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<h2> LETTER V </h2>
<p>MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ. SUNDAY NIGHT, JULY 9.</p>
<p>Now, Jack, have I a subject with a vengeance. I am in the very height of
my trial for all my sins to my beloved fugitive. For here to-day, at about
five o'clock, arrived Lady Sarah Sadleir and Lady Betty Lawrance, each in
her chariot-and-six. Dowagers love equipage; and these cannot travel ten
miles without a sett, and half a dozen horsemen.</p>
<p>My time had hung heavy upon my hands; and so I went to church after
dinner. Why may not handsome fellows, thought I, like to be looked at, as
well as handsome wenches? I fell in, when service was over, with Major
Warneton; and so came not home till after six; and was surprised, at
entering the court-yard here, to find it littered with equipages and
servants. I was sure the owners of them came for no good to me.</p>
<p>Lady Sarah, I soon found, was raised to this visit by Lady Betty; who has
health enough to allow her to look out to herself, and out of her own
affairs, for business. Yet congratulation to Lord M. on his amendment,
[spiteful devils on both accounts!] was the avowed errand. But coming in
my absence, I was their principal subject; and they had opportunity to set
each other's heart against me.</p>
<p>Simon Parsons hinted this to me, as I passed by the steward's office; for
it seems they talked loud; and he was making up some accounts with old
Pritchard.</p>
<p>However, I hastened to pay my duty to them—other people not
performing theirs, is no excuse for the neglect of our own, you know.</p>
<p>And now I enter upon my TRIAL.<br/></p>
<p>With horrible grave faces was I received. The two antiquities only bowed
their tabby heads; making longer faces than ordinary; and all the old
lines appearing strong in their furrowed foreheads and fallen cheeks; How
do you, Cousin? And how do you, Mr. Lovelace? looking all round at one
another, as who should say, do you speak first: and, do you: for they
seemed resolved to lose no time.</p>
<p>I had nothing for it, but an air as manly, as theirs was womanly. Your
servant, Madam, to Lady Betty; and, Your servant, Madam, I am glad to see
you abroad, to Lady Sarah.</p>
<p>I took my seat. Lord M. looked horribly glum; his fingers claspt, and
turning round and round, under and over, his but just disgouted thumb; his
sallow face, and goggling eyes, on his two kinswomen, by turns; but not
once deigning to look upon me.</p>
<p>Then I began to think of the laudanum, and wet cloth, I told thee of long
ago; and to call myself in question for a tenderness of heart that will
never do me good.</p>
<p>At last, Mr. Lovelace!——Cousin Lovelace!——Hem!—Hem!—I
am sorry, very sorry, hesitated Lady Sarah, that there is no hope of your
ever taking up——</p>
<p>What's the matter now, Madam?</p>
<p>The matter now!——Why Lady Betty has two letters from Miss
Harlowe, which have told us what's the matter——Are all women
alike with you?</p>
<p>Yes; I could have answered; 'bating the difference which pride makes.</p>
<p>Then they all chorus'd upon me—Such a character as Miss Harlowe's!
cried one——A lady of so much generosity and good sense!
