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In
FOUR VOLUMES.
VOL.
III.
Bear
with me now, I have a timid Mind: but if you will
encourage
my first Shoots, my future Aim shall be to
give
you Pleasure.
TUDOR.
S
T A F F O R D:
PRINTED
BY ARTHUR MORGAN.
T.N.
LONGMAN,
PATER-NOSTER-ROW,
LONDON.
M.
DCC. XCIV.
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VOL.
III.
LETTER,
I.
LADY STANLEY, TO
MISS STANLEY.
Alverston, March 24th.
YOUR letter, my dearest Emma, dated the
twenty-second, I have now received, and the contents strengthen an apprehension
which has, for some days past, greatly disturbed me. Your father is no less
uneasy than I am; but I
will lead you progressively to the cause of our disquiet.
It
is unnecessary to descant upon the impetuosity of your brother’s disposition.
We all know it well; and I must needs say that, in so young a man, I have
thought it no unfavourable prognostic: however, experience has taught me that
it is to be deplored.
About
eight days back, Mrs. Butler; Mrs. Willett; Mrs. Raymond, and Miss Parker, made
me a morning-visit. George was present; and the conversation almost immediately
turned upon the partiality with which he was honored by Lady Lucinda
Harrington; whom, he says, he never saw but once; and that was at Huntingdon,
three years back, when Sir Charles Conway and he were coming from Newmarket
races. However, from her conduct at Mortimer Lodge, at Mrs. Manwairing's
wedding, and from some other circumstances, which I have no spirits now to give
minutely, it appeared no less true than strange, that he was distinguished by
her favourable opinion.
After the
ladies were gone, your brother was unusually silent, and seemed very
thoughtful. I enquired the cause, when, with his natural candour, he informed
me that he could not help being more impressed by what he termed the prating of
the gossips who had just left us, than, perhaps, he ought to be; and then
showed me a little vellum case which he found at the Lodge, and which, he was
then assured, was dropped by the young lady of whom they had been talking. I
must own I was exceedingly surprised when he opened, and drew from the recess, the most
elegant performance I ever saw done in crayons. It was a portrait of himself;
and so extremely like, that I gazed at it with increasing surprise. At the back
of the picture were a few lines of poetry which demonstrated the equal
excellency of the head and heart of the performer, who, beyond doubt, appeared
to be Lady Lucinda Harrington; but the circumstances which gave the
confirmation are, as I said, too numerous and particular for my present
relation. George immediately declared his resolution to follow her to Bristol.
I opposed his sudden determination; yet when he asked for my reasons, I could
not give any one he thought material; therefore told him I would lay the whole
before his father; which I did; and though we both wished him to postpone the
matter for a short time, we were at length prevailed upon by his importunity to
consent to his going to Bristol, and thinking (as no objection could be offered
to circumstances) that he would, upon seeing the lady, be able to judge how to
proceed. Sir Edward impowered him to make generous
proposals with respect to her fortune. This happened on the Tuesday, just after
I had sent off to you my letter of that day, and I should immediately have
written again, but your brother promised you should hear from him within two
days.
The morning
after he left Alverston, I went, as soon as breakfast
was over, into my dressing-room, and requested my amiable companion, who
encroached hourly upon my affection, to alter a cap I had just received from
Derby, and finding, upon falling into chat, that she knew many young ladies of
fashion about town, I asked if she had ever seen Lady Lucinda Harrington. Her
affirmative produced other enquiries, to which her replies considerably perplexed me;
as the substance of them, though delivered in rather softer language, was
nearly equal to the opinion you gave, of the lady above-mentioned, in your
letter dated Sunday.
I immediately
told Sir Edward of what Maria, with much unwillingness, had informed me; he was
concerned; but as we thought it would only be a simple disappointment to your
brother, we did not disturb ourselves much about it; and, indeed, rather hoped
it might be of some advantage to him, by giving a little check to his impetuous
manner of proceeding. However, when his letter, dated Stratford, reached us, we
were considerably uneasy, as he informed us of his having actually entered into
engagements with Sir Philip Glynn, whom he accidently
met with at Coventry; and requested Sir Edward would write a letter to that
gentleman, giving a formal ratification of the proposals. What now to do we
knew not. It was possible George had intimated to Sir Philip that he would soon
have a letter from his father; therefore hopeing Maria (who it
was not to be supposed was personally acquainted with Lady Lucinda) had imbibed
her character from the
representation of prejudice, he wrote to that gentleman as your brother
desired, and told him he left every thing to be settled by the discretion of
himself and his son; after which, we remained tolerably satisfied till the
arrival of your letter this morning. I will not, my love, say how much we are
distressed by your account, which so exactly tallies with that of Maria’s.
However, as nothing can be done, we have only to endeavour to wait, with
patience, the issue of the event: for in the present situation of
circumstances, it would be highly improper to interfere, as we know not how far
the native impetuosity of your brother’s temper, aided by the extraordinary ready concurrence of Sir
Philip, may have carried matters. Before any caution could reach him, he may
have so fettered himself as to make it unavailing; and if so, probably it would
be productive of serious mischief. Besides, what caution can be necessary for a
young man so capable of judging, as George is; whose eyes
are perfectly open; he not being under that fascinating illusion of passion,
miscalled affection, which often fatally blinds the understanding!
After much
consultation, therefore, we concluded that if Lady Lucinda Harrington deserved
the character which has been given of her, George would soon see she was not
the woman to make him happy; if she did not deserve
it—[you likewise had it from report] it would be cruel, as well as unjust, to
insinuate a derogatory idea. Not, my Emma, as I before said, that either your
father or myself approved your brother’s hasty measures upon a matter so
important. Yet, when he left Alverston, his plan did
not seem very reprehensible, as
he meant only to see a lady, of
whom fame, in this part of the country, spoke approvingly; of whose favourable
sentiments for himself he had received very strong presumptive proofs, and who,
as to family and fortune, was surely unobjectionable.
Wishing,
therefore, as we earnestly do, to see him married—we were willing to hope his
pursuit (from which, indeed, it would have been hard to have diverted him,
without being more peremptory than we think we ought to be with such children
as ours) might produce,
with happiness, that desired event: And had he not met with Sir Philip Glynn,
the disappointment of finding the young lady other than he expected, would not
have been of any consequence, or if of
any, perhaps, as I observed, of a good one, in correcting his precipitance in
future.
Just
after your father had written to the baronet, an account was brought of poor
Mr. Fowller’s death, which made a letter to your
brother immediately necessary. Sir Edward having, as you know, given to him the
power of supplying the vacancy; and before he went from home, he informed us of
his having promised the benefice to Mr. Evelyn, the gentleman who, I told you,
accompanies Sir Charles Conway in his tour.
From the
foregoing considerations, no subject was touched upon in this letter to George,
except that which occasioned its being written; but he was desired to let us
hear from him immediately. That we impatiently expect his reply I need not
affirm.
And now, my
love, for another subject of an
unpleasing kind.—My amiable—my truly admirable, and really beloved Maria, has
left Alverston! She went this morning; and I cannot
express my concern at her absence. Your father feels it almost as much as I do;
for he says she is one of the most interesting—one of the most bewitching
characters he ever met with. She was, indeed, to us, almost as another
daughter. I cannot express how she has stolen upon us since your departure. Her
merits seemed to increase every hour.
One day last
week Sir Edward said he would walk as far as the Lilly-copse; and it being
exceedingly pleasant, I set out, about half an hour after he went, with an
intent to meet him upon his return in the long meadow; but your father seeing
old Walden as he passed the lodge, and hearing from him that the carpenters
wanted him at the dairy-house, he crossed over to them, and after directing
them how to proceed (finding himself a little tired) came straight home, with a
design of asking me to take a ride with him in the chaise, and, it seems,
entered the lesser hall just as I left the garden. When he opened the door of
the saloon he heard the organ, and concluding I was
playing upon it, hastened
to the library, when thinking the music was unusually fine, he stopped a moment
at the door, being unwilling to interrupt me; and was more and more struck with
the harmony of the sounds, which were, to use his own words, so wildly
sweet, that he was convinced what he heard was a true voluntary. As this was
the kind of music I, when young, most delighted in, your father fancied I was
endeavouring to recover past ideas in the science; yet confessed, though he
used to be partial to my finger, that he listened with surprise, as he never
remembered to have heard me play so well before. After he had stood at the door
a few minutes, the music ceased, and he was going into the room, but it
immediately began again, and, at the same time, his ears were arrested by tones
from a voice which seemed harmony itself. For a moment, he said, he fancied his
Emma was returned; but recollecting the improbability of that, he stepped into
the little study, and putting aside the curtain of the glass door which opens
into the library, he thought he saw, in the person of Maria Birtles,
an angel’s form sitting before the
organ. Never in his life, as he affirms, was he so stricken with amazement. Her
attitude—her manner of playing, was beyond all description. He was rivetted to the spot; but she sat not long; for starting up
suddenly, she hastened away, as if she apprehended somebody’s over-hearing her;
for which reason, as we afterwards conjectured, she played in the softest
diapason stop. As you may suppose, this incident was more than once the subject
of our conversation; which, as often as it occurred, was always concluded with
a declaration from us both, that Maria Birtles, take
her person and mind, stood in the foremost rank of British females: I have much
more to say about her, but must defer it till I see you, and hasten to tell you
of her leaving us. Yesterday morning Jonathan brought letters from Derby;
amongst which, was one directed to Maria. I took it and carried it to her. She
retired to read it, and did not return sooner than in a quarter of an hour. At
length she came to me with tears starting from her eyes, and with the beautiful
rose in her cheeks much
heightened.
"My
dear madam," said she, sighing very deeply, “I must leave you; at
least, for a time. But how can I express my regret?”
I was as if
thunder-struck. Indeed I was greatly affected; but I cannot enter upon the
ensuing scene which insensibly grew to be exceedingly tender. The occasion of
her going was to see her father, from whom she has been some time absent. What
his determination would be, respecting her situation in future, she did not
know. The letter which summoned her to London was written by a female friend of
hers, whose name is Thompson. She shewed it to me. The anxiety of her father to
see her was feelingly described; yet there were some expressions of resentment
against him for his past unkindness to such a daughter—was the expression—as
never man before was blest with. Mrs. Thompson then urged her hastening up, and
condoled with her on the pain she would feel at leaving a family so
congenial with herself; and, in a very obliging manner, mentioned every one of
us with particularity. She then informed her of the almost sudden death of poor
Mrs. Douglas, who, as you, probably, saw in the newspapers, had been to
Weymouth, in hope of receiving benefit from the sea.
When I had
finished reading the letter, I lamented, in very warm and sincere terms, the
necessity there was for her leaving me, by which the dear amiable girl was so
penetrated that she burst into tears, being unable, as she said, to express her
sensations. She then spoke of you in the most grateful and affectionate terms.
But as I cannot do justice to her sentiments, and as the recapitulation of the
scene really distresses me, I will postpone any farther account of it till I
can give you a verbal one. Suffice it, that Sir Edward, as well as myself,
sincerely regret Maria’s departure from Alverston.
She went about nine o’clock, leaving an earnest request that she might be
remembered to you in the warmest expressions which gratitude and friendship—if
she might be allowed the familiar term—could dictate; promising to write to me
as soon as she reached London. At parting I pressed her to receive a small bank
note, but she so earnestly entreated permission to decline the acceptance,
that, struck with the dignity of her manner, I involuntarily withdrew my hand,
and was near asking pardon, with a courtesy, for the tender.
What an
extraordinary young creature this is! I think, my Emma, warmly as you admired
her, you saw not half her merits; for they continually expanded till the last
moment. I am impatient for her promised letter, that I may write a repetition
of the pressing invitation I gave her to return to us as a visitor, as soon as her father would
consent to spare her.
And
now, my dear girl, will you forgive your mother for having a thought to
interrupt your happy scenes at Woodstock? Indeed, my child, I wish for your
return. I feel a vacancy for which I know not how to account. Sir Edward is
rather unwell, and my poor Moore will probably soon quit this lower world.
If Mrs. Lawson
and Mrs. Eleanor could spare my two girls—and if Mrs. Stanhope would trust
the amiable Maria to my maternal care for a limited time—I think I should soon
be better. But I will not enforce this request, lest the compliance should be
destructive to some agreeable plan: only, my dear, come as soon as your leaving
Woodstock can be made quite easy to your friends in that place, and to yourself;
but I charge you not to hasten improperly. If you do, I shall, indeed, be
displeased. You know me so well that I need not say any more upon this subject.
Your father
sends his tenderest love to his girl; and his cordial respects to all her friends
in Oxfordshire, to which she will unite and dispense those of her other ever
affectionate parent,
HENRIETTA STANLEY.
LETTER,
II.
MR.
STANLEY, TO SIR CHARLES CONWAY.
Bristol,
March 25th.
I Have this instant, my dear Conway, received
a letter from my father on the subject of poor Fowller’s
death. He went off, at last, rather suddenly; if that can be said of a man who
has been lingering several weeks.
Mr. Evelyn is
now Rector of Alverston. Give my compliments to him, and request him to
oblige me, by omitting the acknowledgments customary upon these occasions. In
short—tell him I will not receive any letter from him upon the subject.
But can you
spare him? Can you allow of his going, for a few days, immediately to Alverston? My father wishes to see him there. You know
he is rather particular about these matters. It is his desire that Mr. Evelyn may be inducted, and every relative to the business
settled, as soon as possible.
I forbear
writing to him because I will not have his answer.
And
now—Why do not I hear from you? Yet, upon consideration, I believe
no letter of yours, sent since you knew my address, could have
reached me. I forgot, when I wrote from Stratford, to ask you to direct to the
Bristol post-office; but it might be thought you would have supposed that to have been sufficient.
Excuse me,
Charles. I am confoundedly ill-humoured, and know not when I shall be any
better.
Lady Lucinda
has received a pressing request from a Mrs. Bellmin
at Bath, that she would oblige Miss Horton, her niece, who is very much
indisposed, with a visit. These ladies, I find, do not bear the brightest of
characters, and Lady Glynn does not much wish my dulcinea
to comply. But she claims Sir Philip’s promise, given her two or three days
back, that she shall now be permitted to see this friend, which, it seems, she
has long desired, as she professes to be extremely fond of her. Another blessed
proof of her wisdom and prudence! She goes, I fancy, this afternoon. I am,
doubtless, to escort her; though I think I could welcome a broken limb for
affording me an excuse for non-attendance.
Once
more—A curse upon my stupid folly! And a curse, indeed, is likely to be its
effect. O Charles! Charles! I envy you on the subject of your late
distresses. You had the great consolation of not deserving what you endured.
While I—
But adieu. I
shall run distracted.
GEORGE
STANLEY.
LETTER,
III.
COLONEL
GREVILLE, TO THE HONORABLE
MRS.
DIGBY.
Pall-Mall,
March 25th.
YOUR letter is before me. I have read every
line with admiration, and feel myself a man of encreased
consequence every time I reflect on the nearness of our relationship. But, Arabella, be piteous. Spare the divine his heart. By all
accounts he is an honest fellow. Let the conquest of your baronet—which, I
think, you cannot fail of compleating—entirely
satisfy you; at least at present. When
you are Lady Conway—no advance, by the bye, to the Honorable
Mrs. Digby—I believe I shall be tempted to veil my
remembrance of our consanguinity, and inlist myself
in the number of your dying swains; and if you should find yourself inclined to
be a little grateful—it will only, you know, be in a family way.
"Think of this, my
sweet cuz. Think of this.”
And
now for myself—I have a very pretty plan just going to be brought
into practice. When I last wrote, I had it in agitation, but since that time, I
have considerably improved upon it; which improvement makes it necessary for me
to go to Alverston immediately. But I know you have
curiosity in no small degree; therefore, in
expectation of some future reward, I will e’en
indulge you, contrary to my intention, with a few hints of my design.
Lord Fitzmurray—that tool of intrigue—has, you know, a castle
upon the borders of South Wales. To that my fair Emma is to be conveyed,
without waiting for her consent, which I doubt it would be somewhat hard to
obtain. I was to have assisted in person, though in masquerade, at
the seizure of this capital prize; but Fitzmurray has
undertaken the whole of that part of the business, and as he wishes to be somewhat
more than an agent, Miss Lawson, for his amusement, is to accompany my charmer
in her expedition. Previous to this, I go to Alverston;
not merely to ingratiate myself
with the old people—the young one, which gave birth to this point in my plan,
Captain Jones (in a letter to Jack Brampton) says is at Bristol—but to evince I could not have any hand in the rape. As
soon as the girls are taken, the Lawsons will, doubtless, dispatch
messengers all over the kingdom; certainly one to Alverston:
but not to trust entirely to their sending, I have given Lord Fitzmurray a letter, without a signature, to put into the
post-office, upon his going off, (directed to George Stanley, Esq. or in his absence to any other of the family)
to give the alarm. I, you will remember, am there at the time, and instantly,
with my trusty valet, fly in
search of the ravished fair ones; and, “by
the luckiest chance in the world,” discover the route they were
carried; — pursue, find, and rescue them from the hands of the villains who had
unlawfully seized them.
How I shall proceed,
depends upon the grateful or un-grateful
behaviour of my Venus. If she be softened to compliance, I will carry her back
in safety: if not, she must take, and thank herself for, the ensuing consequence. I will, to pay myself for my trouble,
prevent her ever being any other than Emma Stanley or Mrs. Greville,
though I then abscond the kingdom.
A few
particulars remain to be settled, which I doubt not of making easy, and then—for Alverston.
But I have
quarrelled with, and dispatched, my girl of convenience. Polly Fenton—alias Matilda Barlowe—no longer belongs to me. She grew very expensive,
and was unfaithful. In words of truth—her face was amazingly familiar to me: and she had so long obliged me, that
to oblige longer, was not in her power. I, therefore, this morning sent her a
gallant; then went and discovered them together; abused her, and packed her
off; allowing her but three hours to collect and box up her trumpery.
Her rooms,
furnished in style, are now tenantless, and will probably remain so till the
remembrance of Emma Stanley (for she must, in the end, comply) shall be lost in
Mrs. Greville.
