DURING the garden scene, Mr. Vane
had begged Mrs. Woffington to let him accompany her.
She peremptorily refused, and said in the same breath
she was going to Triplet, in Hercules Buildings, to
have her portrait finished.
Had Mr. Vane understood the sex, he
would not have interpreted her refusal to the letter;
when there was a postscript, the meaning of which
was so little enigmatical.
Some three hours after the scene we
have described, Mrs. Woffington sat in Triplet’s
apartment; and Triplet, palette in hand, painted away
upon her portrait.
Mrs. Woffington was in that languid
state which comes to women after their hearts have
received a blow. She felt as if life was ended,
and but the dregs of existence remained; but at times
a flood of bitterness rolled over her, and she resigned
all hope of perfect happiness in this world all
hope of loving and respecting the same creature; and
at these moments she had but one idea to
use her own power, and bind her lover to her by chains
never to be broken; and to close her eyes, and glide
down the precipice of the future.
“I think you are master of this
art,” said she, very languidly, to Triplet,
“you paint so rapidly.”
“Yes, madam,” said Triplet,
gloomily; and painted on. “Confound this
shadow!” added he; and painted on.
His soul, too, was clouded. Mrs.
Woffington, yawning in his face, had told him she
had invited all Mr. Vane’s company to come and
praise his work; and ever since that he had been morne
et silencieux.
“You are fortunate,” continued
Mrs. Woffington, not caring what she said; “it
is so difficult to make execution keep pace with conception.”
“Yes, ma’am;” and he painted on.
“You are satisfied with it?”
“Anything but, ma’am;” and he painted
on.
“Cheerful soul! then I presume it
is like?”
“Not a bit, ma’am;” and he painted
on.
Mrs. Woffington stretched.
“You can’t yawn, ma’am you
can’t yawn.”
“Oh, yes, I can. You are such good company;”
and she stretched again.
“I was just about to catch the turn of the lip,”
remonstrated Triplet.
“Well, catch it it won’t run
away.”
“I’ll try, ma’am.
A pleasant half-hour it will be for me, when they all
come here like cits at a shilling ordinary each
for his cut.”
“At a sensitive goose!”
“That is as may be, madam. Those critics
flay us alive!”
“You should not hold so many doors open to censure.”
“No, ma’am. Head
a little more that way. I suppose you can’t
sit quiet, ma’am? then never mind!”
(This resignation was intended as a stinging reproach.)
“Mr. Cibber, with his sneering snuff-box!
Mr. Quin, with his humorous bludgeon! Mrs. Clive,
with her tongue! Mr. Snarl, with his abuse!
And Mr. Soaper, with his praise! arsenic
in treacle I call it! But there, I deserve it
all! For look on this picture, and on this!”
“Meaning, I am painted as well as my picture!”
“Oh, no, no, no! But to
turn from your face, madam on which the
lightning of expression plays, continually to
this stony, detestable, dead daub! I could And
I will, too! Imposture! dead caricature of life
and beauty, take that!” and he dashed his palette-knife
through the canvas. “Libelous lie against
nature and Mrs. Woffington, take that!” and
he stabbed the canvas again; then, with sudden humility:
“I beg your pardon, ma’am,” said
he, “for this apparent outrage, which I trust
you will set down to the excitement attendant upon
failure. The fact is, I am an incapable ass,
and no painter! Others have often hinted as much;
but I never observed it myself till now!”
“Right through my pet dimple!”
said Mrs. Woffington, with perfect nonchalance.
“Well, now I suppose I may yawn, or do what I
like?”
“You may, madam,” said
Triplet, gravely. “I have forfeited what
little control I had over you, madam.”
So they sat opposite each other, in
mournful silence. At length the actress suddenly
rose. She struggled fiercely against her depression,
and vowed that melancholy should not benumb her spirits
and her power.
“He ought to have been here
by this time,” said she to herself. “Well,
I will not mope for him. I must do something.
Triplet,” said she.
“Madam.”
“Nothing.”
“No, madam.”
She sat gently down again, and leaned
her head on her hand, and thought. She was beautiful
as she thought! her body seemed bristling
with mind! At last, her thoughtful gravity was
illumined by a smile. She had thought out something
excogitaverat.
“Triplet, the picture is quite ruined!”
“Yes, madam. And a coach-load of criticism
coming!”
“Triplet, we actors and actresses have often
bright ideas.”
“Yes, ma am.”
“When we take other people’s!”
“He, he!” went Triplet. “Those
are our best, madam!”
“Well, sir, I have got a bright idea.”
“You don’t say so, ma’am!”
“Don’t be a brute, dear!” said the
lady gravely.
Triplet stared!
“When I was in France, taking
lessons of Dumesnil, one of the actors of the Theatre
Francais had his portrait painted by a rising artist.
The others were to come and see it. They determined,
beforehand, to mortify the painter and the sitter,
by abusing the work in good set terms. But somehow
this got wind, and the patients resolved to be the
physicians. They put their heads together, and
contrived that the living face should be in the canvas,
surrounded by the accessories; these, of course, were
painted. Enter the actors, who played their little
prearranged farce; and, when they had each given the
picture a slap, the picture rose and laughed in their
faces, and discomfited them! By the by, the painter
did not stop there; he was not content with a short
laugh, he laughed at them five hundred years!”
“Good gracious, Mrs. Woffington!”
“He painted a picture of the
whole thing; and as his work is immortal, ours an
April snow-flake, he has got tremendously the better
of those rash little satirists. Well, Trip, what
is sauce for the gander is sauce for the goose; so
give me the sharpest knife in the house.”
Triplet gave her a knife, and looked
confused, while she cut away the face of the picture,
and by dint of scraping, cutting, and measuring, got
her face two parts through the canvas. She then
made him take his brush and paint all round her face,
so that the transition might not be too abrupt.
Several yards of green baize were also produced.
This was to be disposed behind the easel, so as to
conceal her.
Triplet painted here, and touched
and retouched there. While thus occupied, he
said, in his calm, resigned way: “It won’t
do, madam. I suppose you know that?”
“I know nothing,” was
the reply: “life is a guess. I don’t
think we could deceive Roxalana and Lucy this way,
because their eyes are without colored spectacles;
but, when people have once begun to see by prejudices
and judge by jargon what can’t be done with them?
Who knows? do you? I don’t; so let us try.”
“I beg your pardon, madam; my brush touched
your face.”
“No offense, sir; I am used
to that. And I beg, if you can’t tone the
rest of the picture up to me, that you will instantly
tone me down to the rest. Let us be in tune,
whatever it costs, sir.”
“I will avail myself of the
privilege, madam, but sparingly. Failure, which
is certain, madam, will cover us with disgrace.”
“Nothing is certain in this
life, sir, except that you are a goose. It succeeded
in France; and England can match all Europe for fools.
Besides, it will be well done. They say Davy Garrick
can turn his eyes into bottled gooseberries.
Well, Peg Woffington will turn hers into black currants.
Haven’t you done? I wonder they have not
come. Make haste!”
“They will know by its beauty I never did it.”
“That is a sensible remark,
Trip. But I think they will rather argue backward;
that, as you did it, it cannot be beautiful, and so
cannot be me. Your reputation will be our shield.”
“Well, madam, now you mention
it, they are like enough to take that ground.
They despise all I do; if they did not ”
“You would despise them.”
At this moment the pair were startled
by the sound of a coach. Triplet turned as pale
as ashes. Mrs. Woffington had her misgivings;
but, not choosing to increase the difficulty, she
would not let Triplet, whose self-possession she doubted,
see any sign of emotion in her.
“Lock the door,” said
she, firmly, “and don’t be silly.
Now hold up my green baize petticoat, and let me be
in a half-light. Now put that table and those
chairs before me, so that they can’t come right
up to me; and, Triplet, don’t let them come
within six yards, if you can help it. Say it
is unfinished, and so must be seen from a focus.”
“A focus! I don’t know what you mean.”
“No more do I; no more will
they, perhaps; and if they don’t they will swallow
it directly. Unlock the door. Are they coming?”
“They are only at the first stair.”
“Mr. Triplet, your face is a
book, where one may read strange matters. For
Heaven’s sake, compose yourself. Let all
the risk lie in one countenance. Look at me,
sir. Make your face like the Book of Daniel in
a Jew’s back parlor. Volto Sciolto
is your cue.”
“Madam, madam, how your tongue
goes! I hear them on the stairs. Pray don’t
speak!”
“Do you know what we are going
to do?” continued the tormenting Peggy.
“We are going to weigh goose’s feathers!
to criticise criticism, Trip ”
“Hush! hush!”
A grampus was heard outside the door,
and Triplet opened it. There was Quin leading
the band.
“Have a care, sir,” cried
Triplet; “there is a hiatus the third step from
the door.”
“A gradus ad Parnassum a wanting,”
said Mr. Cibber.
Triplet’s heart sank. The
hole had been there six months, and he had found nothing
witty to say about it, and at first sight Mr. Cibber
had done its business. And on such men he and
his portrait were to attempt a preposterous delusion.
Then there was Snarl, who wrote critiques on painting,
and guided the national taste. The unlucky exhibitor
was in a cold sweat. He led the way, like a thief
going to the gallows.
“The picture being unfinished,
gentlemen,” said he, “must, if you would
do me justice, be seen from a a focus; must
be judged from here, I mean.”
“Where, sir?” said Mr. Cibber.
“About here, sir, if you please,” said
poor Triplet faintly.
“It looks like a finished picture from here,”
said Mrs. Clive.
“Yes, madam,” groaned Triplet.
They all took up a position, and Triplet
timidly raised his eyes along with the rest.
He was a little surprised. The actress had flattened
her face! She had done all that could be done,
and more than he had conceived possible, in the way
of extracting life and the atmosphere of expression
from her countenance. She was “dead still!”
