The world is so taken up of late with
novels and romances, that it will be hard for a private
history to be taken for genuine, where the names and
other circumstances of the person are concealed, and
on this account we must be content to leave the reader
to pass his own opinion upon the ensuing sheet, and
take it just as he pleases.
The author is here supposed to be
writing her own history, and in the very beginning
of her account she gives the reasons why she thinks
fit to conceal her true name, after which there is
no occasion to say any more about that.
It is true that the original of this
story is put into new words, and the style of the
famous lady we here speak of is a little altered;
particularly she is made to tell her own tale in modester
words that she told it at first, the copy which came
first to hand having been written in language more
like one still in Newgate than one grown penitent
and humble, as she afterwards pretends to be.
The pen employed in finishing her
story, and making it what you now see it to be, has
had no little difficulty to put it into a dress fit
to be seen, and to make it speak language fit to be
read. When a woman debauched from her youth,
nay, even being the offspring of debauchery and vice,
comes to give an account of all her vicious practices,
and even to descend to the particular occasions and
circumstances by which she ran through in threescore
years, an author must be hard put to it wrap it up
so clean as not to give room, especially for vicious
readers, to turn it to his disadvantage.
All possible care, however, has been
taken to give no lewd ideas, no immodest turns in
the new dressing up of this story; no, not to the
worst parts of her expressions. To this purpose
some of the vicious part of her life, which could not
be modestly told, is quite left out, and several other
parts are very much shortened. What is left
’tis hoped will not offend the chastest reader
or the modest hearer; and as the best use is made
even of the worst story, the moral ’tis hoped
will keep the reader serious, even where the story
might incline him to be otherwise. To give the
history of a wicked life repented of, necessarily
requires that the wicked part should be make as wicked
as the real history of it will bear, to illustrate
and give a beauty to the penitent part, which is certainly
the best and brightest, if related with equal spirit
and life.
It is suggested there cannot be the
same life, the same brightness and beauty, in relating
the penitent part as is in the criminal part.
If there is any truth in that suggestion, I must be
allowed to say ’tis because there is not the
same taste and relish in the reading, and indeed it
is to true that the difference lies not in the real
worth of the subject so much as in the gust and palate
of the reader.
But as this work is chiefly recommended
to those who know how to read it, and how to make
the good uses of it which the story all along recommends
to them, so it is to be hoped that such readers will
be more leased with the moral than the fable, with
the application than with the relation, and with the
end of the writer than with the life of the person
written of.
There is in this story abundance of
delightful incidents, and all of them usefully applied.
There is an agreeable turn artfully given them in
the relating, that naturally instructs the reader,
either one way or other. The first part of her
lewd life with the young gentleman at Colchester has
so many happy turns given it to expose the crime,
and warn all whose circumstances are adapted to it,
of the ruinous end of such things, and the foolish,
thoughtless, and abhorred conduct of both the parties,
that it abundantly atones for all the lively description
she gives of her folly and wickedness.
The repentance of her lover at the
Bath, and how brought by the just alarm of his fit
of sickness to abandon her; the just caution given
there against even the lawful intimacies of the dearest
friends, and how unable they are to preserve the most
solemn resolutions of virtue without divine assistance;
these are parts which, to a just discernment, will
appear to have more real beauty in them all the amorous
chain of story which introduces it.
In a word, as the whole relation is
carefully garbled of all the levity and looseness
that was in it, so it all applied, and with the utmost
care, to virtuous and religious uses. None can,
without being guilty of manifest injustice, cast any
reproach upon it, or upon our design in publishing
it.
The advocates for the stage have,
in all ages, made this the great argument to persuade
people that their plays are useful, and that they
ought to be allowed in the most civilised and in the
most religious government; namely, that they are applied
to virtuous purposes, and that by the most lively representations,
they fail not to recommend virtue and generous principles,
and to discourage and expose all sorts of vice and
corruption of manners; and were it true that they
did so, and that they constantly adhered to that rule,
as the test of their acting on the theatre, much might
be said in their favour.
Throughout the infinite variety of
this book, this fundamental is most strictly adhered
to; there is not a wicked action in any part of it,
but is first and last rendered unhappy and unfortunate;
there is not a superlative villain brought upon the
stage, but either he is brought to an unhappy end,
or brought to be a penitent; there is not an ill thing
mentioned but it is condemned, even in the relation,
nor a virtuous, just thing but it carries its praise
along with it. What can more exactly answer the
rule laid down, to recommend even those representations
of things which have so many other just objections
leaving against them? namely, of example, of bad company,
obscene language, and the like.
Upon this foundation this book is
recommended to the reader as a work from every part
of which something may be learned, and some just and
religious inference is drawn, by which the reader
will have something of instruction, if he pleases to
make use of it.
All the exploits of this lady of fame,
in her depredations upon mankind, stand as so many
warnings to honest people to beware of them, intimating
to them by what methods innocent people are drawn
in, plundered and robbed, and by consequence how to
avoid them. Her robbing a little innocent child,
dressed fine by the vanity of the mother, to go to
the dancing-school, is a good memento to such people
hereafter, as is likewise her picking the gold watch
from the young lady’s side in the Park.
Her getting a parcel from a hare-brained
wench at the coaches in St. John Street; her booty
made at the fire, and again at Harwich, all give us
excellent warnings in such cases to be more present
to ourselves in sudden surprises of every sort.
Her application to a sober life and
industrious management at last in Virginia, with her
transported spouse, is a story fruitful of instruction
to all the unfortunate creatures who are obliged to
seek their re-establishment abroad, whether by the
misery of transportation or other disaster; letting
them know that diligence and application have their
due encouragement, even in the remotest parts of the
world, and that no case can be so low, so despicable,
or so empty of prospect, but that an unwearied industry
will go a great way to deliver us from it, will in
time raise the meanest creature to appear again the
world, and give him a new case for his life.
There are a few of the serious inferences
which we are led by the hand to in this book, and
these are fully sufficient to justify any man in recommending
it to the world, and much more to justify the publication
of it.
There are two of the most beautiful
parts still behind, which this story gives some idea
of, and lets us into the parts of them, but they are
either of them too long to be brought into the same
volume, and indeed are, as I may call them, whole volumes
of themselves, viz.: 1. The life of
her governess, as she calls her, who had run through,
it seems, in a few years, all the eminent degrees
of a gentlewoman, a whore, and a bawd; a midwife and
a midwife-keeper, as they are called; a pawnbroker,
a childtaker, a receiver of thieves, and of thieves’
purchase, that is to say, of stolen goods; and in
a word, herself a thief, a breeder up of thieves and
the like, and yet at last a penitent.
The second is the life of her transported
husband, a highwayman, who it seems, lived a twelve
years’ life of successful villainy upon the
road, and even at last came off so well as to be a
volunteer transport, not a convict; and in whose life
there is an incredible variety.
But, as I have said, these are things
too long to bring in here, so neither can I make a
promise of the coming out by themselves.
We cannot say, indeed, that this history
is carried on quite to the end of the life of this
famous Moll Flanders, as she calls herself, for nobody
can write their own life to the full end of it, unless
they can write it after they are dead. But her
husband’s life, being written by a third hand,
gives a full account of them both, how long they lived
together in that country, and how they both came to
England again, after about eight years, in which time
they were grown very rich, and where she lived, it
seems, to be very old, but was not so extraordinary
a penitent as she was at first; it seems only that
indeed she always spoke with abhorrence of her former
life, and of every part of it.
In her last scene, at Maryland and
Virginia, many pleasant things happened, which makes
that part of her life very agreeable, but they are
not told with the same elegancy as those accounted
for by herself; so it is still to the more advantage
that we break off here.
My true name is so well known in the
records or registers at Newgate, and in the Old Bailey,
and there are some things of such consequence still
depending there, relating to my particular conduct,
that it is not be expected I should set my name or
the account of my family to this work; perhaps, after
my death, it may be better known; at present it would
not be proper, no not though a general pardon should
be issued, even without exceptions and reserve of
persons or crimes.
It is enough to tell you, that as
some of my worst comrades, who are out of the way
of doing me harm (having gone out of the world by
the steps and the string, as I often expected to go
), knew me by the name of Moll Flanders, so you may
give me leave to speak of myself under that name till
I dare own who I have been, as well as who I am.
I have been told that in one of neighbour
nations, whether it be in France or where else I know
not, they have an order from the king, that when any
criminal is condemned, either to die, or to the galleys,
or to be transported, if they leave any children,
as such are generally unprovided for, by the poverty
or forfeiture of their parents, so they are immediately
taken into the care of the Government, and put into
a hospital called the House of Orphans, where they
are bred up, clothed, fed, taught, and when fit to
go out, are placed out to trades or to services, so
as to be well able to provide for themselves by an
honest, industrious behaviour.
Had this been the custom in our country,
I had not been left a poor desolate girl without friends,
without clothes, without help or helper in the world,
as was my fate; and by which I was not only exposed
to very great distresses, even before I was capable
either of understanding my case or how to amend it,
but brought into a course of life which was not only
scandalous in itself, but which in its ordinary course
tended to the swift destruction both of soul and body.
But the case was otherwise here.
My mother was convicted of felony for a certain petty
theft scarce worth naming, viz. having an opportunity
of borrowing three pieces of fine holland of a certain
draper in Cheapside. The circumstances are too
long to repeat, and I have heard them related so many
ways, that I can scarce be certain which is the right
account.
However it was, this they all agree
in, that my mother pleaded her belly, and being found
quick with child, she was respited for about seven
months; in which time having brought me into the world,
and being about again, she was called down, as they
term it, to her former judgment, but obtained the favour
of being transported to the plantations, and left
me about half a year old; and in bad hands, you may
be sure.
This is too near the first hours of
my life for me to relate anything of myself but by
hearsay; it is enough to mention, that as I was born
in such an unhappy place, I had no parish to have
recourse to for my nourishment in my infancy; nor
can I give the least account how I was kept alive,
other than that, as I have been told, some relation
of my mother’s took me away for a while as a
nurse, but at whose expense, or by whose direction,
I know nothing at all of it.
The first account that I can recollect,
or could ever learn of myself, was that I had wandered
among a crew of those people they call gypsies, or
Egyptians; but I believe it was but a very little
while that I had been among them, for I had not had
my skin discoloured or blackened, as they do very
young to all the children they carry about with them;
nor can I tell how I came among them, or how I got
from them.
It was at Colchester, in Essex, that
those people left me; and I have a notion in my head
that I left them there (that is, that I hid myself
and would not go any farther with them), but I am
not able to be particular in that account; only this
I remember, that being taken up by some of the parish
officers of Colchester, I gave an account that I came
into the town with the gypsies, but that I would not
go any farther with them, and that so they had left
me, but whither they were gone that I knew not, nor
could they expect it of me; for though they send round
the country to inquire after them, it seems they could
not be found.
I was now in a way to be provided
for; for though I was not a parish charge upon this
or that part of the town by law, yet as my case came
to be known, and that I was too young to do any work,
being not above three years old, compassion moved the
magistrates of the town to order some care to be taken
of me, and I became one of their own as much as if
I had been born in the place.
In the provision they made for me,
it was my good hap to be put to nurse, as they call
it, to a woman who was indeed poor but had been in
better circumstances, and who got a little livelihood
by taking such as I was supposed to be, and keeping
them with all necessaries, till they were at a certain
age, in which it might be supposed they might go to
service or get their own bread.
This woman had also had a little school,
which she kept to teach children to read and to work;
and having, as I have said, lived before that in good
fashion, she bred up the children she took with a
great deal of art, as well as with a great deal of
care.
