EVERY ONE HAS HIS FAULT: A COMEDY, IN FIVE ACTS, AS IT IS PERFORMED AT THE THEATRE ROYAL, COVENT-GARDEN.
BY MRS. INCHBALD.
LONDON: PRINTED FOR G. G. J. AND J. ROBINSON, PATERNOSTER-ROW. 1793.
SCENE, London.
YOU are to blame.
I ſay the ſame by you.
And yet your ſingularity pleaſes me; for you are the firſt elderly bachelor I ever knew, who did not hug himſelf in the reflection, that he was not in the trammels of wedlock.
No; I am only the firſt elderly bachelor who has truth and courage enough to confeſs his diſſa⯑tisfaction.
And you really wiſh you were married?
I do. I wiſh ſtill more, that I had been married thirty years ago. Oh! I wiſh a wife and half-a-ſcore children would now ſtart up around me, and bring along with them all that affection, which we ſhould have had for each other by being ear⯑lier acquainted. But as it is, in my preſent ſtate, there is not a perſon in the world I care a ſtraw for; and the world is pretty even with me, for I don't believe there is a creature in it who cares a ſtraw for me.
Pſhaw! You have in your time been a man of gallantry; and, conſequently, muſt have made many attachments.
Yes, ſuch as men of gallantry uſually make. I have been attached to women who have purloined my fortune, and to men who have partaken of the theft: I have been in as much fear of my miſtreſs as you are of your wife.
Is that poſſible?
Yes; and without having one of thoſe tender, delicate ties of a huſband, an excuſe for my ap⯑prehenſion.—I have maintained children—
Then why do you complain for the want of a family?
I did not ſay I ever had any children; I ſaid I had maintained them; but I never believed they were mine; for I could have no dependence upon the principles of their mother—and never did I [3] take one of thoſe tender infants in my arms, that the forehead of my Valet, the ſquint-eye of my Apothecary, or the double-chin of my Chaplain, did not ſtare me in the face, and damp all the fine feelings of the parent, which I had juſt call⯑ed up.
But thoſe are accidents which may occur in the marriage ſtate.
In that caſe, a man is pitied—in mine, he is only laughed at.
I wiſh to heaven I could exchange the pity which my friends beſtow on me, for the merriment which your ill fate excites.
You want but courage to be envied.
Does any one doubt my courage?
No. If a Prince were to offend you, you would challenge him, I have no doubt.
But if my wife offend me, I am obliged to make an apology.—Was not that her voice? I hope ſhe has not overheard our converſation.
If ſhe have, ſhe'll be in an ill humour.
That ſhe will be, whether ſhe have heard it or not.
Well, good-day. I don't like to be driven from my fixed plan of wedlock; and, therefore, I won't be a ſpectator of your mutual diſcontent.
But before you go, Mr. Solus, permit me to remind you of a certain concern, that, I think, would afford you much more delight, than all you can, at this time of life, propoſe to yourſelf in marriage. Make happy by your beneficence, a near relation whom the trueſt affection has drawn into that ſtate, but who is denied the bleſſing of competency to make the ſtate ſupportable.
You mean my nephew, Irwin? But do not you acknowledge he has a wife and children? Did not he marry the woman he loved, and has he not, at this moment, a large family, by whom he is beloved? And is he not, therefore, with all his poverty, much happier than I? He has often told me, when I have reproached him with his indiſcreet marriage, "that in his wife he poſſeſſed kingdoms!" Do you ſuppoſe I will give any part of my fortune to a man who enjoys ſuch exten⯑ſive domains? No:—let him preſerve his terri⯑tories, and I will keep my little eſtate for my own uſe.
John! John!—
Has your miſ⯑treſs been enquiring for me?
Yes, Sir:—My Lady aſked juſt now, if I knew who was with you?
Did ſhe ſeem angry?
No, Sir;—pretty well.
You ſcoundrel, what do you mean by "pretty well?"
Much as uſual, Sir.
And do you call that "pretty well?" You ſcoundrel, I have a great mind—
What is the matter, Mr. Placid? What is all this noiſe about? You know I hate a noiſe. What is the matter?
My dear, I was only finding fault with that blockhead.
Pray, Mr. Placid, do not find fault with any body in this houſe. But I have ſomething which I muſt take you very ſeverely to talk about, Sir.
No, my dear, not juſt now, pray.
Why not now?
Becauſe dinner will be ready in a few minutes. I am very hungry, and it will be cruel of you [6] to ſpoil my appetite. John, is the dinner on table?
No, John, don't let it be ſerved yet—Mr. Placid, you ſhall firſt hear what I have to ſay.
But then I know I ſha'n't be able to eat a morſel.
Sit down.
—I believe, Mr. Placid, you are going to do a very ſilly thing. I am afraid you are going to lend ſome money?
Well, my dear, and ſuppoſe I am?
Then, I don't approve of people lending their money.
But, my dear, I have known you approve of borrowing money: And, once in our lives, what ſhould we have done, if every body had refuſed to lend?
That is nothing to the purpoſe.—And now I deſire you will hear what I ſay, without ſpeaking a word yourſelf.
Well, my dear.
Now mind you don't ſpeak, till I have done. —Our old acquaintance, Captain Irwin, and Lady [7] Eleanor, his wife (with whom we lived upon very intimate terms, to be ſure, while we were in America), are returned to London; and I find you have viſited them very frequently.
Not above two or three times, upon my word; for it hurts me to ſee them in diſtreſs, and I for⯑bear to go.
There! You own they are in diſtreſs; I ex⯑pected as much. Now, own to me that they have aſked you to lend them money.
I do own it—I do own it. Now, are you ſa⯑tisfied?
No: for I have no doubt but you have pro⯑miſed they ſhall have it.
No, upon my word, I have not promiſed.
Then promiſe me they ſhall not.
Nay, my dear, you have no idea of their diſ⯑treſs!
Yes, I have; and 'tis that which makes me ſuſ⯑picious.
His regiment is now broken; all her jewels and little bawbles are diſpoſed of; he is in ſuch dread of his old creditors, that, in the lodging they have taken, he paſſes by the name of Middleton—They have three more children, my dear, than when [8] we left them in New England; and they have in vain ſent repeated ſupplications, both to his uncle, and her father, for the ſmalleſt bounty.
And is not Lord Norland, her father, a remark⯑ably wiſe man? and a good man? And ought you to do for them, what he has refuſed?
They have offended him, but they have never offended me.
I think 'tis an offence to aſk a friend for money, when there is no certainty of returning it.
By no means: for, if there were a certainty, even an enemy might lend.
But I inſiſt, Mr. Placid, that they ſhall not find a friend in you upon this occaſion.—What do you ſay, Sir?
No, my dear, they ſhall not.
Poſitively ſhall not?
Poſitively ſhall not—ſince they have found an enemy in you.
Dinner is on table.
Ah! I am not hungry now.
What do you mean by that, Mr. Placid? I inſiſt on your being hungry.
Oh yes! I have a very excellent appetite. I ſhall eat prodigiouſly.
You had beſt.
Couſin, couſin Harmony, I will not forgive you for thus continually ſpeaking in the behalf of every ſervant whom you find me offended with. Your philanthropy becomes inſupportable; and, inſtead of being a virtue, degenerates into a vice.
Dear Madam, do not upbraid me for a conſtitu⯑tional fault.
Very true; you had it from your infancy. I have heard your mother ſay you were always fooliſhly tender-hearted, and never ſhewed one of thoſe diſcriminating paſſions of envy, hatred, or revenge, to which all her other children were liable.
No: ſince I can remember, I have felt the moſt unbounded affection for all my fellow creatures. I even proteſt to you, dear Madam, that, as I walk along the ſtreets of this large metropolis, ſo warm is my heart towards every perſon who paſſes me, that I long to ſay, "How do you do?" and [10] "I am glad to ſee you," to them all. Some men, I ſhould like even to ſtop and ſhake hands with;— and ſome women, I ſhould like even to ſtop and kiſs.
How can you be ſo ridiculous!
Nay, 'tis truth: and I ſincerely lament that hu⯑man beings ſhould be ſuch ſtrangers to one another as we are. We live in the ſame ſtreet, without knowing one another's neceſſities; and oftentimes meet and part from each other at church, at cof⯑fee-houſes, play-houſes, and all public places, without ever ſpeaking a ſingle word, or nodding "Good bye!" though 'tis a hundred chances to ten we never ſee one another again.
Let me tell you, kinſman, all this pretended philanthropy renders you ridiculous. There is not a fraud, a theft, or hardly any vice com⯑mitted, that you do not take the criminal's part, ſhake your head, and cry, "Proviſions are ſo ſcarce!" And no longer ago than laſt Lord-mayor's-day, when you were told that Mr. Alder⯑man Ravenous was ill with an indigeſtion, you en⯑deavoured to ſoften the matter, by exclaiming, "Proviſions are ſo ſcarce!"—But, above all, I condemn that falſe humanity, which induces you to ſay many things in converſation which deſerve to ſtigmatize you with the character of deceit.
This is a weakneſs I confeſs. But though my honour ſometimes reproaches me with it as a fault, my conſcience never does: for it is by this very failing that I have frequently made the bittereſt [11] enemies friends—Juſt by ſaying a few harmleſs ſentences, which, though a ſpecies of falſehood and deceit, yet, being ſoothing and acceptable to the perſon offended, I have immediately inſpired him with lenity and forgiveneſs; and then, by only re⯑peating the ſelf-ſame ſentences to his opponent, I have known hearts cold and cloſed to each other, warmed and expanded, as every human creature's ought to be.
Mr. Solus.
I cannot think, Mr. Harmony, why you keep company with that old bachelor; he is a man, of all others on earth, I diſlike; and ſo I am ob⯑liged to quit the room, though I have a thouſand things to ſay.
Mr. Solus, how do you do?
I am very lonely at home; will you come and dine with me?
Now you are here, you had better ſtay with me: we have no company; only my couſin Miſs Spinſter and myſelf.
No, I muſt go home: do come to my houſe.
Nay, pray ſtay: what objection can you have?
Why, to tell you the truth, your relation, Miſs Spinſter, is no great favourite of mine; and I don't like to dine with you, becauſe I don't like her company.
That is, to me, ſurpriſing!
Why, old bachelors and old maids never agree: we are too much alike in our habits: we know our own hearts ſo well, we are apt to diſco⯑ver every foible we would wiſh to forget, in the ſymptoms diſplayed by the other. Miſs Spinſter is peeviſh, fretful and tireſome, and I am always in a fidget when I am in her company.
How different are her ſentiments of you! for one of her greateſt joys is to be in your company.
Poor woman! ſhe has, to be ſure, an uneven temper—
No, perhaps I am miſtaken.
—But I will aſſure you, I never ſee her in half ſuch good humour as when you are here: for I believe you are the greateſt favourite ſhe has.
I am very much obliged to her, and I certainly am miſtaken about her temper—Some people, if they look ever ſo croſs, are good-natured in the main; and I dare ſay ſhe is ſo. Beſides, ſhe never has had a huſband to ſooth and ſoften her diſpo⯑ſition; and there ſhould be ſome allowance made for that.
Will you dine with us?
I don't care if I do. Yes, I think I will. I muſt however ſtep home firſt:—but I'll be back in a quarter of an hour.—My compliments to Miſs Spinſter, if you ſhould ſee her before I return.
My lady begs to know, Sir, if you have invited Mr. Solus to dine? becauſe if you have, ſhe ſhall go out.
Yes, Madam, I could not help inviting him; for, poor man, his own houſe is in ſuch a ſtate for want of proper management, he cannot give a comfortable dinner himſelf.
And ſo he muſt ſpoil the comfort of mine.
Poor man! poor man! after all the praiſes he has been laviſhing upon you.
What praiſes?
I won't tell you; for you won't believe them.
Yes, I ſhall.—Oh no—now I recollect, this is ſome of your invention.
Nay, I told him it was his invention: for he declared you looked better laſt night, than any other lady at the Opera.
No, this ſounds like truth: —and, depend upon it, though I never liked the manners of Mr. Solus much, yet—
Nay, Solus has his faults.
So we have all.
And will you leave him and me to dine by our⯑ſelves?
Oh no, I cannot be guilty of ſuch ill manners, though I talked of it. Beſides, poor Mr. Solus does not come ſo often, and it would be wrong not to ſhew him all the civility we can. For my part, I have no diſlike to the man; and, if taking a bit of dinner with us now and then can oblige either you or him, I ſhould be to blame to make any ob⯑jection. Come, let us go into the drawing-room to receive him.
Ay! this is right: this is as it ſhould be.
My dear huſband, my dear Irwin, I cannot bear to ſee you thus melancholy. Is this the joy of re⯑turning to our native country after a nine years ba⯑niſhment?
