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<h2> LETTER XXVII </h2>
<p>MR. BELFORD, TO ROBERT LOVELACE, ESQ. THURSDAY NIGHT.</p>
<p>I was forced to take back my twenty guineas. How the women managed it I
can't tell, (I suppose they too readily found a purchaser for the rich
suit;) but she mistrusted, that I was the advancer of the money; and would
not let the clothes go. But Mrs. Lovick has actually sold, for fifteen
guineas, some rich lace worth three times the sum; out of which she repaid
her the money she borrowed for fees to the doctor, in an illness
occasioned by the barbarity of the most savage of men. Thou knowest his
name!</p>
<p>The Doctor called on her in the morning it seems, and had a short debate
with her about fees. She insisted that he should take one every time he
came, write or not write; mistrusting that he only gave verbal directions
to Mrs. Lovick, or the nurse, to avoid taking any.</p>
<p>He said that it would be impossible for him, had he not been a physician,
to forbear inquiries after the health and welfare of so excellent a
person. He had not the thought of paying her a compliment in declining the
offered fee: but he knew her case could not so suddenly vary as to demand
his daily visits. She must permit him, therefore, to inquire of the women
below after her health; and he must not think of coming up, if he were to
be pecuniarily rewarded for the satisfaction he was so desirous to give
himself.</p>
<p>It ended in a compromise for a fee each other time; which she unwillingly
submitted to; telling him, that though she was at present desolate and in
disgrace, yet her circumstances were, of right, high; and no expenses
could rise so as to be scrupled, whether she lived or died. But she
submitted, she added, to the compromise, in hopes to see him as often as
he had opportunity; for she really looked upon him, and Mr. Goddard, from
their kind and tender treatment of her, with a regard next to filial.</p>
<p>I hope thou wilt make thyself acquainted with this worthy Doctor when thou
comest to town; and give him thy thanks, for putting her into conceit with
the sex that thou hast given her so much reason to execrate.</p>
<p>Farewell.</p>
<p>LETTER XXVIII</p>
<p>MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ. M. HALL, FRIDAY, JULY 21.</p>
<p>Just returned from an interview with this Hickman: a precise fop of a
fellow, as starched as his ruffles.</p>
<p>Thou knowest I love him not, Jack; and whom we love not we cannot allow a
merit to! perhaps not the merit they should be granted. However, I am in
earnest, when I say, that he seems to me to be so set, so prim, so
affected, so mincing, yet so clouterly in his person, that I dare engage
for thy opinion, if thou dost justice to him, and to thyself, that thou
never beheldest such another, except in a pier-glass.</p>
<p>I'll tell thee how I play'd him off.</p>
<p>He came in his own chariot to Dormer's; and we took a turn in the garden,
at his request. He was devilish ceremonious, and made a bushel of
apologies for the freedom he was going to take: and, after half a hundred
hums and haws, told me, that he came—that he came—to wait on
me—at the request of dear Miss Howe, on the account—on the
account—of Miss Harlowe.</p>
<p>Well, Sir, speak on, said I: but give me leave to say, that if your book
be as long as your preface, it will take up a week to read it.</p>
<p>This was pretty rough, thou'lt say: but there's nothing like balking these
formalities at first. When they are put out of their road, they are filled
with doubts of themselves, and can never get into it again: so that an
honest fellow, impertinently attacked, as I was, has all the game in his
own hand quite through the conference.</p>
<p>He stroked his chin, and hardly knew what to say. At last, after
parenthesis within parenthesis, apologizing for apologies, in imitation, I
suppose, of Swift's digression in praise of digressions—I presume—I
presume, Sir, you were privy to the visit made to Miss Howe by the young
Ladies your cousins, in the name of Lord M., and Lady Sarah Sadleir, and
Lady Betty Lawrance.</p>
<p>I was, Sir: and Miss Howe had a letter afterwards, signed by his Lordship
and by those Ladies, and underwritten by myself. Have you seen it, Sir?</p>