There, cuz: there is multum in parvo
for you, in return.
Fitzmurray gives me an account of the arrangements he
has made towards perfecting our project, and bids me expect his being in town
on Sunday; therefore, to give proofs of my
innocence, I intend going to Alverston on
Monday, as on Thursday or Friday, or Saturday—as opportunity serves—he will attempt
the glorious seizure. If Miss Lawson, he says, be one of his beauties, she shall for life be
mistress of the castle. But I doubt she would hold her sovereignty by a very
frail tenure.
Suppose
you give a hint to Sir Charles, through the medium of the parson, that I have made
proposals to the Stanleys, and have been accepted! I shall gently intimate that, by
means of your meeting at Yarmouth with the baronet, I shall probably have the honor of, very soon, ranking him amongst my kinsmen.
It is a lucky
thought. Improve upon it to our mutual benefit.
As I go down
into Derbyshire, I think I shall call upon Miss Howard, and congratulate her upon the death of her dear friend Mrs. Egerton.
And now sweet cuz! farewell.
With
profound respect—
perfect admiration, &c. &c. &c.
yours,
ARCHIBALD
GREVILLE.
LETTER,
IV.
MAJOR
CARRINGTON, TO MRS. LAWSON.
London,
March 25th.
DEAR MADAM,
YOUR counsellor authorises me to tell you,
that you are perfectly right in all you have asserted, and have offered such
very fair proposals as cannot but be accepted if Hawkins retains his perfect
understanding; and he doubts not but that he shall be able to conclude every
thing to your satisfaction, before the end of next term.
I heartily
congratulate you on this probability.
Your affair too
with Lord Danvers may now be finally adjusted, and that personally, as his
lordship means very soon to visit his cottage. Since my last letter to you on
that subject, a great revolution has happened in the earl’s family. Sir William
Jennyns is out of town, therefore I have not heard
minute particulars; but the substance is, that Lady Caroline Pemberton, and Mr.
and Mrs. Maynard, are all returned to England; that through Mr. Maynard’s
interposition, the earl is reconciled to his next to divine daughter, and that
he received her with transport, without one reproach. It is however whispered
about, that she has dearly earned this affectionate treatment, by giving up her
right in the jointured estate, and thereby rendering
herself entirely pennyless, except his lordship has
gratitude sufficient to induce him to determine upon laying by a yearly sum for
her future support. His engagement with Lord Crumpford
is entirely broken, to the furious displeasure of that ig-nobleman,
who talks of sueing the earl for non-performance of
articles. If this matter should be
brought forward, I fancy the agreement will not redound much to the honor of either of the titled gentlemen: but Mr.
Maynard’s superiority of management will, most likely, put a stop to such kind
of proceedings. That gentleman and his lady are, I believe, to accompany the
earl and his daughter to the Woodstock cottage—as his lordship chuses to have it called.
You expressed
yourself so well pleased with my former account of these personages, and seemed
to take so much interest in the fate of Lady Caroline, that I imagined I could
not more entertain you than by giving the above particulars.
I beg you will
remember me with respect to Mrs. Eleanor and Miss Lawson. Miss Rachel I saw
last week. I fancied she looked rather pale and thin. Perhaps the London air
does not agree with her constitution. She said, however, she was as well as
usual.
Miss Ellison
lately requested me to convey (when I should write again) her compliments to
all my cousins at Woodstock; with the execution of which commission I subscribe
myself, my dear madam,
your
obliged, and affectionate friend,
JOHN
CARRINGTON.
LETTER,
V.
MR.
BROOMLEY, TO AUGUSTUS
MAYNARD, ESQ.
March
25th, 1789.
SIR,
HAVING had the honor
of being once or twice in your company in Edinburgh, and knowing still more of
you from character, my judgment points you out as the person proper to be made
acquainted with an affair of considerable consequence to the noble house from
whence you sprang, and to which you are otherwise allied.
Without more
preface, I will submit my story to your consideration.
I am the vicar
of a little village called Kildwick, near Skipton in Yorkshire, where I have lived from my infancy.
It would be vanity to suppose myself remembered by name; but when I mention the
circumstance of Captain Hubbard’s offending Mr. Macdonald at the last Edinburgh
election, possibly you may recollect the person who took the liberty to give
him a severe reprimand.
A few years
back, a lady, apparently of middle age, came and hired a genteel house in my
parish, bringing with her a boy
about eight or ten years old. Her name, Pemberton; the youth was her son, and,
as I soon found, the incontestible heir to the title and
estate of Danvers. It has always been my wish to gain such information
respecting any new comers into my parish, as would enable me to converse with
them for both their profit and pleasure, where they were not incompatible with
each other; as experience has taught me is too often the case.
Think
not, sir, that I am boasting of conduct which is but a bare performance of
duty. I only mean to elucidate a motive (which might else be termed curiosity)
for enquiring into the characters and connexions of those who become my
parishioners. A man, verging upon fourscore, can hardly fail of being too well
convinced that all beneath the sky is vanity, to indulge any principle of it in
himself.
Mrs.
Pemberton (to which you cannot be a stranger) had formerly wanted either the
benefit of good advice, or the resolution to follow it. By her retiring to this
part of the country, I had hope that she sincerely wished to obliterate the
remembrance of her former conduct, and I made it my endeavour to facilitate
that design. Her behaviour was
not reprehensible, though her conversation was, sometimes, rather more airy
than became the character she seemed desirous to establish; for which reason I
was rather cautious in permitting my darling grand-daughter Alethea
(left to my care by an only and beloved son; her mother dying at her birth) to
be often in her company, except when I was present; and I wished to have the
boy, who was lively; promising, and might, I thought, after I had left the
world, be of some consequence to the nation, as little with his mother as he
could be with propriety; for which reason, though I could not well afford it, I
boarded him at my house upon low terms; telling her that his future probable
situation required all possible care should be taken in his education, and that
I wished her to send him to Edinburgh as soon as his age permitted. She
listened pretty attentively to what I said, and always seemed desirous he
should be well instructed; but from time to time requested his continuing with
me till his age far exceeded that of the youths I wished (for the sake of
accumulating some trifle for my girl) to have under my tuition. However, I last
summer insisted upon his being removed, as I did not think myself capable of
being of service to him any longer. She therefore carried him to Edinburgh, and
placed him with Mr. Blythe, of whose abilities I had some knowledge.
About last Michaelmas she received a letter directed with speed,
informing her that Master Pemberton had been thrown
from a horse; that his skull was fractured, and his death apprehended. This
intelligence almost distracted her; not, as I have often thought, from any
great degree of affection for her child, but from apprehension of the abolition
of her future prospects, of which she used to be continually talking, and
seemed greatly to enjoy, in idea; not doubting but her son, when Earl of
Danvers, would settle her in splendor; and indeed,
from the youth’s noble disposition, she formed but probable conclusions.
I am thus
particular, sir, because I wish to give you an idea of the woman you are to
manage.
Mrs. Pemberton
immediately set off for Edinburgh. When arrived there, she found that her son
was at the house of a cottager, in a small village about four miles from the
city; he having met with the accident, in company with two other boys (who, as
a reward, were allowed an evening’s ride) near that place; and she was bid to
prepare herself for his decease.
This was the
substance of a letter which she wrote to me, in compliance with my request, as
soon as she had seen the youth, for whom I had always a kind of pitying regard.
About a
fortnight after this, I received a second letter from her, in which she excused
herself for not having written again before that time, on account of an illness
occasioned by her close attendance upon her son, who, however, she said, she
was happy to tell me, had entirely recovered the accident, contrary to the
predictions of three eminent surgeons. She then informed me that, by mere
accident, she had met with a friend of her deceased husband’s, who greatly
interested himself in the child’s welfare, and earnestly requested that she
would send him to Eton, and that when she objected the narrowness of her
finances, he offered to be at the additional expence,
provided she would enter into a written engagement to use her influence with
her son to repay him whenever he should inherit the Danvers estate. The
gentleman’s name, she said, was Ditton.
Notwithstanding
all this appeared probable, there was an air of confusion which ran through the
letter; and the style was strikingly different from the first; nevertheless, I
passed it over without thinking much of it, till late circumstances brought it to
my recollection.
Mrs. Pemberton
returned, and appeared more gay than formerly. She often used to tell me of her
having heard from her son at Eton, who sent his duty to me; but never, as before, showed me any
of his letters, which rather surprised me; but I attributed it to the
youth’s not having really made any mention of me; which she was unwilling I
should know.
About two
months after her return she was visited by a gentleman who called himself
Leigh. He staid with her two days, and when I looked in upon her one of the
mornings, I found the table spread with writings, and she, upon seeing me,
looked round her in evident confusion; but recovering herself, presented to me the Mr. Leigh, as
her late husband’s intimate friend. This gentleman, upon understanding Master
Pemberton had been my pupil, told me he could give me pleasure, by informing me
that the young rogue, as he termed him, was extremely improved in his person;
but that in learning he made no great progress; and gave it for a reason that
his old master had taught him more than his new one understood. I was sensible
of, and displeased at the extravagance of the compliment, therefore made no
reply, but asked if this was the gentleman who had taken Master Pemberton to
Eton. Mrs. Pemberton blushed, and said no: that was a Mr. Ditton,
but Mr. Leigh was his intimate friend, and joined with the other in a proper
support for Thomas William—as she always would have him to be called. Conjectures, not
very favorable to Mrs. Pemberton, spontaneously arose
in my mind upon the seeming strangeness of the visit of this Mr. Leigh; though
of a very different nature from the circumstances by which, as it now appears,
it was occasioned. However I was so much displeased by it, that I requested my
child not to be too hasty in again visiting Mrs. Pemberton.
About Christmas
this Mr. Leigh again made his appearance, when a servant whom I had reared from
infancy, and who had obtained leave from his master, who lives in York, to make me a
visit, saw and knew him to be Lord Crumpford. This
servant was just returned with his master from London; had often been at Lord Danvers' house, and had
heard from the domestics of that nobleman a most despicable account of this
feigned Mr. Leigh, and of the persecution which Lady Caroline Pemberton
underwent from her father, on his account; for, it seems, the matter was
grown very public, though the two lords aimed at all imaginable secrecy.
These
suggestions filled my head with a set of incoherent ideas, which I could not
reduce to order. Something, I seemed convinced, was wrong, but what, I could
not guess with probability. Why Lord Crumpford, who
wished to marry Lady Caroline Pemberton, should come twice into Yorkshire with
a feigned name, on a visit to the mother of Lord Danvers’ heir—was a mystery I
could not fathom. My first reasonable alarm was for the youth’s safety; on
which account I was inclined to write to the master at Eton; but being minded
to begin my enquiries at the school in Edinburgh, from whence he was said to be
taken, I staid till Lord Crumpford had left Kildwick, and then sent a letter to Mr. Blythe, desiring to
know if he had heard from his young pupil, Thomas William Pemberton, since he
left his school. The answer to this, you will easily believe, surprised me,
when I tell you that it was a circumstantial account of HIS DEATH, with many
expressions of wonder that I had not heard of it from Mrs. Pemberton.
To tell you all
my sentiments—conjectures and conclusions—at this intelligence, would swell my
letter to a volume. The result of my ponderings were—that I hastened back a
particular enquiry of every minute circumstance attending his decease, with a
request for a proper certificate of that event from the register of the parish
where he was buried.
My
letter was immediately answered: the particulars were given, but no
certificate—the place of his interment being unknown to the lad’s Edinburgh
friends, Mrs. Pemberton having put into a hearse, which she followed in a
coach, the coffin which contained the remains of her son; being desirous, as
she said, to deposit him by the side of his father.
I was now
somewhat puzzled to know how to proceed; but after examining very attentively
the dictates of my mind, I determined to go to Mrs. Pemberton before she could
have any information of the intelligence I had gained, and by an abrupt
taxation to put her off her guard, and then, by confronting her with my
evidence, endeavour to lead her to make a confession of the intended end of
this dark business.
After
some very hard conflicts, this method answered to my wishes: but for a
considerable time she resolutely affirmed that her son had recovered; was still
alive, and, at that period, at Eton: At length, upon my telling her that I knew
her Mr. Leigh to
be Lord Crumpford, and showing her the letters I had
received from Edinburgh, she began to hesitate; thinking, without doubt, that
it was probable her scheme would prove abortive. After much arguing, she
intimated that as all her hopes of fortune must be entirely extinguished by the
confession I pressed her to, she could not be worse off by keeping silent;
hinting that her evidence would overturn any other. Finding, therefore, that
nothing was to be done without, and being willing to prevent the probability of
a public trial, by securing her before any measures were concerted between her
and Lord Crumpford (who I then gathered by her
confused intimations was deeply concerned in the affair) I rather too hastily,
and perhaps reprehensibly, gave her my word that I would exert my utmost
influence with every individual of the house of Danvers to procure her an
annuity of fifty pounds during her life, if she would fully elucidate the
business in question; and farther (for she would not even then comply) that I
would not give up any papers which she should sign or put into my hands till I
had gained security for this donation. She then (considering, I suppose, that
Lord Crumpford would not have it in his power to
perform the conditions, greatly in her favor, into
which he had entered; and depending, it seems, upon the assurance I had given
her) explicitly laid open the whole affair, and gave me his lordship’s letters
upon the subject.
The aggregate
of the matter is, that Lord Crumpford, accompanied by
his daughter, Miss Bomton, was at Edinburgh when Mrs.
Pemberton lost her son, which she did in two days after she reached him, and
that, hearing of the incident, he waited upon her, with much appearance of
respect, to condole with her; being, as he said, a friend to all the family.
After this, the treaty soon began, and was, I believe, soon finished. The
corpse was carried several miles from Edinburgh, and, by the assistance of some
hired creatures of Lord Crumpford’s, buried in an
unfrequented place; the youth’s death was to be kept secret from all but those
who, previously, had necessarily been made acquainted with it; and the story of
his being gone to Eton propagated.
Lord Crumpford could not suppose this plot could long be kept concealed; but
he doubtless expected to carry his point before it should become public; after
which, it may be supposed from his character, he would have braved the opinion
of the world.
Before Mrs.
Pemberton would fall in with his measures, she insisted upon knowing the scheme
he meant to pursue, upon which he pretended—for, beyond dispute, it was pretence—that he had long been
passionately in love with Lady Caroline; that as he had already one child to
provide for, and might have more, he could not afford to marry her with the
small fortune to which, before the event in point, she was intitled;
that now, he was determined to make himself happy with the finest young woman
in existence, for which reason he did not wish it to be known that she was
heiress to the Pemberton estate till after the marriage, as it might make his
work difficult; that before the event should transpire, he was convinced Lord
Danvers would readily comply with the proposals he should make, as he was his
debtor for large sums of money; some of which Mrs. Pemberton believes were lost
at gaming; that his taking the lady, as she herself must suppose, without a
fortune of any consequence, would so gain upon such a disposition as hers, as to
produce affection, and that, therefore, the plan in which he wished her to
join, was not only innocent but laudable.
With these and
such like plausible arguments, and with what, I doubt, prevailed still more, a
promissory note of two thousand pounds to be paid on his marriage with Lady
Caroline, (after which, poor Thomas William’s death was to be announced as a
recent event) did Lord Crumpford entice Mrs.
Pemberton to come into his scheme, in which he would probably have succeeded
had not Lady Caroline with-held her consent, and made her escape (for an escape
I think it may justly be
called) from the persecution she had, it seems, in part suffered. Of this, Lord
Crumpford wrote Mrs. Pemberton a short account;
telling her at the same time that, though this part of his plan might prove
abortive, he had another which could not fail; therefore desired a continuance
of secrecy. This was a letter of only a few lines, but he made her a promise of
writing to her again as soon as his intention was digested; since which time
she had not heard from
him, therefore was in continual expectation of the promised information.
Having thus far
succeeded, I immediately wrote down the particulars for her to sign, to which
she, at first, objected, but upon my representing to her that I should not
scruple to take my oath that I had heard from her what I had written, and that
if she refused to assist in making the affair quite clear, she must expect
obloquy instead of a reward, she complied, on condition that I would promise to
keep the matter as secret as possible in
that part of the world. To this I readily assented, as though my hope of her
thorough conviction of her errors was a little abated, I should be sorry to
have her hardened in the practice
of them; which might be the effect of public reproach. I therefore sent for my
clerk and my grand-daughter, for Alethea is of
sufficient age to be a witness, and my clerk Mrs. Pemberton was assured would
not divulge any thing contrary to my commands, and she signed the paper in
their presence; I likewise putting my name at the bottom.
After this I
was minded to wait for Lord Crumpford’s promised
letter; therefore went to the man at whose house our letters are left, and
desired him to let me know when any one came for Mrs. Pemberton before he sent
it, as I wished to be with her when she received it. I was not under any
apprehension that this man should wonder at my request; as on the present
occasion I may allow myself the pleasure of saying, that all my parishioners
have an implicit confidence in me, and never would think of my asking them to
do any thing wrong. This man supposed the letter I was anxious about, was one
from poor Thomas William. Without answering his surmise, I left him to continue
in his mistake.
Once
or twice I was disappointed by letters from other quarters, but yesterday,
which was the third time of his sending to me, I went upon his message, and was
sitting with her when a letter from Lord Crumpford
was put into her hands.
Upon her reading
it, a repetition of my question, as upon the two former occasions of—From the
Viscount, Madam?—was answered with
the deepest blush of confusion. I see I am right, I added: What plan is he now
pursuing? For some moments she continued silent; then told me that she could
not possibly show me the letter she had received, though she knew it would not
be to any purpose to deny its being from his lordship.
It would be
needless to repeat the ensuing altercation. After some time spent in
conversation on the subject, I arose in displeasure; telling her that our
treaty was at an end: that as she refused her assistance—the terms on which she
had agreed to be benefited—I likewise refused to exert my influence in her favor; and would leave her to consider whether Lord Crumpford [she must remember the information of which I was
in possession] could keep any promise which (as she intimated) he then, or
before, had made her, on the successful issue of any plan he could form on this
event.