Yes. For I could bear my misfortunes, my [15] wretched poverty with patience, in a land where our ſorrows were ſhared by thoſe about us; but here, in London, where plenty and eaſe ſmile upon every face; where, by birth you claim diſtinc⯑tion, and I by ſervices:—here to be in want,—to be obliged to take another name in ſhame of our own,—to tremble at the voice of every ſtranger, for fear he ſhould be a creditor,—to meet each old ac⯑quaintance with an averted eye, becauſe we would not feel the pang of being ſhunned.—To have no reward for all this, even in a comfortable home; but there, to ſee our children looking up to me for that ſupport I have not in my power to give—Can I,—can I love them and you, and not be mi⯑ſerable?
And yet I am not ſo. And I am ſure you will not doubt my love to you or them.
I met my uncle this morning, and was mean enough to repeat my requeſt to him;—he burſt into a fit of laughter, and told me my diſtreſſes were the reſult of my ambition, in marrying the daughter of a nobleman, who himſelf was too am⯑bitious ever to pardon us.
Tell me no more of what he ſaid.
This was a day of trials:—I ſaw your father too.
My father! Lord Norland! Oh Heavens!
He paſſed me in his carriage.
I envy you the bleſſing of ſeeing him! For, Oh!—Excuſe my tears —he is my father ſtill.— How did he look?
As well as he did at the time I uſed to watch him from his houſe, to ſteal to you.—But I am ſorry to acquaint you, that, to guard himſelf againſt all re⯑turning love for you, he has, I am informed, adopted a young lad, on whom he beſtows every mark of that paternal affection, of which you lament the loſs.
May the young man deſerve his tenderneſs bet⯑ter than I have done—May he never diſobey him —May he be a comfort, and cheriſh his benefac⯑tor's declining years—And when his youthful paſ⯑ſions teach him to love, may they not, like mine, teach him diſobedience!
What is that letter?
It comes from Mr. Placid, the ſervant who brought it, ſaid, and requires no anſwer.
It's ſtrange how I tremble at every letter I ſee, as if I dreaded the contents. How poverty has unmann'd me!
—I muſt tell you, my dear, that finding myſelf left this morning without a gui⯑nea, I wrote to Mr. Placid to borrow a ſmall ſum. This is his anſwer:
"To Mr. Middleton"—That's right;—he remem⯑bers the caution I gave him. I had forgot whether [17] I had, for my memory is not ſo good as it was. I did not even recollect this hand, though it is one I am ſo well acquainted with, and ought to give me joy rather than ſorrow
. Now I have not a friend on earth.
Yes, you have me. You forget me.
I would forget you—you—and all your chil⯑dren.
I would not loſe the remembrance of you, or of them, for all my father's fortune.
What am I to do? I muſt leave you! I muſt go, I know not where! I cannot ſtay to ſee you periſh.
Where would you go? 'Tis evening—'tis dark —Whither would you go at this time?
I muſt conſider what's to be done—and in this room my thoughts are too confined to reflect.
And are London ſtreets calculated for reflec⯑tion?
No;—for action. To hurry the faint thought to reſolution.
You are not well—Your health has been lately impaired.—Your temper has undergone a change too:—I tremble leſt any accident—
What accident?
I know your provocations from an ungrateful world: But deſpiſe it, as that deſpiſes you.
But for your ſake, I could.
Then witneſs, Heaven! I am happy.—Though bred in all the delicacy, the luxury of wealth and ſplendour; yet I have never murmured at the change of fortune, while that change has made me wife to you, and mother of your children.
We will be happy—if poſſible. But give me this evening to conſider what plan to fix upon.— There is no time to loſe; we are without friends —without money—without credit.—Farewell for an hour.—I will ſee Mr. Placid, if I can; and though he have not the money to lend, he may, perhaps, give me ſome advice.
Suppoſe I call on her? Women are ſometimes more conſiderate than men, and—
Do you for the beſt, and ſo will I.—Heavens bleſs you!
SIR Robert Ramble, how do you do?
My dear Mr. Solus, I am glad to ſee you. I have been dining by myſelf, and now come into this public room to meet with ſome good company.
Ay, Sir Robert, you are now reduced to the ſame neceſſity which I frequently am—I frequently am obliged to dine at taverns and coffee-houſes, for want of company at home.
Nay, I proteſt I am never happier than in a houſe like this, where a man may meet his friend without the inconvenience of form, either as a hoſt or a viſitor.
Sir Robert, give me leave to introduce to you Mr. Placid: he has been many years abroad; but I believe he now means to remain in his own country for the reſt of his life. This, Mr. Placid, is Sir Robert Ramble.
Sir, I ſhall be happy in your acquaintance; and I aſſure you, if you will do me the honour to meet me now and then at this houſe, you will find every thing very pleaſant. I verily believe, that ſince I loſt my wife, which is now about five months ago, I verily believe I have dined here three days out of the ſeven.
Have you loſt your wife, Sir? And ſo lately?
Yes, Sir; about five months ago—Is it not, Mr. Solus? You keep account of ſuch things better than I do.
Oh! aſk me no queſtions about your wife, Sir Robert; if ſhe had been mine, I would have had her to this moment.
What, wreſted her from the gripe of death?
No, Sir; only from the gripe of the Scotch lawyers.
More ſhame for you. Shame! to wiſh to be divorced from a virtuous wife.
Was that the caſe? Divorced from a virtuous wife! I never heard of ſuch a circumſtance be⯑fore. Pray, Sir Robert
, will you indulge me, by letting me know in what manner you were able to bring about ſo great an event?
It may appear ſtrange to you, Sir; but my wife and I did not live happy together.
Not at all ſtrange, Sir; I can conceive—I can conceive very well.
Yes; he can conceive that part to a nicety.
And ſo, I was determined on a divorce.
But then her character could not be unim⯑peached.
Yes, it was, Sir. You muſt know, we were married in Scotland, and by the laws there, a wife can divorce her huſband for breach of fidelity; and ſo, though my wife's character was unimpeached, mine was not, and ſhe divorced me.
And is this the law in Scotland?
It is. Bleſſed, bleſſed country! that will bind young people together before the years of diſ⯑cretion—and, as ſoon as they have diſcretion to re⯑pent, will unbind them again!
I wiſh I had been married in Scotland.
But, Sir Robert, with all this boaſting, you muſt own that your divorce has greatly diminiſhed your fortune.
Mr. Solus, you have frequently hinted at my fortune being impaired; but I do not approve of ſuch notions being received abroad.
I beg your pardon; but every body knows that you have played very deep lately, and have been a great loſer, and every body knows—
No, Sir, every body does not know it, for I contradict the report wherever I go. A man of faſhion does not like to be reckoned poor, no more than he likes to be reckoned unhappy. We none of us endeavour to be happy, Sir, but merely to be thought ſo; and for my part, I had rather be in a ſtate of miſery, and envied for my ſuppoſed hap⯑pineſs, than in a ſtate of happineſs, and pitied for my ſuppoſed miſery.
But conſider, theſe misfortunes which I have juſt hinted at, are not of any ſerious nature, only ſuch as a few years oeconomy—
But were my wife and her guardian to become acquainted with theſe little misfortunes, they would triumph in my embarraſſments.
Lady Ramble triumph!
She who was ſo firmly attached to you, that I be⯑lieve nothing but a compliance with your repeated requeſt to be ſeparated, cauſed her to take the ſtep ſhe did.
Yes, I believe ſhe did it to oblige me, and I am very much obliged to her.
As good a woman, Mr. Placid—
Very good—but very ugly.
She is beautiful.
I tell you, Sir, ſhe is hideous. And then ſhe was grown ſo inſufferably peeviſh.
I never ſaw her out of temper.
Mr. Solus, it is very uncivil of you to praiſe her before my face. Lady Ramble, at the time I parted with her, had every poſſible fault both of mind and perſon, and ſo I made love to other women in her preſence; told her bluntly that I was tired of her; that ‘I was very ſorry to make her uneaſy, but that I could not love her any longer.’—And was not that frank and open?
Oh! that I had but ſuch a wife as ſhe was!
I muſt own I loved her myſelf when ſhe was young.
Do you call her old?
In years I am certainly older than ſhe; but the difference of ſex makes her a great deal older than I am. For inſtance, Mr. Solus, you have often lamented not being married in your youth; but if you had, what would you have now done with an old wife, a woman of your own age?
Loved and cheriſhed her.
What, in ſpite of her loſs of beauty?
When ſhe had loſt her beauty; moſt likely I ſhould have loſt my eye-ſight, and have been blind to the wane of her charms.
But, Sir Robert, you were explaining to me— Mr. Solus, give me leave to ſpeak to Sir Robert —I feel myſelf particularly intereſted on this ſub⯑ject.—And, Sir, you were explaining to me—
Very true: Where did I leave off? Oh! at my ill uſage of my Lady Ramble. Yes, I did uſe her very ill, and yet ſhe loved me. Many a time, when ſhe has ſaid to me, "Sir Robert, I deteſt your principles, your manners, and even your perſon," often, at that very inſtant, I have ſeen a little ſparkle of a wiſh peep out of the corner of one eye, that has called to me, "Oh! Sir Robert, how I long to make it up with you!"
Do not you wiſh that your wife had ſuch a little ſparkle at the corner of one of her eyes?
Sir, do you wiſh to be divorced?
I have no ſuch proſpect. Mrs. Placid is faith⯑ful, and I was married in England.
But if you have an unconquerable deſire to part, a ſeparate maintenance will anſwer nearly the ſame end—for if your Lady and you will only lay down the plan of ſeparation, and agree—
But, unfortunately, we never do agree!
Then ſpeak of parting as a thing you dread worſe than death; and make it your daily prayer to her, that ſhe will never think of going from you—She will determine upon it directly.
I thank you; I'm very much obliged to you: I thank you a thouſand times.
Yes, I have ſtudied the art of teaſing a wife; and there is nothing vexes her ſo much as laugh⯑ing at her. Can you laugh, Mr. Placid?
I don't know whether I can; I have not laugh⯑ed ſince I married.—But I thank you, Sir, for your inſtructions—I ſincerely thank you.
And now, Sir Robert, you have had the good nature to teach this Gentleman how to get rid of his wife, will you have the kindneſs to teach me how to procure one?
Hah! Sure I know that Gentleman's face?
My Nephew! Let me eſcape his ſolicitations
—Here, waiter!
Irwin!
Having ſent him a denial, I am aſhamed to ſee him.
Here, Mr. So⯑lus!—
More cool faces! My neceſſitous countenance clears even a club-room.
My dear Captain Irwin, is it you? Yes, 'faith it is—After a nine years' abſence I moſt ſincerely rejoice to ſee you.
Sir Robert, you ſhake hands with a cordiality I have not experienced theſe many days, and I thank you.
But what's the matter? You ſeem to droop— Where have you left your uſual ſpirits? Has ab⯑ſence from your country changed your manners?
No, Sir; but I find ſome of my countrymen changed. I fancy them leſs warm, leſs friendly than they were; and it is that which, perhaps, has this effect upon me.
Am I changed?
You appear an exception.
And I aſſure you, that inſtead of being grown more gloomy, I am even more gay than I was ſeven years ago; for then, I was upon the point of matrimony—but now, I am juſt relieved from its cares.
I have heard as much. But I hope you have not taken ſo great an averſion to the marriage-ſtate, as never to marry again.
Perhaps not: But then it muſt be to ſome rich heireſs.
You are right to pay reſpect to fortune. Money is a neceſſary article in the marriage contract.
As to that—that would be no great object at preſent. No, thank Heaven, my eſtates are pretty large; I have no children; I have a rich Uncle, excellent health, admirable ſpirits; — and thus happy, it would be very ſtrange if I did not meet my old friends with thoſe ſmiles, which never for a moment quit my countenance.
In the diſpenſation of the gifts of Providence, how few are found bleſt like you!
And I allure you, my dear Mr. Irwin, it gives me the moſt ſerious reflections, and the moſt ſin⯑cere concern, that they are not.
I thank you, Sir, moſt heartily: I thank you for mankind in general, and for myſelf in parti⯑cular. For after this generous, unaffected decla⯑ration (with leſs ſcruple than I ſhould to any man in the world) I will own to you, that I am at this very time in the utmoſt want of an act of friend⯑ſhip.
And ſo am I—Now muſt I confeſs myſelf a poor man; or paſs for an unfeeling one; and I will chooſe the latter.
Any thing that I can command, is at your ſer⯑vice.
Why then, Sir Robert—I am almoſt aſhamed to ſay it—but circumſtances have been rather unfavourable.—My wife's father
is not reconciled to us yet—My regiment is broke —My Uncle will not part with a farthing.—Lady Eleanor, my wife,
has been ſup⯑ported as yet, with ſome little degree of tender⯑neſs, elegance; and—in ſhort, I owe a ſmall ſum which I am afraid of being troubled for; I want a trifle alſo for our immediate uſe, and if you would lend me a hundred pounds—though, upon my honour, I am not in a ſituation to fix the ex⯑act time when I can pay it.