<p>I can't say but I have. It is the principal cause of this visit: for Miss
Howe thinks your part of it is written with such an air of levity—
pardon me, Sir—that she knows not whether you are in earnest or not,
in your address to her for her interest to her friend.*</p>
<p>* See Mr. Lovelace's billet to Miss Howe, Letter XIV. of this volume.</p>
<p>Will Miss Howe permit me to explain myself in person to her, Mr. Hickman?</p>
<p>O Sir, by no means. Miss Howe, I am sure, would not give you that trouble.</p>
<p>I should not think it a trouble. I will most readily attend you, Sir, to
Miss Howe, and satisfy her in all her scruples. Come, Sir, I will wait
upon you now. You have a chariot. Are alone. We can talk as we ride.</p>
<p>He hesitated, wriggled, winced, stroked his ruffles, set his wig, and
pulled his neckcloth, which was long enough for a bib.—I am not
going directly back to Miss Howe, Sir. It will be as well if you will be
so good as to satisfy Miss Howe by me.</p>
<p>What is it she scruples, Mr. Hickman?</p>
<p>Why, Sir, Miss Howe observes, that in your part of the letter, you say—
but let me see, Sir—I have a copy of what you wrote, [pulling it
out,] will you give me leave, Sir?—Thus you begin—Dear Miss
Howe—</p>
<p>No offence, I hope, Mr. Hickman?</p>
<p>None in the least, Sir!—None at all, Sir!—Taking aim, as it
were, to read.</p>
<p>Do you use spectacles, Mr. Hickman?</p>
<p>Spectacles, Sir! His whole broad face lifted up at me: Spectacles!—What
makes you ask me such a question? such a young man as I use spectacles,
Sir!—</p>
<p>They do in Spain, Mr. Hickman: young as well as old, to save their eyes.
—Have you ever read Prior's Alma, Mr. Hickman?</p>
<p>I have, Sir—custom is every thing in nations, as well as with
individuals: I know the meaning of your question—but 'tis not the
English custom.—</p>
<p>Was you ever in Spain, Mr. Hickman?</p>
<p>No, Sir: I have been in Holland.</p>
<p>In Holland, Sir?—Never to France or Italy?—I was resolved to
travel with him into the land of puzzledom.</p>
<p>No, Sir, I cannot say I have, as yet.</p>
<p>That's a wonder, Sir, when on the continent!</p>
<p>I went on a particular affair: I was obliged to return soon.</p>
<p>Well, Sir; you was going to read—pray be pleased to proceed.</p>
<p>Again he took aim, as if his eyes were older than the rest of him; and
read, After what is written above, and signed by names and characters of
such unquestionable honour—to be sure, (taking off his eye,) nobody
questions the honour of Lord M. nor that of the good Ladies who signed the
letter.</p>
<p>I hope, Mr. Hickman, nobody questions mine neither?</p>
<p>If you please, Sir, I will read on.—I might have been excused
signing a name, almost as hateful to myself [you are pleased to say]—as
I KNOW it is to YOU—</p>
<p>Well, Mr. Hickman, I must interrupt you at this place. In what I wrote to
Miss Howe, I distinguished the word KNOW. I had a reason for it. Miss Howe
has been very free with my character. I have never done her any harm. I
take it very ill of her. And I hope, Sir, you come in her name to make
excuses for it.</p>
<p>Miss Howe, Sir, is a very polite young lady. She is not accustomed to
treat any man's character unbecomingly.</p>
<p>Then I have the more reason to take it amiss, Mr. Hickman.</p>
<p>Why, Sir, you know the friendship—</p>
<p>No friendship should warrant such freedoms as Miss Howe has taken with my
character.</p>
<p>(I believed he began to wish he had not come near me. He seemed quite
disconcerted.)</p>
<p>Have you not heard Miss Howe treat my name with great—</p>
<p>Sir, I come not to offend or affront you: but you know what a love there
is between Miss Howe and Miss Harlowe.—I doubt, Sir, you have not
treated Miss Harlowe as so fine a young lady deserved to be treated. And
if love for her friend has made Miss Howe take freedoms, as you call them,
a mind not ungenerous, on such an occasion, will rather be sorry for
having given the cause, than—</p>
<p>I know your consequence, Sir!—but I'd rather have this reproof from
a lady than from a gentleman. I have a great desire to wait upon Miss
Howe. I am persuaded we should soon come to a good understanding. Generous
minds are always of kin. I know we should agree in every thing. Pray, Mr.
