you will but permit my
- visits, and receive my vows.--And God is my witness, that I bring you not
- back from the door with any view to your dishonour, but the contrary: and
- this moment I will send for a minister to put an end to all your doubts
- and fears.
- Say this, and say a thousand times more, and bind every word with a
- solemn appeal to that God whom thou art accustomed to invoke to the truth
- of the vilest falsehoods, and all will still be short of what thou has
- vowed and promised to me. And, were not my heart to abhor thee, and to
- rise against thee, for thy perjuries, as it does, I would not, I tell
- thee once more, I would not, bind my soul in covenant with such a man,
- for a thousand worlds!
- Compose yourself, however, Madam; for your own sake, compose yourself.
- Permit me to raise you up; abhorred as I am of your soul!
- Nay, if I must not touch you; for she wildly slapt my hands; but with
- such a sweet passionate air, her bosom heaving and throbbing as she
- looked up to me, that although I was most sincerely enraged, I could with
- transport have pressed her to mine.
- If I must not touch you, I will not.--But depend upon it, [and I assumed
- the sternest air I could assume, to try what it would do,] depend upon
- it, Madam, that this is not the way to avoid the evils you dread. Let me
- do what I will, I cannot be used worse--Dorcas, begone!
- She arose, Dorcas being about to withdraw; and wildly caught hold of her
- arm: O Dorcas! If thou art of mine own sex, leave me not, I charge thee!
- --Then quitting Dorcas, down she threw herself upon her knees, in the
- furthermost corner of the room, clasping a chair with her face laid upon
- the bottom of it!--O where can I be safe?--Where, where can I be safe,
- from this man of violence?--
- This gave Dorcas an opportunity to confirm herself in her lady's
- confidence: the wench threw herself at my feet, while I seemed in violent
- wrath; and embracing my knees, Kill me, Sir, kill me, Sir, if you please!
- --I must throw myself in your way, to save my lady. I beg your pardon,
- Sir--but you must be set on!--God forgive the mischief-makers!--But your
- own heart, if left to itself, would not permit these things--spare,
- however, Sir! spare my lady, I beseech you!--bustling on her knees about
- me, as if I were intending to approach her lady, had I not been
- restrained by her.
- This, humoured by me, Begone, devil!--Officious devil, begone!--startled
- the dear creature: who, snatching up hastily her head from the chair, and
- as hastily popping it down again in terror, hit her nose, I suppose,
- against the edge of the chair; and it gushed out with blood, running in a
- stream down her bosom; she herself was too much frighted to heed it!
- Never was mortal man in such terror and agitation as I; for I instantly
- concluded, that she had stabbed herself with some concealed instrument.
- I ran to her in a wild agony--for Dorcas was frighted out of all her mock
- interposition----
- What have you done!--O what have you done!--Look up to me, my dearest
- life!--Sweet injured innocence, look up to me! What have you done!--Long
- will I not survive you!--And I was upon the point of drawing my sword to
- dispatch myself, when I discovered--[What an unmanly blockhead does this
- charming creature make me at her pleasure!] that all I apprehended was
- but a bloody nose, which, as far as I know (for it could not be stopped
- in a quarter of an hour) may have saved her head and her intellects.
- But I see by this scene, that the sweet creature is but a pretty coward
- at bottom; and that I can terrify her out of her virulence against me,
- whenever I put on sternness and anger. But then, as a qualifier to the
- advantage this gives me over her, I find myself to be a coward too, which
- I had not before suspected, since I was capable of being so easily
- terrified by the apprehensions of her offering violence to herself.
- LETTER XXIII
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- But with all this dear creature's resentment against me, I cannot, for my
- heart, think but she will get all over, and consent to enter the pale
- with me. Were she even to die to-morrow, and to know she should, would
- not a woman of her sense, of her punctilio, and in her situation, and of
- so proud a family, rather die married, than otherwise?--No doubt but she
- would; although she were to hate the man ever so heartily. If so, there
- is now but one man in the world whom she can have--and that is me.
- Now I talk [familiar writing is but talking, Jack] thus glibly of
- entering the pale, thou wilt be ready to question me, I know, as to my
- intentions on this head.
- As much of my heart, as I know of it myself, will I tell thee.--When I am
- from her, I cannot still help hesitating about marriage; and I even
- frequently resolve against it, and determine to press my favourite scheme
- for cohabitation. But when I am with her, I am ready to say, to swear,
- and to do, whatever I think will be the most acceptable to her, and were
- a parson at hand, I should plunge at once, no doubt of it, into the
- state.
- I have frequently thought, in common cases, that it is happy for many
- giddy fellows [there are giddy fellows, as well as giddy girls, Jack; and
- perhaps those are as often drawn in, as these] that ceremony and parade
- are necessary to the irrevocable solemnity; and that there is generally
- time for a man to recollect himself in the space between the heated
- over-night, and the cooler next morning; or I know not who could escape
- the sweet gypsies, whose fascinating powers are so much aided by our own
- raised imaginations.
- A wife at any time, I used to say. I had ever confidence and vanity
- enough to think that no woman breathing could deny her hand when I held
- out mine. I am confoundedly mortified to find that this lady is able to
- hold me at bay, and to refuse all my honest vows.
- What force [allow me a serious reflection, Jack: it will be put down!
- What force] have evil habits upon the human mind! When we enter upon a
- devious course, we think we shall have it in our power when we will
- return to the right path. But it is not so, I plainly see: For, who can
- acknowledge with more justice this dear creature's merits, and his own
- errors, than I? Whose regret, at times, can be deeper than mine, for the
- injuries I have done her? Whose resolutions to repair those injuries
- stronger?--Yet how transitory is my penitence!--How am I hurried away--
- Canst thou tell by what?--O devil of youth, and devil of intrigue, how do
- you mislead me!--How often do we end in occasions for the deepest
- remorse, what we begin in wantonness!--
- At the present writing, however, the turn of the scale is in behalf of
- matrimony--for I despair of carrying with her my favourite point.
- The lady tells Dorcas, that her heart is broken: and that she shall live
- but a little while. I think nothing of that, if we marry. In the first
- place, she knows not what a mind unapprehensive will do for her, in a
- state to which all the sex look forwards with high satisfaction. How
- often have the whole of the sacred conclave been thus deceived in their
- choice of a pope; not considering that the new dignity is of itself
- sufficient to give new life! A few months' heart's ease will give my
- charmer a quite different notion of things: and I dare say, as I have
- heretofore said,* once married, and I am married for life.
- * See Letter IX. of this volume.
- I will allow that her pride, in one sense, has suffered abasement: but
- her triumph is the greater in every other. And while I can think that
- all her trials are but additions to her honour, and that I have laid the
- foundations of her glory in my own shame, can I be called cruel, if I am
- not affected with her grief as some men would be?
- And for what should her heart be broken? Her will is unviolated;--at
- present, however, her will is unviolated. The destroying of good habits,
- and the introducing of bad, to the corrupting of the whole heart, is the
- violation. That her will is not to be corrupted, that her mind is not to
- be debased, she has hitherto unquestionably proved. And if she give
- cause for farther trials, and hold fast her integrity, what ideas will
- she have to dwell upon, that will be able to corrupt her morals? What
- vestigia, what remembrances, but such as will inspire abhorrence of the
- attempter?
- What nonsense then to suppose that such a mere notional violation as she
- has suffered should be able to cut asunder the strings of life?
- Her religion, married, or not married, will set her above making such a
- trifling accident, such an involuntary suffering fatal to her.
- Such considerations as these they are that support me against all
- apprehensions of bugbear consequences; and I would have them have weight
- with thee; who are such a doughty advocate for her. And yet I allow thee
- this; that she really makes too much of it; takes it too much to heart.
- To be sure she ought to have forgot it by this time, except the charming,
- charming consequence happen, that still I am in hopes will happen, were I
- to proceed no farther. And, if she apprehended this herself, then has
- the dear over-nice soul some reason for taking it so much to heart; and
- yet would not, I think, refuse to legitimate.
- O Jack! had I am imperial diadem, I swear to thee, that I would give it
- up, even to my enemy, to have one charming boy by this lady. And should
- she escape me, and no such effect follow, my revenge on her family, and,
- in such a case, on herself, would be incomplete, and I should reproach
- myself as long as I lived.
- Were I to be sure that this foundation is laid [And why may I not hope it
- is?] I should not doubt to have her still (should she withstand her day
- of grace) on my own conditions; nor should I, if it were so, question
- that revived affection in her, which a woman seldom fails to have for the
- father of her first child, whether born in wedlock, or out of it.
- And pr'ythee, Jack, see in this my ardent hope, a distinction in my
- favour from other rakes; who, almost to a man, follow their inclinations
- without troubling themselves about consequences. In imitation, as one
- would think, of the strutting villain of a bird, which from feathered
- lady to feathered lady pursues his imperial pleasures, leaving it to his
- sleek paramours to hatch the genial product in holes and corners of their
- own finding out.
- LETTER XXIV
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- TUESDAY MORN. JUNE 20.
- Well, Jack, now are we upon another footing together. This dear creature
- will not let me be good. She is now authorizing all my plots by her own
- example.
- Thou must be partial in the highest degree, if now thou blamest me for
- resuming my former schemes, since in that case I shall but follow her
- cue. No forced construction of her actions do I make on this occasion,
- in order to justify a bad cause or a worse intention. A slight pretence,
- indeed, served the wolf when he had a mind to quarrel with the lamb; but
- this is not now my case.
- For here (wouldst thou have thought it?) taking advantage of Dorcas's
- compassionate temper, and of some warm expressions which the
- tender-hearted wench let fall against the cruelty of men, and wishing to
- have it in her power to serve her, has she given her the following note,
- signed by her maiden name: for she has thought fit, in positive and plain
- words, to own to the pitying Dorcas that she is not married.
- MONDAY, JUNE 19.
- I then underwritten do hereby promise, that, on my coming into possession
- of my own estate, I will provide for Dorcas Martindale in a gentlewoman-
- like manner, in my own house: or, if I do not soon obtain that
- possession, or should first die, I do hereby bind myself, my executors,
- and administrators, to pay to her, or her order, during the term of her
- natural life, the sum of five pounds on each of the four usual quarterly
- days in the year; on condition that she faithfully assist me in my escape
- from an illegal confinement under which I now labour. The first
- quarterly payment to commence and be payable at the end of three months
- immediately following the day of my deliverance. And I do also promise
- to give her, as a testimony of my honour in the rest, a diamond ring,
- which I have showed her. Witness my hand this nineteenth day of June, in
- the year above written.
- CLARISSA HARLOWE.
- Now, Jack, what terms wouldst thou have me to keep with such a sweet
- corruptress? Seest thou not how she hates me? Seest thou not that she
- is resolved never to forgive me? Seest thou not, however, that she must
- disgrace herself in the eye of the world, if she actually should escape?
- That she must be subjected to infinite distress and hazard! For whom has
- she to receive and protect her? Yet to determine to risque all these
- evils! and furthermore to stoop to artifice, to be guilty of the reigning
- vice of the times, of bribery and corruption! O Jack, Jack! say not,
- write not another word in her favour!
- Thou hast blamed me for bringing her to this house: but had I carried her
- to any other in England, where there would have been one servant or
- inmate capable either of compassion or corruption, what must have been
- the consequence?
- But seest thou not, however, that in this flimsy contrivance, the dear
- implacable, like a drowning man, catches at a straw to save herself!--A
- straw shall she find to be the refuge she has resorted to.
- LETTER XXV
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- TUES. MORN. TEN O'CLOCK
- Very ill--exceedingly ill--as Dorcas tells me, in order to avoid seeing
- me--and yet the dear soul may be so in her mind. But is not that
- equivocation? Some one passion predominating in every human breast,
- breaks through principle, and controuls us all. Mine is love and revenge
- taking turns. Her's is hatred.--But this is my consolation, that hatred
- appeased is love begun; or love renewed, I may rather say, if love ever
- had footing here.
- But reflectioning apart, thou seest, Jack, that her plot is beginning to
- work. To-morrow is to break out.
- I have been abroad, to set on foot a plot of circumvention. All fair
- now, Belford!
- I insisted upon visiting my indisposed fair-one. Dorcas made officious
- excuses for her. I cursed the wench in her hearing for her impertinence;
- and stamped and made a clutter; which was improved into an apprehension
- to the lady that I would have flung her faithful confidante from the top
- of the stairs to the bottom.
- He is a violent wretch!--But, Dorcas, [dear Dorcas, now it is,] thou
- shalt have a friend in me to the last day of my life.
- And what now, Jack, dost think the name of her good angel is!--Why Dorcas
- Martindale, christian and super (no more Wykes) as in the promissory note
- in my former--and the dear creature has bound her to her by the most
- solemn obligations, besides the tie of interest.
- Whither, Madam, do you design to go when you get out of this house?
- I will throw myself into the first open house I can find; and beg
- protection till I can get a coach, or a lodging in some honest family.
- What will you do for clothes, Madam? I doubt you'll be able to take any
- away with you, but what you'll have on.
- O, no matter for clothes, if I can but get out of this house.
- What will you do for money, Madam? I have heard his honour express his
- concern, that he could not prevail upon you to be obliged to him, though
- he apprehended that you must be short of money.
- O, I have rings and other valuables. Indeed I have but four guineas, and
- two of them I found lately wrapt up in a bit of lace, designed for a
- charitable use. But now, alas! charity begins at home!--But I have one
- dear friend left, if she be living, as I hope in God she is! to whom I
- can be obliged, if I want. O Dorcas! I must ere now have heard from her,
- if I had had fair play.
- Well, Madam, your's is a hard lot. I pity you at my heart!
- Thank you, Dorcas!--I am unhappy, that I did not think before, that I might
- have confided in thy pity, and in thy sex!
- I pitied you, Madam, often and often: but you were always, as I thought,
- diffident of me. And then I doubted not but you were married; and I
- thought his honour was unkindly used by you. So that I thought it my
- duty to wish well to his honour, rather than to what I thought to be your
- humours, Madam. Would to Heaven that I had known before that you were
- not married!--Such a lady! such a fortune! to be so sadly betrayed;----
- Ah, Dorcas! I was basely drawn in! My youth--my ignorance of the world
- --and I have some things to reproach myself with when I look back.
- Lord, Madam, what deceitful creatures are these men!--Neither oaths, nor
- vows--I am sure! I am sure! [and then with her apron she gave her eyes
- half a dozen hearty rubs] I may curse the time that I came into this
- house!
- Here was accounting for her bold eyes! And was it not better for Dorcas
- to give up a house which her lady could not think worse of than she did,
- in order to gain the reputation of sincerity, than by offering to
- vindicate it, to make her proffered services suspected.
- Poor Dorcas!--Bless me! how little do we, who have lived all our time in
- the country, know of this wicked town!
- Had I been able to write, cried the veteran wench, I should certainly
- have given some other near relations I have in Wales a little inkling of
- matters; and they would have saved me from----from----from----
- Her sobs were enough. The apprehensions of women on such subjects are
- ever aforehand with speech.
- And then, sobbing on, she lifted her apron to her face again. She showed
- me how.
- Poor Dorcas!--Again wiping her own charming eyes.
- All love, all compassion, is this dear creature to every one in
- affliction but me.
- And would not an aunt protect her kinswoman?--Abominable wretch!
- I can't--I can't--I can't--say, my aunt was privy to it. She gave me
- good advice. She knew not for a great while that I was--that I was--that
- I was--ugh!--ugh!--ugh!--
- No more, no more, good Dorcas--What a world do we live in!--What a house
- am I in!--But come, don't weep, (though she herself could not forbear:)
- my being betrayed into it, though to my own ruin, may be a happy event
- for thee: and, if I live, it shall.
- I thank you, my good lady, blubbering. I am sorry, very sorry, you have
- had so hard a lot. But it may be the saving of my soul, if I can get to
- your ladyship's house. Had I but known that your ladyship was not
- married, I would have eat my own flesh, before----before----before----
- Dorcas sobbed and wept. The lady sighed and wept also.
- But now, Jack, for a serious reflection upon the premises.
- How will the good folks account for it, that Satan has such faithful
- instruments, and that the bond of wickedness is a stronger bond than the
- ties of virtue; as if it were the nature of the human mind to be villanous?
- For here, had Dorcas been good, and been tempted as she was tempted to any
- thing evil, I make no doubt but she would have yielded to the temptation.
- And cannot our fraternity in an hundred instances give proof of the like
- predominance of vice over virtue? And that we have risked more to serve
- and promote the interests of the former, than ever a good man did to
- serve a good man or a good cause? For have we not been prodigal of life
- and fortune? have we not defied the civil magistrate upon occasion? and
- have we not attempted rescues, and dared all things, only to extricate a
- pounded profligate?
- Whence, Jack, can this be?
- O! I have it, I believe. The vicious are as bad as they can be; and do
- the Devil's work without looking after; while he is continually spreading
- snares for the others; and, like a skilful angler, suiting his baits to
- the fish he angles for.
- Nor let even honest people, so called, blame poor Dorcas for her fidelity
- in a bad cause. For does not the general, who implicitly serves an
- ambitious prince in his unjust designs upon his neighbours, or upon his
- own oppressed subjects; and even the lawyer, who, for the sake of a
- paltry fee, undertakes to whiten a black cause, and to defend it against
- one he knows to be good, do the very same thing as Dorcas? And are they
- not both every whit as culpable? Yet the one shall be dubbed a hero, the
- other called an admirable fellow, and be contended for by every client,
- and his double-tongued abilities shall carry him through all the high
- preferments of the law with reputation and applause.
- Well, but what shall be done, since the lady is so much determined on
- removing!--Is there no way to oblige her, and yet to make the very act
- subservient to my other views? I fancy such a way may be found out.
- I will study for it----
- Suppose I suffer her to make an escape? Her heart is in it. If she
- effect it, the triumph she will have over me upon it will be a
- counterbalance for all she has suffered.
- I will oblige her if I can.
- LETTER XXVI
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- Tired with a succession of fatiguing days and sleepless nights, and with
- contemplating the precarious situation I stand in with my beloved, I fell
- into a profound reverie; which brought on sleep; and that produced a
- dream; a fortunate dream; which, as I imagine, will afford my working
- mind the means to effect the obliging double purpose my heart is now once
- more set upon.
- What, as I have often contemplated, is the enjoyment of the finest woman
- in the world, to the contrivance, the bustle, the surprises, and at last
- the happy conclusion of a well-laid plot!--The charming round-abouts, to
- come to the nearest way home;--the doubts; the apprehensions; the
- heart-achings; the meditated triumphs--these are the joys that make the
- blessing dear.--For all the rest, what is it?--What but to find an angel
- in imagination dwindled down to a woman in fact?----But to my dream----
- Methought it was about nine on Wednesday morning that a chariot, with a
- dowager's arms upon the doors, and in it a grave matronly lady [not
- unlike mother H. in the face; but, in her heart, Oh! how unlike!] stopped
- at a grocer's shop, about ten doors on the other side of the way, in
- order to buy some groceries: and methought Dorcas, having been out to see
- if the coast were clear for her lady's flight, and if a coach were to be
- got near the place, espied the chariot with the dowager's arms, and this
- matronly lady: and what, methought, did Dorcas, that subtle traitress,
- do, but whip up to the old matronly lady, and lifting up her voice, say,
- Good my Lady, permit me one word with your Ladyship!
- What thou hast to say to me, say on, quoth the old lady; the grocer
- retiring, and standing aloof, to give Dorcas leave to speak; who,
- methought, in words like these accosted the lady:
- 'You seem, Madam, to be a very good lady; and here, in this
- neighbourhood, at a house of no high repute, is an innocent lady of rank
- and fortune, beautiful as a May morning, and youthful as a rose-bud, and
- full as sweet and lovely, who has been tricked thither by a wicked
- gentleman, practised in the ways of the town, and this very night will
- she be ruined if she get not out of his hands. Now, O Lady! if you will
- extend your compassionate goodness to this fair young lady, in whom, the
- moment you behold her, you will see cause to believe all I say, and let
- her but have a place in your chariot, and remain in your protection for
- one day only, till she can send a man and horse to her rich and powerful
- friends, you may save from ruin a lady who has no equal for virtue as
- well as beauty.'
- Methought the old lady, moved with Dorcas's story, answered and said,
- 'Hasten, O damsel, who in a happy moment art come to put it in my power
- to serve the innocent and virtuous, which it has always been my delight
- to do: hasten to this young lady, and bid her hie hither to me with all
- speed; and tell her, that my chariot shall be her asylum: and if I find
- all that thou sayest true, my house shall be her sanctuary, and I will
- protect her from all her oppressors.'
- Hereupon, methought, this traitress Dorcas hied back to the lady, and
- made report of what she had done. And, methought, the lady highly
- approved of Dorcas's proceeding and blessed her for her good thought.
- And I lifted up mine eyes, and behold the lady issued out of the house,
- and without looking back, ran to the chariot with the dowager's coat upon
- it; and was received by the matronly lady with open arms, and 'Welcome,
- welcome, welcome, fair young lady, who so well answer the description of
- the faithful damsel: and I will carry you instantly to my house, where
- you shall meet with all the good usage your heart can wish for, till you
- can apprize your rich and powerful friends of your past dangers, and
- present escape.'
- 'Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, worthy, thrice worthy lady,
- who afford so kindly your protection to a most unhappy young creature,
- who has been basely seduced and betrayed, and brought to the very brink
- of destruction.'
- Methought, then, the matronly lady, who had, by the time the young lady
- came to her, bought and paid for the goods she wanted, ordered her
- coachman to drive home with all speed; who stopped not till he had
- arrived in a certain street not far from Lincoln's-inn-fields, where the
- matronly lady lived in a sumptuous dwelling, replete with damsels who
- wrought curiously in muslins, cambrics, and fine linen, and in every good
- work that industrious damsels love to be employed about, except the loom
- and the spinning-wheel.
- And, methought, all the way the young lady and the old lady rode, and
- after they came in, till dinner was ready, the young lady filled up the
- time with the dismal account of her wrongs and her sufferings, the like
- of which was never heard by mortal ear; and this in so moving a manner,
- that the good old lady did nothing but weep, and sigh, and sob, and
- inveigh against the arts of wicked men, and against that abominable
- 'Squire Lovelace, who was a plotting villain, methought she said; and
- more than that, an unchained Beelzebub.
- Methought I was in a dreadful agony, when I found the lady had escaped,
- and in my wrath had like to have slain Dorcas, and our mother, and every
- one I met. But, by some quick transition, and strange metamorphosis,
- which dreams do not usually account for, methought, all of a sudden, this
- matronly lady turned into the famous mother H. herself; and, being an old
- acquaintance of mother Sinclair, was prevailed upon to assist in my plot
- upon the young lady.
- Then, methought, followed a strange scene; for mother H. longing to hear
- more of the young lady's story, and night being come, besought her to
- accept of a place in her own bed, in order to have all the talk to
- themselves. For, methought, two young nieces of her's had broken in upon
- them, in the middle of the dismal tale.
- Accordingly, going early to bed, and the sad story being resumed, with as
- great earnestness on one side as attention on the other, before the young
- lady had gone far in it, mother H. methought was taken with a fit of the
- colic; and her tortures increasing, was obliged to rise to get a cordial
- she used to find specific in this disorder, to which she was unhappily
- subject.
- Having thus risen, and stept to her closet, methought she let fall the
- wax taper in her return; and then [O metamorphosis still stranger than
- the former! what unaccountable things are dreams!] coming to bed again in
- the dark, the young lady, to her infinite astonishment, grief, and
- surprise, found mother H. turned into a young person of the other sex;
- and although Lovelace was the abhorred of her soul, yet, fearing it was
- some other person, it was matter of consolation to her, when she found it
- was no other than himself, and that she had been still the bed-fellow of
- but one and the same man.
- A strange promiscuous huddle of adventures followed, scenes perpetually
- shifting; now nothing heard from the lady, but sighs, groans,
- exclamations, faintings, dyings--From the gentleman, but vows, promises,
- protestations, disclaimers of purposes pursued, and all the gentle and
- ungentle pressures of the lover's warfare.
- Then, as quick as thought (for dreams, thou knowest confine not
- themselves to the rules of the drama) ensued recoveries, lyings-in,
- christenings, the smiling boy, amply, even in her own opinion, rewarding
- the suffering mother.
- Then the grandfather's estate yielded up, possession taken of it: living
- very happily upon it: her beloved Norton her companion; Miss Howe her
- visiter; and (admirable! thrice admirable!) enabled to compare notes with
- her; a charming girl, by the same father, to her friend's charming boy;
- who, as they grow up, in order to consolidate their mamma's friendships,
- (for neither have dreams regard to consanguinity,) intermarry; change
- names by act of parliament, to enjoy my estate--and I know not what of
- the like incongruous stuff.
- I awoke, as thou mayest believe, in great disorder, and rejoiced to find
- my charmer in the next room, and Dorcas honest.
- Now thou wilt say this was a very odd dream. And yet, (for I am a
- strange dreamer,) it is not altogether improbable that something like it
- may happen; as the pretty simpleton has the weakness to confide in
- Dorcas, whom till now she disliked.
- But I forgot to tell thee one part of my dream; and that was, that, the
- next morning, the lady gave way to such transports of grief and
- resentment, that she was with difficulty diverted from making an attempt
- upon her own life. But, however, at last was prevailed upon to resolve
- to live, and make the best of the matter: a letter, methought, from
- Captain Tomlinson helping to pacify her, written to apprize me, that her
- uncle Harlowe would certainly be at Kentish-town on Wednesday night, June
- 28, the following day (the 29th) being his birth-day; and be doubly
- desirous, on that account, that our nuptials should be then privately
- solemnized in his presence.
- But is Thursday, the 29th, her uncle's anniversary, methinks thou askest?
- --It is; or else the day of celebration should have been earlier still.
- Three weeks ago I heard her say it was: and I have down the birthday of
- every one in the family, and the wedding-day of her father and mother.
- The minutest circumstances are often of great service in matters of the
- last importance.
- And what sayest thou now to my dream?
- Who says that, sleeping and waking, I have not fine helps from somebody,
- some spirit rather, as thou'lt be apt to say? But no wonder that a
- Beelzebub has his devilkins to attend his call.
- I can have no manner of doubt of succeeding in mother H.'s part of the
- scheme; for will the lady (who resolves to throw herself into the first
- house she can enter, or to bespeak the protection of the first person she
- meets, and who thinks there can be no danger out of this house, equal to
- what she apprehends from me in it) scruple to accept of the chariot of a
- dowager, accidentally offered? and the lady's protection engaged by her
- faithful Dorcas, so highly bribed to promote her escape?--And then Mrs.
- H. has the air and appearance of a venerable matron, and is not such a
- forbidding devil as Mrs. Sinclair.
- The pretty simpleton knows nothing in the world; nor that people who have
- money never want assistants in their views, be they what they will. How
- else could the princes of the earth be so implicitly served as they are,
- change they hands every so often, and be their purposes ever so wicked.
- If I can but get her to go on with me till Wednesday next week, we shall
- be settled together pretty quietly by that time. And indeed if she has
- any gratitude, and has in her the least of her sex's foibles, she must
- think I deserve her favour, by the pains she has cost me. For dearly do
- they all love that men should take pains about them and for them.
- And here, for the present, I will lay down my pen, and congratulate
- myself upon my happy invention (since her obstinacy puts me once more
- upon exercising it.)--But with this resolution, I think, that, if the
- present contrivance fail me, I will exert all the faculties of my mind,
- all my talents, to procure for myself a regal right to her favour and
- that in defiance of all my antipathies to the married state; and of the
- suggestions of the great devil out of the house, and of his secret agents
- in it.--Since, if now she is not to be prevailed upon, or drawn in, it
- will be in vain to attempt her further.
- LETTER XXVII
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- TUESDAY NIGHT, JUNE 20.
- No admittance yet to my charmer! she is very ill--in a violent fever,
- Dorcas thinks. Yet will have no advice.
- Dorcas tells her how much I am concerned at it.
- But again let me ask, Does this lady do right to make herself ill, when
- she is not ill? For my own part, libertine as people think me, when I
- had occasion to be sick, I took a dose of ipecacuanha, that I might not
- be guilty of a falsehood; and most heartily sick was I; as she, who
- then pitied me, full well knew. But here to pretend to be very ill,
- only to get an opportunity to run away, in order to avoid forgiving a
- man who has offended her, how unchristian!--If good folks allow
- themselves in these breaches of a known duty, and in these presumptuous
- contrivances to deceive, who, Belford, shall blame us?
- I have a strange notion that the matronly lady will be certainly at the
- grocer's shop at the hour of nine tomorrow morning: for Dorcas heard me
- tell Mrs. Sinclair, that I should go out at eight precisely; and then
- she is to try for a coach: and if the dowager's chariot should happen
- to be there, how lucky will it be for my charmer! how strangely will my
- dream be made out!
- ***
- I have just received a letter from Captain Tomlinson. Is it not
- wonderful? for that was part of my dream.
- I shall always have a prodigious regard to dreams henceforward. I know
- not but I may write a book upon that subject; for my own experience
- will furnish out a great part of it. 'Glanville of Witches,' 'Baxter's
- History of Spirits and Apparitions,' and the 'Royal Pedant's Demonology,'
- will be nothing at all to Lovelace's Reveries.
- The letter is just what I dreamed it to be. I am only concerned that
- uncle John's anniversary did not happen three or four days sooner; for
- should any new misfortune befal my charmer, she may not be able to
- support her spirits so long as till Thursday in the next week. Yet it
- will give me the more time for new expedients, should my present
- contrivance fail; which I cannot however suppose.
- TO ROBERT LOVELACE, ESQ.
- MONDAY, JUNE 19.
- Dear Sir,
- I can now return your joy, for the joy you have given me, as well as my
- dear friend Mr. Harlowe, in the news of his beloved niece's happy
- recovery; for he is determined to comply with her wishes and your's,
- and to give her to you with his own hand.
- As the ceremony has been necessarily delayed by reason of her illness,
- and as Mr. Harlowe's birth-day is on Thursday the 29th of this instant
- June, when he enters into the seventy-fourth year of his age; and as
- time may be wanted to complete the dear lady's recovery; he is very
- desirous that the marriage shall be solemnized upon it; that he may
- afterwards have double joy on that day to the end of his life.
- For this purpose he intends to set out privately, so as to be at
- Kentish-town on Wednesday se'nnight in the evening.
- All the family used, he says, to meet to celebrate it with him; but as
- they are at present in too unhappy a situation for that, he will give
- out, that, not being able to bear the day at home, he has resolved to
- be absent for two or three days.
- He will set out on horseback, attended only with one trusty servant,
- for the greater privacy. He will be at the most creditable-looking
- public house there, expecting you both next morning, if he hear nothing
- from me to prevent him. And he will go to town with you after the
- ceremony is performed, in the coach he supposes you will come in.
- He is very desirous that I should be present on the occasion. But this
- I have promised him, at his request, that I will be up before the day,
- in order to see the settlements executed, and every thing properly
- prepared.
- He is very glad you have the license ready.
- He speaks very kindly of you, Mr. Lovelace; and says, that, if any of
- the family stand out after he has seen the ceremony performed, he will
- separate from them, and unite himself to his dear niece and her
- interests.
- I owned to you, when in town last, that I took slight notice to my dear
- friend of the misunderstanding between you and his niece; and that I
- did this, for fear the lady should have shown any little discontent in
- his presence, had I been able to prevail upon him to go up in person,
- as then was doubtful. But I hope nothing of that discontent remains
- now.
- My absence, when your messenger came, must excuse me for not writing by
- him.
- Be pleased to make my most respectful compliments acceptable to the
- admirable lady, and believe me to be
- Your most faithful and obedient servant,
- ANTONY TOMLINSON.
- ***
- This letter I sealed, and broke open. It was brought, thou mayest
- suppose, by a particular messenger; the seal such a one as the writer
- need be ashamed of. I took care to inquire after the Captain's health,
- in my beloved's hearing; and it is now ready to be produced as a
- pacifier, according as she shall take on or resent, if the two
- metamorphoses happen pursuant to my wonderful dream; as, having great
- faith in dreams, I dare say they will.--I think it will not be amiss,
- in changing my clothes, to have this letter of the worthy Captain lie
- in my beloved's way.
- LETTER XXVIII
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- WEDN. NOON, JUNE 21.
- What shall I say now!--I, who but a few hours ago had such faith in
- dreams, and had proposed out of hand to begin my treatise of dreams
- sleeping and dreams waking, and was pleasing myself with the dialogues
- between the old matronal lady and the young lady, and with the
- metamorphoses, (absolutely assured that every thing would happen as my
- dream chalked it out,) shall never more depend upon those flying follies,
- those illusions of a fancy depraved, and run mad.
- Thus confoundedly have matters happened.
- I went out at eight o'clock in high good humour with myself, in order
- to give the sought-for opportunity to the plotting mistress and corrupted
- maid; only ordering Will. to keep a good look-out for fear his lady
- should mistrust my plot, or mistake a hackney-coach for the
- dowager-lady's chariot. But first I sent to know how she did; and
- receiving for answer, Very ill: had a very bad night: which latter was but
- too probable; since this I know, that people who have plots in their heads
- as seldom have as deserve good ones.
- I desired a physician might be called in; but was refused.
- I took a walk in St. James's Park, congratulating myself all the way on
- my rare inventions: then, impatient, I took coach, with one of the
- windows quite up, the other almost up, playing at bo-peep in every
- chariot I saw pass in my way to Lincoln's-inn-fields: and when arrived
- there I sent the coachman to desire any one of Mother H.'s family to
- come to me to the coach-side, not doubting but I should have
- intelligence of my fair fugitive there; it being then half an hour
- after ten.
- A servant came, who gave me to understand that the matronly lady was
- just returned by herself in the chariot.
- Frighted out of my wits, I alighted, and heard from the mother's own
- mouth, that Dorcas had engaged her to protect the lady; but came to
- tell her afterwards, that she had changed her mind, and would not quit
- the house.
- Quite astonished, not knowing what might have happened, I ordered the
- coachman to lash away to our mother's.
- Arriving here in an instant, the first word I asked, was, If the lady
- was safe?
- [Mr. Lovelace here gives a very circumstantial relation of all that
- passed between the Lady and Dorcas. But as he could only guess at her
- motives for refusing to go off, when Dorcas told her that she had
- engaged for her the protection of the dowager-lady, it is thought
- proper to omit this relation, and to supply it by some memoranda of
- the Lady's. But it is first necessary to account for the occasion on
- which those memoranda were made.
- The reader may remember, that in the letter written to Miss Howe, on
- her escape to Hampstead,* she promises to give her the particulars of
- her flight at leisure. She had indeed thoughts of continuing her
- account of every thing that had passed between her and Mr. Lovelace
- since her last narrative letter. But the uncertainty she was in from
- that time, with the execrable treatment she met with on her being
- deluded back again, followed by a week's delirium, had hitherto
- hindered her from prosecuting her intention. But, nevertheless,
- having it still in her view to perform her promise as soon as she had
- opportunity, she made minutes of every thing as it passed, in order to
- help her memory:--'Which,' as she observes in one place, 'she could
- less trust to since her late disorders than before.' In these
- minutes, or book of memoranda, she observes, 'That having
- apprehensions that Dorcas might be a traitress, she would have got
- away while she was gone out to see for a coach; and actually slid down
- stairs with that intent. But that, seeing Mrs. Sinclair in the entry,
- (whom Dorcas had planted there while she went out,) she speeded up
- again unseen.'
- * See Vol. V. Letter XXI.
- She then went up to the dining-room, and saw the letter of Captain
- Tomlinson: on which she observes in her memorandum-book as follows:]
- 'How am I puzzled now!--He might leave this letter on purpose: none of
- the other papers left with it being of any consequence: What is the
- alternative?--To stay, and be the wife of the vilest of men--how my
- heart resists that!--To attempt to get off, and fail, ruin inevitable!--
- Dorcas may betray me!--I doubt she is still his implement!--At his going
- out, he whispered her, as I saw, unobserved--in a very familiar manner
- too--Never fear, Sir, with a courtesy.
- 'In her agreeing to connive at my escape, she provided not for her own
- safety, if I got away: yet had reason, in that case, to expect his
- vengeance. And wants not forethought.--To have taken her with me, was
- to be in the power of her intelligence, if a faithless creature.--Let
- me, however, though I part not with my caution, keep my charity!--Can
- there be any woman so vile to a woman?--O yes!--Mrs. Sinclair: her
- aunt.--The Lord deliver me!--But, alas!--I have put myself out of the
- course of his protection by the natural means--and am already ruined!
- A father's curse likewise against me! Having made vain all my friends'
- cautions and solicitudes, I must not hope for miracles in my favour!
- 'If I do escape, what may become of me, a poor, helpless, deserted
- creature!--Helpless from sex!--from circumstances!--Exposed to every
- danger!--Lord protect me!