My dear Sir, never trouble yourſelf about the time of paying it, becauſe it happens not to be in my power to lend it you.
Not in your power? I beg your pardon; but have not you this moment been ſaying you are rich?
And is it not very common to be rich without money? Are not half the town rich? And yet half the town has no money. I ſpeak for this end of the town, the Weſt end. The Squares, for inſtance, part of Piccadilly, down St. James's-ſtreet, and ſo home by Pall Mall. We have all, eſtates, bonds, drafts, and notes of hand without number; but as for money, we have no ſuch thing belonging to us.
I ſincerely beg your pardon. And be aſſured, Sir, nothing ſhould have induced me to have taken [29] the liberty I have done, but the neceſſities of my unhappy family, and having underſtood by your own words, that you were in affluence.
I am in affluence, I am, I am; but not in ſo much, perhaps, as my haſty, inconſiderate account may have given you reaſon to believe. I forgot to mention ſeveral heavy incumbrances, which you will perceive are great drawbacks on my for⯑tune.—As my wife ſued for the divorce, I have her fortune to return; I have alſo two ſiſters to portion off—a circumſtance I totally forgot. But, my good friend, though I am not in circumſtances to do what you require, I will do ſomething that ſhall be better. I'll wait upon your father-in-law, (Lord Norland) and entreat him to forgive his daughter: and I am ſure he will if I aſk him.
Impoſſible.
And ſo it is, now I recollect: for he is no other than the guardian of my late wife, and a requeſt from me, will be received worſe than from any other perſon. — However, Mr. Irwin, depend upon it, that whenever I have an opportunity of ſerving you, I will. And whenever you ſhall do me the favour to call upon me, I ſhall be heartily glad to ſee you. If I am not at home, you can leave your card, which, you know, is all the ſame, and depend upon it, I ſhall be extremely glad to ſee you or that, at any time.
Is this my native country? Is this the hoſpitable land which we deſcribe to ſtrangers? No—We are ſavages to each other; nay worſe—The ſavage [30] makes his fellow-ſavage welcome; divides with him his homely fare; gives him the beſt apart⯑ment his hut affords, and tries to huſh thoſe griefs that are confided in his boſom—While in this ci⯑vilized city, among my own countrymen, even among my brother officers in the army, and many of my neareſt relations, ſo very civilized they are, I could not take the liberty to enter under one roof, without a ceremonious invitation, and that they will not give me. I may leave my card at their door, but as for me, or any one of mine, they would not give us a dinner; unleſs, indeed, it was in ſuch a ſtyle, that we might behold with admiration their grandeur, and return ſtill more depreſſed, to our own poverty.—Can I bear this treatment longer? No, not even for you, my Eleanor. And this
ſhall now be the only friend to whom I will apply—And yet I want the courage to be a villain.
Let me ſee half a dozen newſpapers—Every paper of the day.
That is about three dozen, Sir.
Get a couple of porters, and bring them all.
Am I a man, a ſoldier?—And a coward? Yes, [31] I run away, I turn my back on life—I forſake the poſt, which my commander, Providence, has al⯑lotted me, and fly before a banditti of rude miſ⯑fortunes. Rally me, love, connubial and parental love, rally me back to the charge! No, thoſe very affections ſound the retreat.
That gentleman does not ſeem happy. I wiſh I had an opportunity of ſpeaking to him.
But Oh! my wife, what will be your ſufferings when I am brought home to your wretched habita⯑tion!—And by my own hand!
I am afraid, Sir, I engroſs all the news here.
Poor ſoul, how her heart will be torn!
Captain Irwin, till this moment I had not the pleaſure of recollecting you! It is Mr. Irwin, is it not?
Yes, Sir: But what have you to ſay to him more than to a ſtranger?
Nothing more, Sir, than to apologize to you, for having addreſſed you juſt now in ſo familiar a manner, before I knew who you were; and to aſſure you, that although I have no other know⯑ledge of you, than from report, and having been once, I believe, in your company at this very [32] houſe before you left England; yet, any ſervices of mine, as far as my abilities can reach, you may freely command.
Pray, Sir, do you live at the Weſt end of the town?
I do.
Then, Sir, your ſervices can be of no uſe to me.
Here is the place where I live, here is my card.
And here is mine. And now I preſume we have exchanged every act of friendſhip, which the ſtrict forms of etiquette, in this town, will admit of.
By no means, Sir. I aſſure you my profeſſions never go beyond my intentions; and if there is any thing that I can ſerve you in—
Have you no ſiſters to portion off? no lady's fortune to return? Or, perhaps, you will ſpeak to my wife's father, and entreat him to forgive his child.
On that ſubject you may command me; for I have the honour to be intimately acquainted with Lord Norland.
But is there no reaſon you may recollect, "why you would be the moſt unfit perſon in the world to apply to him?"
None. I have been honoured with marks of his friendſhip for many years paſt; and I do not know any one who could, with leſs hazard of his reſentment, venture to name his daughter to him.
Well, Sir, if you ſhould ſee him two or three days hence, when I am ſet out on a journey I am going, if you will then ſay a kind word to him for my wife and children, I'll thank you.
I will go to him inſtantly.
No, do not ſee him yet; ſtay till I am gone. He will do nothing till I am gone.
May I aſk where you are going?
No very tedious journey; but it is a country, to thoſe who go without a proper paſſport, always fatal.
I'll ſee Lord Norland to-night: perhaps I may perſuade him to prevent your journey. I'll ſee him to-night, or early in the morning, depend upon it.—I am a man of my word, Sir; though I muſt own I do live at the Weſt end of the town.
'Sdeath, am I become the ridicule of my fellow-creatures? or am I not in my ſenſes?—I know this is London—this houſe a tavern—I know I have a wife. Oh! 'twere better to be mad than to re⯑member her! She has a father—he is rich and proud—that I will not forget. But I will paſs his houſe, and ſend a malediction as I paſs it—
. [34] No; breathe out my laſt ſigh at his inhoſ⯑pitable door, and that ſigh ſhall breathe—forgive⯑neſs.
I am aſhamed of the trouble I have given you, Mrs. Placid. It had been ſufficient to have ſent me home in your carriage; to attend me yourſelf was ceremonious.
My dear Lady Eleanor, I was reſolved to come home with you, as ſoon as Mr. Placid deſired I would not.
Was that the cauſe of your politeneſs? I am ſorry it ſhould.
Why ſorry? It is not proper he ſhould have his way in every thing.
But I am afraid you ſeldom let him have it at all.
Yes, I do.—But where, my dear, is Mr. Irwin?
I cannot hear the name of Mr. Irwin without ſhedding tears: his health has been ſo much im⯑paired of late, and his ſpirits ſo bad—ſometimes I even fear for a failure in his mind.
Is not he at home?
I hope he is
. Tell your maſter, Mrs. Placid is here.
My maſter is not come in yet, Madam.
Not yet? I am very ſorry for it;—very ſorry indeed.
Bleſs me, my dear, don't look thus pale. Come ſit down, and I'll ſtay with you till he returns.
My dear, you forget that Mr. Placid is in the carriage at the door all this time.
No, I don't. Come, let us ſit and have half an hour's converſation.
Nay, I inſiſt upon your going to him, or de⯑ſiring him to walk in.
Now I think of it, they may as well drive him home, and come back for me.
Why ſurely, Mr. Placid, you were very impatient! I think you might have waited a few minutes longer.
I would have waited, my dear, but the evening is ſo damp.
Ah! 'tis the evening, which makes me alarmed for Mr. Irwin.
Lady Eleanor, you are one of the moſt tender, anxious, and affectionate wives I ever knew.
There! Now he wiſhes he was your huſband— He admires the conduct of every wife but his own, and envies every married man of his acquaintance. But it is very ungenerous of you.
So it is, my dear; and not at all conſiſtent with the law of retaliation; for I am ſure there is not one of my acquaintance who envies me.
Mr. Placid, your behaviour throughout this whole day has been ſo totally different to what it ever was before, that I am half reſolved to live no longer with you.
It will do—It will do.
Oh, my dear friends, do not talk of parting: how can you, while every bleſſing ſmiles on your union? Even I, who have reaſon to regret mine, yet, while that load of grief, a ſeparation from Mr. Irwin, is but averted, I will think every other affliction ſupportable.
That is he.
Why, you ſeem in raptures at his return.
I know no greater rapture.
My dear, you are not well, I ſee.
Yes.—
—Why do you ſpeak of it?
How do you do, Irwin?
I am glad to ſee you.
But I am ſorry to ſee you look ſo ill.
I have only been taking a glaſs too much.
Pſhaw! Don't I know you never drink?
You are miſtaken: I do when my wife is not by. I am afraid of her.
Impoſſible.
What! To be afraid of one's wife?
No; I think that very poſſible.
But it does not look well when it is ſo; it makes a man appear contemptible, and a woman a terma⯑gant. Come, Mr. Placid, I cannot ſtay another moment. Good night. Heaven bleſs you!
—Good night, my dear Mr. Irwin; [38] and now, pray take my advice and keep up your ſpirits.
I will, Madam,
And do you keep up your ſpirits.
I am glad they are gone. I ſpoke unkindly to you juſt now, did I not? My temper is altered lately; and yet I love you.
I never doubted it, nor ever will.
If you did, you would wrong me; for there is not a danger I would not riſk for your ſake; there is not an infamy I would not be branded with to make you happy, nor a puniſhment I would not undergo, with joy, for your welfare.—But there is a bar to this; we are unfortunately ſo entwined together, ſo linked, ſo rivetted, ſo cruelly, pain⯑fully fettered to each other, you could not be happy unleſs I ſhared the ſelf ſame happineſs with you. —But you will learn better—now you are in London, and amongſt faſhionable wives; you muſt learn better.
Do not talk, do not look thus wildly—Indeed, indeed, you make me very uneaſy.
What! uneaſy when I come to bring you com⯑fort; and ſuch comfort as you have not experienced [39] for many a day?
Here is a friend in our neceſſity,—a friend that brings a thouſand friends; plenty and—no, not always— peace.
Ah! 'Tis money.
Theſe are Bank notes.
Huſh! For heaven's ſake, huſh! We ſhall be diſcovered.
What alarms you thus?
What alarms you?
Do you ſay I am frightened?
A ſight ſo new has frightened me.
Nay, they are your own: by heaven, they are! No one on earth has a better, or a fairer right than you have. It was a laudable act by which I obtained them.—The parent-bird had forſook its young, and I but forced it back to perform the rites of nature.
You are inſane, I fear. No, no, I do not fear— hope you are.
Go to the door yourſelf; and if 'tis any one who aſks for me, ſay I am not come home yet.
It is the perſon belonging to the houſe: no one to us.
My dear Eleanor, are you willing to quit Lon⯑don with me in about two hours time?
Inſtantly.
Nay, not only London, but England.
This world, if you deſire it. To go in com⯑pany with you, will make the journey pleaſant; and all I loved on earth would ſtill be with me.
You can, then, leave your father without regret, never, never to ſee him more?
Why ſhould I think on him, who will not think of me?
But our children—
We are not to leave them behind?
One of them we muſt: but do not let that give you uneaſineſs. You know he has never lived with us ſince his infancy, and cannot pine for the loſs of parents whom he has never known.
But I have known him. He was my firſt; and, ſometimes, I think more cloſely wound around my heart, than all the reſt. The grief I felt on being forced to leave him when we went [41] abroad, and the conſtant anxiety I have ſince ex⯑perienced leſt he ſhould not be kindly treated, have augmented, I think, my tenderneſs.
All my endeavours to-day, as well as every other day, have been in vain to find into what part of the country his nurſe has taken him.—Nay, be not thus overcome with tears; we will (in ſpite of all my haſte to be gone) ſtay one more miſerable day here, in hopes to procure intelligence, ſo as to take him with us; and then ſmile with con⯑tempt on all we leave behind.
I TELL you, Mr. Harmony, that if an indif⯑ferent perſon, one on whom I had never beſtowed a favour in my life, were to offend me, it is in my nature never to forgive. Can I then forgive my own daughter, my only child, on whom I heaped continually marks of the moſt affectionate fondneſs? Shall ſhe dare to offend me in the tendereſt point, and you dare to ſuppoſe I will pardon her?
Your child, conſider.
The weakeſt argument you can uſe. As my child, was not ſhe moſt bound to obey me? As my child, ought ſhe not to have ſacrificed her own happineſs to mine? Inſtead of which, mine has been yielded up for a whim, a fancy, a fancy to marry a beggar; and as ſuch is her choice, let her beg with him.