But that which was worth all the rest,
she bred them up very religiously, being herself a
very sober, pious woman, very house-wifely and clean,
and very mannerly, and with good behaviour. So
that in a word, expecting a plain diet, coarse lodging,
and mean clothes, we were brought up as mannerly and
as genteelly as if we had been at the dancing-school.
I was continued here till I was eight
years old, when I was terrified with news that the
magistrates (as I think they called them) had ordered
that I should go to service. I was able to do
but very little service wherever I was to go, except
it was to run of errands and be a drudge to some cookmaid,
and this they told me of often, which put me into
a great fright; for I had a thorough aversion to going
to service, as they called it (that is, to be a servant),
though I was so young; and I told my nurse, as we
called her, that I believed I could get my living
without going to service, if she pleased to let me;
for she had taught me to work with my needle, and
spin worsted, which is the chief trade of that city,
and I told her that if she would keep me, I would
work for her, and I would work very hard.
I talked to her almost every day of
working hard; and, in short, I did nothing but work
and cry all day, which grieved the good, kind woman
so much, that at last she began to be concerned for
me, for she loved me very well.
One day after this, as she came into
the room where all we poor children were at work,
she sat down just over against me, not in her usual
place as mistress, but as if she set herself on purpose
to observe me and see me work. I was doing something
she had set me to; as I remember, it was marking some
shirts which she had taken to make, and after a while
she began to talk to me. ‘Thou foolish
child,’ says she, ’thou art always crying
(for I was crying then); ‘prithee, what dost
cry for?’ ‘Because they will take me away,’
says I, ’and put me to service, and I can’t
work housework.’ ‘Well, child,’
says she, ’but though you can’t work housework,
as you call it, you will learn it in time, and they
won’t put you to hard things at first.’
’Yes, they will,’ says I, ’and
if I can’t do it they will beat me, and the
maids will beat me to make me do great work, and I
am but a little girl and I can’t do it’;
and then I cried again, till I could not speak any
more to her.
This moved my good motherly nurse,
so that she from that time resolved I should not go
to service yet; so she bid me not cry, and she would
speak to Mr. Mayor, and I should not go to service
till I was bigger.
Well, this did not satisfy me, for
to think of going to service was such a frightful
thing to me, that if she had assured me I should not
have gone till I was twenty years old, it would have
been the same to me; I should have cried, I believe,
all the time, with the very apprehension of its being
to be so at last.
When she saw that I was not pacified
yet, she began to be angry with me. ‘And
what would you have?’ says she; ’don’t
I tell you that you shall not go to service till your
are bigger?’ ‘Ay,’ said I, ‘but
then I must go at last.’ ‘Why, what?’
said she; ‘is the girl mad? What would
you be — a gentlewoman?’ ‘Yes,’
says I, and cried heartily till I roared out again.
This set the old gentlewoman a-laughing
at me, as you may be sure it would. ‘Well,
madam, forsooth,’ says she, gibing at me, ’you
would be a gentlewoman; and pray how will you come
to be a gentlewoman? What! will you do it by
your fingers’ end?’
‘Yes,’ says I again, very innocently.
‘Why, what can you earn?’
says she; ’what can you get at your work?’
‘Threepence,’ said I,
’when I spin, and fourpence when I work plain
work.’
‘Alas! poor gentlewoman,’
said she again, laughing, ’what will that do
for thee?’
‘It will keep me,’ says
I, ‘if you will let me live with you.’
And this I said in such a poor petitioning tone,
that it made the poor woman’s heart yearn to
me, as she told me afterwards.
‘But,’ says she, ’that
will not keep you and buy you clothes too; and who
must buy the little gentlewoman clothes?’ says
she, and smiled all the while at me.
‘I will work harder, then,’
says I, ‘and you shall have it all.’
‘Poor child! it won’t
keep you,’ says she; ’it will hardly keep
you in victuals.’
‘Then I will have no victuals,’
says I, again very innocently; ‘let me but live
with you.’
‘Why, can you live without victuals?’
says she.
‘Yes,’ again says I, very
much like a child, you may be sure, and still I cried
heartily.
I had no policy in all this; you may
easily see it was all nature; but it was joined with
so much innocence and so much passion that, in short,
it set the good motherly creature a-weeping too, and
she cried at last as fast as I did, and then took me
and led me out of the teaching-room. ‘Come,’
says she, ’you shan’t go to service; you
shall live with me’; and this pacified me for
the present.
Some time after this, she going to
wait on the Mayor, and talking of such things as belonged
to her business, at last my story came up, and my
good nurse told Mr. Mayor the whole tale. He
was so pleased with it, that he would call his lady
and his two daughters to hear it, and it made mirth
enough among them, you may be sure.
However, not a week had passed over,
but on a sudden comes Mrs. Mayoress and her two daughters
to the house to see my old nurse, and to see her school
and the children. When they had looked about
them a little, ‘Well, Mrs. ——,’
says the Mayoress to my nurse, ’and pray which
is the little lass that intends to be a gentlewoman?’
I heard her, and I was terribly frighted at first,
though I did not know why neither; but Mrs. Mayoress
comes up to me. ‘Well, miss,’ says
she, ’and what are you at work upon?’
The word miss was a language that had hardly been
heard of in our school, and I wondered what sad name
it was she called me. However, I stood up, made
a curtsy, and she took my work out of my hand, looked
on it, and said it was very well; then she took up
one of the hands. ‘Nay,’ says she,
’the child may come to be a gentlewoman for
aught anybody knows; she has a gentlewoman’s
hand,’ says she. This pleased me mightily,
you may be sure; but Mrs. Mayoress did not stop there,
but giving me my work again, she put her hand in her
pocket, gave me a shilling, and bid me mind my work,
and learn to work well, and I might be a gentlewoman
for aught she knew.
Now all this while my good old nurse,
Mrs. Mayoress, and all the rest of them did not understand
me at all, for they meant one sort of thing by the
word gentlewoman, and I meant quite another; for alas!
all I understood by being a gentlewoman was to be
able to work for myself, and get enough to keep me
without that terrible bugbear going to service, whereas
they meant to live great, rich and high, and I know
not what.
Well, after Mrs. Mayoress was gone,
her two daughters came in, and they called for the
gentlewoman too, and they talked a long while to me,
and I answered them in my innocent way; but always,
if they asked me whether I resolved to be a gentlewoman,
I answered Yes. At last one of them asked me
what a gentlewoman was? That puzzled me much;
but, however, I explained myself negatively, that
it was one that did not go to service, to do housework.
They were pleased to be familiar with me, and like
my little prattle to them, which, it seems, was agreeable
enough to them, and they gave me money too.
As for my money, I gave it all to
my mistress-nurse, as I called her, and told her she
should have all I got for myself when I was a gentlewoman,
as well as now. By this and some other of my
talk, my old tutoress began to understand me about
what I meant by being a gentlewoman, and that I understood
by it no more than to be able to get my bread by my
own work; and at last she asked me whether it was
not so.
I told her, yes, and insisted on it,
that to do so was to be a gentlewoman; ‘for,’
says I, ‘there is such a one,’ naming a
woman that mended lace and washed the ladies’
laced-heads; ‘she,’ says I, ‘is
a gentlewoman, and they call her madam.’
“Poor child,’ says my
good old nurse, ’you may soon be such a gentlewoman
as that, for she is a person of ill fame, and has
had two or three bastards.’
I did not understand anything of that;
but I answered, ’I am sure they call her madam,
and she does not go to service nor do housework’;
and therefore I insisted that she was a gentlewoman,
and I would be such a gentlewoman as that.
The ladies were told all this again,
to be sure, and they made themselves merry with it,
and every now and then the young ladies, Mr. Mayor’s
daughters, would come and see me, and ask where the
little gentlewoman was, which made me not a little
proud of myself.
This held a great while, and I was
often visited by these young ladies, and sometimes
they brought others with them; so that I was known
by it almost all over the town.
I was now about ten years old, and
began to look a little womanish, for I was mighty
grave and humble, very mannerly, and as I had often
heard the ladies say I was pretty, and would be a
very handsome woman, so you may be sure that hearing
them say so made me not a little proud. However,
that pride had no ill effect upon me yet; only, as
they often gave me money, and I gave it to my old
nurse, she, honest woman, was so just to me as to
lay it all out again for me, and gave me head-dresses,
and linen, and gloves, and ribbons, and I went very
neat, and always clean; for that I would do, and if
I had rags on, I would always be clean, or else I would
dabble them in water myself; but, I say, my good nurse,
when I had money given me, very honestly laid it out
for me, and would always tell the ladies this or that
was bought with their money; and this made them oftentimes
give me more, till at last I was indeed called upon
by the magistrates, as I understood it, to go out
to service; but then I was come to be so good a workwoman
myself, and the ladies were so kind to me, that it
was plain I could maintain myself—that is
to say, I could earn as much for my nurse as she was
able by it to keep me—so she told them
that if they would give her leave, she would keep
the gentlewoman, as she called me, to be her assistant
and teach the children, which I was very well able
to do; for I was very nimble at my work, and had a
good hand with my needle, though I was yet very young.
But the kindness of the ladies of
the town did not end here, for when they came to understand
that I was no more maintained by the public allowance
as before, they gave me money oftener than formerly;
and as I grew up they brought me work to do for them,
such as linen to make, and laces to mend, and heads
to dress up, and not only paid me for doing them, but
even taught me how to do them; so that now I was a
gentlewoman indeed, as I understood that word, I not
only found myself clothes and paid my nurse for my
keeping, but got money in my pocket too beforehand.
The ladies also gave me clothes frequently
of their own or their children’s; some stockings,
some petticoats, some gowns, some one thing, some
another, and these my old woman managed for me like
a mere mother, and kept them for me, obliged me to
mend them, and turn them and twist them to the best
advantage, for she was a rare housewife.
At last one of the ladies took so
much fancy to me that she would have me home to her
house, for a month, she said, to be among her daughters.
Now, though this was exceeding kind
in her, yet, as my old good woman said to her, unless
she resolved to keep me for good and all, she would
do the little gentlewoman more harm than good.
‘Well,’ says the lady, ’that’s
true; and therefore I’ll only take her home
for a week, then, that I may see how my daughters
and she agree together, and how I like her temper,
and then I’ll tell you more; and in the meantime,
if anybody comes to see her as they used to do, you
may only tell them you have sent her out to my house.’
This was prudently managed enough,
and I went to the lady’s house; but I was so
pleased there with the young ladies, and they so pleased
with me, that I had enough to do to come away, and
they were as unwilling to part with me.
However, I did come away, and lived
almost a year more with my honest old woman, and began
now to be very helpful to her; for I was almost fourteen
years old, was tall of my age, and looked a little
womanish; but I had such a taste of genteel living
at the lady’s house that I was not so easy in
my old quarters as I used to be, and I thought it
was fine to be a gentlewoman indeed, for I had quite
other notions of a gentlewoman now than I had before;
and as I thought, I say, that it was fine to be a
gentlewoman, so I loved to be among gentlewomen, and
therefore I longed to be there again.
About the time that I was fourteen
years and a quarter old, my good nurse, mother I rather
to call her, fell sick and died. I was then in
a sad condition indeed, for as there is no great bustle
in putting an end to a poor body’s family when
once they are carried to the grave, so the poor good
woman being buried, the parish children she kept were
immediately removed by the church-wardens; the school
was at an end, and the children of it had no more
to do but just stay at home till they were sent somewhere
else; and as for what she left, her daughter, a married
woman with six or seven children, came and swept it
all away at once, and removing the goods, they had
no more to say to me than to jest with me, and tell
me that the little gentlewoman might set up for herself
if she pleased.
