I sit down to give you an undeniable
proof of my considering your desires as indispensable
orders. Ungracious then as the task may be, I
shall recall to view those scandalous stages of my
life, out of which I emerged, at length, to the enjoyment
of every blessing in the power of love, health and
fortune to bestow; whilst yet in the flower of youth,
and not too late to employ the leisure afforded me
by great ease and affluence, to cultivate an understanding,
naturally not a despicable one, and which had, even
amidst the whirl of loose pleasures I had been tossed
in, exerted more observation on the characters and
manners of the world than what is common to those
of my unhappy profession, who, looking on all though
or reflection as their capital enemy, keep it at as
great a distance as they can, or destroy it without
mercy.
Hating, as I mortally do, all long
unnecessary prefaces, I shall give you good quarter
in this, and use no farther apology, than to prepare
you for seeing the loose part of my life, written with
the same liberty that I led it.
Truth! stark, naked truth, is the
word; and I will not so much as take the pains to
bestow the strip of a gauze wrapper on it, but paint
situations such as they actually rose to me in nature,
careless of violating those laws of decency that were
never made for such unreserved intimacies as ours;
and you have too much sense, too much knowledge of
the originals, to sniff prudishly and out of character
at the pictures of them. The greatest men, those
of the first and most leading taste, will not scruple
adorning their private closets with nudities, though,
in compliance with vulgar prejudices, they may not
think them decent decorations of the staircase, or
salon.
This, and enough, premised, I go souse
into my personal history. My maiden name was
Frances Hill. I was born at a small village near
Liverpool, in Lancashire, of parents extremely poor,
and, I piously believe, extremely honest.
My father, who had received a maim
on his limbs, that disabled him from following the
more laborious branches of country drudgery, got,
by making nets, a scanty subsistence, which was not
much enlarged by my mother’s keeping a little
day-school for the girls in her neighborhood.
They had had several children; but none lived to any
age except myself, who had received from nature a
constitution perfectly healthy.
My education, till past fourteen,
was no better than very vulgar: reading, or rather
spelling, an illegible scrawl, and a little ordinary
plain work, composed the whole system of it; and then
all my foundation in virtue was no other than a total
ignorance of vice, and the shy timidity general to
our sex, in the tender age of life, when objects alarm
or frighten more by their novelty than anything else.
But then, this is a fear too often cured at the expense
of innocence, when Miss, by degrees, begins no longer
to look on a man as a creature of prey that will eat
her.
My poor mother had divided her time
so entirely between her scholars and her little domestic
cares, that she had spared very little to my instruction,
having, from her own innocence from all ill, no hint
or thought of guarding me against any.
I was now entering on my fifteenth
year, when the worst of ills befell me in the loss
of my fond, tender parents, who were both carried off
by the small-pox, within a few days of each other;
my father dying first, and thereby by hastening the
death of my mother: so that I was now left an
unhappy friendless orphan (for my father’s coming
to settle there, was accidental, he being originally
a Kentisrman). That cruel distemper which had
proved so fatal to them, had indeed seized me, but
with such mild and favourable symptoms, that I was
presently out of danger, and what then I did not know
the value of, was entirely unmarked I skip over here
an account of the natural grief and affliction which
I felt on this melancholy occasion. A little
time, and the giddiness of that age, dissipated too
soon my reflections on that irreparable loss; but nothing
contributed more to reconcile me to it, than the notions
that were immediately put into my head, of going to
London, and looking out for a service, in which I
was promised all assistance and advice from one Esther
Davis, a young woman that had beer down to see her
friends, and who, after the stay of a few days, was
returned to her place.
As I had now nobody left alive in
the village, who had concerned enough about what should
become of me, to start any objections to this scheme,
and the woman who took care of me after my parents’
death, rather encouraged me to pursue it, I soon came
to a resolution of making this launch into the wide
world, by repairing to London, in order to seek my
fortune, a phrase which, by the bye, has ruined more
adventurers of both sexes, from the country, than
ever it made or advanced.
Nor did Esther Davis a little comfort
and inspirit me to venture with her, by piquing my
childish curiosity with the fine sights that were to
be seen in London: the Tombs, the Lions, the King,
the Royal Family, the fine Plays and Operas, and,
in short, all the diversions which fell within her
sphere of life to come at; the detail of all which
perfectly turned the little head of me.
Nor can I remember, without laughing,
the innocent admiration, not without a spice of envy,
with which we poor girls, whose church-going clothes
did not rise above dowlas shifts and stuff gowns, beplaced
with silver: all which we imagined grew in London,
and entered for a great deal into my determination
of trying to come in for my share of them.