She does by me;—pleads hard for your forgive⯑neſs.
If I thought ſhe dared to ſend a meſſage to me, though dictated on her knees, ſhe ſhould find [43] that ſhe had not yet felt the full force of my re⯑ſentment.
What could you do more?
I have done nothing yet. At preſent, I have only abandoned her;—but I can perſecute.
I have no doubt of it: and, that I may not be the means of aggravating your diſpleaſure, I aſſure you, that what I have now ſaid has been entirely from myſelf, without any deſire of hers; and, at the ſame time, I give you my promiſe, I will never preſume to intrude the ſubject again.
On this condition (but on no other) I forgive you now.
And now then, my Lord, let us paſs from thoſe who have forfeited your love, to thoſe who poſſeſs it.—I heard ſome time ago, but I never preſumed to mention it to you, that you had adopted a young man as your ſon?
"A young man!" Pſhaw!—No; a boy—a mere child, who fell in my way by accident.
A chance child! Ho! ho!—I underſtand you.
Do not jeſt with me, Sir. Do I look—
Yes, you look as if you would be aſhamed to own it, if you had one.
But this boy I am not aſhamed of:—he is a favourite—rather a favourite.—I did not like him ſo well at firſt;—but cuſtom,—and having a poor creature entirely at one's mercy, one begins to love it merely from the idea of—What would be its fate if one did not?
Is he an orphan then?
No.
You have a friendſhip for his parents?
I never ſaw the father: his mother I had a friendſhip for once.
Ay, while the huſband was away?
I tell you, no.
—But aſk no more queſ⯑tions. Who his parents are, is a ſecret, which neither he, nor any one (that is now living) knows, except myſelf; nor ever ſhall.
Well, my Lord, ſince 'tis your pleaſure to con⯑ſider him as your child, I ſincerely with you may experience more duty from him than you have done from your daughter.
Thank Heaven, his diſpoſition is not in the leaſt like her's.—No:
I have the joy to ſay, that never child was ſo unlike its mother.
How! His mother!
Confuſion!—what have I ſaid?—I am aſham⯑ed—
No,—be proud.
Of what?
That you have a lawful heir to all your riches; proud that you have a grandſon.
I would have concealed it from all the world; I wiſhed it even unknown to myſelf. And let me tell you, Sir, (as not by my deſign, but through my inadvertency, you are become ac⯑quainted with this ſecret) that, if ever you breathe it to a ſingle creature, the boy ſhall anſwer for it; for, were he known to be her's, though he were dearer to me than ever ſhe was, I would turn him from my houſe, and caſt him from my heart, as I have done her.
I believe you;—and in compaſſion to the child, give you my ſolemn promiſe never to reveal who he is. I have heard that thoſe unfortunate parents left an infant behind when they went abroad, and that they now lament him as loſt. Will you ſatiſ⯑fy my curioſity, in what manner you ſought and found him out?
Do you ſuppoſe I ſearched for him? No;—he was forced upon me. A woman followed me, about eight years ago, in the fields adjoining to [46] my country ſeat, with a half-ſtarved boy in her hand, and aſked my charity for my grand-child: the impreſſion of the word, made me turn round involuntarily; and caſting my eyes upon him, I was rejoiced, not to find a feature of his mother's in all his face; and I began to feel ſomething like pity for him. In ſhort, he caught ſuch faſt hold by one of my fingers, that I aſked him careleſsly "if he would go home and live with me?" On which, he anſwered me ſo willingly "Yes," I took him at his word.
And did never your regard for him, plead in his mother's behalf?
Never. For, by Heaven, I would as ſoon for⯑give the robber who met me laſt night at my own door, and, holding a piſtol to my breaſt, took from me a ſum to a conſiderable amount, as I would pardon her.
Did ſuch an accident happen to you?
Have you not heard of it?
No.
It is amazing we cannot put a ſtop to ſuch de⯑predations.
Proviſions are ſo ſcarce!
Miſs Wooburn, my Lord, if you are not en⯑gaged, will come and ſit an hour with you.
I have no company but what ſhe is perfectly ac⯑quainted with, and ſhall be glad of her viſit.
You forget I am a ſtranger, and my preſence may not be welcome.
A ſtranger! What, to my ward? to Lady Ramble? for that is the name which cuſtom would authoriſe her to keep; but ſuch courteſy ſhe diſ⯑dains, in contempt of the unworthy giver of the title.
I am intimate with Sir Robert, my Lord; and though I acknowledge that both you and his lady have cauſe for complaint, yet Sir Robert has ſtill many virtues.
Not one. He is the moſt vile, the moſt deteſt⯑able of characters. He not only contradicted my will in the whole of his conduct, but he ſeldom met me that he did not give me ſome perſonal affront.
It is, however, generally held better to be unci⯑vil in a perſon's preſence, than in his abſence.
He was uncivil to me in every reſpect.
That I will deny; for I have heard Sir Robert, in your abſence, ſay ſuch things in your praiſe!—
Indeed!
Moſt aſſuredly.
I wiſh he had ſometimes done me the honour to have ſpoken politely to my face.
That is not Sir Robert's way;—he is no flat⯑terer. But then, no ſooner has your back been turned, than I have heard him laviſh in your praiſe.
I muſt own, Mr. Harmony, that I never looked upon Sir Robert as incorrigible. I could always diſcern a ray of underſtanding, and a beam of vir⯑tue through all his foibles; nor would I have urged the divorce, but that I found his wife's ſen⯑ſibility could not bear his neglect; and even now, notwithſtanding her endeavour to conceal it, ſhe pines in ſecret, and laments her hard fortune. All my hopes of reſtoring her health reſt on one proſ⯑pect—that of finding a man worthy my recom⯑mendation for her ſecond huſband, and, by creat⯑ing a ſecond paſſion, expel the firſt.—Mr. Har⯑mony, you and I have been long acquainted—I have known your diſpoſition from your infancy— Now, if ſuch a man as you were to offer—
You flatter me.
I do not.—Would you venture to become her huſband?
I cannot ſay I have any particular deſire; but if it will oblige either you or her,—for my part, I think the ſhort time we live in this world, we ſhould do all we can to oblige each other.
I ſhould rejoice at ſuch an union myſelf, and I [49] think I can anſwer for her.—You permit me then to make overtures to her in your name?
This is rather a ſerious piece of buſineſs— However, I never did make a difficulty when I wiſhed to oblige a friend.—But there is one pro⯑viſo, my Lord; I muſt firſt mention it to Sir Robert.
Why ſo?
Becauſe he and I have always been very inti⯑mate friends; and to marry his wife, without even telling him of it, will appear very uncivil!
Do you mean then to aſk his conſent?
Not abſolutely his conſent; but I will inſinuate the ſubject to him, and obtain his approbation in a manner ſuitable to my own ſatisfaction.
You will oblige me then if you will ſee him as early as poſſible; for it is reported he is going abroad.
I will go to him immediately;—and, my Lord, I will do all in my power to oblige you, Sir Ro⯑bert and the Lady;
—but as to obliging my⯑ſelf, that was never one of my conſiderations.
I am ſorry to ſee you thus; you have been weep⯑ing? Will you ſtill lament your ſeparation from a [50] cruel huſband, as if you had followed a kind one to the grave?
By no means, my Lord. Tears from our ſex are not always the reſult of grief; they are fre⯑quently no more than little ſympathetic tributes which we pay to our fellow-beings, while the mind and the heart are ſteeled againſt the weakneſs which our eyes indicate.
Can you ſay, your mind and heart are ſo ſteeled?
I can: My mind is as firmly fixed againſt Sir Robert Ramble, as at our firſt acquaintance it was fixed upon him. And I ſolemnly proteſt—
To a man of my age and obſervation, proteſta⯑tions are vain.—Give me a proof that you have rooted him from your heart.
Any proof you require, I will give without a moment's heſitation.
I take you at your word; and deſire you to ac⯑cept a Gentleman, whom I ſhall recommend for your ſecond huſband.
— You ſaid you would not heſitate a moment.
I thought I ſhould not;—but this is ſomething. ſo unexpected—
You break your word then, and ſtill give cauſe for this ungrateful man, to ridicule your fondneſs for him.
No, I will put an end to that humiliation; and whoever the Gentleman is whom you mean to pro⯑poſe—Yet, do not name him at preſent—but give me the ſatisfaction of keeping the promiſe I have made to you (at leaſt for a little time) without ex⯑actly knowing how far it extends; for, in return, I have a promiſe to aſk from you, before I ac⯑quaint you with the nature of your engagement.
I give my promiſe. Now name your requeſt.
Then, my Lord,
—the law gave me back, upon my divorce from Sir Robert, the very large fortune which I brought to him.—I am afraid, that in his preſent circum⯑ſtances, to enforce the ſtrict payment of this debt, would very much embarraſs him.
What if it did?
It is my entreaty to you (in whoſe hands is in⯑veſted the power to demand this right of law) to lay my claim aſide for the preſent.
I know, my Lord, what you are going to ſay; I know Sir Robert is not now, but I can never forget that he has been my huſband.
To ſhew my gratitude for your compliance with the requeſt I have juſt made you,
here is the bond by which I am impowered to ſeize on the greateſt part of his eſtates in right of you: take the bond into your own poſſeſſion till your next huſband demands it [52] of you; and by the time you have called him huſ⯑band for a few weeks, this tenderneſs, or delicacy to Sir Robert, will be worn away.
My Lord, I beg pardon; but I forgot to men⯑tion—
Oh, Mr. Harmony, I have not ſeen you before I know not when: I am particularly happy at your calling juſt now, for I have—
a little favour to aſk of you.
If it were a great favour, Madam, you might command me.
But—my Lord, I beg your pardon—but the fa⯑vour I have to aſk of Mr. Harmony muſt be told to him in private.
Oh! I am ſure I have not the leaſt objection to you and Mr. Harmony having a private confe⯑rence. I'll leave you together.
You do not derange my buſineſs— I'll be back in a ſhort time.
Mr. Harmony, you are the very man on earth I moſt wanted to ſee.
I know the kindneſs of your heart, the liberality of your ſentiments, and I wiſh to repoſe a charge to your truſt, very near to me indeed—but you muſt be ſecret.
When a Lady repoſes a truſt in me, I ſhould not be a man if I were not.
I muſt firſt inform you, that Lord Norland has juſt drawn from me a promiſe, that I will once more enter into the marriage-ſtate; and without knowing to whom he intends to give me, I will keep my promiſe—But it is in vain to ſay, that, though I mean all duty and fidelity to my ſecond huſband, I ſhall not experience moments when my thoughts—will wander on my firſt.
Hem!—Hem!—
—Indeed?
I muſt always rejoice in Sir Robert's ſucceſſes, and lament over his misfortunes.
If that is all—
No, I would go one ſtep further:
I would ſecure him from thoſe miſ⯑fortunes, which to hear of, will diſturb my peace of mind. I know his fortune has ſuffered very much, and I cannot, will not, place it in the power of the man, whom my Lord Norland may point out for my next marriage, to diſtreſs him farther. —This is the writing, by which that Gentleman may claim the part of my fortune from Sir Robert Ramble, which is in landed property; carry it, my dear Mr. Harmony, to Sir Robert inſtantly; and tell him, that in ſeparating from him, I meant only to give him liberty; not make him the debtor, perhaps the priſoner of my future huſband.
Madam, I will moſt undoubtedly take this bond to my friend; but will you give me leave to ſug⯑geſt to you, that the perſon on whom you beſtow your hand, may be a little ſurpriſed to find, that while he is in poſſeſſion of you, Sir Robert is in the poſſeſſion of your fortune?
Do not imagine, Sir, that I ſhall marry any man, without firſt declaring what I have done—I only wiſh at preſent it ſhould be concealed from Lord Norland—When this paper is given, as I have required, it cannot be recalled; and when that is paſt, I ſhall divulge my conduct to whom I pleaſe; and firſt of all, to him, who ſhall offer me his addreſſes.
And if he is a man of my feelings, his ad⯑dreſſes will be doubly importunate for this proof of liberality to your former huſband. — But are you ſure, that in the return of this bond, there is no ſecret affection, no latent ſpark of love?
None. I know my heart; and if there was, I could not aſk you, Mr. Harmony (nor any one like you), to be the meſſenger of an imprudent paſſion. Sir Robert's vanity, I know, may cauſe him to judge otherwiſe; but undeceive him; let him know this is a ſacrifice to the golden princi⯑ples of duty, and not an offering to the tinſelled ſhrine of love.
Put up the bond.—
Well, my dear, have you made your requeſt?
Yes, my Lord.
And has he granted it?
Yes, my Lord. I am going to grant it.
I ſincerely wiſh you both joy of this good un⯑derſtanding between you. But, Mr. Harmony,
are not you going to Sir Robert?