- 'His vile man not gone with him!--Lurking hereabouts, no doubt, to
- watch my steps!--I will not go away by the chariot, however.----
- 'That the chariot should come so opportunely! So like his many
- opportunities!--That Dorcas should have the sudden thought!--Should
- have the courage with the thought, to address a lady in behalf of an
- absolute stranger to that lady! That the lady should so readily
- consent! Yet the transaction between them to take up so much time,
- their distance in degree considered: for, arduous as the case was, and
- precious as the time, Dorcas was gone above half an hour! Yet the
- chariot was said to be ready at a grocer's not many doors off!
- 'Indeed some elderly ladies are talkative: and there are, no doubt,
- some good people in the world.----
- 'But that it should chance to be a widow lady, who could do what she
- pleased! That Dorcas should know her to be so by the lozenge! Persons
- in her station are not usually so knowing, I believe, in heraldry.
- 'Yet some may! for servants are fond of deriving collateral honours and
- distinctions, as I may call them, from the quality, or people of rank,
- whom they serve. But this sly servant not gone with him! Then this
- letter of Tomlinson!----
- 'Although I am resolved never to have this wretch, yet, may I not throw
- myself into my uncle's protection at Kentish-town, or Highgate, if I
- cannot escape before: and so get clear of him? May not the evil I know
- be less than what I may fall into, if I can avoid farther villany?
- Farther villany he has not yet threatened; freely and justly as I have
- treated him!--I will not go, I think. At least, unless I can send this
- fellow away.*----
- * She tried to do this; but was prevented by the fellow's pretending to
- put his ankle out, by a slip down stairs--A trick, says his contriving
- master, in his omitted relation, I had taught him, on a like occasion,
- at Amiens.
- 'The fellow a villain! The wench, I doubt, a vile wench. At last
- concerned for her own safety. Plays off and on about a coach.
- 'All my hopes of getting off at present over!--Unhappy creature! to what
- farther evils art thou reserved! Oh! how my heart rises at the necessity
- I must still be under to see and converse with so very vile a man!'
- LETTER XXIX
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON.
- Disappointed in her meditated escape; obliged, against her will, to
- meet me in the dining-room; and perhaps apprehensive of being upbraided
- for her art in feigning herself ill; I expected that the dear perverse
- would begin with me with spirit and indignation. But I was in hopes,
- from the gentleness of her natural disposition; from the consideration
- which I expected from her on her situation; from the contents of the
- letter of Captain Tomlinson, which Dorcas told me she had seen; and
- from the time she had had to cool and reflect since she last admitted
- me to her presence, that she would not have carried it so strongly
- through as she did.
- As I entered the dining-room, I congratulated her and myself upon her
- sudden recovery. And would have taken her hand, with an air of
- respectful tenderness; but she was resolved to begin where she left
- off.
- She turned from me, drawing in her hand, with a repulsing and indignant
- aspect--I meet you once more, said she, because I cannot help it. What
- have you to say to me? Why am I to be thus detained against my will?
- With the utmost solemnity of speech and behaviour, I urged the ceremony.
- I saw I had nothing else for it. I had a letter in my pocket I said,
- [feeling for it, although I had not taken it from the table where I left
- it in the same room,] the contents of which, if attended to, would make
- us both happy. I had been loth to show it to her before, because I hoped
- to prevail upon her to be mine sooner than the day mentioned in it.
- I felt for it in all my pockets, watching her eye mean time, which I saw
- glance towards the table where it lay.
- I was uneasy that I could not find it--at last, directed again by her sly
- eye, I spied it on the table at the farther end of the room.
- With joy I fetched it. Be pleased to read that letter, Madam; with an
- air of satisfied assurance.
- She took it, and cast her eye over it, in such a careless way, as made it
- evident, that she had read it before: and then unthankfully tossed it
- into the window-seat before her.
- I urged her to bless me to-morrow, or Friday morning; at least, that she
- would not render vain her uncle's journey, and kind endeavours to bring
- about a reconciliation among us all.
- Among us all! repeated she, with an air equally disdainful and
- incredulous. O Lovelace, thou art surely nearly allied to the grand
- deceiver, in thy endeavour to suit temptations to inclinations?--But what
- honour, what faith, what veracity, were it possible that I could enter
- into parley with thee on this subject, (which it is not,) may I expect
- from such a man as thou hast shown thyself to be?
- I was touched to the quick. A lady of your perfect character, Madam, who
- has feigned herself sick, on purpose to avoid seeing the man who adored
- her, should not--
- I know what thou wouldst say, interrupted she--Twenty and twenty low
- things, that my soul would have been above being guilty of, and which I
- have despised myself for, have I been brought into by the infection of
- thy company, and by the necessity thou hadst laid me under, of appearing
- mean. But, I thank God, destitute as I am, that I am not, however, sunk
- so low, as to wish to be thine.
- I, Madam, as the injurer, ought to have patience. It is for the injured
- to reproach. But your uncle is not in a plot against you, it is to be
- hoped. There are circumstances in the letter you cast your eyes over----
- Again she interrupted me, Why, once more I ask you, am I detained in this
- house?--Do I not see myself surrounded by wretches, who, though they wear
- the habit of my sex, may yet, as far as I know, lie in wait for my
- perdition?
- She would be very loth, I said, that Mrs. Sinclair and her nieces should
- be called up to vindicate themselves and their house.
- Would but they kill me, let them come, and welcome, I will bless the hand
- that will strike the blow! Indeed I will.
- 'Tis idle, very idle, to talk of dying. Mere young-lady talk, when
- controuled by those they hate. But let me beseech you, dearest creature
- ----
- Beseech me nothing. Let me not be detained thus against my will!--
- Unhappy creature that I am, said she, in a kind of phrensy, wringing her
- hands at the same time, and turning from me, her eyes lifted up! 'Thy
- curse, O my cruel father, seems to be now in the height of its operation!
- --My weakened mind is full of forebodings, that I am in the way of being
- a lost creature as to both worlds! Blessed, blessed God, said she,
- falling on her knees, save me, O save me, from myself and from this man!'
- I sunk down on my knees by her, excessively affecting--O that I could
- recall yesterday!--Forgive me, my dearest creature, forgive what is past,
- as it cannot now, but by one way, be retrieved. Forgive me only on this
- condition--That my future faith and honour--
- She interrupted me, rising--If you mean to beg of me never to seek to
- avenge myself by law, or by an appeal to my relations, to my cousin
- Morden in particular, when he comes to England----
- D--n the law, rising also, [she started,] and all those to whom you talk
- of appealing!--I defy both the one and the other--All I beg is YOUR
- forgiveness; and that you will, on my unfeigned contrition, re-establish
- me in your favour----
- O no, no, no! lifting up her clasped hands, I never never will, never,
- never can forgive you!--and it is a punishment worse than death to me,
- that I am obliged to meet you, or to see you.
- This is the last time, my dearest life, that you will ever see me in this
- posture, on this occasion: and again I kneeled to her. Let me hope, that
- you will be mine next Thursday, your uncle's birth-day, if not before.
- Would to Heaven I had never been a villain! Your indignation is not,
- cannot be greater, than my remorse--and I took hold of her gown for she
- was going from me.
- Be remorse thy portion!--For thine own sake, be remorse thy portion!--I
- never, never will forgive thee!--I never, never will be thine!--Let me
- retire!--Why kneelest thou to the wretch whom thou hast so vilely humbled?
- Say but, dearest creature, you will consider--say but you will take time
- to reflect upon what the honour of both our families requires of you. I
- will not rise. I will not permit you to withdraw [still holding her
- gown] till you tell me you will consider.--Take this letter. Weigh well
- your situation, and mine. Say you will withdraw to consider; and then I
- will not presume to withold [sic] you.
- Compulsion shall do nothing with me. Though a slave, a prisoner, in
- circumstance, I am no slave in my will!--Nothing will I promise thee!--
- Withheld, compelled--nothing will I promise thee!
- Noble creature! but not implacable, I hope!--Promise me but to return in
- an hour!
- Nothing will I promise thee!
- Say but that you will see me again this evening!
- O that I could say--that it were in my power to say--I never will see
- thee more!--Would to Heaven I never were to see thee more!
- Passionate beauty!--still holding her--
- I speak, though with vehemence, the deliberate wish of my heart.--O that
- I could avoid looking down upon thee, mean groveler, and abject as
- insulting--Let me withdraw! My soul is in tumults! Let we [sic]
- withdraw!
- I quitted my hold to clasp my hands together--Withdraw, O sovereign of my
- fate!--Withdraw, if you will withdraw! My destiny is in your power!--It
- depends upon your breath!--Your scorn but augments my love! Your
- resentment is but too well founded!--But, dearest creature, return,
- return, return, with a resolution to bless with pardon and peace your
- faithful adorer!
- She flew from me. The angel, as soon as she found her wings, flew from
- me. I, the reptile kneeler, the despicable slave, no more the proud
- victor, arose; and, retiring, tried to comfort myself, that,
- circumstanced as she is, destitute of friends and fortune; her uncle
- moreover, who is to reconcile all so soon, (as I thank my stars she still
- believes,) expected.
- O that she would forgive me!--Would she but generously forgive me, and
- receive my vows at the altar, at the instant of her forgiving me, that I
- might not have time to relapse into my old prejudices! By my soul,
- Belford, this dear girl gives the lie to all our rakish maxims. There
- must be something more than a name in virtue!--I now see that there is!--
- Once subdued, always subdued--'Tis an egregious falsehood!--But, O Jack,
- she never was subdued. What have I obtained but an increase of shame and
- confusion!--While her glory has been established by her sufferings!
- This one merit is, however, left me, that I have laid all her sex under
- obligation to me, by putting this noble creature to trials, which, so
- gloriously supported, have done honour to them all.
- However--But no more will I add--What a force have evil habits!--I will
- take an airing, and try to fly from myself!--Do not thou upbraid me on my
- weak fits--on my contradictory purposes--on my irresolution--and all will
- be well.
- LETTER XXX
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- WEDNESDAY NIGHT.
- A man is just now arrived from M. Hall, who tells me, that my Lord is in
- a very dangerous way. The gout in his stomach to an extreme degree,
- occasioned by drinking a great quantity of lemonade.
- A man of 8000£. a year to prefer his appetite to his health!--He deserves
- to die!--But we have all of us our inordinate passions to gratify: and
- they generally bring their punishment along with them--so
- witnesses the nephew, as well as the uncle.
- The fellow was sent upon other business; but stretched his orders a
- little, to make his court to a successor.
- I am glad I was not at M. Hall, at the time my Lord took the grateful
- dose: [it was certainly grateful to him at the time:] there are people
- in the world, who would have had the wickedness to say, that I had
- persuaded him to drink.
- The man says, that his Lordship was so bad when he came away, that the
- family began to talk of sending for me in post haste. As I know the
- old peer has a good deal of cash by him, of which he seldom keeps
- account, it behoves me to go down as soon as I can. But what shall I
- do with this dear creature the while?--To-morrow over, I shall, perhaps,
- be able to answer my own question. I am afraid she will make
- me desperate.
- For here have I sent to implore her company, and am denied with scorn.
- ***
- I have been so happy as to receive, this moment, a third letter from
- the dear correspondent Miss Howe. A little severe devil!--It would
- have broken the heart of my beloved, had it fallen into her hands. I
- will enclose a copy of it. Read it here.
- TUESDAY, JUNE 20.
- MY DEAREST MISS HARLOWE,
- Again I venture to you, (almost against inclination;) and that by your
- former conveyance, little as I like it.
- I know not how it is with you. It may be bad; and then it would be hard
- to upbraid you, for a silence you may not be able to help. But if not,
- what shall I say severe enough, that you have not answered either of my
- last letters? the first* of which [and I think it imported you too much
- to be silent upon it] you owned the receipt of. The other which was
- delivered into your own hands,** was so pressing for the favour of a line
- from you, that I am amazed I could not be obliged; and still more, that I
- have not heard from you since.
- * See Vol. V. Letter XX.
- ** See Vol. VI. Letter VII.
- The fellow made so strange a story of the condition he saw you in, and
- of your speech to him, that I know not what to conclude from it: only,
- that he is a simple, blundering, and yet conceited fellow, who, aiming
- at description, and the rustic wonderful, gives an air of bumkinly
- romance to all he tells. That this is his character, you will believe,
- when you are informed that he described you in grief excessive,* yet so
- improved in your person and features, and so rosy, that was his word,
- in your face, and so flush-coloured, and so plump in your arms, that
- one would conclude you were labouring under the operation of some
- malignant poison; and so much the rather, as he was introduced to you,
- when you were upon a couch, from which you offered not to rise, or sit
- up.
- * See Vol. VI. Letter VI.
- Upon my word, Miss Harlowe, I am greatly distressed upon your account;
- for I must be so free as to say, that in your ready return with your
- deceiver, you have not at all answered my expectations, nor acted up to
- your own character; for Mrs. Townsend tells me, from the women at
- Hampstead, how cheerfully you put yourself into his hands again: yet, at
- the time, it was impossible you should be married!--
- Lord, my dear, what pity it is, that you took much pains to get from
- the man!--But you know best!--Sometimes I think it could not be you to
- whom the rustic delivered my letter. But it must too: yet, it is strange
- I could not have one line by him:--not one:--and you so soon well enough
- to go with the wretch back again!
- I am not sure that the letter I am now writing will come to your hands:
- so shall not say half that I have upon my mind to say. But, if you
- think it worth your while to write to me, pray let me know what fine
- ladies his relations those were who visited you at Hampstead, and carried
- you back again so joyfully to a place that I had so fully warned you.--
- But I will say no more: at least till I know more: for I can do nothing
- but wonder and stand amazed.
- Notwithstanding all the man's baseness, 'tis plain there was more than
- a lurking love--Good Heaven!--But I have done!--Yet I know not how to
- have done neither!--Yet I must--I will.
- Only account to me, my dear, for what I cannot at all account for: and
- inform me, whether you are really married, or not.--And then I shall
- know whether there must or must not, be a period shorter than that of
- one of our lives, to a friendship which has hitherto been the pride and
- boast of
- Your
- ANNA HOWE.
- ***
- Dorcas tells me, that she has just now had a searching conversation, as
- she calls it, with her lady. She is willing, she tells the wench, still
- to place her confidence in her. Dorcas hopes she has re-assured her: but
- wishes me not to depend upon it. Yet Captain Tomlinson's letter must
- assuredly weigh with her.
- I sent it in just now by Dorcas, desiring her to re-peruse it. And it
- was not returned me, as I feared it would be. And that's a good sign,
- I think.
- I say I think, and I think; for this charming creature, entangled as I
- am in my own inventions, puzzles me ten thousand times more than I her.
- LETTER XXXI
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- THURSDAY NOON, JUNE 22.
- Let me perish if I know what to make either of myself or of this
- surprising creature--now calm, now tempestuous.--But I know thou lovest
- not anticipation any more than I.
- At my repeated requests, she met me at six this morning.
- She was ready dressed; for she had not her clothes off every since she
- declared, that they never more should be off in this house. And
- charmingly she looked, with all the disadvantages of a three-hours
- violent stomach-ache--(for Dorcas told me that she had been really ill)--
- no rest, and eyes red and swelled with weeping. Strange to me that those
- charming fountains have not been so long ago exhausted! But she is a
- woman. And I believe anatomists allow, that women have more watry heads
- than men.
- Well, my dearest creature, I hope you have now thoroughly considered of
- the contents of Captain Tomlinson's letter. But as we are thus early
- met, let me beseech you to make this my happy day.
- She looked not favourably upon me. A cloud hung upon her brow at her
- entrance: but as she was going to answer me, a still greater solemnity
- took possession of her charming features.
- Your air, and your countenance, my beloved creature, are not propitious
- to me. Let me beg of you, before you speak, to forbear all further
- recriminations: for already I have such a sense of my vileness to you,
- that I know not how to bear the reproaches of my own mind.
- I have been endeavouring, said she, since I am not permitted to avoid
- you, to obtain a composure which I never more expected to see you in.
- How long I may enjoy it, I cannot tell. But I hope I shall be enabled
- to speak to you without that vehemence which I expressed yesterday, and
- could not help it.*
- * The Lady, in her minutes, says, 'I fear Dorcas is a false one. May I
- not be able to prevail upon him to leave me at my liberty? Better to
- try than to trust to her. If I cannot prevail, but must meet him and
- my uncle, I hope I shall have fortitude enough to renounce him then.
- But I would fain avoid qualifying with the wretch, or to give him an
- expectation which I intend not to answer. If I am mistress of my own
- resolutions, my uncle himself shall not prevail with me to bind my soul
- in covenant with so vile a man.'
- After a pause (for I was all attention) thus she proceeded:
- It is easy for me, Mr. Lovelace, to see that further violences are
- intended me, if I comply not with your purposes, whatever they are, I
- will suppose them to be what you solemnly profess they are. But I have
- told you as solemnly my mind, that I never will, that I never can be
- your's; nor, if so, any man's upon earth. All vengeance, nevertheless,
- for the wrongs you have done me, I disclaim. I want but to slide into
- some obscure corner, to hide myself from you and from every one who
- once loved me. The desire lately so near my heart, of a reconciliation
- with my friends, is much abated. They shall not receive me now, if they
- would. Sunk in mine own eyes, I now think myself unworthy of their
- favour. In the anguish of my soul, therefore, I conjure you, Lovelace,
- [tears in her eyes,] to leave me to my fate. In doing so, you will give
- me a pleasure the highest I now can know.
- Where, my dearest life----
- No matter where. I will leave to Providence, when I am out of this
- house, the direction of my future steps. I am sensible enough of my
- destitute condition. I know that I have not now a friend in the world.
- Even Miss Howe has given me up--or you are--But I would fain keep my
- temper!--By your means I have lost them all--and you have been a
- barbarous enemy to me. You know you have.
- She paused.
- I could not speak.
- The evils I have suffered, proceeded she, [turning from me,] however
- irreparable, are but temporarily evils. Leave me to my hopes of being
- enabled to obtain the Divine forgiveness for the offence I have been
- drawn in to give to my parents and to virtue; that so I may avoid the
- evils that are more than temporary. This is now all I have to wish
- for. And what is it that I demand, that I have not a right to, and
- from which it is an illegal violence to withhold me?
- It was impossible for me, I told her plainly, to comply.
- I besought her to give me her hand as this very day. I could not live
- without her. I communicated to her my Lord's illness, as a reason why
- I wished not to stay for her uncle's anniversary. I besought her to
- bless me with her consent; and, after the ceremony was passed, to
- accompany me down to Berks. And thus, my dearest life, said I, will
- you be freed from a house, to which you have conceived so great an
- antipathy.
- This, thou wilt own, was a princely offer. And I was resolved to be as
- good as my word. I thought I had killed my conscience, as I told thee,
- Belford, some time ago. But conscience, I find, though it may be
- temporarily stifled, cannot die, and, when it dare not speak aloud, will
- whisper. And at this instant I thought I felt the revived varletess (on
- but a slight retrograde motion) writhing round my pericardium like a
- serpent; and in the action of a dying one, (collecting all its force into
- its head,) fix its plaguy fangs into my heart.
- She hesitated, and looked down, as if irresolute. And this set my
- heart up at my mouth. And, believe me, I had instantly popt in upon
- me, in imagination, an old spectacled parson, with a white surplice
- thrown over a black habit, [a fit emblem of the halcyon office, which,
- under a benign appearance, often introduced a life of storms and
- tempests,] whining and snuffling through his nose the irrevocable
- ceremony.
- I hope now, my dearest life, said I, snatching her hand, and pressing
- it to my lips, that your silence bodes me good. Let me, my beloved
- creature, have but your tacit consent; and this moment I will step out
- and engage a minister. And then I promised how much my whole future
- life should be devoted to her commands, and that I would make her the
- best and tenderest of husbands.
- At last, turning to me, I have told you my mind, Mr. Lovelace, said she.
- Think you, that I could thus solemnly--There she stopt--I am too much in
- your power, proceeded she; your prisoner, rather than a person free to
- choose for myself, or to say what I will do or be. But as a testimony
- that you mean me well, let me instantly quit this house; and I will then
- give you such an answer in writing, as best befits my unhappy
- circumstances.
- And imaginest thou, fairest, thought I, that this will go down with a
- Lovelace? Thou oughtest to have known that free-livers, like ministers
- of state, never part with a power put into their hands, without an
- equivalent of twice the value.
- I pleaded, that if we joined hands this morning, (if not, to-morrow; if
- not, on Thursday, her uncle's birth-day, and in his presence); and
- afterwards, as I had proposed, set out for Berks; we should, of course,
- quit this house; and, on our return to town, should have in readiness
- the house I was in treaty for.
- She answered me not, but with tears and sighs; fond of believing what I
- hoped I imputed her silence to the modesty of her sex. The dear
- creature, (thought I,) solemnly as she began with me, is ruminating, in
- a sweet suspence, how to put into fit words the gentle purposes of her
- condescending heart. But, looking in her averted face with a soothing
- gentleness, I plainly perceived, that it was resentment, and not
- bashfulness, that was struggling in her bosom.*
- * The Lady, in her minutes, owns the difficulty she lay under to keep
- her temper in this conference. 'But when I found,' says she, 'that all
- my entreaties were ineffectual, and that he was resolved to detain me,
- I could no longer withhold my impatience.'
- At last she broke silence--I have no patience, said she, to find myself
- a slave, a prisoner, in a vile house--Tell me, Sir, in so many words
- tell me, whether it be, or be not, your intention to permit me to quit
- it?--To permit me the freedom which is my birthright as an English
- subject?
- Will not the consequence of your departure hence be that I shall lose
- you for ever, Madam?--And can I bear the thoughts of that?
- She flung from me--My soul disdains to hold parley with thee! were her
- violent words.--But I threw myself at her feet, and took hold of her
- reluctant hand, and began to imprecate, avow, to promise--But thus the
- passionate beauty, interrupting me, went on:
- I am sick of thee, MAN!--One continued string of vows, oaths, and
- protestations, varied only by time and place, fills thy mouth!--Why
- detainest thou me? My heart rises against thee, O thou cruel implement
- of my brother's causeless vengeance.--All I beg of thee is, that thou
- wilt remit me the future part of my father's dreadful curse! the
- temporary part, base and ungrateful as thou art! thou hast completed!
- I was speechless!--Well I might!--Her brother's implement!--James
- Harlowe's implement!--Zounds, Jack! what words were these!
- I let go her struggling hand. She took two or three turns cross the
- room, her whole haughty soul in her air. Then approaching me, but in
- silence, turning from me, and again to me, in a milder voice--I see thy
- confusion, Lovelace. Or is it thy remorse?--I have but one request to
- make thee--the request so often repeated--That thou wilt this moment
- permit me to quit this house. Adieu, then, let me say, for ever adieu!
- And mayest thou enjoy that happiness in this world, which thou hast
- robbed me of; as thou hast of every friend I have in it!
- And saying this, away she flung, leaving me in a confusion so great, that
- I knew not what to think, say, or do!
- But Dorcas soon roused me--Do you know, Sir, running in hastily, that my
- lady is gone down stairs!
- No, sure!--And down I flew, and found her once more at the street-door,
- contending with Polly Horton to get out.
- She rushed by me into the fore parlour, and flew to the window, and
- attempted once more to throw up the sash--Good people! good people! cried
- she.
- I caught her in my arms, and lifted her from the window. But being
- afraid of hurting the charming creature, (charming in her very rage,)
- she slid through my arms on the floor.--Let me die here! let me die here!
- were her words; remaining jointless and immovable, till Sally and Mrs.
- Sinclair hurried in.
- She was visibly terrified at the sight of the old wretch; while I
- (sincerely affected) appealed, Bear witness, Mrs. Sinclair!--bear
- witness, Miss Martin!--Miss Horton!--Every one bear witness, that I
- offer not violence to this beloved creature!
- She then found her feet--O house [look towards the windows, and all round
- her, O house,] contrived on purpose for my ruin! said she--but let not
- that woman come into my presence--not that Miss Horton neither, who would
- not have dared to controul me, had she not been a base one!--
- Hoh, Sir! Hoh, Madam! vociferated the old dragon, her armed kemboed, and
- flourishing with one foot to the extent of her petticoats--What's ado
- here about nothing! I never knew such work in my life, between a chicken
- of a gentleman and a tiger of a lady!--
- She was visibly affrighted: and up stairs she hastened. A bad woman is
- certainly, Jack, more terrible to her own sex than even a bad man.
- I followed her up. She rushed by her own apartment into the dining-room:
- no terror can make her forget her punctilio.
- To recite what passed there of invective, exclamations, threatenings,
- even of her own life, on one side; of expostulations, supplications, and
- sometimes menaces, on the other; would be too affecting; and, after my
- particularity in like scenes, these things may as well be imagined as
- expressed.
- I will therefore only mention, that, at length, I extorted a concession
- from her. She had reason* to think it would have been worse for her on
- the spot, if she had not made it. It was, That she would endeavour to
- make herself easy till she saw what next Thursday, her uncle's birth-day,
- would produce. But Oh! that it were not a sin, she passionately
- exclaimed on making this poor concession, to put and end to her own life,
- rather than yield to give me but that assurance!
- * The Lady mentions, in her memorandum-book, that she had no other way,
- as is apprehended, to save herself from instant dishonour, but by making
- this concession. Her only hope, now, she says, if she cannot escape by
- Dorcas's connivance, (whom, nevertheless she suspects,) is to find a way
- to engage the protection of her uncle, and even of the civil magistrate,
- on Thursday next, if necessary. 'He shall see,' says she, 'tame and
- timid as he thought me, what I dare to do, to avoid so hated a
- compulsion, and a man capable of a baseness so premeditatedly vile and
- inhuman.'
- This, however, shows me, that she is aware that the reluctantly-given
- assurance may be fairly construed into a matrimonial expectation on my
- side. And if she will now, even now, look forward, I think, from my
- heart, that I will put on her livery, and wear it for life.
- What a situation am I in, with all my cursed inventions! I am puzzled,
- confounded, and ashamed of myself, upon the whole. To take such pains to
- be a villain!--But (for the fiftieth time) let me ask thee, Who would
- have thought that there had been such a woman in the world?--
- Nevertheless, she had best take care that she carries not her obstinacy
- much farther. She knows not what revenge for slighted love will make me
- do.
- The busy scenes I have just passed through have given emotions to my
- heart, which will not be quieted one while. My heart, I see,
- (on re-perusing what I have written,) has communicated its tremors to my
- fingers; and in some places the characters are so indistinct and
- unformed, that thou'lt hardly be able to make them out. But if one half
- of them is only intelligible, that will be enough to expose me to thy
- contempt, for the wretched hand I have made of my plots and contrivances.
- --But surely, Jack, I have gained some ground by this promise.
- And now, one word to the assurances thou sendest me, that thou hast not
- betrayed my secrets in relation to this charming creature. Thou mightest
- have spared them, Belford. My suspicions held no longer than while I
- wrote about them.* For well I knew, when I allowed myself time to think,
- that thou hadst no principles, no virtue, to be misled by. A great deal
- of strong envy, and a little of weak pity, I knew to be thy motives.
- Thou couldst not provoke my anger, and my compassion thou ever hadst; and
- art now more especially entitled to it; because thou art a pityful
- fellow.
- All thy new expostulations in my beloved's behalf I will answer when I
- see thee.
- LETTER XXXII
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- THURSDAY NIGHT.
- Confoundedly out of humour with this perverse woman!--Nor wilt thou blame
- me, if thou art my friend. She regards the concession she made, as a
- concession extorted from her: and we are but just where we were before
- she made it.
- With great difficulty I prevailed upon her to favour me with her company
- for one half hour this evening. The necessity I was under to go down to
- M. Hall was the subject I wanted to talk upon.
- I told her, that as she had been so good as to promise that she would
- endeavour to make herself easy till she saw the Thursday in next week
- over, I hoped that she would not scruple to oblige me with her word, that
- I should find her here at my return from M. Hall.
- Indeed she would make no such promise. Nothing of this house was
- mentioned to me, said she: you know it was not. And do you think that I
- would have given my consent to my imprisonment in it?
- I was plaguily nettled, and disappointed too. If I go not down to Mr.
- Hall, Madam, you'll have no scruple to stay here, I suppose, till
- Thursday is over?
- If I cannot help myself I must--but I insist upon being permitted to go
- out of this house, whether you leave it or not.
- Well, Madam, then I will comply with your commands. And I will go out
- this very evening in quest of lodgings that you shall have no objections
- to.
- I will have no lodgings of your providing, Sir--I will go to Mrs.
- Moore's, at Hampstead.
- Mrs. Moore's, Madam!--I have no objection to Mrs. Moore's--but will you
- give me your promise, to admit me there to your presence?
- As I do here--when I cannot help it.
- Very well, Madam--Will you be so good as to let me know what you intend
- by your promise to make yourself easy.
- To endeavour, Sir, to make myself easy--were the words----
- Till you saw what next Thursday would produce?
- Ask me no questions that may ensnare me. I am too sincere for the
- company I am in.
- Let me ask you, Madam, What meant you, when you said, 'that, were it
- not a sin, you would die before you gave me that assurance?'
- She was indignantly silent.
- You thought, Madam, you had given me room to hope your pardon by it?
- When I think I ought to answer you with patience I will speak.
- Do you think yourself in my power, Madam?
- If I were not--And there she stopt----
- Dearest creature, speak out--I beseech you, dearest creature, speak out
- ----
- She was silent; her charming face all in a glow.
- Have you, Madam, any reliance upon my honour?
- Still silent.
- You hate me, Madam! You despise me more than you do the most odious of
- God's creatures!
- You ought to despise me, if I did not.
- You say, Madam, you are in a bad house. You have no reliance upon my
- honour--you believe you cannot avoid me----
- She arose. I beseech you, let me withdraw.
- I snatched her hand, rising, and pressed it first to my lips, and then to
- my heart, in wild disorder. She might have felt the bounding mischief
- ready to burst its bars--You shall go--to your own apartment, if you
- please--But, by the great God of Heaven, I will accompany you thither!
- She trembled--Pray, pray, Mr. Lovelace, don't terrify me so!
- Be seated, Madam! I beseech you, be seated!----
- I will sit down----
- Do then--All my soul is in my eyes, and my heart's blood throbbing at my
- fingers' ends.
- I will--I will--You hurt me--Pray, Mr. Lovelace, don't--don't frighten me
- so--And down she sat, trembling; my hand still grasping her's.
- I hung over her throbbing bosom, and putting my other arm round her waist
- --And you say, you hate me, Madam--and you say, you despise me--and you
- say, you promise me nothing----
- Yes, yes, I did promise you--let me not be held down thus--you see I sat
- down when you bid me--Why [struggling] need you hold me down thus?--I did
- promise to endeavour to be easy till Thursday was over! But you won't
- let me!--How can I be easy?--Pray, let me not be thus terrified.
- And what, Madam, meant you by your promise? Did you mean any thing in my
- favour?--You designed that I should, at that time, think you did. Did
- you mean any thing in my favour, Madam?--Did you intend that I should
- think you did?
- Let go my hand, Sir--Take away your arm from about me, [struggling, yet
- trembling,]--Why do you gaze upon me so?
- Answer me, Madam--Did you mean any thing in my favour by your promise?
- Let me be not thus constrained to answer.
- Then pausing, and gaining more spirit, Let me go, said she: I am but a
- woman--but a weak woman.
- But my life is in my own power, though my person is not--I will not be
- thus constrained.
- You shall not, Madam, quitting her hand, bowing; but my heart is at my
- mouth, and hoping farther provocation.
- She arose, and was hurrying away.
- I pursue you not, Madam--I will try your generosity. Stop--return--this
- moment stop, return, if, Madam, you would not make me desperate.
- She stopt at the door; burst into tears--O Lovelace!--How, how, have I
- deserved----
- Be pleased, dearest angel, to return.
- She came back--but with declared reluctance; and imputing her compliance
- to terror.
- Terror, Jack, as I have heretofore found out, though I have so little
- benefited by the discovery, must be my resort, if she make it necessary--
- nothing else will do with the inflexible charmer.
- She seated herself over-against me; extremely discomposed--but
- indignation had a visible predominance in her features.
- I was going towards her, with a countenance intendedly changed to love
- and softness: Sweetest, dearest angel, were my words, in the tenderest
- accent:--But, rising up, she insisted upon my being seated at a distance
- from her.
- I obeyed, and begged her hand over the table, to my extended hand;
- to see, if in any thing she would oblige me. But nothing gentle, soft,
- or affectionate, would do. She refused me her hand!--Was she wise, Jack,
- to confirm to me, that nothing but terror would do?
- Let me only know, Madam, if your promise to endeavour to wait with
- patience the event of next Thursday meant me favour?
- Do you expect any voluntary favour from one to whom you give not a free
- choice?
- Do you intend, Madam, to honour me with your hand, in your uncle's
- presence, or do you not?
- My heart and my hand shall never be separated. Why, think you, did I
- stand in opposition to the will of my best, my natural friends.
- I know what you mean, Madam--Am I then as hateful to you as the vile
- Solmes?
- Ask me not such a question, Mr. Lovelace.
- I must be answered. Am I as hateful to you as the vile Solmes?
- Why do you call Mr. Solmes vile?
- Don't you think him so, Madam?
- Why should I? Did Mr. Solmes ever do vilely by me?
- Dearest creature! don't distract me by hateful comparisons! and perhaps
- by a more hateful preference.
- Don't you, Sir, put questions to me that you know I will answer truly,
- though my answer were ever so much to enrage you.
- My heart, Madam, my soul is all your's at present. But you must give me
- hope, that your promise, in your own construction, binds you, no new
- cause to the contrary, to be mine on Thursday. How else can I leave you?
- Let me go to Hampstead; and trust to my favour.
- May I trust to it?--Say only may I trust to it?
- How will you trust to it, if you extort an answer to this question?
- Say only, dearest creature, say only, may I trust to your favour, if you
- go to Hampstead?
- How dare you, Sir, if I must speak out, expect a promise of favour from
- me?--What a mean creature must you think me, after the ungrateful
- baseness to me, were I to give you such a promise?
- Then standing up, Thou hast made me, O vilest of men! [her hands clasped,
- and a face crimsoned with indignation,] an inmate of the vilest of houses
- --nevertheless, while I am in it, I shall have a heart incapable of any
- thing but abhorrence of that and of thee!
- And round her looked the angel, and upon me, with fear in her sweet
- aspect of the consequence of her free declaration--But what a devil must
- I have been, I who love bravery in a man, had I not been more struck with
- admiration of her fortitude at the instant, than stimulated by revenge?
- Noblest of creatures!--And do you think I can leave you, and my interest
- in such an excellence, precarious? No promise!--no hope!--If you make me
- not desperate, may lightning blast me, if I do you not all the justice
- 'tis in my power to do you!
- If you have any intention to oblige me, leave me at my own liberty, and
- let me not be detained in this abominable house. To be constrained as I
- have been constrained! to be stopt by your vile agents! to be brought up
- by force, and be bruised in my own defence against such illegal violence!
- --I dare to die, Lovelace--and she who fears not death, is not to be
- intimidated into a meanness unworthy of her heart and principles!
- Wonderful creature! But why, Madam, did you lead me to hope for
- something favourable for next Thursday?--Once more, make me not desperate
- --With all your magnanimity, glorious creature! [I was more than half
- frantic, Belford,] you may, you may--but do not, do not make me brutally
- threaten you--do not, do not make me desperate!
- My aspect, I believe, threatened still more than my words. I was rising
- --She rose--Mr. Lovelace, be pacified--you are even more dreadful than
- the Lovelace I have long dreaded--let me retire--I ask your leave to
- retire--you really frighten me--yet I give you no hope--from my heart I
- ab----
- Say not, Madam, you abhor me. You must, for your own sake, conceal your
- hatred--at least not avow it. I seized her hand.
- Let me retire--let me, retire, said she, in a manner out of breath.
- I will only say, Madam, that I refer myself to your generosity. My heart
- is not to be trusted at this instant. As a mark of my submission to your
- will, you shall, if you please, withdraw--but I will not go to M. Hall--
- live or die my Lord M. I will not go to M. Hall--but will attend the
- effect of your promise. Remember, Madam, you have promised to endeavour
- to make yourself easy till you see the event of next Thursday--next
- Thursday, remember, your uncle comes up, to see us married--that's the
- event.--You think ill of your Lovelace--do not, Madam, suffer your own
- morals to be degraded by the infection, as you called it, of his example.
- Away flew the charmer with this half permission--and no doubt thought that
- she had an escape--nor without reason.
- I knew not for half an hour what to do with myself. Vexed at the heart,
- nevertheless, (now she was from me, and when I reflected upon her hatred
- of me, and her defiances,) that I suffered myself to be so overawed,
- checked, restrained----
- And now I have written thus far, (have of course recollected the whole of
- our conversation,) I am more and more incensed against myself.