Hickman, be so kind as to introduce me to Miss Howe.</p>
<p>Sir—I can signify your desire, if you please, to Miss Howe.</p>
<p>Do so. Be pleased to read on, Mr. Hickman.</p>
<p>He did very formally, as if I remembered not what I had written; and when
he came to the passage about the halter, the parson, and the hangman,
reading it, Why, Sir, says he, does not this look like a jest?—Miss
Howe thinks it does. It is not in the lady's power, you know, Sir, to doom
you to the gallows.</p>
<p>Then, if it were, Mr. Hickman, you think she would?</p>
<p>You say here to Miss Howe, proceeded he, that Miss Harlowe is the most
injured of her sex. I know, from Miss Howe, that she highly resents the
injuries you own: insomuch that Miss Howe doubts that she shall never
prevail upon her to overlook them: and as your family are all desirous you
should repair her wrongs, and likewise desire Miss Howe's interposition
with her friend; Miss Howe fears, from this part of your letter, that you
are too much in jest; and that your offer to do her justice is rather in
compliment to your friends' entreaties, than proceeding form your own
inclinations: and she desires to know your true sentiments on this
occasion, before she interposes further.</p>
<p>Do you think, Mr. Hickman, that, if I am capable of deceiving my own
relations, I have so much obligation to Miss Howe, who has always treated
me with great freedom, as to acknowledge to her what I don't to them?</p>
<p>Sir, I beg pardon: but Miss Howe thinks that, as you have written to her,
she may ask you, by me, for an explanation of what you have written.</p>
<p>You see, Mr. Hickman, something of me.—Do you think I am in jest, or
in earnest?</p>
<p>I see, Sir, you are a gay gentleman, of fine spirits, and all that. All I
beg in Miss Howe's name is, to know if you really and bonâ fide join with
your friends in desiring her to use her interest to reconcile you to Miss
Harlowe?</p>
<p>I should be extremely glad to be reconciled to Miss Harlowe; and should
owe great obligations to Miss Howe, if she could bring about so happy an
event.</p>
<p>Well, Sir, and you have no objections to marriage, I presume, as the
condition of that reconciliation?</p>
<p>I never liked matrimony in my life. I must be plain with you, Mr. Hickman.</p>
<p>I am sorry for it: I think it a very happy state.</p>
<p>I hope you will find it so, Mr. Hickman.</p>
<p>I doubt not but I shall, Sir. And I dare say, so would you, if you were to
have Miss Harlowe.</p>
<p>If I could be happy in it with any body, it would be with Miss Harlowe.</p>
<p>I am surprised, Sir!——Then, after all, you don't think of
marrying Miss Harlowe!——After the hard usage——</p>
<p>What hard usage, Mr. Hickman? I don't doubt but a lady of her niceness has
represented what would appear trifles to any other, in a very strong
light.</p>
<p>If what I have had hinted to me, Sir—excuse me—had been
offered to the lady, she has more than trifles to complain of.</p>
<p>Let me know what you have heard, Mr. Hickman? I will very truly answer to
the accusations.</p>
<p>Sir, you know best what you have done: you own the lady is the most
injured, as well as the most deserving of her sex.</p>
<p>I do, Sir; and yet I would be glad to know what you have heard: for on
that, perhaps, depends my answer to the questions Miss Howe puts to me by
you.</p>
<p>Why then, Sir, since you ask it, you cannot be displeased if I answer you:—in
the first place, Sir, you will acknowledge, I suppose, that you promised
Miss Harlowe marriage, and all that?</p>
<p>Well, Sir, and I suppose what you have to charge me with is, that I was
desirous to have all that, without marriage?</p>
<p>Cot-so, Sir, I know you are deemed to be a man of wit: but may I not ask