"You have ruined my fortune
Sir,” said she—rising from her chair in a rage.—“No; he cannot proceed in his
scheme. I am convinced he cannot.
It is impossible;” she added,
after a pause, “therefore remember your engagements;
take the letter and make, with all my heart, your most of it.”
I
was strongly tempted to reject her offer, as what I had already obtained was
sufficient to reinstate in their rights the injured party; but as I had given
my promise that if she would assist
to the utmost of her power, I would endeavour to procure the
before-mentioned stipend, my refusing that assistance which she, however
reluctantly, was at last, inclined to render, would be such an evasive breach
of engagement as I could not reconcile to rectitude, though I could not but
think her entirely undeserving any consideration: I therefore took the letter,
and, when I had read it, did not grudge its price. The substance of it is an
account of his vile new plot, which is already in its progress.
Lord
Crumpford, encouraged by the belief that the incident
of little Pemberton's death has not yet transpired, is led on to hope it will
subside as a trivial circumstance; which he says is not likely to undergo any
investigation, as the Danvers family are prepossessed with a continual idea of
his existence. He has, therefore, dressed; instructed, and put to Eton school,
under the assumed name of Thomas William Pemberton, a lad about sixteen years
old; who, he darkly intimates, is a natural son of his brother the late
viscount, from whom, about two years back, he inherited the title and estate.
But these expressions are so ambiguous, that this particular cannot be
ascertained. The boy, he says, is sharp and promising; exceedingly pleased with
his new situation, and elate with the prospect of his future dignity—for he was
obliged to trust him with the outlines of the scheme, as it was necessary the
masters and scholars should acknowledge and treat him as the undoubted heir of
the Danvers Earldom. So far, he says, from running any hazard by this
communication, it will bind the youth to keep the secret with the utmost
caution; he having a pretty ripe understanding, though it has not been much
cultivated; for which reason it was represented in the school that his
education had been sadly neglected, through the straitness
of his mothers fortune. He then says he is not incited to adopt this plan to
revenge himself on Lady Caroline, though she has so ungratefully refused him,
nor of resentment to Lord Danvers for his shameful breach of articles (whom he
will effectually prevent from ever being benefited by the sueing
of any fine, as he has heard him project) but to save the title from
extinction, and to benefit and aggrandize his own family, as he intends this
boy should privately (as if without his knowledge) marry his daughter, ere much
time elapses, and that the matter shall, in due time be made public. From this
grand part of the plan I am willing to hope I was mistaken in an idea, raised
by the cloudiness of the expressions when he first mentions him, of this
youth’s being more nearly related to him than a nephew. Yet what will such a
dark spirit stick at! He may think incest a crime of but small magnitude;
especially (he may advance in palliation) as the parties, if kept in ignorance
of the consanguinity, may justly be termed innocent.
I hope I do not
judge him too severely; though I must own my charity for his lordship burns
very dimly.
Lord Crumpford's capital piece of art to
seduce Mrs. Pemberton to connivance is yet to be told. After describing the
effects of measures he endeavours to extenuate, he sums all up by urging her to allow him
to hope she will agree to participate in the wealth and honors
thus secured to his family, by accepting, some time hence, the title—the
hand—and the heart, of the present head of the house of Crumpford.
He then assures her that he would hasten down to solicit this favor directly, did he not think an immediate union between
them might suggest inconvenient ideas; but tells her that as soon as his son in law and daughter are Earl and Countess
of Danvers,
(hinting in very odd language that the present possessor of the title seems
drawing near his end—being very infirm for
his years—) she may depend upon his honor;
not only as a reward for her assistance, but as an indulgence to himself. He says
he shall consider the intermediate time as suspending his happiness, but
consoles himself with a repetition of the probability that the lease of Lord Danvers will soon be expired.
This, sir, is
the sum of the intelligence of which I am possessed.
I will not add
unnecessarily to the length of this epistle by useless comment, as every
particular will speak for itself; but, depending upon hearing from you
immediately, subscribe myself
your
respectful
and
obedient servant,
ANTHONY
BROOMLEY.
LETTER,
VI.
LADY
CAROLINE PEMBERTON,
(In
the Character of Maria Birtles)
TO
LADY STANLEY.
London,
March 26th.
Ever
dear and truly honored Madam,
IN obedience to your very kind injunction, I
write as soon after my journey as fatigue allows me to use my pen. I
know not why I was so extremely tired with travelling so small a number of
miles, except from the great reluctance I found to proceed in a road that
carried me from a house in which I could dwell with pleasure during the
remaining period of my existence.
Shall I
endeavour to paint the happiness, so congenial with the inmost feeling of my
heart, which I, for many weeks, experienced within the pale of Alverston Park? I will not. I cannot. Shall I give a
description of the regret which filled my soul at quitting, perhaps for ever,
the inhabitants of its beloved inclosures? Equally
impossible.
For
ever—did I say? I did. Ah madam! there is the sting! This was more than,
when I saw you, I dare trust myself to say. My grief at raising the probable
conjecture, would have been too extreme for observation: and till within a few
days of my leaving you I had hoped—what did I not
hope. But my hope is destroyed; and its destruction was the cause of
my being obliged to fly, with such velocity, to London.
Yet to what
purpose thus wanders my pen in delineating the shades of past felicity and its
contrary!
Revered Lady
Stanley! How shall I express my thanks for the kind—the affectionate, the parental treatment I received from you and
the equally revered Sir Edward,
during my residence at Alverston Park! I feel the
poverty of my language when I attempt to speak my gratitude, in this my
farewell letter.
Pardon the presumptuous hope which led me to
look forward to the time of my being distinguished as Miss Stanley’s friend—of its
being no more remembered that I ever entered your family in any other capacity.
Pardon, my dear
madam—pardon and pity all the deficiencies of your too much obliged,
ever
grateful,
and
respectful humble servant,
MARIA
BIRTLES.
LETTER,
VII.
MR.
STANLEY, TO SIR CHARLES CONWAY.
Bristol,
Thursday night, March 26th.
I Wrote to you, Charles, yesterday morning. I
was then a miserable dog; but am now one of the happiest fellows existing.
The dear—the
lovely—the charming Lucinda—Harrington no longer—has compleatly blest me. I
now think of her with transport and extacies. Her
beauty shall be the subject of my contemplation; and the fiery squint of her
eyes—lately thought almost disgusting—now be allowed to kindle the most
grateful raptures. But let me lead in order to this surprising revolution—to
the subject of my almost unbounded felicity.
In my last I
told you that my charmer—not then distinguished by that appellation—was going
to Bath to see Miss Horton whose aunt, Mrs. Bellmin,
had sent a pressing request
that Lady Lucinda would favor her niece with a visit,
as she was very much indisposed and greatly desired her dear friend’s company
for a few hours. Lady Glynn, as I said, objected to this request, but was
over-ruled, and it was agreed that Lady Lucinda should go
in the afternoon. I, as a matter of course, offered to attend her, but the
sweet creature, in the most obliging manner and with an enchanting smile, said
her dear Belinda would some-time hence, think herself greatly distinguished by
a visit from a man, to whom—with a down-cast eye she said it—she was so soon to
vow duty: but that, at present, it would, she doubted, greatly disorder her; as
her nerves, poor dear! were
extremely weak.
I submitted;
and it was agreed the young lady should go in Sir Philip’s chariot and four;
her maid with her; and to be attended by Sir Philip’s gentleman and another
servant on horse-back; and that she was to be at home in good time in the evening.
Soon after one
o’clock—so desirous was she of spending a long afternoon with “her dear friend”—she was ready to step
into the chariot, having eat a piece of cold chicken and a slice of ham, as she
had not patience to wait till dinner was ready, though Lady Glynn had purposely
ordered it to be early. Delivered from what I was then so insensible as to
think a miserable clogg—I spent the rest of the day
pleasantly enough in walking round a considerable part of the town. In the
evening, about half after eight, Sir Philip called at my rooms and showed me a
letter which he had just received from his niece: the purport of it was—that
Miss Horton was so extremely ill she found it impossible to leave her that
evening; that she should detain the chariot, but would send home the horses,
which she requested might return for her the next day as soon as dinner was
ended; and that she should keep Chapone to attend her
orders, lest any other message should be necessary, as her friend, who was at
times, delirious, seemed to be quite in a frenzy whenever she offered to leave
her.
Sir Philip was,
I found, a little angry at the young lady’s taking the liberty of staying from
home all night, without his leave; from which, and from some other past
incidents I found they had thought it necessary to keep her under pretty close
confinement.
About
three o'clock this afternoon the servants were again sent with
the horses to Bath, to
conduct Lady Lucinda to Bristol. At the entrance of the town they were met by
Mrs. Sally—her ladyship’s waiting-maid—who told them that Miss Horton still
continued extremely ill, and that they must go to the inn and wait there till
she saw them again. She then gave them a crown, which she said her lady had
ordered them for liquor.
The command to
spend the money they did not hesitate to obey, therefore went to the inn as
desired; called for a bowl of punch, and waited quietly till near six o’clock,
when recollecting their master’s injunctions to be home early, one of the men
went to the door, and there saw, talking to the coachman of the London
diligence, Mrs. Sally, who, as soon as she saw the servant, took from her bosom
a letter, telling him in the greatest seeming hurry and confusion, that Miss
Horton was drawing very near her end, and that he must make all possible haste
home with the chariot and all the horses, as it was impossible for Lady Lucinda
to leave her friend; and giving him the letter, desired him to deliver it to
his master the moment he should reach home. The man hesitated, and was going to
speak, but she stopped him with—“Ask no questions. Do as you are ordered, and
away.”—At which instant she hastened from him, and turned into the next street.
About nine o’clock the chariot was driven into Sir Philip’s yard, at which
time, according to an extorted promise to attend at supper, I was sitting in
conversation with him and his lady, who, upon hearing the rattling of the
carriage, immediately exclaimed, with evident pleasure, “The dear child is now
come.”—and rose to go to meet her; but before she could reach the door, a
servant entered and laid upon a table that stood between Sir Philip and me, a
letter directed, as I instantly saw, TO SIR PHILIP AND LADY GLYNN BARONIGHT—Sir
Philip stared with astonishment, and the lady was seemingly struck mute; for
she likewise (following the servant) saw the singular direction. The baronet at
length recollected himself; took up the letter and perused (as I afterwards
knew, for he read it first to himself) the following lines, written in a
legible school-boy hand.
Wednesday forenoon.
Hornered Sir and Lady,
Before this can
have reached your hands Lady Lucinda and myself will neerly
have reeched Cretny Green
and be marred in the holly bands of matrimoney. You
will be pleesed to consider that it never will be to
no purpose to go after us, as we shall have near forty hours the start, as this
letter is not to be given to you till nine at clock of Thursday night and we
left Brister at one at clock to day, and though I am
a servant and no scollar it is my intention not to
disgrace my lady’s choice, so shall go with her to France to learn French and
to go to school for other things to be as far as I am able a gentleman,
therefore I hope for this good design you will be so good now that things
cannot be helped as to let us have some money for you knows sir as I am now
yours and her ladyship’s relation and cannot help it it
will be better than my staying in England till I know how to behave myself. I
write this at home before we set out while her dear ladyship is dressing
herself that we may not have nothing to do when we arrives at Bath
but to whip forward all three in a post chaise and four, for Miss Horton is to
go with us in our tower as my dear lady and I you must know sir and madam has
kept company for all the time since she came home from France, and we have been
a long time been trying how to
manage all these matters. Mrs. Bellmin is to go to
London and Sally is gone too as soon as she have given Nicholas this letter
that you may not do nothing to
punish neither of them, and Nicholas is not to ask Sally no questions about
where I am for if he do Sally is not to give no answer. My lady send her duty to
you and her ladyship and I remain sir yours and her ladyship’s dutiful servant
to command and by this time kinsman
GEORGE
CHAPONE.
Now,
Charles, for the pencil of Hogarth, or the pen of his
congenial genius—Fielding—to give you an exact picture—mind and body—of our
trio, upon the publication of the contents of this letter.
But previous to our being made acquainted with the catastrophe, the baronet was
no sooner sensible of the sum total, than
his eyes were perfectly glazed—he foamed at the mouth—threw his fine queue-wig
into the farthest corner of the room, and rising in a rage, uttered a string of
tremendous oaths, without connexion; without meaning; and then—“She is gone. She is off. That rogue—that cursed rogue Chapone
has carried her away. I tell you they are
gone to Gretna Green, and are by this time married.”
Down,
at the conclusion of this speech, dropped poor Lady Glynn—Sir Philip stamping
and storming about the room. I rang the bell; ordered assistance, and desired
her ladyship might be carried into her own chamber, and then sent for medical
advice. To describe the scene which ensued between the baronet and me, is
absolutely beyond my power. However, as soon as I could, I persuaded him to
listen to reason, and convinced him of the impropriety (as all pursuit must be
in vain) of making more bustle about the affair than could be helped; and
advised him to mention it as a matter for which he was extremely sorry; but
that as Lady Lucinda Harrington had acted so indiscreetly, she must take the
consequence. I likewise represented the propriety of complying, after some
little time, with the request for money; as I thought the plan of going to
France ought, after such an event, to be encouraged.
To all this Sir Philip listened in sullen silence, but at length confessed I was right; said he would endeavour to act according to my advice, and would write in the style I recommended to Mr. Barnard.
He then sent
down for the servants who had been at Bath, and examined them, when they
informed him of the particulars, respecting their dismission
by Sally, which I just now gave you. After this, I motioned to take my leave,
but he requested me to see Lady Glynn before I went, and to endeavour to mollify her a little. Upon my consenting
to stay, Sir Philip sent, not wishing, as it seemed, to see her alone, to
request her ladyship’s company in the drawing-room. In about a quarter of an
hour she appeared; her face covered with tears. The baronet gave me a push on
the side to begin my mollifications, and
I, after a previous attempt to soothe her, repeated the same arguments I had
advanced to Sir Philip, and, after a much longer time, with the same success.
Their seeing me
(whom they must suppose to be greatly interested) so calm upon the occasion,
was a considerable relief to them; as they were, I believe, ashamed of the
treatment I had received from their relation.
Before
I finished my visit, the matter was talked over with some degree of
temper; though their grief was truly poignant.
And so,
Charles, the lady has now got her own George. For this George—George Chapone, or (as I have been informed he was always called
till Sir Philip chose to Frenchify him) GEORGE CAPON
is THE George. This was the occasion—But thus elate, I cannot sit to reconcile
particulars. Look into my first account of this business, and you will find the
whole elucidated. All my young madam’s conduct is, from this clew explainable.
Her fainting at Mortimer Lodge, and the airs she there assumed—her request that
Chapone might convey her home — In short, the entire
farce, the occasion of which was so misconstrued by a parcel of conjecturing gossips, is
laid open to view. And most bravely did I swallow the deluding dose, which was
so nicely made palatable by that confounded misleading portrait. And now the
wonder returns. Who the plague could—But I will not, at this time bewilder my
imagination. Present matters of fact shall occupy my ideas. The termination of
this event delights me. I seem so easy—so happy—so like a new creature in a new
world, that I cannot express my sensations. Lately so heavy—so fettered—so
oppressed! now all air; all freedom; all spirit. My ideas seem at liberty to
range round the universe: but, Charles—chide not: frown not; for they rest, and
will rest, with MARIA BIRTLES; and in the morning, as soon as it be light, not
intending to go to bed, will I fly upon the wings of the most ardent
affection, to that only charmer
of my heart. This is all I mean to say at present upon this
subject.
After I left
Sir Philip’s, which I did about eleven o’clock, I went to Lady Bingham's card-rout,
(having previously received an invitation) where were all the people whom I
know in Bristol; and to the principal amongst them, I imparted, in confidence, the events of the day, that when they were
made public, it might not be supposed to have been any concern of
mine; for fortunately Lady Glynn, from what motive I know not, had particularly desired the intended union might be kept as secret
as possible, till we came slap-dash upon them—was her ladyship’s
expression—with a wedding. To this all parties—I in particular—readily
assented; and I was looked upon as an acquaintance of Sir Philip’s; though, I
believe, not without some surmises respecting
his ward. To obviate this entirely, I ought to stay a few days longer in
Bristol, instead of disappearing just at this crisis; but, Charles, I must—I
will go to Alverston: and that directly. My call at
Lady Bingham’s, where I staid till after one and where I was in random spirits, was calculated to quiet
any apprehensions that my pride might otherwise have been under; therefore as
soon as I have finished this, and a short note to Emma, I shall call up Jerry
and prepare for Alverston, being determined to reach
it, if no unforeseen accident intervenes, to-morrow evening.
Jones will take
care to transmit to the Park whatever letters may arrive for me after my
departure. Yours of the twenty-fourth, I received just before I went to Sir
Philip’s. Its contents are singular. To some of them I shall reply in my
journey; as I must unavoidably, though unwillingly, make some few stops upon
the road. When I first perused your letter, your sentiments of Lady Lucinda,
though so sparingly expressed, and though only demonstrative of what I was
before well convinced of, vexed my very soul. But I am now happily delivered
from the effects of my own folly; for folly in a superlative degree I must ever
acknowledge it to have been; and hope to profit from the remembrance.
With respect to
Mrs. Digby—I know her better than you do. But more of
that another time. Only depend upon this—It is you
she is aiming to entrap; and she has such a boundless confidence in
her powers of fascination, as to allow herself to believe no man, upon whom she
looks with favor, can elude her enchantments.
So
much for Mrs. Digby.
Charles,
farewell. Send me soon your congratulations.
GEORGE
STANLEY.
LETTER,
VIII.
SIR
C. CONWAY, TO
GEORGE STANLEY, ESQ.
Yarmouth,
Friday evening, March 27th.