- But I will go down to these women--and perhaps suffer myself to be
- laughed at by them.
- Devil fetch them, they pretend to know their own sex. Sally was a woman
- well educated--Polly also--both have read--both have sense--of parentage
- not mean--once modest both--still, they say, had been modest, but for me
- --not entirely indelicate now; though too little nice for my personal
- intimacy, loth as they both are to have me think so--the old one, too, a
- woman of family, though thus (from bad inclination as well as at first
- from low circumstances) miserably sunk:--and hence they all pretend to
- remember what once they were; and vouch for the inclinations and
- hypocrisy of the whole sex, and wish for nothing so ardently, as that I
- will leave the perverse lady to their management while I am gone to
- Berkshire; undertaking absolutely for her humility and passiveness on my
- return; and continually boasting of the many perverse creatures whom they
- have obliged to draw in their traces.
- ***
- I am just come from the sorceresses.
- I was forced to take the mother down; for she began with her Hoh, Sir!
- with me; and to catechize and upbraid me, with as much insolence as if I
- owed her money.
- I made her fly the pit at last. Strange wishes wished we against each
- other at her quitting it----What were they?--I'll tell thee----She wished
- me married, and to be jealous of my wife; and my heir-apparent the child
- of another man. I was even with her with a vengeance. And yet thou wilt
- think that could not well be.--As how?--As how, Jack!--Why, I wished for
- her conscience come to life! And I know, by the gripes mine gives me
- every half-hour, that she would then have a cursed time of it.
- Sally and Polly gave themselves high airs too. Their first favours were
- thrown at me, [women to boast of those favours which they were as willing
- to impart, first forms all the difficulty with them! as I to receive!] I
- was upbraided with ingratitude, dastardice and all my difficulties with
- my angel charged upon myself, for want of following my blows; and for
- leaving the proud lady mistress of her own will, and nothing to reproach
- herself with. And all agreed, that the arts used against her on a
- certain occasion, had too high an operation for them or me to judge what
- her will would have been in the arduous trial. And then they blamed one
- another; as I cursed them all.
- They concluded, that I should certainly marry, and be a lost man. And
- Sally, on this occasion, with an affected and malicious laugh, snapt her
- fingers at me, and pointing two of each hand forkedly at me, bid me
- remember the lines I once showed her of my favourite Jack Dryden, as she
- always familiarly calls that celebrated poet:
- We women to new joys unseen may move:
- There are no prints left in the paths of love.
- All goods besides by public marks are known:
- But those men most desire to keep, have none.
- This infernal implement had the confidence further to hint, that when a
- wife, some other man would not find half the difficulty with my angel
- that I had found. Confidence indeed! But yet, I must say, if a man
- gives himself up to the company of these devils, they never let him rest
- till he either suspects or hate his wife.
- But a word or two of other matters, if possible.
- Methinks I long to know how causes go at M. Hall. I have another private
- intimation, that the old peer is in the greatest danger.
- I must go down. Yet what to do with this lady the mean while! These
- cursed women are full of cruelty and enterprise. She will never be easy
- with them in my absence. They will have provocation and pretence
- therefore. But woe be to them, if----
- Yet what will vengeance do, after an insult committed? The two nymphs
- will have jealous rage to goad them on. And what will withhold a jealous
- and already-ruined woman?
- To let her go elsewhere; that cannot be done. I am still too resolved to
- be honest, if she'll give me hope: if yet she'll let me be honest. But
- I'll see how she'll be after the contention she will certainly have
- between her resentment and the terror she has reason for from our last
- conversation. So let this subject rest till the morning. And to the old
- peer once more.
- I shall have a good deal of trouble, I reckon, though no sordid man, to
- be decent on the expected occasion. Then how to act (I who am no
- hypocrite) in the days of condolement! What farces have I to go through;
- and to be the principal actor in them! I'll try to think of my own
- latter end; a gray beard, and a graceless heir; in order to make me
- serious.
- Thou, Belford, knowest a good deal of this sort of grimace; and canst
- help a gay heart to a little of the dismal. But then every feature of
- thy face is cut out for it. My heart may be touched, perhaps, sooner
- than thine; for, believe me or not, I have a very tender one. But then,
- no man looking into my face, be the occasion for grief ever so great,
- will believe that heart to be deeply distressed.
- All is placid, easy, serene, in my countenance. Sorrow cannot sit half
- an hour together upon it. Nay, I believe, that Lord M.'s recovery,
- should it happen, would not affect me above a quarter of an hour. Only
- the new scenery, (and the pleasure of aping an Heraclitus to the family,
- while I am a Democritus among my private friends,) or I want nothing that
- the old peer can leave me. Wherefore then should grief sadden and
- distort such blythe, such jocund, features as mine?
- But as for thine, were there murder committed in the street, and thou
- wert but passing by, the murderer even in sight, the pursuers would
- quit him, and lay hold of thee: and thy very looks would hang, as well
- as apprehend thee.
- But one word to business, Jack. Whom dealest thou with for thy blacks?--
- Wert thou well used?--I shall want a plaguy parcel of them. For I intend
- to make every soul of the family mourn--outside, if not in.
- LETTER XXXIII
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- JUNE 23, FRIDAY MORNING.
- I went out early this morning, on a design that I know not yet whether
- I shall or shall not pursue; and on my return found Simon Parsons, my
- Lord's Berkshire bailiff, (just before arrived,) waiting for me with a
- message in form, sent by all the family, to press me to go down, and
- that at my Lord's particular desire, who wants to see me before he
- dies.
- Simon has brought my Lord's chariot-and-six [perhaps my own by this
- time,] to carry me down. I have ordered it to be in readiness by four
- to-morrow morning. The cattle shall smoke for the delay; and by the
- rest they'll have in the interim, will be better able to bear it.
- I am still resolved upon matrimony, if my fair perverse will accept of
- me. But, if she will not----why then I must give an uninterrupted
- hearing, not to my conscience, but to these women below.
- Dorcas had acquainted her lady with Simon's arrival and errand. My
- beloved had desired to see him. But my coming in prevented his
- attendance on her, just as Dorcas was instructing him what questions he
- should not answer to, that might be asked of him.
- I am to be admitted to her presence immediately, at my repeated
- request. Surely the acquisition in view will help me to make up all
- with her. She is just gone up to the dining-room.
- ***
- Nothing will do, Jack!--I can procure no favour from her, though she
- has obtained from me the point which she had set her heart upon.
- I will give thee a brief account of what passed between us.
- I first proposed instant marriage; and this in the most fervent manner:
- but was denied as fervently.
- Would she be pleased to assure me that she would stay here only till
- Tuesday morning? I would but just go down to see how my Lord was--to
- know whether he had any thing particular to say, or enjoin me, while yet
- he was sensible, as he was very earnest to see me: perhaps I might be up
- on Sunday.--Concede in something!--I beseech you, Madam, show me some
- little consideration.
- Why, Mr. Lovelace, must I be determined by your motions?--Think you that
- I will voluntarily give a sanction to the imprisonment of my person? Of
- what importance to me ought to be your stay or your return.
- Give a sanction to the imprisonment of your person! Do you think, Madam,
- that I fear the law?
- I might have spared this foolish question of defiance: but my pride would
- not let me. I thought she threatened me, Jack.
- I don't think you fear the law, Sir.--You are too brave to have any
- regard either to moral or divine sanctions.
- 'Tis well, Madam! But ask me any thing I can do to oblige you; and I
- will oblige you, though in nothing will you oblige me.
- Then I ask you, then I request of you, to let me go to Hampstead.
- I paused--And at last--By my soul you shall--this very moment I will
- wait upon you, and see you fixed there, if you'll promise me your hand
- on Thursday, in presence of your uncle.
- I want not you to see me fixed. I will promise nothing.
- Take care, Madam, that you don't let me see that I can have no reliance
- upon your future favour.
- I have been used to be threatened by you, Sir--but I will accept of your
- company to Hampstead--I will be ready to go in a quarter of an hour--my
- clothes may be sent after me.
- You know the condition, Madam--Next Thursday.
- You dare not trust----
- My infinite demerits tell me, that I ought not--nevertheless I will
- confide in your generosity.--To-morrow morning (no new cause arising to
- give reason to the contrary) as early as you please you may go to
- Hampstead.
- This seemed to oblige her. But yet she looked with a face of doubt.
- I will go down to the women, Belford. And having no better judges at
- hand, will hear what they say upon my critical situation with this
- proud beauty, who has so insolently rejected a Lovelace kneeling at her
- feet, though making an earnest tender of himself for a husband, in spite
- of all his prejudices to the state of shackles.
- LETTER XXXIV
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- Just come from the women.
- 'Have I gone so far, and am I afraid to go farther?--Have I not already,
- as it is evident by her behaviour, sinned beyond forgiveness?--A woman's
- tears used to be to me but as water sprinkled on a glowing fire, which
- gives it a fiercer and brighter blaze: What defence has this lady but her
- tears and her eloquence? She was before taken at no weak advantage. She
- was insensible in her moments of trial. Had she been sensible, she must
- have been sensible. So they say. The methods taken with her have
- augmented her glory and her pride. She has now a tale to tell, that she
- may tell with honour to herself. No accomplice-inclination. She can
- look me into confusion, without being conscious of so much as a thought
- which she need to be ashamed of.'
- This, Jack, is the substance of the women's reasonings with me.
- To which let me add, that the dear creature now sees the necessity I am
- in to leave her. Detecting me is in her head. My contrivances are of
- such a nature, that I must appear to be the most odious of men if I am
- detected on this side matrimony. And yet I have promised, as thou seest,
- that she shall set out to Hampstead as soon as she pleases in the
- morning, and that without condition on her side.
- Dost thou ask, What I meant by this promise?
- No new cause arising, was the proviso on my side, thou'lt remember.
- But there will be a new cause.
- Suppose Dorcas should drop the promissory note given her by her lady?
- Servants, especially those who cannot read or write, are the most
- careless people in the world of written papers. Suppose I take it up?--
- at a time, too, that I was determined that the dear creature should be
- her own mistress?--Will not this detection be a new cause?--A cause that
- will carry with it against her the appearance of ingratitude!
- That she designed it a secret to me, argues a fear of detection, and
- indirectly a sense of guilt. I wanted a pretence. Can I have a better?
- --If I am in a violent passion upon the detection, is not passion an
- universally-allowed extenuator of violence? Is not every man and woman
- obliged to excuse that fault in another, which at times they find
- attended with such ungovernable effects in themselves?
- The mother and sisterhood, suppose, brought to sit in judgment upon the
- vile corrupted--the least benefit that must accrue from the accidental
- discovery, if not a pretence for perpetration, [which, however, may be
- the case,] an excuse for renewing my orders for her detention till my
- return from M. Hall, [the fault her own,] and for keeping a stricter
- watch over her than before; with direction to send me any letters that
- may be written by her or to her.--And when I return, the devil's in it
- if I find not a way to make her choose lodgings for herself, (since
- these are so hateful to her,) that shall answer all my purposes; and
- yet I no more appear to direct her choice, than I did before in these.
- Thou wilt curse me when thou comest to this place. I know thou wilt.
- But thinkest thou that, after such a series of contrivance, I will lose
- this inimitable woman for want of a little more? A rake's a rake, Jack!
- --And what rake is withheld by principle from the perpetration of any
- evil his heart is set upon, and in which he thinks he can succeed?--
- Besides, am I not in earnest as to marriage?--Will not the generality of
- the world acquit me, if I do marry? And what is that injury which a
- church-rite will not at any time repair? Is not the catastrophe of every
- story that ends in wedlock accounted happy, be the difficulties in the
- progress of it ever so great.
- But here, how am I engrossed by this lady, while poor Lord M. as Simon
- tells me, lies groaning in the most dreadful agonies!--What must he
- suffer!--Heaven relieve him!--I have a too compassionate heart. And so
- would the dear creature have found, could I have thought that the worst
- of her sufferings is equal to the lightest of his. I mean as to fact;
- for as to that part of her's, which arises from extreme sensibility, I
- know nothing of that; and cannot therefore be answerable for it.
- LETTER XXXV
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- Just come from my charmer. She will not suffer me to say half the
- obliging, the tender things, which my honest heart is ready to overflow
- with. A confounded situation that, when a man finds himself in humour
- to be eloquent, and pathetic at the same time, yet cannot engage the
- mistress of his fate to lend an ear to his fine speeches.
- I can account now how it comes about that lovers, when their mistresses
- are cruel, run into solitude, and disburthen their minds to stocks and
- stones: For am I not forced to make my complaints to thee?
- She claimed the performance of my promise, the moment she saw me, of
- permitting her [haughtily she spoke the word] to go to Hampstead as soon
- as I was gone to Berks.
- Most cheerfully I renewed it.
- She desired me to give orders in her hearing.
- I sent for Dorcas and Will. They came.--Do you both take notice, (but,
- perhaps, Sir, I may take you with me,) that your lady is to be obeyed in
- all her commands. She purposes to return to Hampstead as soon as I am
- gone--My dear, will you not have a servant to attend you?
- I shall want no servant there.
- Will you take Dorcas?
- If I should want Dorcas, I can send for her.
- Dorcas could not but say, She should be very proud--
- Well, well, that may be at my return, if your lady permit.--Shall I, my
- dear, call up Mrs. Sinclair, and give her orders, to the same effect, in
- your hearing?
- I desire not to see Mrs. Sinclair; nor any that belong to her.
- As you please, Madam.
- And then (the servants being withdrawn) I urged her again for the
- assurance, that she would meet me at the altar on Thursday next. But to
- no purpose.--May she not thank herself for all that may follow?
- One favour, however, I would not be denied, to be admitted to pass the
- evening with her.
- All sweetness and obsequiousness will I be on this occasion. My whole
- soul shall be poured out to move her to forgive me. If she will not, and
- if the promissory note should fall in my way, my revenge will doubtless
- take total possession of me.
- All the house in my interest, and every one in it not only engaging to
- intimidate and assist, as occasion shall offer, but staking all their
- experience upon my success, if it be not my own fault, what must be the
- consequence?
- This, Jack, however, shall be her last trial; and if she behave as nobly
- in and after this second attempt (all her senses about her) as she has
- done after the first, she will come out an angel upon full proof, in
- spite of man, woman, and devil: then shall there be an end of all her
- sufferings. I will then renounce that vanquished devil, and reform. And
- if any vile machination start up, presuming to mislead me, I will sooner
- stab it in my heart, as it rises, than give way to it.
- A few hours will now decide all. But whatever be the event, I shall be
- too busy to write again, till I get to M. Hall.
- Mean time, I am in strange agitations. I must suppress them, if
- possible, before I venture into her presence.--My heart bounces my bosom
- from the table. I will lay down my pen, and wholly resign to its
- impulses.
- LETTER XXXVI
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- FRIDAY NIGHT, OR RATHER SAT. MORN. ONE O'CLOCK.
- I thought I should not have had either time or inclination to write
- another line before I got to M. Hall. But, having the first, must find
- the last; since I can neither sleep, nor do any thing but write, if I can
- do that. I am most confoundedly out of humour. The reason let it
- follow; if it will follow--nor preparation for it from me.
- I tried by gentleness and love to soften--What?--Marble. A heart
- incapable either of love or gentleness. Her past injuries for ever in
- her head. Ready to receive a favour; the permission to go to
- Hampstead: but neither to deserve it, nor return any. So my scheme of
- the gentle kind was soon given over.
- I then wanted to provoke her: like a coward boy, who waits for the first
- blow before he can persuade himself to fight, I half challenged her to
- challenge or defy me. She seemed aware of her danger; and would not
- directly brave my resentment: but kept such a middle course, that I
- neither could find a pretence to offend, nor reason to hope: yet she
- believed my tale, that her uncle would come to Kentish-town, and seemed
- not to apprehend that Tomlinson was an impostor.
- She was very uneasy, upon the whole, in my company: wanted often to
- break from me: yet so held me to my purpose of permitting her to go to
- Hampstead, that I knew not how to get off it; although it was impossible,
- in my precarious situation with her, to think of performing
- it.
- In this situation; the women ready to assist; and, if I proceeded not,
- as ready to ridicule me; what had I left me, but to pursue the concerted
- scheme, and to seek a pretence to quarrel with her, in order to revoke my
- promised permission, and to convince her that I would not be upbraided as
- the most brutal of ravishers for nothing?
- I had agreed with the women, that if I could not find a pretence in her
- presence to begin my operations, the note should lie in my way, and I was
- to pick it up, soon after her retiring from me. But I began to doubt at
- near ten o'clock, (so earnest was she to leave me, suspecting my
- over-warm behaviour to her, and eager grasping of her hand two or three
- times, with eye-strings, as I felt, on the strain, while her eyes showed
- uneasiness and apprehension,) that if she actually retired for the night,
- it might be a chance whether it would be easy to come at her again. Loth,
- therefore, to run such a risk, I stept out a little after ten, with intent
- to alter the preconcerted disposition a little; saying I would attend her
- again instantly. But as I returned I met her at the door, intending to
- withdraw for the night. I could not persuade her to go back: nor had I
- presence of mind (so full of complaisance as I was to her just before) to
- stay her by force: so she slid through my hands into her own apartment. I
- had nothing to do, therefore, but to let my former concert take place.
- I should have promised (but care not for order of time, connection, or
- any thing else) that, between eight and nine in the evening, another
- servant of Lord M. on horseback came, to desire me to carry down with me
- Dr. S., the old peer having been once (in extremis, as they judge he is
- now) relieved and reprieved by him. I sent and engaged the doctor to
- accompany me down: and am to call upon him by four this morning: or the
- devil should have both my Lord and the Doctor, if I'd stir till I got all
- made up.
- Poke thy damn'd nose forward into the event, if thou wilt--Curse me if
- thou shalt have it till its proper time and place. And too soon then.
- She had hardly got into her chamber, but I found a little paper, as I was
- going into mine, which I took up; and opening it, (for it was carefully
- pinned in another paper,) what should it be but a promissory note, given
- as a bribe, with a further promise of a diamond ring, to induce Dorcas to
- favour her mistress's escape?
- How my temper changed in a moment!--Ring, ring, ring, ring, I my bell,
- with a violence enough to break the string, and as if the house were on
- fire.
- Every devil frighted into active life: the whole house in an uproar. Up
- runs Will.--Sir--Sir--Sir!--Eyes goggling, mouth distended--Bid the
- damn'd toad Dorcas come hither, (as I stood at the stair-head,) in a
- horrible rage, and out of breath, cried I.
- In sight came the trembling devil--but standing aloof, from the report
- made her by Will. of the passion I was in, as well as from what she had
- heard.
- Flash came out my sword immediately; for I had it ready on--Cursed,
- confounded, villanous bribery and corruption----
- Up runs she to her lady's door, screaming out for safety and protection.
- Good your honour, interposed Will., for God's sake!--O Lord, O Lord!--
- receiving a good cuff.--
- Take that, varlet, for saving the ungrateful wretch from my vengeance.
- Wretch! I intended to say; but if it were some other word of like
- ending, passion must be my excuse.
- Up ran two or three of the sisterhood, What's the matter! What's the
- matter!
- The matter! (for still my beloved opened not the door; on the contrary,
- drew another bolt,) This abominable Dorcas!--(call her aunt up!--let her
- see what a traitress she has placed about me!--and let her bring the toad
- to answer for herself)--has taken a bribe, a provision for life, to
- betray her trust; by that means to perpetuate a quarrel between a man and
- his wife, and frustrate for ever all hopes of reconciliation between us!
- Let me perish, Belford, if I have patience to proceed with the farce!
- ***
- If I must resume, I must----
- Up came the aunt, puffing and blowing--As she hoped for mercy, she was
- not privy to it! She never knew such a plotting, perverse lady in her
- life!--Well might servants be at the pass they were, when such ladies as
- Mrs. Lovelace made no conscience of corrupting them. For her part she
- desired no mercy for the wretch; no niece of her's, if she were not
- faithful to her trust!--But what was the proof?----
- She was shown the paper----
- But too evident!--Cursed, cursed toad, devil, jade, passed from each
- mouth:--and the vileness of the corrupted, and the unworthiness of the
- corruptress, were inveighed against.
- Up we all went, passing the lady's door into the dining-room, to proceed
- to trial.----
- Stamp, stamp, stamp up, each on her heels; rave, rave, rave, every tongue
- ----
- Bring up the creature before us all this instant!----
- And would she have got out of the house, say you?--
- These the noises and the speeches as we clattered by the door of the fair
- bribress.
- Up was brought Dorcas (whimpering) between two, both bawling out--You
- must go--You shall go--'Tis fit you should answer for yourself--You are a
- discredit to all worthy servants--as they pulled and pushed her up
- stairs.--She whining, I cannot see his honour--I cannot look so good and
- so generous a gentleman in the face--O how shall I bear my aunt's
- ravings?----
- Come up, and be d--n'd--Bring her forward, her imperial judge--What a
- plague, it is the detection, not the crime, that confounds you. You
- could be quiet enough for days together, as I see by the date, under the
- villany. Tell me, ungrateful devil, tell me who made the first advances?
- Ay, disgrace to my family and blood, cried the old one--tell his honour--
- tell the truth!--Who made the first advances?----
- Ay, cursed creature, cried Sally, who made the first advances?
- I have betrayed one trust already!--O let me not betray another!--My lady
- is a good lady!--O let not her suffer!--
- Tell all you know. Tell the whole truth, Dorcas, cried Polly Horton.--
- His honour loves his lady too well to make her suffer much: little as she
- requites his love!----
- Every body sees that, cried Sally--too well, indeed, for his honour, I
- was going to say.
- Till now, I thought she deserved my love--But to bribe a servant thus,
- who she supposed had orders to watch her steps, for fear of another
- elopement; and to impute that precaution to me as a crime!--Yet I must
- love her--Ladies, forgive my weakness!----
- Curse upon my grimaces!--if I have patience to repeat them!--But thou
- shalt have it all--thou canst not despise me more than I despise myself!
- ***
- But suppose, Sir, said Sally, you have my lady and the wench face to
- face! You see she cares not to confess.
- O my carelessness! cried Dorcas--Don't let my poor lady suffer!--Indeed,
- if you all knew what I know, you would say her ladyship has been cruelly
- treated--
- See, see, see, see!--repeatedly, every one at once--Only sorry for the
- detection, as your honour said--not for the fault.
- Cursed creature, and devilish creature, from every mouth.
- Your lady won't, she dare not come out to save you, cried Sally; though
- it is more his honour's mercy, than your desert, if he does not cut your
- vile throat this instant.
- Say, repeated Polly, was it your lady that made the first advances, or
- was it you, you creature----
- If the lady had so much honour, bawled the mother, excuse me, so--Excuse
- me, Sir, [confound the old wretch! she had like to have said son!]--If
- the lady has so much honour, as we have supposed, she will appear to
- vindicate a poor servant, misled, as she has been, by such large
- promises!--But I hope, Sir, you will do them both justice: I hope you
- will!--Good lack!--Good lack! clapping her hands together, to grant her
- every thing she could ask--to indulge her in her unworthy hatred to my
- poor innocent house!--to let her go to Hampstead, though your honour told
- us, you could get no condescension from her; no, not the least--O Sir, O
- Sir--I hope--I hope--if your lady will not come out--I hope you will find
- a way to hear this cause in her presence. I value not my doors on such
- an occasion as this. Justice I ever loved. I desire you will come to
- the bottom of it in clearance to me. I'll be sworn I had no privity in
- this black corruption.
- Just then we heard the lady's door, unbar, unlock, unbolt----
- Now, Sir!
- Now, Mr. Lovelace!
- Now, Sir! from every encouraging mouth!----
- But, O Jack! Jack! Jack! I can write no more!
- ***
- If you must have it all, you must!
- Now, Belford, see us all sitting in judgment, resolved to punish the fair
- bribress--I, and the mother, the hitherto dreaded mother, the nieces
- Sally, Polly, the traitress Dorcas, and Mabell, a guard, as it were, over
- Dorcas, that she might not run away, and hide herself:--all
- pre-determined, and of necessity pre-determined, from the journey I was
- going to take, and my precarious situation with her--and hear her unbolt,
- unlock, unbar, the door; then, as it proved afterwards, put the key into
- the lock on the outside, lock the door, and put it in her pocket--Will. I
- knew, below, who would give me notice, if, while we were all above, she
- should mistake her way, and go down stairs, instead of coming into the
- dining-room: the street-door also doubly secured, and every shutter to the
- windows round the house fastened, that no noise or screaming should be
- heard--[such was the brutal preparation]--and then hear her step towards
- us, and instantly see her enter among us, confiding in her own innocence;
- and with a majesty in her person and manner, that is natural to her; but
- which then shone out in all its glory!--Every tongue silent, every eye
- awed, every heart quaking, mine, in a particular manner sunk, throbless,
- and twice below its usual region, to once at my throat:--a shameful
- recreant:--She silent too, looking round her, first on me; then on the
- mother, no longer fearing her; then on Sally, Polly, and the culprit
- Dorcas!--such the glorious power of innocence exerted at that awful
- moment!
- She would have spoken, but could not, looking down my guilt into
- confusion. A mouse might have been heard passing over the floor: her own
- light feet and rustling silks could not have prevented it; for she seemed
- to tread air, and to be all soul. She passed backwards and forwards, now
- towards me, now towards the door several times, before speech could get
- the better of indignation; and at last, after twice or thrice hemming to
- recover her articulate voice--'O thou contemptible and abandoned
- Lovelace, thinkest thou that I see not through this poor villanous plot
- of thine, and of these thy wicked accomplices?
- 'Thou, woman, [looking at the mother] once my terror! always my dislike!
- but now my detestation! shouldst once more (for thine perhaps was the
- preparation) have provided for me intoxicating potions, to rob me of my
- senses----
- 'And then, thus, wretch, [turning to me,] mightest thou more securely
- have depended upon such a low contrivance as this!
- 'And ye, vile women, who perhaps have been the ruin, body and soul, of
- hundreds of innocents, (you show me how, in full assembly,) know, that I
- am not married--ruined as I am, by your help, I bless God, I am not
- married to this miscreant--and I have friends that will demand my honour
- at your hands!--and to whose authority I will apply; for none has this
- man over me. Look to it then, what farther insults you offer me, or
- incite him to offer me. I am a person, though thus vilely betrayed, of
- rank and fortune. I never will be his; and, to your utter ruin, will
- find friends to pursue you: and now I have this full proof of your
- detestable wickedness, and have heard your base incitements, will have
- no mercy upon you!'
- They could not laugh at the poor figure I made.--Lord! how every devil,
- conscience-shaken, trembled!--
- What a dejection must ever fall to the lot of guilt, were it given to
- innocence always thus to exert itself!
- 'And as for thee, thou vile Dorcas! Thou double deceiver!--whining out
- thy pretended love for me!--Begone, wretch!--Nobody will hurt thee!--
- Begone, I say!--thou has too well acted thy part to be blamed by any here
- but myself--thou art safe: thy guilt is thy security in such a house as
- this!--thy shameful, thy poor part, thou hast as well acted as the low
- farce could give thee to act!--as well as they each of them (thy
- superiors, though not thy betters), thou seest, can act theirs.--Steal
- away into darkness! No inquiry after this will be made, whose the first
- advances, thine or mine.'
- And, as I hope to live, the wench, confoundedly frightened, slunk away;
- so did her sentinel Mabell; though I, endeavouring to rally, cried out
- for Dorcas to stay--but I believe the devil could not have stopt her,
- when an angel bid her begone.
- Madam, said I, let me tell you; and was advancing towards her with a
- fierce aspect, most cursedly vexed, and ashamed too----
- But she turned to me: 'Stop where thou art, O vilest and most abandoned
- of men!--Stop where thou art!--nor, with that determined face, offer to
- touch me, if thou wouldst not that I should be a corps at thy feet!'
- To my astonishment, she held forth a penknife in her hand, the point to
- her own bosom, grasping resolutely the whole handle, so that there was no
- offering to take it from her.
- 'I offer not mischief to any body but myself. You, Sir, and ye women,
- are safe from every violence of mine. The LAW shall be all my resource:
- the LAW,' and she spoke the word with emphasis, the LAW! that to such
- people carries natural terror with it, and now struck a panic into them.
- No wonder, since those who will damn themselves to procure ease and
- plenty in this world, will tremble at every thing that seems to threaten
- their methods of obtaining that ease and plenty.----
- 'The LAW only shall be my refuge!'----
- The infamous mother whispered me, that it were better to make terms with
- this strange lady, and let her go.
- Sally, notwithstanding all her impudent bravery at other times, said, If
- Mr. Lovelace had told them what was not true, of her being his wife----
- And Polly Horton, That she must needs say, the lady, if she were not my
- wife, had been very much injured; that was all.
- That is not now a matter to be disputed, cried I: you and I know, Madam
- ----
- 'We do, said she; and I thank God, I am not thine--once more I thank God
- for it--I have no doubt of the farther baseness that thou hast intended
- me, by this vile and low trick: but I have my SENSES, Lovelace: and from
- my heart I despise thee, thou very poor Lovelace!--How canst thou stand
- in my presence!--Thou, that'----
- Madam, Madam, Madam--these are insults not to be borne--and was
- approaching her.
- She withdrew to the door, and set her back against it, holding the
- pointed knife to her heaving bosom; while the women held me, beseeching
- me not to provoke the violent lady--for their house sake, and be curs'd
- to them, they besought me--and all three hung upon me--while the truly
- heroic lady braved me at that distance:
- 'Approach me, Lovelace, with resentment, if thou wilt. I dare die. It
- is in defence of my honour. God will be merciful to my poor soul! I
- expect no more mercy from thee! I have gained this distance, and two
- steps nearer me, and thou shalt see what I dare do!'----
- Leave me, women, to myself, and to my angel!--[They retired at a
- distance.]--O my beloved creature, how you terrify me! Holding out my
- arms, and kneeling on one knee--not a step, not a step farther, except to
- receive my death at that injured hand which is thus held up against a
- life far dearer to me than my own! I am a villain! the blackest of
- villains!--Say you will sheath your knife in the injurer's, not the
- injured's heart, and then will I indeed approach you, but not else.
- The mother twanged her d--n'd nose; and Sally and Polly pulled out their
- handkerchiefs, and turned from us. They never in their lives, they told
- me afterwards, beheld such a scene----
- Innocence so triumphant: villany so debased, they must mean!
- Unawares to myself, I had moved onward to my angel--'And dost thou, dost
- thou, still disclaiming, still advancing--dost thou, dost thou, still
- insidiously move towards me?'--[And her hand was extended] 'I dare--I
- dare--not rashly neither--my heart from principle abhors the act, which
- thou makest necessary!--God, in thy mercy! [lifting up her eyes and
- hands] God, in thy mercy!'
- I threw myself to the farther end of the room. An ejaculation, a silent
- ejaculation, employing her thoughts that moment; Polly says the whites of
- her lovely eyes were only visible: and, in the instant that she extended
- her hand, assuredly to strike the fatal blow, [how the very recital
- terrifies me!] she cast her eye towards me, and saw me at the utmost
- distance the room would allow, and heard my broken voice--my voice was
- utterly broken; nor knew I what I said, or whether to the purpose or not
- --and her charming cheeks, that were all in a glow before, turned pale,
- as if terrified at her own purpose; and lifting up her eyes--'Thank God!
- --thank God! said the angel--delivered for the present; for the present
- delivered--from myself--keep, Sir, that distance;' [looking down towards
- me, who was prostrate on the floor, my heart pierced, as with an hundred
- daggers;] 'that distance has saved a life; to what reserved, the Almighty
- only knows!'--
- To be happy, Madam; and to make happy!--And, O let me hope for your
- favour for to-morrow--I will put off my journey till then--and may God--
- Swear not, Sir!--with an awful and piercing aspect--you have too often
- sworn!--God's eye is upon us!--His more immediate eye; and looked wildly.
- --But the women looked up to the ceiling, as if afraid of God's eye, and
- trembled. And well they might, and I too, who so very lately had each of
- us the devil in our hearts.
- If not to-morrow, Madam, say but next Thursday, your uncle's birth-day;
- say but next Thursday!
- 'This I say, of this you may assure yourself, I never, never will be
- your's.--And let me hope, that I may be entitled to the performance of
- your promise, to be permitted to leave this innocent house, as one called
- it, (but long have my ears been accustomed to such inversions of words),
- as soon as the day breaks.'
- Did my perdition depend upon it, that you cannot, Madam, but upon terms.
- And I hope you will not terrify me--still dreading the accursed knife.
- 'Nothing less than an attempt upon my honour shall make me desperate. I
- have no view but to defend my honour: with such a view only I entered
- into treaty with your infamous agent below. The resolution you have
- seen, I trust, God will give me again, upon the same occasion. But for a
- less, I wish not for it.--Only take notice, women, that I am no wife of
- this man: basely as he has used me, I am not his wife. He has no
- authority over me. If he go away by-and-by, and you act by his authority
- to detain me, look to it.'
- Then, taking one of the lights, she turned from us; and away she went,
- unmolested.--Not a soul was able to molest her.
- Mabell saw her, tremblingly, and in a hurry, take the key of her
- chamber-door out of her pocket, and unlock it; and, as soon as she
- entered, heard her double-lock, bar, and bolt it.
- By her taking out her key, when she came out of her chamber to us, she no
- doubt suspected my design: which was, to have carried her in my arms
- thither, if she made such force necessary, after I had intimidated her; and
- to have been her companion for that night.
- She was to have had several bedchamber-women to assist to undress her
- upon occasion: but from the moment she entered the dining-room with so
- much intrepidity, it was absolutely impossible to think of prosecuting my
- villanous designs against her.
- ***
- This, this, Belford, was the hand I made of a contrivance from which I
- expected so much!--And now I am ten times worse off than before.
- Thou never sawest people in thy life look so like fools upon one another,
- as the mother, her partners, and I, did, for a few minutes. And at last,
- the two devilish nymphs broke out into insulting ridicule upon me; while
- the old wretch was concerned for her house, the reputation of her house.
- I cursed them all together; and, retiring to my chamber, locked myself
- in.
- And now it is time to set out: all I have gained, detection, disgrace,
- fresh guilt by repeated perjuries, and to be despised by her I doat upon;
- and, what is still worse to a proud heart, by myself.
- Success, success in projects, is every thing. What an admirable
- contriver did I think myself till now! Even for this scheme among the
- rest! But how pitifully foolish does it now appear to me!--Scratch out,
- erase, never to be read, every part of my preceding letters, where I have
- boastingly mentioned it. And never presume to rally me upon the cursed
- subject: for I cannot bear it.
- But for the lady, by my soul, I love her. I admire her more than ever!
- I must have her. I will have her still--with honour or without, as I
- have often vowed. My cursed fright at her accidental bloody nose, so
- lately, put her upon improving upon me thus. Had she threatened ME, I
- should have soon been master of one arm, and in both! But for so sincere
- a virtue to threaten herself, and not to offer to intimidate any other,
- and with so much presence of mind, as to distinguish, in the very
- passionate intention, the necessity of the act, defence of her honour,
- and so fairly to disavow lesser occasions: showed such a deliberation,
- such a choice, such a principle; and then keeping me so watchfully at a
- distance that I could not seize her hand, so soon as she could have given
- the fatal blow; how impossible not to be subdued by so true and so
- discreet a magnanimity!
- But she is not gone. She shall not go. I will press her with letters
- for the Thursday. She shall yet be mine, legally mine. For, as to
- cohabitation, there is no such thing to be thought of.
- The Captain shall give her away, as proxy for her uncle. My Lord will
- die. My fortune will help my will, and set me above every thing and
- every body.
- But here is the curse--she despises me, Jack!--What man, as I have
- heretofore said, can bear to be despised--especially by his wife!--O
- Lord!--O Lord! What a hand, what a cursed hand, have I made of this
- plot!--And here ends
- The history of the lady and the penknife!--The devil take the penknife!
- --It goes against me to say,
- God bless the lady!
- NEAR 5, SAT. MORN.
- LETTER XXXVII
- MR. LOVELACE, TO MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE
- [SUPERSCRIBED TO MRS. LOVELACE.]
- M. HALL, SAT. NIGHT, JUNE 24.
- MY DEAREST LIFE,
- If you do not impute to live, and to terror raised by love, the poor
- figure I made before you last night, you will not do me justice. I
- thought I would try to the very last moment, if, by complying with you in
- every thing, I could prevail upon you to promise to be mine on Thursday
- next, since you refused me an earlier day. Could I have been so happy,
- you had not been hindered going to Hampstead, or wherever else you
- pleased. But when I could not prevail upon you to give me this
- assurance, what room had I, (my demerit so great,) to suppose, that your
- going thither would not be to lose you for ever?