if these things sit not too light upon you?</p>
<p>When a thing is done, and cannot be helped, 'tis right to make the best of
it. I wish the lady would think so too.</p>
<p>I think, Sir, ladies should not be deceived. I think a promise to a lady
should be as binding as to any other person, at the least.</p>
<p>I believe you think so, Mr. Hickman: and I believe you are a very honest,
good sort of a man.</p>
<p>I would always keep my word, Sir, whether to man or woman.</p>
<p>You say well. And far be it from me to persuade you to do otherwise. But
what have you farther heard?</p>
<p>(Thou wilt think, Jack, I must be very desirous to know in what light my
elected spouse had represented things to Miss Howe; and how far Miss Howe
had communicated them to Mr. Hickman.)</p>
<p>Sir, this is no part of my present business.</p>
<p>But, Mr. Hickman, 'tis part of mine. I hope you would not expect that I
should answer your questions, at the same time that you refused to answer
mine. What, pray, have you farther heard?</p>
<p>Why then, Sir, if I must say, I am told, that Miss Harlowe was carried to
a very bad house.</p>
<p>Why, indeed, the people did not prove so good as they should be.—What
farther have you heard?</p>
<p>I have heard, Sir, that the lady had strange advantages taken of her, very
unfair ones: but what I cannot say.</p>
<p>And cannot you say? Cannot you guess?—Then I'll tell you, Sir.
Perhaps some liberty was taken with her when she was asleep. Do you think
no lady ever was taken at such an advantage?—You know, Mr. Hickman,
that ladies are very shy of trusting themselves with the modestest of our
sex, when they are disposed to sleep; and why so, if they did not expect
that advantages would be taken of them at such times?</p>
<p>But, Sir, had not the lady something given her to make her sleep?</p>
<p>Ay, Mr. Hickman, that's the question: I want to know if the lady says she
had?</p>
<p>I have not seen all she has written; but, by what I have heard, it is a
very black affair—Excuse me, Sir.</p>
<p>I do excuse you, Mr. Hickman: but, supposing it were so, do you think a
lady was never imposed upon by wine, or so?—Do you not think the
most cautious woman in the world might not be cheated by a stronger liquor
for a smaller, when she was thirsty, after a fatigue in this very warm
weather? And do you think, if she was thus thrown into a profound sleep,
that she is the only lady that was ever taken at such an advantage?</p>
<p>Even as you make it, Mr. Lovelace, this matter is not a light one. But I
fear it is a great deal heavier than as you put it.</p>
<p>What reasons have you to fear this, Sir? What has the lady said? Pray let
me know. I have reason to be so earnest.</p>
<p>Why, Sir, Miss Howe herself knows not the whole. The lady promises to give
her all the particulars at a proper time, if she lives; but has said
enough to make it out to be a very bad affair.</p>
<p>I am glad Miss Harlowe has not yet given all the particulars. And, since
she has not, you may tell Miss Howe from me, that neither she, nor any
woman in the world can be more virtuous than Miss Harlowe is to this hour,
as to her own mind. Tell her, that I hope she never will know the
particulars; but that she has been unworthily used: tell her, that though
I know not what she has said, yet I have such an opinion of her veracity,
that I would blindly subscribe to the truth of every tittle of it, though
it make me ever so black. Tell her, that I have but three things to blame
her for; one, that she won't give me an opportunity of repairing her
wrongs: the second, that she is so ready to acquaint every body with what
she has suffered, that it will put it out of my power to redress those
wrongs, with any tolerable reputation to either of us. Will this, Mr.