Another—How charmingly she writes! the two maiden monkeys, looking
at her find handwriting: her perfections my crimes. What can you expect
will be the end of these things! cried Lady Sarah—d——d,
d——d doings! vociferated the Peer, shaking his loose-fleshe'd
wabbling chaps, which hung on his shoulders like an old cow's dewlap.</p>
<p>For my part, I hardly knew whether to sing or say what I had to reply to
these all-at-once attacks upon me! Fair and softly, Ladies—one at a
time, I beseech you. I am not to be hunted down without being heard, I
hope. Pray let me see these letters. I beg you will let me see them.</p>
<p>There they are:—that's the first—read it out, if you can.</p>
<p>I opened a letter from my charmer, dated Thursday, June 29, our
wedding-day, that was to be, and written to Lady Betty Lawrance. By the
contents, to my great joy, I find the dear creature is alive and well, and
in charming spirits. But the direction where to send an answer to was so
scratched out that I could not read it; which afflicted me much.</p>
<p>She puts three questions in it to Lady Betty.</p>
<p>1st. About a letter of her's, dated June 7, congratulating me on my
nuptials, and which I was so good as to save Lady Betty the trouble of
writing——A very civil thing of me, I think!</p>
<p>Again—'Whether she and one of her nieces Montague were to go to
town, on an old chancery suit?'—And, 'Whether they actually did go
to town accordingly, and to Hampstead afterwards?' and, 'Whether they
brought to town from thence the young creature whom they visited?' was the
subject of the second and third questions.</p>
<p>A little inquisitive, dear rogue! and what did she expect to be the better
for these questions?——But curiosity, d——d
curiosity, is the itch of the sex—yet when didst thou know it turned
to their benefit?— For they seldom inquire, but what they fear—and
the proverb, as my Lord has it, says, It comes with a fear. That is, I
suppose, what they fear generally happens, because there is generally
occasion for the fear.</p>
<p>Curiosity indeed she avows to be her only motive for these
interrogatories: for, though she says her Ladyship may suppose the
questions are not asked for good to me, yet the answer can do me no harm,
nor her good, only to give her to understand, whether I have told her a
parcel of d——d lyes; that's the plain English of her inquiry.</p>
<p>Well, Madam, said I, with as much philosophy as I could assume; and may I
ask—Pray, what was your Ladyship's answer?</p>
<p>There's a copy of it, tossing it to me, very disrespectfully.</p>
<p>This answer was dated July 1. A very kind and complaisant one to the lady,
but very so-so to her poor kinsman—That people can give up their own
flesh and blood with so much ease!—She tells her 'how proud all our
family would be of an alliance with such an excellence.' She does me
justice in saying how much I adore her, as an angel of a woman; and begs
of her, for I know not how many sakes, besides my soul's sake, 'that she
will be so good as to have me for a husband:' and answers—thou wilt
guess how—to the lady's questions.</p>
<p>Well, Madam; and pray, may I be favoured with the lady's other letter? I
presume it is in reply to your's.</p>
<p>It is, said the Peer: but, Sir, let me ask you a few questions, before you
read it—give me the letter, Lady Betty.</p>
<p>There it is, my Lord.</p>
<p>Then on went the spectacles, and his head moved to the lines—a
charming pretty hand!—I have often heard that this lady is a genius.</p>
<p>And so, Jack, repeating my Lord's wise comments and questions will let
thee into the contents of this merciless letter.</p>
<p>'Monday, July 3,' [reads my Lord.]—Let me see!—that was last
Monday; no longer ago! 'Monday, July the third—Madam—I cannot
excuse myself'—um, um, um, um, um, um, [humming inarticulately, and
skipping,]—'I must own to you, Madam, that the honour of being
related'——</p>
<p>Off went the spectacles—Now, tell me, Sir-r, Has not this lady lost
all the friends she had in the world for your sake?</p>
<p>She has very implacable friends, my Lord: we all know that.</p>
<p>But has she not lost them all for your sake?—Tell me that.</p>
<p>I believe so, my Lord.</p>
<p>Well then!—I am glad thou art not so graceless as to deny that.</p>
<p>On went the spectacles again—'I must own to you, Madam, that the
honour of being related to ladies as eminent for their virtue as for their
descent.'—Very pretty, truly! saith my Lord, repeating, '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.'</p>
<p>There is dignity, born-dignity, in this lady, cried my Lord.</p>
<p>Lady Sarah. She would have been a grace to our family.</p>
<p>Lady Betty. Indeed she would.</p>
<p>Lovel. To a royal family, I will venture to say.</p>
<p>Lord M. Then what a devil—-</p>
<p>Lovel. Please to read on, my Lord. It cannot be her letter, if it does not
make you admire her more and more as you read. Cousin Charlotte, Cousin
Patty, pray attend——Read on, my Lord.</p>
<p>Miss Charlotte. Amazing fortitude!</p>
<p>Miss Patty only lifted up her dove's eyes.</p>
<p>Lord M. [Reading.] 'And the rather, as I was determined, had it come to
effect, to do every thing in my power to deserve your favourable opinion.'</p>
<p>Then again they chorus'd upon me!</p>
<p>A blessed time of it, poor I!—I had nothing for it but impudence!</p>
<p>Lovel. Pray read on, my Lord—I told you how you would all admire her
——or, shall I read?</p>
<p>Lord M. D——d assurance! [Then reading.] 'I had another motive,
which I knew would of itself give me merit with your whole family: [they
were all ear:] 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 at
bottom to be reclaimed; or at least gratitude enough to acknowledge the
intended obligation, whether the generous hope were to succeed or not.'
