<p>J. BELFORD. <SPAN name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> LETTER XVI </h2>
<p>MR. BELFORD, TO ROBERT LOVELACE, ESQ. MONDAY, JULY 17.</p>
<p>About six this morning, I went to Rowland's. Mrs. Sinclair was to follow
me, in order to dismiss the action; but not to come in sight.</p>
<p>Rowland, upon inquiry, told me, that the lady was extremely ill; and that
she had desired, that no one but his wife or maid should come near her.</p>
<p>I said, I must see her. I had told him my business over-night, and I must
see her.</p>
<p>His wife went up: but returned presently, saying, she could not get her to
speak to her; yet that her eyelids moved; though she either would not, or
could not, open them, to look up at her.</p>
<p>Oons, woman, said I, the lady may be in a fit: the lady may be dying—let
me go up. Show me the way.</p>
<p>A horrid hole of a house, in an alley they call a court; stairs wretchedly
narrow, even to the first-floor rooms: and into a den they led me, with
broken walls, which had been papered, as I saw by a multitude of tacks,
and some torn bits held on by the rusty heads.</p>
<p>The floor indeed was clean, but the ceiling was smoked with variety of
figures, and initials of names, that had been the woeful employment of
wretches who had no other way to amuse themselves.</p>
<p>A bed at one corner, with coarse curtains tacked up at the feet to the
ceiling; because the curtain-rings were broken off; but a coverlid upon it
with a cleanish look, though plaguily in tatters, and the corners tied up
in tassels, that the rents in it might go no farther.</p>
<p>The windows dark and double-barred, the tops boarded up to save mending;
and only a little four-paned eyelet-hole of a casement to let in air;
more, however, coming in at broken panes than could come in at that.</p>
<p>Four old Turkey-worked chairs, bursten-bottomed, the stuffing staring out.</p>
<p>An old, tottering, worm-eaten table, that had more nails bestowed in
mending it to make it stand, than the table cost fifty years ago, when
new.</p>
<p>On the mantle-piece was an iron shove-up candlestick, with a lighted
candle in it, twinkle, twinkle, twinkle, four of them, I suppose, for a
penny.</p>
<p>Near that, on the same shelf, was an old looking-glass, cracked through
the middle, breaking out into a thousand points; the crack given it,
perhaps, in a rage, by some poor creature, to whom it gave the
representation of his heart's woes in his face.</p>
<p>The chimney had two half-tiles in it on one side, and one whole one on the
other; which showed it had been in better plight; but now the very mortar
had followed the rest of the tiles in every other place, and left the
bricks bare.</p>
<p>An old half-barred stove grate was in the chimney; and in that a large
stone-bottle without a neck, filled with baleful yew, as an evergreen,
withered southern-wood, dead sweet-briar, and sprigs of rue in flower.</p>
<p>To finish the shocking description, in a dark nook stood an old
broken-bottomed cane couch, without a squab, or coverlid, sunk at one
corner, and unmortised by the failing of one of its worm-eaten legs, which
lay in two pieces under the wretched piece of furniture it could no longer
support.</p>
<p>And this, thou horrid Lovelace, was the bed-chamber of the divine
Clarissa!!!</p>
<p>I had leisure to cast my eye on these things: for, going up softly, the
poor lady turned not about at our entrance; nor, till I spoke, moved her
head.</p>
<p>She was kneeling in a corner of the room, near the dismal window, against
the table, on an old bolster (as it seemed to be) of the cane couch,
half-covered with her handkerchief; her back to the door; which was only
shut to, [no need of fastenings;] her arms crossed upon the table, the
fore-finger of her right-hand in her Bible. She had perhaps been reading
in it, and could read no longer. Paper, pens, ink, lay by her book on the
table. Her dress was white damask, exceeding neat; but her stays seemed
not tight-laced. I was told afterwards, that her laces had been cut, when
she fainted away at her entrance into this cursed place; and she had not
been solicitous enough about her dress to send for others. Her head-dress
was a little discomposed; her charming hair, in natural ringlets, as you
have heretofore described it, but a little tangled, as if not lately
combed, irregularly shading one side of the loveliest neck in the world;
as her disordered rumpled handkerchief did the other. Her face [O how
altered from what I had seen it! yet lovely in spite of all her griefs and
sufferings!] was reclined, when we entered, upon her crossed arms; but so,
as not more than one side of it could be hid.</p>
<p>When I surveyed the room around, and the kneeling lady, sunk with majesty
too in her white flowing robes, (for she had not on a hoop,) spreading the
dark, though not dirty, floor, and illuminating that horrid corner; her
linen beyond imagination white, considering that she had not been
undressed every since she had been here; I thought my concern would have
choked me. Something rose in my throat, I know not what, which made me,
for a moment, guggle, as it were, for speech: which, at last, forcing its
way, con—con—confound you both, said I, to the man and woman,
is this an apartment for such a lady? and could the cursed devils of her
own sex, who visited this suffering angel, see her, and leave her, in so d——d
a nook?</p>
<p>Sir, we would have had the lady to accept of our own bed-chamber: but she
refused it. We are poor people—and we expect nobody will stay with
us longer than they can help it.</p>