JUST after I had sent off my last letter to
you, I received three of yours; one dated Saturday, and the two others, Sunday
morning and night. From the last of these I saw, with inexpressible concern,
the disappointment (though you were unwilling to enlarge upon it) you had met
with in the course of the day. On the Wednesday and Thursday I received two
more, and was still more distressed; yet so critical was your situation, I
resolved not to write till something was finally determined. However my resolution
gave way, and I was just sitting down, with my pen in my hand, to ask you if my
sending for you by an express, as if on business of the greatest consequence,
as surely this may be called, would not necessarily procrastinate the matter
till some effectual relief might arise, when yours, respecting poor Mr. Fowller’s death, was brought up to me. I cannot, Stanley,
speak my anxiety. Rouse yourself to action; exert your resolution to get out of
this miserable dilemma. But what do I urge! You who are so intimate with the
circumstances must best know what can be—what
ought to be done. Only remember
this—every atom of power that I possess is accompanied—is exceeded—by my will
to free you from future wretchedness.
And
now, on this subject, no more.
Notwithstanding
your prohibition, Mr. Evelyn was urgent to write to
you, but knowing the true nobleness of your mind, I requested an answer to your
letter might devolve upon me. He, with some unwillingness, acquiesced, and I
ought to make, in his name, the most lively acknowledgments of one of the most
grateful hearts in the universe. But your own is calculated to supply, on this
head, all I omit to express. Mr. Evelyn sets out
within half an hour for Alverston.
Mrs. Digby plagues me heartily. But I will spare you a recital
of my disquietudes, at this juncture. You have borne with me long and often,
and have now torments of your own sufficient.
Write every
hour till your fate is decided.
Ever and
faithfully yours,
CHARLES
CONWAY.
LETTER,
IX.
MISS
STANLEY, TO LADY STANLEY.
Woodstock,
March 27th.
YOUR letter, my ever dearest madam, of
Tuesday’s date, reached me but a few hours back. I ought to have received it yesterday, and I much wish
I had; as I then should have set off this morning for Alverston;
whereas, except I make Sunday one of my travelling days, I must now defer my
journey till Monday.
Mrs. Lawson and
Mrs. Eleanor are kind beyond expression: they not only give my Charlotte most
willing leave to accompany me, but to stay in Derbyshire as long as she pleases.
We this morning
breakfasted at Mrs. Stanhope’s, where I received your letter; all of which
(except the most material parts about my brother, and to which I will not even
attempt a reply) I read to the happy circle. I dare not tell you their sentiments
upon it, lest you suspect your girl of having lately learned to flatter.
Mrs. Stanhope
has, for some days past, been rather indisposed; for which reason Miss Lewis
cannot be persuaded to leave her, though her good aunt warmly presses her
accompanying Charlotte and me to Alverston; she,
however, promises, if nothing preventing occurs, to go a few weeks before
Charlotte leaves it, that they may together return to Woodstock.
Mrs. Lawson had
yesterday a letter from Major Carrington, about some of her law-business. In it he tells her
that Lord Danvers, now reconciled to his lovely daughter, intends very soon to
visit his Woodstock cottage; and that Lady Caroline and, he believes, Mr. and
Mrs. Maynard, are to accompany him. I will not express a wish to see this celebrated of our sex, lest
it implies a regret to leave Woodstock, when, upon my word, it is with
unaffected pleasure that I think of setting out on Monday morning, because I
hope thereby to convey some satisfaction to my dearest mother. We are to go in
Mrs. Lawson’s carriage to Coventry, where, on Monday evening, that we may
pursue and finish our journey next day, we hope to be met by your order.
But, my dear
madam, I cannot tell you my concern at knowing Maria Birtles
has left Alverston. Often have I, with pleasure,
contemplated the idea of her being at my return (for I would have insisted upon
her compliance) raised from a situation to which she is greatly superior, and
placed in the light of one of my favored friends,
whose company I consider as an obligation.
Nothing can
console me for her absence but the hope of soon hearing from her, that I may
prevail upon her to return quickly into Derbyshire. Your account of her was
very interesting to our party. They all say they long to see the admirable girl.
Mrs. Lawson had
the other day a letter from Miss Rachel. She professes a hearty contempt for
Lady Blurton and the
Honorable Miss Barbara Tupps,
but is so bewitched by London and its gaieties, that rather than
leave it, she will endure their company. Upon my word she does, in some parts
of her letters, make them appear extremely ridiculous; and that, as she says,
by merely relating their actions.
I mean to write
half a dozen lines to my brother, to inform him of my leaving Woodstock; but
shall avoid touching upon any other subject.
Yesterday
I had a letter from Mrs. Pritchyard, which gave me a
very pleasing account of Lady Davison’s health. She thinks herself so much
mended from her residence at Runcan, that she means
to continue there some time longer.
It is with
difficulty that I forbear to mention my brother’s affairs, but as I hope so
soon to see you, I will, till I have that pleasure, suppress my inclination,
and conclude with the kindest compliments of all around me; with expressing my
hope that my father’s indisposition (as you mentioned its being but slight) is
already removed, and with subscribing myself
yours,
my dear madam,
with
affectionate duty,
EMMA
STANLEY.
LETTER,
X.
MR.
MAYNARD, TO THE REVEREND ANTHONY
BROOMLEY.
St.
James’s Square, March 27th, 1789.
THE inclosed note,
reverend and worthy sir, will be your security for the annuity you promised to procure for the widow
of my late cousin Pemberton.
The
astonishment with which I read your letter is beyond expressing; and I cannot
forbear to say that the character of the writer, so visible in every line of
it, made no small part of my surprise. Let not this, my dear sir, be construed
flattery. I have too warm a wish to stand well in your opinion to dare to offer
you such an incense: but you must prepare yourself to expect the most fervent
expressions of applause and veneration, and must permit your consciousness to
do me the justice of crediting my sincerity.
Take no thought
for Miss Broomley’s future provision. That is no more
an object of your concern. One of the loveliest and best young women in
England—Lady Caroline Pemberton—courts her acceptance of her future friendship;
and Lady Caroline stops not at words where deeds are requisite.
I write, my
good sir, as you will observe, in the most concise manner possible, because I
hope very soon to have the happiness of making my acknowledgments, and of
consulting you, respecting my procedures, in person.
It is a great
pleasure to me that I can claim the honor of
perfectly remembering you. I have more than once retrospected
your conduct at the Edinburgh election; which is all I will venture to say on
that subject.
Your letter,
ever since its arrival, has constantly employed me. But for the business it has
occasioned here, I should, immediately upon the receipt of it, have set out for
your village. On Monday morning, however, I hope to begin my journey; and as I
shall not think of sleeping much on the road, I expect to be with you on
Tuesday evening.
Will you
believe and excuse me, if I say that I seem as if I was going to see an old
friend? Your letter has made me so familiar with you, that I cannot help
thinking I have known you from my infancy. Mrs. Maynard commands me to
convey her duty to you; it is her
own expression—and her love to Miss Broomley, whom
she hopes very soon to have the pleasure of seeing: but Lady Caroline’s
gratitude and sentiments of affection for you and your Alethea,
sets expression at defiance. Yet I am persuaded that the chief satisfaction
which my amiable cousin reaps from this event, arises from tenderness to her
father. As for his lordship—he is not yet, for some prudent considerations,
acquainted with this change in his circumstances. When I see you, I am
convinced I shall lay open to you all particulars; being, dear and worthy sir,
your
obliged, grateful,
and
respectful humble servant,
AUGUSTUS
MAYNARD.
LETTER,
XI.
MR.
MAYNARD, TO SIR WILLIAM JENYNS.
St.
James’s Square, March
27th.
THE enclosed letter, my dear Sir William,
from the reverend Mr. Broomley, which I send express, will
speak for itself. Doubtless your surprise at its contents will be equal to that
which seized me upon perusal. Mrs. Maynard was almost beside herself with joy.
Lady Caroline was the calmest of the three; yet truly happy and truly grateful
did she seem on account of a father whom she so devoutly loves. I am convinced
the pleasure she received at this sudden turn of events, arose chiefly from
considerations respecting him; for to own the truth to you, Sir William, I doubt
the heart of our lovely girl is not quite undisturbed. But of this not now. I
have a plan arising, which I hope will produce some relief to her disquietude.
I must request
your coming to town immediately. Lord Danvers, yesterday, confessed the whole
of his situation. It was—and he thinks still is—a deplorable one. Lady Caroline
was necessarily made acquainted with it, upon which she so peremptorily
insisted upon being allowed to part with her jewels, that there was no
resisting her. Their value was to be given in to-morrow by Heathcote.
This circumstance very fortunately retarded the signing of the deeds already
engrossed; for now will I take advantage of his lordship’s ignorance
of this turn of his fortune, to secure my beloved cousin a handsome future
provision: in doing which, I am certain of your approbation, but I want your
assistance likewise, as I do not intend to carry on this piece of kind deceit, even to himself, one moment
longer than is necessary, but as soon as Caroline be secure, ask his pardon and
unfold the whole: for which reason I request your presence; it being impossible
to conclude in what manner he will receive the explanation. However as he is a
man of sense, and, I think, keenly alive to the wretched effects of his unhappy
propensity to gaming, I have hope his conscience will involuntarily justify me;
as he cannot impute to me any regard to self-interest. If it happens otherwise,
I shall be quite insensible to his anger, because, knowing him so well as I do,
I shall be self-satisfied: for were I to be accessary in throwing
the whole power over his estate
into his hands, without any provision for his daughter, I should think myself
criminal.
Lady Caroline
knows not the measure I am pursuing. I have requested her to be silent respecting
this event for a day or two, to which she very reluctantly consented. But I
told her I must be complied with, if she wished her father’s future happiness.
My design is
this—The signing of the deeds respecting the Derbyshire estate, was, as I have
said, retarded on account of the insufficiency of the sum arising from its
valuation; for which reason my cousin insisted upon disposing of her diamonds;
but even their produce, great as it must be, would have left a deficiency; so
greatly beyond conjecture has this unthinking man involved himself. I will
therefore offer to his lordship to raise a sum sufficient to set him entirely
at liberty, if he will execute a deed which shall secure to his daughter all
the estate round the Priory (which is, I think, a good five thousand a year,
and which he had no power to mortgage) if ever he becomes heir to the estates
in general: but this only if he dies without a son; for in that case the deed shall
be void, upon payment of twenty thousand pounds to Lady Caroline.
With this I think
my uncle will immediately fall in; but I cannot say that I am quite indifferent to the
disapprobation which may possibly succeed; and to own the truth, I feel myself
rather aukward in my pursuit of a measure so indirect. Yet what can I do! Put it into the power of one of
the most indiscreet men upon earth not only to bring, a second time, to the
brink of ruin, one of the most deserving young women existing, but again to
involve himself in destruction?
Forbid it prudence! Forbid it rectitude! I am determined—and will not permit a
false delicacy to destroy the future welfare of my family.
Suppose I were
to neglect the present opportunity, and afterwards the earl should repeat his
folly, and madly throw from himself and his daughter the means of happiness now
once more offered to his acceptance—how should I be blamed and condemned by
every individual who would know I had had the power to stop the might-be-apprehended devastation!—though
perhaps (if by the intended management all things go smoothly on) the same
beings will favor me with their censure. And let them censure me. The opinion of such
people must always be despised, because none but the weak-minded ever judge by
events. The motive, when it can be made to
appear, is the criterion of human actions; and the only one to which either the Wise or the Good will attend;
and by that for justification I abide. However, I earnestly request your
presence; not alone because I
shall be happy to have the sanction of your approbation, but as you have more
influence with this uncle of mine than any other man breathing.
I
am, my dear sir,
your
affectionate,
and
obedient servant,
AUGUSTUS
MAYNARD.
LETTER,
XII.
SIR
WILLIAM JENYNS, TO AUGUSTUS
MAYNARD,
ESQ.
Enfield,
March 27th, 1789.
DEAR
SIR,
I Return you Mr. Broomley’s
very extraordinary letter, without comments; for my sentiments upon its
contents would exceed the limits of four pages.
Were I able to
move, I would be with you by the time you receive this, but the gout has seized
both my knees and one ankle: consequently, I write in bed.
Go
on and prosper, my dear friend, in your well-concerted scheme, which I would
not, on any account, have you relinquish.
Show this
scribble, which I write with extreme difficulty, to Lord Danvers, that he may see,
from under my hand, my high approbation of your plan, which is truly consonant
with all your generous and spirited exertions, shown on divers occasions, to
promote the honor and happiness of his family. Tell
him I wish to revive in his memory the transaction of the summer in the year
eighty five; and then assure him and Lady Caroline that I most cordially
congratulate them upon this great event.
With
my compliments to Mrs. Maynard, whose happiness on this occasion I can easily conceive,
I
am, dear sir,
yours
affectionately,
WILLIAM
JENYNS.
I
will thank you to let me soon hear from you again, and if you will inform Major
Carrington I greatly wish him to come to Enfield.
LETTER,
XIII.
MR.
MAYNARD, TO SIR WILLIAM JENYNS.
March
28th, 1789.
I May now, my dear sir, defy the verdict of
even the cunningly-wise ones who judge by events, as the effect of my plan was
happy beyond my expectation. However, as I should have exonerated myself had it
not been so successful, I will not claim, nor even accept any praise for the
good it produced more than I projected.
After I
received your letter, for which I much thank you, I went and gave my lawyer the
finishing directions about the deed, which was ready for signing this morning
at nine, when I went to Lord Danvers, who was then at breakfast, and made him
the intended offer, which, as I expected, he accepted very readily, and calling
up the witnesses, it was immediately executed, but the disagreeable part was
still to come: however, as soon as I found myself alone with his lordship, I
told him I had then to congratulate him and beg his pardon, but that before I
explained myself, I requested him to read that letter—putting into his hand
yours of yesterday. With considerable surprise, as you will imagine, but with seeming
attention, he perused it, then asked me what it meant. I repeated that I must
beg his pardon; and that I hoped he would not determine
to be angry before he had well considered the motive which excited
me to take advantage of a communication which had been made to me. I then
assured him Lady Caroline was entirely a stranger to what had that
morning been done; but that I would then go home and acquaint her with the
particulars. At saying this, I put into his hands the letter of Mr. Broomley, and telling him I would
presume to wait upon him again in about an hour and half, withdrew.
I then went
home to Lady Caroline, who has resided with us ever since her return to London,
and gave her the deed for her perusal; which (as I expected from her) procured me
more blame than praise. She could not bear the idea of such an advantage having
been taken of the earl, though I convinced her that his benefit was, at least, as much promoted by it as her
own. Between eleven and twelve, I again went to Berkeley Square, and chusing, at this crisis, to send up my name, was desired to
walk up immediately. And now I cannot do justice to his lordship. He was
affected, even to shedding tears; and thanked me in such expressions for the
active concern I had ever shown for his welfare, that I began to be almost
sorry for the late transaction, from the idea of its having been unnecessary.
My uncle, most
assuredly, has a fine understanding and a noble spirit, would he but correct
that ruining inclination for gambling, and for some of its kindred vices; and
with great pleasure I tell you that I have now very lively hopes of his
thorough conviction and reformation.
We soon turned
to the business of the reverend vicar’s letter. The earl’s rage when Lord Crumpford was brought upon the carpet, is beyond
description. Indeed I believe he is one of the vilest wretches upon the
habitable globe. What measures can be taken with him I do not know. When
matters are settled (and till then we mean to keep every thing respecting this
event between ourselves) his lordship will have opinion of council how to
proceed to bring him to some exemplary punishment—not adequate; for that is
impossible: and if that cannot be inflicted by a legal process, equal to his
wishes, he will have all given at large in the public papers; mentioning as
lightly as possible (from a due regard to good Mr. Broomley's promise) the
part of Mrs. Pemberton; her readiness to comply, or reluctance to confess,
making the case neither better nor worse for Lord Crumpford;
therefore it will not be necessary, from
a principle of justice, to insist upon either. Not that I think she merits this consideration, even though
every allowance be granted in her favor: but Mr. Broomley’s engagements must be sacredly attended to, and
his motive for this promise was a pious one—He was not willing to suffer a lost
sheep to be prevented from returning, by reproach for having strayed, which is
too often effected by the violent outwardly virtuous
of the human race, who, because they never were assailed by temptation, or
are, perhaps, placed by fortune, out of the reach of its influence, press,
without mercy, on the less happy, though not
less valuable of our species, who, by a complicated train of events,
fall from a height, probably, much greater than that in which their condemners
stand; for which reason they wish to keep them down, lest (rising from their
fall, bettered perhaps by its painful effects) they should obtain a state of
superiority still more elevated than the former.
However
I doubt, with the worthy divine, that Mrs. Pemberton does not come within this
description; nevertheless, as we are incompetent judges of the human heart, it
is worthy of his character to wish to reclaim her; and from the late
discoveries he will have a right to urge, in terms explicit, her reformation.
When I sat down
to give you an account of our proceedings, I did not, Sir William, intend to
moralize; but the subject naturally produced serious reflections.
It was now
agreed that I should set off for Kildwick on Monday
morning by break of day; and after I had settled matters with its reverend
pastor, proceed to visit his lordship’s estate in Cumberland; which, if I judge
right of its condition, may be sold to advantage; and the money arising from
that sale will, doubtless, more than answer all present occasions. His lordship
talks of a magnificent present for Miss Broomley.
Five thousand guineas he mentioned. What he will determine upon I do not know.
After we had settled the above particulars, he expressed a wish to see his dear Caroline (very tenderly, indeed,
he spoke) immediately. I therefore dispatched a note to my Harriet, desiring
her to hasten with her cousin to Berkeley Square, and, when arrived, to send up
for me. My summons was obeyed without loss of time, and when they alighted, I
went down to receive them, and as Caroline wished to see her father by himself
for a few minutes, Mrs. Maynard and I went into an adjoining room, where
staying till we thought we heard Lady Caroline’s voice as if crying, we went
into the study, and when I opened the door, were struck by the sight of the
lovely girl kneeling at her father’s feet, while his arms were clasped round
her neck, and both in tears. The cause of this affecting appearance which we
afterwards gleaned, from first
one, then the other, was as follows.
Lady
Caroline, upon seeing his lordship, sprang to him with open arms, and with the
most lively expression of joy, at the means of happiness being once more
offered to his acceptance, congratulated him on this important event; and
immediately dropping on one knee, put into his hands the bond which he had
signed that morning; protesting her ignorance of its being drawn, and
requesting his re-acceptance of it, as he valued her tranquility.