There was a pause. Triplet fluttered.
At last some of them spoke as follows:
Soaper. “Ah!”
Quin. “Ho!”
Clive. “Eh!”
Cibber. “Humph!”
These interjections are
small on paper, but as the good creatures uttered
them they were eloquent; there was a cheerful variety
of dispraise skillfully thrown into each of them.
“Well,” continued Soaper, with his everlasting
smile.
Then the fun began.
“May I be permitted to ask whose
portrait this is?” said Mr. Cibber slyly.
“I distinctly told you, it was
to be Peg Woffington’s,” said Mrs. Clive.
“I think you might take my word.”
“Do you act as truly as you paint?” said
Quin.
“Your fame runs no risk from me, sir!”
replied Triplet.
“It is not like Peggy’s beauty! Eh?”
rejoined Quin.
“I can’t agree with you,”
cried Kitty Clive. “I think it a very pretty
face; and not at all like Peg Woffington’s.”
“Compare paint with paint,”
said Quin. “Are you sure you ever saw down
to Peggy’s real face?”
Triplet had seen with alarm that Mr.
Snarl spoke not; many satirical expressions crossed
his face, but he said nothing. Triplet gathered
from this that he had at once detected the trick.
“Ah!” thought Triplet, “he means
to quiz them, as well as expose me. He is hanging
back; and, in point of fact, a mighty satirist like
Snarl would naturally choose to quiz six people rather
than two.”
“Now I call it beautiful!”
said the traitor Soaper. “So calm and reposeful;
no particular expression.”
“None whatever,” said Snarl.
“Gentlemen,” said Triplet,
“does it never occur to you that the fine arts
are tender violets, and cannot blow when the north
winds ”
“Blow!” inserted Quin.
“Are so cursed cutting?” continued Triplet.
“My good sir, I am never cutting!”
smirked Soaper. “My dear Snarl,”
whined he, “give us the benefit of your practiced
judgment. Do justice to this ad-mirable work
of art,” drawled the traitor.
“I will!” said Mr. Snarl; and placed himself
before the picture.
“What on earth will he say?”
thought Triplet. “I can see by his face
he has found us out.”
Mr. Snarl delivered a short critique.
Mr. Snarl’s intelligence was not confined to
his phrases; all critics use intelligent phrases and
philosophical truths. But this gentleman’s
manner was very intelligent; it was pleasant, quiet,
assured, and very convincing. Had the reader or
I been there, he would have carried us with him, as
he did his hearers; and as his successors carry the
public with them now.
“Your brush is by no means destitute
of talent, Mr. Triplet,” said Mr. Snarl.
“But you are somewhat deficient, at present,
in the great principles of your art; the first of
which is a loyal adherence to truth. Beauty itself
is but one of the forms of truth, and nature is our
finite exponent of infinite truth.”
His auditors gave him a marked attention.
They could not but acknowledge that men who go to
the bottom of things like this should be the best
instructors.
“Now, in nature, a woman’s
face at this distance ay, even at this short
distance melts into the air. There
is none of that sharpness; but, on the contrary, a
softness of outline.” He made a lorgnette
of his two hands; the others did so too, and found
they saw much better oh, ever so much better!
“Whereas yours,” resumed Snarl, “is
hard; and, forgive me, rather tea-board like.
Then your chiaro scuro, my good sir, is very
defective; for instance, in nature, the nose, intercepting
the light on one side the face, throws, of necessity,
a shadow under the eye. Caravaggio, Venetians
generally, and the Bolognese masters, do particular
justice to this. No such shade appears in this
portrait.”
“’Tis so, stop my vitals!”
observed Colley Cibber. And they all looked,
and, having looked, wagged their heads in assent as
the fat, white lords at Christie’s waggle fifty
pounds more out for a copy of Rembrandt, a brown levitical
Dutchman, visible in the pitch-dark by some sleight
of sun Newton had not wit to discover.
Soaper dissented from the mass.
“But, my dear Snarl, if there
are no shades, there are lights, loads of lights.”
“There are,” replied Snarl;
“only they are impossible, that is all.
You have, however,” concluded he, with a manner
slightly supercilious, “succeeded in the mechanical
parts; the hair and the dress are well, Mr. Triplet;
but your Woffington is not a woman, not nature.”
They all nodded and waggled assent;
but this sagacious motion was arrested as by an earthquake.
The picture rang out, in the voice
of a clarion, an answer that outlived the speaker:
“She’s a woman! for she has taken four
men in! She’s nature! for a fluent dunce
doesn’t know her when he sees her!”
Imagine the tableau! It was charming!
Such opening of eyes and mouths! Cibber fell
by second nature into an attitude of the old comedy.
And all were rooted where they stood, with surprise
and incipient mortification, except Quin, who slapped
his knee, and took the trick at its value.
Peg Woffington slipped out of the
green baize, and, coming round from the back of the
late picture, stood in person before them; while they
looked alternately at her and at the hole in the canvas.
She then came at each of them in turn, more dramático.
“A pretty face, and not like
Woffington. I owe you two, Kate Clive.”
“Who ever saw Peggy’s
real face? Look at it now if you can without
blushing, Mr. Quin.”
Quin, a good-humored fellow, took
the wisest view of his predicament, and burst into
a hearty laugh.
“For all this,” said Mr.
Snarl, peevishly, “I maintain, upon the unalterable
principles of art ” At this they all
burst into a roar, not sorry to shift the ridicule.
“Goths!” cried Snarl, fiercely. “Good-morning,
ladies and gentlemen,” cried Mr. Snarl, avec
intention, “I have a criticism to write
of last night’s performance.” The
laugh died away to a quaver. “I shall sit
on your pictures one day, Mr. Brush.”
“Don’t sit on them with
your head downward, or you’ll addle them,”
said Mr. Brush, fiercely. This was the first
time Triplet had ever answered a foe. Mrs. Woffington
gave him an eloquent glance of encouragement.
He nodded his head in infantine exultation at what
he had done.
“Come, Soaper,” said Mr. Snarl.
Mr. Soaper lingered one moment to
say: “You shall always have my good word,
Mr. Triplet.”
“I will try and not
deserve it, Mr. Soaper,” was the prompt reply.
“Serve ’em right,”
said Mr. Cibber, as soon as the door had closed upon
them; “for a couple of serpents, or rather one
boa-constrictor. Soaper slavers, for Snarl to
crush. But we were all a little too hard on Triplet
here; and, if he will accept my apology ”
“Why, sir,” said Triplet,
half trembling, but driven on by looks from Mrs. Woffington,
“‘Cibber’s Apology’ is found
to be a trifle wearisome.”
“Confound his impertinence!”
cried the astounded laureate. “Come along,
Jemmy.”
“Oh, sir,” said Quin,
good-humoredly, “we must give a joke and take
a joke. And when he paints my portrait which
he shall do ”
“The bear from Hockley Hole shall sit for the
head!”
“Curse his impudence!”
roared Quin. “I’m at your service,
Mr. Cibber,” added he, in huge dudgeon.
Away went the two old boys.
“Mighty well!” said waspish
Mrs. Clive. “I did intend you should have
painted Mrs. Clive. But after this impertinence ”
“You will continue to do it yourself, ma’am!”
This was Triplet’s hour of triumph.
His exultation was undignified, and such as is said
to precede a fall. He inquired gravely of Mrs.
Woffington, whether he had or had not shown a spirit.
Whether he had or had not fired into each a parting
shot, as they sheered off. To repair which, it
might be advisable for them to put into friendly ports.
“Tremendous!” was the
reply. “And when Snarl and Soaper sit on
your next play, they won’t forget the lesson
you have given them.”
“I’ll be sworn they won’t!”
chuckled Triplet. But, reconsidering her words,
he looked blank, and muttered: “Then perhaps
it would have been more prudent to let them alone!”
“Incalculably more prudent!” was the reply.
“Then why did you set me on, madam?” said
Triplet, reproachfully.
“Because I wanted amusement,
and my head ached,” was the cool answer, somewhat
languidly given.
“I defy the coxcombs!”
cried Triplet, with reviving spirit. “But
real criticism I respect, honor, and bow to.
Such as yours, madam; or such as that sweet lady’s
at Mr. Vane’s would have been; or, in fact, anybody’s
who appreciates me. Oh, madam, I wanted to ask
you, was it not strange your not being at Mr. Vane’s,
after all, to-day?”
“I was at Mr. Vane’s, Triplet.”
“You were? Why, I came
with my verses, and she said you were not there!
I will go fetch the verses.”
“No, no! Who said I was not there?”
“Did I not tell you? The
charming young lady who helped me with her own hand
to everything on the table. What wine that gentleman
possesses!”
“Was it a young lady, Triplet?”
“Not more than two-and-twenty, I should say.
“In a traveling-dress?”
“I could not see her dress,
madam, for her beauty brown hair, blue
eyes, charming in conversation ”
“Ah! What did she tell you?”
“She told me, madam Ahem!”
“Well, what did you tell her? And what
did she answer?”
“I told her that I came with
verses for you, ordered by Mr. Vane. That he
admired you. I descanted, madam, on your virtues,
which had made him your slave.”
“Go on,” said Mrs. Woffington,
encouraging him with a deceitful smile. “Tell
me all you told her.”
“That you were sitting to me
for your portrait, the destination of which was not
doubtful. That I lived at 10, Hercules Buildings.”
“You told that lady all this?”
“I give my honor. She was
so kind, I opened my heart to her. But tell me
now, madam,” said Triplet, joyously dancing round
the Woffington volcano, “do you know this charming
lady?”
“Yes.”
“I congratulate you, madam.
An acquaintance worthy even of you; and there are
not many such. Who is she, madam?” continued
Triplet, lively with curiosity.
“Mrs. Vane,” was the quiet, grim answer.