I was frighted out of my wits almost,
and knew not what to do, for I was, as it were, turned
out of doors to the wide world, and that which was
still worse, the old honest woman had two-and-twenty
shillings of mine in her hand, which was all the estate
the little gentlewoman had in the world; and when
I asked the daughter for it, she huffed me and laughed
at me, and told me she had nothing to do with it.
It was true the good, poor woman had
told her daughter of it, and that it lay in such a
place, that it was the child’s money, and had
called once or twice for me to give it me, but I was,
unhappily, out of the way somewhere or other, and when
I came back she was past being in a condition to speak
of it. However, the daughter was so honest afterwards
as to give it me, though at first she used me cruelly
about it.
Now was I a poor gentlewoman indeed,
and I was just that very night to be turned into the
wide world; for the daughter removed all the goods,
and I had not so much as a lodging to go to, or a
bit of bread to eat. But it seems some of the
neighbours, who had known my circumstances, took so
much compassion of me as to acquaint the lady in whose
family I had been a week, as I mentioned above; and
immediately she sent her maid to fetch me away, and
two of her daughters came with the maid though unsent.
So I went with them, bag and baggage, and with a
glad heart, you may be sure. The fright of my
condition had made such an impression upon me, that
I did not want now to be a gentlewoman, but was very
willing to be a servant, and that any kind of servant
they thought fit to have me be.
But my new generous mistress, for
she exceeded the good woman I was with before, in
everything, as well as in the matter of estate; I
say, in everything except honesty; and for that, though
this was a lady most exactly just, yet I must not
forget to say on all occasions, that the first, though
poor, was as uprightly honest as it was possible for
any one to be.
I was no sooner carried away, as I
have said, by this good gentlewoman, but the first
lady, that is to say, the Mayoress that was, sent
her two daughters to take care of me; and another
family which had taken notice of me when I was the
little gentlewoman, and had given me work to do, sent
for me after her, so that I was mightily made of,
as we say; nay, and they were not a little angry,
especially madam the Mayoress, that her friend had
taken me away from her, as she called it; for, as
she said, I was hers by right, she having been the
first that took any notice of me. But they that
had me would not part with me; and as for me, though
I should have been very well treated with any of the
others, yet I could not be better than where I was.
Here I continued till I was between
seventeen and eighteen years old, and here I had all
the advantages for my education that could be imagined;
the lady had masters home to the house to teach her
daughters to dance, and to speak French, and to write,
and other to teach them music; and I was always with
them, I learned as fast as they; and though the masters
were not appointed to teach me, yet I learned by imitation
and inquiry all that they learned by instruction and
direction; so that, in short, I learned to dance and
speak French as well as any of them, and to sing much
better, for I had a better voice than any of them.
I could not so readily come at playing on the harpsichord
or spinet, because I had no instrument of my own to
practice on, and could only come at theirs in the intervals
when they left it, which was uncertain; but yet I learned
tolerably well too, and the young ladies at length
got two instruments, that is to say, a harpsichord
and a spinet too, and then they taught me themselves.
But as to dancing, they could hardly help my learning
country-dances, because they always wanted me to make
up even number; and, on the other hand, they were
as heartily willing to learn me everything that they
had been taught themselves, as I could be to take
the learning.
By this means I had, as I have said
above, all the advantages of education that I could
have had if I had been as much a gentlewoman as they
were with whom I lived; and in some things I had the
advantage of my ladies, though they were my superiors;
but they were all the gifts of nature, and which all
their fortunes could not furnish. First, I was
apparently handsomer than any of them; secondly, I
was better shaped; and, thirdly, I sang better, by
which I mean I had a better voice; in all which you
will, I hope, allow me to say, I do not speak my own
conceit of myself, but the opinion of all that knew
the family.
I had with all these the common vanity
of my sex, viz. that being really taken for very
handsome, or, if you please, for a great beauty, I
very well knew it, and had as good an opinion of myself
as anybody else could have of me; and particularly
I loved to hear anybody speak of it, which could not
but happen to me sometimes, and was a great satisfaction
to me.
Thus far I have had a smooth story
to tell of myself, and in all this part of my life
I not only had the reputation of living in a very
good family, and a family noted and respected everywhere
for virtue and sobriety, and for every valuable thing;
but I had the character too of a very sober, modest,
and virtuous young woman, and such I had always been;
neither had I yet any occasion to think of anything
else, or to know what a temptation to wickedness meant.
But that which I was too vain of was
my ruin, or rather my vanity was the cause of it.
The lady in the house where I was had two sons, young
gentlemen of very promising parts and of extraordinary
behaviour, and it was my misfortune to be very well
with them both, but they managed themselves with me
in a quite different manner.
The eldest, a gay gentleman that knew
the town as well as the country, and though he had
levity enough to do an ill-natured thing, yet had
too much judgment of things to pay too dear for his
pleasures; he began with the unhappy snare to all
women, viz. taking notice upon all occasions how
pretty I was, as he called it, how agreeable, how
well-carriaged, and the like; and this he contrived
so subtly, as if he had known as well how to catch
a woman in his net as a partridge when he went a-setting;
for he would contrive to be talking this to his sisters
when, though I was not by, yet when he knew I was
not far off but that I should be sure to hear him.
His sisters would return softly to him, ’Hush,
brother, she will hear you; she is but in the next
room.’ Then he would put it off and talk
softlier, as if he had not know it, and begin to acknowledge
he was wrong; and then, as if he had forgot himself,
he would speak aloud again, and I, that was so well
pleased to hear it, was sure to listen for it upon
all occasions.
After he had thus baited his hook,
and found easily enough the method how to lay it in
my way, he played an opener game; and one day, going
by his sister’s chamber when I was there, doing
something about dressing her, he comes in with an air
of gaiety. ‘Oh, Mrs. Betty,’ said
he to me, ’how do you do, Mrs. Betty?
Don’t your cheeks burn, Mrs. Betty?’ I
made a curtsy and blushed, but said nothing.
’What makes you talk so, brother?’ says
the lady. ‘Why,’ says he, ’we
have been talking of her below-stairs this half-hour.’
‘Well,’ says his sister, ’you can
say no harm of her, that I am sure, so ’tis no
matter what you have been talking about.’
‘Nay,’ says he, ’’tis so far
from talking harm of her, that we have been talking
a great deal of good, and a great many fine things
have been said of Mrs. Betty, I assure you; and particularly,
that she is the handsomest young woman in Colchester;
and, in short, they begin to toast her health in the
town.’
‘I wonder at you, brother,’
says the sister. ’Betty wants but one
thing, but she had as good want everything, for the
market is against our sex just now; and if a young
woman have beauty, birth, breeding, wit, sense, manners,
modesty, and all these to an extreme, yet if she have
not money, she’s nobody, she had as good want
them all for nothing but money now recommends a woman;
the men play the game all into their own hands.’
Her younger brother, who was by, cried,
’Hold, sister, you run too fast; I am an exception
to your rule. I assure you, if I find a woman
so accomplished as you talk of, I say, I assure you,
I would not trouble myself about the money.’
‘Oh,’ says the sister,
’but you will take care not to fancy one, then,
without the money.’
‘You don’t know that neither,’ says
the brother.
‘But why, sister,’ says
the elder brother, ’why do you exclaim so at
the men for aiming so much at the fortune? You
are none of them that want a fortune, whatever else
you want.’
‘I understand you, brother,’
replies the lady very smartly; ’you suppose
I have the money, and want the beauty; but as times
go now, the first will do without the last, so I have
the better of my neighbours.’
‘Well,’ says the younger
brother, ’but your neighbours, as you call them,
may be even with you, for beauty will steal a husband
sometimes in spite of money, and when the maid chances
to be handsomer than the mistress, she oftentimes
makes as good a market, and rides in a coach before
her.’
I thought it was time for me to withdraw
and leave them, and I did so, but not so far but that
I heard all their discourse, in which I heard abundance
of the fine things said of myself, which served to
prompt my vanity, but, as I soon found, was not the
way to increase my interest in the family, for the
sister and the younger brother fell grievously out
about it; and as he said some very disobliging things
to her upon my account, so I could easily see that
she resented them by her future conduct to me, which
indeed was very unjust to me, for I had never had
the least thought of what she suspected as to her younger
brother; indeed, the elder brother, in his distant,
remote way, had said a great many things as in jest,
which I had the folly to believe were in earnest,
or to flatter myself with the hopes of what I ought
to have supposed he never intended, and perhaps never
thought of.
It happened one day that he came running
upstairs, towards the room where his sisters used
to sit and work, as he often used to do; and calling
to them before he came in, as was his way too, I,
being there alone, stepped to the door, and said,
‘Sir, the ladies are not here, they are walked
down the garden.’ As I stepped forward
to say this, towards the door, he was just got to
the door, and clasping me in his arms, as if it had
been by chance, ‘Oh, Mrs. Betty,’ says
he, ’are you here? That’s better
still; I want to speak with you more than I do with
them’; and then, having me in his arms, he kissed
me three or four times.
I struggled to get away, and yet did
it but faintly neither, and he held me fast, and still
kissed me, till he was almost out of breath, and then,
sitting down, says, ’Dear Betty, I am in love
with you.’
His words, I must confess, fired my
blood; all my spirits flew about my heart and put
me into disorder enough, which he might easily have
seen in my face. He repeated it afterwards several
times, that he was in love with me, and my heart spoke
as plain as a voice, that I liked it; nay, whenever
he said, ’I am in love with you,’ my blushes
plainly replied, ’Would you were, sir.’
However, nothing else passed at that
time; it was but a sur-prise, and when he was gone
I soon recovered myself again. He had stayed
longer with me, but he happened to look out at the
window and see his sisters coming up the garden, so
he took his leave, kissed me again, told me he was
very serious, and I should hear more of him very quickly,
and away he went, leaving me infinitely pleased, though
surprised; and had there not been one misfortune in
it, I had been in the right, but the mistake lay here,
that Mrs. Betty was in earnest and the gentleman was
not.
From this time my head ran upon strange
things, and I may truly say I was not myself; to have
such a gentleman talk to me of being in love with
me, and of my being such a charming creature, as he
told me I was; these were things I knew not how to
bear, my vanity was elevated to the last degree.
It is true I had my head full of pride, but, knowing
nothing of the wickedness of the times, I had not
one thought of my own safety or of my virtue about
me; and had my young master offered it at first sight,
he might have taken any liberty he thought fit with
me; but he did not see his advantage, which was my
happiness for that time.
After this attack it was not long
but he found an opportunity to catch me again, and
almost in the same posture; indeed, it had more of
design in it on his part, though not on my part.
It was thus: the young ladies were all gone
a-visiting with their mother; his brother was out
of town; and as for his father, he had been in London
for a week before. He had so well watched me
that he knew where I was, though I did not so much
as know that he was in the house; and he briskly comes
up the stairs and, seeing me at work, comes into the
room to me directly, and began just as he did before,
with taking me in his arms, and kissing me for almost
a quarter of an hour together.
It was his younger sister’s
chamber that I was in, and as there was nobody in
the house but the maids below-stairs, he was, it may
be, the ruder; in short, he began to be in earnest
with me indeed. Perhaps he found me a little
too easy, for God knows I made no resistance to him
while he only held me in his arms and kissed me; indeed,
I was too well pleased with it to resist him much.
However, as it were, tired with that
kind of work, we sat down, and there he talked with
me a great while; he said he was charmed with me,
and that he could not rest night or day till he had
told me how he was in love with me, and, if I was able
to love him again, and would make him happy, I should
be the saving of his life, and many such fine things.
I said little to him again, but easily discovered
that I was a fool, and that I did not in the least
perceive what he meant.
