Letter
314: MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE TO MISS HOWE
[Summary]
In the midst of these agreeablenesses, the coach came to the door. The pretended
Lady Betty besought me to give them my company to their cousin Leeson's. I
desired to be excused: yet suspected nothing. She would not be denied. How happy
would a visit so condescending make her cousin Leeson!--Her cousin Leeson was not
unworthy of my acquaintance: and would take it for the greatest favour in the
world.
I objected my dress. But the
objection was not admitted. She bespoke a supper of Mrs. Moore to be ready at
nine.
Mr. Lovelace, vile hypocrite
and wicked deceiver, seeing as he said my dislike to go, desired her ladyship
not to insist upon it.
Fondness for my company was
pleaded. She begged me to oblige her: made a motion to help me to my fan
herself: and, in short, was so very urgent that my feet complied against my
speech, and my mind: and being in a manner led to the coach by her, and made to
step in first, she followed me; and her pretended niece, and the wretch,
followed her: and away it drove.
Nothing but the height of affectionate complaisance passed all the way: over and over, what a joy would this unexpected visit give her cousin Leeson!
What a pleasure must it be to such
a mind as mine to be able to give so much joy to everybody I came near!
The cruel, the savage
seducer (as I have since recollected) was in rapture all the way; but yet such a
sort of rapture as he took visible pains to check.
Hateful villain!--How I
abhor him!--What mischief must be then in his plotting heart!--What a devoted
victim must I be in all their eyes!
Though not pleased, I was
nevertheless just then thoughtless of danger; they endeavouring thus to lift me
up above all apprehension of that, and above myself too.
But think, my dear, what a
dreadful turn all had upon me, when, through several streets and ways I knew
nothing of, the coach slackening its pace came within sight of the dreadful
house of the dreadfullest woman in the world; as she proved to me.
Lord be good unto me! cried
the poor fool, looking out of the coach--Mr. Lovelace!--Madam! turning to the
pretended aunt--Madam! turning to the niece, my eyes and hands lifted
up--Lord be good unto me!
What! What! What, my dear!
He pulled the string--What
need to have come this way? said he-But since we are, I will but ask a
question--My dearest life! why this apprehension?
The coachman stopped: his
servant, who with one of hers was behind, alighted--ask, said he, if I have any
letters?--Who knows, my dearest creature, turning to me, but we may already have
one from the captain?--We will not go out of the coach!--Fear nothing--Why so
apprehensive?--Oh! these fine spirits!--cried the execrable insulter.
Dreadfully did my heart then
misgive me: I was ready to faint. Why this terror, my life? You shall not stir
out of the coach!--But one question, now the fellow has drove us this way!
Your lady will faint! cried
the execrable Lady Betty, turning to him. My dearest niece! I will call you,
taking my hand, we must alight if you are so ill--Let us alight--only for a glass
of water and hartshorn-Indeed we must alight.
No, no, no--I am well--quite
well--Won't the man drive on?--I am well-quite well--indeed I am--Man, drive on,
putting my head out of the coach--Man, drive on!--though my voice was too low to
be heard.
The coach stopped at the
door. How I trembled!
Dorcas came to the door on
its stopping.
My dearest creature! said
the vile man, gasping as it were for breath, you shall not alight--Any letters
for me, Dorcas?
There are two, sir. And here is a gentleman, Mr. Belton, sir,
waits for your honour; and has done so above an hour.
I’ll just speak to him. Open the door--You shan't step out,
my dear--A letter, perhaps, from the captain already!--You shan't step out, my
dear.
I sighed as if my heart would burst.
But we must step out, nephew: your lady will faint-Maid, a
glass of hartshorn and water!--My dear, you must step out--You will faint,
child--We must cut your
laces--(I believe my complexion was all manner of colours by turns)--Indeed, you
must step out, my dear.
He knew, he said, I should be well, the moment the coach
drove from the door. I should not
alight. By his soul, I should not.
Lord, Lord, nephew, Lord, Lord, cousin, both women in a
breath, What ado you make about nothing!--You persuade your lady to be afraid of
alighting!--See you not that she is just fainting?
Indeed, madam, said the vile seducer, my dearest love must
not be moved in this point against her will!--I beg it may not be insisted upon.
Fiddle-faddle, foolish man!-what a pother is here!--I guess
how it is: you are ashamed to let us see what sort of people you carried your
lady among!--But do you
go out and speak to your friend, and take your letters.
He stepped out; but shut the coach door after him, to oblige
me.
The coach may go on, madam! said I.