“Mrs. Vane? His mother? No am
I mad? His sister! Oh, I see, his ”
“His wife!”
“His wife! Why, then, Mr. Vane’s
married?”
“Yes.”
“Oh, look there! Oh,
look here now! Well, but, good Heavens! she wasn’t
to know you were there, perhaps?”
“No.”
“But then I let the cat out of the bag?”
“Yes.”
“But, good gracious! there will be some serious
mischief!”
“No doubt of it.”
“And it is all my fault?”
“Yes.”
“I’ve played the deuce with their married
happiness?”
“Probably.”
“And ten to one if you are not incensed against
me too?”
Mrs. Woffington replied by looking
him in the face, and turning her back upon him.
She walked hastily to the window, threw it open, and
looked out of it, leaving poor Triplet to very unpleasant
reflections. She was so angry with him she dared
not trust herself to speak.
“Just my luck,” thought
he. “I had a patron and a benefactress;
I have betrayed them both.” Suddenly an
idea struck him. “Madam,” said he,
timorously, “see what these fine gentlemen are!
What business had he, with a wife at home, to come
and fall in love with you? I do it forever in
my plays I am obliged they would
be so dull else; but in real life to do it
is abominable.”
“You forget, sir,” replied
Mrs. Woffington, without moving, “that I am
an actress a plaything for the impertinence
of puppies and the treachery of hypocrites. Fool!
to think there was an honest man in the world, and
that he had shone on me!”
With these words she turned, and Triplet
was shocked to see the change in her face. She
was pale, and her black, lowering brows were gloomy
and terrible. She walked like a tigress to and
fro, and Triplet dared not speak to her. Indeed
she seemed but half conscious of his presence.
He went for nobody with her. How little we know
the people we eat and go to church and flirt with!
Triplet had imagined this creature an incarnation
of gayety, a sportive being, the daughter of smiles,
the bride of mirth; needed but a look at her now to
see that her heart was a volcano, her bosom a boiling
gulf of fiery lava. She walked like some wild
creature; she flung her hands up to heaven with a
passionate despair, before which the feeble spirit
of her companion shrank and cowered; and, with quivering
lips and blazing eyes, she burst into a torrent of
passionate bitterness.
“But who is Margaret Woffington,”
she cried, “that she should pretend to honest
love, or feel insulted by the proffer of a stolen regard?
And what have we to do with homes, or hearts, or firesides?
Have we not the playhouse, its paste diamonds, its
paste feelings, and the loud applause of fops and
sots hearts? beneath loads of
tinsel and paint? Nonsense! The love that
can go with souls to heaven such love for
us? Nonsense! These men applaud us, cajole
us, swear to us, flatter us; and yet, forsooth, we
would have them respect us too.”
“My dear benefactress,”
said Triplet, “they are not worthy of you.”
“I thought this man was not
all dross; from the first I never felt his passion
an insult. Oh, Triplet! I could have loved
this man really loved him! and I longed
so to be good. Oh, God! oh, God!”
“Thank Heaven, you don’t
love him!” cried Triplet, hastily. “Thank
Heaven for that!”
“Love him? Love a man who
comes to me with a silly second-hand affection from
his insipid baby-face, and offers me half, or two-thirds,
or a third of his worthless heart? I hate him!
and her! and all the world!”
“That is what I call a very
proper feeling,” said poor Triplet, with a weak
attempt to soothe her. “Then break with
him at once, and all will be well.”
“Break with him? Are you
mad? No! Since he plays with the tools of
my trade I shall fool him worse than he has me.
I will feed his passion full, tempt him, torture him,
play with him, as the angler plays a fish upon his
hook. And, when his very life depends on me, then
by degrees he shall see me cool, and cool, and freeze
into bitter aversion. Then he shall rue the hour
he fought with the Devil against my soul, and played
false with a brain and heart like mine!”
“But his poor wife? You will have pity
on her?”
“His wife! Are wives’
hearts the only hearts that throb, and burn, and break?
His wife must defend herself. It is not from me
that mercy can come to her, nor from her to me.
I loathe her, and I shall not forget that you took
her part. Only, if you are her friend, take my
advice, don’t you assist her. I shall defeat
her without that. Let her fight her battle,
and I mine.
“Ah, madam! she cannot fight; she is a dove.”
“You are a fool! What do
you know about women? You were with her five
minutes, and she turned you inside out. My life
on it, while I have been fooling my time here, she
is in the field, with all the arts of our sex, simplicity
at the head of them.”
Triplet was making a futile endeavor
to convert her to his view of her rival, when a knock
suddenly came to his door. A slovenly girl, one
of his own neighbors, brought him a bit of paper,
with a line written in pencil.
“’Tis from a lady, who waits below,”
said the girl.
Mrs. Woffington went again to the
window, and there she saw getting out of a coach,
and attended by James Burdock, Mabel Vane, who had
sent up her name on the back of an old letter.
“What shall I do?” said
Triplet, as soon as he recovered the first stunning
effects of this contretemps. To his astonishment,
Mrs. Woffington bade the girl show the lady upstairs.
The girl went down on this errand.
“But you are here,”
remonstrated Triplet. “Oh, to be sure, you
can go into the other room. There is plenty of
time to avoid her,” said Triplet, in a very
natural tremor. “This way, madam!”
Mrs. Woffington stood in the middle
of the room like a statue.
“What does she come here for?”
said she, sternly. “You have not told me
all.”
“I don’t know,”
cried poor Triplet, in dismay; “and I think the
Devil brings her here to confound me. For Heaven’s
sake, retire! What will become of us all?
There will be murder, I know there will!”
To his horror, Mrs. Woffington would
not move. “You are on her side,”
said she slowly, with a concentration of spite and
suspicion. She looked frightful at this moment.
“All the better for me,” added she, with
a world of female malignity.
Triplet could not make head against
this blow; he gasped, and pointed piteously to the
inner door. “No; I will know two things:
the course she means to take, and the terms you two
are upon.”
By this time Mrs. Vane’s light
foot was heard on the stair, and Triplet sank into
a chair. “They will tear one another to
pieces,” said he.
A tap came to the door.
He looked fearfully round for the
woman whom jealousy had so speedily turned from an
angel to a fiend; and saw with dismay that she had
actually had the hardihood to slip round and enter
the picture again. She had not quite arranged
herself when her rival knocked.
Triplet dragged himself to the door.
Before he opened it, he looked fearfully over his
shoulder, and received a glance of cool, bitter, deadly
hostility, that boded ill both for him and his visitor.
Triplet’s apprehensions were not unreasonable.
His benefactress and this sweet lady were rivals!
Jealousy is a dreadful passion, it
makes us tigers. The jealous always thirst for
blood. At any moment when reason is a little weaker
than usual, they are ready to kill the thing they
hate, or the thing they love.
Any open collision between these ladies
would scatter ill consequences all round. Under
such circumstances, we are pretty sure to say or do
something wicked, silly, or unreasonable. But
what tortured Triplet more than anything was his own
particular notion that fate doomed him to witness
a formal encounter between these two women, and of
course an encounter of such a nature as we in our
day illustrate by “Kilkenny cats.”
To be sure Mrs. Vane had appeared
a dove, but doves can peck on certain occasions, and
no doubt she had a spirit at bottom. Her coming
to him proved it. And had not the other been
a dove all the morning and afternoon? Yet, jealousy
had turned her to a fiend before his eyes. Then
if (which was not probable) no collision took place,
what a situation was his! Mrs. Woffington (his
buckler from starvation) suspected him, and would
distort every word that came from Mrs. Vane’s
lips.
Triplet’s situation was, in
fact, that of AEneas in the storm.
“Olim et haec
meminisse juvabit ” “But, while
present, such things don’t please any one a
bit.”
It was the sort of situation we can
laugh at, and see the fun of it six months after,
if not shipwrecked on it at the time.
With a ghastly smile the poor quaking
hypocrite welcomed Mrs. Vane, and professed a world
of innocent delight that she had so honored his humble
roof.
She interrupted his compliments, and
begged him to see whether she was followed by a gentleman
in a cloak.
Triplet looked out of the window.
“Sir Charles Pomander!” gasped he.
Sir Charles was at the very door.
If, however, he had intended to mount the stairs he
changed his mind, for he suddenly went off round the
corner with a businesslike air, real or fictitious.
“He is gone, madam,” said Triplet.
Mrs. Vane, the better to escape detection
or observation, wore a thick mantle and a hood that
concealed her features. Of these Triplet debarrassed
her.
“Sit down, madam;” and
he hastily drew a chair so that her back was to the
picture.
She was pale, and trembled a little.
She hid her face in her hands a moment, then, recovering
her courage, “she begged Mr. Triplet to pardon
her for coming to him. He had inspired her with
confidence,” she said; “he had offered
her his services, and so she had come to him, for she
had no other friend to aid her in her sore distress.”
She might have added, that with the tact of her sex
she had read Triplet to the bottom, and came to him,
as she would to a benevolent, muscular old woman.
Triplet’s natural impulse was
to repeat most warmly his offers of service.
He did so; and then, conscious of the picture, had
a misgiving.
“Dear Mr. Triplet,” began
Mrs. Vane, “you know this person, Mrs. Woffington?”
“Yes, madam,” replied
Triplet, lowering his eyes, “I am honored by
her acquaintance.”
“You will take me to the theater where she acts?”
“Yes, madam; to the boxes, I presume?”
“No! oh, no! How could
I bear that? To the place where the actors and
actresses are.”
Triplet demurred. This would
be courting that very collision, the dread of which
even now oppressed him.
At the first faint sign of resistance
she began to supplicate him, as if he was some great,
stern tyrant.
“Oh, you must not, you cannot
refuse me. You do not know what I risk to obtain
this. I have risen from my bed to come to you.