- I will own to you, Madam, that yesterday afternoon I picked up the paper
- dropt by Dorcas; who has confessed that she would have assisted you in
- getting away, if she had had opportunity so to do; and undoubtedly
- dropped it by accident. And could I have prevailed upon you as to
- Thursday next, I would have made no use of it; secure as I should have
- been in your word given, to be mine. But when I found you inflexible,
- I was resolved to try, if, by resenting Dorcas's treachery, I could not
- make your pardon of me the condition of mine to her: and if not, to make
- a handle of it to revoke my consent to your going away from Mrs.
- Sinclair's; since the consequence of that must have been so fatal to me.
- So far, indeed, was my proceeding low and artful: and when I was
- challenged with it, as such, in so high and noble a manner, I could not
- avoid taking shame to myself upon it.
- But you must permit me, Madam, to hope, that you will not punish me too
- heavily for so poor a contrivance, since no dishonour was meant you: and
- since, in the moment of its execution, you had as great an instance of my
- incapacity to defend a wrong, a low measure, and, at the same time, in
- your power over me, as mortal man could give--in a word, since you must
- have seen, that I was absolutely under the controul both of conscience
- and of love.
- I will not offer to defend myself, for wishing you to remain where you
- are, till either you give me your word to meet me at the altar on
- Thursday; or till I have the honour of attending you, preparative to the
- solemnity which will make that day the happiest of my life.
- I am but too sensible, that this kind of treatment may appear to you with
- the face of an arbitrary and illegal imposition: but as the consequences,
- not only to ourselves, but to both our families, may be fatal, if you
- cannot be moved in my favour; let me beseech you to forgive this act of
- compulsion, on the score of the necessity you your dear self have laid me
- under to be guilty of it; and to permit the solemnity of next Thursday to
- include an act of oblivion for all past offences.
- The orders I have given to the people of the house are: 'That you shall
- be obeyed in every particular that is consistent with my expectations of
- finding you there on my return on Wednesday next: that Mrs. Sinclair and
- her nieces, having incurred your just displeasure, shall not, without
- your orders, come into your presence: that neither shall Dorcas, till she
- has fully cleared her conduct to your satisfaction, be permitted to
- attend you: but Mabell, in her place; of whom you seemed some time ago to
- express some liking. Will. I have left behind me to attend your
- commands. If he be either negligent or impertinent, your dismission
- shall be a dismission of him from my service for ever. But, as to
- letters which may be sent you, or any which you may have to send, I must
- humbly entreat, that none such pass from or to you, for the few days that
- I shall be absent.' But I do assure you, madam, that the seals of both
- sorts shall be sacred: and the letters, if such be sent, shall be given
- into your own hands the moment the ceremony is performed, or before, if
- you require it.
- Mean time I will inquire, and send you word, how Miss Howe does; and to
- what, if I can be informed, her long silence is owing.
- Dr. Perkins I found here, attending my Lord, when I arrived with Dr. S.
- He acquaints me that your father, mother, uncles, and the still less
- worthy persons of your family, are well; and intend to be all at your
- uncle Harlowe's next week; I presume, with intent to keep his
- anniversary. This can make no alteration, but a happy one, as to
- persons, on Thursday; because Mr. Tomlinson assured me, that if any thing
- fell out to hinder your uncle's coming up in person, (which, however, he
- did not then expect,) he would be satisfied if his friend the Captain
- were proxy for him. I shall send a man and horse to-morrow to the
- Captain, to be at greater certainty.
- I send this by a special messenger, who will wait your pleasure in
- relation to the impatiently-wished-for Thursday: which I humbly hope will
- be signified by a line.
- My Lord, though hardly sensible, and unmindful of every thing but of your
- felicity, desires his most affectionate compliments to you. He has in
- readiness to present to you a very valuable set of jewels, which he hopes
- will be acceptable, whether he lives to see you adorn them or not.
- Lady Sarah and Lady Betty have also their tokens of respect ready to
- court your acceptance: but may Heaven incline you to give the opportunity
- of receiving their personal compliments, and those of my cousins
- Montague, before the next week be out!
- His Lordship is exceeding ill. Dr. S. has no hopes of him. The only
- consolation I can have for the death of a relation who loves me so well,
- if he do die, must arise from the additional power it will put into my
- hands of showing how much I am,
- My dearest life,
- Your ever-affectionate, faithful,
- LOVELACE.
- LETTER XXXVIII
- MR. LOVELACE, TO MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE
- [SUPERSCRIBED TO MRS. LOVELACE.]
- M. HALL, SUNDAY NIGHT, JUNE 25.
- MY DEAREST LOVE,
- I cannot find words to express how much I am mortified at the return of
- my messenger without a line from you.
- Thursday is so near, that I will send messenger after messenger every
- four hours, till I have a favourable answer; the one to meet the other,
- till its eve arrives, to know if I may venture to appear in your presence
- with the hope of having my wishes answered on that day.
- Your love, Madam, I neither expect, nor ask for; nor will, till my future
- behaviour gives you cause to think I deserve it. All I at present
- presume to wish is, to have it in my power to do you all the justice I
- can now do you: and to your generosity will I leave it, to reward me, as
- I shall merit, with your affection.
- At present, revolving my poor behaviour of Friday night before you, I
- think I should sooner choose to go to my last audit, unprepared for it as
- I am, than to appear in your presence, unless you give me some hope, that
- I shall be received as your elected husband, rather than, (however
- deserved,) as a detested criminal.
- Let me, therefore, propose an expedient, in order to spare my own
- confusion; and to spare you the necessity for that soul-harrowing
- recrimination, which I cannot stand, and which must be disagreeable to
- yourself--to name the church, and I will have every thing in readiness;
- so that our next interview will be, in a manner, at the very altar; and
- then you will have the kind husband to forgive for the faults of the
- ungrateful lover. If your resentment be still too high to write more,
- let it only be in your own dear hand, these words, St. Martin's church,
- Thursday--or these, St. Giles's church, Thursday; nor will I insist upon
- any inscription or subscription, or so much as the initials of your name.
- This shall be all the favour I will expect, till the dear hand itself is
- given to mine, in presence of that Being whom I invoke as a witness of
- the inviolable faith and honour of
- Your adoring
- LOVELACE.
- LETTER XXXIX
- MR. LOVELACE, TO MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE
- [SUPERSCRIBED TO MRS. LOVELACE.]
- M. HALL, MONDAY, JUNE 26.
- Once more, my dearest love, do I conjure you to send me the four
- requested words. There is no time to be lost. And I would not have next
- Thursday go over, without being entitled to call you mine, for the world;
- and that as well for your sake as for my own. Hitherto all that has
- passed is between you and me only; but, after Thursday, if my wishes are
- unanswered, the whole will be before the world.
- My Lord is extremely ill, and endures not to have me out of his sight for
- one half hour. But this shall not have the least weight with me, if you
- be pleased to hold out the olive-branch to me in the four requested
- words.
- I have the following intelligence from Captain Tomlinson.
- 'All your family are at your uncle Harlowe's. Your uncle finds he cannot
- go up; and names Captain Tomlinson for his proxy. He proposes to keep
- all your family with him till the Captain assures him that the ceremony
- is over.
- 'Already he has begun, with hope of success, to try to reconcile your
- mother to you.'
- My Lord M. but just now has told me how happy he should think himself to
- have an opportunity, before he dies, to salute you as his niece. I have
- put him in hopes that he shall see you; and have told him that I will go
- to town on Wednesday, in order to prevail upon you to accompany me down
- on Thursday or Friday. I have ordered a set to be in readiness to carry
- me up; and, were not my Lord so very ill, my cousin Montague tells me
- that she would offer her attendance on you. If you please, therefore, we
- can set out for this place the moment the solemnity is performed.
- Do not, dearest creature, dissipate all those promising appearances, and
- by refusing to save your own and your family's reputation in the eye of
- the world, use yourself worse than the ungratefullest wretch on earth has
- used you. For if we were married, all the disgrace you imagine you have
- suffered while a single lady, will be my own, and only known to
- ourselves.
- Once more, then, consider well the situation we are both in; and
- remember, my dearest life, that Thursday will be soon here; and that you
- have no time to lose.
- In a letter sent by the messenger whom I dispatch with this, I have
- desired that my friend, Mr. Belford, who is your very great admirer, and
- who knows all the secrets of my heart, will wait upon you, to know what I
- am to depend upon as to the chosen day.
- Surely, my dear, you never could, at any time, suffer half so much from
- cruel suspense, as I do.
- If I have not an answer to this, either from your own goodness, or
- through Mr. Belford's intercession, it will be too late for me to set
- out: and Captain Tomlinson will be disappointed, who goes to town on
- purpose to attend your pleasure.
- One motive for the gentle resistance I have presumed to lay you under is,
- to prevent the mischiefs that might ensue (as probably to the more
- innocent, as to the less) were you to write to any body while your
- passions were so much raised and inflamed against me. Having apprized
- you of my direction to the women in town on this head, I wonder you
- should have endeavoured to send a letter to Miss Howe, although in a
- cover directed to that young lady's* servant; as you must think it would
- be likely to fall into my hands.
- * The lady had made an attempt to send away a letter.
- The just sense of what I have deserved the contents should be, leaves me
- no room to doubt what they are. Nevertheless, I return it you enclosed,
- with the seal, as you will see, unbroken.
- Relieve, I beseech you, dearest Madam, by the four requested words, or by
- Mr. Belford, the anxiety of
- Your ever-affectionate and obliged
- LOVELACE.
- Remember, there will not, there cannot be time for further writing, and
- for coming up by Thursday, your uncle's birth-day.
- LETTER XL
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- MONDAY, JUNE 26.
- Thou wilt see the situation I am in with Miss Harlowe by the enclosed
- copies of three letters; to two of which I am so much scorned as not to
- have one word given me in answer; and of the third (now sent by the
- messenger who brings thee this) I am afraid as little notice will be
- taken--and if so, her day of grace is absolutely over.
- One would imagine (so long used to constraint too as she has been) that
- she might have been satisfied with the triumph she had over us all on
- Friday night! a triumph that to this hour has sunk my pride and my vanity
- so much, that I almost hate the words, plot, contrivance, scheme; and
- shall mistrust myself in future for every one that rises to my inventive
- head.
- But seest thou not that I am under a necessity to continue her at
- Sinclair's and to prohibit all her correspondencies?
- Now, Belford, as I really, in my present mood, think of nothing less
- than marrying her, if she let not Thursday slip, I would have thee attend
- her, in pursuance of the intimation I have given her in my letter of this
- date; and vow for me, swear for me, bind thy soul to her for my honour,
- and use what arguments thy friendly heart can suggest, in order to
- procure me an answer from her; which, as thou wilt see, she may give in
- four words only. And then I purpose to leave Lord M. (dangerously ill as
- he is,) and meet her at her appointed church, in order to solemnize. If
- she will but sign Cl. H. to thy writing the four words, that shall do:
- for I would not come up to be made a fool of in the face of all my family
- and friends.
- If she should let the day go off, I shall be desperate. I am entangled
- in my own devices, and cannot bear that she should detect me.
- O that I had been honest!--What a devil are all my plots come to! What
- do they end in, but one grand plot upon myself, and a title to eternal
- infamy and disgrace! But, depending on thy friendly offices, I will say
- no more of this.--Let her send me but one line!--But one line!--To treat
- me as unworthy of her notice;--yet be altogether in my power--I cannot--I
- will not bear that.
- My Lord, as I said, is extremely ill. The doctors give him over. He
- gives himself over. Those who would not have him die, are afraid he will
- die. But as to myself, I am doubtful: for these long and violent
- struggles between the constitution and the disease (though the latter has
- three physicians and an apothecary to help it forward, and all three, as
- to their prescriptions, of different opinions too) indicate a plaguy
- habit, and savour more of recovery than death: and the more so, as he has
- no sharp or acute mental organs to whet out his bodily ones, and to raise
- his fever above the sympathetic helpful one.
- Thou wilt see in the enclosed what pains I am at to dispatch messengers;
- who are constantly on the road to meet each other, and one of them to
- link in the chain with the fourth, whose station is in London, and five
- miles onwards, or till met. But in truth I have some other matters for
- them to perform at the same time, with my Lord's banker and his lawyer;
- which will enable me, if his Lordship is so good as to die this bout, to
- be an over match for some of my other relations. I don't mean Charlotte
- and Patty; for they are noble girls: but others, who have been scratching
- and clawing under-ground like so many moles in my absence; and whose
- workings I have discovered since I have been down, by the little heaps of
- dirt they have thrown up.
- A speedy account of thy commission, dear Jack! The letter travels all
- night.
- LETTER XLI
- MR. BELFORD, TO ROBERT LOVELACE, ESQ.
- LONDON, JUNE 27. TUESDAY.
- You must excuse me, Lovelace, from engaging in the office you would have
- me undertake, till I can be better assured you really intend honourably
- at last by this much-injured lady.
- I believe you know your friend Belford too well to think he would be easy
- with you, or with any man alive, who should seek to make him promise for
- him what he never intended to perform. And let me tell thee, that I have
- not much confidence in the honour of a man, why by imitation of hands (I
- will only call it) has shown so little regard to the honour of his own
- relations.
- Only that thou hast such jesuitical qualifyings, or I should think thee
- at last touched with remorse, and brought within view of being ashamed
- of thy cursed inventions by the ill success of thy last: which I heartily
- congratulate thee upon.
- O the divine lady!--But I will not aggravate!
- Nevertheless, when thou writest that, in thy present mood, thou thinkest
- of marrying, and yet canst so easily change thy mood; when I know thy
- heart is against the state: that the four words thou courtest from the
- lady are as much to thy purpose, as if she wrote forty; since it will
- show she can forgive the highest injury that can be offered to woman; and
- when I recollect how easily thou canst find excuses to postpone; thou
- must be more explicit a good deal, as to thy real intentions, and future
- honour, than thou art: for I cannot trust to temporary remorse; which
- brought on by disappointment too, and not by principle, and the like of
- which thou hast so often got over.
- If thou canst convince me time enough for the day, that thou meanest to
- do honourably by her, in her own sense of the word; or, if not time
- enough, wilt fix some other day, (which thou oughtest to leave to her
- option, and not bind her down for the Thursday; and the rather, as thy
- pretence for so doing is founded on an absolute fiction;) I will then
- most cheerfully undertake thy cause; by person, if she will admit me to
- her presence; if she will not, by pen. But, in this case, thou must
- allow me to be guarantee for thy family. And, if so, so much as I value
- thee, and respect thy skill in all the qualifications of a gentleman,
- thou mayest depend upon it, that I will act up to the character of a
- guarantee, with more honour than the princes of our day usually do----to
- their shame be it spoken.
- Mean time let me tell thee, that my heart bleeds for the wrong this
- angelic lady has received: and if thou dost not marry her, if she will
- have thee, and, when married, make her the best and tenderest of
- husbands, I would rather be a dog, a monkey, a bear, a viper, or a toad,
- than thee.
- Command me with honour, and thou shalt find none readier to oblige thee
- than
- Thy sincere friend,
- JOHN BELFORD.
- LETTER XLII
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- M. HALL, JUNE 27. TUESDAY NIGHT, NEAR 12.
- Your's reached me this moment, by an extraordinary push in the
- messengers.
- What a man of honour thou of a sudden!----
- And so, in the imaginary shape of a guarantee, thou threatenest me!
- Had I not been in earnest as to the lady, I should not have offered to
- employ thee in the affair. But, let me say, that hadst thou undertaken
- the task, and I hadst afterwards thought fit to change my mind, I should
- have contented myself to tell thee, that that was my mind when thou
- engagedst for me, and to have given thee the reasons for the change, and
- then left thee to thy own discretion: for never knew I what fear of man
- was--nor fear of woman neither, till I became acquainted with Miss
- Clarissa Harlowe, nay, what is most surprising, till I came to have her
- in my power.
- And so thou wilt not wait upon the charmer of my heart, but upon terms
- and conditions!--Let it alone and be curs'd; I care not.--But so much
- credit did I give to the value thou expressedst for her, that I thought
- the office would have been acceptable to thee, as serviceable to me;
- for what was it, but to endeavour to persuade her to consent to the
- reparation of her own honour? For what have I done but disgraced myself,
- and been a thief to my own joys?--And if there be a union of hearts, and
- an intention to solemnize, what is there wanting but the foolish
- ceremony?--and that I still offer. But, if she will keep back her hand,
- if she will make me hold out mine in vain, how can I help it?
- I write her one more letter; and if, after she has received that, she
- keeps sullen silence, she must thank herself for what is to follow.
- But, after all,, my heart is not wholly her's. I love her beyond
- expression; and cannot help it. I hope therefore she will receive this
- last tender as I wish. I hope she intends not, like a true woman, to
- plague, and vex, and tease me, now she has found her power. If she will
- take me to mercy now these remorses are upon me, (though I scorn to
- condition with thee for my sincerity,) all her trials, as I have
- heretofore declared, shall be over, and she shall be as happy as I can
- make her: for, ruminating upon all that has passed between us, from the
- first hour of our acquaintance till the present, I must pronounce, That
- she is virtue itself and once more I say, has no equal.
- As to what you hint, of leaving to her choice another day, do you
- consider, that it will be impossible that my contrivances and stratagems
- should be much longer concealed?--This makes me press that day, though so
- near; and the more, as I have made so much ado about her uncle's
- anniversary. If she send me the four words, I will spare no fatigue to
- be in time, if not for the canonical hour at church, for some other hour
- of the day in her own apartment, or any other: for money will do every
- thing: and that I have never spared in this affair.
- To show thee, that I am not at enmity with thee, I enclose the copies of
- two letters--one to her: it is the fourth, and must be the last on the
- subject----The other to Captain Tomlinson; calculated, as thou wilt see,
- for him to show her.
- And now, Jack, interfere; in this case or not, thou knowest the mind of
- R. LOVELACE.
- LETTER XLIII
- MR. LOVELACE, TO MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE
- [SUPERSCRIBED TO MRS. LOVELACE.]
- M. HALL, WED. MORNING, ONE O'CLOCK, JUNE 28.
- Not one line, my dearest life, not one word, in answer to three letters
- I have written! The time is now so short, that this must be the last
- letter that can reach you on this side the important hour that might make
- us legally one.
- My friend, Mr. Belford, is apprehensive, that he cannot wait upon you in
- time, by reason of some urgent affairs of his own.
- I the less regret the disappointment, because I have procured a more
- acceptable person, as I hope, to attend you; Captain Tomlinson I mean:
- to whom I had applied for this purpose, before I had Mr. Belford's
- answer.
- I was the more solicitous to obtain his favour form him, because of the
- office he is to take upon him, as I humbly presume to hope, to-morrow.
- That office obliged him to be in town as this day: and I acquainted him
- with my unhappy situation with you; and desired that he would show me,
- on this occasion, that I had as much of his favour and friendship as your
- uncle had; since the whole treaty must be broken off, if he could not
- prevail upon you in my behalf.
- He will dispatch the messenger directly; whom I propose to meet in person
- at Slough; either to proceed onward to London with a joyful heart, or to
- return back to M. Hall with a broken one.
- I ought not (but cannot help it) to anticipate the pleasure Mr. Tomlinson
- proposes to himself, in acquainting you with the likelihood there is of
- your mother's seconding your uncle's views. For, it seems, he has
- privately communicated to her his laudable intentions: and her resolution
- depends, as well as his, upon what to-morrow will produce.
- Disappoint not then, I beseech you, for an hundred persons' sakes, as
- well as for mine, that uncle and that mother, whose displeasure I have
- heard you so often deplore.
- You may think it impossible for me to reach London by the canonical hour.
- If it should, the ceremony may be performed in your own apartments, at
- any time in the day, or at night: so that Captain Tomlinson may have it
- to aver to your uncle, that it was performed on his anniversary.
- Tell but the Captain, that you forbid me not to attend you: and that
- shall be sufficient for bringing to you, on the wings of love,
- Your ever-grateful and affectionate
- LOVELACE.
- LETTER XLIV
- TO MR. PATRICK M'DONALD,
- AT HIS LODGINGS, AT MR. BROWN'S, PERUKE-MAKER, IN ST. MARTIN'S LANE,
- WESTMINSTER
- M. HALL, WEDN. MORNING, TWO O'CLOCK.
- DEAR M'DONALD,
- The bearer of this has a letter to carry to the lady.* I have been at
- the trouble of writing a copy of it: which I enclose, that you may not
- mistake your cue.
- * See the preceding Letter.
- You will judge of my reasons for ante-dating the enclosed sealed one,*
- directed to you by the name of Tomlinson; which you are to show to the
- lady, as in confidence. You will open it of course.
- * See the next Letter.
- I doubt not your dexterity and management, dear M'Donald; nor your zeal;
- especially as the hope of cohabitation must now be given up. Impossible
- to be carried is that scheme. I might break her heart, but not incline
- her will--am in earnest therefore to marry her, if she let not the day
- slip.
- Improve upon the hint of her mother. That may touch her. But John
- Harlowe, remember, has privately engaged that lady--privately, I say;
- else, (not to mention the reason for her uncle Harlowe's former
- expedient,) you know, she might find means to get a letter away to the
- one or to the other, to know the truth; or to Miss Howe, to engage her
- to inquire into it: and, if she should, the word privately will account
- for the uncle's and mother's denying it.
- However, fail not, as from me, to charge our mother and her nymphs to
- redouble their vigilance both as to her person and letters. All's upon a
- crisis now. But she must not be treated ill neither.
- Thursday over, I shall know what to resolve upon.
- If necessary, you must assume authority. The devil's in't, if such a
- girl as this shall awe a man of your years and experience. You are not
- in love with her as I am. Fly out, if she doubt your honour. Spirits
- naturally soft may be beat out of their play and borne down (though ever
- so much raised) by higher anger. All women are cowards at bottom; only
- violent where they may. I have often stormed a girl out of her mistrust,
- and made her yield (before she knew where she was) to the point
- indignantly mistrusted; and that to make up with me, though I was the
- aggressor.
- If this matter succeed as I'd have it, (or if not, and do not fail by
- your fault,) I will take you off the necessity of pursuing your cursed
- smuggling; which otherwise may one day end fatally for you.
- We are none of us perfect, M'Donald. This sweet lady makes me serious
- sometimes in spite of my heart. But as private vices are less blamable
- than public; an as I think smuggling (as it is called) a national evil;
- I have no doubt to pronounce you a much worse man than myself, and as
- such shall take pleasure in reforming you.
- I send you enclosed ten guineas, as a small earnest of further favours.
- Hitherto you have been a very clever fellow.
- As to clothes for Thursday, Monmouth-street will afford a ready supply.
- Clothes quite new would make your condition suspected. But you may
- defer that care, till you see if she can be prevailed upon. Your
- riding-dress will do for the first visit. Nor let your boots be over
- clean. I have always told you the consequence of attending to the
- minutiae, where art (or imposture, as the ill-mannered would call it) is
- designed--your linen rumpled and soily, when you wait upon her--easy terms
- these--just come to town--remember (as formerly) to loll, to throw out
- your legs, to stroke and grasp down your ruffles, as if of significance
- enough to be careless. What though the presence of a fine lady would
- require a different behaviour, are you not of years to dispense with
- politeness? You can have no design upon her, you know. You are a father
- yourself of daughters as old as she. Evermore is parade and
- obsequiousness suspectable: it must show either a foolish head, or a
- knavish heart. Assume airs of consequence therefore; and you will be
- treated as a man of consequence. I have often more than half ruined
- myself by my complaisance; and, being afraid of controul, have brought
- controul upon myself.
- I think I have no more to say at present. I intend to be at Slough, or
- on the way to it, as by mine to the lady. Adieu, honest M'Donald.
- R.L.
- LETTER XLV
- TO CAPTAIN TOMLINSON
- [ENCLOSED IN THE PRECEDING; TO BE SHOWN TO THE LADY AS IN CONFIDENCE.]
- M. HALL, TUESDAY MORN., JUNE 27.
- DEAR CAPTAIN TOMLINSON,
- An unhappy misunderstanding has arisen between the dearest lady in the
- world and me (the particulars of which she perhaps may give you, but I
- will not, because I might be thought partial to myself;) and she refusing
- to answer my most pressing and respectful letters; I am at a most
- perplexing uncertainty whether she will meet us or not next Thursday to
- solemnize.
- My Lord is so extremely ill, that if I thought she would not oblige me,
- I would defer going up to town for two or three days. He cares not to
- have me out of his sight: yet is impatient to salute my beloved as his
- neice [sic] before he dies. This I have promised to give him an
- opportunity to do: intending, if the dear creature will make me happy,
- to set out with her for this place directly from church.
- With regret I speak it of the charmer of my soul, that irreconcilableness
- is her family-fault--the less excusable indeed for her, as she herself
- suffers by it in so high a degree from her own relations.
- Now, Sir, as you intended to be in town some time before Thursday, if
- it be not too great an inconvenience to you, I could be glad you would
- go up as soon as possible, for my sake: and this I the more boldly
- request, as I presume that a man who has so many great affairs of his
- own in hand as you have, would be glad to be at a certainty as to the
- day.
- You, Sir, can so pathetically and justly set before her the unhappy
- consequences that will follow if the day be postponed, as well with
- regard to her uncle's disappointment, as to the part you have assured
- me her mother is willing to take in the wished-for reconciliation, that
- I have great hopes she will suffer herself to be prevailed upon. And a
- man and horse shall be in waiting to take your dispatches and bring them
- to me.
- But if you cannot prevail in my favour, you will be pleased to satisfy
- your friend, Mr. John Harlowe, that it is not my fault that he is not
- obliged. I am, dear Sir,
- Your extremely obliged
- and faithful servant,
- R. LOVELACE.
- LETTER XLVI
- TO ROBERT LOVELACE, ESQ.
- WEDN. JUNE 28, NEAR TWELVE O'CLOCK.
- HONOURED SIR,
- I received your's, as your servant desired me to acquaint you, by ten
- this morning. Horse and man were in a foam.
- I instantly equipped myself, as if come off from a journey, and posted
- away to the lady, intending to plead great affairs that I came not
- before, in order to favour your antedate; and likewise to be in a hurry,
- to have a pretence to hurry her ladyship, and to take no denial for her
- giving a satisfactory return to your messenger. But, upon my entering
- Mrs. Sinclair's house, I found all in the greatest consternation.
- You must not, Sir, be surprised. It is a trouble to me to be the
- relater of the bad news; but so it is--The lady is gone off! She was
- missed but half an hour before I came.
- Her waiting-maid is run away, or hitherto is not to be found: so that
- they conclude it was by her connivance.
- They had sent, before I came, to my honoured masters Mr. Belton, Mr.
- Mowbray, and Mr. Belford. Mr. Tourville is out of town.
- High words are passing between Madam Sinclair, and Madam Horton, and
- Madam Martin; as also with Dorcas. And your servant William threatens
- to hang or drown himself.
- They have sent to know if they can hear of Mabell, the waiting-maid, at
- her mother's, who it seems lives in Chick-lane, West-Smithfield; and to
- an uncle of her's also, who keeps an alehouse at Cow-cross, had by, and
- with whom she lived last.
- Your messenger having just changed his horse, is come back: so I will
- not detain him longer than to add, that I am, with great concern for this
- misfortune, and thanks for your seasonable favour and kind intentions
- towards me--I am sure this was not my fault--
- Honoured Sir,
- Your most obliged, humble servant,
- PATRICK M'DONALD.
- LETTER XLVII
- MR. MOWBRAY, TO ROBERT LOVELACE, ESQ.
- WEDNESDAY, TWELVE O'CLOCK.
- DEAR LOVELACE,
- I have plaguy news to acquaint thee with. Miss Harlowe is gone off!--
- Quite gone, by soul!--I have no time for particulars, your servant being
- gone off. But if I had, we are not yet come to the bottom of the matter.
- The ladies here are all blubbering like devills, accusing one another
- most confoundedly: whilst Belton and I damn them all together in thy
- name.
- If thou shouldst hear that thy fellow Will. is taken dead out of some
- horse-pond, and Dorcas cut down from her bed's teaster, from dangling
- in her own garters, be not surprised. Here's the devil to pay. Nobody
- serene but Jack Belford, who is taking minutes of examinations,
- accusations, and confessions, with the significant air of a Middlesex
- Justice; and intends to write at large all particulars, I suppose.
- I heartily condole with thee: so does Belton. But it may turn out for
- the best: for she is gone away with thy marks, I understand. A foolish
- little devill! Where will she mend herself? for nobody will look upon
- her. And they tell me that thou wouldst certainly have married her, had
- she staid. But I know thee better.
- Dear Bobby, adieu. If Lord M. will die now, to comfort thee for this
- loss, what a seasonable exit would he make! Let's have a letter from
- thee. Pr'ythee do. Thou can'st write devill-like to Belford, who shews
- us nothing at all. Thine heartily,
- RD. MOWBRAY.
- LETTER XLVIII
- MR. BELFORD, TO ROBERT LOVELACE, ESQ.
- THURSDAY, JUNE 29.
- Thou hast heard from M'Donald and Mowbray the news. Bad or good, I know
- not which thou'lt deem it. I only wish I could have given thee joy upon
- the same account, before the unhappy lady was seduced from Hampstead; for
- then of what an ungrateful villany hadst thou been spared the
- perpetration, which now thou hast to answer for!
- I came to town purely to serve thee with her, expecting that thy next
- would satisfy me that I might endeavour it without dishonour. And at
- first when I found her gone, I half pitied thee; for now wilt thou be
- inevitably blown up: and in what an execrable light wilt thou appear to
- all the world!--Poor Lovelace! caught in thy own snares! thy punishment
- is but beginning.
- But to my narrative: for I suppose thou expectest all particulars from
- me, since Mowbray has informed thee that I have been collecting them.
- 'The noble exertion of spirit she has made on Friday night, had, it
- seems, greatly disordered her; insomuch that she was not visible till
- Saturday evening; when Mabell saw her; and she seemed to be very ill:
- but on Sunday morning, having dressed herself, as if designing to go to
- church, she ordered Mabell to get her a coach to the door.
- 'The wench told her, She was to obey her in every thing but the calling
- of a coach or chair, or in relation to letters.
- 'She sent for Will. and gave him the same command.
- 'He pleaded his master's orders to the contrary, and desired to be
- excused.
- 'Upon this, down she went, herself, and would have gone out without
- observation; but finding the street-door double-locked, and the key not
- in the lock, she stept into the street-parlour, and would have thrown up
- the sash to call out to the people passing by, as they doubted not: but
- that, since her last attempt of the same nature, had been fastened down.
- 'Hereupon she resolutely stept into Mrs. Sinclair's parlour in the
- back-house; where were the old devil and her two partners; and demanded
- the key of the street-door, or to have it opened for her.
- 'They were all surprised; but desired to be excused, and pleaded your
- orders.
- 'She asserted, that you had no authority over her; and never should have
- any: that their present refusal was their own act and deed: she saw the
- intent of their back house, and the reason of putting her there: she
- pleaded her condition and fortune; and said, they had no way to avoid
- utter ruin, but by opening their doors to her, or by murdering her, and
- burying her in their garden or cellar, too deep for detection: that
- already what had been done to her was punishable by death: and bid them
- at their peril detain her.'
- What a noble, what a right spirit has this charming creature, in cases
- that will justify an exertion of spirit!--
- 'They answered that Mr. Lovelace could prove his marriage, and would
- indemnify them. And they all would have vindicated their behaviour on
- Friday night, and the reputation of their house. But refusing to hear
- them on that topic, she flung from them threatening.
- 'She then went up half a dozen stairs in her way to her own apartment:
- but, as if she had bethought herself, down she stept again, and proceeded
- towards the street-parlour; saying, as she passed by the infamous Dorcas,
- I'll make myself protectors, though the windows suffer. But that wench,
- of her own head, on the lady's going out of that parlour to Mrs.
- Sinclair's, had locked the door, and taken out the key: so that finding
- herself disappointed, she burst into tears, and went sobbing and menacing
- up stairs again.
- 'She made no other attempt till the effectual one. Your letters and
- messages, they suppose, coming so fast upon one another (though she would
- not answer one of them) gave her some amusement, and an assurance to
- them, that she would at last forgive you; and that then all would end as
- you wished.
- 'The women, in pursuance of your orders, offered not to obtrude
- themselves upon her; and Dorcas also kept out of her sight all the rest
- of Sunday; also on Monday and Tuesday. But by the lady's condescension,
- (even to familiarity) to Mabell, they imagined, that she must be working
- in her mind all that time to get away. They therefore redoubled their
- cautions to the wench; who told them so faithfully all that passed
- between her lady and her, that they had no doubt of her fidelity to her
- wicked trust.
- ''Tis probable she might have been contriving something all this time;
- but saw no room for perfecting any scheme. The contrivance by which she
- effected her escape seems to me not to have been fallen upon till the
- very day; since it depended partly upon the weather, as it proved. But
- it is evident she hoped something from Mabell's simplicity, or gratitude,
- or compassion, by cultivating all the time her civility to her.
- 'Polly waited on her early on Wednesday morning; and met with a better
- reception than she had reason to expect. She complained however, with
- warmth, of her confinement. Polly said there would be an happy end to it
- (if it were a confinement,) next day, she presumed. She absolutely
- declared to the contrary, in the way Polly meant it; and said, That Mr.
- Lovelace, on his return [which looked as if she intended to wait for it]
- should have reason to repent the orders he had given, as they all should
- their observance of them: let him send twenty letters, she would not
- answer one, be the consequence what it would; nor give him hope of the
- least favour, while she was in that house. She had given Mrs. Sinclair
- and themselves fair warning, she said: no orders of another ought to make
- them detain a free person: but having made an open attempt to go, and
- been detained by them, she was the calmer, she told Polly; let them look
- to the consequence.
- 'But yet she spoke this with temper; and Polly gave it as her opinion,
- (with apprehension for their own safety,) that having so good a handle to
- punish them all, she would not go away if she might. And what, inferred
- Polly, is the indemnity of a man who has committed the vilest of rapes on
- a person of condition; and must himself, if prosecuted for it, either
- fly, or be hanged?
- 'Sinclair, [so I will still call her,] upon this representation of Polly,
- foresaw, she said, the ruin of her poor house in the issue of this
- strange business; and the infamous Sally and Dorcas bore their parts in
- the apprehension: and this put them upon thinking it advisable for the
- future, that the street-door should generally in the day-time be only
- left upon a bolt-latch, as they called it, which any body might open on
- the inside; and that the key should be kept in the door; that their
- numerous comers and goers, as they called their guests, should be able to
- give evidence, that she might have gone out if she would: not forgetting,
- however, to renew their orders to Will. to Dorcas, to Mabell, and the
- rest, to redouble their vigilance on this occasion, to prevent her
- escape: none of them doubting, at the same time, that her love of a man
- so considerable in their eyes, and the prospect of what was to happen, as
- she had reason to believe, on Thursday, her uncle's birth-day, would
- (though perhaps not till the last hour, for her pride sake, was their
- word) engage her to change her temper.
- 'They believe, that she discovered the key to be left in the door; for
- she was down more than once to walk in the little garden, and seemed to
- cast her eye each time to the street-door.
- 'About eight yesterday morning, an hour after Polly had left her, she
- told Mabell, she was sure she should not live long; and having a good
- many suits of apparel, which after her death would be of no use to any
- body she valued, she would give her a brown lustring gown, which, with
- some alterations to make it more suitable to her degree, would a great
- while serve her for a Sunday wear; for that she (Mabell) was the only
- person in that house of whom she could think without terror or antipathy.
- 'Mabell expressing her gratitude upon the occasion, the lady said, she
- had nothing to employ herself about, and if she could get a workwoman
- directly, she would look over her things then, and give her what she
- intended for her.
- 'Her mistress's mantua-maker, the maid replied, lived but a little way
- off: and she doubted not that she could procure her, or one of the
- journey-women to alter the gown out of hand.
- 'I will give you also, said she, a quilted coat, which will require but
- little alteration, if any; for you are much about my stature: but the
- gown I will give directions about, because the sleeves and the robings
- and facings must be altered for your wear, being, I believe, above your
- station: and try, said she, if you can get the workwoman, and we'll
- advise about it. If she cannot come now, let her come in the afternoon;
- but I had rather now, because it will amuse me to give you a lift.
- 'Then stepping to the window, it rains, said she, [and so it had done all
- the morning:] slip on the hood and short cloak I have seen you wear, and
- come to me when you are ready to go out, because you shall bring me in
- something that I want.
- 'Mabell equipped herself accordingly, and received her commands to buy
- her some trifles, and then left her; but in her way out, stept into the
- back parlour, where Dorcas was with Mrs. Sinclair, telling her where she
- was going, and on what account, bidding Dorcas look out till she came
- back. So faithful as the wench to the trust reposed in her, and so
- little had the lady's generosity wrought upon her.
- 'Mrs. Sinclair commended her; Dorcas envied her, and took her cue: and
- Mabell soon returned with the mantua-maker's journey-woman; (she
- resolved, she said, but she would not come without her); and then Dorcas
- went off guard.