The idea however of having the company
of a towns-woman with her, was the trivial, and all
the motives that engaged Esther to take charge of
me during my journey to town, where she told me, after
the manner and style, “as how several maids
out of the country had made themselves and all their
kind for ever: that by preserving their virtue,
some had taken so with their masters, that they had
married them, and kept them coaches, and lived vastly
grand and happy; and some, may-hap, came to be Duchesses;
luck was all, and why not I, as well as another?”;
with other almanacs to this purpose, which set me
a tip-toe to begin this promising journey, and to
leave a place which, though my native one, contained
no relations that I had reason to regret, and was
grown insupportable to me, from the change of the
tenderest usage into a cold air of charity, with which
I was entertained, even at the only friend’s
house that I had the least expectation of care and
protection from. She was, however, so just to
me, as to manage the turning into money the little
matters that remained to me after the debts and burial
charges were allowed for, and, at my departure, put
my whole fortune into my hands; which consisted of
a very slender wardrobe, packed up in a very portable
box, and eight guineas, with seventeen shillings in
silver, stowed in a spring-pouch, which was a greater
treasure than I ever had seen together, and which I
could not conceive there was a possibility of running
out; and indeed, I was so entirely taken up with the
joy of seeing myself mistress of such an immence sum,
that I gave very little attention to a world of good
advice which was given me with it.
Places, then, being taken for Esther
and me in the Chester waggon, I pass over a very immaterial
scene of leave-taking, at which I droped a few tears
betwixt grief and joy; and, for the same reasons of
insignificance, skip over all that happened to me on
the road, such as the waggoner’s looking liquorish
on me, the schemes laid for me by some of the passengers,
which were defeated by the valiance of my guardian
Esther; who, to do her justice, took a motherly care
of me, at the same time that she taxed me for the
protection by making me bear all travelling charges,
which I defrayed with the unmost cheerfulness, and
thought myself much obliged to her into the bargain.
She took indeed great care that we
were not overrated, or imposed on, as well as of managing
as frugally as possible; expensiveness was not her
vice.
It was pretty late in a summer evening
when we reached the town, in our slow conveyance,
though drawn by six at length. As we passed through
the greatest streets that led to our inn, the noise,
of the coaches, the hurry, the crowds of foot passengers,
in short, the new scenery of the shops and houses,
at once pleased and amazed me.
But guess at my mortification and
surprise when we came to the inn, and our things were
landed and delivered to us, when my fellow traveller
and protectress, Esther Davis, who had used me with
the utmost tenderness during the journey, and prepared
me by no preceedings signs for the stunning blow I
was to receive, when I say, my only dependence and
friend, in this strange place, all of a sudden assumed
a strange and cool air towards me, as if she dreaded
my becoming a burden to her.
Instead, then, of proffering me the
continuance of her assistance and good offices, which
I relied upon, and never more wanted, she thought
herself, it seems, abundantly acquitted of her engagements
to me, by having brought me safe to my journey’s
end, and seeing nothing in her procedure towards me
but what natural and in order, began to embrace me
by the way of taking leave, whilst I was so confounded,
so struck, that I had not spirit or sense enough so
much as to mention my hopes or expectations from her
experience, and knowledge of the place she had brought
me to.
Whilst I stood thus stupid and mute,
which she doubtless attributed to nothing more than
a concern at parting, this idea procured me perhaps
a slight alleviation of it, in the following harangue:
“That now we were got safe to London, and that
she was obliged to go to her place, she advised me
by all means to get into one as soon as possible; that
I need not fear getting one; there were more places
than parish-churches; that she advised me to go to
an intelligence office; that if she heard of any thing
stirring, she would find me out and let me know; that
in the meantime, I should take a private lodging,
and acquaint her where to send to me; that she wished
me good luck, and hoped I should always have the grace
to keep myself honest, and not bringing a disgrace
on my parentage.” With this; she took her
leave of me, and left me, as it were, on my own hands,
full as lightly as I had been put into hers.
Left thus alone, absolutely destitute
and friendless I began then to feel most bitterly
the severity of this separation, the scene of which
had passed in a little room in the inn; and no sooner
was her back turned, but the affliction I felt at
my helpless strange circumstances, burst out into
a flood of tears, which infinitely relieved the oppression
of my heart; though I still remained stupified, and
most perfectly perplexed how to dispose of myself.
One of the waiters coming in, added
yet more to my uncertainty, by asking me, in a short
way, if I called for anything? to which I replied
innocently: “No.” But I wished
him to tell me where I might get a lodging for that
night. He said he would go and speak to his mistress,
who accordingly came, and told me drily, without entering
in the least into the distress she saw me in, that
I might have a bed for a shilling, and that, as she
supposed I had some friends in town (there I fetched
a deep sigh in vain!), I might provide for myself
in the morning.
It is incredible what trifling consolations
the human mind will seize in its greatest afflictions.