The earl, it seems, was so deeply penetrated by this instance of her duty;
affection, and nobleness of spirit, that he could make no reply; but throwing
his arms around her neck, wept over her till we, by our entrance, interrupted
the affecting scene.
“Augustus!
Harriet!” said his lordship as we advanced, “see here one of the best, as well
as loveliest daughters of the human race. But I always knew her merits. Happier
had it been for me, had I always rewarded them. For the
future—nephew”—interrupting himself—“take this deed”—giving me that which my
cousin had returned—“keep it in security; and let not Caroline come at it any
more. And now be it your first care that another bond be drawn up to oblige me
to pay her in quarterly payments, a thousand pounds a year, during my life, for
her own private use; after that, assist me in making my will, and to all
besides I will be indifferent.” And then, after a pause—“Maynard I will seek
happiness upon a new plan, and here, in the presence of all you, most near to
me, make a vow never to loose nor to win, at one sitting, or in one day
more than ten guineas,”—to which he bound himself by the most solemn oath; and
then calling to him Lady Caroline, who, had risen at our entrance and was at
that time sitting upon a sopha leaning against Mrs.
Maynard, he embraced her with the greatest fervency; calling her his
Angel-daughter, and telling her his highest future happiness should be in
making hers as compleat as possible.
But I must not
go on with this description. Suffice it that we spent together a most happy
day; his lordship regretting only your absence. He says he must soon see you, therefore on Monday,
after I shall have left London, he means to take Caroline and Harriet with him
to dine at Enfield; and knowing I intended writing to you, he bid me tell you
that if their company will not mend you he shall deem you incurable.
I do not
remember for these dozen years to have seen Lord Danvers so pleasing a
companion. It would be a pleasure to me to relate the conversation till, and
during, dinner; but I must not indulge myself, having much business to transact
before I sleep, and the night advances. We had an early repast at his
lordship’s, and at five returned to St. James' Square, since which time I
have been employed in writing.
If an opportunity
offers, I mean to morrow to give the earl some intimation of the state of his
daughters heart, that if I find my plan for her more particular happiness can
be practised with equity and propriety, I may be authorised to take the
measures I have conditionally resolved upon.
I am as
impatient as the earl can be to see you, having a considerable deal to consult
you upon; but must defer particulars till my return from my northern
expedition.
I am, my dear
sir, yours, with cordial wishes for your recovery, though I did not formally express my
concern for your indisposition,
AUGUSTUS
MAYNARD.
LETTER,
XIV.
MR.
STANLEY, TO SIR CHARLES CONWAY,
Alverston, Sunday morning, March 29th,
1789.
WHAT a phantom is human happiness! how
illusive the pursuit of this "shadow of a
shade!" It seems to be every where, except the very place in which one is. Seek
it—and it is gone. It shrinks from the grasp at the moment we think we are on
the point of securing it for ever.
When
I was at Alverston, I fancied it was to be found at
Bristol. When at Bristol—I was convinced I had left it behind me. I
returned—the phantom was vanished, and I now know not where to look for its
abode.
The last date
of my itinerant letter was Lichfield, in which I deplored the perverse accident
that detained me so
long at Mr. Webbers. By the bye, after it was gone I was half sorry for having
been so severe upon Mrs. Digby; for though what I
said was true, I gave it, I must confess, the highest colouring; being at that
time, from a reperusal of your letter, extremely out
of humour with her, as it brought fresh into my remembrance the instance which
I related.
After I had
done writing, I went
to Lady Davison's; never recollecting, till I had entered the
house, that she was gone to Runcan for change of air.
However, I had the satisfaction of hearing she had received benefit from
removing her residence.
At
five o'clock last evening with an agitated mind, I entered Alverston Park. I fancied every distant figure that I saw was the lovely Maria!
but in all, I was mistaken. I much wished to meet and surprise her by a sudden
and unexpected appearance, that I might observe the effects, before she had
time to be guarded, but being afraid by that means of too much surprising my dear mother, I sent
Jerry forwards to inform her of my arrival; upon which, both my father and her
ladyship came out to meet me and welcome my return. I alighted at their
approach. My mother seemed greatly agitated. I hastily enquired the cause of
her being so affected; when my father interrupted me with—"my dear George
tell us how your engagement stands with Lady Lucinda Harrington?”
Seeing their
anxiety, I informed them in four words that it was entirely over.
"How—how?" said my
father.
"Over!" repeated my
mother, in an exclamatory tone.
Their
earnestness surprised me; but to put an end to their suspense, I explicitly
told them that Lady Lucinda Harrington had eloped from her guardian’s house
with his valet; or, as he used to style him, with his gentleman; that their
route was to Gretna Green; that before that time, they probably were married,
and that I was returned to their presence with a little purchased wisdom.
At
hearing this account, the joy of both my father and mother was extreme; which
when we entered the house and were seated in the drawing room, they accounted
for by telling me that since I had been gone they had heard such a character of
the lady in question as greatly alarmed them, lest I should precipitately have
involved myself in an engagement from which I could not recede with honor, when I found, as they supposed I soon should do, her
mind unconsonant to my own. We had a great deal of
conversation on this subject, and I candidly informed them of every particular
which had passed in the course of the event. My sister, it seems, sent a
character of Lady Lucinda, “which,” said my mother, “confirmed what Maria Birtles” [I felt myself blush at the mention of her name]
“had before intimated.”
Is Lady
Lucinda, asked I, known to Maria Birtles?
“With
her character,” replied my mother, “she is certainly perfectly acquainted;”
adding, that when, at her importunity, the dear girl had given her opinion of
the young lady, and found she was likely to be allied to the family, she burst
into tears, because (as her ladyship supposed)
she was apprehensive of having spoken what might create an unfavorable prejudice.
What a blow,
Charles, was this upon my senses! Maria knew I was gone in pursuit of Lady
Lucinda Harrington! Knowing her as she knew her—how must she despise me for
such an attachment! To what inducement could she attribute my design! But she
burst into tears at the communication my mother then unguardedly made. And for
what!—Not, as the dear lady imagined, because she was apprehensive of having
given her concern. NO, Conway; fine as are her susceptibilities—this was not
the case. Those tears were shed—I WILL believe so—from the hurt she herself received upon the occasion of my
supposed attachment.
For a moment
this thought pained me most exquisitely; but a hope immediately arose that I
should be soon able to
convince her my heart was truly hers, though, by a strange concurrence of
circumstances, I was led to think my gratitude and even my compassion concerned in my journey to
Bristol.
I
should like, said I, to hear Maria’s account of this young lady. Pray—with
seeming indifference—is she at home?
“Ah!”
replied my mother, shaking her head, “I have lost the dear girl since you left Alverston.”
Lost
her! repeated I, more than half out of breath, and scarce knowing what I said.
How? Which way? When?—all command over myself being at that instant entirely
gone.
My
mother then informed me of her having received a summons to go to London, about
four days after I set out for Bristol. To see her father, was the ostensible reason,
but it strikes me very forcibly that, some way or other, I was the occasion of
her leaving Alverston. The idea was torture to me,
but as my mother said she had received a letter from her from London, I turned
the conversation (not indeed finding it entertaining) intending shortly, in a
careless way, to ask her to let me see it; that by its particular date I might
know where to find her, without enquiry; being bent upon pursuing, till I could
re-gain this real charmer.
After
supper my father again mentioned “my
sister’s waiting-maid,” and gave me a penetrating account of his
over-hearing her play upon the library organ in the most harmonious and
finished style. He said she likewise accompanied it with her voice, which was
one of the most melodious he ever listened to.
But
let me break off before my senses are quite bewildered.
Breakfast
is ready. I rose early on purpose to write; being unable, last night, to touch
a pen.
Mr.
Evelyn is to dine with us. He arrived yesterday, but
had left the park before I reached home. We are this morning to have a specimen
of his talents in the preaching- way.
Half
after eleven.
NOW,
Charles! am I indeed miserable! I
am sick—quite sick at heart. The noblest jewel the world can produce has been
within my reach, and I have tossed it away—tossed it for ever from my view—and
now what have I to do with happiness! That, too, was put into my power; and that likewise
I have slighted—slighted for an airy dream of incoherent fiction, till it has
fled beyond my power of pursuing.
At breakfast I
asked my mother if she had in her pocket the letter she mentioned having
received from Maria Birtles, telling her I wanted to
see it on account of the elegance of the writing of which she had spoken so
highly.
"I believe it is
in yonder letter-case,” replied my mother, looking at one which lay upon the
library writing-table. I arose to seek for it; soon distinguished, and, with
her ladyship’s permission, opened, and was going, with eagerness, to peruse its
contents, when I was, indeed, struck
with the hand-writing.
Charles, it was
indubitably the same as that on the back of my little resemblance!!! Its
certainty flashed in one instant upon my soul like electrical fire. I stood
mute and transfixed; till recollecting myself, I bowed, without speaking, to my
father and mother as I passed to the door, and hurried to my own apartment,
where, taking from my escritoir the portrait, I
examined, with minuteness, the characters; though I wanted not any farther
proof of their identity. Lost in
a reverie, I never changed place or posture till my mother’s entrance into the
room made me start.
“My
dear George!” said this tender parent, “what is the occasion of the agitation
under which I perceive you still continue? Your father and I are equally alarmed
with apprehensions for our son's tranquility."
Madam, said I,
without regard to consequences, look at the lines on the back of this little
picture. Whose writing is that?
I had, as I
told you, acquainted my mother with all the circumstances of my finding the vellum case; and she had told them to my
father. Treated as my sister and I ever were by our parents, it is no merit in
us that we, in return, confide in them, in
most cases, with the same freedom and unreserve
that we would in each other. In most cases, I
repeat; for conscience reminds me of the carefulness with which I avoided my
fathers eye whenever the name of Maria Birtles was
sounded in his presence, and you perhaps
will remind me of some other instances of a breach of entire confidence. However, in the present
case, caution was involuntarily banished—Whose
writing, said I to my mother, is
that? At my question, asked I know with a fixed concern, she hastily
turned to the table, and looking at the portrait and letter alternately, at
last said—It must be so. But
how”—
That madam,
interrupted I, is the question. How
could the writer of this letter drop
that picture at Hazle-wood Lodge?
"It
is possible," answered my mother, “that when she went in the
carriage for me"—
And did she!—Did Maria go to attend you home from the ball?—abruptly
interrupted I.
"She
did,"
replied her ladyship: “and when Mr. Mortimer’s servant found my
ear-ring, she went into the anti-room and sat down on the sopha,
while she took from her pocket a little ivory box, and in it carefully
deposited the jewel.”
Enough,
said I; my conviction is compleat. But why, madam,
did you not sooner tell me this? why did not you insist upon my attending you
to the carriage? you ought not to have permitted Mr. Saunders to have usurped
my office. All had then been well, and I—
Thus madly did
I run on to my dear patiently-attentive mother, till recollection stopped my career and, ashamed
of my transport, I threw myself into an armed chair, requesting to
be left alone.
"But, George,"—said my mother.
Dear madam
leave me—leave me to myself for a few minutes, said I, with earnestness.
She did; saying
she must ease my father of his anxiety, as far as that could be done by telling
him the cause of my being so suddenly affected, asking my leave to take with
her the portrait.
I bowed assent.
When she was
gone I recollected that I had not read the letter, therefore eagerly took it up
to look for her present abode; but how shall I tell you my distraction upon
finding she had carefully concealed it, and had written a kind of farewel! her date simply London.
I immediately
thought of applying to Mrs. Douglas for information respecting this angel of a
woman, when it occured that I had read in the papers,
a short time back, an account from Weymouth of her death. Who upon earth can
give me any intelligence
of her! where can I think of
seeking my dear lost charmer!
Conway I am
scarce right in my intellects.
I
will enclose a copy of the letter which has distracted me. By that you will see,
though it probably escaped my mother, the reason of her “flying with such
velocity to London.” I cannot dwell upon it. Allow that the hope which was
destroyed was founded, in a belief of my attachment to her and the whole is
explicable.
She mentions my
sister—She mentions my father; but of me she writes not one syllable! Cruel
girl! Inhuman — barbarous—But what do I say! It is I who have been inhuman and barbarous to myself and to her.
Little cause had she to think that my whole soul was in reality devoted to her,
when I went galloping near a hundred and fifty miles after such a girl as Lady Lucinda Harrington;
with whose character she was so well acquainted. How stupid—how sordid, must I appear in her eyes.
Distraction! I cannot bear the idea! Why did
my mother disclose to the dear girl the cause of my idiotical journey to Bristol? my mother was blamable
in saying any thing about the matter.
But how
foolishly I endeavour to throw from myself the conscious reproaches of my own
heart! I, and I only, am the culprit; and I am the sufferer.
Maria, dear
offended maid! how amply art thou avenged for my undue valuation of
thy all-surpassing beauties of
both mind and person!
But I will—I must tear myself from the subject, or I
shall not be fit for any company.
My father and
mother are gone to church. I really was not well enough to attend them. It is
drawing near the time for their return. Mr. Evelyn
will not now think me “a mad fellow.” Heavy;
dull; stupid, are the epithets I expect he will bestow upon me.
Jerry waits to
dress me.
Farewell.
Sunday night.
I have been
considerably mortified by appearing in such an unfavorable
light to Herbert Evelyn; a character interesting beyond what my
ideas could rise to. The moment I saw him he fixed my respect. Charles, we owe
you increased obligation for your gift of such a successor to poor Fowller.
Just before our
dining time my precious godfather arrived at Alverston,
in his return from his journey to town. I wish he was an hundred miles distant.
We shall now, I suppose, be often plagued with him, for he has purchased Hazle-wood Lodge, with its furniture, of Mr. Mortimer, who
is going to reside in the neighbourhood of Mrs. Manwaring.
Tattisford is the name of Mr. Manwaring’s
country seat, situated near Salisbury; a distance too great for Mrs. Mortimer, who is
exceedingly fond of Mrs. Manwaring, to think of often
travelling.
Had I been any
thing tolerable, I should have thought the day pleasant enough; for though Mr.
Slayton tormented me, as usual, about matrimony, Mr. Evelyn’s most agreeable
and friendly manner made amends for the other’s teazing.
Last night my godfather slept at Mr. Bellard’s, who
told him of my having been at Bristol, and that he heard I was returned; which
greatly displeased him, because I did not call upon him in my way home. The old
fellow then enquired, with some authority, into the business which carried me
to Bristol. To silence at once his importunity, for I knew he would not rest
till he was answered, I told I had been upon a matrimonial errand; but that the
lady very judiciously preferred her guardian’s valet to me, and therefore took
a trip with him to Scotland: for the rest, I must refer him to my father and
mother; requesting him to excuse me, as I had promised Mr. Evelyn
to attend him in a walk round the park. Herbert and I then left the elders to
themselves, and rambled about the distant pleasure-grounds till it was almost
dark.
It is
impossible to tell you how much pleased I was with my companion. Our
conversation was chiefly about you, and your situation with Mrs. Digby. As I expected—her aim is to entrap you, Charles. Shall I then be sorry that I
have written so freely of her? Will she ever, think you, be Lady
Conway? Evelyn seems to hesitate in his answer. Not
that he thinks she will be your choice, but
he is apprehensive of your being so entangled by her affection, that, well stocked as you are, in the great
qualities of the human mind, you will find it difficult to escape. Write, I
beseech you, at large upon this matter as soon as possible.
When Mr. Evelyn
and I returned from our walk, my mother, as soon as I entered, took me aside to
tell me what had passed between Sir Edward; herself, and my god-father, during my absence.
It seems I was no sooner out of sight than he desired an account of the Bristol
expedition; expressed some disapprobation, if there was any truth in the tale,
at his not having been apprized of it; but supposed
the whole to be a fabrication to amuse him. Upon this, my father, to convince
him that I was not so averse to matrimony as he always chuses
to suppose I am, and telling him it was the suddenness of the matter, with the
expectation of soon seeing him, which prevented his having been previously made
acquainted with it, informed him of the whole rise of the affair from the
circumstance of my finding the picture;—the very strong presumptive proofs that
Lady Lucinda Harrington was the delineator—at least the loser—with all the
ensuing corroborating circumstances of her thinking favorably
of me: that, therefore, I hastily—perhaps too hastily—determined upon going to
Bristol; my design, however, being only to get some acquaintance with the lady;
to which neither he nor my mother could make any reasonable objection; as, if I
liked her, and was accepted, none could lie against either her descent, her
connexions or her fortune;
and they were sure of his [my godfather’s] hearty concurrence.
My father then,
without telling him how foolishly I was entrapped by my own precipitancy and
Sir Philip’s great readiness [which I now do not wonder at] to dispose of his
niece, informed him of the young lady’s flight with Mr. Chapone;
whose name being George, was, in
some measure, the cause of the supposition, at least corroborated it, that I
was favored with her approbation.
I have many
times, Conway, been
ashamed of having had sufficient vanity to believe so easily this imaginary
conquest; yet when all circumstances and incidents are considered, a wiser
fellow than myself might have been mis-led. The
incidents, it may be said, were very slight ones. True: and so must all incidents be which
discover the instant affection of a delicate woman. It must be a gross affair,
indeed, which under such circumstances is delivered in plain terms; and were I
the object of a predilection, declared without any regard to that modest,
hesitating timidity, so bewitching on these occasions, I believe my disgust
would be sooner excited than even my compassion; whereas a prepossession in my favor concealed—suppressed—and at length accidently discovered, would—must—were my heart free and
the object amiable—create in my soul a real and ardent affection. I should not
be such a pitiful coxcomb as to disesteem and slight a lady's tender regard because it
was given me unsought. Far from a generous mind must ever be such senseless
ingratitude; therefore as there were some circumstances which favored the idea of her partial opinion of me—such as her
seeming to be so disordered at hearing I was expected at the ball as even to
faint—occasioned probably by the sudden and, perhaps, unlooked-for appearance
of her beloved Chapone (for being, as you may
suppose, pretty attentive to the relation, I remember Miss Parker said
something about the servants entering the room at that time with a message from
Sir Philip) her afterwards admiring so tenderly the name of George; then
earnestly begging she might be hurried away, because of her being so
discomposed, before the arrival of the Alverston
carriage; and these, with other minutiae, so
corroborated by the seeming certainty of her having dropped the vellum-case—an incident constantly
upper-most in my remembrance—that I could not, I even now think, act otherwise than I did,
consistently with generosity; except I had determinedly given way to my
admiration of the dear Maria; but as there was in that, some impropriety—in the pursuit of this, none—I think I deserve the
attribution of some merit for sacrificing my real inclination to prudent and humane
considerations; and had I succeeded—and the lady’s predilection and character
answered the given account—I should have been extolled to the skies for the
delicacy and true generosity of my proceedings.