- 'The lady looked out the gown and petticoat, and before the workwoman
- caused Mabell to try it on; and, that it might fit the better, made the
- willing wench pull off her upper-petticoat, and put on that she gave her.
- Then she bid them go into Mr. Lovelace's apartment, and contrive about it
- before the pier-glass there, and stay till she came to them, to give them
- her opinion.
- 'Mabell would have taken her own clothes, and hood, and short cloak with
- her: but her lady said, No matter; you may put them on again here, when
- we have considered about the alterations: there's no occasion to litter
- the other room.
- 'They went; and instantly, as it is supposed, she slipt on Mabell's gown
- and petticoat over her own, which was white damask, and put on the
- wench's hood, short cloak, and ordinary apron, and down she went.
- 'Hearing somebody tripping along the passage, both Will. and Dorcas whipt
- to the inner-hall door, and saw her; but, taking her for Mabell, Are you
- going far, Mabell? cried Will.
- 'Without turning her face, or answering, she held out her hand, pointing
- to the stairs; which they construed as a caution for them to look out in
- her absence; and supposing she would not be long gone, as she had not in
- form, repeated her caution to them, up went Will, tarrying at the
- stairs-head in expectation of the supposed Mabell's return.
- 'Mabell and the workwoman waited a good while, amusing themselves not
- disagreeably, the one with contriving in the way of her business, the
- other delighting herself with her fine gown and coat. But at last,
- wondering the lady did not come in to them, Mabell tiptoed it to her
- door, and tapping, and not being answered, stept into the chamber.
- 'Will. at that instant, from his station at the stairs-head, seeing
- Mabell in her lady's clothes; for he had been told of the present, [gifts
- to servants fly from servant to servant in a minute,] was very much
- surprised, having, as he thought, just seen her go out in her own; and
- stepping up, met her at the door. How the devil can this be? said he:
- just now you went out in your own dress! How came you here in this? and
- how could you pass me unseen? but nevertheless, kissing her, said, he
- would now brag he had kissed his lady, or one in her clothes.
- 'I am glad, Mr. William, cried Mabell, to see you here so diligently.
- But know you where my lady is?
- 'In my master's apartment, answered Will. Is she not? Was she not
- talking with you this moment?
- 'No, that's Mrs. Dolins's journey-woman.
- 'They both stood aghast, as they said; Will, again recollecting he had
- seen Mabell, as he thought, go out in her own clothes. And while they
- were debating and wondering, up comes Dorcas with your fourth letter,
- just then brought for the lady, and seeing Mabell dressed out, (whom she
- had likewise beheld a little before), as she supposed, in her common
- clothes; she joined in the wonder; till Mabell, re-entering the lady's
- apartment, missed her own clothes; and then suspecting what had happened,
- and letting the others into the ground of the suspicion, they all agreed
- that she had certainly escaped. And then followed such an uproar of
- mutual accusation, and you should have done this, and you have done that,
- as alarmed the whole house; every apartment in both houses giving up its
- devil, to the number of fourteen or fifteen, including the mother and her
- partners.
- 'Will. told them his story; and then ran out, as on the like occasion
- formerly, to make inquiry whether the lady was seen by any of the
- coachmen, chairmen, or porters, plying in that neighbourhood: while
- Dorcas cleared herself immediately, and that at the poor Mabell's
- expense, who made a figure as guilty as awkward, having on the suspected
- price of her treachery; which Dorcas, out of envy, was ready to tear from
- her back.
- 'Hereupon all the pack opened at the poor wench, while the mother foamed
- at the mouth, bellowed out her orders for seizing the suspected offender;
- who could neither be heard in her own defence, nor had she been heard,
- would have been believed.
- 'That such a perfidious wretch should ever disgrace her house, was the
- mother's cry; good people might be corrupted; but it was a fine thing if
- such a house as her's could not be faithfully served by cursed creatures
- who were hired knowing the business they were to be employed in, and who
- had no pretence to principle!--D--n her, the wretch proceeded!--She had
- no patience with her! call the cook, and call the scullion!
- 'They were at hand.
- 'See, that guilty pyeball devil, was her word--(her lady's gown upon her
- back)--but I'll punish her for a warning to all betrayers of their trust.
- Put on the great gridiron this moment, [an oath or a curse at every
- word:] make up a roaring fire--the cleaver bring me this instant--I'll
- cut her into quarters with my own hands; and carbonade and broil the
- traitress for a feast to all the dogs and cats in the neighbourhood, and
- eat the first slice of the toad myself, without salt or pepper.
- 'The poor Mabell, frighted out of her wits, expected every moment to be
- torn in pieces, having half a score open-clawed paws upon her all at
- once. She promised to confess all. But that all, when she had obtained
- a hearing, was nothing: for nothing had she to confess.
- 'Sally, hereupon with a curse of mercy, ordered her to retire;
- undertaking that she and Polly would examine her themselves, that they
- might be able to write all particulars to his honour; and then, if she
- could not clear herself, or, if guilty, give some account of the lady,
- (who had been so wicked as to give them all this trouble,) so as they
- might get her again, then the cleaver and gridiron might go to work with
- all their heart.
- 'The wench, glad of this reprieve, went up stairs; and while Sally was
- laying out the law, and prating away in her usual dictorial manner, whipt
- on another gown, and sliding down the stairs, escaped to her relations.
- And this flight, which was certainly more owing to terror than guilt,
- was, in the true Old Bailey construction, made a confirmation of the
- latter.'
- ***
- These are the particulars of Miss Harlowe's flight. Thou'lt hardly think
- me too minute.--How I long to triumph over thy impatience and fury on the
- occasion!
- Let me beseech thee, my dear Lovelace, in thy next letter, to rave most
- gloriously!--I shall be grievously disappointed if thou dost not.
- ***
- Where, Lovelace, can the poor lady be gone? And who can describe the
- distress she must be in?
- By thy former letters, it may be supposed, that she can have very little
- money: nor, by the suddenness of her flight, more clothes than those she
- has on. And thou knowest who once said,* 'Her parents will not receive
- her. Her uncles will not entertain her. Her Norton is in their
- direction, and cannot. Miss Howe dare not. She has not one friend or
- intimate in town--entirely a stranger to it.' And, let me add, has been
- despoiled of her honour by the man for whom she had made all these
- sacrifices; and who stood bound to her by a thousand oaths and vows, to
- be her husband, her protector, and friend!
- * See Vol. IV. Letter XXI.
- How strong must be her resentment of the barbarous treatment she has
- received! how worthy of herself, that it has made her hate the man she
- once loved! and, rather than marry him, choose to expose her disgrace to
- the whole world: to forego the reconciliation with her friends which her
- heart was so set upon: and to hazard a thousand evils to which her youth
- and her sex may too probably expose an indigent and friendly beauty!
- Rememberest thou not that home push upon thee, in one of the papers
- written in her delirium; of which, however it savours not?----
- I will assure thee, that I have very often since most seriously reflected
- upon it: and as thy intended second outrage convinces me that it made no
- impression upon thee then, and perhaps thou hast never thought of it
- since, I will transcribe the sentence.
- 'If, as religion teaches us, God will judge us, in a great measure! by
- our benevolent or evil actions to one another--O wretch! bethink thee, in
- time bethink thee, how great must be thy condemnation.'*
- * See Vol. VI. Letter XVI.
- And is this amiable doctrine the sum of religion? Upon my faith,
- believe it is. For, to indulge a serious thought, since we are not
- atheists, except in practice, does God, the BEING of Beings, want any
- thing of us for HIMSELF! And does he not enjoin us works of mercy to one
- another, as the means to obtain his mercy? A sublime principle, and
- worthy of the SUPREME SUPERINTENDENT and FATHER of all things!--But if we
- are to be judged by this noble principle, what, indeed, must be thy
- condemnation on the score of this lady only? and what mine, and what all
- our confraternity's, on the score of other women: though we are none of
- us half so bad as thou art, as well for want of inclination, I hope, as
- of opportunity!
- I must add, that, as well for thy own sake, as for the lady's, I wish ye
- were yet to be married to each other. It is the only medium that can be
- hit upon to salve the honour of both. All that's past may yet be
- concealed from the world, and from all her sufferings, if thou resolvest
- to be a tender and kind husband to her.
- And if this really be thy intention, I will accept with pleasure of a
- commission from thee that shall tend to promote so good an end, whenever
- she can be found; that is to say, if she will admit to her presence a man
- who professes friendship to thee. Nor can I give a greater
- demonstration, that I am
- Thy sincere friend,
- J. BELFORD.
- P.S. Mabell's clothes were thrown into the passage this morning: nobody
- knows by whom.
- LETTER XLIX
- MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.
- FRIDAY, JUNE 30.
- I am ruined, undone, blown up, destroyed, and worse than annihilated,
- that's certain!--But was not the news shocking enough, dost thou think,
- without thy throwing into the too-weighty scale reproaches, which thou
- couldst have had no opportunity to make but for my own voluntary
- communications? at a time too, when, as it falls out, I have another very
- sensible disappointment to struggle with?
- I imagine, if there be such a thing as future punishment, it must be none
- of the smallest mortifications, that a new devil shall be punished by a
- worse old one. And, take that! And, take that! to have the old satyr
- cry to the screaming sufferer, laying on with a cat-o'-nine-tails, with a
- star of burning brass at the end of each: and, for what! for what!---Why,
- if the truth may be fairly told, for not being so bad a devil as myself.
- Thou art, surely, casuist good enough to know, (what I have insisted
- upon* heretofore,) that the sin of seducing a credulous and easy girl, is
- as great as that of bringing to your lure an incredulous and watchful
- one.
- * See Vol. IV. Letter XVII.
- However ungenerous an appearance what I am going to say may have from my
- pen, let me tell thee, that if such a woman as Miss Harlowe chose to
- enter into the matrimonial state, [I am resolved to disappoint thee in
- thy meditated triumph over my rage and despair!] and, according to the
- old patriarchal system, to go on contributing to get sons and daughters,
- with no other view than to bring them up piously, and to be good and
- useful members of the commonwealth, what a devil had she to do, to let
- her fancy run a gadding after a rake? one whom she knew to be a rake?
- Oh! but truly she hoped to have the merit of reclaiming him. She had
- formed pretty notions how charming it would look to have a penitent of
- her own making dangling at her side at church, through an applauding
- neighbourhood: and, as their family increased, marching with her thither,
- at the head of their boys and girls, processionally, as it were, boasting
- of the fruits of their honest desires, as my good lord bishop has it in
- his license. And then, what a comely sight, all kneeling down together
- in one pew, according to eldership as we have seen in effigy, a whole
- family upon some old monument, where the honest chevalier in armour is
- presented kneeling, with up-lifted hands, and half a dozen jolter-headed
- crop-eared boys behind him, ranged gradatim, or step-fashion according to
- age and size, all in the same posture--facing his pious dame, with a ruff
- about her neck, and as many whey-faced girls all kneeling behind her: an
- altar between them, and an open book upon it: over their heads
- semiluminary rays darting from gilded clouds, surrounding an achievement-
- motto, IN COELO SALUS--or QUIES--perhaps, if they have happened to live
- the usual married life of brawl and contradiction.
- It is certainly as much my misfortune to have fallen in with Miss
- Clarissa Harlowe, were I to have valued my reputation or ease, as it is
- that of Miss Harlowe to have been acquainted with me. And, after all,
- what have I done more than prosecute the maxim, by which thou and I and
- every rake are governed, and which, before I knew this lady, we have
- pursued from pretty girl to pretty girl, as fast as we have set one down,
- taking another up;--just as the fellows do with their flying coaches and
- flying horses at a country fair----with a Who rides next! Who rides
- next!
- But here in the present case, to carry on the volant metaphor, (for I
- must either be merry, or mad,) is a pretty little miss just come out of
- her hanging-sleeve-coat, brought to buy a pretty little fairing; for the
- world, Jack, is but a great fair, thou knowest; and, to give thee serious
- reflection for serious, all its joys but tinselled hobby-horses, gilt
- gingerbread, squeaking trumpets, painted drums, and so forth.
- Now behold this pretty little miss skimming from booth to booth, in a
- very pretty manner. One pretty little fellow called Wyerley, perhaps;
- another jiggeting rascal called Biron, a third simpering varlet of the
- name of Symmes, and a more hideous villain than any of the reset, with a
- long bag under his arm, and parchment settlements tagged to his heels,
- yelped Solmes: pursue her from raree-show to raree-show, shouldering upon
- one another at every turn, stopping when she stops, and set a spinning
- again when she moves. And thus dangled after, but still in the eye of
- her watchful guardians, traverses the pretty little miss through the
- whole fair, equally delighted and delighting: till at last, taken with
- the invitation of the laced-hat orator, and seeing several pretty little
- bib-wearers stuck together in the flying-coaches, cutting safely the
- yielding air, in the one-go-up the other go-down picture-of-the-world
- vehicle, and all with as little fear as wit, is tempted to ride next.
- In then suppose she slily pops, when none of her friends are near her:
- And if, after two or three ups and downs, her pretty head turns giddy,
- and she throws herself out of the coach when at its elevation, and so
- dashes out her pretty little brains, who can help it?--And would you hang
- the poor fellow, whose professed trade it was to set the pretty little
- creature a flying?
- 'Tis true, this pretty little miss, being a very pretty little miss,
- being a very much-admired little miss, being a very good little miss, who
- always minded her book, and had passed through her sampler-doctrine with
- high applause; had even stitched out, in gaudy propriety of colors, an
- Abraham offering up Isaac, a Sampson and the Philistines; and flowers,
- and knots, and trees, and the sun and the moon, and the seven stars, all
- hung up in frames with glasses before them, for the admiration of her
- future grand children: who likewise was entitled to a very pretty little
- estate: who was descended from a pretty little family upwards of one
- hundred years gentility; which lived in a very pretty little manner,
- respected a very little on their own accounts, a great deal on her's:----
- For such a pretty little miss as this to come to so great a misfortune,
- must be a very sad thing: But, tell me, would not the losing of any
- ordinary child, of any other less considerable family, or less shining or
- amiable qualities, have been as great and heavy a loss to that family, as
- the losing this pretty little miss could be to her's?
- To descend to a very low instance, and that only as to personality; hast
- thou any doubt, that thy strong-muscled bony-faced was as much admired by
- thy mother, as if it had been the face of a Lovelace, or any other
- handsome fellow? And had thy picture been drawn, would she have forgiven
- the painter, had he not expressed so exactly thy lineaments, as that
- every one should have discerned the likeness? The handsome likeness is
- all that is wished for. Ugliness made familiar to us, with the
- partiality natural to fond parents, will be beauty all the world over.--
- Do thou apply.
- But, alas! Jack, all this is but a copy of my countenance, drawn to evade
- thy malice!--Though it answer thy unfriendly purpose to own it, I cannot
- forbear to own it, that I am stung to the very soul with this unhappy--
- accident, must I call it!--Have I nobody, whose throat, either for
- carelessness or treachery, I ought to cut, in order to pacify my
- vengeance?
- When I reflect upon my last iniquitous intention, the first outrage so
- nobly resented, as well as, so far as she was able, so nobly resisted, I
- cannot but conclude, that I was under the power of fascination from these
- accursed Circes; who, pretending to know their own sex, would have it,
- that there is in every woman a yielding, or a weak-resisting moment to be
- met with: and that yet, and yet, and yet, I had not tried enough; but
- that, if neither love nor terror should enable me to hit that lucky
- moment, when, by help of their cursed arts, she was once overcome, she
- would be for ever overcome:--appealing to all my experience, to all my
- knowledge of the sex, for justification of their assertion.
- My appeal to experience, I own, was but too favourable to their argument:
- For dost thou think I could have held my purpose against such an angel as
- this, had I ever before met with a woman so much in earnest to defend her
- honour against the unwearied artifices and perseverance of the man she
- loved? Why then were there not more examples of a virtue so immovable?
- Or, why was this singular one to fall to my lot? except indeed to double
- my guilt; and at the same time to convince all that should hear her
- story, that there are angels as well as devils in the flesh?
- So much for confession; and for the sake of humouring my conscience; with
- a view likewise to disarm thy malice by acknowledgement: since no one shall
- say worse of me, than I will of myself on this occasion.
- One thing I will nevertheless add, to show the sincerity of my contrition
- --'Tis this, that if thou canst by any means find her out within these
- three days, or any time before she has discovered the stories relating to
- Captain Tomlinson and her uncle to be what they are; and if thou canst
- prevail upon her to consent, I will actually, in thy presence and his,
- (he to represent her uncle,) marry her.
- I am still in hopes it may be so--she cannot be long concealed--I have
- already set all engines at work to find her out! and if I do, what
- indifferent persons, [and no one of her friends, as thou observest, will
- look upon her,] will care to embroil themselves with a man of my figure,
- fortune, and resolution? Show her this part, then, or any other part of
- this letter, as thy own discretion, if thou canst find her: for, after
- all, methinks, I would be glad that this affair, which is bad enough in
- itself, should go off without worse personal consequences to any body
- else: and yet it runs in my mind, I know not why, that, sooner or later
- it will draw a few drops of blood after it; except she and I can make it
- up between ourselves. And this may be another reason why she should not
- carry her resentment too far--not that such an affair would give me much
- concern neither, were I to choose any man of men, for I heartily hate all
- her family, but herself; and ever shall.
- ***
- Let me add, that the lady's plot to escape appears to me no extraordinary
- one. There was much more luck than probability that it should do: since,
- to make it succeed, it was necessary that Dorcas and Will., and Sinclair
- and her nymphs, should be all deceived, or off their guard. It belongs
- to me, when I see them, to give them my hearty thanks that they were; and
- that their selfish care to provide for their own future security, should
- induce them to leave their outward door upon their bolt-latch, and be
- curs'd to them.
- Mabell deserves a pitch suit and a bonfire, rather than the lustring; and
- as her clothes are returned, le the lady's be put to her others, to be
- sent to her when it can be told whither--but not till I give the word
- neither; for we must get the dear fugitive back again if possible.
- I suppose that my stupid villain, who knew not such a goddess-shaped lady
- with a mien so noble, from the awkward and bent-shouldered Mabell, has
- been at Hampstead to see after her. And yet I hardly think she would go
- thither. He ought to go through every street where bills for lodgings
- are up, to inquire after a new-comer. The houses of such as deal in
- women's matters, and tea, coffee, and such-like, are those to be inquired
- at for her. If some tidings be not quickly heard of her, I would not
- have either Dorcas, Will., or Mabell, appear in my sight, whatever their
- superiors think fit to do.
- This, though written in character, is a very long letter, considering it
- is not a narrative one, or a journal of proceedings, like most of my
- former; for such will unavoidably and naturally, as I may say, run into
- length. But I have so used myself to write a great deal of late, that I
- know not how to help it. Yet I must add to its length, in order to
- explain myself on a hint I gave at the beginning of it; which was, that I
- have another disappointment, besides this of Miss Harlowe's escape, to
- bemoan.
- And what dost thou think it is? Why, the old Peer, pox of his tough
- constitution, (for that malady would have helped him on,) has made shift
- by fire and brimstone, and the devil knows what, to force the gout to
- quit the counterscarp of his stomach, just as it had collected all its
- strength, in order to storm the citadel of his heart. In short, they
- have, by the mere force of stink-pots, hand-granades, and pop-guns,
- driven the slow-working pioneer quite out of the trunk into the
- extremities; and there it lies nibbling and gnawing upon his great toe;
- when I had a fair end of the distemper and the distempered.
- But I, who could write to thee of laudanum, and the wet cloth, formerly,
- yet let 8000£. a year slip through my fingers, when I had entered upon it
- more than in imagination, [for I had begun to ask the stewards questions,
- and to hear them talk of fines and renewals, and such sort of stuff,]
- deserve to be mortified.
- Thou canst not imagine how differently the servants, and even my cousins,
- look upon me, since yesterday, to what they did before. Neither the one
- nor the other bow or courtesy half so low--nor am I a quarter so often
- his honour and your honour, as I was within these few hours, with the
- former: and as to the latter--it is cousin Bobby again, with the usual
- familiarity, instead of Sir, and Sir, and If you please, Mr. Lovelace.
- And now they have the insolence to congratulate me on the recovery of the
- best of uncles; while I am forced to seem as much delighted as they,
- when, would it do me good, I could sit down and cry my eyes out.
- I had bespoke my mourning in imagination, after the example of a certain
- foreign minister, who, before the death, or even last illness of Charles
- II., as honest White Kennet tells us, had half exhausted Blackwell-hall
- of its sables--an indication, as the historian would insinuate, that the
- monarch was to be poisoned, and the ambassador in the secret.--And yet,
- fool that I was, I could not take the hint--What the devil does a man
- read history for, if he cannot profit by the examples he find in it?
- But thus, Jack, is an observation of the old Peer's verified, that one
- misfortune seldom comes alone: and so concludes
- Thy doubly mortified
- LOVELACE.
- LETTER L
- MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE, TO MISS HOWE
- WEDNESDAY NIGHT, JUNE 28.
- O MY DEAREST MISS HOWE!
- Once more have I escaped--But, alas! I, my best self, have not escaped!
- --Oh! your poor Clarissa Harlowe! you also will hate me, I fear!----
- Yet you won't, when you know all!
- But no more of my self! my lost self. You that can rise in a morning to
- be blest, and to bless; and go to rest delighted with your own
- reflections, and in your unbroken, unstarting slumbers, conversing with
- saints and angels, the former only more pure than yourself, as they have
- shaken off the incumbrance of body; you shall be my subject, as you have
- long, long, been my only pleasure. And let me, at awful distance, revere
- my beloved Anna Howe, and in her reflect upon what her Clarissa Harlowe
- once was!
- ***
- Forgive, O forgive my rambling. My peace is destroyed. My intellects
- are touched. And what flighty nonsense must you read, if you now will
- vouchsafe to correspond with me, as formerly!
- O my best, my dearest, my only friend! what a tale have I to unfold!--
- But still upon self, this vile, this hated self!--I will shake it off, if
- possible; and why should I not, since I think, except one wretch, I hate
- nothing so much? Self, then, be banished from self one moment (for I
- doubt it will be for no longer) to inquire after a dearer object, my
- beloved Anna Howe!--whose mind, all robed in spotless white, charms and
- irradiates--But what would I say?----
- ***
- And how, my dearest friend, after this rhapsody, which on re-perusal, I
- would not let go, but to show you what a distracted mind dictates to my
- trembling pen! How do you? You have been very ill, it seems. That you
- are recovered, my dear, let me hear. That your mother is well, pray let
- me hear, and hear quickly. This comfort surely is owing to me; for if
- life is no worse than chequer-work, I must now have a little white to
- come, having seen nothing but black, all unchequered dismal black, for a
- great, great while.
- ***
- And what is all this wild incoherence for? It is only to beg to know how
- you have been, and how you do now, by a line directed for Mrs. Rachel
- Clark, at Mr. Smith's, a glove-shop, in King-street, Covent-garden; which
- (although my abode is secret to every body else) will reach the hands of
- --your unhappy--but that's not enough----
- Your miserable
- CLARISSA HARLOWE.
- LETTER LI
- MRS. HOWE, TO MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE
- [SUPERSCRIBED AS DIRECTED IN THE PRECEDING.]
- FRIDAY, JUNE 30.
- MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE,
- You will wonder to receive a letter from me. I am sorry for the great
- distress you seem to be in. Such a hopeful young lady as you were! But
- see what comes of disobedience to parents!
- For my part; although I pity you, yet I much more pity your poor father
- and mother. Such education as they gave you! such improvement as you
- made! and such delight as they took in you!--And all come to this!--
- But pray, Miss, don't make my Nancy guilt of your fault; which is that of
- disobedience. I have charged her over and over not to correspond with
- one who had made such a giddy step. It is not to her reputation, I am
- sure. You know that I so charged her; yet you go on corresponding
- together, to my very great vexation; for she has been very perverse upon
- it more than once. Evil communication, Miss--you know the rest.
- Here, people cannot be unhappy by themselves, but they must invoke their
- friends and acquaintance whose discretion has kept them clear of their
- errors, into near as much unhappiness as if they had run into the like
- of their own heads! Thus my poor daughter is always in tears and grief.
- And she has postponed her own felicity, truly, because you are unhappy.
- If people, who seek their own ruin, could be the only sufferers by their
- headstrong doings, it were something: But, O Miss, Miss! what have you to
- answer for, who have made as many grieved hearts as have known you! The
- whole sex is indeed wounded by you: For, who but Miss Clarissa Harlowe
- was proposed by every father and mother for a pattern for their
- daughters?
- I write a long letter, where I proposed to say but a few words; and those
- to forbid your writing to my Nancy: and this as well because of the false
- step you have made, as because it will grieve her poor heart, and do you
- no good. If you love her, therefore, write not to her. Your sad letter
- came into my hands, Nancy being abroad: and I shall not show it her: for
- there would be no comfort for her, if she saw it, nor for me, whose
- delight she is--as you once was to your parents.--
- But you seem to be sensible enough of your errors now.--So are all giddy
- girls, when it is too late: and what a crest-fallen figure then do the
- consequences of their self-willed obstinacy and headstrongness compel
- them to make!
- I may say too much: only as I think it proper to bear that testimony
- against your rashness which it behoves every careful parent to bear: and
- none more than
- Your compassionating, well-wishing
- ANNABELLA HOWE.
- I send this by a special messenger, who has business only so far as
- Barnet, because you shall have no need to write again; knowing how
- you love writing: and knowing, likewise, that misfortune makes people
- plaintive.
- LETTER LII
- MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE, TO MRS. HOWE.
- SATURDAY, JULY 1.
- Permit me, Madam, to trouble you with a few lines, were it only to thank
- you for your reproofs; which have nevertheless drawn fresh streams of
- blood from a bleeding heart.
- My story is a dismal story. It has circumstances in it that would engage
- pity, and possibly a judgment not altogether unfavourable, were those
- circumstances known. But it is my business, and shall be all my
- business, to repent of my failings, and not endeavour to extenuate them.
- Nor will I seek to distress your worthy mind. If I cannot suffer alone,
- I will make as few parties as I can in my sufferings. And, indeed, I
- took up my pen with this resolution when I wrote the letter which has
- fallen into your hands. It was only to know, and that for a very
- particular reason, as well as for affection unbounded, if my dear Miss
- Howe, from whom I had not heard of a long time, were ill; as I had been
- told she was; and if so, how she now does. But my injuries being recent,
- and my distresses having been exceeding great, self would crowd into my
- letter. When distressed, the human mind is apt to turn itself to every
- one, in whom it imagined or wished an interest, for pity and consolation.
- --Or, to express myself better, and more concisely, in your own words,
- misfortune makes people plaintive: And to whom, if not to a friend, can
- the afflicted complain?
- Miss Howe being abroad when my letter came, I flatter myself that she is
- recovered. But it would be some satisfaction to me to be informed if she
- has been ill. Another line from your hand would be too great a favour:
- but if you will be pleased to direct any servant to answer yes, or no, to
- that question, I will not be farther troublesome.
- Nevertheless, I must declare, that my Miss Howe's friendship was all the
- comfort I had, or expected to have in this world; and a line from her
- would have been a cordial to my fainting heart. Judge then, dearest
- Madam, how reluctantly I must obey your prohibition--but yet I will
- endeavour to obey it; although I should have hoped, as well from the
- tenor of all that has passed between Miss Howe and me, as from her
- established virtue, that she could not be tainted by evil communication,
- had one or two letters been permitted. This, however, I ask not for,
- since I think I have nothing to do but to beg of God (who, I hope, has
- not yet withdrawn his grace from me, although he has pleaded to let loose
- his justice upon my faults) to give me a truly broken spirit, if it be
- not already broken enough, and then to take to his mercy
- The unhappy
- CLARISSA HARLOWE.
- Two favours, good Madam, I have to beg of you.--The first,--that you will
- not let any of my relations know that you have heard from me. The
- other,--that no living creature be apprized where I am to be heard of,
- or directed to. This is a point that concerns me more than I can
- express.--In short, my preservation from further evils may depend upon
- it.
- LETTER LIII
- MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE, TO HANNAH BURTON
- THURSDAY, JUNE 29.
- MY GOOD HANNAH,
- Strange things have happened to me, since you were dismissed my service
- (so sorely against my will) and your pert fellow servant set over me.
- But that must all be forgotten now--
- How do you, my Hannah? Are you recovered of your illness? If you are,
- do you choose to come and be with me? Or can you conveniently?
- I am a very unhappy creature, and, being among all strangers, should be
- very glad to have you with me, of whose fidelity and love I have had so
- many acceptable instances.
- Living or dying, I will endeavour to make it worth your while, my Hannah.
- If you are recovered, as I hope, and if you have a good place, it may be
- they would bear with your absence, and suffer somebody in your room for a
- month or so: and, by that time, I hope to be provided for, and you may
- then return to your place.
- Don't let any of my friends know of this my desire: whether you can come
- or not.
- I am at Mr. Smith's, a hosier's and glove shop, in King-street,
- Covent-garden.
- You must direct to me by the name of Rachel Clark.
- Do, my good Hannah, come if you can to your poor young mistress, who
- always valued you, and always will whether you come or not.
- I send this to your mother at St. Alban's, not knowing where to direct
- to you. Return me a line, that I may know what to depend upon: and I
- shall see you have not forgotten the pretty hand you were taught, in
- happy days, by
- Your true friend,
- CLARISSA HARLOWE.
- LETTER LIV
- HANNAH BURTON
- [IN ANSWER.]
- MONDAY, JULY 3.
- HONORED MADDAM,
- I have not forgot to write, and never will forget any thing you, my dear
- young lady, was so good as to larn me. I am very sorrowful for your
- misfortens, my dearest young lady; so sorrowfull, I do not know what to
- do. Gladd at harte would I be to be able to come to you. But indeed I
- have not been able to stir out of my rome here at my mother's ever since
- I was forsed to leave my plase with a roomatise, which has made me quite
- and clene helpless. I will pray for you night and day, my dearest, my
- kindest, my goodest young lady, who have been so badly used; and I am
- very sorry I cannot come to do you love and sarvice; which will ever be
- in the harte of mee to do, if it was in my power: who am
- Your most dutiful servant to command,
- HANNAH BURTON.
- LETTER LV
- MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE, TO MRS. JUDITH NORTON
- THURSDAY, JUNE 29.
- MY DEAR MRS. NORTON,
- I address myself to you, after a very long silence, (which, however, was
- not owing either to want of love or duty,) principally to desire you to
- satisfy me in two or three points, which it behoves me to know.
- My father, and all the family, I am informed, are to be at my uncle
- Harlowe's this day, as usual. Pray acquaint me, if they have been there?
- And if they were cheerful on the anniversary occasion? And also, if you
- have heard of any journey, or intended journey, of my brother, in company
- with Captain Singleton and Mr. Solmes?
- Strange things have happened to me, my dear, worthy and maternal friend--
- very strange things!--Mr. Lovelace has proved a very barbarous and
- ungrateful man to me. But, God be praised, I have escaped from him.
- Being among absolute strangers (though I think worthy folks) I have
- written to Hannah Burton to come and be with me. If the good creature
- fall in your way, pray encourage her to come to me. I always intended
- to have her, she knows: but hoped to be in happier circumstances.
- Say nothing to any of my friends that you have heard from me.
- Pray, do you think my father would be prevailed upon, if I were to
- supplicate him by letter, to take off the heavy curse he laid upon me at
- my going from Harlowe-place? I can expect no other favour from him. But
- that being literally fulfilled as to my prospects in this life, I hope it
- will be thought to have operated far enough; and my heart is so weak!--it
- is very weak!--But for my father's own sake--what should I say!--Indeed I
- hardly know how I ought to express myself on this sad subject!--but it
- will give ease to my mind to be released from it.
- I am afraid my Poor, as I used to call the good creatures to whose
- necessities I was wont to administer by your faithful hands, have missed
- me of late. But now, alas! I am poor myself. It is not the least
- aggravation of my fault, nor of my regrets, that with such inclinations
- as God has given me, I have put it our of my power to do the good I once
- pleased myself to think I was born to do. It is a sad thing, my dearest
- Mrs. Nortin, to render useless to ourselves and the world, by our own
- rashness, the talents which Providence has intrusted to us, for the
- service of both.
- But these reflections are now too late; and perhaps I ought to have kept
- them to myself. Let me, however, hope that you love me still. Pray let
- me hope that you do. And then, notwithstanding my misfortunes, which
- have made me seem ungrateful to the kind and truly maternal pains you
- have taken with me from my cradle, I shall have the happiness to think
- that there is one worthy person, who hates not
- The unfortunate
- CLARISSA HARLOWE.
- Pray remember me to my foster-brother. I hope he continues dutiful and
- good to you.
- Be pleased to direct for Rachel Clark, at Mr. Smith's, in King-street,
- Covent-garden. But keep the direction an absolute secret.
- LETTER LVI
- MRS. NORTON
- [IN ANSWER.]
- SATURDAY, JULY 1.
- Your letter, my dearest young lady, cuts me to the heart! Why will you
- not let me know all your distresses?--Yet you have said enough!
- My son is very good to me. A few hours ago he was taken with a feverish
- disorder. But I hope it will go off happily, if his ardour for business
- will give him the recess from it which his good master is willing to
- allow him. He presents his duty to you, and shed tears at hearing your
- sad letter read.
- You have been misinformed as to your family's being at your uncle
- Harlowe's. They did not intend to be there. Nor was the day kept at
- all. Indeed, they have not stirred out, but to church (and that but
- three times) ever since the day you went away.--Unhappy day for them, and
- for all who know you!--To me, I am sure, most particularly so!--My heart
- now bleeds more and more for you.
- I have not heard a syllable of such a journey as you mentioned of your
- brother, Captain Singleton, and Mr. Solmes. There has been some talk
- indeed of your brother's setting out for his northern estates: but I have
- not heard of it lately.
- I am afraid no letter will be received from you. It grieves me to tell
- you so, my dearest young lady. No evil can have happened to you, which
- they do not expect to hear of; so great is their antipathy to the wicked
- man, and so bad is his character.
- I cannot but think hardly of their unforgiveness: but there is no judging
- for others by one's self. Nevertheless I will add, that, if you had had
- as gentle spirits as mine, these evils had never happened either to them
- or to you. I knew your virtue, and your love of virtue, from your very
- cradle; and I doubted not but that, with God's grace, would always be
- your guard. But you could never be driven; nor was there occasion to
- drive you--so generous, so noble, so discreet.--But how does my love of
- your amiable qualities increase my affliction; as these recollections
- must do your's!
- You are escaped, my dearest Miss--happily, I hope--that is to say, with
- your honour--else, how great must be your distress!--Yet, from your
- letter, I dread the worst.
- I am very seldom at Harlowe-place. The house is not the house it used to
- be, since you went from it. Then they are so relentless! And, as I
- cannot say harsh things of the beloved child of my heart, as well as
- bosom, they do not take it amiss that I stay away.
- Your Hannah left her place ill some time ago! and, as she is still at her
- mother's at St. Alban's, I am afraid she continues ill. If so, as you
- are among strangers, and I cannot encourage you at present to come into
- these parts, I shall think it my duty to attend you (let it be taken as
- it will) as soon as my Tommy's indisposition will permit; which I hope
- will be soon.
- I have a little money by me. You say you are poor yourself.--How
- grievous are those words from one entitled and accustomed to affluence!--
- Will you be so good to command it, my beloved young lady?--It is most of
- it your own bounty to me. And I should take a pride to restore it to its
- original owner.
- Your Poor bless you, and pray for you continually. I have so managed
- your last benevolence, and they have been so healthy, and have had such
- constant employ, that it has held out; and will hold out till the happier
- times return, which I continually pray for.
- Let me beg of you, my dearest young lady, to take to yourself all those
- aids which good persons, like you, draw from RELIGION, in support of
- their calamities. Let your sufferings be what they will, I am sure you
- have been innocent in your intention. So do not despond. None are made
- to suffer above what they can, and therefore ought to bear.
- We know not the methods of Providence, nor what wise ends it may have to
- serve in its seemingly-severe dispensations to its poor creatures.
- Few persons have greater reason to say this than myself. And since we
- are apt in calamities to draw more comfort from example than precept, you
- will permit me to remind you of my own lot: For who has had a greater
- share of afflictions than myself?
- To say nothing of the loss of an excellent mother, at a time of life when
- motherly care is most wanted; the death of a dear father, who was an
- ornament to his cloth, (and who had qualified me to be his scribe and
- amanuensis,) just as he came within view of a preferment which would have
- made his family easy, threw me friendless into the wide world; threw me
- upon a very careless, and, which was much worse, a very unkind husband.
- Poor man!--but he was spared long enough, thank God, in a tedious
- illness, to repent of his neglected opportunities, and his light
- principles; which I have always thought of with pleasure, although I was
- left the more destitute for his chargeable illness, and ready to be
- brought to bed, when he died, of my Tommy.