The assurance of nothing more than a bed to lie on
that night, calmed my agonies; and being ashamed to
acquaint the mistress of the inn that I had no friends
to apply to in town, I proposed to myself to proceed,
the very next morning, to an intelligence office,
to which I was furnished with written directions on
the back of a ballad, Esther had given me. There
I counted on getting information of any place that
such a country girl as I might be fit for, and where
I could get into any sort of being, before my little
stock should be consumed; and as to a character, Esther
had often repeated to me, that I might depend on her
managing me one; nor, however affected I was at her
leaving me thus, did I entirely cease to rely on her,
as I began to think, good-naturedly, that her procedure
was all in course, and that is was only my ignorance
of life that had made me take it in the light I at
first did.
Accordingly, the next morning I dressed
myself as clean and as neat as my rustic wardrobe
would permit me; and having left my box, with special
recommendation, with the landlady, I ventured out by
myself, and without any more difficulty than can be
supposed of a young country girl, barely fifteen,
and to whom every sign or shop was a gazing trap, I
got to the wished for intelligence office.
It was kept by an elderly woman, who
sat at the receipt of custom, with a book before her
in great form and order, and several scrolls made out,
of directions for places.
I made up then to this important personage,
without lifting up my eyes or observing any of the
people round me, who were attending there on the same
errand as myself, and dropping her curtsies nine deep,
just made a shift to stammer out my business to her.
Madam heard me out, with all the gravity
and brow of a petty minister of State, and seeing
at one glance over my figure what I was, made me no
answer, but to ask me the preliminary shilling, on
receipt of which she told me places for women too
slight built for hard work: but that she would
look over her book, and see what was to be done for
me, desiring me to stay a little, till she had dispatched
some other customers.
On this I drew back a little, most
heartily mortified at a declaration which carried
with it a killing uncertainly, that my circumstances
could not well endure.
Presently, assuming more courage,
and seeking some diversion from my uneasy thoughts,
I ventured to lift up my head a little, and sent my
eyes on a course round the room, where they met full
tilt with those of a lady (for such my extreme innocence
pronounced her) sitting in a corner of the room, dressed
in a velvet mantle (in the midst of summer), with
her bonnet off; squat, fat, red-faced, and at least
fifty.
She looked as if she would devour
me with her eyes, staring at me from head to foot,
without the least regard to the confusion and blushes
her eyeing me so fixedly put me to, and which were
to her, no doubt, the strongest recommendation and
marks of my being fit for her purpose. After
a little time, in which my air, person and whole figure
had undergone a strict examination, which I had, on
my part, tried to render favourable to me, by primming,
drawing up my neck, and setting my best looks, she
advanced and spoke to me with the greatest demureness:
“Sweet-heart, do you want a place?
“Yes, and please you,” (with a curtsey
down to the ground).
Upon this she acquainted me she was
actually come to the office herself, to look out for
a servant; that she believed I might do, with a little
of her instruction; that she could take my very looks
for a sufficient character; that London was a very
wicked, vile, place; that she hoped I would be tractable,
and keep out of bad company; in short, she said all
to me that an old experienced practitioner in town
could think of, and which was much more than was necessary
to take in an artless inexperienced country maid,
who was even afraid of becoming a wanderer about the
streets, and therefore gladly jumped at the first offer
of a shelter, especially from so grave and matron-like
a lady, for such my flattering fancy assured me this
new mistress of mine was, I being actually hired under
the nose of the good woman that kept the office, whose
shrewed smiles and shrugs I could not help observing,
and innocently interpreted them as marks of being
pleased at my getting into place so soon: but,
as I afterwards came to know, these Beldams understood
one another very well, and this was a market where
Mrs. Brown, my mistress, frequently attended, on the
watch for any fresh goods that might offer there,
for the use of her customers, and her own profit.
Madam was, however, so well pleased
with her bargain that fearing I presume, lest better
advice or some accident might occasion my slipping
through her fingers, she would officiously take me
in a coach to my inn, where, calling herself for my
box, it was, I being present, delivered without the
least scruple or explanation as to where I was going.
This being over, she bid the coachman
drive to a shop in St. Paul’s Churchyard, where
she bought a pair of gloves, which she gave me, and
thence renewed her directions to the coachman to drive
to her house in -- street, who accordingly landed
us at the door, after I had been cheered up and entertained
by the way with the most plausible flams, without
one syllable from which I could conclude anything but
that I was, by the greatest luck, fallen into the
hands of kindest mistress, not to say friend, that
the vast world could afford; and accordingly I entered
her doors with most complete confidence and exultation,
promising, myself that, as soon as I could be a little
settled, I would acquaint Esther Davis with my rare
good fortune.
You may be sure the good opinion of
my place was not lessened by the appearance of a very
handsome back parlor, into which I was led and which
seemed to me magnificently furnished, who had never
seen better rooms than the ordinary ones in inns upon
the road. There were two gilt pier-glasses, and
a buffet, on which a few pieces of plate, set out to
the most shew, dazzled, and altogether persuaded me
that I must be got into a very reputable family.