The coach shall go on, my dear life, said he--but he gave not,
nor intended to give, orders that it should.
Let the coach go on! said I--Mr. Lovelace may come after us.
Indeed, my dear, you are ill!--Indeed you must alight!--Alight but for one quarter of an hour!--Alight but to give order yourself about your things.
Whom can you be afraid of,
in my company and my niece's?--These people must have behaved shockingly to
you!--Please the Lord, I'll inquire into it!-I'll see what sort
of people they are!
Immediately came the old creature to the door. A thousand
pardons, dear madam, stepping to the coachside, if we have any way offended
you!--Be pleased ladies (to the other two), to alight.
Well, my dear, whispered the Lady Betty, I now find that an
hideous description of a person we never saw is an advantage to them. I thought
the woman was a monster! But, really, she seems tolerable.
I was afraid I should have fallen into fits: but still
refused to go out!--Man!--Man!--Man! cried I, gaspingly, my head out of the coach
and in, by turns, half a dozen
times running, drive on!--Let us go!
My heart misgave me beyond the power of my own accounting for
it; for still I did not suspect these women. But the antipathy I had taken to
the vile house, and to find myself so near it when I expected no such matter,
with the sight of the old creature, all together made me behave like a
distracted person.
The hartshorn and water was brought. The pretended Lady Betty
made me drink it. Heaven knows if there were anything else in it!
Besides, said she, whisperingly, I must see what sort of
creatures the nieces are.
Want of delicacy cannot be hid from me. You could not surely,
my dear, have this aversion to re-enter a house for a few minutes in our
company, in which I have no doubt that my two dishes, and perhaps my hartshorn,
were prepared lodged and boarded several weeks, unless these women could be so
presumptuouly vile as my nephew ought to know.
Out stepped the pretended lady; the servant, at her command,
having opened the door.
Dearest madam, said the other, let me follow you (for I was
next the door). Fear nothing: I
will not stir from your presence.
Come, my dear, said the pretended lady: Give me your hand;
holding out hers. Oblige me this
once!
I will bless your footsteps, said the old creature, if once
more you honour my house with your presence.
A crowd by this time was gathered about us; but I was too
much affected to mind that.
Again the pretended Miss Montague urged me (standing up as
ready to go out if I would give her room). Lord, my dear, said she, who can bear
this crowd?--What will people think?
The pretended lady again pressed me, with both her hands held
out--Only, my dear, to give orders about your things.
And thus pressed, and gazed at (for then I looked about me),
the women so richly dressed, people whispering; in an evil moment, out stepped
I, trembling, forced
to lean with both hands (frighted too much for ceremony) on the pretended Lady
Betty's arm--Oh that I had dropped down dead upon the guilty threshold!
We shall stay but a few
minutes, my dear!--but a few minutes! said the same specious jilt--out of breath
with her joy, as I have since thought, that they had thus triumphed over the
unhappy victim!
Come, Mrs Sinclair, I think
your name is, show us the way--following her, and leading me. I am very thirsty.
You have frighted me, my dear, with your strange fears. I must have tea made, if
it can be done in a moment. We have further to go, Mrs Sinclair, and must return
to Hampstead this night.
It shall be ready in a
moment, cried the wretch. We have water boiling.
Hasten, then-Come, my dear,
to me, as she led me through the passage to the fatal inner house--Lean upon
me--How you tremble!--how you falter in your steps!--Dearest niece Lovelace (the
old wretch being in hearing), why these hurries upon your spirits?--We'll begone
in a minute.
And thus she led the poor
sacrifice into the old wretch's too well--known parlor.
Never was anybody so gentle, so meek so low-voiced as
the odious woman; drawling out, in a puling accent, all the obliging things she
could say: awed, I then thought, by the conscious dignity of a woman of quality;
glittering with jewels.
The called-for tea was ready presently.
There was no Mr. Belton, I
believe: for the wretch went not to anybody, unless it were while we were
parleying in the coach. No such person, however, appeared at the tea-table.
I was made to drink two
dishes, with milk, complaisantly urged by the pretended ladies helping me each
to one. I was stupid to their hands; and when I took the tea almost choked with
vapours; and could hardly swallow.
I thought, transiently, that
the tea, the last dish particularly, had an odd taste. They, on my palating it, observed that the milk was London
milk; far short in goodness of what they were accustomed to from their own
dairies.
I have no doubt that my two
dishes, and perhaps my hartshorn, were prepared for me; in which case it was
more proper for their purpose that they should help me than that I should help
myself. Ill before, I found myself
still more and more disordered in my heart; a heavy torpid pain increasing fast
upon me. But I imputed it to my
terror.