- But this very circumstance, which I thought the unhappiest that I could
- have been left in, (so short-sighted is human prudence!) became the happy
- means of recommending me to your mother, who, in regard to my character,
- and in compassion to my very destitute circumstances, permitted me, as I
- made a conscience of not parting with my poor boy, to nurse both you and
- him, born within a few days of each other. And I have never since wanted
- any of the humble blessings which God has made me contented with.
- Nor have I known what a very great grief was, from the day of my poor
- husband's death till the day that your parents told me how much they were
- determined that you should have Mr. Solmes; when I was apprized not only
- of your aversion to him, but how unworthy he was of you: for then I began
- to dread the consequences of forcing so generous a spirit; and, till
- then, I never feared Mr. Lovelace, attracting as was his person, and
- specious his manners and address. For I was sure you would never have
- him, if he gave you not good reason to be convinced of his reformation:
- nor till your friends were as well satisfied in it as yourself. But that
- unhappy misunderstanding between your brother and Mr. Lovelace, and their
- joining so violently to force you upon Mr. Solmes, did all that mischief,
- which has cost you and them so dear, and poor me all my peace! Oh! what
- has not this ungrateful, this double-guilty man to answer for!
- Nevertheless, you know not what God has in store for you yet!--But if you
- are to be punished all your days here, for example sake, in a case of
- such importance, for your one false step, be pleased to consider, that
- this life is but a state of probation; and if you have your purification
- in it, you will be the more happy. Nor doubt I, that you will have the
- higher reward hereafter for submitting to the will of Providence here
- with patience and resignation.
- You see, my dearest Miss Clary, that I make no scruple to call the step
- you took a false one. In you it was less excusable than it would have
- been in any other young lady; not only because of your superior talents,
- but because of the opposition between your character and his: so that, if
- you had been provoked to quit your father's house, it need not to have
- been with him. Nor needed I, indeed, but as an instance of my impartial
- love, to have written this to you.*
- * Mrs. Norton, having only the family representation and invectives to
- form her judgment upon, knew not that Clarissa had determined against
- going off with Mr. Lovelace; nor how solicitous she had been to procure
- for herself any other protection than his, when she apprehended that, if
- she staid, she had no way to avoid being married to Mr. Solmes.
- After this, it will have an unkind, and perhaps at this time an
- unseasonable appearance, to express my concern that you have not before
- favoured me with a line. Yet if you can account to yourself for your
- silence, I dare say I ought to be satisfied; for I am sure you love me:
- as I both love and honour you, and ever will, and the more for your
- misfortunes.
- One consolation, methinks, I have, even when I am sorrowing for your
- calamities; and that is, that I know not any young person so qualified to
- shine the brighter for the trials she may be exercised with: and yet it
- is a consolation that ends in adding to my regrets for your afflictions,
- because you are blessed with a mind so well able to bear prosperity, and
- to make every body round you the better for it!--But I will forbear till
- I know more.
- Ruminating on every thing your melancholy letter suggests, and
- apprehending, from the gentleness of your mind, the amiableness of your
- person, and your youth, the farther misfortunes and inconveniencies to
- which you may possibly be subjected, I cannot conclude without asking for
- your leave to attend you, and that in a very earnest manner--and I beg of
- you not to deny me, on any consideration relating to myself, or even to
- the indisposition of my other beloved child, if I can be either of use or
- of comfort to you. Were it, my dearest young lady, but for two or three
- days, permit me to attend you, although my son's illness should increase,
- and compel me to come down again at the end of those two or three days.--
- I repeat my request, likewise, that you will command from me the little
- sum remaining in the hands of your bounty to your Poor, as well as that
- dispensed to
- Your ever-affectionate and faithful servant,
- JUDITH NORTON.
- LETTER LVII
- MISS CL. HARLOWE, TO LADY BETTY LAWRANCE
- THURSDAY, JUNE 29.
- MADAM,
- I hope you'll excuse the freedom of this address, from one who has not
- the honour to be personally known to you, although you must have heard
- much of Clarissa Harlowe. It is only to beg the favour of a line from
- your Ladyship's hand, (by the next post, if convenient,) in answer to the
- following questions:
- 1. Whether you wrote a letter, dated, as I have a memorandum, Wedn. June
- 7, congratulating your nephew Lovelace on his supposed nuptials, as
- reported to you by Mr. Spurrier, your Ladyship's steward, as from one
- Captain Tomlinson:--and in it reproaching Mr. Lovelace, as guilty of
- slight, &c. in not having acquainted your Ladyship and the family
- with his marriage?
- 2. Whether your ladyship wrote to Miss Montague to meet you at Reading,
- in order to attend you to your cousin Leeson's, in Albemarle-street;
- on your being obliged to be in town on your old chancery affair, I
- remember are the words? and whether you bespoke your nephew's
- attendance there on Sunday night the 11th?
- 3. Whether your Ladyship and Miss Montague did come to town at that
- time; and whether you went to Hampstead, on Monday, in a hired coach
- and four, your own being repairing, and took from thence to town with
- the young creature whom you visited there?
- Your Ladyship will probably guess, that the questions are not asked for
- reasons favourable to your nephew Lovelace. But be the answer what it
- will, it can do him no hurt, nor me any good; only that I think I owe it
- to my former hopes, (however deceived in them,) and even to charity, that
- a person, of whom I was once willing to think better, should not prove so
- egregiously abandoned, as to be wanting, in every instance, to that
- veracity which is indispensable in the character of a gentleman.
- Be pleased, Madam, to direct to me, (keeping the direction a secret for
- the present,) to be left at the Belle-Savage, on Ludgate hill, till
- called for. I am
- Your Ladyship's most humble servant,
- CLARISSA HARLOWE.
- LETTER LVIII
- LADY BETTY LAWRANCE, TO MISS CL. HARLOWE
- SATURDAY, JULY 1.
- DEAR MADAM,
- I find that all is not as it should be between you and my nephew
- Lovelace. It will very much afflict me, and all his friends, if he has
- been guilty of any designed baseness to a lady of your character and
- merit.
- We have been long in expectation of an opportunity to congratulate you
- and ourselves upon an event most earnestly wished for by us all; since
- our hopes of him are built upon the power you have over him: for if ever
- man adored a woman, he is that man, and you, Madam, are that woman.
- Miss Montague, in her last letter to me, in answer to one of mine,
- inquiring if she knew from him whether he could call you his, or was
- likely soon to have that honour, has these words: 'I know not what to
- make of my cousin Lovelace, as to the point your Ladyship is so earnest
- about. He sometimes says he is actually married to Miss Cl. Harlowe: at
- other times, that it is her own fault if he be not.--He speaks of her not
- only with love but with reverence: yet owns, that there is a
- misunderstanding between them; but confesses that she is wholly
- faultless. An angel, and not a woman, he says she is: and that no man
- living can be worthy of her.'--
- This is what my niece Montague writes.
- God grant, my dearest young lady, that he may not have so heinously
- offended you that you cannot forgive him! If you are not already
- married, and refuse to be his, I shall lose all hopes that he ever will
- marry, or be the man I wish him to be. So will Lord M. So will Lady
- Sarah Sadleir.
- I will now answer your questions: but indeed I hardly know what to write,
- for fear of widening still more the unhappy difference between you. But
- yet such a young lady must command every thing from me. This then is my
- answer:
- I wrote not any letter to him on or about the 7th of June.
- Neither I nor my steward know any such man as Captain Tomlinson.
- I wrote not to my niece to meet me at Reading, nor to accompany me to my
- cousin Leeson's in town.
- My chancery affair, though, like most chancery affairs, it be of long
- standing, is, nevertheless, now in so good a way, that it cannot
- give me occasion to go to town.
- Nor have I been in town these six months: nor at Hampstead for
- years.
- Neither shall I have any temptation to go to town, except to pay my
- congratulatory compliments to Mrs. Lovelace. On which occasion I
- should go with the greatest pleasure; and should hope for the
- favour of your accompanying me to Glenham-hall, for a month at
- least.
- Be what will the reason of your inquiry, let me entreat you, my dear
- young lady, for Lord M.'s sake; for my sake; for this giddy man's sake,
- soul as well as body; and for all our family's sakes; not to suffer this
- answer to widen differences so far as to make you refuse him, if he
- already has not the honour of calling you his; as I am apprehensive he
- has not, by your signing by your family-name.
- And here let me offer to you my mediation to compose the difference
- between you, be it what it will. Your cause, my dear young lady, cannot
- be put into the hands of any body living more devoted to your service,
- than into those of
- Your sincere admirer, and humble servant,
- ELIZ. LAWRANCE.
- LETTER LIX
- MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE, TO MRS. HODGES
- ENFIELD, JUNE 22.
- MRS. HODGES,
- I am under a kind of necessity to write to you, having no one among my
- relations to whom I dare write, or hope a line from if I did. It is but
- to answer a question. It is this:
- Whether you know any such man as Captain Tomlinson? and, if you do,
- whether he be very intimate with my uncle Harlowe?
- I will describe his person lest, possibly, he should go by another name
- among you; although I know not why he should.
- 'He is a thin, tallish man, a little pock-fretten, of a sallowish
- complexion. Fifty years of age, or more. Of good aspect when he looks
- up. He seems to be a serious man, and one who knows the world. He
- stoops a little in the shoulders. Is of Berkshire. His wife of
- Oxfordshire; and has several children. He removed lately into your parts
- form Northamptonshire.'
- I must desire you, Mrs. Hodges, that you will not let my uncle, nor any
- of my relations, know that I write to you.
- You used to say, that you would be glad to have it in your power to serve
- me. That, indeed, was in my prosperity. But, I dare say, you will not
- refuse me in a particular that will oblige me, without hurting yourself.
- I understand that my father, mother, and sister, and I presume, my
- brother, and my uncle Antony, are to be at my uncle Harlowe's this day.
- God preserve them all, and may they rejoice in many happy birth-days!
- You will write six words to me concerning their healths.
- Direct, for a particular reason, to Mrs. Dorothy Salcombe, to be left
- till called for, at the Four Swans Inn, Bishopsgate-street.
- You know my hand-writing well enough, were not the contents of the letter
- sufficient to excuse my name, or any other subscription, than that of
- Your friend.
- LETTER LX
- MRS. HODGES
- [IN ANSWER.]
- SAT. JULY 2.
- MADDAM,
- I return you an anser, as you wish me to doe. Master is acquented with
- no sitch man. I am shure no sitch ever came to our house. And master
- sturs very little out. He has no harte to stur out. For why? Your
- obstinacy makes um not care to see one another. Master's birth-day never
- was kept soe before: for not a sole heere: and nothing but sikeing and
- sorrowin from master to think how it yused to bee.
- I axed master, if soe bee he knowed sitch a man as one Captain Tomlinson?
- but said not whirfor I axed. He sed, No, not he.
- Shure this is no trix nor forgery bruing against master by one Tomlinson
- --Won knows not what company you may have been forsed to keep, sen you
- went away, you knoe, Maddam; but Lundon is a pestilent plase; and that
- 'Squire Luvless is a devil (for all he is sitch a like gentleman to look
- to) as I hev herd every boddy say; and think as how you have found by
- thiss.
- I truste, Maddam, you wulde not let master cum to harme, if you knoed it,
- by any body who may pretend to be acquented with him: but for fere, I
- querid with myself if I shulde not tell him. But I was willin to show
- you, that I wulde plessure you in advarsity, if advarsity be your lott,
- as well as prosperity; for I am none of those that woulde doe otherwiss.
- Soe no more from
- Your humble sarvent, to wish you well,
- SARAH HODGES.
- LETTER LXI
- MISS CL. HARLOWE, TO LADY BETTY LAWRANCE.
- MONDAY, JULY 3.
- MADAM,
- I cannot excuse myself from giving your Ladyship this one trouble more;
- to thank you, as I most heartily do, for your kind letter.
- I must own to you, Madam, that the honour of being related to ladies as
- eminent for their virtue as for their descent, was at first no small
- inducement with me to lend an ear to Mr. Lovelace's address. And the
- rather, as I was determined, had it come to effect, to do every thing in
- my power to deserve your favourable opinion.
- I had another motive, which I knew would of itself give me merit with
- your whole family; a presumptuous one, (a punishably presumptuous one, as
- it has proved,) in the hope that I might be an humble mean in the hand of
- Providence to reclaim a man, who had, as I thought, good sense enough to
- acknowledge the intended obligation, whether the generous hope were to
- succeed or not.
- But I have been most egregiously mistaken in Mr. Lovelace; the only man,
- I persuade myself, pretending to be a gentleman, in whom I could have
- been so much mistaken: for while I was endeavouring to save a drowning
- wretch, I have been, not accidentally, but premeditatedly, and of set
- purpose, drawn in after him. And he has had the glory to add to the list
- of those he has ruined, a name, that, I will be bold to say, would not
- have disparaged his own. And this, Madam, by means that would shock
- humanity to be made acquainted with.
- My whole end is served by your Ladyship's answer to the questions I took
- the liberty to put to you in writing. Nor have I a wish to make the
- unhappy man more odious to you than is necessary to excuse myself for
- absolutely declining your offered mediation.
- When your Ladyship shall be informed of the following particulars:
- That after he had compulsorily, as I may say, tricked me into the act of
- going off with him, he could carry me to one of the vilest houses, as it
- proved, in London:
- That he could be guilty of a wicked attempt, in resentment of which, I
- found means to escape from him to Hampstead:
- That, after he had found me out there (I know not how) he could procure
- two women, dressed out richly, to personate your Ladyship and Miss
- Montague; who, under pretence of engaging me to make a visit in town to
- your cousin Leeson, (promising to return with me that evening to
- Hampstead,) betrayed me back again to the vile house: where, again made a
- prisoner, I was first robbed of my senses; and then of my honour. Why
- should I seek to conceal that disgrace from others which I cannot hide
- from myself?
- When your Ladyship shall know, that, in the shocking progress to this
- ruin, wilful falsehoods, repeated forgeries, (particularly of one letter
- from your Ladyship, another from Miss Montague, and a third from Lord M.)
- and numberless perjuries, were not the least of his crimes: you will
- judge, that I can have no principles that will make me worthy of an
- alliance with ladies of your's and your noble sister's character, if I
- could not from my soul declare, that such an alliance can never now take
- place.
- I will not offer to clear myself entirely of blame: but, as to him, I
- have no fault to accuse myself of: my crime was, the corresponding with
- him at first, when prohibited so to do by those who had a right to my
- obedience; made still more inexcusable, by giving him a clandestine
- meeting, which put me into the power of his arts. And for this I am
- content to be punished: thankful, that at last I have escaped from him;
- and have it in my power to reject so wicked a man for my husband: and
- glad, if I may be a warning, since I cannot be an example: which once
- (very vain, and very conceited, as I was) I proposed to myself to be.
- All the ill I wish him is, that he may reform; and that I may be the last
- victim to his baseness. Perhaps this desirable wish may be obtained,
- when he shall see how his wickedness, his unmerited wickedness! to a poor
- creature, made friendless by his cruel arts, will end.
- I conclude with my humble thanks to your Ladyship for your favourable
- opinion of me; and with the assurance that I will be, while life is lent
- me,
- Your Ladyship's grateful and obliged servant,
- CLARISSA HARLOWE.
- LETTER LXII
- MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE, TO MRS. NORTON
- SUNDAY EVENING, JULY 2.
- How kindly, my beloved Mrs. Norton, do you soothe the anguish of a
- bleeding heart! Surely you are mine own mother; and, by some
- unaccountable mistake, I must have been laid to a family that, having
- newly found out, or at least suspected, the imposture, cast me from their
- hearts, with the indignation that such a discovery will warrant.
- Oh! that I had been indeed your own child, born to partake of your humble
- fortunes, an heiress only to that content in which you are so happy! then
- should I have had a truly gentle spirit to have guided my ductile heart,
- which force and ungenerous usage sit so ill upon: and nothing of what has
- happened would have been.
- But let me take heed that I enlarge not, by impatience, the breach
- already made in my duty by my rashness! since, had I not erred, my
- mother, at least, could never have been thought hard-hearted and
- unforgiving. Am I not then answerable, not only for my own faults, but
- for the consequences of them; which tend to depreciate and bring disgrace
- upon a maternal character never before called in question?
- It is kind, however, in you to endeavour to extenuate the faults of one
- so greatly sensible of it: and could it be wiped off entirely, it would
- render me more worthy of the pains you have taken in my education: for it
- must add to your grief, as it does to my confusion, that, after such
- promising beginnings, I should have so behaved as to be a disgrace
- instead of a credit to you and my other friends.
- But that I may not make you think me more guilty than I am, give me leave
- briefly to assure you, that, when my story is known, I shall be
- to more compassion than blame, even on the score of going away with Mr.
- Lovelace.
- As to all that happened afterwards, let me only say, that although I must
- call myself a lost creature as to this world, yet have I this consolation
- left me, that I have not suffered either for want of circumspection, or
- through careful credulity or weakness. Not one moment was I off my
- guard, or unmindful of your early precepts. But (having been enabled to
- baffle many base contrivances) I was at last ruined by arts the most
- inhuman. But had I not been rejected by every friend, this low-hearted
- man had not dared, nor would have had opportunity, to treat me as he has
- treated me.
- More I cannot, at this time, nor need I say: and this I desire you to
- keep to yourself, lest resentments should be taken up when I am gone,
- that may spread the evil which I hope will end with me.
- I have been misinformed, you say, as to my principal relations being at
- my uncle Harlowe's. The day, you say, was not kept. Nor have my brother
- and Mr. Solmes--Astonishing!--What complicated wickedness has this
- wretched man to answer for!--Were I to tell you, you would hardly believe
- that there could have been such a heart in man.--
- But one day you may know the whole story!--At present I have neither
- inclination nor words--O my bursting heart!--Yet a happy, a wished
- relief!--Were you present my tears would supply the rest!
- ***
- I resume my pen!
- And so you fear no letter will be received from me. But DON'T grieve to
- tell me so! I expect every thing bad--and such is my distress, that had
- you not bid me hope for mercy from the throne of mercy, I should have
- been afraid that my father's dreadful curse would be completed with
- regard to both worlds.
- For here, an additional misfortune!--In a fit of phrensical heedlessness,
- I sent a letter to my beloved Miss Howe, without recollecting her private
- address; and it has fallen into her angry mother's hands: and so that
- dear friend perhaps has anew incurred displeasure on my account. And
- here too your worthy son is ill; and my poor Hannah, you think, cannot
- come to me--O my dear Mrs. Norton, will you, can you censure those whose
- resentments against me Heaven seems to approve of? and will you acquit
- her whom that condemns?
- Yet you bid me not despond.--I will not, if I can help it. And, indeed,
- most seasonable consolation has your kind letter afforded me.--Yet to God
- Almighty do I appeal, to avenge my wrongs, and vindicate my inno----
- But hushed be my stormy passions!--Have I not but this moment said that
- your letter gave me consolation?--May those be forgiven who hinder my
- father from forgiving me!--and this, as to them, shall be the harshest
- thing that shall drop from my pen.
- But although your son should recover, I charge you, my dear Mrs. Norton,
- that you do not think of coming to me. I don't know still but your
- mediation with my mother (although at present your interposition would be
- so little attended to) may be of use to procure me the revocation of that
- most dreadful part of my father's curse, which only remains to be
- fulfilled. The voice of Nature must at last be heard in my favour,
- surely. It will only plead at first to my friends in the still conscious
- plaintiveness of a young and unhardened beggar. But it will grow more
- clamorous when I have the courage to be so, and shall demand, perhaps,
- the paternal protection from farther ruin; and that forgiveness, which
- those will be little entitled to expect, for their own faults, who shall
- interpose to have it refused to me, for an accidental, not a premeditated
- error: and which, but for them, I had never fallen into.
- But again, impatiency, founded perhaps on self-partiality, that strange
- misleader! prevails.
- Let me briefly say, that it is necessary to my present and future hopes
- that you keep well with my family. And moreover, should you come, I may
- be traced out by that means by the most abandoned of men. Say not then
- that you think you ought to come up to me, let it be taken as it will:--
- For my sake, let me repeat, (were my foster-brother recovered, as I hope
- he is,) you must not come. Nor can I want your advice, while I can
- write, and you can answer me. And write I will as often as I stand in
- need of your counsel.
- Then the people I am now with seem to be both honest and humane: and
- there is in the same house a widow-lodger, of low fortunes, but of great
- merit:--almost such another serious and good woman as the dear one to
- whom I am now writing; who has, as she says, given over all other
- thoughts of the world but such as should assist her to leave it happily.
- --How suitable to my own views!--There seems to be a comfortable
- providence in this at least--so that at present there is nothing of
- exigence; nothing that can require, or even excuse, your coming, when so
- many better ends may be answered by your staying where you are. A time
- may come, when I shall want your last and best assistance: and then, my
- dear Mrs. Norton--and then, I will speak it, and embrace it with all my
- whole heart--and then, will it not be denied me by any body.
- You are very obliging in your offer of money. But although I was forced
- to leave my clothes behind me, yet I took several things of value with
- me, which will keep me from present want. You'll say, I have made a
- miserable hand of it--so indeed I have--and, to look backwards, in a very
- little while too.
- But what shall I do, if my father cannot be prevailed upon to recall his
- malediction? O my dear Mrs. Norton, what a weight must a father's curse
- have upon a heart so appreciative as mine!--Did I think I should ever
- have a father's curse to deprecate? And yet, only that the temporary
- part of it is so terribly fulfilled, or I should be as earnest for its
- recall, for my father's sake, as for my own!
- You must not be angry with me that I wrote not to you before. You are
- very right and very kind to say you are sure I love you. Indeed I do.
- And what a generosity, [so like yourself!] is there in your praise, to
- attribute to me more than I merit, in order to raise an emulation to me
- to deserve your praises!--you tell me what you expect from me in the
- calamities I am called upon to bear. May I behave answerably!
- I can a little account to myself for my silence to you, my kind, my dear
- maternal friend! How equally sweetly and politely do you express
- yourself on this occasion! I was very desirous, for your sake, as well
- as for my own, that you should have it to say that we did not correspond:
- had they thought we did, every word you could have dropt in my favour
- would have been rejected; and my mother would have been forbid to see
- you, or pay any regard to what you should say.
- Then I had sometimes better and sometimes worse prospects before me. My
- worst would only have troubled you to know: my better made me frequently
- hope, that, by the next post, or the next, and so on for weeks, I should
- have the best news to impart to you that then could happen: cold as the
- wretch had made my heart to that best.--For how could I think to write to
- you, with a confession that I was not married, yet lived in the house
- (for I could not help it) with such a man?--Who likewise had given it out
- to several, that we were actually married, although with restrictions
- that depended on the reconciliation with my friends? And to disguise the
- truth, or be guilty of a falsehood, either direct or equivocal, that was
- what you had never taught me.
- But I might have written to you for advice, in my precarious situation,
- perhaps you will think. But, indeed, my dear Mrs. Norton, I was not lost
- for want of advice. And this will appear clear to you from what I have
- already hinted, were I to explain myself no further:--For what need had
- the cruel spoiler to have recourse to unprecedented arts--I will speak
- out plainer still, (but you must not at present report it,) to stupifying
- potions, and to the most brutal and outrageous force, had I been wanting
- in my duty?
- A few words more upon this grievous subject--
- When I reflect upon all that has happened to me, it is apparent, that
- this generally-supposed thoughtless seducer has acted by me upon a
- regular and preconcerted plan of villany.
- In order to set all his vile plots in motion, nothing was wanting, from
- the first, but to prevail upon me, either by force or fraud, to throw
- myself into his power: and when this was effected, nothing less than the
- intervention of the paternal authority, (which I had not deserved to be
- exerted in my behalf,) could have saved me from the effect of his deep
- machinations. Opposition from any other quarter would but too probably
- have precipitated his barbarous and ungrateful violence: and had you
- yourself been with me, I have reason now to think, that somehow or other
- you would have suffered in endeavouring to save me: for never was there,
- as now I see, a plan of wickedness more steadily and uniformly pursued
- than his has been, against an unhappy creature who merited better of him:
- but the Almighty has thought fit, according to the general course of His
- providence, to make the fault bring on its own punishment: but surely not
- in consequence of my father's dreadful imprecation, 'That I might be
- punished here,' [O my mamma Norton, pray with me, if so, that here it
- stop!] 'by the very wretch in whom I had placed my wicked confidence!'
- I am sorry, for your sake, to leave off so heavily. Yet the rest must be
- brief.
- Let me desire you to be secret in what I have communicated to you; at
- least till you have my consent to divulge it.
- God preserve to you your more faultless child!
- I will hope for His mercy, although I should not obtain that of any
- earthly person.
- And I repeat my prohibition:--You must not think of coming up to
- Your ever dutiful
- CL. HARLOWE.
- The obliging person, who left your's for me this day, promised to call
- to-morrow, to see if I should have any thing to return. I would
- not lose so good an opportunity.
- LETTER LXIII
- MRS. NORTON, TO MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE
- MONDAY NIGHT, JULY 3.
- O the barbarous villany of this detestable man! And is there a man in
- the world who could offer violence to so sweet a creature!
- And are you sure you are now out of his reach?
- You command me to keep secret the particulars of the vile treatment you
- have met with; or else, upon an unexpected visit which Miss Harlowe
- favoured me with, soon after I had received your melancholy letter, I
- should have been tempted to own I had heard from you, and to have
- communicated to her such parts of your two letters as would have
- demonstrated your penitence, and your earnestness to obtain the
- revocation of your father's malediction, as well as his protection from
- outrages that may still be offered to you. But then your sister would
- probably have expected a sight of the letters, and even to have been
- permitted to take them with her to the family.
- Yet they must one day be acquainted with the sad story:--and it is
- impossible but they must pity you, and forgive you, when they know your
- early penitence, and your unprecedented sufferings; and that you have
- fallen by the brutal force of a barbarous ravisher, and not by the vile
- arts of a seducing lover.
- The wicked man gives it out at Lord M.'s, as Miss Harlowe tells me, that
- he is actually married to you--yet she believes it not: nor had I the
- heart to let her know the truth.
- She put it close to me, Whether I had not corresponded with you from the
- time of your going away? I could safely tell her, (as I did,) that I had
- not: but I said, that I was well informed, that you took extremely to
- heart your father's imprecation; and that, if she would excuse me, I
- would say it would be a kind and sisterly part, if she would use her
- interest to get you discharged from it.
- Among other severe things, she told me, that my partial fondness for you
- made me very little consider the honour of the rest of the family: but,
- if I had not heard this from you, she supposed I was set on by Miss Howe.
- She expressed herself with a good deal of bitterness against that young
- lady: who, it seems, every where, and to every body, (for you must think
- that your story is the subject of all conversations,) rails against your
- family; treating them, as your sister says, with contempt, and even with
- ridicule.
- I am sorry such angry freedoms are taken, for two reasons; first, because
- such liberties never do any good. I have heard you own, that Miss Howe
- has a satirical vein; but I should hope that a young lady of her sense,
- and right cast of mind, must know that the end of satire is not to
- exasperate, but amend; and should never be personal. If it be, as my
- good father used to say, it may make an impartial person suspect that the
- satirist has a natural spleen to gratify; which may be as great a fault
- in him, as any of those which he pretends to censure and expose in
- others.
- Perhaps a hint of this from you will not be thrown away.
- My second reason is, That these freedoms, from so warm a friend to you as
- Miss Howe is known to be, are most likely to be charged to your account.
- My resentments are so strong against this vilest of men, that I dare not
- touch upon the shocking particulars which you mention of his baseness.
- What defence, indeed, could there be against so determined a wretch,
- after you was in his power? I will only repeat my earnest supplication
- to you, that, black as appearances are, you will not despair. Your
- calamities are exceeding great; but then you have talents proportioned to
- your trials. This every body allows.
- Suppose the worst, and that your family will not be moved in your favour,
- your cousin Morden will soon arrive, as Miss Harlowe told me. If he
- should even be got over to their side, he will however see justice done
- you; and then may you live an exemplary life, making hundreds happy, and
- teaching young ladies to shun the snares in which you have been so
- dreadfully entangled.
- As to the man you have lost, is an union with such a perjured heart as
- his, with such an admirable one as your's, to be wished for? A base,
- low-hearted wretch, as you justly call him, with all his pride of
- ancestry; and more an enemy to himself with regard to his present and
- future happiness than to you, in the barbarous and ungrateful wrongs he
- has done you: I need not, I am sure, exhort you to despise such a man as
- this, since not to be able to do so, would be a reflection upon a sex to
- which you have always been an honour.
- Your moral character is untainted: the very nature of your sufferings, as
- you will observe, demonstrates that. Cheer up, therefore, your dear
- heart, and do not despair; for is it not GOD who governs the world, and
- permits some things, and directs others, as He pleases? and will He not
- reward temporary sufferings, innocently incurred, and piously supported,
- with eternal felicity?--And what, my dear, is this poor needle's point of
- NOW to a boundless eternity?
- My heart, however, labours under a double affliction: For my poor boy is
- very, very bad--a violent fever--nor can it be brought to intermit.--Pray
- for him, my dearest Miss--for his recovery, if God see fit.--I hope God
- will see fit--if not (how can I bear to suppose that!) Pray for me, that
- he will give me that patience and resignation which I have been wishing
- to you. I am, my dearest young lady,
- Your ever affectionate
- JUDITH NORTON.
- LETTER LXIV
- MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE, TO MRS. JUDITH NORTON
- THURSDAY, JULY 6.
- I ought not, especially at this time, to add to your afflictions--but yet
- I cannot help communicating to you (who now are my only soothing friend)
- a new trouble that has befallen me.
- I had but one friend in the world, beside you; and she is utterly
- displeased with me.* It is grievous, but for one moment, to lie under a
- beloved person's censure; and this through imputations that affect one's
- honour and prudence. There are points so delicate, you know, my dear
- Mrs. Norton, that it is a degree of dishonour to have a vindication of
- one's self from them appear to be necessary. In the present case, my
- misfortune is, that I know not how to account, but by guess (so subtle
- have been the workings of the dark spirit I have been unhappily entangled
- by) for some of the facts that I am called upon to explain.
- Miss Howe, in short, supposes she has found a flaw in my character. I
- have just now received her severe letter--but I shall answer it, perhaps,
- in better temper, if I first consider your's: for indeed my patience is
- almost at an end. And yet I ought to consider, that faithful are the
- wounds of a friend. But so many things at once! O my dear Mrs. Norton,
- how shall so young a scholar in the school of affliction be able to bear
- such heavy and such various evils!
- But to leave this subject for a while, and turn to your letter.
- I am very sorry Miss Howe is so lively in her resentments on my account.
- I have always blamed her very freely for her liberties of this sort with
- my friends. I once had a good deal of influence over her kind heart, and
- she made all I said a law to her. But people in calamity have little
- weight in any thing, or with any body. Prosperity and independence are
- charming things on this account, that they give force to the counsels of
- a friendly heart; while it is thought insolence in the miserable to
- advise, or so much as to remonstrate.
- Yet is Miss Howe an invaluable person: And is it to be expected that she
- should preserve the same regard for my judgment that she had before I
- forfeited all title to discretion? With what face can I take upon me to
- reproach a want of prudence in her? But if I can be so happy as to
- re-establish myself in her ever-valued opinion, I shall endeavour to
- enforce upon her your just observation on this head.
- You need not, you say, exhort me to despise such a man as him, by whom I
- have suffered--indeed you need not: for I would choose the cruellest
- death rather than to be his. And yet, my dear Mrs. Norton, I will own to
- you, that once I could have loved him.--Ungrateful man!--had he permitted
- me to love him, I once could have loved him. Yet he never deserved
- love. And was not this a fault?--But now, if I can but keep out of his
- hands, and obtain a last forgiveness, and that as well for the sake of my
- dear friends' future reflections, as for my own present comfort, it is
- all I wish for.
- Reconciliation with my friends I do not expect; nor pardon from them; at
- least, till in extremity, and as a viaticum.
- O my beloved Mrs. Norton, you cannot imagine what I have suffered!--But
- indeed my heart is broken!--I am sure I shall not live to take possession
- of that independence, which you think would enable me to atone, in some
- measure, for my past conduct.
- While this is my opinion, you may believe I shall not be easy till I can
- obtain a last forgiveness.
- I wish to be left to take my own course in endeavouring to procure this
- grace. Yet know I not, at present, what that course shall be.
- I will write. But to whom is my doubt. Calamity has not yet given me
- the assurance to address myself to my FATHER. My UNCLES (well as they
- once loved me) are hard hearted. They never had their masculine passions
- humanized by the tender name of FATHER. Of my BROTHER I have no hope. I
- have then but my MOTHER, and my SISTER, to whom I can apply.--'And may I
- not, my dearest Mamma, be permitted to lift up my trembling eye to your
- all-cheering, and your once more than indulgent, your fond eye, in hopes
- of seasonable mercy to the poor sick heart that yet beats with life drawn
- from your own dearer heart?--Especially when pardon only, and not
- restoration, is implored?'
- Yet were I able to engage my mother's pity, would it not be a mean to
- make her still more unhappy than I have already made her, by the
- opposition she would meet with, were she to try to give force to that
- pity?
- To my SISTER, then, I think, I will apply--Yet how hard-hearted has my
- sister been!--But I will not ask for protection; and yet I am in hourly
- dread that I shall want protection.--All I will ask for at present
- (preparative to the last forgiveness I will implore) shall be only to be
- freed from the heavy curse that seems to have operated as far is it can
- operate as to this life--and, surely, it was passion, and not intention,
- that carried it so far as to the other!
- But why do I thus add to your distresses?--It is not, my dear Mrs.
- Norton, that I have so much feeling for my own calamity that I have none
- for your's: since your's is indeed an addition to my own. But you have
- one consolation (a very great one) which I have not:--That your
- afflictions, whether respecting your more or your less deserving child,
- rise not from any fault of your own.
- But what can I do for you more than pray?--Assure yourself, that in every
- supplication I put up for myself, I will with equal fervour remember both
- you and your son. For I am and ever will be
- Your truly sympathising and dutiful
- CLARISSA HARLOWE.
- LETTER LXV
- MISS HOWE, TO MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE
- [SUPERSCRIBED FOR MRS. RACHEL CLARK, &c.]
- WEDNESDAY, JULY 5.
- MY DEAR CLARISSA,
- I have at last heard from you from a quarter I little expected.
- From my mother!
- She had for some time seen me uneasy and grieving; and justly supposed it
- was about you: and this morning dropt a hint, which made me conjecture
- that she must have heard something of you more than I knew. And when she
- found that this added to my uneasiness, she owned she had a letter in her
- hands of your's, dated the 29th of June, directed for me.
- You may guess, that this occasioned a little warmth, that could not be
- wished for by either.
- [It is surprising, my dear, mighty surprising! that knowing the
- prohibition I lay under of corresponding with you, you could send a
- letter for me to our own house: since it must be fifty to one that it
- would fall into my mother's hands, as you find it did.]
- In short, she resented that I should disobey her: I was as much concerned
- that she should open and withhold from me my letters: and at last she was
- pleased to compromise the matter with me by giving up the letter, and
- permitting me to write to you once or twice: she to see the contents of
- what I wrote. For, besides the value she has for you, she could not but
- have greater curiosity to know the occasion of so sad a situation as your
- melancholy letter shows you to be in.
- [But I shall get her to be satisfied with hearing me read what I write;
- putting in between hooks, thus [], what I intend not to read to her.]
- Need I to remind you, Miss Clarissa Harlowe, of three letters I wrote to
- you, to none of which I had any answer; except to the first, and that of
- a few lines only, promising a letter at large, though you were well
- enough, the day after you received my second, to go joyfully back again
- with him to the vile house? But more of these by-and-by. I must hasten
- to take notice of your letter of Wednesday last week; which you could
- contrive should fall into my mother's hands.
- Let me tell you, that that letter has almost broken my heart. Good God!
- --What have you brought yourself to, Miss Clarissa Harlowe?--Could I have
- believed, that after you had escaped from the miscreant, (with such
- mighty pains and earnestness escaped,) and after such an attempt as he
- had made, you would have been prevailed upon not only to forgive him, but
- (without being married too) to return with him to that horrid house!--A
- house I had given you such an account of!--Surprising!----What an
- intoxicating thing is this love?--I always feared, that you, even you,
- were not proof against its inconsistent effects.
- You your best self have not escaped!--Indeed I see not how you could
- expect to escape.
- What a tale have you to unfold!--You need not unfold it, my dear: I would
- have engaged to prognosticate all that has happened, had you but told me
- that you would once more have put yourself in his power, after you had
- taken such pains to get out of it.
- Your peace is destroyed!--I wonder not at it: since now you must reproach
- yourself for a credulity so ill-placed.
- Your intellect is touched!--I am sure my heart bleeds for you! But,
- excuse me, my dear, I doubt your intellect was touched before you left
- Hampstead: or you would never have let him find you out there; or, when
- he did, suffer him to prevail upon you to return to the horrid brothel.