Here my mistress first began her part,
with telling me that I must have good spirits, and
learn to be free with her; that she had not taken me
to be a common servant, to do domestic drudgery, but
to be a kind of companion to her; and that if I would
be a good girl, she would do more than twenty mothers
for me; to all which I answered only by the profoundest
and the awkwardest curtsies, and a few monosyllables,
such as “’yes! no! to be sure!”
Presently my mistress touched the
bell, and in came a strapping maid-servant, who had
let us in. “Here, Martha,” said Mrs.
Brown, “I have just hired this young woman to
look after my linen; so step up and show her her chamber;
and I charge you to use her with as much respect as
you would myself, for I have taken a prodigious liking
to her, and I do not know what I shall do for her.”
Martha, who was an arch-jade, and,
being used to this decoy, had her cue perfect, made
me a kind of half curtsy, and asked me to walk up
with her; and accordingly showed me a neat room, two
pair of stairs backwards, in which there was a handsome
bed, where Martha told me I was to lie with a young
gentlewoman, a cousin of my mistress, who she was
sure would be vastly good to me. Then she ran
out into such affected encomiums on her good mistress!
her sweet mistress! and how happy I was to light upon
her! and that I could not have bespoke a better; with
other the like gross stuff, such as would itself have
started suspicions in any but such an unpractised
simpleton, who was perfectly new to life, and who
took every word she said in the very sense she laid
out for me to take it; but she readily saw what a
penetration she had to deal with, and measured me
very rightly in her manner of whistling to me, so
as to make me pleased with my cage, and blind to the
wires.
In the midst of these false explanations
of the nature of my future service, we were rung for
down again, and I was reintroduced into the same parlour,
where there was a table laid with three covers; and
my mistress had now got with her one of her favourite
girls, a notable manager of her house, and whose business
it was to prepare and break such young fillies as
I was to the mounting block; and she was accordingly,
in that view, alloted me for a bed-fellow, and, to
give her the more authority, she had the title of
cousin conferred on her by the venerable president
of this college.
Here I underwent a second survey,
which ended in the full approbation of Mrs. Phoebe
Ayres, the name of my tutoress elect, to whose care
and instruction I was affectionately recommended.
Dinner was now set on table, and in
pursuance of treating me as a companion, Mrs. Brown,
with a tone to cut off all dispute, soon over-ruled
my most humble and most confused protestations against
sitting down with her Ladyship, which my very short
breeding just suggested to me could not be right,
or in the order of things.
At table, the conversation was chiefly
kept up by the two madams and carried on in double
meaning expressions, interrupted every now and then
by kind assurances to me, all tending to confirm and
fix my satisfaction with my present condition:
augment it they could not, so very a novice was I
then.
It was here agreed that I should keep
myself up and out of sight for a few days, till such
clothes could be procured for me as were fit for the
character I was to appear in, of my mistress’s
companion, observing withal, that on the first impressions
of my figure much might depend; and, as they rightly
judged, the prospect of exchanging my country clothes
for London finery, made the clause of confinement digest
perfectly well with me. But the truth was, Mrs.
Brown did not care that I should be seen or talked
to by any, either of her customers, or her Does (as
they called the girls provided for them), till she
secured a good market for my maidenhead, which I had
at least all the appearances of having brought into
her Ladyship’s service.
To slip over minutes of no importance
to the main of my story, I pass the interval to bed
time, in which I was more and more pleased with the
views that opened to me, of an easy service under these
good people; and after supper being shewed up to bed,
Miss Phoebe, who observed a kind of reluctance in
me to strip and go to bed, in my shift, before her,
now the maid was withdrawn, came up to me, and beginning
with unpinning my handkerchief and gown, soon encouraged
me to go on with undressing myself; and, blushing
at now seeing myself naked to my shift, I hurried
to get under the bed-clothes out of sight.
Phoebe laughed and was not long before
she placed herself by my side. She was about
five and twenty, by her most suspicious account, in
which, according to all appearances, she must have
sunk at least ten good years; allowance, too, being
made for the havoc which a long course of hackneyship
and hot waters must have made of her constitution,
and which had already brought on, upon the spur, that
stale stage in which those of her profession are reduced
to think of showing company, instead of seeing it.
No sooner then was this precious substitute
of my mistress laid down, but she, who was never out
of her way when any occasion of lewdness presented
itself, turned to me, embraced and kissed me with great
eagerness. This was new, this was odd; but imputing
it to nothing but pure kindness, which, for ought
I knew, it might be the London way to express in that
manner, I was determined not to be behind-hand with
her, and returned her the kiss and embrace, with all
the fervour that perfect innocence knew.
Encouraged by this, her hands became
extremely free, and wandered over my whole body, with
touches, squeezes, pressures, that rather warmed and
surprised me with their novelty, than they either shocked
or alarmed me.