Then he walked about the room, and
taking me by the hand, I walked with him; and by and
by, taking his advantage, he threw me down upon the
bed, and kissed me there most violently; but, to give
him his due, offered no manner of rudeness to me,
only kissed a great while. After this he thought
he had heard somebody come upstairs, so got off from
the bed, lifted me up, professing a great deal of love
for me, but told me it was all an honest affection,
and that he meant no ill to me; and with that he put
five guineas into my hand, and went away downstairs.
I was more confounded with the money
than I was before with the love, and began to be so
elevated that I scarce knew the ground I stood on.
I am the more particular in this part, that if my
story comes to be read by any innocent young body,
they may learn from it to guard themselves against
the mischiefs which attend an early knowledge of their
own beauty. If a young woman once thinks herself
handsome, she never doubts the truth of any man that
tells her he is in love with her; for if she believes
herself charming enough to captivate him, ’tis
natural to expect the effects of it.
This young gentleman had fired his
inclination as much as he had my vanity, and, as if
he had found that he had an opportunity and was sorry
he did not take hold of it, he comes up again in half
an hour or thereabouts, and falls to work with me again
as before, only with a little less introduction.
And first, when he entered the room,
he turned about and shut the door. ‘Mrs.
Betty,’ said he, ’I fancied before somebody
was coming upstairs, but it was not so; however,’
adds he, ’if they find me in the room with you,
they shan’t catch me a-kissing of you.’
I told him I did not know who should be coming upstairs,
for I believed there was nobody in the house but the
cook and the other maid, and they never came up those
stairs. ‘Well, my dear,’ says he,
‘’tis good to be sure, however’;
and so he sits down, and we began to talk. And
now, though I was still all on fire with his first
visit, and said little, he did as it were put words
in my mouth, telling me how passionately he loved
me, and that though he could not mention such a thing
till he came to this estate, yet he was resolved to
make me happy then, and himself too; that is to say,
to marry me, and abundance of such fine things, which
I, poor fool, did not understand the drift of, but
acted as if there was no such thing as any kind of
love but that which tended to matrimony; and if he
had spoke of that, I had no room, as well as no power,
to have said no; but we were not come that length
yet.
We had not sat long, but he got up,
and, stopping my very breath with kisses, threw me
upon the bed again; but then being both well warmed,
he went farther with me than decency permits me to
mention, nor had it been in my power to have denied
him at that moment, had he offered much more than
he did.
However, though he took these freedoms
with me, it did not go to that which they call the
last favour, which, to do him justice, he did not
attempt; and he made that self-denial of his a plea
for all his freedoms with me upon other occasions after
this. When this was over, he stayed but a little
while, but he put almost a handful of gold in my hand,
and left me, making a thousand protestations of his
passion for me, and of his loving me above all the
women in the world.
It will not be strange if I now began
to think, but alas! it was but with very little solid
reflection. I had a most unbounded stock of
vanity and pride, and but a very little stock of virtue.
I did indeed case sometimes with myself what young
master aimed at, but thought of nothing but the fine
words and the gold; whether he intended to marry me,
or not to marry me, seemed a matter of no great consequence
to me; nor did my thoughts so much as suggest to me
the necessity of making any capitulation for myself,
till he came to make a kind of formal proposal to
me, as you shall hear presently.
Thus I gave up myself to a readiness
of being ruined without the least concern and am a
fair memento to all young women whose vanity prevails
over their virtue. Nothing was ever so stupid
on both sides. Had I acted as became me, and
resisted as virtue and honour require, this gentleman
had either desisted his attacks, finding no room to
expect the accomplishment of his design, or had made
fair and honourable proposals of marriage; in which
case, whoever had blamed him, nobody could have blamed
me. In short, if he had known me, and how easy
the trifle he aimed at was to be had, he would have
troubled his head no farther, but have given me four
or five guineas, and have lain with me the next time
he had come at me. And if I had known his thoughts,
and how hard he thought I would be to be gained, I
might have made my own terms with him; and if I had
not capitulated for an immediate marriage, I might
for a maintenance till marriage, and might have had
what I would; for he was already rich to excess, besides
what he had in expectation; but I seemed wholly to
have abandoned all such thoughts as these, and was
taken up only with the pride of my beauty, and of
being beloved by such a gentleman. As for the
gold, I spent whole hours in looking upon it; I told
the guineas over and over a thousand times a day.
Never poor vain creature was so wrapt up with every
part of the story as I was, not considering what was
before me, and how near my ruin was at the door; indeed,
I think I rather wished for that ruin than studied
to avoid it.
In the meantime, however, I was cunning
enough not to give the least room to any in the family
to suspect me, or to imagine that I had the least
correspondence with this young gentleman. I scarce
ever looked towards him in public, or answered if he
spoke to me when anybody was near us; but for all that,
we had every now and then a little encounter, where
we had room for a word or two, an now and then a kiss,
but no fair opportunity for the mischief intended;
and especially considering that he made more circumlocution
than, if he had known by thoughts, he had occasion
for; and the work appearing difficult to him, he really
made it so.
But as the devil is an unwearied tempter,
so he never fails to find opportunity for that wickedness
he invites to. It was one evening that I was
in the garden, with his two younger sisters and himself,
and all very innocently merry, when he found means
to convey a note into my hand, by which he directed
me to understand that he would to-morrow desire me
publicly to go of an errand for him into the town,
and that I should see him somewhere by the way.
Accordingly, after dinner, he very
gravely says to me, his sisters being all by, ‘Mrs.
Betty, I must ask a favour of you.’ ‘What’s
that?’ says his second sister. ‘Nay,
sister,’ says he very gravely, ’if you
can’t spare Mrs. Betty to-day, any other time
will do.’ Yes, they said, they could spare
her well enough, and the sister begged pardon for
asking, which they did but of mere course, without
any meaning. ‘Well, but, brother,’
says the eldest sister, ’you must tell Mrs.
Betty what it is; if it be any private business that
we must not hear, you may call her out. There
she is.’ ‘Why, sister,’ says
the gentleman very gravely, ’what do you mean?
I only desire her to go into the High Street’
(and then he pulls out a turnover), ‘to such
a shop’; and then he tells them a long story
of two fine neckcloths he had bid money for, and he
wanted to have me go and make an errand to buy a neck
to the turnover that he showed, to see if they would
take my money for the neckcloths; to bid a shilling
more, and haggle with them; and then he made more errands,
and so continued to have such petty business to do,
that I should be sure to stay a good while.
When he had given me my errands, he
told them a long story of a visit he was going to
make to a family they all knew, and where was to be
such-and-such gentlemen, and how merry they were to
be, and very formally asks his sisters to go with
him, and they as formally excused themselves, because
of company that they had notice was to come and visit
them that afternoon; which, by the way, he had contrived
on purpose.
He had scarce done speaking to them,
and giving me my errand, but his man came up to tell
him that Sir W—— H——’s
coach stopped at the door; so he runs down, and comes
up again immediately. ‘Alas!’ says
he aloud, ’there’s all my mirth spoiled
at once; sir W—— has sent his coach
for me, and desires to speak with me upon some earnest
business.’ It seems this Sir W——
was a gentleman who lived about three miles out of
town, to whom he had spoken on purpose the day before,
to lend him his chariot for a particular occasion,
and had appointed it to call for him, as it did, about
three o’clock.
Immediately he calls for his best
wig, hat, and sword, and ordering his man to go to
the other place to make his excuse— that
was to say, he made an excuse to send his man away—he
prepares to go into the coach. As he was going,
he stopped a while, and speaks mighty earnestly to
me about his business, and finds an opportunity to
say very softly to me, ’Come away, my dear,
as soon as ever you can.’ I said nothing,
but made a curtsy, as if I had done so to what he
said in public. In about a quarter of an hour
I went out too; I had no dress other than before,
except that I had a hood, a mask, a fan, and a pair
of gloves in my pocket; so that there was not the
least suspicion in the house. He waited for
me in the coach in a back-lane, which he knew I must
pass by, and had directed the coachman whither to
go, which was to a certain place, called Mile End,
where lived a confidant of his, where we went in, and
where was all the convenience in the world to be as
wicked as we pleased.
When we were together he began to
talk very gravely to me, and to tell me he did not
bring me there to betray me; that his passion for
me would not suffer him to abuse me; that he resolved
to marry me as soon as he came to his estate; that
in the meantime, if I would grant his request, he
would maintain me very honourably; and made me a thousand
protestations of his sincerity and of his affection
to me; and that he would never abandon me, and as
I may say, made a thousand more preambles than he
need to have done.
However, as he pressed me to speak,
I told him I had no reason to question the sincerity
of his love to me after so many protestations, but—and
there I stopped, as if I left him to guess the rest.
‘But what, my dear?’ says he. ’I
guess what you mean: what if you should be with
child? Is not that it? Why, then,’
says he, ’I’ll take care of you and provide
for you, and the child too; and that you may see I
am not in jest,’ says he, ‘here’s
an earnest for you,’ and with that he pulls out
a silk purse, with an hundred guineas in it, and gave
it me. ’And I’ll give you such another,’
says he, ‘every year till I marry you.’
My colour came and went, at the sight
of the purse and with the fire of his proposal together,
so that I could not say a word, and he easily perceived
it; so putting the purse into my bosom, I made no
more resistance to him, but let him do just what he
pleased, and as often as he pleased; and thus I finished
my own destruction at once, for from this day, being
forsaken of my virtue and my modesty, I had nothing
of value left to recommend me, either to God’s
blessing or man’s assistance.
But things did not end here.
I went back to the town, did the business he publicly
directed me to, and was at home before anybody thought
me long. As for my gentleman, he stayed out,
as he told me he would, till late at night, and there
was not the least suspicion in the family either on
his account or on mine.
We had, after this, frequent opportunities
to repeat our crime —chiefly by his contrivance—especially
at home, when his mother and the young ladies went
abroad a-visiting, which he watched so narrowly as
never to miss; knowing always beforehand when they
went out, and then failed not to catch me all alone,
and securely enough; so that we took our fill of our
wicked pleasure for near half a year; and yet, which
was the most to my satisfaction, I was not with child.
But before this half-year was expired,
his younger brother, of whom I have made some mention
in the beginning of the story, falls to work with
me; and he, finding me alone in the garden one evening,
begins a story of the same kind to me, made good honest
professions of being in love with me, and in short,
proposes fairly and honourably to marry me, and that
before he made any other offer to me at all.
I was now confounded, and driven to
such an extremity as the like was never known; at
least not to me. I resisted the proposal with
obstinacy; and now I began to arm myself with arguments.
I laid before him the inequality of the match; the
treatment I should meet with in the family; the ingratitude
it would be to his good father and mother, who had
taken me into their house upon such generous principles,
and when I was in such a low condition; and, in short,
I said everything to dissuade him from his design
that I could imagine, except telling him the truth,
which would indeed have put an end to it all, but
that I durst not think of mentioning.
But here happened a circumstance that
I did not expect indeed, which put me to my shifts;
for this young gentleman, as he was plain and honest,
so he pretended to nothing with me but what was so
too; and, knowing his own innocence, he was not so
careful to make his having a kindness for Mrs. Betty
a secret I the house, as his brother was. And
though he did not let them know that he had talked
to me about it, yet he said enough to let his sisters
perceive he loved me, and his mother saw it too, which,
though they took no notice of it to me, yet they did
to him, an immediately I found their carriage to me
altered, more than ever before.
I saw the cloud, though I did not
foresee the storm. It was easy, I say, to see
that their carriage to me was altered, and that it
grew worse and worse every day; till at last I got
information among the servants that I should, in a
very little while, be desired to remove.
I was not alarmed at the news, having
a full satisfaction that I should be otherwise provided
for; and especially considering that I had reason
every day to expect I should be with child, and that
then I should be obliged to remove without any pretences
for it.