<p>You are people chosen purposely, I doubt not, by the d——d
woman who has employed you: and if your usage of this lady has been but
half as bad as your house, you had better never to have seen the light.</p>
<p>Up then raised the charming sufferer her lovely face; but with such a
significance of woe overspreading it, that I could not, for the soul of
me, help being visibly affected.</p>
<p>She waved her hand two or three times towards the door, as if commanding
me to withdraw; and displeased at my intrusion; but did not speak.</p>
<p>Permit me, Madam—I will not approach one step farther without your
leave —permit me, for one moment, the favour of your ear!</p>
<p>No—no—go, go, MAN! with an emphasis—and would have said
more; but, as if struggling in vain for words, she seemed to give up
speech for lost, and dropped her head down once more, with a deep sigh,
upon her left arm; her right, as if she had not the use of it (numbed, I
suppose) self-moved, dropping on her side.</p>
<p>O that thou hadst been there! and in my place!—But by what I then
felt, in myself, I am convinced, that a capacity of being moved by the
distresses of our fellow creatures, is far from being disgraceful to a
manly heart. With what pleasure, at that moment, could I have given up my
own life, could I but first have avenged this charming creature, and cut
the throat of her destroyer, as she emphatically calls thee, though the
friend that I best love: and yet, at the same time, my heart and my eyes
gave way to a softness of which (though not so hardened a wretch as thou)
they were never before so susceptible.</p>
<p>I dare not approach you, dearest lady, without your leave: but on my knees
I beseech you to permit me to release you from this d——d
house, and out of the power of the cursed woman, who was the occasion of
your being here!</p>
<p>She lifted up her sweet face once more, and beheld me on my knees. Never
knew I before what it was to pray so heartily.</p>
<p>Are you not—are you not Mr. Belford, Sir? I think your name is
Belford?</p>
<p>It is, Madam, and I ever was a worshipper of your virtues, and an advocate
for you; and I come to release you from the hands you are in.</p>
<p>And in whose to place me?—O leave me, leave me! let me never rise
from this spot! let me never, never more believe in man!</p>
<p>This moment, dearest lady, this very moment, if you please, you may depart
whithersoever you think fit. You are absolutely free, and your own
mistress.</p>
<p>I had now as lieve die here in this place, as any where. I will owe no
obligation to any friend of him in whose company you have seen me. So,
pray, Sir, withdraw.</p>
<p>Then turning to the officer, Mr. Rowland I think your name is? I am better
reconciled to your house than I was at first. If you can but engage that I
shall have nobody come near me but your wife, (no man!) and neither of
those women who have sported with my calamities, I will die with you, and
in this very corner. And you shall be well satisfied for the trouble you
have had with me—I have value enough for that—for, see, I have
a diamond ring; taking it out of her bosom; and I have friends will redeem
it at a high price, when I am gone.</p>
<p>But for you, Sir, looking at me, I beg you to withdraw. If you mean well
by me, God, I hope, will reward you for your good meaning; but to the
friend of my destroyer will I not owe an obligation.</p>
<p>You will owe no obligation to me, nor to any body. You have been detained
for a debt you do not owe. The action is dismissed; and you will only be
so good as to give me your hand into the coach, which stands as near to
this house as it could draw up. And I will either leave you at the
coach-door, or attend you whithersoever you please, till I see you safe
where you would wish to be.</p>
<p>Will you then, Sir, compel me to be beholden to you?</p>
<p>You will inexpressibly oblige me, Madam, to command me to do you either
service or pleasure.</p>
<p>Why then, Sir, [looking at me]—but why do you mock me in that humble
posture! Rise, Sir! I cannot speak to you else.</p>
<p>I rose.</p>
<p>Only, Sir, take this ring. I have a sister, who will be glad to have it,
at the price it shall be valued at, for the former owner's sake!—Out
of the money she gives, let this man be paid! handsomely paid: and I have
a few valuables more at my lodging, (Dorcas, or the MAN William, can tell
where that is;) let them, and my clothes at the wicked woman's, where you
have seen me, be sold for the payment of my lodging first, and next of
your friend's debts, that I have been arrested for, as far as they will
go; only reserving enough to put me into the ground, any where, or any
how, no matter——Tell your friend, I wish it may be enough to
satisfy the whole demand; but if it be not, he must make it up himself;
or, if he think fit to draw for it on Miss Howe, she will repay it, and
with interest, if he insist upon it.——And this, Sir, if you
promise to perform, you will do me, as you offer, both pleasure and
service: and say you will, and take the ring and withdraw. If I want to
say any thing more to you (you seem to be an humane man) I will let you
know——and so, Sir, God bless you!</p>
<p>I approached her, and was going to speak——</p>
<p>Don't speak, Sir: here's the ring.</p>
<p>I stood off.</p>
<p>And won't you take it? won't you do this last office for me?—I have
no other person to ask it of; else, believe me, I would not request it of
you. But take it, or not, laying it upon the table——you must
withdraw, Sir: I am very ill. I would fain get a little rest, if I could.