Yes, my Lord, I am going this moment.
Make haſte then, and do not forget your errand.
No, my Lord, I ſha'n't forget my errand; it won't ſlip my memory—Good morning, my Lord —good morning, Madam.
Now, my dear, as you and Mr. Harmony ſeem, to be on ſuch excellent terms, I think I may ven⯑ture to tell you (if he has not yet told you himſelf), that he is the man, who is to be your huſband.
He! Mr. Harmony!—No, my Lord, he has not told me; and I am confident he never will.
What makes you think ſo?
Becauſe—becauſe—he muſt be ſenſible he would not be the man I ſhould chooſe.
And where is the woman who marries the man ſhe would chooſe? You are reverſing the order of ſociety; men, only, have the right of choice in marriage. Were women permitted theirs, we ſhould have handſome beggars allied to our nobleſt families, and no ſuch object in our whole iſland as an old maid.
But being denied that choice, why forbid to remain as I am?
What are you now? Neither a widow, a maid, nor a wife. If I could fix a term to your pre⯑ſent ſtate, I ſhould not be thus anxious to place you in another.
I am perfectly acquainted with your friendly motives, and feel the full force of your advice.— I therefore renew my promiſe—and although Mr. Harmony (in reſpect to the marriage ſtate) is as little to my wiſhes as any man on earth, I will nevertheleſs endeavour—whatever ſtruggles it may coſt me—to be to him, if he prefers his ſuit, a dutiful, an obedient—but, for a loving wife, that I can never be again.
I thank you for this viſit. I was undetermined what to do with myſelf. Your company has de⯑termined me to ſtay at home.
I was with a Gentleman juſt now, Sir Robert, and you were the ſubject of our converſation.
Had it been a Lady, I ſhould be anxious to know what ſhe ſaid.
I have been with a Lady likewiſe; and ſhe made you the ſubject of her diſcourſe.
But was ſhe handſome?
Very handſome.
My dear fellow, what is her name? What did ſhe ſay, and where may I meet with her?
Her name is Wooburn.
That is the name of my late wife.
It is her I mean.
Zounds, you had juſt put my ſpirits into a flame, and now you throw cold water all over me.
I am ſorry to hear you ſay ſo, for I came from her this moment; and what do you think is the preſent ſhe has given me to deliver to you?
Pſhaw! I want no preſents. Some of my old love-letters returned, I ſuppoſe, to remind me of my inconſtancy?
Do not undervalue her generoſity: this is her preſent;—this bond, which has power to take from you three thouſand a year, her right.
Ah! this is a preſent indeed. Are you ſure you ſpeak truth? Let me look at it:—Sure my eyes de⯑ceive me!—No, by Heaven it is true!
The very thing I wanted, and will make me perfectly happy. Now I'll be generous again; my bills ſhall be paid, my gaming debts cancelled, poor Irwin ſhall find a friend; and I'll ſend her as pretty a copy of verſes as ever I wrote in my life.
Take care how you treat with levity a woman of her elevated mind. She charged me to aſſure you, "that love had no ſhare whatever in this act, but merely compaſſion to the embarraſſed ſtate of your affairs."
Sir, I would have you to know, I am no object of compaſſion. However, a Lady's favour one cannot return; and ſo, I'll keep this thing.
Nay, if your circumſtances are different from what ſhe imagines, give it me back, and I will re⯑turn it to her.
No, poor thing! it would break her heart to ſend it back—No, I'll keep it—She would never forgive me, were I to ſend it back. I'll keep it. And ſhe is welcome to attribute her concern for me to what ſhe pleaſes. But ſurely you can ſee— you can underſtand—But Heaven bleſs her for [59] her love! and I would love her in return—if I could.
You would not talk thus, if you had ſeen the firm dignity with which ſhe gave me that paper— "Aſſure him," ſaid ſhe, "no remaining affection comes along with it, but merely a duty which I owe him, to protect him from the humiliation of being a debtor to the man whom I am going to marry."
Why, ſhe is not going to be married again!
I believe ſo.
But are you ſure of it, Sir? Are you ſure of it?
Both ſhe and her guardian told me ſo.
That guardian, my Lord Norland, is one of the baſeſt, vileſt of men.—I tell you what, Sir, I'll re⯑ſent this uſage.
Wherefore?—As to his being the means of bringing about your ſeparation, in that he obliged you.
Yes, Sir, he did, he certainly did;—but though I am not the leaſt offended with him on that head (for at that I rejoice), yet I will reſent his diſpoſing of her a ſecond time.
And why?
Becauſe, little regard as I have for her myſelf, yet no other man ſhall dare to treat her ſo ill, as I have done.
Do not fear it—Her next huſband will be a man, who, I can ſafely ſay, will never inſult, or even offend her; but ſooth, indulge, and make her happy.
And do you dare to tell me, that her next huſband ſhall make her happy? Now, that is worſe than the other—No, Sir, no man ſhall ever have it to ſay "he has made her either happy or miſerable," but myſelf.
I know of but one way to prevent it.
And what is that?
Pay your addreſſes to her, and marry her again yourſelf.
And I would, rather than ſhe ſhould be happy with any body elſe. The devil take me if I would not.
To ſhew that I am wholly diſintereſted in this affair, I will carry her a letter from you if you like, and ſay all I can in your behalf.
Ha, ha, ha! Now, my dear Harmony, you carry your good-natured ſimplicity too far. How⯑ever, I thank you, I ſincerely thank you—But do you imagine I ſhould be ſuch a blockhead, as to make love to the ſame woman I made love to ſeven years ago, and who for the laſt ſix years I totally neglected?
Yes: for if you neglected her ſix years, ſhe will now be a novelty.
Egad, and ſo ſhe will. You are right.
But being in poſſeſſion of her fortune, you can be very happy without her.
Take her fortune back, Sir.
I would ſtarve, I would periſh, die in poverty and infamy, rather than owe an obligation to a vile, perfidi⯑ous, inconſtant woman.
Conſider, Sir Robert, if you inſiſt on my taking this bond back, it may fall into the huſband's hands.
Take it back—I inſiſt upon it.
But, Mr. Harmony, depend on it, Lord Norland ſhall hear from me, in the moſt ſerious manner, for his interference—I repeat, he is the vileſt, the moſt villanous of men.
How can you ſpeak with ſuch rancour of a noble⯑man, who ſpeaks of you in the higheſt terms?
Does he, 'faith?
He owns you have ſome faults.
I know I have.
But he thinks your good qualities are num⯑berleſs.
Now dam'me, if ever I thought ſo ill of him, as I have appeared to do!—But who is the intended [62] huſband, my dear friend? Tell me, that I may laugh at him, and make you laugh at him.
No, I am not inclined to laugh at him.
Is it old Solus?
No.
But I will bet you a wager it is ſomebody equally ridiculous.
I never bet.
Solus is mad for a wife, and has been praiſing mine up to the heavens; you need ſay no more; I know it is he.
Upon my honour, it is not. However, I can⯑not diſcloſe to you at preſent the perſon's name; I muſt firſt obtain Lord Norland's permiſſion.
I ſhall aſk you no more. I'll write to her— ſhe will tell me;—or, I'll pay her a viſit, and aſk her boldly myſelf.—Do you think
—do you think ſhe would ſee me?
You can but try.
Mr. Solus.
Now I will find out the ſecret immediately.—I'll charge him with being the intended huſband.
I will not ſtay to hear you.
Mr. Solus, how do you do? I am extremely ſorry that my enagagements take me away as ſoon as you enter.
Sir Robert, what is the matter? Has any thing ruffled you? Why, I never ſaw you look more out of temper, even while you were married.
Ah! that I had never married! never known what marriage was! for, even at this moment, I feel its torments in my heart.
I have often heard of the torments of matri⯑mony; but I conceive, that at the worſt, they are nothing more than a kind of violent tickling, which will force the tears into your eyes, though at the ſame time you are burſting your ſides with laughter.
You have defined marriage too favourably; there is no laughter in the ſtate: all is melancholy, all gloom.
Now I think marriage is an excellent remedy for the ſpleen. I have known a Gentleman at a feaſt receive an affront, diſguiſe his rage, ſtep home, vent it all upon his wife, return to his com⯑panions, and be as good company as if nothing had happened.
But even the neceſſary expences of a wife ſhould alarm you.
I can then retrench ſome of my own. Oh! my dear Sir, a married man has ſo many delightful privileges to what a bachelor has!—An old Lady will introduce her daughters to you in a diſhabille —"It does not ſignify, my dears, it's a married man"—One Lady will ſuffer you to draw on her glove—"Never mind, it's a married man"— Another will permit you to pull on her ſlipper; a third will even take you into her bed-chamber —"Pſhaw, it's nothing but a married man."
But the weight of your fetters will overbalance all theſe joys.
And I cannot ſay, notwithſtanding you are re⯑lieved from the bond, that I ſee much joy or brightneſs here.
I am not very well at preſent; I have the head⯑ach; and, if ever a wife can be of comfort to her huſband, it muſt be when he is indiſpoſed. A wife, then, binds up your head, mixes your powders, bathes your temples, and hovers about, in a way that is moſt endearing.
Don't ſpeak of it; I long to have one hover about me. But I will—I am determined I will, before I am a week older. Don't ſpeak, don't at⯑tempt to perſuade me not. Your deſcription has renewed my eagerneſs—I will be married.
And without pretending not to know who you mean to make your wife, I tell you plainly, it is, Miſs Wooburn, it is my late wife.—I know you [65] made overtures to my Lord Norland, and that he has given his conſent.
You tell me a great piece of news—I'll go aſk my Lord if it be true; and if he ſays it is, I ſhall be very glad to find it ſo.
That is right, Sir; marry her, marry her;—I give you joy,—that's all.—Ha, ha, ha! I think I ſhould know her temper.—But if you will venture to, marry her, I ſincerely wiſh you happy.
And if we are not, you know we can be di⯑vorced.
Not always. Take my advice, and live as you are.
You almoſt ſtagger my reſolution.—I had paint⯑ed ſuch bright proſpects in marriage:—Good day to you.
—You think I had better not marry?
You are undone if you do.
You ought to know from experience.
From that I ſpeak.
But then, what a poor diſconſolate object ſhall I live, without a wife to hover about me; to bind up my head, and bathe my temples! Oh! I am [66] impatient for all the chartered rights, privileges, and immunities of a married man.
Furies, racks, torments—I cannot bear what I feel, and yet I am aſhamed to own I feel any thing!
My dear Sir Robert, give me joy. Mrs. Placid and I are come to the very point you adviſed; matters are in the faireſt way for a ſeparation.
I do give you joy, and moſt ſincerely.—You are right; you'll ſoon be as happy as I am.
But would you ſuppoſe it? that deluded woman, my wife, is going to be married again! I thought ſhe had had enough of me!
You are hurt, I ſee, leſt the world ſhould ſay ſhe has forgot you.
She cannot forget me; I defy her to forget me.
Who is her intended huſband?
Solus, Solus. An old man—an ugly man. He left me this moment, and owned it—owned it! Go after him, will you, and perſuade him not to have her.
My advice will have no effect, for you know he is bent upon matrimony.
Then could not you, my dear Sir (as you are going to be ſeparated), could not you recommend him to marry your wife?—It will be all the ſame to him, I dare ſay, and I ſhall like it much better.
Ours will not be a divorce, conſider, but merely a ſeparate maintenance. But were it otherwiſe, I wiſh no man ſo ill, as to wiſh him married to Mrs. Placid.
That is my caſe exactly. I wiſh no man ſo ill, as to wiſh him married to my Lady Ramble; and poor old Solus in particular, poor old man! a very good ſort of man—I have a great friendſhip for Solus.—I can't ſtay a moment in the houſe—I muſt go ſomewhere—I'll go to Solus.—No, I'll go to Lord Norland—No, I will go to Harmony; and then I'll call on you, and we'll take a bottle to⯑gether; and when we are both free
we'll join, from that moment we'll join, to laugh at, to contemn, to deſpiſe all thoſe who boaſt of the joys of conjugal love.
AND now, for one of the moſt painful taſks that brotherly love ever draws upon me; to tell another, the ſuit, of which I gave him hope, has failed.—Yet, if I can but overcome Captain Irwin's delicacy ſo far, as to prevail on him to accept one proof more of my good wiſhes towards him;— but to a man of his nice ſenſe of obligations, the offer muſt be made with caution.
Mr. Harmony, I beg your pardon: I come in thus abruptly, from the anxiety I feel concerning what paſſed between us this morning in reſpect to Miſs Wooburn. You have not changed your mind, I hope?
Indeed, my Lord, I am very ſorry that it will not be in my power to oblige you.
How, Sir? Did not you give me your word?