After some time the younger gentleman
took an opportunity to tell me that the kindness he
had for me had got vent in the family. He did
not charge me with it, he said, for he know well enough
which way it came out. He told me his plain way
of talking had been the occasion of it, for that he
did not make his respect for me so much a secret as
he might have done, and the reason was, that he was
at a point, that if I would consent to have him, he
would tell them all openly that he loved me, and that
he intended to marry me; that it was true his father
and mother might resent it, and be unkind, but that
he was now in a way to live, being bred to the law,
and he did not fear maintaining me agreeable to what
I should expect; and that, in short, as he believed
I would not be ashamed of him, so he was resolved
not to be ashamed of me, and that he scorned to be
afraid to own me now, whom he resolved to own after
I was his wife, and therefore I had nothing to do but
to give him my hand, and he would answer for all the
rest.
I was now in a dreadful condition
indeed, and now I repented heartily my easiness with
the eldest brother; not from any reflection of conscience,
but from a view of the happiness I might have enjoyed,
and had now made impossible; for though I had no great
scruples of conscience, as I have said, to struggle
with, yet I could not think of being a whore to one
brother and a wife to the other. But then it
came into my thoughts that the first brother had promised
to made me his wife when he came to his estate; but
I presently remembered what I had often thought of,
that he had never spoken a word of having me for a
wife after he had conquered me for a mistress; and
indeed, till now, though I said I thought of it often,
yet it gave me no disturbance at all, for as he did
not seem in the least to lessen his affection to me,
so neither did he lessen his bounty, though he had
the discretion himself to desire me not to lay out
a penny of what he gave me in clothes, or to make
the least show extraordinary, because it would necessarily
give jealousy in the family, since everybody know
I could come at such things no manner of ordinary
way, but by some private friendship, which they would
presently have suspected.
But I was now in a great strait, and
knew not what to do. The main difficulty was
this: the younger brother not only laid close
siege to me, but suffered it to be seen. He
would come into his sister’s room, and his mother’s
room, and sit down, and talk a thousand kind things
of me, and to me, even before their faces, and when
they were all there. This grew so public that
the whole house talked of it, and his mother reproved
him for it, and their carriage to me appeared quite
altered. In short, his mother had let fall some
speeches, as if she intended to put me out of the
family; that is, in English, to turn me out of doors.
Now I was sure this could not be a secret to his
brother, only that he might not think, as indeed nobody
else yet did, that the youngest brother had made any
proposal to me about it; but as I easily could see
that it would go farther, so I saw likewise there
was an absolute necessity to speak of it to him, or
that he would speak of it to me, and which to do first
I knew not; that is, whether I should break it to
him or let it alone till he should break it to me.
Upon serious consideration, for indeed
now I began to consider things very seriously, and
never till now; I say, upon serious consideration,
I resolved to tell him of it first; and it was not
long before I had an opportunity, for the very next
day his brother went to London upon some business,
and the family being out a-visiting, just as it had
happened before, and as indeed was often the case,
he came according to his custom, to spend an hour
or two with Mrs. Betty.
When he came had had sat down a while,
he easily perceived there was an alteration in my
countenance, that I was not so free and pleasant with
him as I used to be, and particularly, that I had
been a-crying; he was not long before he took notice
of it, and asked me in very kind terms what was the
matter, and if anything troubled me. I would
have put it off if I could, but it was not to be concealed;
so after suffering many importunities to draw that
out of me which I longed as much as possible to disclose,
I told him that it was true something did trouble
me, and something of such a nature that I could not
conceal from him, and yet that I could not tell how
to tell him of it neither; that it was a thing that
not only surprised me, but greatly perplexed me, and
that I knew not what course to take, unless he would
direct me. He told me with great tenderness,
that let it be what it would, I should not let it
trouble me, for he would protect me from all the world.
I then began at a distance, and told
him I was afraid the ladies had got some secret information
of our correspondence; for that it was easy to see
that their conduct was very much changed towards me
for a great while, and that now it was come to that
pass that they frequently found fault with me, and
sometimes fell quite out with me, though I never gave
them the least occasion; that whereas I used always
to lie with the eldest sister, I was lately put to
lie by myself, or with one of the maids; and that
I had overheard them several times talking very unkindly
about me; but that which confirmed it all was, that
one of the servants had told me that she had heard
I was to be turned out, and that it was not safe for
the family that I should be any longer in the house.
He smiled when he herd all this, and
I asked him how he could make so light of it, when
he must needs know that if there was any discovery
I was undone for ever, and that even it would hurt
him, though not ruin him as it would me. I upbraided
him, that he was like all the rest of the sex, that,
when they had the character and honour of a woman at
their mercy, oftentimes made it their jest, and at
least looked upon it as a trifle, and counted the
ruin of those they had had their will of as a thing
of no value.
He saw me warm and serious, and he
changed his style immediately; he told me he was sorry
I should have such a thought of him; that he had never
given me the least occasion for it, but had been as
tender of my reputation as he could be of his own;
that he was sure our correspondence had been managed
with so much address, that not one creature in the
family had so much as a suspicion of it; that if he
smiled when I told him my thoughts, it was at the
assurance he lately received, that our understanding
one another was not so much as known or guessed at;
and that when he had told me how much reason he had
to be easy, I should smile as he did, for he was very
certain it would give me a full satisfaction.
‘This is a mystery I cannot
understand,’ says I, ’or how it should
be to my satisfaction that I am to be turned out of
doors; for if our correspondence is not discovered,
I know not what else I have done to change the countenances
of the whole family to me, or to have them treat me
as they do now, who formerly used me with so much
tenderness, as if I had been one of their own children.’
‘Why, look you, child,’
says he, ’that they are uneasy about you, that
is true; but that they have the least suspicion of
the case as it is, and as it respects you and I, is
so far from being true, that they suspect my brother
Robin; and, in short, they are fully persuaded he
makes love to you; nay, the fool has put it into their
heads too himself, for he is continually bantering
them about it, and making a jest of himself.
I confess I think he is wrong to do so, because he
cannot but see it vexes them, and makes them unkind
to you; but ’tis a satisfaction to me, because
of the assurance it gives me, that they do not suspect
me in the least, and I hope this will be to your satisfaction
too.’
‘So it is,’ says I, ’one
way; but this does not reach my case at all, nor is
this the chief thing that troubles me, though I have
been concerned about that too.’ ‘What
is it, then?’ says he. With which I fell
to tears, and could say nothing to him at all.
He strove to pacify me all he could, but began at last
to be very pressing upon me to tell what it was.
At last I answered that I thought I ought to tell
him too, and that he had some right to know it; besides,
that I wanted his direction in the case, for I was
in such perplexity that I knew not what course to take,
and then I related the whole affair to him. I
told him how imprudently his brother had managed himself,
in making himself so public; for that if he had kept
it a secret, as such a thing out to have been, I could
but have denied him positively, without giving any
reason for it, and he would in time have ceased his
solicitations; but that he had the vanity, first, to
depend upon it that I would not deny him, and then
had taken the freedom to tell his resolution of having
me to the whole house.
I told him how far I had resisted
him, and told him how sincere and honourable his offers
were. ‘But,’ says I, ’my case
will be doubly hard; for as they carry it ill to me
now, because he desires to have me, they’ll
carry it worse when they shall find I have denied
him; and they will presently say, there’s something
else in it, and then out it comes that I am married
already to somebody else, or that I would never refuse
a match so much above me as this was.’
This discourse surprised him indeed
very much. He told me that it was a critical
point indeed for me to manage, and he did not see
which way I should get out of it; but he would consider
it, and let me know next time we met, what resolution
he was come to about it; and in the meantime desired
I would not give my consent to his brother, nor yet
give him a flat denial, but that I would hold him
in suspense a while.
I seemed to start at his saying I
should not give him my consent. I told him he
knew very well I had no consent to give; that he had
engaged himself to marry me, and that my consent was
the same time engaged to him; that he had all along
told me I was his wife, and I looked upon myself as
effectually so as if the ceremony had passed; and that
it was from his own mouth that I did so, he having
all along persuaded me to call myself his wife.
‘Well, my dear,’ says
he, ’don’t be concerned at that now; if
I am not your husband, I’ll be as good as a husband
to you; and do not let those things trouble you now,
but let me look a little farther into this affair,
and I shall be able to say more next time we meet.’
He pacified me as well as he could
with this, but I found he was very thoughtful, and
that though he was very kind to me and kissed me
a thousand times, and more I believe, and gave me
money too, yet he offered no more all the while we
were together, which was above two hours, and which
I much wondered at indeed at that time, considering
how it used to be, and what opportunity we had.
His brother did not come from London
for five or six days, and it was two days more before
he got an opportunity to talk with him; but then getting
him by himself he began to talk very close to him
about it, and the same evening got an opportunity
(for we had a long conference together) to repeat
all their discourse to me, which, as near as I can
remember, was to the purpose following. He told
him he heard strange news of him since he went, viz.
that he made love to Mrs. Betty. ’Well,
says his brother a little angrily, ’and so I
do. And what then? What has anybody to
do with that?’ ‘Nay,’ says his
brother, ’don’t be angry, Robin; I don’t
pretend to have anything to do with it; nor do I pretend
to be angry with you about it. But I find they
do concern themselves about it, and that they have
used the poor girl ill about it, which I should take
as done to myself.’ ‘Whom do you
mean by they?’ says Robin. ‘I
mean my mother and the girls,’ says the elder
brother. ‘But hark ye,’ says his
brother, ’are you in earnest? Do you really
love this girl? You may be free with me, you
know.’ ‘Why, then,’ says Robin,
’I will be free with you; I do love her above
all the women in the world, and I will have her, let
them say and do what they will. I believe the
girl will not deny me.’
It struck me to the heart when he
told me this, for though it was most rational to think
I would not deny him, yet I knew in my own conscience
I must deny him, and I saw my ruin in my being obliged
to do so; but I knew it was my business to talk otherwise
then, so I interrupted him in his story thus.
‘Ay!,’ said I, ’does
he think I cannot deny him? But he shall find
I can deny him, for all that.’
‘Well, my dear,’ says
he, ’but let me give you the whole story as
it went on between us, and then say what you will.’
Then he went on and told me that he
replied thus: ’But, brother, you know
she has nothing, and you may have several ladies with
good fortunes.’
‘’Tis no matter for that,’
said Robin; ’I love the girl, and I will never
please my pocket in marrying, and not please my fancy.’
‘And so, my dear,’ adds he, ‘there
is no opposing him.’
‘Yes, yes,’ says I, ’you
shall see I can oppose him; I have learnt to say No,
now though I had not learnt it before; if the best
lord in the land offered me marriage now, I could very
cheerfully say No to him.’
‘Well, but, my dear,’
says he, ’what can you say to him? You
know, as you said when we talked of it before, he well
ask you many questions about it, and all the house
will wonder what the meaning of it should be.’
‘Why,’ says I, smiling,
’I can stop all their mouths at one clap by
telling him, and them too, that I am married already
to his elder brother.’
He smiled a little too at the word,
but I could see it startled him, and he could not
hide the disorder it put him into. However, he
returned, ’Why, though that may be true in some
sense, yet I suppose you are but in jest when you talk
of giving such an answer as that; it may not be convenient
on many accounts.’
‘No, no,’ says I pleasantly,
’I am not so fond of letting the secret come
out without your consent.’
‘But what, then, can you say
to him, or to them,’ says he, ’when they
find you positive against a match which would be apparently
so much to your advantage?’
‘Why,’ says I, ’should
I be at a loss? First of all, I am not obliged
to give me any reason at all; on the other hand, I
may tell them I am married already, and stop there,
and that will be a full stop too to him, for he can
have no reason to ask one question after it.’