I have a fire here!” She pressed her hand to
her brow. “Oh, take me to her!”
“Madam, I will do anything for
you. But be advised; trust to my knowledge of
human nature. What you require is madness.
Gracious Heavens! you two are rivals, and when rivals
meet there’s murder or deadly mischief.”
“Ah! if you knew my sorrow,
you would not thwart me. Oh, Mr. Triplet! little
did I think you were as cruel as the rest.”
So then this cruel monster whimpered out that he should
do any folly she insisted upon. “Good,
kind Mr. Triplet!” said Mrs. Vane. “Let
me look in your face? Yes, I see you are honest
and true. I will tell you all.” Then
she poured in his ear her simple tale, unadorned and
touching as Judah’s speech to Joseph. She
told him how she loved her husband; how he had loved
her; how happy they were for the first six months;
how her heart sank when he left her; how he had promised
she should join him, and on that hope she lived.
“But for two months he had ceased to speak of
this, and I grew heart-sick waiting for the summons
that never came. At last I felt I should die
if I did not see him; so I plucked up courage and
wrote that I must come to him. He did not forbid
me, so I left our country home. Oh, sir!
I cannot make you know how my heart burned to be by
his side. I counted the hours of the journey;
I counted the miles. At last I reached his house;
I found a gay company there. I was a little sorry,
but I said: ’His friends shall be welcome,
right welcome. He has asked them to welcome his
wife.’”
“Poor thing!” muttered Triplet.
“Oh, Mr. Triplet! they were
there to do honor to , and the
wife was neither expected nor desired. There
lay my letters with their seals unbroken. I know
all his letters by heart, Mr. Triplet.
The seals unbroken unbroken! Mr. Triplet.”
“It is abominable!” cried
Triplet fiercely. “And she who sat in my
seat in his house, and in his heart was
this lady, the actress you so praised to me?”
“That lady, ma’am,”
said Triplet, “has been deceived as well as you.”
“I am convinced of it,” said Mabel.
“And it is my painful duty to
tell you, madam, that, with all her talents and sweetness,
she has a fiery temper; yes, a very fiery temper,”
continued Triplet, stoutly, though with an uneasy glance
in a certain direction; “and I have reason to
believe she is angry, and thinks more of her own ill-usage
than yours. Don’t you go near her.
Trust to my knowledge of the sex, madam; I am a dramatic
writer. Did you ever read the ’Rival Queens’?”
“No.”
“I thought not. Well, madam,
one stabs the other, and the one that is stabbed says
things to the other that are more biting than steel.
The prudent course for you is to keep apart, and be
always cheerful, and welcome him with a smile and have
you read ’The Way to keep him’?”
“No, Mr. Triplet,” said
Mabel, firmly, “I cannot feign. Were I to
attempt talent and deceit, I should be weaker than
I am now. Honesty and right are all my strength.
I will cry to her for justice and mercy. And
if I cry in vain, I shall die, Mr. Triplet, that is
all.”
“Don’t cry, dear lady,” said Triplet,
in a broken voice.
“It is impossible!” cried
she, suddenly. “I am not learned, but I
can read faces. I always could, and so could
my Aunt Deborah before me. I read you right,
Mr. Triplet, and I have read her too. Did not
my heart warm to her among them all? There is
a heart at the bottom of all her acting, and that
heart is good and noble.”
“She is, madam! she is! and
charitable too. I know a family she saved from
starvation and despair. Oh, yes! she has a heart to
feel for the poor, at all events.”
“And am I not the poorest of
the poor?” cried Mrs. Vane. “I have
no father nor mother, Mr. Triplet; my husband is all
I have in the world all I had, I
mean.”
Triplet, deeply affected himself,
stole a look at Mrs. Woffington. She was pale;
but her face was composed into a sort of dogged obstinacy.
He was disgusted with her. “Madam,”
said he, sternly, “there is a wild beast more
cruel and savage than wolves and bears; it is called
’a rival,’ and don’t you get in
its way.”
At this moment, in spite of Triplet’s
precaution, Mrs. Vane, casting her eye accidentally
round, caught sight of the picture, and instantly
started up, crying, “She is there!” Triplet
was thunderstruck. “What likeness!”
cried she, and moved toward the supposed picture.
“Don’t go to it!”
cried Triplet, aghast; “the color is wet.”
She stopped; but her eye and her very
soul dwelt upon the supposed picture; and Triplet
stood quaking. “How like! It seems
to breathe. You are a great painter, sir.
A glass is not truer.”
Triplet, hardly knowing what he said,
muttered something about “critics and lights
and shades.”
“Then they are blind!”
cried Mabel, never for a moment removing her eye from
the object. “Tell me not of lights and shades.
The pictures I see have a look of paint; but yours
looks like life. Oh, that she were here, as this
wonderful image of hers is. I would speak
to her. I am not wise or learned; but orators
never pleaded as I would plead to her for my Ernest’s
heart.” Still her eye glanced upon the picture;
and I suppose her heart realized an actual presence,
though her judgment did not; for by some irresistible
impulse she sank slowly down and stretched her clasped
hands toward it, while sobs and words seemed to break
direct from her bursting heart. “Oh, yes!
you are beautiful, you are gifted, and the eyes of
thousands wait upon your very word and look. What
wonder that he, ardent, refined, and genial, should
lay his heart at your feet? And I have nothing
but my love to make him love me. I cannot take
him from you. Oh, be generous to the weak!
Oh, give him back to me! What is one heart more
to you? You are so rich, and I am so poor, that
without his love I have nothing, and can do nothing
but sit me down and cry till my heart breaks.
Give him back to me, beautiful, terrible woman! for,
with all your gifts, you cannot love him as his poor
Mabel does; and I will love you longer perhaps than
men can love. I will kiss your feet, and Heaven
above will bless you; and I will bless you and pray
for you to my dying day. Ah! it is alive!
I am frightened! I am frightened!” She
ran to Triplet and seized his arm. “No!”
cried she, quivering close to him; “I’m
not frightened, for it was for me she Oh,
Mrs. Woffington!” and, hiding her face on Mr.
Triplet’s shoulder, she blushed, and wept, and
trembled.
What was it had betrayed Mrs. Woffington? A tear!
During the whole of this interview
(which had taken a turn so unlooked for by the listener)
she might have said with Beatrice, “What fire
is in mine ears?” and what self-reproach and
chill misgiving in her heart too. She had passed
through a hundred emotions, as the young innocent wife
told her sad and simple story. But, anxious now
above all things to escape without being recognized for
she had long repented having listened at all, or placed
herself in her present position she fiercely
mastered her countenance; but, though she ruled her
features, she could not rule her heart. And when
the young wife, instead of inveighing against her,
came to her as a supplicant, with faith in her goodness,
and sobbed to her for pity, a big tear rolled down
her cheek, and proved her something more than a picture
or an actress.
Mrs. Vane, as we have related, screamed
and ran to Triplet.
Mrs. Woffington came instantly from
her frame, and stood before them in a despairing attitude,
with one hand upon her brow. For a single moment
her impulse was to fly from the apartment, so ashamed
was she of having listened, and of meeting her rival
in this way; but she conquered this feeling, and,
as soon as she saw Mrs. Vane too had recovered some
composure, she said to Triplet, in a low but firm voice:
“Leave us, sir. No living
creature must hear what I say to this lady!”
Triplet remonstrated, but Mrs. Vane said, faintly:
“Oh, yes, good Mr. Triplet, I would rather you
left me.”
Triplet, full of misgivings, was obliged to retire.
“Be composed, ladies,”
said he piteously. “Neither of you could
help it;” and so he entered his inner room,
where he sat and listened nervously, for he could
not shake off all apprehension of a personal encounter.
In the room he had left there was
a long, uneasy silence. Both ladies were greatly
embarrassed. It was the actress who spoke first.
All trace of emotion, except a certain pallor, was
driven from her face. She spoke with very marked
courtesy, but in tones that seemed to freeze as they
dropped one by one from her mouth.
“I trust, madam, you will do
me the justice to believe I did not know Mr. Vane
was married?”
“I am sure of it!” said
Mabel, warmly. “I feel you are as good as
you are gifted.”
“Mrs. Vane, I am not!”
said the other, almost sternly. “You are
deceived!”
“Then Heaven have mercy on me!
No! I am not deceived, you pitied me. You
speak coldly now; but I know your face and your heart you
pity me!”
“I do respect, admire, and pity
you,” said Mrs. Woffington, sadly; “and
I could consent nevermore to communicate with your with
Mr. Vane.”
“Ah!” cried Mabel; “Heaven
will bless you! But will you give me back his
heart?”
“How can I do that?” said
Mrs. Woffington, uneasily; she had not bargained for
this.
“The magnet can repel as well
as attract. Can you not break your own spell?
What will his presence be to me, if his heart remain
behind?”
“You ask much of me.”
“Alas! I do.”
“But I could do even this.”
She paused for breath. “And perhaps if you,
who have not only touched my heart, but won my respect,
were to say to me, ‘Do so,’ I should do
it.” Again she paused, and spoke with difficulty;
for the bitter struggle took away her breath.
“Mr. Vane thinks better of me than I deserve.
I have only to make him believe
me worthless worse than I am and
he will drop me like an adder and love
you better, far better for having known admired and
despised Margaret Woffington.”
“Oh!” cried Mabel, “I
shall bless you every hour of my life.”
Her countenance brightened into rapture at the picture,
and Mrs. Woffington’s darkened with bitterness
as she watched her.
But Mabel reflected. “Rob
you of your good name?” said this pure creature.
“Ah, Mabel Vane! you think but of yourself.”
“I thank you, madam,”
said Mrs. Woffington, a little touched by this unexpected
trait; “but some one must suffer here, and ”
Mabel Vane interrupted her. “This
would be cruel and base,” said she firmly.