- I tell you, I sent you three letters: The first of which, dated the 7th
- and 8th of June* (for it was written at twice) came safely to your hands,
- as you sent me word by a few lines dated the 9th: had it not, I should
- have doubted my own safety; since in it I give you such an account of the
- abominable house, and threw such cautions in your way, in relation to
- that Tomlinson, as the more surprised me that you could think of going
- back to it again, after you had escaped from it, and from Lovelace.--O
- my dear--but nothing now will I ever wonder at!
- * See Vol. V. Letter XX.
- The second, dated June 10,* was given into your own hand at Hampstead, on
- Sunday the 11th, as you was lying upon a couch, in a strange way,
- according to my messenger's account of you, bloated, and flush-coloured;
- I don't know how.
- * See Letter VII. of this volume.
- The third was dated the 20th of June.* Having not heard one word from
- you since the promising billet of the 9th, I own I did not spare you in
- it. I ventured it by the usual conveyance, by that Wilson's, having no
- other: so cannot be sure you received it. Indeed I rather think you
- might not; because in your's, which fell into my mother's hands, you make
- no mention of it: and if you had had it, I believe it would have touched
- you too much to have been passed by unnoticed.
- * See Letter XXX. of this volume.
- You have heard, that I have been ill, you say. I had a cold, indeed; but
- it was so slight a one that it confined me not an hour. But I doubt not
- that strange things you have heard, and been told, to induce you to take
- the step you took. And, till you did take that step (the going back with
- this villain, I mean,) I knew not a more pitiable case than your's: since
- every body must have excused you before, who knew how you were used at
- home, and was acquainted with your prudence and vigilance. But, alas! my
- dear, we see that the wisest people are not to be depended upon, when
- love, like an ignis fatuus, holds up its misleading lights before their
- eyes.
- My mother tells me, she sent you an answer, desiring you not to write to
- me, because it would grieve me. To be sure I am grieved; exceedingly
- grieved; and, disappointed too, you must permit me to say. For I had
- always thought that there never was such a woman, at your years, in the
- world.
- But I remember once an argument you held, on occasion of a censure passed
- in company upon an excellent preacher, who was not a very excellent
- liver: preaching and practising, you said, required very different
- talents:* which, when united in the same person, made the man a saint; as
- wit and judgment, going together, constituted a genius.
- * See Vol. II. Letter IV.
- You made it out, I remember, very prettily: but you never made it out,
- excuse me, my dear, more convincingly, than by that part of your late
- conduct, which I complain of.
- My love for you, and my concern for your honour, may possibly have made
- me a little of the severest. If you think so, place it to its proper
- account; to that love, and to that concern: which will but do justice
- to
- Your afflicted and faithful
- A.H.
- P.S. My mother would not be satisfied without reading my letter herself;
- and that before I had fixed all the proposed hooks. She knows, by
- this means, and has excused, our former correspondence.
- She indeed suspected it before: and so she very well might; knowing my
- love of you.
- She has so much real concern for your misfortunes, that, thinking it will
- be a consolation to you, and that it will oblige me, she consents
- that you shall write to me the particulars at large of your say
- story. But it is on condition that I show her all that has passed
- between us, relating to yourself and the vilest of men. I have the
- more cheerfully complied, as the communication cannot be to your
- disadvantage.
- You may therefore write freely, and direct to our own house.
- My mother promises to show me the copy of her letter to you, and your
- reply to it; which latter she has but just told me of. She already
- apologizes for the severity of her's: and thinks the sight of your
- reply will affect me too much. But, having her promise, I will not
- dispense with it.
- I doubt her's is severe enough. So I fear you will think mine: but you
- have taught me never to spare the fault for the friend's sake; and
- that a great error ought rather to be the more inexcusable in the
- person we value, than in one we are indifferent to; because it is a
- reflection upon our choice of that person, and tends to a breach of
- the love of mind, and to expose us to the world for our partiality.
- To the love of mind, I repeat; since it is impossible but the
- errors of the dearest friend must weaken our inward opinion of that
- friend; and thereby lay a foundation for future distance, and
- perhaps disgust.
- God grant that you may be able to clear your conduct after you had
- escaped from Hampstead; as all before that time was noble,
- generous, and prudent; the man a devil and you a saint!----Yet I
- hope you can; and therefore expect it from you.
- I send by a particular hand. He will call for your answer at your own
- appointment.
- I am afraid this horrid wretch will trace out by the post-offices where
- you are, if not careful.
- To have money, and will, and head, to be a villain, is too much for the
- rest of the world, when they meet in one man.
- LETTER LXVI
- MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE, TO MISS HOWE
- THURSDAY, JULY 6.
- Few young persons have been able to give more convincing proofs than
- myself how little true happiness lies in the enjoyment of our own wishes.
- To produce one instance only of the truth of this observation; what would
- I have given for weeks past, for the favour of a letter from my dear Miss
- Howe, in whose friendship I placed all my remaining comfort! Little did
- I think, that the next letter she would honour me with, should be in such
- a style, as should make me look more than once at the subscription, that
- I might be sure (the name not being written at length) that it was not
- signed by another A.H. For surely, thought I, this is my sister
- Arabella's style: surely Miss Howe (blame me as she pleases in other
- points) could never repeat so sharply upon her friend, words written in
- the bitterness of spirit, and in the disorder of head; nor remind her,
- with asperity, and with mingled strokes of wit, of an argument held in
- the gaiety of a heart elated with prosperous fortunes, (as mine then
- was,) and very little apprehensive of the severe turn that argument would
- one day take against herself.
- But what have I, sink in my fortunes; my character forfeited; my honour
- lost, [while I know it, I care not who knows it;] destitute of friends,
- and even of hope; what have I to do to show a spirit of repining and
- expostulation to a dear friend, because she is not more kind than a
- sister?----
- You have till now, my dear, treated me with great indulgence. If it was
- with greater than I had deserved, I may be to blame to have built upon
- it, on the consciousness that I deserve it now as much as ever. But I
- find, by the rising bitterness which will mingle with the gall in my ink,
- that I am not yet subdued enough to my condition.--I lay down my pen for
- one moment.
- ***
- Pardon me, my Miss Howe. I have recollected myself: and will endeavour
- to give a particular answer to your letter; although it will take me up
- too much time to think of sending it by your messenger to-morrow: he can
- put off his journey, he says, till Saturday. I will endeavour to have
- the whole narrative ready for you by Saturday.
- But how to defend myself in every thing that has happened, I cannot tell:
- since in some part of the time, in which my conduct appears to have been
- censurable, I was not myself; and to this hour know not all the methods
- taken to deceive and ruin me.
- You tell me, that in your first letter you gave me such an account of the
- vile house I was in, and such cautions about that Tomlinson, as made you
- wonder how I could think of going back.
- Alas, my dear! I was tricked, most vilely tricked back, as you shall
- hear in its place.
- Without knowing the house was so very vile a house from your intended
- information, I disliked the people too much, ever voluntarily to have
- returned to it. But had you really written such cautions about
- Tomlinson, and the house, as you seem to have purposed to do, they must,
- had they come in time, have been of infinite service to me. But not one
- word of either, whatever was your intention, did you mention to me, in
- that first of the three letters you so warmly TELL me you did send me. I
- will enclose it to convince you.*
- * The letter she encloses was Mr. Lovelace's forged one. See Vol. V.
- Letter XXX.
- But your account of your messenger's delivering to me your second
- letter, and the description he gives of me, as lying upon a couch, in a
- strange way, bloated, and flush-coloured; you don't know how, absolutely
- puzzles and confounds me.
- Lord have mercy upon the poor Clarissa Harlowe! What can this mean!--Who
- was the messenger you sent? Was he one of Lovelace's creatures too!--
- Could nobody come near me but that man's confederates, either setting out
- so, or made so? I know not what to make of any one syllable of this!
- Indeed I don't.
- Let me see. You say, this was before I went from Hampstead! My
- intellects had not then been touched!--nor had I ever been surprised by
- wine, [strange if I had!]: How then could I be found in such a strange
- way, bloated and flush-coloured; you don't know how!--Yet what a vile,
- what a hateful figure has your messenger represented me to have made!
- But indeed I know nothing of any messenger from you.
- Believing myself secure at Hampstead, I staid longer there than I would
- have done, in hopes of the letter promised me in your short one of the
- 9th, brought me by my own messenger, in which you undertake to send for
- and engage Mrs. Townsend in my favour.*
- * See Vol. V. Letter XXIX.
- I wondered I had not heard from you: and was told you were sick; and, at
- another time, that your mother and you had had words on my account, and
- that you had refused to admit Mr. Hickman's visits upon it: so that I
- supposed, at one time, that you were not able to write; at another, that
- your mother's prohibition had its due force with you. But now I have no
- doubt that the wicked man must have intercepted your letter; and I wish
- he found not means to corrupt your messenger to tell you so strange a
- story.
- It was on Sunday, June 11, you say, that the man gave it me. I was at
- church twice that day with Mrs. Moore. Mr. Lovelace was at her house the
- while, where he boarded, and wanted to have lodged; but I would not
- permit that, though I could not help the other. In one of these spaces
- it must be that he had time to work upon the man. You'll easily, my
- dear, find that out, by inquiring the time of his arrival at Mrs. Moore's
- and other circumstances of the strange way he pretended to see me in, on
- a couch, and the rest.
- Had any body seen me afterwards, when I was betrayed back to the vile
- house, struggling under the operation of wicked potions, and robbed
- indeed of my intellects (for this, as you shall hear, was my dreadful
- case,) I might then, perhaps, have appeared bloated and flush-coloured,
- and I know not how myself. But were you to see your poor Clarissa, now
- (or even to have seen her at Hampstead before she suffered the vilest of
- all outrages,) you would not think her bloated or flush-coloured: indeed
- you would not.
- In a word, it could not be me your messenger saw; nor (if any body) who
- it was can I divine.
- I will now, as briefly as the subject will permit, enter into the darker
- part of my sad story: and yet I must be somewhat circumstantial, that you
- may not think me capable of reserve or palliation. The latter I am not
- conscious that I need. I should be utterly inexcusable were I guilty of
- the former to you. And yet, if you know how my heart sinks under the
- thoughts of a recollection so painful, you would pity me.
- As I shall not be able, perhaps, to conclude what I have to write in even
- two or three letters, I will begin a new one with my story; and send the
- whole of it together, although written at different periods, as I am
- able.
- Allow me a little pause, my dear, at this place; and to subscribe myself
- Your ever affectionate and obliged,
- CLARISSA HARLOWE.
- LETTER LXVII
- MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE, TO MISS HOWE
- [REFERRED TO IN LETTER XII.]
- THURSDAY NIGHT.
- He had found me out at Hampstead: strangely found me out; for I am still
- at a loss to know by what means.
- I was loth, in my billet of the 6th,* to tell you so, for fear of giving
- you apprehensions for me; and besides, I hoped then to have a shorter and
- happier issue to account to you for, through your assistance, than I met
- with.
- * See Vol. V. Letter XXXI.
- [She then gives a narrative of all that passed at Hampstead between
- herself, Mr. Lovelace, Capt. Tomlinson, and the women there, to the
- same effect with that so amply given by Mr. Lovelace.]
- Mr. Lovelace, finding all he could say, and all Captain Tomlinson could
- urge, ineffectual, to prevail upon me to forgive an outrage so flagrantly
- premeditated; rested all his hopes on a visit which was to be paid me by
- Lady Betty Lawrance and Miss Montague.
- In my uncertain situation, my prospects all so dark, I knew not to whom I
- might be obliged to have recourse in the last resort: and as those ladies
- had the best of characters, insomuch that I had reason to regret that I
- had not from the first thrown myself upon their protection, (when I had
- forfeited that of my own friends,) I thought I would not shun an
- interview with them, though I was too indifferent to their kinsman to
- seek it, as I doubted not that one end of their visit would be to
- reconcile me to him.
- On Monday, the 12th of June, these pretended ladies came to Hampstead;
- and I was presented to them, and they to me by their kinsman.
- They were richly dressed, and stuck out with jewels; the pretended Lady
- Betty's were particularly very fine.
- They came in a coach-and-four, hired, as was confessed, while their own
- was repairing in town: a pretence made, I now perceive, that I should not
- guess at the imposture by the want of the real lady's arms upon it. Lady
- Betty was attended by her woman, who she called Morrison; a modest
- country-looking person.
- I had heard, that Lady Betty was a fine woman, and that Miss Montague was
- a beautiful young lady, genteel, and graceful, and full of vivacity.--
- Such were these impostors: and having never seen either of them, I had
- not the least suspicion, that they were not the ladies they personated;
- and being put a little out of countenance by the richness of their
- dresses, I could not help, (fool that I was!) to apologize for my own.
- The pretended Lady Betty then told me, that her nephew had acquainted
- them with the situation of affairs between us. And although she could
- not but say, that she was very glad that she had not put such a slight
- upon his Lordship and them, as report had given them cause to apprehend,
- (the reasons for which report, however, she must have approved of;) yet
- it had been matter of great concern to her, and to her niece Montague,
- and would to the whole family, to find so great a misunderstanding
- subsisting between us, as, if not made up, might distance all their
- hopes.
- She could easily tell who was in fault, she said. And gave him a look
- both of anger and disdain; asking him, How it was possible for him to
- give an offence of such a nature to so charming a lady, [so she called
- me,] as should occasion a resentment so strong?
- He pretended to be awed into shame and silence.
- My dearest niece, said she, and took my hand, (I must call you niece, as
- well from love, as to humour your uncle's laudable expedient,) permit me
- to be, not an advocate, but a mediatrix for him; and not for his sake, so
- much as for my own, my Charlotte's, and all our family's. The indignity
- he has offered to you, may be of too tender a nature to be inquired into.
- But as he declares, that it was not a premeditated offence; whether, my
- dear, [for I was going to rise upon it in my temper,] it were or not; and
- as he declares his sorrows for it, (and never did creature express a
- deeper sorrow for any offence than he); and as it is a repairable one; let
- us, for this one time, forgive him; and thereby lay an obligation upon
- this man of errors--Let US, I say, my dear: for, Sir, [turning to him,]
- an offence against such a peerless lady as this, must be an offence
- against me, against your cousin here, and against all the virtuous of our
- sex.
- See, my dear, what a creature he had picked out! Could you have thought
- there was a woman in the world who could thus express herself, and yet be
- vile? But she had her principal instructions from him, and those written
- down too, as I have reason to think: for I have recollected since, that I
- once saw this Lady Betty, (who often rose from her seat, and took a turn
- to the other end of the room with such an emotion, as if the joy of her
- heart would not let her sit still) take out a paper from her stays, and
- look into it, and put it there again. She might oftener, and I not
- observe it; for I little thought that there could be such impostors in
- the world.
- I could not forbear paying great attention to what she said. I found my
- tears ready to start; I drew out my handkerchief, and was silent. I had
- not been so indulgently treated a great while by a person of character
- and distinction, [such I thought her;] and durst not trust to the accent
- of my voice.
- The pretended Miss Montague joined in on this occasion: and drawing her
- chair close to me, took my other hand, and besought me to forgive her
- cousin; and consent to rank myself as one of the principals of a family
- that had long, very long, coveted the honour of my alliance.
- I am ashamed to repeat to you, my dear, now I know what wretches they
- are, the tender, the obliging, and the respectful things I said to them.
- The wretch himself then came forward. He threw himself at my feet. How
- was I beset!--The women grasping, one my right hand, the other my left:
- the pretended Miss Montague pressing to her lips more than once the hand
- she held: the wicked man on his knees, imploring my forgiveness; and
- setting before me my happy and my unhappy prospects, as I should forgive
- and not forgive him. All that he thought would affect me in former
- pleas, and those of Capt. Tomlinson, he repeated. He vowed, he promised,
- he bespoke the pretended ladies to answer for him; and they engaged their
- honours in his behalf.
- Indeed, my dear, I was distressed, perfectly distressed. I was sorry
- that I had given way to this visit. For I knew not how, in tenderness to
- relations, (as I thought them,) so worthy, to treat so freely as he
- deserved, a man nearly allied to them: so that my arguments and my
- resolutions were deprived of their greatest force.
- I pleaded, however, my application to you. I expected every hour, I told
- them, an answer from you to a letter I had written, which would decide my
- future destiny.
- They offered to apply to you themselves in person, in their own behalf,
- as they politely termed it. They besought me to write to you to hasten
- your answer.
- I said, I was sure that you would write the moment that the event of an
- application to be made to a third person enabled you to write. But as to
- the success of their request in behalf of their kinsman, that depended
- not upon the expected answer; for that, I begged their pardon, was out of
- the question. I wished him well. I wished him happy. But I was
- convinced, that I neither could make him so, nor he me.
- Then! how the wretch promised!--How he vowed!--How he entreated!--And how
- the women pleaded!--And they engaged themselves, and the honour of their
- whole family, for his just, his kind, his tender behaviour to me.
- In short, my dear, I was so hard set, that I was obliged to come to a
- more favourable compromise with them than I had intended. I would wait
- for your answer to my letter, I said: and if that made doubtful or
- difficult the change of measures I had resolved upon, and the scheme of
- life I had formed, I would then consider of the matter; and, if they
- would permit me, lay all before them, and take their advice upon it, in
- conjunction with your's, as if the one were my own aunt, and the other
- were my own cousin.
- They shed tears upon this--of joy they called them:--But since, I
- believe, to their credit, bad as they are, that they were tears of
- temporary remorse; for, the pretended Miss Montague turned about, and, as
- I remember, said, There was no standing it.
- But Mr. Lovelace was not so easily satisfied. He was fixed upon his
- villanous measures perhaps; and so might not be sorry to have a pretence
- against me. He bit his lip--he had been but too much used, he said, to
- such indifference, such coldness, in the very midst of his happiest
- prospects. I had on twenty occasions shown him, to his infinite regret,
- that any favour I was to confer upon him was to be the result of--there
- he stopt--and not of my choice.
- This had like to have set all back again. I was exceedingly offended.
- But the pretended ladies interposed. The elder severely took him to
- task. He ought, she told him, to be satisfied with what I had said. She
- desired no other condition. And what, Sir, said she, with an air of
- authority, would you commit errors, and expect to be rewarded for them?
- They then engaged me in a more agreeable conversation--the pretended lady
- declared, that she, Lord M. and Lady Sarah, would directly and personally
- interest themselves to bring about a general reconciliation between the
- two families, and this either in open or private concert with my uncle
- Harlowe, as should be thought fit. Animosities on one side had been
- carried a great way, she said; and too little care had been shown on the
- other to mollify or heal. My father should see that they could treat him
- as a brother and a friend; and my brother and sister should be convinced
- that there was no room either for the jealously [sic] or envy they had
- conceived from motives too unworthy to be avowed.
- Could I help, my dear, being pleased with them?--
- Permit me here to break off. The task grows too heavy, at present, for
- the heart of
- Your
- CLARISSA HARLOWE.
- LETTER LXVIII
- MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE
- [IN CONTINUATION.]
- I was very ill, and obliged to lay down my pen. I thought I should have
- fainted. But am better now--so will proceed.
- The pretended ladies, the more we talked, the fonder they seemed to be of
- me. And the Lady Betty had Mrs. Moore called up; and asked her, If she
- had accommodations for her niece and self, her woman, and two men
- servants, for three or four days?
- Mr. Lovelace answered for her that she had.
- She would not ask her dear niece Lovelace, [Permit me, my dear, whispered
- she, this charming style before strangers! I will keep your uncle's
- secret,] whether she should be welcome or not to be so near her. But for
- the time she should stay in these parts, she would come up every night--
- What say you, niece Charlotte?
- The pretended Charlotte answered, she should like to do so, of all
- things.
- The Lady Betty called her an obliging girl. She liked the place, she
- said. Her cousin Leeson would excuse her. The air, and my company,
- would do her good. She never chose to lie in the smoky town, if she
- could help it. In short, my dear, said she to me, I will stay with you
- till you hear from Miss Howe; and till I have your consent to go with me
- to Glenham-hall. Not one moment will I be out of your company, when I
- can have it. Stedman, my solicitor, as the distance from town is so
- small, may attend me here for instructions. Niece Charlotte, one word
- with you, child.
- They retired to the further end of the room, and talked about their
- night-dresses.
- The Miss Charlotte said, Morrison might be dispatched for them.
- True, said the other--but I have some letters in my private box, which
- I must have up. And you know, Charlotte, that I trust nobody with the
- keys of that.
- Could not Morrison bring up the box?
- No. She thought it safest where it was. She had heard of a robbery
- committed but two days ago at the food of Hampstead-hill; and she should
- be ruined in she lost her box.
- Well, then, it was but going to town to undress, and she would leave her
- jewels behind her, and return; and should be easier a great deal on all
- accounts.
- For my part, I wondered they came up with them. But that was to be taken
- as a respect paid to me. And then they hinted at another visit of
- ceremony which they had thought to make, had they not found me so
- inexpressibly engaging.
- They talked loud enough for me to hear them; on purpose, no doubt, though
- in affected whispers; and concluded with high praises of me.
- I was not fool enough to believe, or to be puffed up with their
- encomiums; yet not suspecting them, I was not displeased at so favourable
- a beginning of acquaintance with Ladies (whether I were to be related to
- them or not) of whom I had always heard honourable mention. And yet at
- the time, I thought, highly as they exalted me, that in some respects
- (though I hardly know in what) they fell short of what I expected them to
- be.
- The grand deluder was at the farther end of the room, another way;
- probably to give me an opportunity to hear these preconcerted praises--
- looking into a book, which had there not been a preconcert, would not
- have taken his attention for one moment. It was Taylor's Holy Living and
- Dying.
- When the pretended ladies joined me, he approached me with it in his hand
- --a smart book, this, my dear!--this old divine affects, I see, a mighty
- flowery style of an ordinary country funeral, where, the young women, in
- honour of a defunct companion, especially if she were a virgin, or passed
- for such, make a flower-bed of her coffin.
- And then, laying down the book, turning upon his heel, with one of his
- usual airs of gaiety, And are you determined, Ladies, to take up your
- lodgings with my charming creature?
- Indeed they were.
- Never were there more cunning, more artful impostors, than these women.
- Practised creatures, to be sure: yet genteel; and they must have been
- well-educated--once, perhaps, as much the delight of their parents, as I
- was of mine: and who knows by what arts ruined, body and mind--O my dear!
- how pregnant is this reflection!
- But the man!--Never was there a man so deep. Never so consummate a
- deceiver; except that detested Tomlinson; whose years and seriousness,
- joined with a solidity of sense and judgment that seemed uncommon, gave
- him, one would have thought, advantages in villany, the other had not
- time for. Hard, very hard, that I should fall into the knowledge of two
- such wretches; when two more such I hope are not to be met with in the
- world!--both so determined to carry on the most barbarous and perfidious
- projects against a poor young creature, who never did or wished harm to
- either.
- Take the following slight account of these women's and of this man's
- behaviour to each other before me.
- Mr. Lovelace carried himself to his pretended aunt with high respect,
- and paid a great deference to all she said. He permitted her to have all
- the advantage over him in the repartees and retorts that passed between
- them. I could, indeed, easily see, that it was permitted; and that he
- forbore that vivacity, that quickness, which he never spared showing to
- his pretended Miss Montague; and which a man of wit seldom knows how to
- spare showing, when an opportunity offers to display his wit.
- The pretended Miss Montague was still more respectful in her behaviour to
- her pretended aunt. While the aunt kept up the dignity of the character
- she had assumed, rallying both of them with the air of a person who
- depends upon the superiority which years and fortune give over younger
- persons, who might have a view to be obliged to her, either in her life,
- or at her death.
- The severity of her raillery, however, was turned upon Mr. Lovelace, on
- occasion of the character of the people who kept the lodgings, which, she
- said, I had thought myself so well warranted to leave privately.
- This startled me. For having then no suspicion of the vile Tomlinson, I
- concluded (and your letter of the 7th* favoured my conclusion) that if
- the house were notorious, either he, or Mr. Mennell, would have given me
- or him some hints of it--nor, although I liked not the people, did I
- observe any thing in them very culpable, till the Wednesday night before,
- that they offered not to come to my assistance, although within hearing
- of my distress, (as I am sure they were,) and having as much reason as I
- to be frighted at the fire, had it been real.
- * His forged letter. See Vol. V. Letter XXX.
- I looked with indignation upon Mr. Lovelace, at this hint.
- He seemed abashed. I have not patience, but to recollect the specious
- looks of this vile deceiver. But how was it possible, that even that
- florid countenance of his should enable him to command a blush at his
- pleasure? for blush he did, more than once: and the blush, on this
- occasion, was a deep-dyed crimson, unstrained for, and natural, as I
- thought--but he is so much of the actor, that he seems able to enter into
- any character; and his muscles and features appear entirely under
- obedience to his wicked will.*
- * It is proper to observe, that there was a more natural reason than this
- that the Lady gives for Mr. Lovelace's blushing. It was a blush of
- indignation, as he owned afterwards to his friend Belford, in
- conversation; for the pretended Lady Betty had mistaken her cue, in
- condemning the house; and he had much ado to recover the blunder; being
- obliged to follow her lead, and vary from his first design; which was to
- have the people of the house spoken well of, in order to induce her to
- return to it, were it but on pretence to direct her clothes to be carried
- to Hampstead.
- The pretended lady went on, saying, she had taken upon herself to inquire
- after the people, on hearing that I had left the house in disgust; and
- though she heard not any thing much amiss, yet she heard enough to make
- her wonder that he could carry his spouse, a person of so much delicacy,
- to a house, that, if it had not a bad fame, had not a good one.
- You must think, my dear, that I liked the pretended Lady Betty the better
- for this. I suppose it was designed that I should.
- He was surprised, he said, that her Ladyship should hear a bad character
- of the people. It was what he had never before heard that they deserved.
- It was easy, indeed, to see, that they had not very great delicacy,
- though they were not indelicate. The nature of their livelihood, letting
- lodgings, and taking people to board, (and yet he had understood that
- they were nice in these particulars,) led them to aim at being free and
- obliging: and it was difficult, he said, for persons of cheerful
- dispositions, so to behave as to avoid censure: openness of heart and
- countenance in the sex (more was the pity) too often subjected good
- people, whose fortunes did not set them above the world, to uncharitable
- censure.
- He wished, however, that her Ladyship would tell what she had heard:
- although now it signified but little, because he would never ask me to
- set foot within their doors again: and he begged she would not mince the
- matter.
- Nay, no great matter, she said. But she had been informed, that there
- were more women-lodgers in the house than men: yet that their visiters
- were more men than women. And this had been hinted to her (perhaps by
- ill-wishers, she could not answer for that) in such a way, as if somewhat
- further were meant by it than was spoken.
- This, he said, was the true innuendo-way of characterizing, used by
- detractors. Every body and every thing had a black and a white side, of
- which well wishers and ill wishers may make their advantage. He had
- observed that the front house was well let, and he believed more to the
- one sex than to the other; for he had seen, occasionally passing to or
- fro, several genteel modest looking women; and who, it was very probable,
- were not so ill-beloved, but they might have visiters and relations of
- both sexes: but they were none of them any thing to us, or we to them: we
- were not once in any of their companies: but in the genteelest and most
- retired house of the two, which we had in a manner to ourselves, with the
- use of a parlour to the street, to serve us for a servants' hall, or to
- receive common visiters, or our traders only, whom we admitted not up
- stairs.
- He always loved to speak as he found. No man in the world had suffered
- more from calumny than he himself had done.
- Women, he owned, ought to be more scrupulous than men needed to be where
- they lodged. Nevertheless he wished that fact, rather than surmise, were
- to be the foundation of their judgments, especially when they spoke of
- one another.
- He meant no reflection upon her Ladyship's informants, or rather
- surmisants, (as he might call them,) be they who they would: nor did he
- think himself obliged to defend characters impeached, or not thought well
- of, by women of virtue and honour. Neither were these people of
- importance enough to have so much said about them.
- The pretended Lady Betty said, all who knew her, would clear her of
- censoriousness: that it gave her some opinion, she must needs say, of the
- people, that he had continued there so long with me; that I had rather
- negative than positive reasons of dislike to them; and that so shrewd a
- man as she heard Captain Tomlinson was had not objected to them.
- I think, niece Charlotte, proceeded she, as my nephew had not parted with
- these lodgings, you and I, (for, as my dear Miss Harlowe dislikes the
- people, I would not ask her for her company) will take a dish of tea with
- my nephew there, before we go out of town; and then we shall see what
- sort of people they are. I have heard that Mrs. Sinclair is a mighty
- forbidding creature.
- With all my heart, Madam. In your Ladyship's company I shall make no
- scruple of going any where.
- It was Ladyship at every word; and as she seemed proud of her title, and
- of her dress too, I might have guessed that she was not used to either.
- What say you, cousin Lovelace? Lady Sarah, though a melancholy woman, is
- very inquisitive about all your affairs. I must acquaint her with every
- particular circumstance when I go down.
- With all his heart. He would attend her whenever she pleased. She would
- see very handsome apartments, and very civil people.
- The deuce is in them, said the Miss Montague, if they appear other to us.
- She then fell into family talk; family happiness on my hoped-for
- accession into it. They mentioned Lord M.'s and Lady Sarah's great
- desire to see me: how many friends and admirers, with uplift hands, I
- should have! [Oh! my dear, what a triumph must these creatures, and he,
- have over the poor devoted all the time!]--What a happy man he would be!
- --They would not, the Lady Betty said, give themselves the mortification
- but to suppose that I should not be one of them!
- Presents were hinted at. She resolved that I should go with her to
- Glenham-hall. She would not be refused, although she were to stay a week
- beyond her time for me.
- She longed for the expected letter from you. I must write to hasten it,
- and to let Miss Howe know how every thing stood since I wrote last. That
- might dispose me absolutely in her favour and in her nephew's; and then
- she hoped there would be no occasion for me to think of entering upon any
- new measures.
- Indeed, my dear, I did at the time intend, if I heard not from you by
- morning, to dispatch a man and horse to you, with the particulars of all,
- that you might (if you thought proper) at least put off Mrs. Townsend's
- coming up to another day.--But I was miserably prevented.
- She made me promise that I would write to you upon this subject, whether
- I heard from you or not. One of her servants should ride post with my
- letter, and wait for Miss Howe's answer.
- She then launched out in deserved praises of you, my dear. How fond she
- should be of the honour of your acquaintance.
- The pretended Miss Montague joined in with her, as well for herself as
- for her sister.
- Abominably well instructed were they both!
- O my dear! what risks may poor giddy girls run, when they throw
- themselves out of the protection of their natural friends, and into the
- wide world!
- The then talked again of reconciliation and intimacy with every one of my
- friends; with my mother particularly; and gave the dear good lady the
- praises that every one gives her, who has the happiness to know her.
- Ah, my dear Miss Howe! I had almost forgot my resentments against the
- pretended nephew!--So many agreeable things said, made me think, that, if
- you should advise it, and if I could bring my mind to forgive the wretch
- for an outrage so premeditatedly vile, and could forbear despising him
- for that and his other ungrateful and wicked ways, I might not be unhappy
- in an alliance with such a family. Yet, thought I at the time, with what
- intermixture does every thing come to me that had the appearance of good!
- ----However, as my lucid hopes made me see fewer faults in the behaviour
- of these pretended ladies, than recollection and abhorrence have helped
- me since to see, I began to reproach myself, that I had not at first
- thrown myself into their protection.
- But amidst all these delightful prospects, I must not, said the Lady
- Betty, forget that I am to go to town.
- She then ordered her coach to be got to the door.--We will all go to town
- together, said she, and return together. Morrison shall stay here, and
- see every thing as I am used to have it, in relation to my apartment, and
- my bed; for I am very particular in some respects. My cousin Leeson's
- servants can do all I want to be done with regard to my night-dresses,
- and the like. And it will be a little airing for you, my dear, and a
- want of your apparel to be sent from your former lodgings to Mrs.
- Leeson's; and we can bring it up with us from thence.
- I had no intention to comply. But as I did not imagine that she would
- insist upon my going to town with them, I made no answer to that part of
- her speech.
- I must here lay down my tired pen!
- Recollection! heart-affecting recollection! how it pains me!
- LETTER LXIX
- MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE, TO MISS HOWE
- In the midst of this agreeableness, the coach came to the door. The
- pretended Lady Betty besought me to give them my company to their cousin
- Leeson's. I desired to be excused: yet suspected nothing. She would not
- be denied. How happy would a visit so condescending make her cousin
- Leeson!----Her cousin Leeson was not unworthy of my acquaintance: and
- would take it for the greatest favour in the world.
- I objected my dress. But the objection was not admitted. She bespoke a
- supper of Mrs. Moore to be ready at nine.
- Mr. Lovelace, vile hypocrite, and wicked deceiver! seeing, as he said, my
- dislike to go, desired his Ladyship not to insist upon it.
- Fondness for my company was pleaded. She begged me to oblige her: made a
- motion to help me to my fan herself: and, in short, was so very urgent,
- that my feet complied against my speech and my mind: and being, in a
- manner, led to the coach by her, and made to step in first, she followed
- me: and her pretended niece, and the wretch, followed her: and away it
- drove.
- Nothing but the height of affectionate complaisance passed all the way:
- over and over, what a joy would this unexpected visit give her cousin
- Leeson! What a pleasure must it be to such a mind as mine, to be able
- to give so much joy to every body I came near!
- The cruel, the savage seducer (as I have since recollected) was in a
- rapture all the way; but yet such a sort of rapture, as he took visible
- pains to check.
- Hateful villain! how I abhor him!--What mischief must be then in his
- plotting heart!--What a devoted victim must I be in all their eyes!
- Though not pleased, I was nevertheless just then thoughtless of danger;
- they endeavouring thus to lift me up above all apprehensions of that, and
- above myself too.
- But think, my dear, what a dreadful turn all had upon me, when, through
- several streets and ways I knew nothing of, the coach slackening its
- pace, came within sight of the dreadful house of the dreadfullest woman
- in the world; as she proved to me.
- Lord be good unto me! cried the poor fool, looking out of the coach--Mr.
- Lovelace!--Madam! turning to the pretended Lady Betty!--Madam! turning to
- the niece, my hands and eyes lifted up--Lord be good unto me!
- What! What! What! my dear.
- He pulled the string--What need to have come this way? said he--But since
- we are, I will but ask a question--My dearest life, why this
- apprehension?
- The coachman stopped: his servant, who, with one of her's was behind,
- alighted--Ask, said he, if I have any letters? Who knows, my dearest
- creature, turning to me, but we may already have one from the Captain?--
- We will not go out of the coach!--Fear nothing--Why so apprehensive?--Oh!
- these fine spirits!--cried the execrable insulter.
- Dreadfully did my heart then misgive me: I was ready to faint. Why this
- terror, my life? you shall not stir out of the coach but one question,
- now the fellow has drove us this way.
- Your lady will faint, cried the execrable Lady Betty, turning to him--My
- dearest Niece! (niece I will call you, taking my hand)--we must alight,
- if you are so ill.--Let us alight--only for a glass of water and
- hartshorn--indeed we must alight.
- No, no, no--I am well--quite well--Won't the man drive on?--I am well--
- quite well--indeed I am.--Man, drive on, putting my head out of the coach
- --Man, drive on!--though my voice was too low to be heard.
- The coach stopt at the door. How I trembled!
- Dorcas came to the door, on its stopping.
- My dearest creature, said the vile man, gasping, as it were for breath,
- you shall not alight--Any letters for me, Dorcas?
- There are two, Sir. And here is a gentleman, Mr. Belton, Sir, waits for
- your honour; and has done so above an hour.
- I'll just speak to him. Open the door--You sha'n't step out, my dear--A
- letter perhaps from Captain already!--You sha'n't step out, my dear.
- I sighed as if my heart would burst.
- But we must step out, Nephew: your lady will faint. Maid, a glass of
- hartshorn and water!--My dear you must step out--You will faint, child--
- We must cut your laces.--[I believe my complexion was all manner of
- colours by turns]--Indeed, you must step out, my dear.
- He knew, said I, I should be well, the moment the coach drove from the
- door. I should not alight. By his soul, I should not.
- Lord, Lord, Nephew, Lord, Lord, Cousin, both women in a breath, what ado
- you make about nothing! You persuade your lady to be afraid of
- alighting.--See you not that she is just fainting?
- Indeed, Madam, said the vile seducer, my dearest love must not be moved
- in this point against her will. I beg it may not be insisted upon.
- Fiddle-faddle, foolish man--What a pother is here! I guess how it is:
- you are ashamed to let us see what sort of people you carried your lady
- among--but do you go out, and speak to your friend, and take your
- letters.
- He stept out; but shut the coach-door after him, to oblige me.
- The coach may go on, Madam, said I.
- The coach shall go on, my dear life, said he.--But he gave not, nor
- intended to give, orders that it should.