Nevertheless, at the
pretended ladies’ motion, I went upstairs, attended by Dorcas; who affected to
weep for joy that once more she saw my blessed face, that was the vile
creature’s word; and immediately I set about taking out some of my clothes,
ordering what should be put up, and what sent after me.
While I was thus employed,
up came the pretended Lady Betty in a hurrying way--My dear, you won’t be
long before you are ready. My
nephew is very busy in writing answers to his letters: so I’ll just whip away
and change my dress, and call upon you in an instant.
O madam! I
am ready! I am
now ready!--You must not leave me here: and down I sunk, affrighted, into a
chair.
This instant, this instant,
I will return--before you can be ready--before you can have packed up your
things--We would not be late--the robbers we have heard of may be out--don’t let us be late.
And away she hurried before
I could say another word. Her
pretended niece went with her, without taking notice to me of her going.
I had no suspicion yet that these women were not
indeed the ladies they personated; and I blamed myself for my weak fears--It
cannot be, thought I, that such ladies will abet treachery against a poor
creature they are so fond of. They
must undoubtedly be the persons they appear to be--what folly to doubt it!
The air, the dress, the dignity, of women of quality--How unworthy of
them, and of my charity, concluded I, is this ungenerous shadow of suspicion!
So, recovering my stupefied
spirits as well as they could be recovered (for I was heavier and heavier; and
wondered to Dorcas what ailed me; rubbing my eyes, and taking some of her snuff,
pinch after pinch, to very little purpose), I pursued my employment; but when
that was over, all packed up that I designed to be packed up and I had nothing
to do but to think; and found them tarry so long; I thought I should have gone
distracted. I shut myself into the
chamber that had been mine; I kneeled, I prayed; yet knew not what I prayed for:
then ran out again. It was almost
dark night, I said: where, where, was Mr. Lovelace?
He came to me, taking no
notice at first of my consternation and wildness (what they had given me made me
incoherent and wile): All goes well, said he, my dear!--A line from Captain
Tomlinson!
All indeed did go well for
the villainous project of the most cruel and most villainous of men!
I
demanded his aunt!--I demanded his cousin!--The evening, I said, was closing!--My
head was very, very bad, I remember, I said--And it grew worse and worse.
Terror, however, as yet kept
up my spirits; and I insisted upon his going himself to hasten them.
He called his servant.
He raved at the sex for their delay: ‘twas well that business of
consequence seldom depended upon such parading, unpunctual triflers!
His servant came.
He ordered him to fly to his
cousin Leeson’s; and to let his aunt and cousins know how uneasy we both were
at their delay: adding, of his own accord, Desire them, if they don’t come
instantly, to send their coach and we well go without them.
Tell them I wonder they’ll serve me so!
I thought this was
considerately and fairly put. But
now, indifferent as my head was, I had a little time to consider the man and his
behaviour. He terrified me with his
looks, and with his violent emotions as he gazed upon me.
Evident joy-suppressed emotions, as I have since recollected.
His sentences short; and pronounced as if his breath were touched.
Never saw I his abominable eyes look,
as then they looked--triumph in them!--fierce and wild; and more
disagreeable than the women’s at
the vile house appeared to me when I first saw them; and at times, such a
leering, mischief-boding cast!--I would have given the world to have been an
hundred miles from him. Yet his
behaviour was decent--a decency, however, that I might have seen to be
struggled for--for he snatched my hand two or three times with a vehemence in
his grasp that hurt me; speaking words of tenderness through his shut teeth, as
it seemed; and let it go with a beggar-voiced humble accent, like the vile
woman’s just before; half-inward; yet his words and manner carrying the
appearance of strong and almost convulsed passion!--Oh my dear! What mischiefs was he not then meditating!
I complained once or twice
of thirst. My mouth seemed parched.
At the time, I supposed that it was my terror (gasping often as I did for
breath) that parched up the roof of my mouth.
I called for water; some table-beer was brought me.
Beer, I suppose, was a better vehicle (if I were not dosed enough before)
for their potions. I told the maid
that she knew I seldom tasted malt-liquor; yet, suspecting nothing of this
nature, being extremely thirsty I drank it, as what came next; and instantly, as
it were, found myself much worse than before; as it inebriated, should fancy: I
know not how.
His servant was gone twice
as long as he needed: and, just before his return, came one of the pretended
Lady Betty’s with a letter for Mr. Lovelace.