“No woman’s forehead shall be soiled by
me. Oh, madam! beauty is admired, talent is adored;
but virtue is a woman’s crown. With it,
the poor are rich; without it, the rich are poor.
It walks through life upright, and never hides its
head for high or low.”
Her face was as the face of an angel
now; and the actress, conquered by her beauty and
her goodness, actually bowed her head and gently kissed
the hand of the country wife whom she had quizzed a
few hours ago.
Frailty paid this homage to virtue!
Mabel Vane hardly noticed it; her
eye was lifted to heaven, and her heart was gone there
for help in a sore struggle.
“This would be to assassinate
you; no less. And so, madam,” she sighed,
“with God’s help, I do refuse your offer;
choosing rather, if needs be, to live desolate, but
innocent many a better than I hath lived
so ay! if God wills it, to die, with my
hopes and my heart crushed, but my hands unstained;
for so my humble life has passed.”
How beautiful, great, and pure goodness
is! It paints heaven on the face that has it;
it wakens the sleeping souls that meet it.
At the bottom of Margaret Woffington’s
heart lay a soul, unknown to the world, scarce known
to herself a heavenly harp, on which ill
airs of passion had been played but still
it was there, in tune with all that is true, pure,
really great and good. And now the flush that
a great heart sends to the brow, to herald great actions,
came to her cheek and brow.
“Humble!” she cried.
“Such as you are the diamonds of our race.
You angel of truth and goodness, you have conquered!”
“Oh, yes! yes! Thank God, yes!”
“What a fiend I must be could
I injure you! The poor heart we have both overrated
shall be yours again, and yours for ever. In my
hands it is painted glass; in the luster of a love
like yours it may become a priceless jewel.”
She turned her head away and pondered a moment, then
suddenly offered to Mrs. Vane her hand with nobleness
and majesty; “Can you trust me?” The actress
too was divinely beautiful now, for her good angel
shone through her.
“I could trust you with my life!” was
the reply.
“Ah! if I might call you friend,
dear lady, what would I not do suffer resign to
be worthy that title!”
“No, not friend!” cried
the warm, innocent Mabel; “sister! I will
call you sister. I have no sister.”
“Sister!” said Mrs. Woffington.
“Oh, do not mock me! Alas! you do not know
what you say. That sacred name to me, from lips
so pure as yours. Mrs. Vane,” said she,
timidly, “would you think me presumptuous if
I begged you to to let me kiss you?”
The words were scarce spoken before
Mrs. Vane’s arms were wreathed round her neck,
and that innocent cheek laid sweetly to hers.
Mrs. Woffington strained her to her
bosom, and two great hearts, whose grandeur the world,
worshiper of charlatans, never discovered, had found
each other out and beat against each other. A
great heart is as quick to find another out as the
world is slow.
Mrs. Woffington burst into a passion
of tears and clasped Mabel tighter and tighter in
a half-despairing way. Mabel mistook the cause,
but she kissed her tears away.
“Dear sister,” said she,
“be comforted. I love you. My heart
warmed to you the first moment I saw you. A woman’s
love and gratitude are something. Ah! you will
never find me change. This is for life, look
you.”
“God grant it!” cried
the other poor woman. “Oh, it is not that,
it is not that; it is because I am so little worthy
of this. It is a sin to deceive you. I am
not good like you. You do not know me!”
“You do not know yourself if
you say so!” cried Mabel; and to her hearer
the words seemed to come from heaven. “I
read faces,” said Mabel. “I read
yours at sight, and you are what I set you down; and
nobody must breathe a word against you, not even yourself.
Do you think I am blind? You are beautiful, you
are good, you are my sister, and I love you!”
“Heaven forgive me!” thought
the other. “How can I resign this angel’s
good opinion? Surely Heaven sends this blessed
dew to my parched heart!” And now she burned
to make good her promise and earn this virtuous wife’s
love. She folded her once more in her arms, and
then, taking her by the hand, led her tenderly into
Triplet’s inner room. She made her lie
down on the bed, and placed pillows high for her like
a mother, and leaned over her as she lay, and pressed
her lips gently to her forehead. Her fertile
brain had already digested a plan, but she had resolved
that this pure and candid soul should take no lessons
of deceit. “Lie there,” said she,
“till I open the door: then join us.
Do you know what I am going to do? I am not going
to restore you your husband’s heart, but to
show you it never really left you. You read faces;
well, I read circumstances. Matters are not as
you thought,” said she, with all a woman’s
tact. “I cannot explain, but you will see.”
She then gave Mrs. Triplet peremptory orders not to
let her charge rise from the bed until the preconcerted
signal.
Mrs. Vane was, in fact, so exhausted
by all she had gone through that she was in no condition
to resist. She cast a look of childlike confidence
upon her rival, and then closed her eyes, and tried
not to tremble all over and listen like a frightened
hare.
It is one great characteristic of
genius to do great things with little things.
Paxton could see that so small a matter as a greenhouse
could be dilated into a crystal palace, and with two
common materials glass and iron he
raised the palace of the genii; the brightest idea
and the noblest ornament added to Europe in this century the
koh-i-noor of the west. Livy’s definition
of Archimedes goes on the same ground.
Peg Woffington was a genius in her
way. On entering Triplet’s studio her eye
fell upon three trifles Mrs. Vane’s
hood and mantle, the back of an old letter, and Mr.
Triplet. (It will be seen how she worked these slight
materials.) On the letter was written in pencil simply
these two words, “Mabel Vane.” Mrs.
Woffington wrote above these words two more, “Alone
and unprotected.” She put this into Mr.
Triplet’s hand, and bade him take it down stairs
and give it Sir Charles Pomander, whose retreat, she
knew, must have been fictitious. “You will
find him round the corner,” said she, “or
in some shop that looks this way.” While
uttering these words she had put on Mrs. Vane’s
hood and mantle.
No answer was returned, and no Triplet
went out of the door.
She turned, and there he was kneeling
on both knees close under her.
“Bid me jump out of that window,
madam; bid me kill those two gentlemen, and I will
not rebel. You are a great lady, a talented lady;
you have been insulted, and no doubt blood will flow.
It ought it is your due; but that innocent
lady, do not compromise her!”
“Oh, Mr. Triplet, you need not
kneel to me. I do not wish to force you to render
me a service. I have no right to dictate to you.”
“Oh, dear!” cried Triplet,
“don’t talk in that way. I owe you
my life, but I think of your own peace of mind, for
you are not one to be happy if you injure the innocent!”
He rose suddenly, and cried: “Madam, promise
me not to stir till I come back!”
“Where are you going?”
“To bring the husband to his
wife’s feet, and so save one angel from despair,
and another angel from a great crime.”
“Well, I suppose you are wiser
than I,” said she. “But, if you are
in earnest, you had better be quick, for somehow I
am rather changeable about these people.”
“You can’t help that,
madam, it is your sex; you are an angel. May I
be permitted to kiss your hand? you are all goodness
and gentleness at bottom. I fly to Mr. Vane,
and we will be back before you have time to repent,
and give the Devil the upper hand again, my dear, good,
sweet lady!”
Away flew Triplet, all unconscious
that he was not Mrs. Woffington’s opponent,
but puppet. He ran, he tore, animated by a good
action, and spurred by the notion that he was in direct
competition with the fiend for the possession of his
benefactress. He had no sooner turned the corner
than Mrs. Woffington, looking out of the window, observed
Sir Charles Pomander on the watch, as she had expected.
She remained at the window with Mrs. Vane’s
hood on, until Sir Charles’s eye in its wanderings
lighted on her, and then, dropping Mrs. Vane’s
letter from the window, she hastily withdrew.
Sir Charles eagerly picked it up.
His eye brightened when he read the short contents.
With a self-satisfied smile he mounted the stair.
He found in Triplet’s house a lady who seemed
startled at her late hardihood. She sat with
her back to the door, her hood drawn tightly down,
and wore an air of trembling consciousness. Sir
Charles smiled again. He knew the sex, at least
he said so. (It is an assertion often ventured upon.)
Accordingly Sir Charles determined to come down from
his height, and court nature and innocence in their
own tones. This he rightly judged must be the
proper course to take with Mrs. Vane. He fell
down with mock ardor upon one knee.
The supposed Mrs. Vane gave a little squeak.
“Dear Mrs. Vane,” cried
he, “be not alarmed; loveliness neglected, and
simplicity deceived, insure respect as well as adoration.
Ah!” (A sigh.)
“Oh, get up, sir; do, please. Ah!”
(A sigh.)
“You sigh, sweetest of human
creatures. Ah! why did not a nature like yours
fall into hands that would have cherished it as it
deserves? Had Heaven bestowed on me this hand,
which I take ”
“Oh, please, sir ”
“With the profoundest respect,
would I have abandoned such a treasure for an actress? a
Woffington! as artificial and hollow a jade as ever
winked at a side box!”
“Is she, sir?”
“Notorious, madam. Your
husband is the only man in London who does not see
through her. How different are you! Even
I, who have no taste for actresses, found myself revived,
refreshed, ameliorated by that engaging picture of
innocence and virtue you drew this morning; yourself
the bright and central figure. Ah, dear angel!
I remember all your favorites, and envy them their
place in your recollections. Your Barbary mare ”
“Hen, sir!
“Of course I meant hen; and Gray Gillian, his
old nurse ”
“No, no, no! she is the mare, sir. He!
he! he!”
“So she is. And Dame Dame ”
“Best!”
“Ah! I knew it. You
see how I remember them all. And all carry me
back to those innocent days which fleet too soon days
when an angel like you might have weaned me from the
wicked pleasures of the town, to the placid delights
of a rural existence!”
“Alas, sir!”
“You sigh. It is not yet
too late. I am a convert to you; I swear it on
this white hand. Ah! how can I relinquish it,
pretty fluttering prisoner?”