- Let the coach go on! said I--Mr. Lovelace may come after us.
- Indeed, my dear, you are ill!--Indeed you must alight--alight but for one
- quarter of an hour.--Alight but to give orders yourself about your
- things. Whom can you be afraid of in my company, and my niece's; these
- people must have behaved shockingly to you! Please the Lord, I'll
- inquire into it!--I'll see what sort of people they are!
- Immediately came the old creature to the door. A thousand pardons, dear
- Madam, stepping to the coach-side, if we have any way offended you--Be
- pleased, Ladies, [to the other two] to alight.
- Well, my dear, whispered the Lady Betty, I now find that an hideous
- description of a person we never saw is an advantage to them. I thought
- the woman was a monster--but, really, she seems tolerable.
- I was afraid I should have fallen into fits: but still refused to go out
- --Man!--Man!--Man!--cried I, gaspingly, my head out of the coach and in,
- by turns, half a dozen times running, drive on!--Let us go!
- My heart misgave me beyond the power of my own accounting for it; for
- still I did not suspect these women. But the antipathy I had taken to
- the vile house, and to find myself so near it, when I expected no such
- matter, with the sight of the old creature, all together made me behave
- like a distracted person.
- The hartshorn and water was brought. The pretended Lady Betty made me
- drink it. Heaven knows if there was any thing else in it!
- Besides, said she, whisperingly, I must see what sort of creatures the
- nieces are. Want of delicacy cannot be hid from me. You could not
- surely, my dear, have this aversion to re-enter a house, for a few
- minutes, in our company, in which you lodged and boarded several weeks,
- unless these women could be so presumptuously vile, as my nephew ought
- not to know.
- Out stept the pretended lady; the servant, at her command, having opened
- the door.
- Dearest Madam, said the other to me, let me follow you, [for I was next
- the door.] Fear nothing: I will not stir from your presence.
- Come, my dear, said the pretended lady, give me your hand; holding out
- her's. Oblige me this once.
- I will bless your footsteps, said the old creature, if once more you
- honour my house with your presence.
- A crowd by this time was gathered about us; but I was too much affected
- to mind that.
- Again the pretended Miss Montague urged me; standing up as ready to go
- out if I would give her room.--Lord, my dear, said she, who can bear this
- crowd?--What will people think?
- The pretended Lady again pressed me, with both her hands held out--Only,
- my dear, to give orders about your things.
- And thus pressed, and gazed at, (for then I looked about me,) the women
- so richly dressed, people whispering; in an evil moment, out stepped I,
- trembling, forced to lean with both my hands (frighted too much for
- ceremony) on the pretended Lady Betty's arm--Oh! that I had dropped down
- dead upon the guilty threshold!
- We shall stay but a few minutes, my dear!--but a few minutes! said the
- same specious jilt--out of breath with her joy, as I have since thought,
- that they had thus triumphed over the unhappy victim!
- Come, Mrs. Sinclair, I think your name is, show us the way----following
- her, and leading me. I am very thirsty. You have frighted me, my dear,
- with your strange fears. I must have tea made, if it can be done in a
- moment. We have farther to go, Mrs. Sinclair, and must return to
- Hampstead this night.
- It shall be ready in a moment, cried the wretch. We have water boiling.
- Hasten, then--Come, my dear, to me, as she led me through the passage to
- the fatal inner house--lean upon me--how you tremble!--how you falter in
- your steps!--Dearest niece Lovelace, [the old wretch being in hearing,]
- why these hurries upon your spirits?--We'll be gone in a minute.
- And thus she led the poor sacrifice into the old wretch's too-well-known
- parlour.
- Never was any body so gentle, so meek, so low voiced, as the odious
- woman; drawling out, in a puling accent, all the obliging things she
- could say: awed, I then thought, by the conscious dignity of a woman of
- quality; glittering with jewels.
- The called-for tea was ready presently.
- There was no Mr. Belton, I believe: for the wretch went not to any body,
- unless it were while we were parlying in the coach. No such person
- however, appeared at the tea-table.
- I was made to drink two dishes, with milk, complaisantly urged by the
- pretended ladies helping me each to one. I was stupid to their hands;
- and, when I took the tea, almost choked with vapours; and could hardly
- swallow.
- I thought, transiently thought, that the tea, the last dish particularly,
- had an odd taste. They, on my palating it, observed, that the milk was
- London-milk; far short in goodness of what they were accustomed to from
- their own dairies.
- I have no doubt that my two dishes, and perhaps my hartshorn, were
- prepared for me; in which case it was more proper for their purpose, that
- they should help me, than that I should help myself. Ill before, I found
- myself still more and more disordered in my head; a heavy torpid pain
- increasing fast upon me. But I imputed it to my terror.
- Nevertheless, at the pretended Lady's motion, I went up stairs, attended
- by Dorcas; who affected to weep for joy, that she once more saw my
- blessed face; that was the vile creature's word: and immediately I set
- about taking out some of my clothes, ordering what should be put up, and
- what sent after me.
- While I was thus employed, up came the pretended Lady Betty, in a
- hurrying way----My dear, you won't be long before you are ready. My
- nephew is very busy in writing answers to his letters: so, I'll just whip
- away, and change my dress, and call upon you in an instant.
- O Madam!--I am ready! I am now ready!--You must not leave me here. And
- down I sunk, affrighted, into a chair.
- This instant, this instant, I will return--before you can be ready--
- before you can have packed up your things--we would not be late--the
- robbers we have heard of may be out--don't let us be late.
- And away she hurried before I could say another word. Her pretended
- niece went with her, without taking notice to me of her going.
- I had no suspicion yet that these women were not indeed the ladies
- they personated; and I blamed myself for my weak fears.--It cannot be,
- thought I, that such ladies will abet treachery against a poor creature
- they are so fond of. They must undoubtedly be the persons they appear to
- be--what folly to doubt it! The air, the dress, the dignity of women of
- quality. How unworthy of them, and of my charity, concluded I, is this
- ungenerous shadow of suspicion!
- So, recovering my stupefied spirits, as well as they could be recovered,
- (for I was heavier and heavier! and wondered to Dorcas what ailed me,
- rubbing my eyes, and taking some of her snuff, pinch after pinch, to very
- little purpose,) I pursued my employment: but when that was over, all
- packed up that I designed to be packed up; and I had nothing to do but to
- think; and found them tarry so long; I thought I should have gone
- distracted. I shut myself into the chamber that had been mine; I
- kneeled, I prayed; yet knew not what I prayed for: then ran out again: it
- was almost dark night, I said: where, where, where was Mr. Lovelace?
- He came to me, taking no notice at first of my consternation and
- wildness, [what they had given me made me incoherent and wild:] All goes
- well, said he, my dear!--A line from Capt. Tomlinson!
- All indeed did go well for the villanous project of the most cruel and
- most villanous of men!
- I demanded his aunt!--I demanded his cousin!--The evening, I said, was
- closing!--My head was very, very bad, I remember I said--and it grew
- worse and worse.--
- Terror, however, as yet kept up my spirits; and I insisted upon his going
- himself to hasten them.
- He called his servant. He raved at the sex for their delay: 'twas well
- that business of consequence seldom depended upon such parading,
- unpunctual triflers!
- His servant came.
- He ordered him to fly to his cousin Leeson's, and to let Lady Betty and
- his cousin know how uneasy we both were at their delay: adding, of his
- own accord, desire them, if they don't come instantly, to send their
- coach, and we will go without them. Tell them I wonder they'll serve me
- so!
- I thought this was considerately and fairly put. But now, indifferent as
- my head was, I had a little time to consider the man and his behaviour.
- He terrified me with his looks, and with his violent emotions, as he
- gazed upon me. Evident joy-suppressed emotions, as I have since
- recollected. His sentences short, and pronounced as if his breath were
- touched. Never saw I his abominable eyes look as then they looked--
- Triumph in them!--fierce and wild; and more disagreeable than the women's
- at the vile house appeared to me when I first saw them: and at times,
- such a leering, mischief-boding cast!--I would have given the world to
- have been an hundred miles from him. Yet his behaviour was decent--a
- decency, however, that I might have seen to be struggled for--for he
- snatched my hand two or three times, with a vehemence in his grasp that
- hurt me; speaking words of tenderness through his shut teeth, as it
- seemed; and let it go with a beggar-voiced humbled accent, like the vile
- woman's just before; half-inward; yet his words and manner carrying the
- appearance of strong and almost convulsed passion!--O my dear! what
- mischief was he not then meditating!
- I complained once or twice of thirst. My mouth seemed parched. At the
- time, I supposed that it was my terror (gasping often as I did for
- breath) that parched up the roof of my mouth. I called for water: some
- table-beer was brought me: beer, I suppose, was a better vehicle for
- their potions. I told the maid, that she knew I seldom tasted malt
- liquor: yet, suspecting nothing of this nature, being extremely thirsty,
- I drank it, as what came next: and instantly, as it were, found myself
- much worse than before: as if inebriated, I should fancy: I know not how.
- His servant was gone twice as long as he needed: and, just before his
- return, came one of the pretended Lady Betty's with a letter for Mr.
- Lovelace.
- He sent it up to me. I read it: and then it was that I thought myself a
- lost creature; it being to put off her going to Hampstead that night, on
- account of violent fits which Miss Montague was pretended to be seized
- with; for then immediately came into my head his vile attempt upon me in
- this house; the revenge that my flight might too probably inspire him
- with on that occasion, and because of the difficulty I made to forgive
- him, and to be reconciled to him; his very looks wild and dreadful to me;
- and the women of the house such as I had more reason than ever, even from
- the pretended Lady Betty's hint, to be afraid of: all these crowding
- together in my apprehensive mind, I fell into a kind of phrensy.
- I have no remembrance how I was for this time it lasted: but I know that,
- in my first agitations, I pulled off my head-dress, and tore my ruffles
- in twenty tatters, and ran to find him out.
- When a little recovered, I insisted upon the hint he had given me of
- their coach. But the messenger, he said, had told him, that it was sent
- to fetch a physician, lest his chariot should be put up, or not ready.
- I then insisted upon going directly to Lady Betty's lodgings.
- Mrs. Leeson's was now a crowded house, he said: and as my earnestness
- could be owing to nothing but groundless apprehensions, [and Oh! what
- vows, what protestations of his honour, did he then make!] he hoped I
- would not add to their present concern. Charlotte, indeed, was used to
- fits, he said, upon any great surprises, whether of joy or grief; and
- they would hold her for one week together, if not got off in a few hours.
- You are an observer of eyes, my dear, said the villain; perhaps in secret
- insult: Saw you not in Miss Montague's, now-and-then at Hampstead,
- something wildish? I was afraid for her then. Silence and quiet only do
- her good: your concern for her, and her love for you, will but augment
- the poor girl's disorder, if you should go.
- All impatient with grief and apprehension, I still declared myself
- resolved not to stay in that house till morning. All I had in the world,
- my rings, my watch, my little money, for a coach; or, if one were not to
- be got, I would go on foot to Hampstead that night, though I walked it by
- myself.
- A coach was hereupon sent for, or pretended to be sent for. Any price,
- he said, he would give to oblige me, late as it was; and he would attend
- me with all his soul. But no coach was to be got.
- Let me cut short the rest. I grew worse and worse in my head! now
- stupid, now raving, now senseless. The vilest of vile women was brought
- to frighten me. Never was there so horrible a creature as she
- appreared to me at this time.
- I remember I pleaded for mercy. I remember that I said I would be his--
- indeed I would be his--to obtain his mercy. But no mercy found I! My
- strength, my intellects failed me--And then such scenes followed--O my
- dear, such dreadful scenes!--fits upon fits, (faintly indeed and
- imperfectly remembered,) procuring me no compassion--But death was
- withheld from me. That would have been too great a mercy!
- ***
- Thus was I tricked and deluded back by blacker hearts of my own sex than
- I thought there were in the world; who appeared to me to be persons of
- honour; and, when in his power, thus barbarously was I treated by this
- villanous man!
- I was so senseless, that I dare not aver, that the horrid creatures of
- the house were personally aiding and abetting: but some visionary
- remembrances I have of female figures, flitting, as I may say, before my
- sight; the wretched woman's particularly. But as these confused ideas
- might be owing to the terror I had conceived of the worse than masculine
- violence she had been permitted to assume to me, for expressing my
- abhorrence of her house; and as what I suffered from his barbarity wants
- not that aggravation; I will say no more on a subject so shocking as this
- must ever be to my remembrance.
- I never saw the personating wretches afterwards. He persisted to the
- last, (dreadfully invoking Heaven as a witness to the truth of his
- assertion) that they were really and truly the ladies they pretended to
- be; declaring, that they could not take leave of me, when they left town,
- because of the state of senselessness and phrensy I was in. For their
- intoxicating, or rather stupefying, potions had almost deleterious
- effects upon my intellects, as I have hinted; insomuch that, for several
- days together, I was under a strange delirium; now moping, now dozing,
- now weeping, now raving, now scribbling, tearing what I scribbled as fast
- as I wrote it: most miserable when now-and-then a ray of reason brought
- confusedly to my remembrance what I had suffered.
- LETTER LXX
- MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE
- [IN CONTINUATION.]
- [The lady next gives an account,
- Of her recovery from her delirium and sleepy disorder:
- Of her attempt to get away in his absence:
- Of the conversations that followed, at his return, between them:
- Of the guilty figure he made:
- Of her resolution not to have him:
- Of her several efforts to escape:
- Of her treaty with Dorcas to assist her in it:
- Of Dorcas's dropping the promissory note, undoubtedly, as she says, on
- purpose to betray her:
- Of her triumph over all the creatures of the house, assembled to terrify
- her; and perhaps to commit fresh outrages upon her:
- Of his setting out for M. Hall:
- Of his repeated letters to induce her to meet him at the altar, on her
- uncle's anniversary:
- Of her determined silence to them all:
- Of her second escape, effected, as she says, contrary to her own
- expectation: the attempt being at first but the intended prelude to
- a more promising one, which she had formed in her mind:
- And of other particulars; which being to be found in Mr. Lovelace's
- letters preceding, and the letter of his friend Belford, are
- omitted. She then proceeds:]
- The very hour that I found myself in a place of safety, I took pen to
- write to you. When I began, I designed only to write six or eight lines,
- to inquire after your health: for, having heard nothing from you, I
- feared indeed, that you had been, and still were, too ill to write. But
- no sooner did my pen begin to blot the paper, but my sad heart hurried it
- into length. The apprehensions I had lain under, that I should not be
- able to get away; the fatigue I had in effecting my escape: the
- difficulty of procuring a lodging for myself; having disliked the people
- of two houses, and those of a third disliking me; for you must think I
- made a frighted appearance--these, together with the recollection of what
- I had suffered from him, and my farther apprehensions of my insecurity,
- and my desolate circumstances, had so disordered me, that I remember I
- rambled strangely in that letter.
- In short, I thought it, on re-perusal, a half-distracted one: but I then
- despaired, (were I to begin again,) of writing better: so I let it go:
- and can have no excuse for directing it as I did, if the cause of the
- incoherence in it will not furnish me with a very pitiable one.
- The letter I received from your mother was a dreadful blow to me. But
- nevertheless it had the good effect upon me (labouring, as I did just
- then, under a violent fit of vapourish despondency, and almost yielding
- to it) which profuse bleeding and blisterings have in paralytic or
- apoplectical strokes; reviving my attention, and restoring me to spirits
- to combat the evils I was surrounded by--sluicing off, and diverting into
- a new channel, (if I may be allowed another metaphor,) the overcharging
- woes which threatened once more to overwhelm my intellects.
- But yet I most sincerely lamented, (and still lament,) in your mother's
- words, That I cannot be unhappy by myself: and was grieved, not only for
- the trouble I had given you before; but for the new one I had brought
- upon you by my inattention.
- [She then gives the substance of the letters she wrote to Mrs. Norton, to
- Lady Betty Lawrance, and to Mrs. Hodges; as also of their answers;
- whereby she detected all Mr. Lovelace's impostures. She proceeds
- as follows:]
- I cannot, however, forbear to wonder how the vile Tomlinson could come at
- the knowledge of several of the things he told me of, and which
- contributed to give me confidence in him.*
- * The attentive reader need not be referred back for what the Lady
- nevertheless could not account for, as she knew not that Mr. Lovelace had
- come at Miss Howe's letters; particularly that in Vol. IV. Letter XXIX.
- which he comments upon in Letter XLIV. of the same volume.
- I doubt not that the stories of Mrs. Fretchville and her house would be
- found as vile as any of the rest, were I to inquire; and had I not
- enough, and too much, already against the perjured man.
- How have I been led on!--What will be the end of such a false and
- perjured creature! Heaven not less profaned and defied by him than
- myself deceived and abused! This, however, against myself I must say,
- That if what I have suffered be the natural consequence of my first
- error, I never can forgive myself, although you are so partial in my
- favour, as to say, that I was not censurable for what passed before my
- first escape.
- And now, honoured Madam, and my dearest Miss Howe, who are to sit in
- judgment upon my case, permit me to lay down my pen with one request,
- which, with the greatest earnestness, I make to you both: and that is,
- That you will neither of you open your lips in relation to the potions
- and the violences I have hinted at.--Not that I am solicitous, that my
- disgrace should be hidden from the world, or that it should not be
- generally known, that the man has proved a villain to me: for this, it
- seems, every body but myself expected from his character. But suppose,
- as his actions by me are really of a capital nature, it were insisted
- upon that I should appear to prosecute him and his accomplices in a court
- of justice, how do you think I could bear that?
- But since my character, before the capital enormity, was lost in the eye
- of the world; and that from the very hour I left my father's house; and
- since all my own hopes of worldly happiness are entirely over; let me
- slide quietly into my grave; and let it be not remembered, except by one
- friendly tear, and no more, dropt from your gentle eye, mine own dear
- Anna Howe, on the happy day that shall shut up all my sorrows, that there
- was such a creature as
- CLARISSA HARLOWE
- SATURDAY, JULY 8.
- LETTER LXXI
- MISS HOWE, TO MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE
- SUNDAY, JULY 9.
- May Heaven signalize its vengeance, in the face of all the world, upon
- the most abandoned and profligate of men!--And in its own time, I doubt
- not but it will.--And we must look to a WORLD BEYOND THIS for the reward
- of your sufferings!
- Another shocking detection, my dear!--How have you been deluded!--Very
- watchful I have thought you; very sagacious:--but, alas! not watchful,
- not sagacious enough, for the horrid villain you have had to deal with!
- ----
- The letter you sent me enclosed as mine, of the 7th of June, is a
- villanous forgery.*
- * See Vol. V. Letter XXX.
- The hand, indeed, is astonishingly like mine; and the cover, I see, is
- actually my cover: but yet the letter is not so exactly imitated, but
- that, (had you had any suspicions about his vileness at the time,) you,
- who so well know my hand, might have detected it.
- In short, this vile, forged letter, though a long one, contains but a
- few extracts from mine. Mine was a very long one. He has omitted every
- thing, I see, in it that could have shown you what a detestable house the
- house is; and given you suspicions of the vile Tomlinson.--You will see
- this, and how he has turned Miss Lardner's information, and my advices to
- you, [execrable villain!] to his own horrid ends, by the rough draught of
- the genuine letter, which I shall enclose.*
- * See Vol. V. Letter XX.
- Apprehensive for both our safeties from the villany of such a daring and
- profligate contriver, I must call upon you, my dear, to resolve upon
- taking legal vengeance of the infernal wretch. And this not only for our
- own sakes, but for the sakes of innocents who otherwise may yet be
- deluded and outraged by him.
- [She then gives the particulars of the report made by the young fellow
- whom she sent to Hampstead with her letter; and who supposed he had
- delivered it into her own hand;* and then proceeds:]
- * See Vol. VI. Letter VI.
- I am astonished, that the vile wretch, who could know nothing of the time
- my messenger, (whose honesty I can vouch for) would come, could have a
- creature ready to personate you! Strange, that the man should happen to
- arrive just as you were gone to church, (as I find was the fact, on
- comparing what he says with your hint that you were at church twice that
- day,) when he might have got to Mrs. Moore's two hours before!--But had
- you told me, my dear, that the villain had found you out, and was about
- you!--You should have done that--yet I blame you upon a judgment founded
- on the event only!
- I never had any faith in the stories that go current among country girls,
- of specters, familiars, and demons; yet I see not any other way to
- account for this wretch's successful villany, and for his means of
- working up his specious delusions, but by supposing, (if he be not the
- devil himself,) that he has a familiar constantly at his elbow.
- Sometimes it seems to me that this familiar assumes the shape of that
- solemn villain Tomlinson: sometimes that of the execrable Sinclair, as he
- calls her: sometimes it is permitted to take that of Lady Betty Lawrance
- --but, when it would assume the angelic shape and mien of my beloved
- friend, see what a bloated figure it made!
- 'Tis my opinion, my dear, that you will be no longer safe where you are,
- than while the V. is in the country. Words are poor!--or how could I
- execrate him! I have hardly any doubt that he has sold himself for a
- time. Oh! may the time be short!--or may his infernal prompter no more
- keep covenant with him than he does with others!
- I enclose not only the rough draught of my long letter mentioned above,
- but the heads of that which the young fellow thought he delivered into
- your own hands at Hampstead. And when you have perused them, I will
- leave to you to judge how much reason I had to be surprised that you
- wrote me not an answer to either of those letters; one of which you owned
- you had received, (though it proved to be his forged one,) the other
- delivered into your own hands, as I was assured; and both of them of so
- much concern to your honour; and still now much more surprised I must be,
- when I received a letter from Mrs. Townsend, dated June 15, from
- Hampstead, importing, 'That Mr. Lovelace, who had been with you several
- days, had, on the Monday before, brought Lady Betty and his cousin,
- richly dressed, and in a coach-and-four, to visit you: who, with your own
- consent, had carried you to town with them--to your former lodgings;
- where you still were: that the Hampstead women believed you to be
- married; and reflected upon me as a fomenter of differences between man
- and wife: that he himself was at Hampstead the day before; viz. Wednesday
- the 14th; and boasted of his happiness with you; inviting Mrs. Moore,
- Mrs. Bevis, and Miss Rawlins, to go to town, to visit his spouse; which
- they promised to do: that he declared that you were entirely reconciled
- to your former lodgings:--and that, finally, the women at Hampstead told
- Mrs. Townsend, that he had very handsomely discharged theirs.'
- I own to you, my dear, that I was so much surprised and disgusted at
- these appearances against a conduct till then unexceptionable, that I was
- resolved to make myself as easy as I could, and wait till you should
- think fit to write to me. But I could rein-in my impatience but for a
- few days; and on the 20th of June I wrote a sharp letter to you; which I
- find you did not receive.
- What a fatality, my dear, has appeared in your case, from the very
- beginning till this hour! Had my mother permitted----
- But can I blame her; when you have a father and mother living, who have
- so much to answer for?--So much!--as no father and mother, considering
- the child they have driven, persecuted, exposed, renounced, ever had to
- answer for!
- But again I must execrate the abandoned villain--yet, as I said before,
- all words are poor, and beneath the occasion.
- But see we not, in the horrid perjuries and treachery of this man, what
- rakes and libertines will do, when they get a young creature into their
- power! It is probable that he might have the intolerable presumption to
- hope an easier conquest: but, when your unexampled vigilance and exalted
- virtue made potions, and rapes, and the utmost violences, necessary to
- the attainment of his detestable end, we see that he never boggled at
- them. I have no doubt that the same or equal wickedness would be oftener
- committed by men of his villanous cast, if the folly and credulity of the
- poor inconsiderates who throw themselves into their hands, did not give
- them an easier triumph.
- With what comfort must those parents reflect upon these things who have
- happily disposed of their daughters in marriage to a virtuous man! And
- how happy the young women who find themselves safe in a worthy
- protection!--If such a person as Miss Clarissa Harlowe could not escape,
- who can be secure?--Since, though every rake is not a LOVELACE, neither
- is every woman a CLARISSA: and his attempts were but proportioned to your
- resistance and vigilance.
- My mother has commanded me to let you know her thoughts upon the whole of
- your sad story. I will do it in another letter; and send it to you with
- this, by a special messenger.
- But, for the future, if you approve of it, I will send my letters by the
- usual hand, (Collins's,) to be left at the Saracen's Head, on Snow-hill:
- whither you may send your's, (as we both used to do, to Wilson's,) except
- such as we shall think fit to transmit by the post: which I am afraid,
- after my next, must be directed to Mr. Hickman, as before: since my
- mother is fixing a condition to our correspondence, which, I doubt, you
- will not comply with, though I wish you would. This condition I shall
- acquaint you with by-and-by.
- Mean time, begging excuse for all the harsh things in my last, of which
- your sweet meekness and superior greatness of soul have now made me most
- heartily ashamed, I beseech you, my dearest creature, to believe me to be
- Your truly sympathising,
- and unalterable friend,
- ANNA HOWE.
- LETTER LXXII
- MISS HOWE, TO MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE
- MONDAY, JULY 10.
- I now, my dearest friend, resume my pen, to obey my mother, in giving you
- her opinion upon your unhappy story.
- She still harps upon the old string, and will have it that all your
- calamities are owing to your first fatal step; for she believes, (what I
- cannot,) that your relations had intended after one general trial more,
- to comply with your aversion, if they had found it to be as riveted a
- one, as, let me say, it was a folly to suppose it would not be found to
- be, after so many ridiculously-repeated experiments.
- As to your latter sufferings from that vilest of miscreants, she is
- unalterably of opinion that if all be as you have related (which she
- doubts not) with regard to the potions, and to the violences you have
- sustained, you ought by all means to set on foot a prosecution against
- him, and against his devilish accomplices.
- She asks, What murderers, what ravishers, would be brought to justice, if
- modesty were to be a general plea, and allowable, against appearing in a
- court to prosecute?
- She says, that the good of society requires, that such a beast of prey
- should be hunted out of it: and, if you do not prosecute him, she thinks
- you will be answerable for all the mischiefs he may do in the course of
- his future villanous life.
- Will it be thought, Nancy, said she, that Miss Clarissa Harlowe can be in
- earnest, when she says, she is not solicitous to have her disgraces
- concealed from the world, if she be afraid or ashamed to appear in court,
- to do justice to herself and her sex against him? Will it not be rather
- surmised, that she may be apprehensive that some weakness, or lurking
- love, will appear upon the trial of the strange cause? If, inferred she,
- such complicated villany as this (where perjury, potions, forgery,
- subornation, are all combined to effect the ruin of an innocent creature,
- and to dishonour a family of eminence, and where the very crimes, as may
- be supposed, are proofs of her innocence) is to go off with impunity,
- what case will deserve to be brought into judgment? or what malefactor
- ought to be hanged?
- Then she thinks, and so do I, that the vile creatures, his accomplices,
- ought, by all means, to be brought to condign punishment, as they must
- and will be upon bringing him to trial: and this may be a mean to blow up
- and root out a whole nest of vipers, and save many innocent creatures.
- She added, that if Miss Clarissa Harlowe could be so indifferent about
- having this public justice done upon such a wretch for her own sake, she
- ought to overcome her scruples out of regard to her family, her
- acquaintance, and her sex, which are all highly injured and scandalized
- by his villany to her.
- For her own part, she declares, that were she your mother, she would
- forgive you upon no other terms: and, upon your compliance with these,
- she herself will undertake to reconcile all your family to you.
- These, my dear, are my mother's sentiments upon your sad story.
- I cannot say but there are reason and justice in them: and it is my
- opinion, that it would be very right for the law to oblige an injured
- woman to prosecute, and to make seduction on the man's part capital,
- where his studied baseness, and no fault in her will, appeared.
- To this purpose the custom in the Isle of Man is a very good one----
- 'If a single woman there prosecutes a single man for a rape, the
- ecclesiastical judges impannel a jury; and, if this jury find him guilty,
- he is returned guilty to the temporal courts: where if he be convicted,
- the deemster, or judge, delivers to the woman a rope, a sword, and a
- ring; and she has it in her choice to have him hanged, beheaded, or to
- marry him.'
- One of the two former, I think, should always be her option.
- I long for the particulars of your story. You must have too much time
- upon your hands for a mind so active as your's, if tolerable health and
- spirits be afforded you.
- The villany of the worst of men, and the virtue of the most excellent of
- women, I expect will be exemplified in it, were it to be written in the
- same connected and particular manner in which you used to write to me.
- Try for it, my dearest friend; and since you cannot give the example
- without the warning, give both, for the sakes of all those who shall hear
- of your unhappy fate; beginning from your's of June 5, your prospects
- then not disagreeable. I pity you for the task; though I cannot
- willingly exempt you from it.
- ***
- My mother will have me add, that she must insist upon your prosecuting
- the villain. She repeats, that she makes that a condition on which she
- permits our future correspondence. Let me therefore know your thoughts
- upon it. I asked her, if she would be willing that I should appear to
- support you in court, if you complied?--By all means, she said, if that
- would induce you to begin with him, and with the horrid women. I think I
- could probably attend you, I am sure I could, were there but a
- probability of bringing the monster to his deserved end.
- Once more your thoughts of it, supposing it were to meet with the
- approbation of your relations.
- But whatever be your determination on this head, it shall be my constant
- prayer, that God will give you patience to bear your heavy afflictions,
- as a person ought to do who has not brought them upon herself by a faulty
- will: that He will speak peace and comfort to your wounded mind; and give
- you many happy years. I am, and ever will be,
- Your affectionate and faithful
- ANNA HOWE.
- ***
- [The two preceding letters were sent by a special messenger: in the cover
- were written the following lines:]
- MONDAY, JULY 10.
- I cannot, my dearest friend, suffer the enclosed to go unaccompanied by a
- few lines, to signify to you that they are both less tender in some
- places than I would have written, had they not been to pass my mother's
- inspection. The principal reason, however, of my writing thus separately
- is, to beg of you to permit me to send you money and necessaries, which
- you must needs want; and that you will let me know, if either I, or any
- body I can influence, can be of service to you. I am excessively
- apprehensive that you are not enough out of the villain's reach where you
- are. Yet London, I am persuaded, is the place, of all others, to be
- private in.
- I could tear my hair for vexation, that I have it not in my power to
- afford you personal protection!--I am
- Your ever devoted
- ANNA HOWE.
- Once more forgive me, my dearest creature, for my barbarous taunting in
- mine of the 5th! Yet I can hardly forgive myself. I to be so cruel, yet
- to know you so well!--Whence, whence, had I this vile impatiency of
- spirit!--
- LETTER LXXIII
- MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE, TO MISS HOWE
- TUESDAY, JULY 11.
- Forgive you, my dear!--Most cordially do I forgive you--Will you forgive
- me for some sharp things I wrote in return to your's of the 5th? You
- could not have loved me as you do, nor had the concern you have always
- shown for my honour, if you had not been utterly displeased with me, on
- the appearance which my conduct wore to you when you wrote that letter.
- I most heartily thank you, my best and only love, for the opportunity you
- gave me of clearing it up; and for being generously ready to acquit me of
- intentional blame, the moment you had read my melancholy narrative.
- As you are so earnest to have all the particulars of my sad story before
- you, I will, if life and spirits be lent me, give you an ample account of
- all that has befallen me, from the time you mention. But this, it is
- very probable, you will not see, till after the close of my last scene:
- and as I shall write with a view to that, I hope no other voucher will be
- wanted for the veracity of the writer, be who will the reader.
- I am far from thinking myself out of the reach of this man's further
- violence. But what can I do? Whither can I fly?--Perhaps my bad state
- of health (which must grow worse, as recollection of the past evils, and
- reflections upon them, grow heavier and heavier upon me) may be my
- protection. Once, indeed, I thought of going abroad; and, had I the
- prospect of many years before me, I would go.--But, my dear, the blow is
- given.--Nor have you reason now, circumstanced as I am, to be concerned
- that it is. What a heart must I have, if it be not broken--and indeed,
- my dear friend, I do so earnestly wish for the last closing scene, and
- with so much comfort find myself in a declining way, that I even
- sometimes ungratefully regret that naturally-healthy constitution, which
- used to double upon me all my enjoyments.
- As to the earnestly-recommended prosecution, I may possibly touch upon it
- more largely hereafter, if ever I shall have better spirits; for they are
- at present extremely sunk and low. But just now, I will only say, that I
- would sooner suffer every evil (the repetition of the capital one
- excepted) than appear publicly in a court to do myself justice.* And I
- am heartily grieved that your mother prescribes such a measure as the
- condition of our future correspondence: for the continuance of your
- friendship, my dear, and the desire I had to correspond with you to my
- life's end, were all my remaining hopes and consolation. Nevertheless,
- as that friendship is in the power of the heart, not of the hand only, I
- hope I shall not forfeit that.
- * Dr. Lewen, in Letter XXIV. of Vol. VIII. presses her to this public
- prosecution, by arguments worthy of his character; which she answers in a
- manner worthy of her's. See Letter XXV. of that volume.
- O my dear! what would I give to obtain a revocation of my father's
- malediction! a reconciliation is not to be hoped for. You, who never
- loved my father, may think my solicitude on this head a weakness: but the
- motive for it, sunk as my spirits at times are, is not always weak.
- ***
- I approve of the method you prescribe for the conveyance of our letters;
- and have already caused the porter of the inn to be engaged to bring to
- me your's, the moment that Collins arrives with them. And the servant of
- the house where I am will be permitted to carry mine to Collins for you.
- I have written a letter to Miss Rawlins, of Hampstead; the answer to
- which, just now received, has helped me to the knowledge of the vile
- contrivance, by which the wicked man got your letter of June the 10th. I
- will give you the contents of both.
- In mine to her, I briefly acquainted her 'with what had befallen me,
- through the vileness of the women who had passed upon me as the aunt and
- cousin of the wickedest of men; and own, that I never was married to him.
- I desire her to make particular inquiry, and to let me know, who it was
- at Mrs. Moore's that, on Sunday afternoon, June 11, while I was at
- church, received a letter from Miss Howe, pretending to be me, and lying
- on a couch:--which letter, had it come to my hands, would have saved me
- from ruin. I excuse myself (on the score of the delirium, which the
- horrid usage I had received threw me into, and from a confinement as
- barbarous as illegal) that I had not before applied to Mrs. Moore for an
- account of what I was indebted to her: which account I now desired. And,
- for fear of being traced by Mr. Lovelace, I directed her to superscribe
- her answer, To Mrs. Mary Atkins; to be left till called for, at the Belle
- Savage Inn, on Ludgate-hill.'
- In her answer, she tells me, 'that the vile wretch prevailed upon Mrs.
- Bevis to personate me, [a sudden motion of his, it seems, on the
- appearance of your messenger,] and persuaded her to lie along a couch:
- a handkerchief over her neck and face; pretending to be ill; the
- credulous woman drawn in by false notions of your ill offices to keep up
- a variance between a man and his wife--and so taking the letter from your
- messenger as me.
- 'Miss Rawlins takes pains to excuse Mrs. Bevis's intention. She
- expresses their astonishment, and concern at what I communicate: but is
- glad, however, and so they are all, that they know in time the vileness
- of the base man; the two widows and herself having, at his earnest
- invitation, designed me a visit at Mrs. Sinclair's: supposing all to be
- happy between him and me; as he assured them was the case. Mr. Lovelace,
- she informs me, had handsomely satisfied Mrs. Moore. And Miss Rawlins
- concludes with wishing to be favoured with the particulars of so
- extraordinary a story, as these particulars may be of use, to let her see
- what wicked creatures (women as well as men) there are in the world.'
- I thank you, my dear, for the draughts of your two letters which were
- intercepted by this horrid man. I see the great advantage they were of
- to him, in the prosecution of his villanous designs against the poor
- wretch whom he had so long made the sport of his abhorred inventions.
- Let me repeat, that I am quite sick of life; and of an earth, in which
- innocent and benevolent spirits are sure to be considered as aliens, and
- to be made sufferers by the genuine sons and daughters of that earth.
- How unhappy, that those letters only which could have acquainted me with
- his horrid views, and armed me against them, and against the vileness of
- the base women, should fall into his hands!--Unhappier still, in that my
- very escape to Hampstead gave him the opportunity of receiving them.
- Nevertheless, I cannot but still wonder, how it was possible for that
- Tomlinson to know what passed between Mr. Hickman and my uncle Harlowe:*
- a circumstance which gave the vile impostor most of his credit with me.
- * See the note in Letter LXX. of this volume.
- How the wicked wretch himself could find me out at Hampstead, must also
- remain wholly a mystery to me. He may glory in his contrivances--he, who
- has more wickedness than wit, may glory in his contrivances!--But, after
- all, I shall, I humbly presume to hope, be happy, when he, poor wretch,
- will be--alas!--who can say what!----
- Adieu, my dearest friend!--May you be happy!--And then your Clarissa
- cannot be wholly miserable!
- END OF VOL. 6.
- End of Project Gutenberg's Clarissa, Volume 6 (of 9), by Samuel Richardson
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