‘Ay,’ says he; ’but
the whole house will tease you about that, even to
father and mother, and if you deny them positively,
they will be disobliged at you, and suspicious besides.’
‘Why,’ says I, ’what
can I do? What would have me do? I was
in straight enough before, and as I told you, I was
in perplexity before, and acquainted you with the
circumstances, that I might have your advice.’
‘My dear,’ says he, ’I
have been considering very much upon it, you may be
sure, and though it is a piece of advice that has
a great many mortifications in it to me, and may at
first seem strange to you, yet, all things considered,
I see no better way for you than to let him go on;
and if you find him hearty and in earnest, marry him.’
I gave him a look full of horror at
those words, and, turning pale as death, was at the
very point of sinking down out of the chair I sat
in; when, giving a start, ‘My dear,’ says
he aloud, ‘what’s the matter with you?
Where are you a-going?’ and a great many such
things; and with jogging and called to me, fetched
me a little to myself, though it was a good while before
I fully recovered my senses, and was not able to speak
for several minutes more.
When I was fully recovered he began
again. ‘My dear,’ says he, ’what
made you so surprised at what I said? I would
have you consider seriously of it? You may see
plainly how the family stand in this case, and they
would be stark mad if it was my case, as it is my
brother’s; and for aught I see, it would be
my ruin and yours too.’
‘Ay!’ says I, still speaking
angrily; ’are all your protestations and vows
to be shaken by the dislike of the family? Did
I not always object that to you, and you made light
thing of it, as what you were above, and would value;
and is it come to this now?’ said I. ’Is
this your faith and honour, your love, and the solidity
of your promises?’
He continued perfectly calm, notwithstanding
all my reproaches, and I was not sparing of them at
all; but he replied at last, ’My dear, I have
not broken one promise with you yet; I did tell you
I would marry you when I was come to my estate; but
you see my father is a hale, healthy man, and may live
these thirty years still, and not be older than several
are round us in town; and you never proposed my marrying
you sooner, because you knew it might be my ruin;
and as to all the rest, I have not failed you in anything,
you have wanted for nothing.’
I could not deny a word of this, and
had nothing to say to it in general. ‘But
why, then,’ says I, ’can you persuade me
to such a horrid step as leaving you, since you have
not left me? Will you allow no affection, no
love on my side, where there has been so much on your
side? Have I made you no returns? Have
I given no testimony of my sincerity and of my passion?
Are the sacrifices I have made of honour and modesty
to you no proof of my being tied to you in bonds too
strong to be broken?’
‘But here, my dear,’ says
he, ’you may come into a safe station, and appear
with honour and with splendour at once, and the remembrance
of what we have done may be wrapt up in an eternal
silence, as if it had never happened; you shall always
have my respect, and my sincere affection, only then
it shall be honest, and perfectly just to my brother;
you shall be my dear sister, as now you are my dear——’
and there he stopped.
‘Your dear whore,’ says
I, ’you would have said if you had gone on,
and you might as well have said it; but I understand
you. However, I desire you to remember the long
discourses you have had with me, and the many hours’
pains you have taken to persuade me to believe myself
an honest woman; that I was your wife intentionally,
though not in the eyes of the world, and that it was
as effectual a marriage that had passed between us
as is we had been publicly wedded by the parson of
the parish. You know and cannot but remember
that these have been your own words to me.’
I found this was a little too close
upon him, but I made it up in what follows.
He stood stock-still for a while and said nothing,
and I went on thus: ‘You cannot,’
says I, ’without the highest injustice, believe
that I yielded upon all these persuasions without
a love not to be questioned, not to be shaken again
by anything that could happen afterward. If you
have such dishonourable thoughts of me, I must ask
you what foundation in any of my behaviour have I
given for such a suggestion?
’If, then, I have yielded to
the importunities of my affection, and if I have been
persuaded to believe that I am really, and in the
essence of the thing, your wife, shall I now give the
lie to all those arguments and call myself your whore,
or mistress, which is the same thing? And will
you transfer me to your brother? Can you transfer
my affection? Can you bid me cease loving you,
and bid me love him? It is in my power, think
you, to make such a change at demand? No, sir,’
said I, ’depend upon it ’tis impossible,
and whatever the change of your side may be, I will
ever be true; and I had much rather, since it is come
that unhappy length, be your whore than your brother’s
wife.’
He appeared pleased and touched with
the impression of this last discourse, and told me
that he stood where he did before; that he had not
been unfaithful to me in any one promise he had ever
made yet, but that there were so many terrible things
presented themselves to his view in the affair before
me, and that on my account in particular, that he
had thought of the other as a remedy so effectual
as nothing could come up to it. That he thought
this would not be entire parting us, but we might
love as friends all our days, and perhaps with more
satisfaction than we should in the station we were
now in, as things might happen; that he durst say,
I could not apprehend anything from him as to betraying
a secret, which could not but be the destruction of
us both, if it came out; that he had but one question
to ask of me that could lie in the way of it, and
if that question was answered in the negative, he could
not but think still it was the only step I could take.
I guessed at his question presently,
namely, whether I was sure I was not with child?
As to that, I told him he need not be concerned about
it, for I was not with child. ’Why, then,
my dear,’ says he, ’we have no time to
talk further now. Consider of it, and think closely
about it; I cannot but be of the opinion still, that
it will be the best course you can take.’
And with this he took his leave, and the more hastily
too, his mother and sisters ringing at the gate, just
at the moment that he had risen up to go.
He left me in the utmost confusion
of thought; and he easily perceived it the next day,
and all the rest of the week, for it was but Tuesday
evening when we talked; but he had no opportunity
to come at me all that week, till the Sunday after,
when I, being indisposed, did not go to church, and
he, making some excuse for the like, stayed at home.
And now he had me an hour and a half
again by myself, and we fell into the same arguments
all over again, or at least so near the same, as it
would be to no purpose to repeat them. At last
I asked him warmly, what opinion he must have of my
modesty, that he could suppose I should so much as
entertain a thought of lying with two brothers, and
assured him it could never be. I added, if he
was to tell me that he would never see me more, than
which nothing but death could be more terrible, yet
I could never entertain a thought so dishonourable
to myself, and so base to him; and therefore, I entreated
him, if he had one grain of respect or affection left
for me, that he would speak no more of it to me, or
that he would pull his sword out and kill me.
He appeared surprised at my obstinacy, as he called
it; told me I was unkind to myself, and unkind to
him in it; that it was a crisis unlooked for upon us
both, and impossible for either of us to foresee,
but that he did not see any other way to save us both
from ruin, and therefore he thought it the more unkind;
but that if he must say no more of it to me, he added
with an unusual coldness, that he did not know anything
else we had to talk of; and so he rose up to take
his leave. I rose up too, as if with the same
indifference; but when he came to give me as it were
a parting kiss, I burst out into such a passion of
crying, that though I would have spoke, I could not,
and only pressing his hand, seemed to give him the
adieu, but cried vehemently.
He was sensibly moved with this; so
he sat down again, and said a great many kind things
to me, to abate the excess of my passion, but still
urged the necessity of what he had proposed; all the
while insisting, that if I did refuse, he would notwithstanding
provide for me; but letting me plainly see that he
would decline me in the main point—nay,
even as a mistress; making it a point of honour not
to lie with the woman that, for aught he knew, might
come to be his brother’s wife.
The bare loss of him as a gallant
was not so much my affliction as the loss of his person,
whom indeed I loved to distraction; and the loss of
all the expectations I had, and which I always had
built my hopes upon, of having him one day for my
husband. These things oppressed my mind so much,
that, in short, I fell very ill; the agonies of my
mind, in a word, threw me into a high fever, and
long it was, that none in the family expected my life.
I was reduced very low indeed, and
was often delirious and light-headed; but nothing
lay so near me as the fear that, when I was light-headed,
I should say something or other to his prejudice.
I was distressed in my mind also to see him, and
so he was to see me, for he really loved me most passionately;
but it could not be; there was not the least room to
desire it on one side or other, or so much as to make
it decent.
It was near five weeks that I kept
my bed and though the violence of my fever abated
in three weeks, yet it several times returned; and
the physicians said two or three times, they could
do no more for me, but that they must leave nature
and the distemper to fight it out, only strengthening
the first with cordials to maintain the struggle.
After the end of five weeks I grew better, but was
so weak, so altered, so melancholy, and recovered
so slowly, that they physicians apprehended I should
go into a consumption; and which vexed me most, they
gave it as their opinion that my mind was oppressed,
that something troubled me, and, in short, that I was
in love. Upon this, the whole house was set upon
me to examine me, and to press me to tell whether
I was in love or not, and with whom; but as I well
might, I denied my being in love at all.
They had on this occasion a squabble
one day about me at table, that had like to have put
the whole family in an uproar, and for some time did
so. They happened to be all at table but the
father; as for me, I was ill, and in my chamber.
At the beginning of the talk, which was just as they
had finished their dinner, the old gentlewoman, who
had sent me somewhat to eat, called her maid to go
up and ask me if I would have any more; but the maid
brought down word I had not eaten half what she had
sent me already.
’Alas, says the old lady, ’that
poor girl! I am afraid she will never be well.’
‘Well!’ says the elder
brother, ’how should Mrs. Betty be well?
They say she is in love.’
‘I believe nothing of it,’ says the old
gentlewoman.
‘I don’t know,’
says the eldest sister, ’what to say to it;
they have made such a rout about her being so handsome,
and so charming, and I know not what, and that in
her hearing too, that has turned the creature’s
head, I believe, and who knows what possessions may
follow such doings? For my part, I don’t
know what to make of it.’
‘Why, sister, you must acknowledge
she is very handsome,’ says the elder brother.
‘Ay, and a great deal handsomer
than you, sister,’ says Robin, ‘and that’s
your mortification.’
‘Well, well, that is not the
question,’ says his sister; ’that girl
is well enough, and she knows it well enough; she need
not be told of it to make her vain.’
‘We are not talking of her being
vain,’ says the elder brother, ’but of
her being in love; it may be she is in love with herself;
it seems my sisters think so.’
‘I would she was in love with
me,’ says Robin; ’I’d quickly put
her out of her pain.’
‘What d’ye mean by that,
son,’ says the old lady; ’how can you
talk so?’
‘Why, madam,’ says Robin,
again, very honestly, ’do you think I’d
let the poor girl die for love, and of one that is
near at hand to be had, too?’
‘Fie, brother!’, says
the second sister, ’how can you talk so?
Would you take a creature that has not a groat in the
world?’
‘Prithee, child,’ says
Robin, ’beauty’s a portion, and good-humour
with it is a double portion; I wish thou hadst half
her stock of both for thy portion.’ So
there was her mouth stopped.
‘I find,’ says the eldest
sister, ’if Betty is not in love, my brother
is. I wonder he has not broke his mind to Betty;
I warrant she won’t say No.’
‘They that yield when they’re
asked,’ says Robin, ’are one step before
them that were never asked to yield, sister, and two
steps before them that yield before they are asked;
and that’s an answer to you, sister.’
This fired the sister, and she flew
into a passion, and said, things were come to that
pass that it was time the wench, meaning me, was out
of the family; and but that she was not fit to be
turned out, she hoped her father and mother would
consider of it as soon as she could be removed.
Robin replied, that was business for
the master and mistress of the family, who where not
to be taught by one that had so little judgment as
his eldest sister.
It ran up a great deal farther; the
sister scolded, Robin rallied and bantered, but poor
Betty lost ground by it extremely in the family.