There, Charles!
I think I have got myself off very handsomely. If ever I am called to the bar
of justice, I most assuredly will be my own pleader.
With the
account which my father gave of this affair, Mr. Slayton seemed quite
satisfied. “So, so, so! Well, well! So, so! this is all right; all fair; all
right”—was repeated over and over. “I am pleased to find the boy has some thoughts of marrying. And I am glad his heart—as I hope it is—is his
own. I was afraid—faith I was afraid—But well, well; no fear I hope. All is as
it should be, I dare say. George is a good boy, upon the whole. But, pray now, who owns this picture? Faith,
it is like him” [for my mother, at the beginning of this conversation, had put
it into his hand]—“very much like him I think. Aye, I remember the time—I very
well remember it—when I myself was bewitched by a picture. But I want to know
who did it. To be sure—for this is a woman’s writing at the back; and very
pretty writing it is—to be sure it is somebody who is in love with him. I would
give fifty guineas to know who did it. Suppose we were to have it advertised!
Do you not think the owner would claim it?”
Thus
he ran on some time: for though my mother, to strengthen the circumstances from which my credulity
respecting Lady Lucinda’s prepossession, arose, showed him the portrait,
neither she nor my father thought it proper to acquaint him with the accidental
discovery of the morning; therefore gave no particular answer to his querying
observations.
When we
returned, we found my god-father in a wonderful good humour. He prated
incessantly during the whole time of supper, and after that was over, enquired
very particularly about my sister; when he was told it is expected she will be home
on Tuesday evening, accompanied by Miss Lawson. This enquiry was, I believe,
intended as a prelude to his next question, which was, what was become of the
fine Madam whom he saw when he was here before, that was her waiting-maid?
My mother told
him she left Alverston a few days back.
“And
pray,” turning his eye upon me, but addressing himself to her ladyship, “where
is she gone to?”
“To
London”—was my mother’s reply.
“To
what part of London?”
Nobody
knew; which he thought was very strange.
“Boy,”
[to me] “cannot you tell what is
become of this beauty?”
I cannot, sir.
But do you then allow her to be handsome?
"Well, and suppose I
do! Is that any thing to you?”
It gives me
pleasure, sir, when we agree in opinion.
"Then you
think her a beauty, do you sir?”
You ask the
question, my good god-father, as if an affirmative would displease
you; but I must answer truly. I do think
her the handsomest woman I ever saw; and I likewise think her a young woman of
great merit.
Charles, I
could not, for the soul of me, desist from giving this testimony to the dear
creature’s excellence: and, upon recollection, I am not sorry that I did; for as neither my father nor my
mother could have any reason (save from the discovery of the morning) to
suppose I was under any concern about her, my open manner of speaking was the
most likely way to quiet any apprehensions which that discovery might have
given rise to; and on their own account I
do not wish them to form any vexing suppositions.
The old Squire
looked alarmed, and with his head on one side—“Then, sir, I suppose you know to
what place this pretty creature is retired.”
I just now told
you, sir, that I did not, and it
is a new thing for any one who knows me to question my veracity.
"Mighty
well, sir: mighty well. But you need not be so snappish on the occasion.
However, if you don’t, you don’t, and there’s an end of it.”
"I
think," said my father, "George has lately given some proof
that his heart is at liberty.”
"Why
true," replied the other, “and upon that account,
as well as from the consideration I before mentioned, I am pleased with the
story you have been telling me.”
After this, the
evening was finished with universal good humour; and could I have had the least
probable hope of ever gaining intelligence of my dear enslaver, I should have
enjoyed the happiness of those around me.
At present, I
know not what to determine upon. Going to London to find, at Mrs. Douglas’s
house, some of her relatives, and to ask if
they can give any intelligence of MARIA BIRTLES, is all I can think
of. I will therefore take hold of the first plausible pretence for a trip to
town; for I have no other resort. To avoid setting afloat any suspicions, I
will wait till I have a seeming call to go up on some other occasion; as it is
not long since I declared my intention of not seeing London till the birth-day;
and that I should then return as soon as it was over. The house in Grosvenor Square will now soon be compleated.
Had not the workmen been idle, it might have been done long since; but Jephson says it is now habitable.
To that I will go; and surely I shall stand some chance of finding out something, one way or other, by means of
the people at Mrs. Douglas’s; if the house in which she lived, opposite my
father’s, be now occupied; and I should think her executors cannot yet have disposed of its
furniture.
For the present
adieu.
Remember I
shall be impatient for some intelligence subsequent to Evelyn’s account.
GEORGE
STANLEY.
LETTER,
XV.
SIR
CHARLES CONWAY, TO THE REV.
HERBERT
EVELYN.
Yarmouth,
March 29th.
SINCE you left me, my dear Evelyn, I have spent three very
disagreeable days; and should, in consequence of the occasion, immediately
leave Yarmouth, had I not weakly given a promise to stay another fortnight,
unless unexpectedly called away by business of consequence.
What will you
conjecture respecting my situation with Mrs. Digby,
when I tell you that it is her to whom this promise—this extorted promise—has
been given!
Be not, my friend, under any alarm on my
account. Mrs. Digby keeps the same place in my opinion which she possessed when you
left Yarmouth.
And now for the
communication, which friendship demands, of the particulars of my present
situation.
Very soon after
you were gone, Mrs. Digby sent a card requesting to
see you on business of the greatest consequence; desiring you to settle your
engagements in such a manner as to enable you to afford her, at least, an hour
of your company. This card, which was carelessly folded in a piece of paper
unsealed, I made no scruple to take from its cover and peruse, supposing it to
be a matter of trifling consequence, but after I had read it, I did not (for
her delicacy’s sake) wish her to think I was acquainted with her having made
the request, therefore covered it with another piece of paper, in which I
informed her of your departure and the
occasion of it; for being persuaded that my conjectures of her
seeing you with a favorable eye, were to receive a
confirmation in the desired conversation, I did not judge it right she should
have reason to think you had left Yarmouth without paying your respects to her,
but on pressing business; not knowing what effect a certainty of her partiality
might have on your sentiments and tenderness. I, therefore, informed her that I
expected your return as soon as your new engagements would permit. Impressed
with the opinion I have mentioned—guess, if you can, the surprise with which I read
a letter, received on the evening of the day, directed to myself on a subject
so unexpected, that, during my perusal of it, I several times adverted to the
direction, to see if my eyes had not deceived me.
Delicacy—generosity—honor would
have obliged me to have for ever buried the contents of this letter in
oblivion, had not Mrs. Digby’s unguarded behaviour and her determination to
write to you on the subject, made
it absurd to even attempt concealment. However I do not wish it to transpire from either
you or me, but to be hushed on all sides as soon as possible.
Mrs.
Digby, in one part of her letter, expressed
sentiments of distraction at the idea of my leaving Yarmouth without seeing
her; yet anticipated the pleasure she should receive from my visit, in such
terms as showed she should construe my going, into a profession of a consonant regard; though she previously
urged me to hasten, on her account, my departure.
But I cannot,
Herbert, enter into the particulars of this very incoherent epistle, which
distressed me beyond imagining. She says she has a particular reason for
writing to you upon the subject. Probably because she believes you have
considerable influence with me, which she hopes to persuade you to exert in her
favor.
I am well
convinced I need not ask you to forbear the task.
It was some
time before I could determine upon what method I ought to pursue. To go, as she
first desired, immediately from Yarmouth, and without seeing her, would render
me liable to two very disagreeable imputations—either that I was conceitedly
afraid of my own powers, and therefore forbore seeing her from motives of
compassion; or that I meant to show a silent contempt of her expressions of
kindness: both which constructions must have been very humiliating to her. By
attending her, I was certain I should inevitably experience a great degree of
pain; but I concluded that I ought not to excuse myself on that
consideration. It appeared, therefore, as if the only proper mode of conduct
would be to make her a visit previous to my leaving the town; at which, all I
should have to do would be to endeavour to unite a proper degree of
conciliation with firmness.
When thus
determined, I wrote her a note, intimating my intention of removing from
Yarmouth, but that I would call upon her to take my leave at any time it was
agreeable to her to appoint.
From this my
whole intention must be obvious, but, by what has followed, I am persuaded she
was determined not to see it in a light contrary to her inclinations. Had I
been sooner convinced of this, my work would have been easier.
An answer to my
note, appointed Saturday evening for my visit. I went, and was received
with—But I cannot go through the subject. My firmness was strongly attacked;
and had I not been greatly fortified by an undiminished and most invincible
affection for a woman of quite a contrary character, my imbecility of mind,
upon the occasion, might have led me into still greater inconveniencies than I now am under. In the
most respectful manner I acknowledged to Mrs. Digby
the situation of my heart; assured her that I was perfectly sensible of the honor of having her good opinion, for which I wished to
make all possible return; but that, from my prepossession, a consonant one was
not in my power.
I omit giving
you her part of the conversation,
save that she requested me to promise I would not marry within the next twelve
months. This I absolutely refused, because I thought it wrong to concede so
far, as it might lead her to form conjectures which could never be realized.
She then abated in her request, by pressing me to tell her I would not, within
twelve months, marry without giving her some
previous information. To this I objected, likewise; but she appeared
so much hurt by my refusing such a trifle, which she said could no way injure
me, and might be a means of her reconciling herself to an event—so grievous,
she chose to term it,—and asked it with such wild
earnestness, that not thinking it of any great consequence, I gave
her the promise she required; after which, she prevailed upon me for the other,
with the mention of which I began my letter. So here I stand—hampered, by
weakly yielding to what my judgment tells me I ought to have resisted. On her account resisted—if I am to admit the
reality of her prepossession.
Never
let it be said that the female sex are weak and defenceless. They have arms
invincible when they are exerted with prudence and delicacy; such as the
bravest hearts and wisest heads must bow before. It is only those undesirable
members of society, who are hardened beyond the feelings of humanity, that can
withstand their influence.
How Mrs. Digby managed it I cannot tell, but she has not lost either
in dignity or
delicacy, by the extraordinary step she has taken. On the contrary she has, in
my eye, rather raised herself upon the occasion. I believe if I were to give
you the whole of her letter, I should exalt her in your opinion; and yet its
expressions are so favorable to myself that I cannot
submit it to any other’s perusal.
Time here seems
now to drag heavily. After next Sunday I hope you will, with propriety, be able
to leave Alverston for a few weeks.
You are now,
Herbert, introduced into one of the best families upon earth. How exquisitely
happy have I been at Alverston Park!—a place where I
cannot expect ever to meet with happiness again.
I am, as you
will perceive, exceedingly low. Mrs. Digby, instead
of drawing my ideas from Emma
Stanley, has caused them to revert to her with increasing liveliness. A needle
once touched by a magnet will ever remain steady to its attractive pole; to
which it will fly with the same avidity that it resists the other. I need not
otherwise explain the state of my heart.
Since I began
this, I have had a letter from Mr. Stanley. He probably arrived at Alverston on Saturday night; a circumstance upon which I
dwell with pleasure; the idea of your introduction to him affording me peculiar
satisfaction. Tell him he shall soon hear from me; and congratulate him in my
name upon the very happy turn his affairs have taken; the account of which gave
me more relief than any thing I have met with lately.
What shall I
say to this friend of my heart respecting Mrs. Digby?
To conceal any thing from him
would be new to me, and would seem a breach of that friendship which has so
long cemented our minds. Yet to disclose, unnecessarily,
such an affair as this, is not quite consistent with my ideas of
that honor with which we ought to treat every
individual of the gentler sex. But by a hint in his letter, he has, I find,
some suspicion of her bias; from—he says—a
thorough knowledge of her character; upon which subject he tells me he will,
some other time, write more at large. Mr. Stanley seems to entertain but very
indifferent thoughts of Mrs. Digby. It is possible
that a knowledge of the explicitness with
which she has treated me, may raise his opinion. You will easily come at his
sentiments upon this, and indeed upon every subject; for his heart is as open
as your own. I therefore leave to your discretion the management of the matter.
For the
present, my friend, I will bid you farewel. You will
write to me soon; and if you have heard any thing of Miss Stanley, will
transmit the intelligence.
CHARLES
CONWAY.
LETTER,
XVI.
COLONEL
GREVILLE, TO LORD FITZMURRAY.
Alverston Park, Monday night, March
30th.
A Curse upon fortune for a jilting jade! Our plan
is entirely ruined: at least for the present.
In the first place—George Stanley is
returned. He therefore would join
in pursuit of the girls and spoil my sport, could the seizure be effected,
which is impossible, as they were to leave Woodstock this morning, and are
expected at Alverston to-morrow evening. Who the
plague thought of this little witch’s so soon quitting Oxfordshire! I supposed
she meant to stay there a considerable time, or our work should have been
executed long ago. Had I received the information respecting her return before
my journey hither, we might have laid a plan to have intercepted them: but it
is now too late to think about that. Would it answer any serviceable purpose, I
should execrate till my pen would be worn to a stump. As it is, I may spare
myself the plague of raving about what irritates my very soul. The skirts of my plan must now be changed. I
will proceed by sap, till another opportunity offers of securing by storm this
seemingly impregnable fortress. For a time I will drop the hero,
and assume the submissive, though adoring swain. Who knows but time may give me
an interest in the affection of my nymph!
I am now
stationed at Alverston, and mean to continue here for
a considerable period; it being a place always pleasant to me, on account of
the distinguished treatment I have received at it, ever since my rescue of the
lovely Emma from the soldier’s ruthless element: and if I seem, though with
reluctance, to give up my pursuit, there cannot be any reason why that friendly
treatment should not be continued.
The young
parson, who I told you accompanied Sir Charles Conway, is amongst the groupe at the Park. He is come to take possession of the Alverston Rectory. Him I design to make a tool of;
whispering in his ear a tale, as if in confidence, though in ambiguous
language, respecting a little love affair between Miss Stanley and his most
obedient humble servant; which tale he will indubitably convey to his other patron, the
Hawthorn-Grove Baronet.
Old Slayton,
George Stanley's
godfather, from Oakley-Hill, who is to give riches to this already rich family,
left the Park this morning. I was not sorry he decamped before I arrived, as I
query if he would much approve my union with his fair cousin; because, though I
am a votary, I am not one of the favorites of his master Plutus;
so ungrateful is the monster to my sacrifices.
I can tell you,
Lord Fitzmurray, I have difficulties enow before me to excite the spirit of chivalry to
action;—difficulties so great, that was not the reward, in view, of a most
glorious shining quality, a
little persuasion would lead me to relinquish the pursuit: but Emma Stanley, decked with golden ore, is more than I can
forbear.
Let
me, my lord, have a letter from you; but order Bridgen
to direct it, and seal it with a common head. It must not be known that you and
I correspond, as that might be destructive to some future design. Adieu.
Yours,
with esteem,
ARCHIBALD
GREVILLE.
LETTER,
XVII.
MISS
LAWSON, TO MISS MARIA LEWIS.
Alverston, Tuesday evening, March 31st.
IN safety, health and spirits, we arrived, my
dear Maria, at Alverston Park, about half an hour
back, and it is now near eight. I write the first moment I can get opportunity,
that my revered friends at Woodstock may, as soon as possible, be eased of
their anxiety. Miss Stanley sends more love; duty
and thanks than I will undertake to convey. Love to
you; duty to the mama and aunts, and thanks to all, is, she says, her meaning.
As for my heart, Maria—the poor thing is
overwhelmed by its own sensibilities. Remember me to all at dear Woodstock in a language expressive of
the utmost tenderness.
My mother
forbids my writing to her; my aunt refuses to hear from me. Both constitute you
to be the Receiver General of my
letters. And why? Because they wish to give pleasure to me and to you; and
command as an instance of duty what is, in fact, the highest indulgence.
But how I lose time, Maria! Would any mortal woman,
except she were as stupid as myself, sit scribbling up-stairs when there are in
the drawing-room three smarts of the highest order! First — Mr. Stanley. And
indeed, first he is in all companies; though I never before saw him so
in-alert. Next, Colonel Greville. Of these two
gentlemen you have often heard mention: but the third is a character new to
both you and me. The Reverend Herbert Evelyn, distinguishes him by name. A
very handsome, sensible young man; perfectly polite and accomplished, and of apparent
sweetness of temper, gives him by description. He has been at Yarmouth with Sir
Charles Conway, and is now come to receive from Sir Edward Stanley the living
of Alverston.
Emma is this
instant come up. Her spirits are low. Sir Charles Conway has, probably, been
mentioned. His name always affects her. Colonel Greville’s
presence distresses her too. She owes him gratitude, but he seeks affection.
Emma has none to give him.
We found Sir
Edward but very so, so. Lady Stanley looks as well as I ever saw her. Emma and
I met with a rapturous reception: but I think her brother and she are more
ceremonious than usual. All on account of the discontinuance of the engagement
between his sister and Sir Charles Conway.
Dear lovely
Emma Stanley! How greatly is she to be pitied! Her happiness is entirely destroyed.
But I must, my
Maria, bid you farewel.
CHARLOTTE
LAWSON.
LETTER,
XVIII.
MR.
EVELYN, TO SIR CHARLES CONWAY,
Alverston, Tuesday night, March 31st.
YOUR letter, my dear Sir Charles, has just now reached
me; and its contents have very much distressed me, because I know the subject
upon which you write has pained you greatly.