The flattering praises she intermingled
with these invasions, contributed also not a little
to bribe my passiveness; and, knowing no ill, I feared
none, especially from one who had prevented all doubts
of her womanhood, by conducting my hands to a pair
of breasts that hung loosely down, in a size and volume
that full sufficiently distinguished her sex, to me
at least, who had never made any other comparison.
I lay then all tame and passive as
she could wish, whilst her freedom raised no other
emotion but those of a strange, and, till then, unfelt
pleasure. Every part of me was open and exposed
to the licentious courses of her hands, which, like
a lambent fire, ran over my whole body, and thawed
all coldness as they went.
My breasts, if it is not too bold
a figure to call so two hard, firm, rising hillocks,
that just began to shew themselves, or signify anything
to the touch, employed and amused her hands awhile,
till, slipping down lower, over a smooth track, she
could just feel the soft silky down that had but a
few months before put forth and garnished the mount-pleasant
of those parts, and promised to spread a grateful shelter
over the sweet seat of the most exquisite sensation,
and which had been, till that instant, the seat of
the most insensible innocence. Her fingers played
and strove to twine in the young tendrils of that moss,
which nature has contrived at once for use and ornament.
But, not contented with these outer
posts, she now attempts the main spot, and began to
twitch, to insinuate, and at length to force an introduction
of a finger into the quick itself, in such a manner,
that had she not proceeded by insensible gradations
that inflamed me beyond the power of modesty to oppose
its resistance to their progress, I should have jumped
out of bed and cried for help against such strange
assaults.
Instead of which, her lascivious touches
had lighted up a new fire that wantoned through all
my veins, but fixed with violence in that center appointed
them by nature, where the first strange hands were
now busied in feeling, squeezing, compressing the
lips, then opening them again, with a finger between,
till an “Oh!” expressed her hurting me,
where the narrowness of the unbroken passage refused
it entrance to any depth.
In the meantime, the extension of
my limbs, languid stretching, sighs, short heavings,
all conspired to as-ure that experienced wanton that
I was more pleased than offended at her proceedings,
which she seasoned with repeated kisses and exclamations,
such as “Oh! what a charming creature thou art!
What a happy man will he be that first makes a woman
of you! Oh! that I were a man for your sake!”
with the like broken expressions, interrupted by kisses
as fierce and salacious as ever I received from the
other sex.
For my part, I was transported, confused,
and out of myself; feelings so new were too much for
me. My heated and alarmed senses were in a tumult
that robbed me of all liberty of thought; tears of
pleasure gushed from my eyes, and somewhat assuaged
the fire that raged all over me.
Phoebe, herself, the hackneyed, thorough-bred
Phoebe, to whom all modes and devices of pleasure
were known and familiar, found, it seems, in this
exercise her those arbitrary tastes, for which there
is no accounting. Not that she hated men, or
did not even prefer them to her own sex; but when
she met with such occasions as this was, a satiety
of enjoyments in the common road, perhaps, too a great
secret bias, inclined her to make the most of pleasure,
wherever she could find it, without distinction of
sexes. In this view, now well assured that she
had, by her touches, sufficiently inflamed me for her
purpose, she rolled down the bed clothes gently, and
I saw myself stretched naked, my shift being turned
up to my neck, whilst I had no power or sense to oppose
it. Even my growing blushes expressed more desire
than modesty, whilst the candle, left (to be sure
not undesignedly) burning, threw a full light on my
whole body.
“No!” says Phoebe, “you
must not, my sweet girl, think to hide all these treasures
from me. My sight must be feasted as my touch.
I must devour with my eyes this springing bosom.
Suffer me to kiss it. I have not seen it enough.
Let me kiss it once more. What firm, smooth, white
flesh is here! How delicately shaped! Then
this delicious down! Oh! let me view the small,
dear, tender cleft! This is too much, I cannot
bear it! I must! I must!” Here she
took my hand, and in a transport carried it where
you will easily guess. But what a difference in
the state of the same thing! A spreading thicket
of bushy curls marked the full grown, complete woman.
Then the cavity to which she guided my hand easily
received it; and as soon as she felt it within her,
she moved herself to and fro, with so rapid a friction,
that I presently withdrew it, wet and clammy, when
instantly Phoebe grew more composed, after two or
three sighs, and heart-fetched Oh’s! and giving
me a kiss that seemed to exhale her soul through her
lips, she replaced the bed-clothes over us. What
pleasure she had found I will not say; but this I know,
that the first sparks of kindling nature, the first
ideas of pollution, were caught by me that night;
and that the acquaintance and communication with the
bad of our sex, is often as fatal to innocence as all
the seductions of the other. But to go on.
When Phoebe was restored to that calm, which I was
far from the enjoyment of myself, she artfully sounded
me on all the points necessary to govern the designs
of my virtuous mistress on me, and by my answers,
drawn from pure undissembled nature, she had no reason
but to promise herself all imaginable success, so far
as it depended on my ignorance, easiness and warmth
of constitution.