Only conditionally, my Lord.
And what were the conditions?
Have you forgot them? Her former huſband.
Sir Robert Ramble is in his carriage at the door, and, if you are at leiſure, will come in.
Deſire him to walk up. I have your leave, I ſuppoſe, my Lord?
Yes; but let me get out of the houſe without meeting him.
Can I go this way?
Why ſhould you ſhun him?
Becauſe he uſed his wife ill.
He did. But I believe he is very ſorry for it. —And as for you, he ſaid to me only a few hours ago—but no matter.
What did he ſay? I inſiſt upon knowing.
Why then he ſaid, "that if he had a ſacred truſt to repoſe in any one, you ſhould be the man on earth, to whom he would confide it."
Well, I am in no hurry; I can ſtay a few mi⯑nutes.
Oh! Harmony! I am in ſuch a diſtracted ſtate [70] of mind—
Sir Robert, how do you do?
My Lord, I am pretty well.—I hope I have the happineſs of ſeeing your Lordſhip in perfect health.
Very well, Sir, I thank you.
Indeed, my Lord, I think I never ſaw you look better.
Mr. Harmony, you and Sir Robert may have ſome buſineſs—I'll wiſh you a good morning.
No, my Lord, I fancy Sir Robert has nothing particular.
Nothing, nothing, I aſſure you, my Lord.
However, I have buſineſs myſelf in another place, and ſo you will excuſe me.
My Lord—Lord Norland,—I truſt you will excuſe my enquiries.—I hope, my Lord, all your family are well?
All very well.
Your little Elevè,—Maſter Edward,—the young Gentleman you have adopted—I hope he is [71] well—
And—your Ward, Sir—Miſs Wooburn—I hope, my Lord, ſhe is well?
Yes, Sir Robert, Miſs Wooburn is tolerably well.
Only tolerably, my Lord? I am ſorry for that.
I hope, my Lord, you will excuſe my men⯑tioning the ſubject; but I was telling Sir Robert juſt now, of your intentions reſpecting a ſecond marriage for that Lady; but Sir Robert does not appear to approve of the deſign.
What objection can he have?
My Lord, there are ſuch a number of bad huſ⯑bands; there are ſuch a number of diſſipated, un⯑thinking, unprincipled men!—And—I ſhould be extremely ſorry to ſee any Lady with whom I have had the honour of being ſo cloſely allied, united to one who would undervalue her worth.
Pray, Sir Robert, were you not then extremely ſorry for her, while ſhe was united to you?
Very ſorry for her indeed, my Lord. But, at that time, my mind was ſo taken up with other cares, I own I did not feel the compaſſion which was her due; but, now that I am ſingle, I ſhall have leiſure to pay her more attention; and ſhould I find her unhappy, it muſt, inevitably, make me ſo.
Depend upon it, that on the preſent occaſion, I ſhall take infinite care in the choice of her huſband.
If your Lordſhip would permit me to have an interview with Miſs Wooburn, I think I ſhould be able at leaſt—
You would not ſure inſult her by your pre⯑ſence?
I think I ſhould be able at leaſt to point out an object worthy of her taſte—I know what ſhe will like better than any body in the world.
Her requeſt has been, that I may point her out a huſband the reverſe of you.
Then, upon my honour, my Lord, ſhe won't like him.
Have not you liked women the reverſe of her?
Yes, my Lord, perhaps I have, and perhaps I ſtill do. I do not pretend to love her; I did not ſay I did; nay, I poſitively proteſt I do not; but this indifference I acknowledge as one of my faults; and, notwithſtanding all my faults, give me leave to acknowledge my gratitude that your Lordſhip has nevertheleſs been pleaſed to declare you think my virtues are numberleſs.
Huſh, huſh!—Don't, talk of your virtues now.
Sir Robert, to all this incoherent language, this is my anſwer, this is my will: The Lady, to whom I have had the honour to be guardian, ſhall never (while ſhe calls me friend) ſee you more.
Lord Norland, I am too well acquainted with the truth of your word, and the firmneſs of your temper, to preſs my ſuit one ſentence farther.
I commend your diſcernment.
My Lord, I feel myſelf a little embarraſſed.— I am afraid I have made myſelf a little ridiculous upon this occaſion—Will your Lordſhip do me the favour to forget it?
I will forget whatever you pleaſe.
I am ſorry to ſee you going away in deſpair.
I never did deſpair in my life, Sir; and while a woman is the object of my wiſhes, I never will.
What did he ſay?
That he thought your conduct that of a juſt and an upright man.
To ſay the truth, he has gone away with better [74] manners than I could have imagined, conſidering his jealouſy is provoked.
Ah! I always knew he loved his wife, notwith⯑ſtanding his behaviour to her; for, if you remem⯑ber, he always ſpoke well of her behind her back.
No, I do not remember it.
Yes, he did; and that is the only criterion of a man's love, or of his friendſhip.
A young gentleman is at the door, Sir, enquir⯑ing for Lord Norland.
Who can it be?
Your young gentleman from home, I dare ſay. Deſire him to walk in. Bring him here.
What buſineſs can he have to follow me?
Oh, my Lord, I beg your pardon for coming hither; but I come to tell you ſomething you will be glad to hear.
Good Heaven! how like his mother!
I begin to think he is—but he was not ſo when I firſt took him. No, no, if he had, he would not have been thus near me now;—but to turn him away becauſe his countenance is a little changed, I think would not be right.
Pray, Sir, did you know my mother?
I have ſeen her.
Did you ever ſee her, my Lord?
I thought you had orders never to enquire about your parents? Have you forgot thoſe orders?
No, my Lord; but when this gentleman ſaid I was like my mother—it put me in mind of her.
You do not remember your mother, do you?
Sometimes I think I do. I think ſometimes I remember her kiſſing me, when ſhe and my father went on board of a ſhip; and ſo hard ſhe preſſed me—I think I feel it now.
Perhaps ſhe was the only Lady that ever ſaluted you?
No, Sir; not by many.
But pray, young man (to have done with this [76] ſubject), what brought you here? You ſeem to have forgot your errand?
And ſo I had, upon my word. Speaking of my mother, put it quite out of my head.—But, my Lord, I came to let you know, the robber who ſtopped you laſt night is taken.
I am glad to hear it.
I knew you would; and therefore I begged to be the firſt to tell you.
Should you know the perſon again?
I cannot ſay I ſhould, his face ſeemed ſo much diſtorted.
Ay, wretched man! I ſuppoſe with terror.
No; it appeared a different paſſion from fear.
Perhaps, my Lord, it was your fear that made you think ſo.
No, Sir, I was not frightened.
Then why did you give him your money?
It was ſurpriſe cauſed me to do that.
I wondered what it was! You ſaid it was not fear, and I was ſure it could not be love.
How has he been taken?
A perſon came to our ſteward, and informed againſt him;—and, Oh! my Lord, his poor wife told the officers who took him, they had met with misfortunes, which ſhe feared had cauſed a fever in her huſband's head; and, indeed, they found him too ill to be removed; and ſo, ſhe hoped, ſhe ſaid, "that as a man, not in his perfect mind, you would be merciful to him."
I will be juſt.
And that is being merciful, is it not, my Lord?
Not always.
I thought it had been.—It is not juſt to be un⯑merciful, is it?
Certainly not.
Then it muſt be juſt, to have mercy.
You draw a falſe concluſion. Great as is the virtue of mercy, juſtice is greater ſtill. Juſtice holds its place among thoſe cardinal virtues which include all the leſſer.—Come, Mr. Harmony, will you go home with me? And before I attend to this buſineſs, let me perſuade you to forget there is ſuch a perſon in the world as Sir Robert, and ſuffer me to introduce you to Miſs Wooburn, as the man who—
I beg to be excuſed—Beſides the conſideration of Sir Robert, I have another reaſon why I cannot go with you. The melancholy tale which this young gentleman has been telling, has caſt a gloom on my ſpirits which renders me unfit for the ſociety of a Lady.
Now I ſhould not be ſurpriſed were you to go in ſearch of this culprit and his family, and come to me to intreat me to forego the proſecution; but, before you aſk me, I tell you it is in vain—I will not.
Lord Norland, I have lately been ſo unſucceſſ⯑ful in my petitions to you, I ſhall never preſume to interpoſe between your rigour and a weak ſufferer more.
Plead the cauſe of the good, and I will liſten; but you find none but the wicked for your com⯑paſſion.
The good in all ſtates, even in the very jaws of death, are objects of envy; it is the bad who are the only real ſufferers: There, where no internal conſolation cheers, who can refuſe a little external comfort?—And let me tell you, my Lord, that amidſt all your authority, your ſtate, your gran⯑deur, I often pity you.
Good-day, Mr. Harmony; and when you have apologiſed for what you have ſaid, we may be friends again.
Nay, hear my apology now. I cannot—no, it is not in my nature to live in reſentment, nor under the reſentment of any creature in the world.
Do not ſay who it is—but ſay a Gentleman who has ſome very particular buſineſs with her.
Yes, Sir.
Pray,
You are but lately come into this ſervice, I believe?
Only a few days, Sir.
You don't know me, then?
No, Sir.
I am very glad of it. So much the better. Go to Miſs Wooburn, with a Stranger's compli⯑ments who is waiting, and who begs to ſpeak with her upon an affair of importance.
Yes, Sir.
I wiſh I may die if I don't feel very unaccount⯑ably! How different are our ſenſations towards [80] our wives, and all other women! This is the very firſt time ſhe has given me a palpitation ſince the honey-moon.
Support me, Heaven!
Was ever man in ſuch confuſion before his wife!
Sir Robert, having recovered in ſome meaſure, from the ſurpriſe into which this intruſion firſt threw me, I have only to ſay, that whatever pre⯑tence may have induced you to offer me this in⯑ſult, there are none to oblige me to bear with it.
Lady Ramb—
Miſs Woo—
Lady Ramble—
Miſs Wooburn—Madam—You wrong me— There was a time when I inſulted you, I confeſs; but it is impoſſible that time ſhould ever return.
While I ſtay with you, I incur the danger.
Nay, liſten to me as a friend, whom you have ſo often heard as an enemy.—You offered me a fa⯑vour by the hands of Mr. Harmony—
And is this the motive of your viſit—this the return—
No, Madam, that obligation was not the mo⯑tive which drew me hither—The real cauſe of this ſeeming intruſion is—you are going to be mar⯑ried once more, and I come to warn you of your danger.
That you did ſufficiently in the marriage-ſtate.
But now I come to offer you advice that may be of the moſt material conſequence, ſhould you really be determined to yield yourſelf again into the power of a huſband.
Which I moſt aſſuredly am.
Happy, happy man! How much is he the ob⯑ject of my envy! None ſo well as I, know how to envy him, becauſe none ſo well as I, know how to value you.
Nay, by Heaven you ſhall not go till you have heard all that I came to ſay!
Speak it then inſtantly.
No, it would take whole ages to ſpeak; and ſhould we live together, as long as we have lived together, ſtill I ſhould not find time to tell you— how much I love you.
That, I hope, is Lord Norland.
And what has Lord Norland to do with ſouls [82] free as ours? Let us go to Scotland again; and again bid defiance to his ſtern commands.
Be aſſured, that through him only, will I ever liſten to a ſyllable you have to utter.
One ſyllable only, and I am gone that inſtant.
Well, Sir?
Maria, Maria, look at me!—Look at me in this humble ſtate—Could you have ſuſpected this, Maria?
No: nor can I conceive what this mockery means.
It means, that now you are no longer my wife, you are my Goddeſs; and thus I offer you my ſupplication, that (if you are reſolved not to live ſingle) amongſt the numerous train who preſent their ſuit, you will once more ſelect me.
You!—You who have treated me with cruelty; who made no ſecret of your love for others—but gloried, boaſted of your gallantries?
I did, I did—But here I ſwear, only truſt me again—do but once more truſt me, and I ſwear [83] by all I hold moſt ſacred, that I will for the fu⯑ture carefully conceal all my gallantries from your knowledge—though they were ten times more fre⯑quent than before.
Oh, my dear Miſs Wooburn—What! Sir Ro⯑bert here too!
How do you do, Sir Robert? Who would have thought of ſeeing you here? I am glad to ſee you though, with all my heart; and ſo I dare ſay is Miſs Wooburn, though ſhe may not like to ſay ſo.
You are impertinent, Sir.
What, for coming in? I will go away then.
Do, do—There's a good boy—do.
I cannot help laughing, though, to ſee you two together!—For you know you never were toge⯑ther when you lived in the ſame houſe.
Leave the room inſtantly, Sir, or I ſhall call Lord Norland.
Oh, don't take that trouble, I will call him my⯑ſelf.
—My Lord, my Lord, pray come here this moment—As I am alive, here is Sir Robert Ramble along with Lady Ramble!