Hickman, answer any part of the intention of this visit?</p>
<p>Why, Sir, this is talking like a man of honour, I own. But you say there
is a third thing you blame the lady for: May I ask what that is?</p>
<p>I don't know, Sir, whether I ought to tell it you, or not. Perhaps you
won't believe it, if I do. But though the lady will tell the truth, and
nothing but the truth, yet, perhaps, she will not tell the whole truth.</p>
<p>Pray, Sir—But it mayn't be proper—Yet you give me great
curiosity. Sure there is no misconduct in the lady. I hope there is not. I
am sure, if Miss Howe did not believe her to be faultless in every
particular, she would not interest herself so much in her favour as she
does, dearly as she loves her.</p>
<p>I love Miss Harlowe too well, Mr. Hickman, to wish to lessen her in Miss
Howe's opinion; especially as she is abandoned of every other friend. But,
perhaps, it would hardly be credited, if I should tell you.</p>
<p>I should be very sorry, Sir, and so would Miss Howe, if this poor lady's
conduct had laid her under obligation to you for this reserve.—You
have so much the appearance of a gentleman, as well as are so much
distinguished in your family and fortunes, that I hope you are incapable
of loading such a young lady as this, in order to lighten yourself——
Excuse me, Sir.</p>
<p>I do, I do, Mr. Hickman. You say you came not with any intention to
affront me. I take freedom, and I give it. I should be very loth, I
repeat, to say any thing that may weaken Miss Harlowe in the good opinion
of the only friend she thinks she has left.</p>
<p>It may not be proper, said he, for me to know your third article against
this unhappy lady: but I never heard of any body, out of her own
implacable family, that had the least doubt of her honour. Mrs. Howe,
indeed, once said, after a conference with one of her uncles, that she
feared all was not right on her side.—But else, I never heard—</p>
<p>Oons, Sir, in a fierce tone, and with an erect mien, stopping short upon
him, which made him start back—'tis next to blasphemy to question
this lady's honour. She is more pure than a vestal; for vestals have often
been warmed by their own fires. No age, from the first to the present,
ever produced, nor will the future, to the end of the world, I dare aver,
ever produce, a young blooming lady, tried as she has been tried, who has
stood all trials, as she has done.—Let me tell you, Sir, that you
never saw, never knew, never heard of, such another woman as Miss Harlowe.</p>
<p>Sir, Sir, I beg your pardon. Far be it from me to question the lady. You
have not heard me say a word that could be so construed. I have the utmost
honour for her. Miss Howe loves her, as she loves her own soul; and that
she would not do, if she were not sure she were as virtuous as herself.</p>
<p>As herself, Sir!—I have a high opinion of Miss Howe, Sir—but,
I dare say—</p>
<p>What, Sir, dare you say of Miss Howe!—I hope, Sir, you will not
presume to say any thing to the disparagement of Miss Howe.</p>
<p>Presume, Mr. Hickman!—that is presuming language, let me tell you,
Mr. Hickman!</p>
<p>The occasion for it, Mr. Lovelace, if designed, is presuming, if you
please.—I am not a man ready to take offence, Sir—especially
where I am employed as a mediator. But no man breathing shall say
disparaging things of Miss Howe, in my hearing, without observation.</p>
<p>Well said, Mr. Hickman. I dislike not your spirit, on such a supposed
occasion. But what I was going to say is this. That there is not, in my
opinion, a woman in the world, who ought to compare herself with Miss
Clarissa Harlowe till she has stood her trials, and has behaved under
them, and after them, as she has done. You see, Sir, I speak against
myself. You see I do. For, libertine as I am thought to be, I never will
attempt to bring down the measures of right and wrong to the standard of
my actions.</p>
<p>Why, Sir, this is very right. It is very noble, I will say. But 'tis pity,
that the man who can pronounce so fine a sentence, will not square his
actions accordingly.</p>