“Oh, please ”
“Stay a while.”
“No! please, sir ”
“While I fetter thee with a
worthy manacle.” Sir Charles slipped a
diamond ring of great value upon his pretty prisoner.
“La, sir, how pretty!” cried innocence.
Sir Charles then undertook to prove
that the luster of the ring was faint, compared with
that of the present wearer’s eyes. This
did not suit innocence; she hung her head and fluttered,
and showed a bashful repugnance to look her admirer
in the face. Sir Charles playfully insisted,
and Mrs. Woffington was beginning to be a little at
a loss, when suddenly voices were heard upon the stairs.
"My husband!" cried the false
Mrs. Vane, and in a moment she rose and darted into
Triplet’s inner apartment.
Mr. Vane and Mr. Triplet were talking
earnestly as they came up the stair. It seems
the wise Triplet had prepared a little dramatic scene
for his own refreshment, as well as for the ultimate
benefit of all parties. He had persuaded Mr.
Vane to accompany him by warm, mysterious promises
of a happy denouement; and now, having conducted
that gentleman as far as his door, he was heard to
say:
“And now, sir, you shall see
one who waits to forget grief, suspicion all,
in your arms. Behold!” and here he flung
the door open.
“The devil!”
“You flatter me!” said
Pomander, who had had time to recover his aplomb,
somewhat shaken, at first, by Mr. Vane’s inopportune
arrival.
Now it is to be observed that Mr.
Vane had not long ago seen his wife lying on her bed,
to all appearance incapable of motion.
Mr. Vane, before Triplet could recover
his surprise, inquired of Pomander why he had sent
for him. “And what,” added he, “is
the grief, suspicion, I am, according to Mr. Triplet,
to forget in your arms?”
Mr. Vane added this last sentence
in rather a testy manner.
“Why, the fact is ”
began Sir Charles, without the remotest idea of what
the fact was going to be.
“That Sir Charles Pomander ”
interrupted Triplet.
“But Mr. Triplet is going to explain,”
said Sir Charles, keenly.
“Nay, sir; be yours the pleasing
duty. But, now I think of it,” resumed
Triplet, “why not tell the simple truth? it is
not a play! She I brought you here to see was
not Sir Charles Pomander; but ”
“I forbid you to complete the name!” cried
Pomander.
“I command you to complete the name!”
cried Vane.
“Gentlemen, gentlemen! how can I do both?”
remonstrated Triplet.
“Enough, sir!” cried Pomander.
“It is a lady’s secret. I am the guardian
of that lady’s honor.”
“She has chosen a strange guardian of her honor!”
said Vane bitterly.
“Gentlemen!” cried poor
Triplet, who did not at all like the turn things were
taking, “I give you my word, she does not even
know of Sir Charies’s presence here!”
“Who?” cried Vane, furiously. “Man
alive! who are you speaking of?”
“Mrs. Vane.”
“My wife!” cried Vane,
trembling with anger and jealousy. “She
here! and with this man?”
“No!” cried Triplet. “With
me, with me! Not with him, of course.”
“Boaster!” cried Vane,
contemptuously. “But that is a part of your
profession!”
Pomander, irritated, scornfully drew
from his pocket the ladies’ joint production,
which had fallen at his feet from Mrs. Woffington’s
hand. He presented this to Mr. Vane, who took
it very uneasily; a mist swam before his eyes as he
read the words: “Alone and unprotected Mabel
Vane.” He had no sooner read these words,
than he found he loved his wife; when he tampered
with his treasure, he did not calculate on another
seeking it.
This was Pomander’s hour of
triumph! He proceeded coolly to explain to Mr.
Vane, that, Mrs. Woffington having deserted him for
Mr. Vane, and Mr. Vane his wife for Mrs. Woffington,
the bereaved parties had, according to custom, agreed
to console each other.
This soothing little speech was interrupted
by Mr. Vane’s sword flashing suddenly out of
its sheath; while that gentleman, white with rage and
jealousy, bade him instantly take to his guard, or
be run through the body like some noxious animal.
Sir Charles drew his sword, and, in
spite of Triplet’s weak interference, half a
dozen passes were rapidly exchanged, when suddenly
the door of the inner room opened, and a lady in a
hood pronounced, in a voice which was an excellent
imitation of Mrs. Vane’s, the word, “False!”
The combatants lowered their points.
“You hear, sir!” cried Triplet.
“You see, sir!” said Pomander.
“Mabel! wife!”
cried Mr. Vane, in agony. “Oh, say this
is not true! Oh, say that letter is a forgery!
Say, at least, it was by some treachery you were lured
to this den of iniquity! Oh, speak!”
The lady silently beckoned to some person inside.
“You know I loved you you
know how bitterly I repent the infatuation that brought
me to the feet of another!”
The lady replied not, though Vane’s
soul appeared to hang upon her answer. But she
threw the door open and there appeared another lady,
the real Mrs. Vane. Mrs. Woffington then threw
off her hood, and, to Sir Charles Pomander’s
consternation, revealed the features of that ingenious
person, who seemed born to outwit him.
“You heard that fervent declaration,
madam?” said she to Mrs. Vane. “I
present to you, madam, a gentleman who regrets that
he mistook the real direction of his feelings.
And to you, sir,” continued she, with great
dignity, “I present a lady who will never mistake
either her feelings or her duty.”
“Ernest! dear Ernest!”
cried Mrs. Vane, blushing as if she was the culprit.
And she came forward all love and tenderness.
Her truant husband kneeled at her
feet of course. No! he said, rather sternly,
“How came you here, Mabel?”
“Mrs. Vane,” said the
actress, “fancied you had mislaid that weathercock,
your heart, in Covent Garden, and that an actress had
seen in it a fit companion for her own, and had feloniously
appropriated it. She came to me to inquire after
it.”
“But this letter, signed by
you?” said Vane, still addressing Mabel.
“Was written by me on a paper
which accidentally contained Mrs. Vane’s name.
The fact is, Mr. Vane I can hardly look
you in the face I had a little wager with
Sir Charles here; his diamond ring which
you may see has become my diamond ring” a
horrible wry face from Sir Charles “against
my left glove that I could bewitch a country gentleman’s
imagination, and make him think me an angel. Unfortunately
the owner of his heart appeared, and, like poor Mr.
Vane, took our play for earnest. It became necessary
to disabuse her and to open your eyes. Have I
done so?”
“You have, madam,” said
Vane, wincing at each word she said. But at last,
by a mighty effort, he mastered himself, and, coming
to Mrs. Woffington with a quivering lip, he held out
his hand suddenly in a very manly way. “I
have been the dupe of my own vanity,” said he,
“and I thank you for this lesson.”
Poor Mrs. Woffington’s fortitude had well-nigh
left her at this.
“Mabel,” he cried, “is
this humiliation any punishment for my folly? any
guaranty for my repentance? Can you forgive me?”
“It is all forgiven, Ernest.
But, oh, you are mistaken.” She glided to
Mrs. Woffington. “What do we not owe you,
sister?” whispered she.
“Nothing! that word pays all,”
was the reply. She then slipped her address into
Mrs. Vane’s hand, and, courtesying to all the
company, she hastily left the room.
Sir Charles Pomander followed; but
he was not quick enough. She got a start, and
purposely avoided him, and for three days neither the
public nor private friends saw this poor woman’s
face.
Mr. and Mrs. Vane prepared to go also;
but Mrs. Vane would thank good Mr. Triplet and Mrs.
Triplet for their kindness to her.
Triplet the benevolent blushed, was
confused and delighted; but suddenly, turning somewhat
sorrowful, he said: “Mr. Vane, madam, made
use of an expression which caused a momentary pang.
He called this a den of iniquity. Now this is
my studio! But never mind.”
Mr. Vane asked his pardon for so absurd
an error, and the pair left Triplet in all the enjoyment
which does come now and then to an honest man, whether
this dirty little world will or not.
A coach was called and they went home
to Bloomsbury. Few words were said; but the repentant
husband often silently pressed this angel to his bosom,
and the tears which found their way to her beautiful
eyelashes were tears of joy.
This weakish, and consequently villainous,
though not ill-disposed person would have gone down
to Willoughby that night; but his wife had great good
sense. She would not take her husband off, like
a school-boy caught out of bounds. She begged
him to stay while she made certain purchases; but,
for all that, her heart burned to be at home.
So in less than a week after the events we have related
they left London.
Meantime, every day Mrs. Vane paid
a quiet visit to Mrs. Woffington (for some days the
actress admitted no other visitor), and was with her
but two hours before she left London. On that
occasion she found her very sad.
“I shall never see you again
in this world,” said she; “but I beg of
you to write to me, that my mind may be in contact
with yours.”
She then asked Mabel, in her half-sorrowful,
half-bitter way, how many months it would be ere she
was forgotten.
Mabel answered by quietly crying.
So then they embraced; and Mabel assured her friend
she was not one of those who change their minds.
“It is for life, dear sister; it is for life,”
cried she.
“Swear this to me,” said
the other, almost sternly. “But no.
I have more confidence in that candid face and pure
nature than in a human being’s oath. If
you are happy, remember you owe me something.
If you are unhappy, come to me, and I will love you
as men cannot love.”
Then vows passed between them, for
a singular tie bound these two women; and then the
actress showed a part at least of her sore heart to
her new sister; and that sister was surprised and
grieved, and pitied her truly and deeply, and they
wept on each other’s neck; and at last they were
fain to part. They parted; and true it was, they
never met again in this world. They parted in
sorrow; but when they meet again, it shall be with
joy.
Women are generally such faithless,
unscrupulous and pitiless humbugs in their dealings
with their own sex which, whatever they
may say, they despise at heart that I am
happy to be able to say, Mrs. Vane proved true as
steel. She was a noble-minded, simple-minded creature;
she was also a constant creature. Constancy is
a rare, a beautiful, a godlike virtue.