—Excellent young creature!—</p>
<p>Excellent young creature! echoed the Ladies, with their handkerchiefs at
their eyes, attended with music.</p>
<p>Lovel. By my soul, Miss Patty, you weep in the wrong place: you shall
never go with me to a tragedy.</p>
<p>Lady Betty. Hardened wretch.</p>
<p>His Lordship had pulled off his spectacles to wipe them. His eyes were
misty; and he thought the fault in his spectacles.</p>
<p>I saw they were all cocked and primed—to be sure that is a very
pretty sentence, said I——that is the excellency of this lady,
that in every line, as she writes on, she improves upon herself. Pray, my
Lord, proceed—I know her style; the next sentence will still rise
upon us.</p>
<p>Lord M. D——d fellow! [Again saddling, and reading.] 'But I
have been most egregiously mistaken in Mr. Lovelace!' [Then they all
clamoured again.]—'The only man, I persuade myself'——</p>
<p>Lovel. Ladies may persuade themselves to any thing: but how can she answer
for what other men would or would not have done in the same circumstances?</p>
<p>I was forced to say any thing to stifle their outcries. Pox take ye
altogether, thought I; as if I had not vexation enough in losing her!</p>
<p>Lord M. [Reading.] 'The only man, I persuade myself, pretending to be a
gentleman, in whom I could have been so much mistaken.'</p>
<p>They were all beginning again—Pray, my Lord, proceed!—Hear,
hear—pray, Ladies, hear!—Now, my Lord, be pleased to proceed.
The Ladies are silent.</p>
<p>So they were; lost in admiration of me, hands and eyes uplifted.</p>
<p>Lord M. I will, to thy confusion; for he had looked over the next
sentence.</p>
<p>What wretches, Belford, what spiteful wretches, are poor mortals!—So
rejoiced to sting one another! to see each other stung!</p>
<p>Lord M. [Reading.] '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.'—What say you to that, Sir-r?</p>
<p>Lady S. | Ay, Sir, what say you to this? Lady B. |</p>
<p>Lovel. Say! Why I say it is a very pretty metaphor, if it would but hold.—But,
if you please, my Lord, read on. Let me hear what is further said, and I
will speak to it all together.</p>
<p>Lord M. I will. '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.'</p>
<p>They all looked at me, as expecting me to speak.</p>
<p>Lovel. Be pleased to proceed, my Lord: I will speak to this by-and-by—
How came she to know I kept a list?—I will speak to this by-and-by.</p>
<p>Lord M. [Reading on.] 'And this, Madam, by means that would shock humanity
to be made acquainted with.'</p>
<p>Then again, in a hurry, off went the spectacles.</p>
<p>This was a plaguy stroke upon me. I thought myself an oak in impudence;
but, by my troth, this almost felled me.</p>
<p>Lord M. What say you to this, SIR-R!</p>
<p>Remember, Jack, to read all their Sirs in this dialogue with a double rr,
Sir-r! denoting indignation rather than respect.</p>
<p>They all looked at me as if to see if I could blush.</p>
<p>Lovel. Eyes off, my Lord!——Eyes off, Ladies! [Looking
bashfully, I believe.]—What say I to this, my Lord!—Why, I
say, that this lady has a strong manner of expressing herself!—That's
all.—There are many things that pass among lovers, which a man
cannot explain himself upon before grave people.</p>
<p>Lady Betty. Among lovers, Sir-r! But, Mr. Lovelace, can you say that this
lady behaved either like a weak, or a credulous person?—Can you say—</p>
<p>Lovel. I am ready to do the lady all manner of justice.—But, pray
now, Ladies, if I am to be thus interrogated, let me know the contents of
the rest of the letter, that I may be prepared for my defence, as you are