Sir Robert, on what pretence do you come hither?
On the ſame pretence, as when I was for the firſt time admitted into your houſe; to ſolicit this Lady's hand. And, after having had it once, no force ſhall compel me to take a refuſal.
I will try however—Madam, quit the room in⯑ſtantly.
My Lord, ſhe ſhall not quit it.
I command her to go.
And I command her to ſtay.
Which of us will you obey?
My inclination, my Lord, diſpoſes me to obey you;—but I have ſo lately been accuſtomed to obey him, that cuſtom inclines me to obey him ſtill.
There! There! There, my Lord! Now I hope you will underſtand better for the future, and not attempt to interfere between a man and his wife.
Be explicit in your anſwer to this queſtion— Will you conſent to be his wife?
No, never.
Zounds, my Lord, now you are hurrying mat⯑ters.—You ſhould do it by gentle means;—let me aſk her gently.
Maria, Maria, will you be my wife once again?
Never.
So you ſaid ſeven years ago when I aſked you, and yet you conſented.
And now, Sir Robert, you have had your an⯑ſwer; leave my houſe.
Yes, Sir; but not without my other half.
"Your other half?"
Yes; the wife of my boſom—the wife, whom I ſwore at the altar ‘to love and to cheriſh, and, forſaking all others, cleave only to her as long as we both ſhould live.’
You broke your oath, and made the contract void.
But I am ready to take another oath; and an⯑other after that, and another after that—And, Oh, my dear Maria, be propitious to my vows, and give me hopes you will again be mine.
I cannot live without you.—Receive your peni⯑tent huſband, thus humbly acknowledging his faults, and imploring you to accept him once again.
Now, is it wonderful that I ſhould want a wife?
And is it to be wondered at, if I ſhould heſitate about parting with mine?
Mr. Solus, Mr. Placid, I am highly diſpleaſed that my private actions ſhould be thus inſpected.
No one ſhall perſuade me now, to live a day without a wife.
And no one ſhall perſuade me now, not to be content with my own.
I will procure a ſpecial licence, and marry the firſt woman I meet.
Mr. Solus, you are, I believe, intereſted in a peculiar manner, about the marriage of this Lady.
And, poor man, you are ſick, and want ſome⯑body [87] to "bathe your temples," and to ‘hover about you.’
You come in moſt opportunely, my dear Mr. Solus, to be a witneſs—
"My dear Mr. Solus!"
To be a witneſs, Madam, that a man is miſer⯑able without a wife. I have been a fatal inſtance of that, for ſome time.
Come to me then, and receive a leſſon.
No, Madam, he ſhall not come to you; nor ſhall he receive a leſſon. No one ſhall receive a leſſon from you, but me.
Sir Robert, one would ſuppoſe by this extra⯑ordinary behaviour, you were jealous.
And ſo I am, my Lord; I have cauſe to be ſo.
No cauſe to be jealous of Mr. Solus—He is not Miſs Wooburn's lover, I aſſure you.
Then, my Lord, I verily believe it is yourſelf. Yes, I can ſee it is; I can ſee it by her eyes, and by every feature in your face.
Oh! my good friend, Mr. Placid, only liſten to him.
And why "my good friend, Mr. Placid?"
By Heavens, Sir, I believe that you only wiſhed to get rid of your own wife, in order to marry mine.
I do not wiſh to part with my own wife, Sir Robert, ſince what I have juſt ſeen.
Then, pray, gentlemen, be ſo good as to tell me, which of you two is the happy man, that I may know how to conduct myſelf towards him?
Ha, ha, ha!
Do you inſult me, Maria?—Oh! have pity on my ſufferings.
If you have a mind to kneel down again, we will go out of the room.
Juſt as I was comforting myſelf with the proſ⯑pect of a divorce, I find my inſtructor and direc⯑tor pleading on his knees to be remarried.
What were you ſaying about a divorce?
Now, down on your knees, and beg pardon.
My dear Mrs. Placid, if this viſit is to me, I take it very kind.
Not abſolutely to you, my dear. I ſaw Mr. Placid's carriage at the door, and ſo I ſtepped in to deſire him to go home. Go home directly.
Preſently, my dear; I will go preſently.
Preſently won't do; I ſay directly. There is a lady at my houſe in the greateſt poſſible diſtreſs
—Lady Eleanor—I never ſaw a creature in ſuch diſtraction;
—therefore go home this moment; you ſha'n't ſtay an inſtant longer.
Egad, I don't know whether I will marry or no.
Why don't you go, Mr. Placid, when I bid you?
No;—I think I won't marry.
But, my dear, will not you go home with me?
Did not I tell you to go by yourſelf?
No;—I am ſure I won't marry.
And now, Mr. Solus and Sir Robert, theſe la⯑dies may have ſome private converſation. Do me the favour to leave them alone.
My Lord, with your leave we will retire.
Sir Robert, I have re⯑mained in your company, and compelled myſelf to the painful taſk of hearing all you have had to ſay, merely for the ſatisfaction of expoſing your love, and then enjoying the triumph of bidding you fare⯑well for ever.
He turns pale at the thoughts of loſing her. Yes, I think I'll marry.
Come, Sir Robert, it is in vain to loiter; your doom is fixed.
Shall I then never again know what it is to have a heart like her's, to repoſe my troubles on?
Yes, I am pretty ſure I'll marry.
—A friend in all my anxieties, a companion in all my pleaſures, a phyſician in all my ſickneſſes—
Yes, I will marry.
Come, come, Sir Robert, do not let you and I have any diſpute.
Senſeleſs man, not to value thoſe bleſſings—Not to know how to eſtimate them, till they were loſt.
Yes,—I am determined;—nothing ſhall prevent me—I will be married.
MY Lord is buſily engaged, Madam; I do not ſuppoſe he would ſee any one, much leſs a ſtranger.
I am no ſtranger.
Your name then, Madam?
That, I cannot ſend in. But tell him, Sir, I am the afflicted wife of a man, who for ſome weeks paſt has given many fatal proofs of a diſordered mind. In one of thoſe fits of phrenſy, he held an inſtru⯑ment of death, meant for his own deſtruction, to the breaſt of your Lord (who by accident that moment paſſed), and took from him, what he vainly hoped might preſerve his own life, and relieve the wants of his family. But his paroxyſm over, he ſhrunk from what he had done, and gave the whole he had thus unwarrantably taken, into a ſervant's hands to be returned to its lawful owner. The man, admitted to this confidence, betrayed his truſt, and inſtead of giving up what was ſo ſacredly delivered to him, ſecreted it; and, to obtain the promiſed reward, came to this houſe, but to in⯑form againſt the wretched offender; who now, only reſting on your Lord's clemency, can eſcape the direful fate he has incurred.
Madam, the account you give, makes me in⯑tereſted in your behalf, and you may depend, I will repeat it all with the greateſt exactneſs.
This is my father's houſe! It is only through two rooms and one ſhort paſſage, and there he is ſitting in his ſtudy. Oh! in that ſtudy, where I (even in the midſt of all his buſineſs) have been ſo often welcome; where I have urged the ſuit of many an unhappy perſon, nor ever urged in vain. Now I am not permitted to ſpeak for myſelf, nor have one friendly voice to do that office for me, which I have ſo often undertaken for others.
My Lord ſays, that any petition concerning the perſon you come about, is in vain. His reſpect for the laws of his country demands an example ſuch as he means to make.
Am I, am I to deſpair then?
Dear Sir, would you go once more to him, and humbly repreſent—
I ſhould be happy to oblige you, but I dare not take any more meſſages to my Lord; he has given me my anſwer.—If you will give me leave, Madam, I'll ſee you to the door.
Miſery—Diſtraction!—Oh, Mr. Placid! Oh, [93] Mr. Harmony! Are theſe the hopes you gave me, could I have the boldneſs to enter this houſe? But you would neither of you undertake to bring me here!—neither of you undertake to ſpeak for me!
Shall I ſpeak for you, Madam?
Who are you, pray, young Gentleman? Is it you, whom Lord Norland has adopted for his ſon?
I believe he has, Madam; but he has never told me ſo yet.
I am obliged to you for your offer; but my ſuit is of too much conſequence for you to undertake.
I know what your ſuit is, Madam, becauſe I was with my Lord when Hammond brought in your meſſage; and I was ſo ſorry for you, I came out on purpoſe to ſee you—and, without ſpeaking to my Lord, I could do you a great kindneſs—if I durſt.
What kindneſs?
But I durſt not—No, do not aſk me.
I do not. But you have raiſed my curioſity; and in a mind ſo diſtracted as mine, it is cruel to excite one additional pain.
I am ſure I would not add to your grief for the world.—But then, pray do not ſpeak of what I am going to ſay.—I heard my Lord's lawyer tell him juſt now, "that as he ſaid he ſhould not know the perſon again, who committed the offence about which you came, and as the man who informed againſt him was gone off, there could be no evidence that he did the action, but from a book, a parti⯑cular pocket-book, of my Lord's, which he forgot to deliver to his ſervant with the notes and money to return, and which was found upon him at your houſe: and this, Lord Norland will affirm to be his."—Now, if I did not think I was doing wrong, this is the very book—
I took it from my Lord's table;— but it would be doing wrong, or I am ſure I wiſh you had it.
It will ſave my life, my huſband's and my children's.
But what is to become of me?
That Providence, who never puniſhes the deed, unleſs the will be an accomplice, ſhall protect you for ſaving one, who has only erred in a mo⯑ment of diſtraction.
I never did any thing to offend my Lord in my life;—and I am in ſuch fear of him, I did not think I ever ſhould.—Yet, I cannot refuſe you;— take it.—
But pity me, when my Lord ſhall know of it.
Oh! ſhould he diſcard you for what you have done, it will embitter every moment of my remain⯑ing life.
Do not frighten yourſelf about that.—I think he loves me too well to diſcard me quite.
Does he indeed?
I think he does;—for often, when we are alone, he preſſes me to his boſom ſo fondly, you would not ſuppoſe.—And, when my poor nurſe died, ſhe called me to her bed-ſide, and told me (but pray keep it a ſecret)—ſhe told me I was—his grand⯑child.
You are—you are his grand-child—I ſee,—I feel you are;—for I feel that I am your mother.
Oh! take this evidence back
—I cannot receive it from thee, my child;—no, let us all periſh, rather than my boy, my only boy, ſhould do an act to ſtain his conſcience, or to loſe his grand-father's love.
What do you mean?
The name of the perſon with whom you lived in your infancy, was Heyland?
It was.
I am your mother; Lord Norland's only child,
who, for one act of diſobedience, have been driven to another part of the globe in [96] poverty, and forced to leave you, my life, behind.
Your father, in his ſtruggles to ſupport us all, has fallen a victim;— but Heaven, which has preſerved my child, will ſave my huſband, reſtore his ſenſe, and once more—
I hear my Lord's ſtep,—he is coming this way: —Begone, mother, or we are all undone.
No, let him come —for though his frown ſhould kill me, yet muſt I thank him for his care of thee.
You love me,— 'tis in vain to ſay you do not: You love my child; and with whatever hardſhips you have dealt, or ſtill mean to deal by me, I will never ceaſe to think you love me, nor ever ceaſe my gratitude for your goodneſs.
Where are my ſervants? Who let this woman in?
Oh, my Lord, pity her.—Do not let me ſee her hardly treated—Indeed I cannot bear it.
What was your errand here? If to ſee your child, take him along with you.
I came to ſee my father;—I have a houſe too full of ſuch as he already.
How did ſhe gain admittance?
With a petition, which I repeated to your Lordſhip.
Her huſband then it was, who—
But let him know, for this boy's ſake, I will no longer purſue him.
For that boy's ſake you will not purſue his fa⯑ther; but for whoſe ſake are you ſo tender of that boy? 'Tis for mine, for my ſake; and by that I conjure you—
Your prayers are vain—
Go, take leave of your mother for ever, and inſtantly follow me; or ſhake hands with me for the laſt time, and inſtantly begone with her.
Farewell, my Lord, —it almoſt breaks my heart to part from you;—but, if I have my choice, I muſt go with my mother.
Well, my dear, farewell.—I have ſtaid a great while longer than I intended—I certainly forgot to tell Mr. Placid to come back after he had ſpoken with Lady Eleanor, or he would not have taken the liberty not to have come.
How often have I lamented the fate of Lord Norland's daughter! But, luckily, I have no per⯑ſonal acquaintance with her, or I ſhould probably feel a great deal more on her account than I do at preſent.—She had quitted her father's houſe before I came to it.