I find I am going to be bad again.</p>
<p>And offering to rise, she sunk down through excess of weakness and grief,
in a fainting fit.</p>
<p>Why, Lovelace, was thou not present thyself?——Why dost thou
commit such villanies, as even thou art afraid to appear in; and yet
puttest a weaker heart and head upon encountering with them?</p>
<p>The maid coming in just then, the woman and she lifted her up on a
decrepit couch; and I withdrew with this Rowland; who wept like a child,
and said, he never in his life was so moved.</p>
<p>Yet so hardened a wretch art thou, that I question whether thou wilt shed
a tear at my relation.</p>
<p>They recovered her by hartshorn and water. I went down mean while; for the
detestable woman had been below some time. O how I did curse her! I never
before was so fluent in curses.</p>
<p>She tried to wheedle me; but I renounced her; and, after she had dismissed
the action, sent her away crying, or pretending to cry, because of my
behaviour to her.</p>
<p>You will observe, that I did not mention one word to the lady about you. I
was afraid to do it. For 'twas plain, that she could not bear your name:
your friend, and the company you have seen me in, were the words nearest
to naming you she could speak: and yet I wanted to clear your intention of
this brutal, this sordid-looking villany.</p>
<p>I sent up again, by Rowland's wife, when I heard that the lady was
recovered, beseeching her to quit that devilish place; and the woman
assured her that she was at liberty to do so, for that the action was
dismissed.</p>
<p>But she cared not to answer her: and was so weak and low, that it was
almost as much out of her power as inclination, the woman told me, to
speak.</p>
<p>I would have hastened away for my friend Doctor H., but the house is such
a den, and the room she was in such a hole, that I was ashamed to be seen
in it by a man of his reputation, especially with a woman of such an
appearance, and in such uncommon distress; and I found there was no
prevailing upon her to quit it for the people's bed-room, which was neat
and lightsome.</p>
<p>The strong room she was in, the wretches told me, should have been in
better order, but that it was but the very morning that she was brought in
that an unhappy man had quitted it; for a more eligible prison, no doubt;
since there could hardly be a worse.</p>
<p>Being told that she desired not to be disturbed, and seemed inclined to
doze, I took this opportunity to go to her lodgings in Covent-garden: to
which Dorcas (who first discovered her there, as Will. was the setter from
church) had before given me a direction.</p>
<p>The man's name is Smith, a dealer in gloves, snuff, and such petty
merchandize: his wife the shopkeeper: he a maker of the gloves they sell.
Honest people, it seems.</p>
<p>I thought to have got the woman with me to the lady; but she was not
within.</p>
<p>I talked with the man, and told him what had befallen the lady; owing, as
I said, to a mistake of orders; and gave her the character she deserved;
and desired him to send his wife, the moment she came in, to the lady;
directing him whither; not doubting that her attendance would be very
welcome to her; which he promised.</p>
<p>He told me that a letter was left for her there on Saturday; and, about
half an hour before I came, another, superscribed by the same hand; the
first, by the post; the other, by a countryman; who having been informed
of her absence, and of all the circumstances they could tell him of it,
posted away, full of concern, saying, that the lady he was sent from would
be ready to break her heart at the tidings.</p>
<p>I thought it right to take the two letters back with me; and, dismissing
my coach, took a chair, as a more proper vehicle for the lady, if I (the
friend of her destroyer) could prevail upon her to leave Rowland's.</p>
<p>And here, being obliged to give way to an indispensable avocation, I will
make thee taste a little, in thy turn, of the plague of suspense; and
break off, without giving thee the least hint of the issue of my further
proceedings. I know, that those least bear disappointment, who love most
to give it. In twenty instances, hast thou afforded me proof of the truth
of this observation. And I matter not thy raving.</p>
<p>Another letter, however, shall be ready, send for it a soon as thou wilt.
But, were it not, have I not written enough to convince thee, that I am</p>
<p>Thy ready and obliging friend, J. BELFORD.</p>
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