Four times every year she wrote a
long letter to Mrs. Woffington; and twice a year,
in the cold weather, she sent her a hamper of country
delicacies that would have victualed a small garrison.
And when her sister left this earthly scene a
humble, pious, long-repentant Christian Mrs.
Vane wore mourning for her, and sorrowed over her;
but not as those who cannot hope to meet again.
My story as a work of art good,
bad or indifferent ends with that last
sentence. If a reader accompanies me further,
I shall feel flattered, and he does so at his own
risk.
My reader knows that all this befell
long ago. That Woffington is gay, and Triplet
sad, no more. That Mabel’s, and all the
bright eyes of that day, have long been dim, and all
its cunning voices hushed. Judge then whether
I am one of those happy story-tellers who can end with
a wedding. No! this story must wind up, as yours
and mine must to-morrow or to-morrow or
to-morrow! when our little sand is run.
Sir Charles Pomander lived a man of
pleasure until sixty. He then became a man of
pain; he dragged the chain about eight years, and died
miserably.
Mr. Cibber not so much died as “slipped
his wind” a nautical expression that
conveys the idea of an easy exit. He went off,
quiet and genteel. He was past eighty, and had
lived fast. His servant called him at seven in
the morning. “I will shave at eight,”
said Mr. Cibber. John brought the hot water at
eight; but his master had taken advantage of this
interval in his toilet to die! to avoid
shaving?
Snarl and Soaper conducted the criticism
of their day with credit and respectability until
a good old age, and died placidly a natural death,
like twaddle, sweet or sour.
The Triplets, while their patroness
lived, did pretty well. She got a tragedy of
his accepted at her theater. She made him send
her a copy, and with her scissors cut out about half;
sometimes thinning, sometimes cutting bodily away.
But, lo! the inherent vanity of Mr. Triplet came out
strong. Submissively, but obstinately, he fought
for the discarded beauties. Unluckily, he did
this one day that his patroness was in one of her
bitter humors. So she instantly gave him back
his manuscript, with a sweet smile owned herself inferior
in judgment to him, and left him unmolested.
Triplet breathed freely; a weight
was taken off him. The savage steel (he applied
this title to the actress’s scissors) had spared
his purpurei panni. He was played, pure and
intact, a calamity the rest of us grumbling escape.
But it did so happen that the audience
were of the actress’s mind, and found the words
too exuberant, and the business of the play too scanty
in proportion. At last their patience was so sorely
tried that they supplied one striking incident to
a piece deficient in facts. They gave the manager
the usual broad hint, and in the middle of Triplet’s
third act a huge veil of green baize descended upon
“The Jealous Spaniard.”
Failing here, Mrs. Woffington contrived
often to befriend him in his other arts, and moreover
she often sent Mr. Triplet what she called a snug
investment, a loan of ten pounds, to be repaid at Doomsday,
with interest and compound interest, according to
the Scriptures; and, although she laughed, she secretly
believed she was to get her ten pounds back, double
and treble. And I believe so too.
Some years later Mrs. Triplet became
eventful. She fell ill, and lay a dying; but
one fine morning, after all hope had been given up,
she suddenly rose and dressed herself. She was
quite well in body now, but insane.
She continued in this state a month,
and then, by God’s mercy, she recovered her
reason; but now the disease fell another step, and
lighted upon her temper a more athletic
vixen was not to be found. She had spoiled Triplet
for this by being too tame, so when the dispensation
came they sparred daily. They were now thoroughly
unhappy. They were poor as ever, and their benefactress
was dead, and they had learned to snap. A speculative
tour had taken this pair to Bristol, then the second
city in England. They sojourned in the suburbs.
One morning the postman brought a
letter for Triplet, who was showing his landlord’s
boy how to plant onions. (N. B. Triplet
had never planted an onion, but he was one of your
a priori gentlemen, and could show anybody
how to do anything.) Triplet held out his hand for
the letter, but the postman held out his hand for
a half crown first. Trip’s profession had
transpired, and his clothes inspired diffidence.
Triplet appealed to his good feeling.
He replied with exultation, “That
he had none left.” (A middle-aged postman, no
doubt.)
Triplet then suddenly started from
entreaty to King Cambyses’ vein. In vain!
Mrs. Triplet came down, and essayed
the blandishments of the softer sex. In vain!
And, as there were no assets, the postman marched off
down the road.
Mrs. Triplet glided after him like
an assassin, beckoning on Triplet, who followed, doubtful
of her designs. Suddenly (truth compels me to
relate this) she seized the obdurate official from
behind, pinned both his arms to his side, and with
her nose furiously telegraphed her husband.
He, animated by her example, plunged
upon the man and tore the letter from his hand and
opened it before his eyes.
It happened to be a very windy morning,
and when he opened the letter an inclosure, printed
on much finer paper, was caught into the air and went
down the wind. Triplet followed in kangaroo leaps,
like a dancer making a flying exit.
The postman cried on all good citizens
for help. Some collected and laughed at him;
Mrs. Triplet explaining that they were poor, and could
not pay half a crown for the freight of half an ounce
of paper. She held him convulsively until Triplet
reappeared.
That gentleman on his return was ostentatiously
calm and dignified. “You are, or were,
in perturbation about half a crown,” said he.
“There, sir, is a twenty-pound note, oblige
me with nineteen pounds seventeen shillings and sixpence.
Should your resources be unequal to such a demand,
meet me at the ‘Green Cat and Brown Frogs,’
after dinner, when you shall receive your half-crown,
and drink another upon the occasion of my sudden accession
to unbounded affluence.”
The postman was staggered by the sentence
and overawed by the note, and chose the “Cat
and Frogs,” and liquid half-crown.
Triplet took his wife down the road
and showed her the letter and inclosure. The
letter ran thus:
“SIR We beg respectfully
to inform you that our late friend and client, James
Triplet, Merchant, of the Minories, died last August,
without a will, and that you are his heir.
“His property amounts to about
twenty thousand pounds, besides some reversions.
Having possessed the confidence of your late uncle
we should feel honored and gratified if you should
think us worthy to act professionally for yourself.
“We inclose twenty pounds, and
beg you will draw upon us as far as five thousand
pounds, should you have immediate occasion.
“We are, sir,
“Your humble servants,
“JAMES AND JOHN ALLMITT.”
It was some time before these children
of misfortune could realize this enormous stroke of
compensation; but at last it worked its way into their
spirits, and they began to sing, to triumph, and dance
upon the king’s highway.
Mrs. Triplet was the first to pause,
and take better views. “Oh, James!”
she cried, “we have suffered much! we have been
poor, but honest, and the Almighty has looked upon
us at last!”
Then they began to reproach themselves.
“Oh, James! I have been
a peevish woman an ill wife to you, this
many years!”
“No, no!” cried Triplet,
with tears in his eyes. “It is I who have
been rough and brutal. Poverty tried us too hard;
but we were not like the rest of them we
were always faithful to the altar. And the Almighty
has seen us, though we often doubted it.”
“I never doubted that, James.”
So then the poor things fell on their
knees upon the public road, and thanked God.
If any man had seen them, he would have said they were
mad. Yet madder things are done every day by
gentlemen with faces as grave as the parish bull’s.
And then they rose and formed their little plans.
Triplet was for devoting four-fifths
to charity, and living like a prince on the remainder.
But Mrs. Triplet thought the poor were entitled to
no more than two-thirds, and they themselves ought
to bask in a third, to make up for what they had gone
through; and then suddenly she sighed, and burst into
tears. “Lucy! Lucy!” sobbed she.
Yes, reader, God had taken little
Lucy! And her mother cried to think all this
wealth and comfort had come too late for her darling
child.
“Do not cry. Lucy is richer,
a thousand times, than you are, with your twenty thousand
pounds.”
Their good resolutions were carried
out, for a wonder. Triplet lived for years, the
benefactor of all the loose fish that swim in and round
theaters; and, indeed, the unfortunate seldom appealed
to him in vain. He now predominated over the
arts, instead of climbing them. In his latter
day he became an oracle, as far as the science of acting
was concerned; and, what is far more rare, he really
got to know something about it. This was
owing to two circumstances: first, he ceased to
run blindfold in a groove behind the scenes; second,
he became a frequenter of the first row of the pit,
and that is where the whole critic, and two-thirds
of the true actor, is made.
On one point, to his dying day, his
feelings guided his judgment. He never could
see an actress equal to his Woffington. Mrs. Abington
was grace personified, but so was Woffington, said
the old man: and Abington’s voice is thin,
Woffington’s was sweet and mellow. When
Jordan rose, with her voice of honey, her dewy freshness,
and her heavenly laugh, that melted in along with
her words, like the gold in the quartz, Triplet was
obliged to own her the goddess of beautiful gayety;
but still he had the last word: “Woffington
was all she is, except her figure. Woffington
was a Hebe; your Nell Jordan is little better than
a dowdy.”
Triplet almost reached the present
century. He passed through great events, but
they did not excite him; his eye was upon the arts.
When Napoleon drew his conquering sword on England,
Triplet’s remark was: “Now we shall
be driven upon native talent, thank Heaven!”
The storms of Europe shook not Triplet. The fact
is, nothing that happened on the great stage of the
world seemed real to him. He believed in nothing
where there was no curtain visible. But even the
grotesque are not good in vain. Many an eye was
wet round his dying bed, and many a tear fell upon
his grave. He made his final exit in the year
of grace 1799. And I, who laugh at him, would
leave this world to-day to be with him; for I am tossing
at sea he is in port.