all for my arraignment. For, to be required to answer piecemeal thus,
without knowing what is to follow, is a cursed ensnaring way of
proceeding.</p>
<p>They gave me the letter: I read it through to myself:—and by the
repetition of what I said, thou wilt guess at the remaining contents.</p>
<p>You shall find, Ladies, you shall find, my Lord, that I will not spare
myself. Then holding the letter in my hand, and looking upon it, as a
lawyer upon his brief,</p>
<p>Miss Harlowe says, 'That when your Ladyship,' [turning to Lady Betty,]
'shall know, that, in the progress to her ruin, wilful falsehoods,
repeated forgeries, and numberless perjuries, were not the least of my
crimes, you will judge that she can have no principles that will make her
worthy of an alliance with ladies of your's, and your noble sister's
character, if she could not, from her soul, declare, that such an alliance
can never now take place.'</p>
<p>Surely, Ladies, this is passion! This is not reason. If our family would
not think themselves dishonoured by my marrying a person whom I had so
treated; but, on the contrary, would rejoice that I did her this justice:
and if she has come out pure gold from the assay; and has nothing to
reproach herself with; why should it be an impeachment of her principles,
to consent that such an alliance take place?</p>
<p>She cannot think herself the worse, justly she cannot, for what was done
against her will.</p>
<p>Their countenances menaced a general uproar—but I proceeded.</p>
<p>Your Lordship read to us, that she had an hope, a presumptuous one: nay, a
punishably-presumptuous one, she calls it; 'that she might be a mean, in
the hand of Providence, to reclaim me; and that this, she knew, if
effected, would give her a merit with you all.' But from what would she
reclaim me?—She had heard, you'll say, (but she had only heard, at
the time she entertained that hope,) that, to express myself in the
women's dialect, I was a very wicked fellow!—Well, and what then?—Why,
truly, the very moment she was convinced, by her own experience, that the
charge against me was more than hearsay; and that, of consequence, I was a
fit subject for her generous endeavours to work upon; she would needs give
me up. Accordingly, she flies out, and declares, that the ceremony which
would repair all shall never take place!—Can this be from any other
motive than female resentment?</p>
<p>This brought them all upon me, as I intended it should: it was as a tub to
a whale; and after I had let them play with it a while, I claimed their
attention, and, knowing that they always loved to hear me prate, went on.</p>
<p>The lady, it is plain, thought, that the reclaiming of a man from bad
habits was a much easier task than, in the nature of things, it can be.</p>
<p>She writes, as your Lordship has read, 'That, in endeavouring to save a
drowning wretch, she had been, not accidentally, but premeditatedly, and
of set purpose, drawn in after him.' But how is this, Ladies?—You
see by her own words, that I am still far from being out of danger myself.
Had she found me, in a quagmire suppose, and I had got out of it by her
means, and left her to perish in it; that would have been a crime indeed.
—But is not the fact quite otherwise? Has she not, if her allegory
prove what she would have it prove, got out herself, and left me
floundering still deeper and deeper in?—What she should have done,
had she been in earnest to save me, was, to join her hand with mine, that
so we might by our united strength help one another out.—I held out
my hand to her, and besought her to give me her's:—But, no truly!