Surely
Mrs. Digby's proceedings are extremely singular. That she
saw—and even acknowledged she saw—you
were distinguished in the qualities of your mind, shall be attributed to her as
a merit; but her
method—her manner—is strikingly particular.
Yet let me
suspend my censures. I may be too
hasty in forming my opinion.
Her letter to
me—for she actually did write, was dated Saturday, yet it reached me
but with yours of Sunday. Her style is truly whimsical. When we meet I will
show it to you. I must now be brief on this subject, as the servant is just
going off with letters to the post.
With respect to
matters here—I am at some loss what to say; for though, my dear sir, the
greatness of your mind makes a palliation of real truth unnecessary, yet I
could wish to be spared giving you any intimations which would raise
disagreeable ideas, could I forbear, consistently with the sincerity I owe you.
Mr. Stanley
reached Alverston on Saturday; on which night I slept
at the Rectory; but on Sunday I was introduced to him, and at once found him to
be all that my raised imagination had led me to expect. We were FRIENDS
directly. Of him, I need not say any more.
Sir Edward and
Lady Stanley are, in my opinion, amongst the most exalted of the human race. Of
them likewise, so well are they known to you, this is sufficient. My reception
from them, and from the people in
general, was such as you predicted. I do not see the least prospect of any
difficulty respecting parish affairs.
Mr. Slayton,
from Oakley-Hill, came to Alverston on Sunday. He
jealously interrogated
Mr. Stanley respecting the Maria Birtles whom you
wished me to observe with attention. She has left the Park about a fortnight. I
have several times heard her name mentioned, and find she stands very high in
every one’s opinion.
On Monday came
Colonel Greville. He is, I observe, distinguished at Alverston, on account of some eminent service afforded by
him to Miss Stanley. His complaisance, though he seems, with almost
officiousness, to court my acquaintance, does not gratify even my vanity. His
mind and mine can never mingle. In an undoubting manner he speaks of your being
soon to be his cousin. That this assertion is advanced to farther his
designs, which are professedly directed to Miss Stanley, I cannot absolutely
affirm, but such appears to me to be his motive, for so industriously talking
upon the subject. Occasionally, I oppose the
intimation; but he bows; smiles, and tells me he must beg my pardon, that he
perceives I am not in the secret; but that he can affirm, from the first
authority, that matters are en train.
His assurance
absolutely puts me out of countenance; and his assertions are so flat and
peremptory, that without an open disclosure of particular circumstances, I
cannot, at present, contradict
him with success. However his hardiesse determined
me to show your letter to Mr. Stanley: the effect it had upon him you will
easily conceive. It was with difficulty he afterwards behaved with politeness
to Colonel Greville. Something, he says, very
mysterious is, to use his own expression, floating in the air, which he is
determined to reach and explore, after a little silent observation. The Colonel
has intimated to me, as if in confidence, (yet still as a matter with which he
seems to suppose I must have some knowledge) his having made proposals in
form to the father; mother, and brother of—shall I tell you that he says—of his Emma?—giving an idea that the plan
was pursued in pre-concert with herself, and that he hoped very soon to be
honored with her hand by joint approbation.
This is the sum
of a few minutes of
accidentally-private conversation: he officiously making such a use of an opportunity afforded by Mr.
Stanley’s being summoned to attend Sir Edward in his study. We were interrupted
by the arrival of company. I have not since been alone with Mr. Stanley, or I
should have had his sentiments upon this communication.
There was such
an air of mystery in what the Colonel infused,
that had I not formed an opinion of Miss Stanley quite opposite to such
a proceeding, I should have concluded they had long been upon what is called a
good understanding with each other; and this floating idea did not loose strength from his arrival at Alverston just before Miss Stanley’s return; who I have
still to tell you, has been for three or four days expected home as this
evening.
Now my dear
friend, if there be any truth in
these insinuations; and if, they would have any influence upon your
determination—And yet it cannot be that you—But what am I saying! We are such
incompetent judges of the fit and unfit—and a person of the most exalted
character is (for doubtless great reasons—such as correcting error, and
levelling the mental qualities of mankind) so often paired with one less
meritorious—that I know not how to fix my judgement; therefore lay before you all particulars, as you
then may form and draw your own conjectures and conclusions.
Sir Edward
Stanley has insisted upon my residing at the Park till my return to Yarmouth
(which, if Mr. Clark can officiate at Alverston for a
short time, will probably be next week) but I often walk to the Rectory to set
on foot some few necessary arrangements; this worthy baronet having taken upon
himself to answer for all delapidations. After tea, this afternoon,
Mr. Stanley accompanied me to my new territories. Colonel Greville
chose to stay within; as it appeared, to receive Miss Stanley; who, just before
we reached the Park on our return, was driven up the avenue with her friend
Miss Lawson, so I saw not the meeting between her and her military admirer; but
I afterwards thought she treated him with a kind of reserved freedom;—if you can understand opposite words so
united—and in spite of the natural liveliness of her temper, evident in her
first appearance, I observed at times, a kind of pensiveness inconsistent with
meeting a favored lover.
And
now my dear Sir Charles, having given you materials which will enable you to
form your judgement, I will conclude my letter with expressing most ardent
wishes for your enjoying all the happiness this world can afford, as far as it
will be consistent with your pursuit of happiness hereafter, subscribing myself
your
greatly obliged,
most
grateful, and
most
affectionate friend,
HERBERT
EVELYN.
LETTER,
XIX.
MR.
MAYNARD, TO MRS. MAYNARD.
Kildwick, March 31st.
MY
DEAREST HARRIET,
BEFORE this reaches you, you will, I hope,
have received a six-line scribble, dated from Nottingham, to inform you of my
safe arrival at that town. I
now write from the snug habitation of one of the most respectable
and, at the same time, amiable Christian veterans I know amongst the order. I
have not been arrived more than two hours, but during that period I have wished
for you half a score times, as I know you would find yourself delighted with
the inhabitants of this rural dwelling; Miss Broomley
being the most charming little country maid I ever saw.
She is very
pretty and genteel; and, notwithstanding her garb is not in the London taste,
has an air of fashion hanging about her which surprised me. It is fashion in
its simplest style; consequently a thousand times more alluring than the
finished labours of a courtly belle.
But I must
reserve these kind of accounts till I see you.
The good Vicar
has so arranged all the particulars necessary to be attended to, that my work
here will be trifling. To morrow afternoon, therefore, I
hope to set off for Cumberland, where I shall just look about me and leave Valence to advertise
and finish the sale of the whole, if I find the farms are in such order as I
expect.
And now for a
matter still more immediately relative to the happiness of our Caroline.
I told you I
would, by some means or other, either in my going or return, manage if
possible, to see Mr. Slayton of Oakley Hill, and endeavour to learn from
him the circumstances of Mr. Stanley’s supposed pursuit of Lady Lucinda
Harrington. Stopping a few minutes at Mansfield, I took up a St. James’s
Chronicle, in which I saw the account of that young lady’s elopement with
her guardian’s valet. This eased my anxiety on that subject, as it left me to
conjecture Mr. Stanley’s being at liberty. However, I still wished to have some
conversation with this old Squire;
therefore finding his house was about two miles from Mansfield, and that it
stood pretty near the road, almost upon the top of the hill from whence it
takes its name, I walked forward, under pretence of being tired with riding; which,
by the bye, was more than
pretence; ordering the carriage to follow slowly in about an hour. The weather
was exceedingly fine, and this walk was really relieving. When I came pretty
near the gentleman’s habitation, which stood in a kind of park, though it could
not properly be called one, being surrounded by a neat clipped hedge, instead
of a pale, I sat down upon a stile, from which went a path to the house, where
I continued a considerable time without seeing a human creature; but at length
I observed a man coming out of a door in the middle of the building, who had in
his hand a short telescope, through which he looked, directing it to me. I
continued sitting till I saw him advance towards me, and when he was pretty
near, arose, crossed the stile, and went to meet him, making first my bow and
then my speech.
I
believe, sir, you have some curiosity to know the reason of my having sat so
long on yonder stile. To which he replied—“Why, sir, I must confess, I was
rather surprised to see a person of your appearance in such a situation; and I
came to learn the occasion of it, apprehending you might have received a hurt
by some accident.”
Your humanity, sir,
I returned, deserves acknowledgment. But that is not the case. I have travelled
several miles in a few hours; have still many more to go, and being tired with
riding, I walked from Mansfield up this hill, ordering my servants to follow
with the carriage, which I every minute expect.
Mr. Slayton
then expressed his wishes that I had walked to his house; giving me an
invitation then to go, if my
regard to time would permit; boasting of being able to amuse me with some
tolerable paintings.
I told him
painting was a science of which I was a passionate admirer; that, at that period, my time
was particularly limited; but that, with his permission, I would call
and look at his collection upon my return from the North; whither I was going
to transact some business relative to my uncle the Earl of Danvers.
This, as I
expected, immediately brought us acquainted. He put on a respectful air;
presumed my name was Maynard, and remembered having once had the honor of
dining with me at the late Lord Rushford’s, though he did not, at first,
recollect my person.
This
was beyond my hopes. I engaged to be his visitor, upon my return; and taking my
leave, for the chaise had been some minutes come up, was driven off, extremely
well satisfied with this beginning of my negociation.
Do not, my dear
Harriet, expect to hear from me again till my return from Cumberland to this
place. My straightest road home would be by Lancaster; Preston; Wigan, &c. but bating my wish to
call at Oakley-Hill, I must return this way, as I shall leave the final
adjustment of matters with Mrs. Pemberton, till I come back, or I must wait
here for the finishing some writings, longer than I else shall have occasion to
do. Not but that I really should be very happy to spend a few days with my
reverend friend in his tranquil abode, but my impatience to return to London
forbids my loitering.
I almost
despair of prevailing with Mr. Broomley to carry his Alethea—or even to permit her going—to St. James’s Square.
However, I shall, by and by, press still more strongly to see them both, either
there, or in Hertfordshire.
When I leave Kildwick I must proceed to Skipton,
from whence I intend writing to the worthy divine, to communicate Lord Danvers’
and Lady Caroline’s intention respecting his grand-daughter. I cannot tell him
of it, while with him, as I should be hurt at receiving any acknowledgments from a man so
much my superior.
My dearest
girl, farewel. I am already impatient to see you.
“The universe, without my Harriet, would appear to me as a desart." Write to me
upon the receipt of this, and direct it to the care of Mr. Broomley,
that it may be ready for me at my return; and about two days after, order
another to be left till demanded, at the post-office, Mansfield.
Yours,
with still encreasing affection,
AUGUSTUS
MAYNARD.
Be
cautious not to let Caroline know any thing of my self-introduction to Mr.
Slayton. Her delicacy would take the alarm, and prohibit my proceeding.
LETTER,
XX.
POLLY
FENTON, TO MISS MARIA LEWIS.
London,
Tuesday, March 31st.
MADAM,
I Was once deemed worthy of your
notice, and that of Mrs. Stanhope, but I confess I have long since lost all
pretensions to that honor. I will not—I need
not—enlarge upon the particulars which led to my destruction. You were too well
acquainted with them, and with the misery which was the consequence of my
deviating from the principles which good Mrs. Stanhope used to endeavour to
impress upon my mind, when she permitted my attendance upon you at Hampstead.
Had my father and mother treated me with half the tenderness I received from
her, I should not, though a stray sheep, have been a lost one. Their severity,
for which, when in the depth of wretchedness, I almost execrated their names,
drove me from error to guilt; from guilt—to guilt repeated and avowed. Oh! had
they fostered; soothed, and healed the wounded soul of the once humble—once
returning penitent! how much happier should we all have been Here and Hereafter!—For what can they
expect in another world, for having, in this, “bruised the broken reed.”
But, madam,
this is not the business of my letter. I am not now, I own, in a
repentant mood. Revenge—Revenge to one of
my guilty partners, by whom I have lately been again abandoned to poverty,
stimulates me to an act, which wants but purity of motive to procure me
applause.
About nine
months back, left in distress, by that agent of the devil’s, Lord Partington, who drew me from innocence and happiness at
once, I was glad to accept of a maintenance from Colonel Greville,
and lived in lodgings of his procuring, till he very lately, upon a pretence of
jealousy, drove me back to penury. While I was under his protection, he
transacted all business of consequence at the rooms he had furnished for my
reception, where, in a bureau (which stood in a little place called my
dressing-closet) he usually deposited all his letters and other papers, because
he thought them more secure there than at his lodgings in Pall-Mall, which,
when he went into the country, were generally left empty.
Near the latter
end of January, at which time Colonel Greville was
absent from England, I was sent for by a Mrs. Digby,
a relation of his, to go down into Leicestershire, there (assuming the name of
Matilda Barlowe) to act the part of a young woman
seduced by Sir Charles Conway; about which business I had had a hint given me
by the Colonel, previous to his leaving London, with a strict injunction to
attend to Mrs. Digby’s instructions. I obeyed, and, from really feeling the
force of the truths I was taught to utter, acted my part with success, as I have since found; for I was not then
made acquainted with the whole of the business: but a short time before this
ungrateful man causelessly quarrelled with me, that he might have some pretence
to throw me again upon the world poor and friendless, he heedlessly left, as
indeed he frequently did, the key in his bureau, which, at this time, excited
my curiosity, and knowing the Colonel was going out of town, not to return till
next day, I opened this repository, and observed such and such arched niches
were appropriated to such and such business, over which, pieces of paper were
affixed with wafers to signify the nature of the writings deposited in each
place; for Colonel Greville is a man of business as
well as pleasure; though I found in my search that his affairs are in a
shattered condition. Over the middle niche, to which was a little door locked
up, I saw Emma Stanley, which,
not knowing the lady by her real name, awakened in me some sentiments of
jealousy. I therefore endeavoured to find a key to fit the lock, which at last
I did, and examining the contents of the place, found the whole history, which
before I was only in part acquainted with, of my journey into Leicestershire;
it being all laid open in several long letters from Mrs. Digby
and Lord Fitzmurray. I will not tire you, madam, with
my sentiments upon what I read; but being desirous to peruse them with
attention, I carried them to my chamber, intending to re-place them before
Colonel Greville’s return, which, however I was
prevented doing by his coming back sooner in the morning than I expected, at
which time he locked the bureau, and put the key in his pocket. I trembled lest
he should miss the letters; till I recollected having re-locked the little door
within.
For two days I
watched for an opportunity to re-place the papers, knowing he would not pardon
what I had done, and I did not chuse to quarrel with
him till I had some security for a promised future maintenance; but for the
opportunity I wanted, I watched in vain; and on the third day after, he
fermented the dispute which occasioned my dismission.
I was ordered to quit my habitation within three hours, which I did; taking
with me the letters I had obtained, that I might use them to his confusion. It
is now just a week since I left him; during which period I have been very
miserable. Sometimes I have had thoughts of endeavouring to get my livelihood
in a reputable way; but the door seems shut against me, and repentance
banished.
Believe me,
madam, I did not, when I began, intend to write in this style. I verily think
it is from recollecting the character I am addressing, that some faint
compunction seems to arise. Oh! my dear young lady! you do not know—and may you
never know—the wretchedness—the deplorable wretchedness of guilt; especially
when those are involved in it who once had hope of happiness with innocence.
But
to what purpose do I go on thus! Before this reaches you, I, probably,
(and cannot help confessing it) shall have lost the ideas which are now
awakened.
I will proceed
to tell you how it came into my mind to send to you the enclosed packet of
letters, which I at first thought of conveying directly to Miss Stanley.
The day after I
left my late lodgings, I was seized with a violent rheumatic pain in my face,
occasioned by having caught cold, which continued to torment me for four or
five days, or I should, before this time, have wreaked my revenge. When I was
well enough to write, I began a letter to the lady above-mentioned, who, I had
reason to suppose, was then at Woodstock; but recollecting that the time which
Lord Fitzmurray had fixed for the execution of his
diabolical plot was near at
hand, I was apprehensive that my information might not reach her soon enough to
frustrate it, as I had not any certain direction to her, and having heard from
Betty Johnson that you were gone with Mrs. Stanhope to live at that place, I
had no doubt but that you must know the family of the Lawson’s whom Lord Fitzmurray talks about, therefore went to Mrs. Ashby, and
begged she would tell me how I must address a letter to you upon urgent
business. The good lady hesitated some time, but at length obliged me.
To you
therefore, madam, I transmit the whole of this important affair; being assured you will, from
better motives than I can boast, find out, and save, if possible, an innocent
young lady from destruction.
And now if you
could—But I am ashamed to ask it—Yet my necessities are so pressing, that if you could procure me some trifle—reward I dare
not call it—for the service my intelligence may be of, it would be a present
relief to an undeserving object, who always admired—though she had not the
grace to follow—the precepts she has often heard in your presence.
Any
little matter directed to me at Mrs. Burchell’s,
opposite St. Clement’s Church, in the Strand, will be
received with gratitude by, madam,
your
distressed,
but
ever respectful,
humble
servant,
MARY
FENTON.
LETTER,
XXI.
MISS
MARIA LEWIS, TO POLLY FENTON.
Woodstock,
first day of fourth month.
I Write to thee, Polly, by my aunt Stanhope's command, which
well agreeth with my own inclination, within five minutes
after the perusal of thy letter, to invite—to entreat—thy immediately coming to
the Lawn in Woodstock, where, my poor unhappy girl! thou wilt be received
without one reproach, and continue to be treated with the greatest tenderness
by one of the best women in the world.
Hasten, Polly,
hasten, instantly, to thy real
friends. Thy story here is not known. Fear not that thou shalt
ever be reminded of thy past errors with severity. We will endeavour—not to drive, but—to lead thee into the path from whence thou hast strayed, and
thou shalt be as secure of a future provision as the
instability of this world can give.
Now is the
time. Now, that adversity is
kindly sent to awaken the bitterness of self-reproach. Stay not till the
thorny, though flowery path, be again opened, lest, by once more entering it,
thou shouldest lose thyself for ever!