After a sufficient length of dialogue,
my bedfellow left me to my rest, and I fell asleep,
through pure weariness, from the violent emotions
I had been led into, when nature which had been too
warmly stirred and fermented to subside without allaying
by some means or other relieved me by one of those
luscious dreams, the transports of which are scarce
inferior to those of waking real action.
In the morning I awoke about ten,
perfectly gay and refreshed. Phoebe was up before
me, and asked me in the kindest manner how I did, how
I had rested, and if I was ready for breakfast? carefully,
at the same time, avoiding to increase the confusion
she saw I was in, at looking her in the face, by any
hint of the night’s bed scene. I told her
if she pleased I would get up, and begin any work
she would be pleased to set me about. She smiled;
presently the maid brought in the tea equipage, and
I just huddled my clothes on, when in waddled my mistress.
I expected no less than to be told of, if not chid
for, my late rising, when I was most agreeably disappointed
by her compliments on my pure and fresh looks.
I was “a bud of beauty” (this was her style),
“and how vastly all the fine men would admire
me!” to all which my answers did not, I can
assure you, wrong my breeding; they were as simple
and silly as they could wish, and, no doubt, flattered
them infinitely more than had they proved me enlightened
by education and a knowledge of the world.
We breakfasted, and the tea things
were scarce removed, when in were brought two bundles
of linen and wearing apparel: in short, all the
necessaries for rigging me out, as they termed it,
completely.
Imagine to yourself, Madam, how my
little coquet heart fluttered with joy at the sight
of a white lutestring, flowered with silver, scoured
indeed, but passed on me for spick and span new, a
Brussels lace cap, braited shoes, and the rest in
proportion, all second-hand finery, and procured instantly
for the occasion, by the diligence and industry of
the good Mrs. Brown, who had already a chapman for
me in the house, before whom my charms were to pass
in review; for he had not only, in course, insisted
on a previous sight of the premises, but also on immediate
surrendering to him, in case of his agreeing for me;
concluding very wisely, that such a place as I was
in, was of the hottest to trust the keeping of such
a perishable commodity in, as a maidenhead.
The care of dressing and tricking
me out for the market, was then left to Phoebe, who
acquitted herself, if not well, at least perfectly
to the satisfaction of everything but my impatience
of seeing myself dressed. When it was over, and
I viewed myself in the glass, I was no doubt, too
natural, too artless, to hide my childish joy at the
change: a change, in the real truth, for much
the worse, since I must have much better become the
neat easy simplicity of my rustic dress than the awkward,
untoward, tawdry finery that I could not conceal my
strangeness to.
Phoebe’s compliments, however,
in which her own share in dressing me was not forgot,
did not a little confirm me in the first notions I
had ever entertained concerning my person; which,
be it said without vanity, was then tolerable to justify
a taste for me, and of which it may not be out of
place here to sketch you an unflattered picture.
I was tall, yet not too tall for my
age, which, as I before remarked, was barely turned
of fifteen; my shape perfectly straight, thin waisted,
and light and free without owing anything to stays;
my hair was a glossy auburn, and as soft as silk,
flowing down my neck in natural curls, and did not
a little to set off the whiteness of a smooth skin;
my face was rather too ruddy, though its features
were delicate, and the shape was a roundish oval,
except where a pit on my chin had far from a disagreeable
effect; my eyes were as black as can be imagined, and
rather languishing than sparkling, except on certain
occasions, when I have been told they struck fire
fast enough; my teeth, which I ever carefully preserved,
were small, even and white; my bosom was finely raised,
and one might then discern rather the promise than
the actual growth of the round, firm breast, that
in a little time made that promise good. In short,
all the points of beauty that are most universally
in request, I had, or at least my vanity forbid me
to appeal from the decision of our sovereign judges
the men, who all, that I ever knew at last, gave it
thus highly in my favour; and I met with, even in
my own sex, some that were above denying me that justice,
whilst others praised me yet more unsuspectedly, by
endeavouring to detract from me, in points of person
and figure that I obviously excelled in. This
is, I own, too strong of self praise; but I should
be ungrateful to nature, and to a form to which I
owe such singular blessings of pleasure and fortune,
were I to suppress, through an affectation of modesty,
the mention of such valuable gifts.
Well then, dressed I was, and little
did it then enter into my head that all this gay attire
was no more than decking the victim out for sacrifice,
whilst I innocently attributed all to mere friendship
and kindness in the sweet good Mrs. Brown; who, I
was forgetting to mention, had, under pretence of
keeping my money safe, got from me, without the least
hesitation, the driblet (so I now call it) which remained
to me after the expenses of my journey.