she was determined to get out herself as fast as she could, let me sink or
swim: refusing her assistance (against her own principles) because she saw
I wanted it.—You see, Ladies, you see, my Lord, how pretty tinkling
words run away with ears inclined to be musical.</p>
<p>They were all ready to exclaim again: but I went on, proleptically, as a
rhetorician would say, before their voices would break out into words.</p>
<p>But my fair accuser says, that, 'I have added to the list of those I have
ruined, a name that would not have disparaged my own.' It is true, I have
been gay and enterprising. It is in my constitution to be so. I know not
how I came by such a constitution: but I was never accustomed to check or
controul; that you all know. When a man finds himself hurried by passion
into a slight offence, which, however slight, will not be forgiven, he may
be made desperate: as a thief, who only intends a robbery, is often by
resistance, and for self-preservation, drawn in to commit murder.</p>
<p>I was a strange, a horrid wretch, with every one. But he must be a silly
fellow who has not something to say for himself, when every cause has its
black and its white side.—Westminster-hall, Jack, affords every day
as confident defences as mine.</p>
<p>But what right, proceeded I, has this lady to complain of me, when she as
good as says—Here, Lovelace, you have acted the part of a villain by
me! —You would repair your fault: but I won't let you, that I may
have the satisfaction of exposing you; and the pride of refusing you.</p>
<p>But, was that the case? Was that the case? Would I pretend to say, I would
now marry the lady, if she would have me?</p>
<p>Lovel. You find she renounces Lady Betty's mediation——</p>
<p>Lord M. [Interrupting me.] Words are wind; but deeds are mind: What
signifies your cursed quibbling, Bob?—Say plainly, if she will have
you, will you have her? Answer me, yes or no; and lead us not a wild-goose
chace after your meaning.</p>
<p>Lovel. She knows I would. But here, my Lord, if she thus goes on to expose
herself and me, she will make it a dishonour to us both to marry.</p>
<p>Charl. But how must she have been treated—</p>
<p>Lovel. [Interrupting her.] Why now, Cousin Charlotte, chucking her under
the chin, would you have me tell you all that has passed between the lady
and me? Would you care, had you a bold and enterprizing lover, that
proclamation should be made of every little piece of amorous roguery, that
he offered to you?</p>
<p>Charlotte reddened. They all began to exclaim. But I proceeded.</p>
<p>The lady says, 'She has been dishonoured' (devil take me, if I spare
myself!) 'by means that would shock humanity to be made acquainted with
them.' She is a very innocent lady, and may not be a judge of the means
she hints at. Over-niceness may be under-niceness: Have you not such a
proverb, my Lord?—tantamount to, One extreme produces another!——Such
a lady as this may possibly think her case more extraordinary than it is.
This I will take upon me to say, that if she has met with the only man in
the world who would have treated her, as she says I have treated her, I
have met in her with the only woman in the world who would have made such
a rout about a case that is uncommon only from the circumstances that
attend it.</p>
<p>This brought them all upon me; hands, eyes, voices, all lifted at once.
But my Lord M. who has in his head (the last seat of retreating lewdness)
as much wickedness as I have in my heart, was forced (upon the air I spoke
this with, and Charlotte's and all the rest reddening) to make a mouth
that was big enough to swallow up the other half of his face; crying out,
to avoid laughing, Oh! Oh!—as if under the power of a gouty twinge.</p>
<p>Hadst thou seen how the two tabbies and the young grimalkins looked at one
another, at my Lord, and at me, by turns, thou would have been ready to
split thy ugly face just in the middle. Thy mouth hath already done half
the work. And, after all, I found not seldom in this conversation, that my
humourous undaunted airs forced a smile into my service from the prim
mouths of the young ladies. They perhaps, had they met with such another
intrepid fellow as myself, who had first gained upon their affections,
would not have made such a rout as my beloved has done, about such an
affair as that we were assembled upon. Young ladies, as I have observed on
an hundred occasions, fear not half so much for themselves as their
mothers do for them. But here the girls were forced to put on grave airs,
and to seem angry, because the antiques made the matter of such high
importance. Yet so lightly sat anger and fellow-feeling at their hearts,
that they were forced to purse in their mouths, to suppress the smiles I
now-and-then laid out for: while the elders having had roses (that is to
say, daughters) of their own, and knowing how fond men are of a trifle,
would have been very loth to have had them nipt in the bud, without saying
to the mother of them, By your leave, Mrs. Rose-bush.</p>
<p>The next article of my indictment was for forgery; and for personating of
Lady Betty and my cousin Charlotte.</p>
<p>Two shocking charges, thou'lt say: and so they were!—The Peer was
outrageous upon the forgery charge. The Ladies vowed never to forgive the
personating part.</p>
<p>Not a peace-maker among them. So we all turned women, and scolded.</p>
<p>My Lord told me, that he believed in his conscience there was not a viler
fellow upon God's earth than me.—What signifies mincing the matter?
said he—and that it was not the first time I had forged his hand.</p>
<p>To this I answered, that I supposed, when the statute of Scandalum
Magnatum was framed, there were a good many in the peerage who knew they
deserved hard names; and that that law therefore was rather made to
privilege their qualities, than to whiten their characters.</p>
<p>He called upon me to explain myself, with a Sir-r, so pronounced, as to
show that one of the most ignominious words in our language was in his
head.</p>
<p>People, I said, that were fenced in by their quality, and by their years,
should not take freedoms that a man of spirit could not put up with,
unless he were able heartily to despise the insulter.</p>
<p>This set him in a violent passion. He would send for Pritchard instantly.