<p>That, Mr. Hickman, is another point. We all err in some things. I wish not
that Miss Howe should have Miss Harlowe's trials: and I rejoice that she
is in no danger of any such from so good a man.</p>
<p>(Poor Hickman!—he looked as if he knew not whether I meant a
compliment or a reflection!)</p>
<p>But, proceeded I, since I find that I have excited your curiosity, that
you may not go away with a doubt that may be injurious to the most
admirable of women, I am enclined to hint to you what I have in the third
place to blame her for.</p>
<p>Sir, as you please—it may not be proper—</p>
<p>It cannot be very improper, Mr. Hickman—So let me ask you, What
would Miss Howe think, if her friend is the more determined against me,
because she thinks (to revenge to me, I verily believe that!) of
encouraging another lover?</p>
<p>How, Sir!—Sure this cannot be the case!—I can tell you, Sir,
if Miss Howe thought this, she would not approve of it at all: for, little
as you think Miss Howe likes you, Sir, and little as she approves of your
actions by her friend, I know she is of opinion that she ought to have
nobody living but you: and should continue single all her life, if she be
not your's.</p>
<p>Revenge and obstinacy, Mr. Hickman, will make women, the best of them, do
very unaccountable things. Rather than not put out both eyes of a man they
are offended with, they will give up one of their own.</p>
<p>I don't know what to say to this, Sir: but sure she cannot encourage any
other person's address!—So soon too—Why, Sir, she is, as we
are told, so ill, and so weak——</p>
<p>Not in resentment weak, I'll assure you. I am well acquainted with all her
movements—and I tell you, believe it, or not, that she refuses me in
view of another lover.</p>
<p>Can it be?</p>
<p>'Tis true, by my soul!—Has she not hinted this to Miss Howe, do you
think?</p>
<p>No, indeed, Sir. If she had I should not have troubled you at this time
from Miss Howe.</p>
<p>Well then, you see I am right: that though she cannot be guilty of a
falsehood, yet she has not told her friend the whole truth.</p>
<p>What shall a man say to these things!—(looking most stupidly
perplexed.)</p>
<p>Say! Say! Mr. Hickman!—Who can account for the workings and ways of
a passionate and offended woman? Endless would be the histories I could
give you, within my own knowledge, of the dreadful effects of woman's
passionate resentments, and what that sex will do when disappointed.</p>
<p>There was Miss DORRINGTON, [perhaps you know her not,] who run away with
her father's groom, because he would not let her have a half-pay officer,
with whom (her passions all up) she fell in love at first sight, as he
accidentally passed under her window.</p>
<p>There was MISS SAVAGE; she married her mother's coachman, because her
mother refused her a journey to Wales; in apprehension that miss intended
to league herself with a remote cousin of unequal fortunes, of whom she
was not a little fond when he was a visiting-guest at their house for a
week.</p>
<p>There was the young widow SANDERSON, who believing herself slighted by a
younger brother of a noble family, (Sarah Stout like,) took it into her
head to drown herself.</p>
<p>Miss SALLY ANDERSON, [You have heard of her, no doubt?] being checked by
her uncle for encouraging an address beneath her, in spite, threw herself
into the arms of an ugly dog, a shoe-maker's apprentice, running away with
him in a pair of shoes he had just fitted to her feet, though she never
saw the fellow before, and hated him ever after: and, at last, took
laudanum to make her forget for ever her own folly.</p>
<p>But can there be a stronger instance in point than what the unaccountable
resentments of such a lady as Miss Clarissa Harlowe afford us? Who at this
instant, ill as she is, not only encourages, but, in a manner, makes court
to one of the most odious dogs that ever was seen? I think Miss Howe
should not be told this—and yet she ought too, in order to dissuade
her from such a preposterous rashness.</p>