After some little time most agreebly
spent before the glass, in scarce self-admiration,
since my new dress had by much the greatest share in
it, I was sent for down to the parlour, where the old
lady saluted me, and wished me joy of my new clothes,
which she was not ashamed to say, fitted me as if
I had worn nothing but the finest all my life-time;
but what was it she could not see me silly enough
to swallow? At the same time, she presented me
to another cousin of her own creation, an elderly
gentleman, who got up, at my entry into the room, and
on my dropping a curtsy to him, saluted me, and seemed
a little affronted that I had only presented my cheek
to him: a mistake, which, if one, he immediately
corrected, by gluing his lips to mine, with an ardour
which his figure had not at all disposed me to thank
him for: his figure, I say, than which nothing
could be more shocking or detestable: for ugly
and disagreeable were terms too gentle to convey a
just idea of it.
Imagine to yourself, a man rather
past threescore, short and ill-made, with a yellow
cadaverous hue, great goggle eyes, that stared as if
he was strangled; an out-mouth from two more properly
tusks than teeth, livid lips, and breath like a Jake’s:
then he had a peculiar ghastliness in his grin, that
made him perfectly frightful, if not dangerous to
women with child; yet, made as he was thus in mock
of man, he was so blind to his own staring deformities,
as to think himself born to please, and that no woman
could see him with impunity: in consequence of
which idea, he had lavished great sums on such wretches
as could gain upon themselves to pretend love to his
person, whilst to those who had not art or patience
to dissemble the horror it inspired, he behaved even
brutally. Impotence, more than necessity, made
him seek in variety, the provocative that was wanting
to raise him to the pitch of enjoyment, which he too
often saw himself baulked of, by the failure of his
powers: and this always threw him into a fit
of rage, which he wreaked, as far as he durst, on
the innocent objects of his fit of momentary desire.
This then was the master to which
my conscientious benefactress, who had long been his
purveyor in this way, had doomed me, and sent for me
down purposely for his examination. Accordingly
she made me stand up before him, turned me round,
unpinned my handkerchief, remarked to him the rise
and fall, the turn and whiteness of a bosom just beginning
to fill; then made me walk, and took even a handle
from the rusticity of my charms: in short, she
omitted no point of jockeyship; to which he only answered
by gracious nods of approbation, whilst he looked
goats and monkeys at me: for I sometimes stole
a corner glance at him, and encountering his fiery,
eager stare, looked another way from pure horror and
affright, which he, characteristically, attributed
to nothing more than maiden modesty, or at least the
affectation of it.
However, I was soon dismissed, and
reconducted to my room by Phoebe, who stuck close
to me, not leaving me alone, and at leisure to make
such reflections as might naturally rise to any one,
not an idiot, on such a scene as I had just gone through;
but to my shame be it confessed, that just was my
invincible stupidity, or rather portentous innocence,
that I did not yet open my eyes to Mrs. Brown’s
designs, and saw nothing in this titular cousin of
hers but a shockingly hideous person, which did not
at all concern me, unless that my gratitude for my
benefactress made me extend my respect to all her
cousinhood.
Phoebe, however, began to sift the
state and pulses of my heart toward this monster,
asking me how I should approve of such a fine gentelman
for a husband. (Fine gentleman, I suppose she called
him, from his being daubed with lace.) I answered
her very naturally, that I had no thoughts of a husband,
but that if I was to choose one, it should be among
my own degree, sure! so much had my aversion to that
wretch’s hideous figure indisposed me to all
“fine gentlemen,” and confounded my ideas,
as if those of that rank had been necessarily cast
in the same mould that he was. But Phoebe was
not to be put off so, but went on with her endeavours
to melt and soften me for the purposes of my reception
into that hospitable house: and whilst she talked
of the sex in general, she had no reason to despair
of a compliance, which more than one reason showed
her would be easily enough obtained of me; but then
she had too much experience not to discover that my
particular fixed aversion to that frightful cousin
would be a block not so readily to be removed, as
suited the consummation of their bargain, and sale
of me.
Mother Brown had in the meantime agreed
the terms with this loquorice old goat, which I afterwards
understood were to be fifty guineas peremptory, for
the liberty of attempting me, and a hundred more at
the complete gratification of his desires, in the
triumph over my virginity: and as for me, I was
to be left entirely at the discretion of his liking
and generosity. This unrighteous contract being
thus settled, he was so eager to be put in possession,
that he insisted on being introduced to drink tea
with me that afternoon, when we were to be left alone;
nor would he hearken to the procuress’s remonstrances,
that I was not sufficiently prepared, and ripened
for such an attack; that I was too green and untamed,
having been scarce twenty-four hours in the house:
it is the character of lust to be impatient, and his
vanity arming him against any supposition of other
than the common resistance of a maid on those occasions,
made him reject all proposals of a delay, and my dreadful
trial was thus fixed, unknown to me, for that very
evening.