Let Pritchard be called. He would alter his will; and all he could leave
from me, he would.</p>
<p>Do, do, my Lord, said I: I always valued my own pleasure above your
estate. But I'll let Pritchard know, that if he draws, he shall sign and
seal.</p>
<p>Why, what would I do to Pritchard?—shaking his crazy head at me.</p>
<p>Only, what he, or any man else, writes with his pen, to despoil me of what
I think my right, he shall seal with his ears; that's all, my Lord.</p>
<p>Then the two Ladies interposed.</p>
<p>Lady Sarah told me, that I carried things a great way; and that neither
Lord M. nor any of them, deserved the treatment I gave them.</p>
<p>I said, I could not bear to be used ill by my Lord, for two reasons;
first, because I respected his Lordship above any man living; and next,
because it looked as if I were induced by selfish considerations to take
that from him, which nobody else would offer to me.</p>
<p>And what, returned he, shall be my inducement to take what I do at your
hands?—Hay, Sir?</p>
<p>Indeed, Cousin Lovelace, said Lady Betty, with great gravity, we do not
any of us, as Lady Sarah says, deserve at your hands the treatment you
give us: and let me tell you, that I don't think my character and your
cousin Charlotte's ought to be prostituted, in order to ruin an innocent
lady. She must have known early the good opinion we all have of her, and
how much we wished her to be your wife. This good opinion of ours has been
an inducement to her (you see she says so) to listen to your address. And
this, with her friends' folly, has helped to throw her into your power.
How you have requited her is too apparent. It becomes the character we all
bear, to disclaim your actions by her. And let me tell you, that to have
her abused by wicked people raised up to personate us, or any of us, makes
a double call upon us to disclaim them.</p>
<p>Lovel. Why this is talking somewhat like. I would have you all disclaim my
actions. I own I have done very vilely by this lady. One step led to
another. I am curst with an enterprizing spirit. I hate to be foiled—</p>
<p>Foiled! interrupted Lady Sarah. What a shame to talk at this rate!—Did
the lady set up a contention with you? All nobly sincere, and
plain-hearted, have I heard Miss Clarissa Harlowe is: above art, above
disguise; neither the coquette, nor the prude!—Poor lady! she
deserved a better fare from the man for whom she took the step which she
so freely blames!</p>
<p>This above half affected me.—Had this dispute been so handled by
every one, I had been ashamed to look up. I began to be bashful.</p>
<p>Charlotte asked if I did not still seem inclinable to do the lady justice,
if she would accept of me? It would be, she dared to say, the greatest
felicity the family could know (she would answer for one) that this fine
lady were of it.</p>
<p>They all declared to the same effect; and Lady Sarah put the matter home
to me.</p>
<p>But my Lord Marplot would have it that I could not be serious for six
minutes together.</p>
<p>I told his Lordship that he was mistaken; light as he thought I made of
his subject, I never knew any that went so near my heart.</p>
<p>Miss Patty said she was glad to hear that: and her soft eyes glistened
with pleasure.</p>
<p>Lord M. called her sweet soul, and was ready to cry.</p>
<p>Not from humanity neither, Jack. This Peer has no bowels; as thou mayest
observe by this treatment of me. But when people's minds are weakened by a
sense of their own infirmities, and when they are drawing on to their
latter ends, they will be moved on the slightest occasions, whether those
offer from within or without them. And this, frequently, the unpenetrating
world, calls humanity; when all the time, in compassionating the miseries
of human nature, they are but pitying themselves; and were they in strong
health and spirits, would care as little for any body else as thou or I
do.</p>
<p>Here broke they off my trial for this sitting. Lady Sarah was much
fatigued. It was agreed to pursue the subject in the morning. They all,
however, retired together, and went into private conference.</p>
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