My dear aunt in
the first moment of zeal for thy real happiness, was going to send thee a draft
upon her banker; but fearing what she intended as a relief, should, by enlivening thy mind, and
causing thee to think of gayer scenes, prove thy sure destruction, she suppressed
her intention.
If thou hast
sufficient money to defray the expences of thy
journey hither, delay not thy setting out one hour. If thou art straitened in
that respect, carry the enclosed letter to Friend Ashby, and she will supply
thee with a sufficiency; but if thou art not in immediate want,
bring the letter back to Woodstock, whither thou must
come, if it be only to receive the gratuity which I dare promise thee from the
generosity of Emma Stanley; who, with her friend Charlotte Lawson, left
Woodstock yesterday morning; frustrating, I hope, thereby, the wicked plan of
that Greville, and him thou stilest
Lord Fitzmurray: but we shall not be quite at ease
about them till we hear they are safe arrived at Alverston.
And now, Polly,
farewel. In a few days I hope to see thee, when thou shalt be convinced I am still thy friend—thy
compassionating friend,
MARIA
LEWIS.
LETTER,
XXII.
MISS
MARIA LEWIS, TO MISS LAWSON.
Woodstock,
first day of fourth month.
TO give immediate ease to the anxiety my dear
Charlotte will be under upon opening a letter sent by a special messenger from
Woodstock, let me hasten to say that our friends here are all well, and that the packet I
am ordered to convey by this expeditious method, is more likely to produce
felicity, than its contrary, to those highest in thy estimation.
And now let me
endeavour to express the surprise—the astonishment—with which we were all
seized upon reading the letters which Richard, who is to give thee this, will have to deliver
to thee. When I say we, thou wilt understand that I mean thy mother and our two
aunts; for as soon as I had written to the young woman, whom, if thou receivest the packet in safety, thou wilt know by the name
of Polly Fenton, my aunt and I were driven off to thy house to call a
consultation; in which (after expressing our hopes that thou and our dear Emma
arrived last evening at the Park in safety; about which we were not very
apprehensive, as Richard said he saw you seated in the Alverston
carriage before he left you at Coventry yesterday morning) we all agreed in
thinking it right to send off a messenger to thee, late as it was, with the
information which hath so
greatly amazed us, lest Greville and Fitzmurray, disappointed in their original plot, should
form some other; and I was ordered up to thy closet to write a few lines,
during the time of Richard’s getting in readiness for the journey.
We anticipate
the sensations thou wilt experience on this occasion; and the dear Emma, and
indeed all who are interested in the event, are before us in imagination. But I
must not stay to express my sentiments. Let us have a minute account of every
circumstance relating to the unfolding this discovery, as thou must suppose the
subject will be the chief one, for some time, of our conversation.
Thy prudence,
my Charlotte, will have a trial. How thou wilt proceed, I cannot
conjecture. We have each of us
formed a separate guess, but I
will not tell thee what any one’s is, lest it should improperly bias thee; and
thou who art amongst those most interested, must, as my aunt observeth, be best qualified to know how to act in a case
so delicate respecting Emma Stanley.
Dear girl! what
pain must she experience before she can enjoy the felicity which will, we all
hope, result from this sad—this vile—and hitherto successful contrivance.
My letter is
now called for. Richard is ready. He engages to be with thee—no accident
intervening—to-morrow evening. By his return we hope to hear thou and Emma are
in safety.
Need
I say that all here join in the kindest remembrance—in sympathy and in
congratulation—
with
thy
MARIA
LEWIS!
As
I know thou wilt not be without anxiety respecting Polly Fenton, I have taken a
slight sketch of what I have written to her, to enclose for thy perusal.
LETTER,
XXIII.
MISS
LAWSON, TO MISS MARIA LEWIS.
Alverston, April 2d.
I Am all surprise! All confusion! All amazement! So pleased! So distressed! So
angry! So happy! What shall I do? How shall I manage? Why did not you tell me
how to proceed? Why did not my matronly friends send their advice? What shall I do? Mr. Stanley is so precipitate,
and Colonel Greville is here. Colonel Greville—vile
dissembler—is at Alverston,
Maria! But that I believe you have gathered from the horrid Fitzmurray’s last letter, though I have only just skimmed any of them
over. I had not time—I had not patience—to read them deliberately.
If I tell Mr.
Stanley — an immediate challenge will be the consequence. Yet sure he would not
draw his sword upon a visiter!
However, I dare not trust him: nor can I first tell my dear Emma.
Her delicacy would not permit her to either act or advise. I must unfold the
matter gently to Sir Edward and Lady Stanley. But what can they do! To be officious in preventing
Mrs. Digby’s detestable art from succeeding, would seem like inviting Sir
Charles Conway’s return to their daughter. Well, and what of that! Is not Sir
Charles too noble to misconstrue an act of bare rectitude! To be sure he is. I
wonder how I could let so false a delicacy one moment prevent my determining to
reveal the matter to them. I hope they will not delay writing to Sir Charles. I
hope their letter will reach him before it be too late to countermine that Mrs.
Digby’s dark workings.
With regard to
Colonel Greville—What can Sir Edward do about him?
But how I
perplex you and myself!
Richard shall
go directly back to Swarkston to get some rest. He
shall not stay here, lest Emma interrogates him. And what shall I say to her about his coming! I
must flatly tell her she must not know the business at present. But what a
perplexity will that be to such an active mind as hers, which is so greatly
interested in all that concerns me, as
she must suppose something that is going forward does particularly! However I must go through with it.
I will now send
off Richard, and will soon write again. You need not ask me to be minute in my
account of the process of this
affair. I shall not be able to forbear giving you every particular.
On Tuesday
evening I wrote you intelligence of our safe arrival at the Park. You will
probably receive that scribble before this reaches Woodstock.
The
drawing-room is filled with company who dined here. I shall, I dare say, be
abominably absent the whole evening. I believe a dance, after tea, has been proposed. If I can be
excused, I will again retire to my pen and ink.
My dear Maria farewel. Dispose of my love and duty.
CHARLOTTE
LAWSON.
Pray ask my
mother or aunt to look into my large cabinet and to take from the middle drawer
a letter from Emma Stanley dated, as I well remember, the sixteenth of
February. It is an account of her dismission of Sir
Charles Conway. Let this be enclosed in your next.
LETTER,
XXIV.
COLONEL
GREVILLE, TO LORD FITZMURRAY.
Alverston April, 2d, 1789.
YOUR messenger is now arrived. Well may you,
as I have done and still do, curse that vile strumpet Fortune. But be
comforted. All is not yet lost: on the contrary, we may find ourselves gainers
by this present frustration of our enterprise.
I wrote to you
on Tuesday evening, when I was most plaguily out of
humour. Since that time I have been better, as I think I make considerable
progress in my amour, and I doubt
not but I shall conquer by submission. If my hopes are fallacious, and I mean
very soon to try their strength, I shall call upon you to assist in the
execution of a project I have been three days in digesting, which will
effectually answer both your purpose and mine. For have her I will; or die in
the attempt. You know the strength of my determinations, when once they are
fixed.
I will just
give you a hint of my new intention.
In a week or
two, if the baronet’s gout be civil—which I shall pray that it may; and of the
efficacy of my prayers who ever doubted?—we are to make an excursion to an
estate of his honor’s which lies along the coast of
North Wales. Need I say any more? Will not this hint, to a man so perfect as
you are in the science of intrigue, be sufficient?
If this
meditated event takes place you shall have due notice, that previous to execution, you may come in your seamans habit down to Derby, where we may meet and consult
about particulars.
But
if my goddess should be kind, and I have great faith in that conjecture, I will
furnish out some plan for your amusement. You are, it must be confessed, the
most active spirit in England when you are well set to work. What a strange
thing, then, it is, that you cannot cut out for yourself. I know you hate to be
idle, for which reason I was doubly sorry for the frustration of the Woodstock
business. But never fear—I will soon employ you some way or other.
I fancy the Alverston Parkites universally
credit Conway’s going to be married to Mrs. Digby,
notwithstanding this plaguey parson hints to the
contrary; and that idea, probably, smooths Miss
Stanley’s brow when she looks at me.
This Charlotte
Lawson is, I believe, a confounded spirited girl. Her eye is sometimes turned
upon me with such a penetrating cast, as if she would dive into the recesses of
my heart. Once or twice I have almost thought she was in love with me.
But I must
finish. The drawing-room
is crowded with beauties. After tea we are to have a dance. Emma Stanley must
dance with me.
George is,
sometimes, very queer; but I pass it over, for
the present. The baronet and his lady are still, upon all occasions,
my obliged humble servants. I
have not, you know, had a negative—strangely
ungrateful if I had—from any one of the family but the girl herself; and
to her I shall soon renew my addresse, which
I think will not now mortally offend.
Adieu.
ARCHIBALD
GREVILLE.
LETTER,
XXV.
MISS
LAWSON, TO MISS MARIA LEWIS.
Alverston, Friday morning.
NOTWITHSTANDING we sat up last night to a
very late hour, I arose this morning with the sun, that I might uninterruptedly
pursue my subject of yesterday.
Emma is, I
believe, still asleep, and I am fearful of making the least noise lest I should
disturb her.
I will now give
you an account of my first reception of your letter.
We had
yesterday, as I told you, a great deal of company to dinner; after which, we
walked to the green-house to look at a very beautiful shrub, for which we do
not yet know a name, that arrived last week as a present from Captain Sellinger; and as we returned, we observed a man riding
pretty fast up the avenue, which I soon perceived to be Richard, and was,
consequently, considerably alarmed; therefore hastened to meet him as he alighted, when the
faithful creature, seeing my anxiety, immediately told me I need not be
frightened, for that all was well at Woodstock; he then gave me your letter,
and after that, the packet, with which I hastened to my chamber, and, after
skimming the contents, wrote the incoherent scribble which I gave to Richard,
and was just going down with it, to send him off, when Miss
Stanley entered the room.
“What,
Charlotte,” hastily asked she, “is the matter at Woodstock?”
Nothing, my
dear Emma, that is, in any degree, unpleasant.
“But
what,” said the dear girl, “occasioned Richard’s coming to Alverston?
And what is the cause of the hurry in which I see you?”
Will you, my
Emma (smiling in her face) be patient for a short time without my telling you
the particulars of the packet I just now received?
“Why,
Charlotte, you astonish me. What can be
going forward that I must not know?”
If I tell you
that I expect soon to hear of a wedding, you will still be inquisitive about the
parties; especially if I add that they are amongst the number of those in whose
happiness I am greatly interested.
"I will be
whipped if Rachel be not going to be married.”
Emma be quiet.
You must not sift. In a few days you shall know the whole. Ask not one more
question, for she was going to speak; I must not yet hear another syllable upon
the subject. And down I went, she following me, repeating—“I am all
astonishment!”
Having
dispatched Richard to Swarkston, I returned to the
drawing-room, where, as soon as I entered, Mr. Evelyn,
who improves upon me every time I see him, approached me, and led me to a seat
in one of the bow windows, placing himself next me, upon which Emma soon joined
us, and we entered into a pleasant conversation on the subject of
secret-keeping; which, had I not more consequential business in hand, I would
amuse you with. At last Emma promised to be very good, and very patient, till I
thought it right to develope the mystery—for she had
told Mr. Evelyn I was a secret in her debt.
It now, for the
first time, occurred that this very gentleman was the most proper person, of
all others in the world, to manage the whole of this important affair. To him,
therefore, I instantly determined to apply; wondering it had not been my first
and immediate resolve. I now cast about how to find an opportunity, and
in what manner to begin; when the purposed dance presented itself to my idea,
and all in a flutter, without any consideration, and I verily believe,
preventing him
from making, that instant, the request of me—I exclaimed—O Mr. Evelyn!
will you—will you dance with me this evening?
The moment I had
spoken, that moment I recollected the seeming impropriety of what I had said,
and began to stammer out an apology, by telling him that as extraordinary as my
proceeding might appear, I believed I should be justified when my motive was
explained, which — and was going on, when he interrupted me by saying that he
thought himself affronted by any apology; as I could only think it necessary to
make one, by supposing him so void of penetration as to believe I could say or
do any thing inconsistent with the strictest rules of rectitude and delicacy;
which in his own justification he must take leave to say, was diametrically
opposite to the idea he had, at first seeing me, imbibed, and which, with encreasing conviction, he continued to entertain.
Do you not think
that I was pleased
with this compliment? I was indeed. I never remember myself to have been so
gratified by flattery; for never before did I hear it conveyed with such a
grace; or with so much modesty and seeming sincerity.
Now, Maria, do
not be ill-natured, and criticise the honesty of my acknowledgements. Surely
one may yield due praise to a deserving object without—without. I really do not
know what to say to you, because you will think—What am I talking about! I was
so earnest in my supposition that you would judge me strictly, that I almost
fancied I heard you speak.
Mr. Evelyn—to go on with my story—reconciled me to
myself, by assuring me he was just going to solicit the honor of my hand for the
evening, when I, with such a frankness, as adorned my character, anticipated
his intention.
Tea was now
brought in; soon after which, country-dances commenced. Miss Stanley was
engaged, greatly I saw against her approbation, to Colonel Greville.
Mr. Stanley danced with Miss Emmeline Stafford: but
he was so very inanimate, that it was not in the power of his agreeable partner
to enliven him. How the rest were paired is not of much consequence. We had ten
couples.
When Mr. Evelyn went up to me to lead me into the line, I
said—I do not wish to dance much, I want to talk to you. However, we must go
down once or twice. I will not, Maria, say that he was the best partner I ever
danced with, because it will again lead you to criticise. And yet, how can I,
good Doctor Griffith! be afraid of the censures of your little dove? My gentle friend, I ask your pardon.
Forgive me, and do not say I was conscious.
At the end of
the second dance I sat down in a distant part of the room; Mr. Evelyn by me; when without any circumlocution, for I was
afraid of its being remarked if I sat long there, I told him every particular
of the affair in question.
No expressions
of surprise that I ever before observed, exceeded those which, while I was
speaking, appeared in Mr. Evelyn’s countenance, mixed with an equal share of
indignation. He never once interrupted me during the whole of my narrative,
which I ended with telling him the reason of my not daring to trust Mr. Stanley
upon the occasion.
“Exceedingly
right, Miss Lawson—exceedingly considerate. But where shall I find language to
speak the surprise—the abhorrence—the happiness—which
fills my mind upon this discovery. Have you, madam, the letters in your
pocket?”
No,
Sir: but I will go up for them, and will give them to your servant; who,
without any particular appearance, may call you out to deliver them. Do not
hasten your return on my account; I will go and sit by the card tables, for I
am not much in the humour for dancing; therefore I beg you will read all the
letters with attention, beginning with that signed Mary Fenton, that your
judgment may have every thing in view.
“Excellent
Miss Lawson!”—was all I allowed him time to say, for hastening out of the room,
I went up for the letters, gave them to his servant, and returned to the
ball-room. He was soon called out, and I went and sat by Lady Stanley; saying
to those who enquired for my partner, that he was sent for out upon some
business.
In
about half an hour he returned. When he entered the room his eyes, darting
fire, seemed to seek Colonel Greville; whom, he
afterwards told me, he was obliged industriously to avoid speaking to; it being
impossible to treat him with common civility.
As soon as Mr. Evelyn could get an opportunity of speaking at large,
without particular observation, he said he never before met with an incident
which had raised such a variety of passions; that it was impossible for him to
convey the least adequate idea of his sentiments upon the letters I had given
him. Miss Stanley, from what I had told him of her sentiments and conduct, was,
he thought, still more to be pitied than Sir Charles Conway; as he had only to endure—she to inflict and endure likewise—sufferings of the most acute
nature. Persuaded as Miss Stanley was (and as any one must have been by such a
train of artful falsehoods) that rectitude required a discontinuance of the
engagement between her and Sir Charles, she had acted most nobly indeed; and
her character was fixed, in his opinion as one of the first amongst women. With
regard to Mrs. Digby—he knew not how to express
himself; as the softest language he could use, with any degree of sincerity,
would be more harsh than he should wish to deliver in my presence. Against
Colonel Greville he was, if possible, still more irritated, because of his
after-plans. Lord Fitzmurray he knew personally, as
well as by his character, which, to speak without ceremony, was that of a fool
and a libertine—a mere tool to any one who would set him at work in an
intrigue, however vile and hazardous. His description of this wretch made me
shudder at recollecting the danger from which my dear Emma and I have so
providentially been delivered; for which I hope my heart, and hers, when she is
apprized of it, will
ever feel truly grateful.
Mr. Evelyn expressed an anxiety for Polly Fenton’s future
welfare; and seemed apprehensive she might suffer from Colonel Greville’s vengeance, should he hereafter find out that it
was she who had made this discovery; upon which I told him in what manner you
had replied to her letter.
And now, Maria,
I must desire you not to come to Alverston till my
conquest be confirmed, for I very much apprehend your power would be absolute.
The difference of your persuasions would stand me in but little stead; because
the liberality in both your hearts is so distinguishable that though each would
prefer partners with similar sentiments—However I will not anticipate evil, and
rather than appear to be a coward, will invite
danger by expressing my most ardent wishes that you, my dear girl,
may hasten, as soon as Mrs. Stanhope’s indisposition will permit, to this
enchanting scene, where you will meet with characters similar to those
celebrated in the Golden Age.
Do not think,
Maria, that by an enchanting scene, I
mean the illuminated ball-room in which I was last night engaged. Whenever my
taste is so vitiated as to prefer (or put in competition) a confined space
enlightened by the most heightened brilliancy of wax-candles, and prepared for
the reception of even royal birth-night visiters, to
a rural prospect gilded by the rays of sun, or by moon, renounce me as a
friend; it being impossible to happen whilst my senses continue entire, and my
heart uncorrupt.
Mr. Evelyn was visibly affected by my account of Mrs.
Stanhope’s intention respecting the poor unhappy creature who unfolded this
important matter, and by the manner in which that intention was communicated to
her; saying that you, however, must not monopolize the merit of providing for
her in future.
He then greatly honored me by asking my advice how to proceed. I was pleased; but told him he must be both judge and council,<