<p>O fie! O strange! Miss Howe knows nothing of this! To be sure she won't
look upon her, if this be true!</p>
<p>'Tis true, very true, Mr. Hickman! True as I am here to tell you so!—
And he is an ugly fellow too; uglier to look at than me.</p>
<p>Than you, Sir! Why, to be sure, you are one of the handsomest men in
England.</p>
<p>Well, but the wretch she so spitefully prefers to me is a mis-shapen,
meagre varlet; more like a skeleton than a man! Then he dresses—you
never saw a devil so bedizened! Hardly a coat to his back, nor a shoe to
his foot. A bald-pated villain, yet grudges to buy a peruke to his
baldness: for he is as covetous as hell, never satisfied, yet plaguy rich.</p>
<p>Why, Sir, there is some joke in this, surely. A man of common parts knows
not how to take such gentleman as you. But, Sir, if there be any truth in
the story, what is he? Some Jew or miserly citizen, I suppose, that may
have presumed on the lady's distressful circumstances; and your lively wit
points him out as it pleases.</p>
<p>Why, the rascal has estates in every county in England, and out of England
too.</p>
<p>Some East India governor, I suppose, if there be any thing in it. The lady
once had thoughts of going abroad. But I fancy all this time you are in
jest, Sir. If not, we must surely have heard of him——</p>
<p>Heard of him! Aye, Sir, we have all heard of him—But none of us care
to be intimate with him—except this lady—and that, as I told
you, in spite of me—his name, in short, is DEATH!—DEATH! Sir,
stamping, and speaking loud, and full in his ears; which made him jump
half a yard high.</p>
<p>(Thou never beheldest any man so disconcerted. He looked as if the
frightful skeleton was before him, and he had not his accounts ready. When
a little recovered, he fribbled with his waistcoat buttons, as if he had
been telling his beads.)</p>
<p>This, Sir, proceeded I, is her wooer!—Nay, she is so forward a girl,
that she wooes him: but I hope it never will be a match.</p>
<p>He had before behaved, and now looked with more spirit than I expected
from him.</p>
<p>I came, Sir, said he, as a mediator of differences.—It behoves me to
keep my temper. But, Sir, and turned short upon me, as much as I love
peace, and to promote it, I will not be ill-used.</p>
<p>As I had played so much upon him, it would have been wrong to take him at
his more than half-menace: yet I think I owe him a grudge, for his
presuming to address Miss Howe.</p>
<p>You mean no defiance, I presume, Mr. Hickman, any more than I do offence.
On that presumption, I ask your excuse. But this is my way. I mean no
harm. I cannot let sorrow touch my heart. I cannot be grave six minutes
together, for the blood of me. I am a descendant of old Chancellor Moore,
I believe; and should not forbear to cut a joke, were I upon the scaffold.
But you may gather, from what I have said, that I prefer Miss Harlowe, and
that upon the justest grounds, to all the women in the world: and I wonder
that there should be any difficulty to believe, from what I have signed,
and from what I have promised to my relations, and enabled them to promise
for me, that I should be glad to marry that excellent creature upon her
own terms. I acknowledge to you, Mr. Hickman, that I have basely injured
her. If she will honour me with her hand, I declare that is my intention
to make her the best of husbands.— But, nevertheless, I must say
that if she goes on appealing her case, and exposing us both, as she does,
it is impossible to think the knot can be knit with reputation to either.
And although, Mr. Hickman, I have delivered my apprehensions under so
ludicrous a figure, I am afraid that she will ruin her constitution: and,
by seeking Death when she may shun him, will not be able to avoid him when
she would be glad to do so.</p>
<p>This cool and honest speech let down his stiffened muscles into
complacence. He was my very obedient and faithful humble servant several
times over, as I waited on him to his chariot: and I was his almost as
often.</p>
<p>And so exit Hickman.</p>
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