My whole life is paſſed in endeavouring to make people happy, and yet they won't let me.—I flat⯑tered myſelf, that after I had reſigned all preten⯑ſions to you, Miſs Wooburn, in order to accom⯑modate Sir Robert—that, after I had told both my Lord and him, in what high eſtimation they ſtood in each other's opinion, they would of courſe be friends; or, at leaſt, not have come to any deſpe⯑rate quarrel:—inſtead of which, what have they done, but, within this hour, had a duel!—and poor Sir Robert—
For Heaven's ſake, tell me of Sir Robert—
You were the only perſon he mentioned after [99] he received his wound; and ſuch encomiums as he uttered—
Good Heaven! If he is in danger, it will be vain to endeavour to conceal what I ſhall ſuffer.
Was my huſband there?
He was one of the ſeconds.
Then he ſhall not ſtir out of his houſe this month, for it.
He is not likely; for he is hurt too.
A great deal hurt?
Don't alarm yourſelf.
I don't.
Nay, if you had heard what he ſaid!
What did he ſay?
How tenderly he ſpoke of you to all his friends—
But what did he ſay?
He ſaid you had imperfections.
Then he told a falſehood.
But he acknowledged they were ſuch as only evinced a ſuperior underſtanding to the reſt of your ſex;—and that your heart—
I am ſure I am very ſorry that any misfortune has happened to him, poor, ſilly man! But I do not ſuppoſe
he will die.
If you will behave kind to him, I ſhould ſup⯑poſe not.
Mr. Harmony, if Mr. Placid is either dying or dead, I ſhall behave with very great tenderneſs; but if I find him alive and likely to live, I will lead him ſuch a life as he has not led a long time.
Then you mean to be kind? But, my dear Miſs Wooburn,
why this ſeeming grief? Sir Robert is ſtill living; and ſhould he die of his wounds, you may at leaſt conſole yourſelf, that it was not your cruelty which killed him.
Rather than have ſuch a weight on my con⯑ſcience, I would comply with the moſt extrava⯑gant of his deſires, and ſuffer his cruelty to be the death of me.
If thoſe are your ſentiments, it is my advice that you pay him a viſit in his affliction.
Oh no, Mr. Harmony, I would not for the univerſe. Mrs. Placid, do you think it would be proper?
No, I think it would not—Conſider, my dear, you are no longer a wife, but a ſingle Lady, and would you run into the clutches of a man?
He has no clutches, Madam; he is ill in bed, and totally helpleſs.—But, upon recollection, it would, perhaps, be needleſs to go; for he may be too ill to admit you.
If that is the caſe, all reſpect to my ſituation, my character, ſinks before the ſtrong deſire of ſee⯑ing him once more. Oh! were I even married to another, I feel, that in ſpite of all my private declarations, or public vows, I ſhould fly from him, to pay my duty where it was firſt plighted.
My coach is at the door; ſhall I take you to his houſe? Come, Mrs. Placid, wave all ceremo⯑nious motives on the preſent melancholy occaſion, and go along with Miſs Wooburn and me.
But, Mrs. Placid, perhaps poor Mr. Placid is in want of your attendance at home.
No, they were both carried in the ſame carriage to Sir Robert's.
Oh! how I long to ſee my dear huſband, that I may conſole him!
Oh! how I long to ſee my dear huſband, that I may quarrel with him!
Porter, porter, how can you ſleep at this time of the day?—It is only eight o'clock.
What did you want, Mr. William?
To tell you my maſter muſt not be diſturbed, and ſo you muſt not let in a ſingle creature.
Mr. William, this is no leſs than the third time I have received thoſe orders within this half hour: —Firſt, from the butler, then from the valet, and now from the footman.—Do you all ſuppoſe I am ſtupid?
I was bid to tell you. I have only done what I was deſired; and mind you do the ſame.
I'll do my duty, I warrant you. I'll do my duty.
And there's a rap to put my duty to the trial.
Theſe ladies come on a viſit to Sir Robert. [103] Deſire one of the ſervants to conduct them to him inſtantly.
Indeed, Sir, that is impoſſible—My maſter is not —
We know he is at home, and therefore we can take no denial.
I own he is at home, Sir; but indeed he is not in a ſituation—
We know his ſituation.
Then, Madam, you muſt ſuppoſe he is not to be diſturbed. I have ſtrict orders not to let in a ſingle ſoul.
This Lady, you muſt be certain, is an exception.
No Lady can be an exception in my maſter's preſent ſtate; for I believe, Sir, but perhaps I ſhould not ſpeak of it, I believe my maſter is nearly gone.
Oh! ſupport me, Heaven!
But has he his ſenſes?
Not very clearly, I believe.
Oh! Mr. Harmony, let me ſee him before they are quite loſt.
It is as much as my place is worth, to let a creature farther than this hall; for my maſter is but in the next room.
That is a dining-room. Is not he in bed?
In caſes of wounds, the patient is oftentimes propped up in his chair.
Does he talk at all?
Yes, Madam, I heard him juſt now very loud.
I think I hear him rave.
No, that murmuring is the voice of other perſons.
The Doctors in conſultation, I apprehend.—Has he taken any thing?
A great deal, I believe, Madam.
No amputation, I hope?
What, Madam?
He does not underſtand you.
—Come, will you go back?
Do, my Lady, and call in the morning.
By that time he may be totally inſenſible, and [105] die without knowing how much I am attached to him.
And my huſband may die without knowing how much I am enraged with him!—Mr. Harmony, never mind this fooliſh man, but force your way into the next room.
Indeed, Sir, you muſt not. Pray, Mr. Harmony, pray, Ladies, go away.
Yes, I muſt go from my huſband's houſe for ever; never to ſee that, or him again.
She is fainting—open the windows—give her air.
Pray go away:—There is plenty of air in the ſtreets, Ma'am.
Scoundrel! Your impertinence is inſupportable. Open theſe doors; I inſiſt on their being opened.
A ſong—a ſong—another ſong—
Oh! what do I ſee!—Women! Ladies! Celeſtial beings we were talking of.—Can this be real?
Gentlemen, Gentlemen, mar⯑ried [106] men and ſingle men, hear me thus pub⯑licly renounce every woman on earth but this; and ſwear henceforward to be devoted to none but my own wife.
Gentlemen, Gentlemen, married men and ſingle men, hear me thus publicly declare, I will hence⯑forth be maſter;—and from this time forward, will be obeyed by my wife.
Mr. Placid—Mr. Placid, are not you afraid?
No, Madam;—I have conſulted my friends, I have drank two bottles of wine, and I never in⯑tend to be afraid again.
Can it be, that I ſee you without a wound?
No, my life, that you do not; for I have a wound through my heart, which none but you can cure. But in deſpair of your aid, I have flown to wine, to give me a temporary relief by the loſs of reflection.
Mr. Placid, you will be ſober in the morning.
Yes, my dear; and I will take care that you ſhall be dutiful in the morning.
For ſhame! How can you treat Mrs. Placid thus? You would not, if you knew what kind things ſhe has been ſaying of you; and how anxious [107] ſhe was when I told her you were wounded in a duel.
Was not I, Mr. Harmony?
I did not know ſhe could cry;—I never ſaw it before, and it has made me ſober in an inſtant.
Mr. Placid, I rely on you to conduct me im⯑mediately from this houſe.
That I proteſt againſt; and will uſe even violent meaſures to prevent it.
Lord Norland.
He will protect me.
Who ſhall protect you in my houſe but I? My Lord, ſhe is under my protection; and if you offer to take her from me, I'll exert the authority of a huſband, and lock her up.
Have you been deluded hither, and wiſh to leave the place with me? Tell me inſtantly, that I may know how to act.
My Lord, I am ready to go with you, but—
—But you find ſhe is inclined to ſtay; and do have [108] ſome compaſſion upon two people that are ſo fond of you.
I am married!—I am married! —Wiſh me joy! I am married!
I cannot give you joy, for envy.
Nay, I do not know whether you will envy me much when you ſee my ſpouſe—I cannot ſay ſhe was exactly my choice. However, ſhe is my wife now; and that is a name ſo endearing, I think I love her better ſince the ceremony has been per⯑formed.
And pray, when did it take place?
This moment. We are now returning from a friend's houſe, where we have been joined; and I felt myſelf ſo happy, I could not paſs Sir Robert's door, without calling to tell him of my good for⯑tune.—And, as I ſee your Lady here, Sir Robert, I gueſs you are juſt married too; and ſo I'll hand my wife out of the carriage, and introduce the two Brides to each other.
You ſee, my Lord, what conſtruction Mr. Solus has put on this Lady's viſit to me. And by Heaven, if you take her away, it will be ſaid, that ſhe came and offered herſelf, and that I reject her!
Such a report would kill me.
Miſtreſs Solus.
My Relation! Dear Madam, by what ſtrange turn of fortune do I ſee you become a wife?
Mr. Harmony, it is a weakneſs I acknowledge; but you can never want an excuſe for me, when you call to mind "the ſcarcity of proviſions."
Mr. Harmony, I have loved her ever ſince you told me ſhe ſpoke ſo well of me behind my back.
I agree with you, Mr. Solus, that this is a moſt excellent proof of a perſon's diſpoſition; and in conſideration, Sir Robert, that, throughout all our many diſagreements, you have ſtill preſerved a re⯑ſpect for my character in my abſence, I do at laſt ſay to that Lady, ſhe has my conſent to truſt you again.
And ſhe will truſt me; I ſee it in her ſmiles. Oh! unexpected ecſtaſy!
Amidſt thoſe bright proſpects of joy which this company are contemplating, I come to announce an event that ought to cloud the ſplendour of the horizon.—A worthy, but an ill-fated man, whom [110] ye were all acquainted with, has juſt breathed his laſt.
Do you mean the huſband of my daughter?
Do you mean my nephew?
Is it my friend?
And my old acquaintance?
Did Mr. Irwin poſſeſs all thoſe titles you have given him, Gentlemen? Was he your ſon?
Your nephew?
Your friend?
And your old acquaint⯑ance?
—How ſtrange he did not know it!
He did know it.
Still more ſtrange that he ſhould die for want, and not apply to any of you!
What! Die for want in London! Starve in the midſt of plenty!
No; but he ſeized that plenty, where law, where honour, where every ſocial and religious tie forbad the treſpaſs; and in puniſhment of the guilt, has become his own executioner.
Then my daughter is wretched, and her boy involved in his father's infamy.
The fear of his ghoſt haunting me, will diſturb the joys of my married life.
Mrs. Placid, Mrs. Placid, my complying with your injunctions in reſpect of Mr. Irwin, will make me miſerable for ever.
I wiſh he had applied to me.
And as I refuſed him his requeſt. I would give half my eſtate he had not applied to me.
And a man who always ſpoke ſo well of you all behind your backs!—I dare ſay, that, in his dying moments, there was not one of you whom he did not praiſe for ſome virtue.
No, no—when he was dying he would be more careful of what he ſaid.
Sir Robert, good-day. Settle your marriage as you and your Lady ſhall approve; you have my good wiſhes. But my ſpirits have received too great a ſhock to be capable of any other impreſ⯑ſion at preſent.
Nay, ſtay, my Lord.
And, Mrs. Solus, let me hand you into your carriage to your company; but excuſe my going home with you. My ſpirits have received too [112] great a ſhock, for me to be capable of any other impreſſion at preſent.
Now, ſo loth am I to ſee any of you, only for a moment, in grief, while I have the power to re⯑lieve you, that I cannot help—Yes, my philan⯑thropy will get the better of my juſtice.
My ſon!
I take a ſhare in all your offences—The worſt of accomplices, while I impelled you to them.
I come to offer my returning reaſon; to offer my vows, that, while that reaſon continue, ſo long will I be penitent for the phrenſy which put your life in danger.
I come to offer you this child, this affectionate child; who, in the midſt of our careſſes, droops his head and pines for your forgiveneſs.
Ah! there is a corner of my heart left to receive him.
Then, pray, my Lord, ſuffer the corner to be large enough to hold my mother.
My heart is ſoftened, and receives you all.
—Mr. Harmony, I thank you, I moſt ſincerely thank you for this, the joyfulleſt moment of my life. I not only experience releaſe from miſery, but return to happineſs.
And now, that I ſee you all reconciled, I can ſay, there are not two enemies in the whole circle of my acquaintance, that I have not within theſe three days made friends.
Very true, Harmony; for we ſhould never have known half how well we all love one another, if you had not told us.
And yet, my good friends, notwithſtanding the merit you may attribute to me, I have one moſt tremendous fault; and it weighs ſo heavy on my conſcience, I would confeſs what it is, but that you might hereafter call my veracity in queſtion.
My dear Harmony, without a fault, you would not be a proper companion for any of us.
And while a man like you, may have (among ſo many virtues) ſome faults; let us hope there may be found in each of us, (among all our faults) ſome virtues.
Yes, my Lord,—and notwithſtanding all our faults, it is my ſincere wiſh, that the world may ſpeak well of us—behind our backs.