A straightforward character like Mabel’s
becomes a firm character with years. Long ere
she was forty, her hand gently but steadily ruled
Willoughby House, and all in it. She and Mr. Vane
lived very happily; he gave her no fresh cause for
uneasiness. Six months after their return, she
told him what burned in that honest heart of hers,
the truth about Mrs. Woffington. The water rushed
to his eyes, but his heart was now wholly his wife’s;
and gratitude to Mrs. Woffington for her noble conduct
was the only sentiment awakened.
“You must repay her, dearest,”
said he. “I know you love her, and until
to-day it gave me pain; now it gives me pleasure.
We owe her much.”
The happy, innocent life of Mabel
Vane is soon summed up. Frank as the day, constant
as the sun, pure as the dew, she passed the golden
years preparing herself and others for a still brighter
eternity. At home, it was she who warmed and
cheered the house, and the hearth, more than all Christmas
fires. Abroad, she shone upon the poor like the
sun. She led her beloved husband by the hand
to Heaven. She led her children the same road;
and she was leading her grandchildren when the angel
of death came for her; and she slept in peace.
Many remember her. For she alone,
of all our tale, lived in this present century; but
they speak of her as “old Madam Vane” her
whom we knew so young and fresh.
She lies in Willoughby Church her
mortal part; her spirit is with the spirits of our
mothers and sisters, reader, that are gone before us;
with the tender mothers, the chaste wives, the loyal
friends, and the just women of all ages.
RESURGET.
I come to her last, who went first;
but I could not have stayed by the others, when once
I had laid my darling asleep. It seemed for a
while as if the events of our tale did her harm; but
it was not so in the end.
Not many years afterward, she was
engaged by Mr. Sheridan, at a very heavy salary, and
went to Dublin. Here the little girl, who had
often carried a pitcher on her head down to the Liffey,
and had played Polly Peachum in a booth, became a
lion; dramatic, political and literary, and the center
of the wit of that wittiest of cities.
But the Dublin ladies and she did
not coalesce. They said she was a naughty woman,
and not fit for them morally. She said they had
but two topics, “silks and scandal,” and
were unfit for her intellectually.
This was the saddest part of her history.
But it is darkest just before sunrise. She returned
to London. Not long after, it so happened that
she went to a small church in the city one Sunday
afternoon. The preacher was such as we have often
heard; but not so this poor woman, in her day of sapless
theology, ere John Wesley waked the snoring church.
Instead of sending a dry clatter of morality about
their ears, or evaporating the Bible in the thin generalities
of the pulpit, this man drove God’s truths home
to the hearts of men and women. In his hands the
divine virtues were thunderbolts, not swans’
down. With good sense, plain speaking, and a
heart yearning for the souls of his brethren and his
sisters, he stormed the bosoms of many; and this afternoon,
as he reasoned like Paul of righteousness, temperance,
and judgment to come, sinners trembled and
Margaret Woffington was of those who trembled.
After this day, she came ever to the
narrow street where shone this house of God; and still
new light burst upon her heart and conscience.
Here she learned why she was unhappy; here she learned
how alone she could be happy; here she learned to
know herself; and, the moment she knew herself, she
abhorred herself, and repented in dust and ashes.
This strong and straightforward character
made no attempt to reconcile two things that an average
Christian would have continued to reconcile.
Her interest fell in a moment before her new sense
of right. She flung her profession from her like
a poisonous weed.
Long before this, Mrs. Vane had begged
her to leave the stage. She had replied, that
it was to her what wine is to weak stomachs. “But,”
added she, “do not fear that I will ever crawl
down hill, and unravel my own reputation; nor will
I ever do as I have seen others stand groaning
at the wing, to go on giggling and come off gasping.
No! the first night the boards do not spring beneath
my feet, and the pulse of the public beat under my
hand, I am gone! Next day, at rehearsal, instead
of Woffington, a note will come, to tell the manager
that henceforth Woffington is herself at
Twickenham, or Richmond, or Harrow-on-the-Hill, far
from his dust, his din, and his glare quiet,
till God takes her. Amid grass, and flowers, and
charitable deeds.”
This day had not come. It was
in the zenith of her charms and her fame that she
went home one night after a play, and never entered
a theater, by the front door or back door, again.
She declined all leave-taking and ceremony.
“When a publican shuts up shop
and ceases to diffuse liquid poison, he does not invite
the world to put up the shutters; neither will I.
Actors overrate themselves ridiculously,” added
she; “I am not of that importance to the world,
nor the world to me. I fling away a dirty old
glove instead of soiling my fingers filling it with
more guineas, and the world loses in me, what? another
old glove, full of words; half of them idle, the rest
wicked, untrue, silly, or impure. Rougissons, taisons-nous,
et partons."
She now changed her residence, and
withdrew politely from her old associates, courting
two classes only, the good and the poor. She had
always supported her mother and sister; but now charity
became her system. The following is characteristic:
A gentleman who had greatly admired
this dashing actress met one day, in the suburbs,
a lady in an old black silk gown and a gray shawl,
with a large basket on her arm. She showed him
its contents worsted stockings of prodigious
thickness which she was carrying to some
of her proteges.
“But surely that is a waste
of your valuable time,” remonstrated her admirer.
“Much better buy them.”
“But, my good soul,” replied
the representative of Sir Harry Wildair, “you
can’t buy them. Nobody in this wretched
town can knit worsted hose except Woffington.”
Conversions like this are open to
just suspicion, and some did not fail to confound
her with certain great sinners, who have turned austere
self-deceivers when sin smiled no more. But this
was mere conjecture. The facts were clear, and
speaking to the contrary. This woman left folly
at its brightest, and did not become austere.
On the contrary, though she laughed less, she was
observed to smile far oftener than before. She
was a humble and penitent, but cheerful, hopeful Christian.
Another class of detractors took a
somewhat opposite ground. They accused her of
bigotry for advising a young female friend against
the stage as a business. But let us hear herself.
This is what she said to the girl:
“At the bottom of my heart,
I always loved and honored virtue. Yet the tendencies
of the stage so completely overcame my good sentiments
that I was for years a worthless woman. It is
a situation of uncommon and incessant temptation.
Ask yourself, my child, whether there is nothing else
you can do, but this. It is, I think, our duty
and our wisdom to fly temptation whenever we can,
as it is to resist it when we cannot escape it.”
Was this the tone of bigotry?
Easy in fortune, penitent, but cheerful,
Mrs. Woffington had now but one care to
efface the memory of her former self, and to give as
many years to purity and piety as had gone to folly
and frailty. This was not to be! The Almighty
did not permit, or perhaps I should say, did not require
this.
Some unpleasant symptoms had long
attracted her notice, but in the bustle of her profession
had received little attention. She was now persuaded
by her own medical attendant to consult Dr. Bowdler,
who had a great reputation, and had been years ago
an acquaintance and an admirer. He visited her,
he examined her by means little used in that day, and
he saw at once that her days were numbered.
Dr. Bowdler’s profession and
experience had not steeled his heart as they generally
do and must do. He could not tell her this sad
news, so he asked her for pen and paper, and said,
I will write a prescription to Mr. .
He then wrote, not a prescription, but a few lines,
begging Mr. to convey the cruel
intelligence by degrees, and with care and tenderness.
“It is all we can do for her,” said he.
He looked so grave while writing the
supposed prescription, that it unluckily occurred
to Mrs. Woffington to look over him. She stole
archly behind him, and, with a smile on her face read
her death warrant.
It was a cruel stroke! A gasping
sigh broke from her. At this Dr. Bowdler looked
up, and to his horror saw the sweet face he had doomed
to the tomb looking earnestly and anxiously at him,
and very pale and grave. He was shocked, and,
strange to say, she, whose death-warrant he had signed,
ran and brought him a glass of wine, for he was quite
overcome. Then she gave him her hand in her own
sweet way, and bade him not grieve for her, for she
was not afraid to die, and had long learned that “life
is a walking shadow, a poor, poor player, who frets
and struts his hour upon the stage, and then is heard
no more.”
But no sooner was the doctor gone
than she wept bitterly. Poor soul! she had set
her heart upon living as many years to God as she had
to the world, and she had hoped to wipe out her former
self.
“Alas!” she said to her
sister, “I have done more harm than I can ever
hope to good now; and my long life of folly and wickedness
will be remembered will be what they call
famous; my short life of repentance who will know,
or heed, or take to profit?”
But she soon ceased to repine.
She bowed to the will of Heaven, and set her house
in order, and awaited her summons. The tranquillity
of her life and her courageous spirit were unfavorable
to the progress of disease, and I am glad to say she
was permitted to live nearly three years after this,
and these three years were the happiest period of her
whole life. Works of piety and love made the days
eventful. She was at home now she
had never been at home in folly and loose living.
All her bitterness was gone now, with its cause.
Reader, it was with her as it is with
many an autumn day; clouds darken the sun, rain and
wind sweep over all till day declines.
But then comes one heavenly hour, when all ill things
seem spent. There is no more wind, no more rain.
The great sun comes forth not fiery bright
indeed, but full of tranquil glory, and warms the
sky with ruby waves, and the hearts of men with hope,
as, parting with us for a little space, he glides
slowly and peacefully to rest.
So fared it with this humble, penitent,
and now happy Christian.
A part of her desire was given her.
She lived long enough to read a firm recantation of
her former self, to show the world a great repentance,
and to leave upon indelible record one more proof,
what alone is true wisdom, and where alone true joys
are to be found.
She endured some physical pain, as
all must who die in their prime. But this never
wrung a sigh from her great heart; and within she had
the peace of God, which passes all understanding.
I am not strong enough to follow her
to her last hour; nor is it needed. Enough that
her own words came true. When the great summons
came, it found her full of hope, and peace, and joy;
sojourning, not dwelling, upon earth; far from dust
and din and vice; the Bible in her hand, the Cross
in her heart; quiet; amid grass, and flowers, and charitable
deeds.
“NON OMNEM MORITURAM.”