He sent it up to me.
I read it: and then it was that I thought myself a lost creature; it
being to put off her going to Hampstead that night, on account of violent fits
which Miss Montague was pretended to be seized with: for then immediately came
into my head his vile attempt upon me in this house; the revenge that my flight
might too probably inspire him with on that occasion, and because of the
difficulty I made to forgive him and to be reconciled to him; his very looks
wild and dreadful to me; and the women of the house such as I had more reason
than ever, even from the pretended Lady Betty’s hints, to be afraid of; all
these crowding together in my apprehensive mind, I fell into a kind of frenzy.
I have not remembrance how I
was for the time it lasted: but I know that in my first agitations I pulled off
my head-dress, and tore my ruffles in twenty tatters; and ran to find him out.
When a little recovered, I
insisted upon the hint he had given of their coach. But the messenger, he said,
had told him that it was sent to fetch a physician, lest his chariot should be
put up, or not ready.
I then insisted upon going
directly to Lade Betty’s lodgings.
Mrs. Leeson’s was now a
crowded house, he said: and as my earnestness could be owing to nothing but
groundless apprehension (and of what vows, what protestation of his honour did
he then make!), he hoped I would not add to the present concern, Charlotte,
indeed, was used to fits, he said, upon any great surprises, whether of joy or
grief; and they would hold her for a week not got off in a few hours.
You are an observer of eyes,
my dear, said the villain; perhaps in secret they saw you not in Miss
Montague’s now and then, at Hampstead, I then insisted upon going directly to
Lade Betty’s lodgings.
Mrs. Leeson’s was now a
crowded house, he said: and as my earnestness could be owing to nothing but
groundless apprehension (and of what vows, what protestation of his honour did
he then make!), he hoped I would not add to the present concern, Charlotte,
indeed, was used to fits, he said, upon any great surprises, whether of joy or
grief; and they would hold her for a week and not got off in a few hours.
You are an
observer of eyes,
my dear, said the villain; perhaps in secret insult saw you not in Miss
Montague’s now and then, at Hampstead, something
wildest?--I was afraid for her then--Silence and quiet only do her good,
your concern for her, and her love for you, will but augment the poor girl’s
disorder, if you should go.
All impatient with grief and
apprehension, I still declared myself resolved not to stay in that house till
morning. All I had in the world, my
rings, my watch, my little money, for a coach! or, if one were not to be got, I
would go on foot to Hampstead that night, though I walked it by myself.
A coach was hereupon sent for, or pretended to be sent
for. Any price, he said, he would give to oblige me, late as it was; and he
would attend me with all his soul--But no coach was to be got.
Let me cut short the rest. I
grew worse and worse in my head; now stupid, now raving, now senseless. The
vilest of vile women was brought to frighten me. Never was there so horrible a
creature as she appeared to me at the time.
I remember, I pleaded for
mercy--I remember that I said I would be his--indeed I would be his--to
obtain his mercy--But no mercy found I!--My strength, my intellects,
failed me!--And then such scenes followed--Oh my dear, such dreadful
scenes!--fits upon fits (faintly indeed, and imperfectly remembered)
procuring me no compassion--but death was withheld from me.
That would have been too great a mercy!
Thus was I tricked and
deluded back by blacker hearts of my own sex, than I thought there were in the
world; who appeared to me to be persons of honour: and, when in his power, thus
barbarously was I treated by this villainous man!
I was so senseless that I
dare not aver that the horrid creatures of the house were personally aiding and
abetting: but some visionary remembrances I have of female figures flitting, as
I may say, before my sight; the wretched woman’ particularly.
But as these confused ideas might be owing to the terror I had conceived
of the worse than masculine violence she had been permitted to assume to me, for
suppressing my abhorrence of her house; and as what I suffered from his
barbarity wants not that aggravation; I will say no more on a subject so
shocking as this must ever be to my remembrance.
I never saw the personating
wretches afterwards. He persisted
to the last (dreadfully invoking Heaves as a witness to the truth of his
assertion), that they were really and truly the ladies they pretended to be;
declaring, that they could not take leave of me when they left the town, because
of the state of senselessness and frenzy I was in.
For their intoxicating, or rather stupefying, potions had almost
deleterious effects upon my intellects, as I have hinted; insomuch that, for
several days together, I was under a strange delirium; now moping, mow dozing,
now weeping, now raving, now scribbling, tearing what I scribbled as fast as I
wrote it: most miserable when now and then a ray of reason brought confusedly to
me remembrance what I had suffered.
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