I heard of it, and I cried heartily, and the old lady
came up to me, somebody having told her that I was
so much concerned about it. I complained to
her, that it was very hard the doctors should pass
such a censure upon me, for which they had no ground;
and that it was still harder, considering the circumstances
I was under in the family; that I hoped I had done
nothing to lessen her esteem for me, or given any
occasion for the bickering between her sons and daughters,
and I had more need to think of a coffin than of being
in love, and begged she would not let me suffer in
her opinion for anybody’s mistakes but my own.
She was sensible of the justice of
what I said, but told me, since there had been such
a clamour among them, and that her younger son talked
after such a rattling way as he did, she desired I
would be so faithful to her as to answer her but one
question sincerely. I told her I would, with
all my heart, and with the utmost plainness and sincerity.
Why, then, the question was, whether there way anything
between her son Robert and me. I told her with
all the protestations of sincerity that I was able
to make, and as I might well, do, that there was not,
nor every had been; I told her that Mr. Robert had
rattled and jested, as she knew it was his way, and
that I took it always, as I supposed he meant it,
to be a wild airy way of discourse that had no signification
in it; and again assured her, that there was not the
least tittle of what she understood by it between
us; and that those who had suggested it had done me
a great deal of wrong, and Mr. Robert no service at
all.
The old lady was fully satisfied,
and kissed me, spoke cheerfully to me, and bid me
take care of my health and want for nothing, and so
took her leave. But when she came down she found
the brother and all his sisters together by the ears;
they were angry, even to passion, at his upbraiding
them with their being homely, and having never had
any sweethearts, never having been asked the question,
and their being so forward as almost to ask first.
He rallied them upon the subject of Mrs. Betty; how
pretty, how good-humoured, how she sung better then
they did, and danced better, and how much handsomer
she was; and in doing this he omitted no ill-natured
thing that could vex them, and indeed, pushed too
hard upon them. The old lady came down in the
height of it, and to put a stop it to, told them all
the discourse she had had with me, and how I answered,
that there was nothing between Mr. Robert and I.
‘She’s wrong there,’
says Robin, ’for if there was not a great deal
between us, we should be closer together than we are.
I told her I loved her hugely,’ says he, ’but
I could never make the jade believe I was in earnest.’
’I do not know how you should,’ says
his mother; ’nobody in their senses could believe
you were in earnest, to talk so to a poor girl, whose
circumstances you know so well.
‘But prithee, son,’ adds
she, ’since you tell me that you could not make
her believe you were in earnest, what must we believe
about it? For you ramble so in your discourse,
that nobody knows whether you are in earnest or in
jest; but as I find the girl, by your own confession,
has answered truly, I wish you would do so too, and
tell me seriously, so that I may depend upon it.
Is there anything in it or no? Are you in earnest
or no? Are you distracted, indeed, or are you
not? ’Tis a weighty question, and I wish
you would make us easy about it.’
‘By my faith, madam,’
says Robin, ’’tis in vain to mince the
matter or tell any more lies about it; I am in earnest,
as much as a man is that’s going to be hanged.
If Mrs. Betty would say she loved me, and that she
would marry me, I’d have her tomorrow morning
fasting, and say, ‘To have and to hold,’
instead of eating my breakfast.’
‘Well,’ says the mother,
‘then there’s one son lost’; and
she said it in a very mournful tone, as one greatly
concerned at it.
‘I hope not, madam,’ says
Robin; ’no man is lost when a good wife has
found him.’
‘Why, but, child,’ says
the old lady, ‘she is a beggar.’
‘Why, then, madam, she has the
more need of charity,’ says Robin; ’I’ll
take her off the hands of the parish, and she and
I’ll beg together.’
‘It’s bad jesting with such things,’
says the mother.
‘I don’t jest, madam,’
says Robin. ’We’ll come and beg your
pardon, madam; and your blessing, madam, and my father’s.’
‘This is all out of the way,
son,’ says the mother. ’If you are
in earnest you are undone.’
‘I am afraid not,’ says
he, ’for I am really afraid she won’t
have me; after all my sister’s huffing and blustering,
I believe I shall never be able to persuade her to
it.’
’That’s a fine tale, indeed;
she is not so far out of her senses neither.
Mrs. Betty is no fool,’ says the younger sister.
’Do you think she has learnt to say No, any
more than other people?’
‘No, Mrs. Mirth-wit,’
says Robin, ’Mrs. Betty’s no fool; but
Mrs. Betty may be engaged some other way, and what
then?’
‘Nay,’ says the eldest
sister, ’we can say nothing to that. Who
must it be to, then? She is never out of the
doors; it must be between you.’
‘I have nothing to say to that,’
says Robin. ’I have been examined enough;
there’s my brother. If it must be between
us, go to work with him.’
This stung the elder brother to the
quick, and he concluded that Robin had discovered
something. However, he kept himself from appearing
disturbed. ‘Prithee,’ says he, ’don’t
go to shame your stories off upon me; I tell you, I
deal in no such ware; I have nothing to say to Mrs.
Betty, nor to any of the Mrs. Bettys in the parish’;
and with that he rose up and brushed off.
‘No,’ says the eldest
sister, ’I dare answer for my brother; he knows
the world better.’
Thus the discourse ended, but it left
the elder brother quite confounded. He concluded
his brother had made a full discovery, and he began
to doubt whether I had been concerned in it or not;
but with all his management he could not bring it
about to get at me. At last he was so perplexed
that he was quite desperate, and resolved he would
come into my chamber and see me, whatever came of
it. In order to do this, he contrived it so,
that one day after dinner, watching his eldest sister
till he could see her go upstairs, he runs after her.
’Hark ye, sister,’ says he, ’where
is this sick woman? May not a body see her?’
‘Yes,’ says the sister, ’I believe
you may; but let me go first a little, and I’ll
tell you.’ So she ran up to the door and
gave me notice, and presently called to him again.
‘Brother,’ says she, ‘you may come
if you please.’ So in he came, just in
the same kind of rant. ‘Well,’ says
he at the door as he came in, ’where is this
sick body that’s in love? How do ye do,
Mrs. Betty?’ I would have got up out of my chair,
but was so weak I could not for a good while; and he
saw it, and his sister to, and she said, ’Come,
do not strive to stand up; my brother desires no ceremony,
especially now you are so weak.’ ‘No,
no, Mrs. Betty, pray sit still,’ says he, and
so sits himself down in a chair over against me, and
appeared as if he was mighty merry.
He talked a lot of rambling stuff
to his sister and to me, sometimes of one thing, sometimes
of another, on purpose to amuse his sister, and every
now and then would turn it upon the old story, directing
it to me. ‘Poor Mrs. Betty,’ says
he, ’it is a sad thing to be in love; why, it
has reduced you sadly.’ At last I spoke
a little. ’I am glad to see you so merry,
sir,’ says I; ’but I think the doctor might
have found something better to do than to make his
game at his patients. If I had been ill of no
other distemper, I know the proverb too well to have
let him come to me.’ ‘What proverb?’
says he, ’Oh! I remember it now.
What—
“Where love is
the case,
The doctor’s
an ass.”
Is not that it, Mrs. Betty?’
I smiled and said nothing. ‘Nay,’
says he, ’I think the effect has proved it to
be love, for it seems the doctor has been able to
do you but little service; you mend very slowly, they
say. I doubt there’s somewhat in it, Mrs.
Betty; I doubt you are sick of the incurables, and
that is love.’ I smiled and said, ’No,
indeed, sir, that’s none of my distemper.’
We had a deal of such discourse, and
sometimes others that signified as little. By
and by he asked me to sing them a song, at which I
smiled, and said my singing days were over. At
last he asked me if he should play upon his flute
to me; his sister said she believe it would hurt me,
and that my head could not bear it. I bowed,
and said, No, it would not hurt me. ‘And,
pray, madam.’ said I, ’do not hinder it;
I love the music of the flute very much.’
Then his sister said, ’Well, do, then, brother.’
With that he pulled out the key of his closet.
’Dear sister,’ says he, ’I am very
lazy; do step to my closet and fetch my flute; it
lies in such a drawer,’ naming a place where
he was sure it was not, that she might be a little
while a-looking for it.
As soon as she was gone, he related
the whole story to me of the discourse his brother
had about me, and of his pushing it at him, and his
concern about it, which was the reason of his contriving
this visit to me. I assured him I had never
opened my mouth either to his brother or to anybody
else. I told him the dreadful exigence I was
in; that my love to him, and his offering to have
me forget that affection and remove it to another,
had thrown me down; and that I had a thousand times
wished I might die rather than recover, and to have
the same circumstances to struggle with as I had before,
and that his backwardness to life had been the great
reason of the slowness of my recovering. I added
that I foresaw that as soon as I was well, I must
quit the family, and that as for marrying his brother,
I abhorred the thoughts of it after what had been
my case with him, and that he might depend upon it
I would never see his brother again upon that subject;
that if he would break all his vows and oaths and
engagements with me, be that between his conscience
and his honour and himself; but he should never be
able to say that I, whom he had persuaded to call
myself his wife, and who had given him the liberty
to use me as a wife, was not as faithful to him as
a wife ought to be, whatever he might be to me.
He was going to reply, and had said
that he was sorry I could not be persuaded, and was
a-going to say more, but he heard his sister a-coming,
and so did I; and yet I forced out these few words
as a reply, that I could never be persuaded to love
one brother and marry another. He shook his head
and said, ‘Then I am ruined,’ meaning
himself; and that moment his sister entered the room
and told him she could not find the flute. ‘Well,’
says he merrily, ‘this laziness won’t do’;
so he gets up and goes himself to go to look for it,
but comes back without it too; not but that he could
have found it, but because his mind was a little disturbed,
and he had no mind to play; and, besides, the errand
he sent his sister on was answered another way; for
he only wanted an opportunity to speak to me, which
he gained, though not much to his satisfaction.
I had, however, a great deal of satisfaction
in having spoken my mind to him with freedom, and
with such an honest plainness, as I have related;
and though it did not at all work the way I desired,
that is to say, to oblige the person to me the more,
yet it took from him all possibility of quitting me
but by a downright breach of honour, and giving up
all the faith of a gentleman to me, which he had so
often engaged by, never to abandon me, but to make
me his wife as soon as he came to his estate.
It was not many weeks after this before
I was about the house again, and began to grow well;
but I continued melancholy, silent, dull, and retired,
which amazed the whole family, except he that knew
the reason of it; yet it was a great while before
he took any notice of it, and I, as backward to speak
as he, carried respectfully to him, but never offered
to speak a word to him that was particular of any
kind whatsoever; and this continued for sixteen or
seventeen weeks; so that, as I expected every day
to be dismissed the family, on account of what distaste
they had taken another way, in which I had no guilt,
so I expected to hear no more of this gentleman, after
all his solemn vows and protestations, but to be ruined
and abandoned.
At last I broke the way myself in
the family for my removing; for being talking seriously
with the old lady one day, about my own circumstances
in the world, and how my distemper had left a heaviness
upon my spirits, that I was not the same thing I was
before, the old lady said, ’I am afraid, Betty,
what I have said to you about my son has had some
influence upon you, and that you are melancholy on
his account; pray, will you let me know how the matter
stands with you both, if it may not be improper?
For, as for Robin, he does nothing but rally and
banter when I speak of it to him.’ ’Why,
truly, madam,’ said I ’that matter stands
as I wish it did not, and I shall be very sincere
with you in it, whatever befalls me for it. Mr.
Robert has several times proposed marriage to me, which
is what I had no reason to expect, my poor circumstances
considered; but I have always resisted him, and that
perhaps in terms more positive than became me, considering
the regard that I ought to have for every branch of
your family; but,’ said I, ’madam, I could
never so far forget my obligation to you and all your
house, to offer to consent to a thing which I know
must needs be disobliging to you, and this I have made
my argument to him, and have positively told him that
I would never entertain a thought of that kind unless
I had your consent, and his father’s also, to
whom I was bound by so many invincible obligations.’
‘And is this possible, Mrs.
Betty?’ says the old lady. ’Then
you have been much juster to us than we have been to
you; for we have all looked upon you as a kind of
snare to my son, and I had a proposal to make to you
for your removing, for fear of it; but I had not yet
mentioned it to you, because I thought you were not
thorough well, and I was afraid of grieving you too
much, lest it should throw you down again; for we
have all a respect for you still, though not so much
as to have it be the ruin of my son; but if it be
as you say, we have all wronged you very much.’
‘As to the truth of what I say,
madam,’ said I, ’refer you to your son
himself; if he will do me any justice, he must tell
you the story just as I have told it.’
Away goes the old lady to her daughters
and tells them the whole story, just as I had told
it her; and they were surprised at it, you may be
sure, as I believed they would be. One said
she could never have thought it; another said Robin
was a fool; a third said she would not believe a word
of it, and she would warrant that Robin would tell
the story another way. But the old gentlewoman,
who was resolved to go to the bottom of it before
I could have the least opportunity of acquainting her
son with what had passed, resolved too that she would
talk with her son immediately, and to that purpose
sent for him, for he was gone but to a lawyer’s
house in the town, upon some petty business of his
own, and upon her sending he returned immediately.
Upon his coming up to them, for they
were all still together, ‘Sit down, Robin,’
says the old lady, ’I must have some talk with
you.’ ‘With all my heart, madam,’
says Robin, looking very merry. ’I hope
it is about a good wife, for I am at a great loss
in that affair.’ ‘How can that be?’
says his mother; ’did not you say you resolved
to have Mrs. Betty?’ ‘Ay, madam,’
says Robin, ‘but there is one has forbid the
banns.’ ’Forbid, the banns!’
says his mother; ‘who can that be?’ ’Even
Mrs. Betty herself,’ says Robin. ‘How
so?’ says his mother. ’Have you
asked her the question, then?’ ‘Yes, indeed,
madam,’ says Robin. ’I have attacked
her in form five times since she was sick, and am
beaten off; the jade is so stout she won’t capitulate
nor yield upon any terms, except such as I cannot
effectually grant.’ ‘Explain yourself,’
says the mother, ’for I am surprised; I do not
understand you. I hope you are not in earnest.’
‘Why, madam,’ says he,
’the case is plain enough upon me, it explains
itself; she won’t have me, she says; is not that
plain enough? I think ‘tis plain, and
pretty rough too.’ ‘Well, but,’
says the mother, ’you talk of conditions that
you cannot grant; what does she want—a
settlement? Her jointure ought to be according
to her portion; but what fortune does she bring you?’
‘Nay, as to fortune,’ says Robin, ’she
is rich enough; I am satisfied in that point; but
’tis I that am not able to come up to her terms,
and she is positive she will not have me without.’
Here the sisters put in. ‘Madam,’
says the second sister, ’’tis impossible
to be serious with him; he will never give a direct
answer to anything; you had better let him alone, and
talk no more of it to him; you know how to dispose
of her out of his way if you thought there was anything
in it.’ Robin was a little warmed with
his sister’s rudeness, but he was even with her,
and yet with good manners too. ’There are
two sorts of people, madam,’ says he, turning
to his mother, ’that there is no contending
with; that is, a wise body and a fool; ’tis a
little hard I should engage with both of them together.’
The younger sister then put in.
‘We must be fools indeed,’ says she,
’in my brother’s opinion, that he should
think we can believe he has seriously asked Mrs. Betty
to marry him, and that she has refused him.’
‘Answer, and answer not, say
Solomon,’ replied her brother. ’When
your brother had said to your mother that he had asked
her no less than five times, and that it was so, that
she positively denied him, methinks a younger sister
need not question the truth of it when her mother
did not.’ ’My mother, you see, did
not understand it,’ says the second sister.
’There’s some difference,’ says
Robin, ’between desiring me to explain it, and
telling me she did not believe it.’
‘Well, but, son,’ says
the old lady, ’if you are disposed to let us
into the mystery of it, what were these hard conditions?’
‘Yes, madam,’ says Robin, ’I had
done it before now, if the teasers here had not worried
my by way of interruption. The conditions are,
that I bring my father and you to consent to it, and
without that she protests she will never see me more
upon that head; and to these conditions, as I said,
I suppose I shall never be able to grant. I
hope my warm sisters will be answered now, and blush
a little; if not, I have no more to say till I hear
further.’
This answer was surprising to them
all, though less to the mother, because of what I
had said to her. As to the daughters, they stood
mute a great while; but the mother said with some
passion, ’Well, I had heard this before, but
I could not believe it; but if it is so, they we have
all done Betty wrong, and she has behaved better than
I ever expected.’ ‘Nay,’ says
the eldest sister, ‘if it be so, she has acted
handsomely indeed.’ ‘I confess,’
says the mother, ’it was none of her fault, if
he was fool enough to take a fancy to her; but to
give such an answer to him, shows more respect to
your father and me than I can tell how to express;
I shall value the girl the better for it as long as
I know her.’ ‘But I shall not,’
says Robin, ’unless you will give your consent.’
‘I’ll consider of that a while,’
says the mother; ’I assure you, if there were
not some other objections in the way, this conduct
of hers would go a great way to bring me to consent.’
‘I wish it would go quite through it,’
says Robin; ’if you had a much thought about
making me easy as you have about making me rich, you
would soon consent to it.’
‘Why, Robin,’ says the
mother again, ’are you really in earnest?
Would you so fain have her as you pretend?’
“Really, madam,’ says Robin, ’I
think ’tis hard you should question me upon
that head after all I have said. I won’t
say that I will have her; how can I resolve that point,
when you see I cannot have her without your consent?
Besides, I am not bound to marry at all. But
this I will say, I am in earnest in, that I will never
have anybody else if I can help it; so you may determine
for me. Betty or nobody is the word, and the
question which of the two shall be in your breast
to decide, madam, provided only, that my good-humoured
sisters here may have no vote in it.’
All this was dreadful to me, for the
mother began to yield, and Robin pressed her home
on it. On the other hand, she advised with the
eldest son, and he used all the arguments in the world
to persuade her to consent; alleging his brother’s
passionate love for me, and my generous regard to the
family, in refusing my own advantages upon such a
nice point of honour, and a thousand such things.
And as to the father, he was a man in a hurry of
public affairs and getting money, seldom at home,
thoughtful of the main chance, but left all those
things to his wife.
You may easily believe, that when
the plot was thus, as they thought, broke out, and
that every one thought they knew how things were carried,
it was not so difficult or so dangerous for the elder
brother, whom nobody suspected of anything, to have
a freer access to me than before; nay, the mother,
which was just as he wished, proposed it to him to
talk with Mrs. Betty. ‘For it may be, son,’
said she, ’you may see farther into the thing
than I, and see if you think she has been so positive
as Robin says she has been, or no.’ This
was as well as he could wish, and he, as it were,
yielding to talk with me at his mother’s request,
she brought me to him into her own chamber, told me
her son had some business with me at her request, and
desired me to be very sincere with him, and then she
left us together, and he went and shut the door after
her.
He came back to me and took me in
his arms, and kissed me very tenderly; but told me
he had a long discourse to hold with me, and it was
not come to that crisis, that I should make myself
happy or miserable as long as I lived; that the thing
was now gone so far, that if I could not comply with
his desire, we would both be ruined. Then he
told the whole story between Robin, as he called him,
and his mother and sisters and himself, as it is above.
‘And now, dear child,’ says he, ’consider
what it will be to marry a gentleman of a good family,
in good circumstances, and with the consent of the
whole house, and to enjoy all that he world can give
you; and what, on the other hand, to be sunk into
the dark circumstances of a woman that has lost her
reputation; and that though I shall be a private friend
to you while I live, yet as I shall be suspected always,
so you will be afraid to see me, and I shall be afraid
to own you.’
He gave me no time to reply, but went
on with me thus: ’What has happened between
us, child, so long as we both agree to do so, may
be buried and forgotten. I shall always be your
sincere friend, without any inclination to nearer
intimacy, when you become my sister; and we shall
have all the honest part of conversation without any
reproaches between us of having done amiss.
I beg of you to consider it, and to not stand in the
way of your own safety and prosperity; and to satisfy
you that I am sincere,’ added he, ’I here
offer you #500 in money, to make you some amends for
the freedoms I have taken with you, which we shall
look upon as some of the follies of our lives, which
‘tis hoped we may repent of.’
He spoke this in so much more moving
terms than it is possible for me to express, and with
so much greater force of argument than I can repeat,
that I only recommend it to those who read the story,
to suppose, that as he held me above an hour and a
half in that discourse, so he answered all my objections,
and fortified his discourse with all the arguments
that human wit and art could devise.
I cannot say, however, that anything
he said made impression enough upon me so as to give
me any thought of the matter, till he told me at last
very plainly, that if I refused, he was sorry to add
that he could never go on with me in that station
as we stood before; that though he loved me as well
as ever, and that I was as agreeable to him as ever,
yet sense of virtue had not so far forsaken him as
to suffer him to lie with a woman that his brother
courted to make his wife; and if he took his leave
of me, with a denial in this affair, whatever he might
do for me in the point of support, grounded on his
first engagement of maintaining me, yet he would not
have me be surprised that he was obliged to tell me
he could not allow himself to see me any more; and
that, indeed, I could not expect it of him.
I received this last part with some
token of surprise and disorder, and had much ado to
avoid sinking down, for indeed I loved him to an extravagance
not easy to imagine; but he perceived my disorder.
He entreated me to consider seriously of it; assured
me that it was the only way to preserve our mutual
affection; that in this station we might love as friends,
with the utmost passion, and with a love of relation
untainted, free from our just reproaches, and free
from other people’s suspicions; that he should
ever acknowledge his happiness owing to me; that he
would be debtor to me as long as he lived, and would
be paying that debt as long as he had breath.
Thus he wrought me up, in short, to a kind of hesitation
in the matter; having the dangers on one side represented
in lively figures, and indeed, heightened by my imagination
of being turned out to the wide world a mere cast-off
whore, for it was no less, and perhaps exposed as
such, with little to provide for myself, with no
friend, no acquaintance in the whole world, out of
that town, and there I could not pretend to stay.
All this terrified me to the last degree, and he
took care upon all occasions to lay it home to me
in the worst colours that it could be possible to
be drawn in. On the other hand, he failed not
to set forth the easy, prosperous life which I was
going to live.
He answered all that I could object
from affection, and from former engagements, with
telling me the necessity that was before us of taking
other measures now; and as to his promises of marriage,
the nature of things, he said, had put an end to that,
by the probability of my being his brother’s
wife, before the time to which his promises all referred.
Thus, in a word, I may say, he reasoned
me out of my reason; he conquered all my arguments,
and I began to see a danger that I was in, which I
had not considered of before, and that was, of being
dropped by both of them and left alone in the world
to shift for myself.
This, and his persuasion, at length
prevailed with me to consent, though with so much
reluctance, that it was easy to see I should go to
church like a bear to the stake. I had some
little apprehensions about me, too, lest my new spouse,
who, by the way, I had not the least affection for,
should be skillful enough to challenge me on another
account, upon our first coming to bed together.
But whether he did it with design or not, I know
not, but his elder brother took care to make him very
much fuddled before he went to bed, so that I had the
satisfaction of a drunken bedfellow the first night.
How he did it I know not, but I concluded that he
certainly contrived it, that his brother might be
able to make no judgment of the difference between
a maid and a married woman; nor did he ever entertain
any notions of it, or disturb his thoughts about it.