At dinner, Mrs. Brown and Phoebe did
nothing but run riot in praise of this wonderful cousin,
and how happy that woman would be that he would favour
with his addresses; in short my two gossips exhausted
all their rhetoric to persuade me to accept them:
“that the gentleman was violently smitten with
me at first sight; that he would make my fortune if
I would be a good girl and not stand in my own light;
that I should trust his honour; that I should be made
for ever, and have a chariot to go abroad in,”
with all such stuff as was fit to turn the head of
such a silly ignorant girl as I then was: but
luckily here my aversion had taken already such deep
root in me, my heart was so strongly defended from
him by my senses, that wanting the art to mask my sentiments,
I gave them no hopes of their employer succeeding,
at least very easily, with me. The glass too
marched pretty quick, with a view, I suppose, to make
a friend of the warmth of my constitution, in the minutes
of the imminent attack.
Thus they kept me pretty long at table,
and about six in the evening, after I had retired
to my apartment, and the tea board was set, enters
my venerable mistress, followed close by that satyr,
who came in grinning in a way peculiar to him, and
by his odious presence, confirmed me in all the sentiments
of detestation which his first appearance had given
birth to.
He sat down fronting me, and all tea
time kept ogling me in a manner that gave me the utmost
pain and confusion, all the mark of which he still
explained to be my bashfulness, and not being used
to see company.
Tea over, the commoding old lady pleady
urgent business (which indeed was true) to go out,
and earnestly desired me to entertain her cousin kindly
till she came back, both for my own sake and her; and
then, with a “Pray, sir, be very good, be very
tender to the sweet child,” she went out of
the room, leaving me staring, with my mouth open, and
unprepared by the suddenness of her departure, to
oppose it.
We were now alone; and on that idea
a sudden fit of trembling seized me. I was so
afraid, without a precise notion of why, and what I
had to fear, that I sat on the settee, by the fire
side, motionless and petrified, without life or spirit,
not knowing how to look or how to stir.
But long I was not suffered to remain
in this state of stupefaction: the monster squatted
down by me on the settee, and without farther ceremony
or preamble, flings his arms about my neck, and drawing
me pretty forcibly towards him, obliged me to receive,
in spite of my struggles to disengage from him, his
pestilential kisses, which quite overcame me.
Finding me then next to senseless, and unresisting,
he tears off my neck handkerchief, and laid all open
there, to his eyes and hands: still I endured
all without flinching, till emboldened by my sufferance
and silence, for I had not the power to speak or cry
out, he attempted to lay me down on the settee, and
I felt his hand on the lower part of my naked thighs,
which were crossed, and which he endeavoured to unlock.
Oh then! I was roused out of my passive endurance,
and springing from him with an activity he was not
prepared for, threw myself at his feet, and begged
him, in the most moving tone, not to be rude, and that
he would not hurt me. “Hurt you, my dear?”
says the brute, “I intend you no harm.
Has not the old lady told you that I love you? that
I shall do handsomely by you?”
“She has indeed, sir,”
said I, “but I cannot love you, indeed I cannot!
pray let me alone! yes! I will love you dearly
if you will let me alone and go away.”
But I was talking to the wind, for whether my tears,
my attitude, or the disorder of my dress proved fresh
incentives, or whether he was now under the dominion
of desires he could not bridle, but snorting and foaming
with lust and rage, he renews his attack, seizes me,
and again attempts to extend and fix me on the settee:
in which he succeeded so far as to lay me along, and
even to toss my petticoats over my head, and lay my
thighs bare, which I obstinately kept close, nor could
he, though he attempted with his knee to force them
open, effect it so as to stand fair for being master
of the main avenue; he was unbuttoned, both waistcoat
and breeches, yet I only felt the weight of his body
upon me, whilst I lay struggling with indignation,
and dying with terrors; but he stopped all of a sudden,
and got off, panting, blowing, cursing, and repeating
“old and ugly!” for so I had very naturally
called him in the heat of my defence.
The brute had, it seems, as I afterwards
understood, brought on, by his eagerness and struggle,
the ultimate period of his hot fit of lust, which
his power was too short-lived to carry him through
the full execution of; of which my thighs and linen
received the effusion.
When it was over he bid me, with a
tone of displeasure, get up: “that he would
not do me the honour to think of me any more; that
the old b h might look out for
another cully; that he would not be fooled so by ever
a country mock modesty in England; that he supposed
I had left my maidenhead with some hobnail in the
country, and was come to dispose of my skim-milk in
town” with a volley of the like abuse; which
I listened to with more pleasure than ever fond woman
did to protestations of love from her darling minion:
for, incapable as I was of receiving any addition
to my perfect hatred and aversion to him, I looked
on this railing, as my security against his renewing
his most odious caress.
Yet, plain as Mrs. Brown’s views
were now come out, I had not the heart, or spirit
to open my eyes to them: still I could not part
with my dependence on that beldam, so much did I think
myself hers, soul and body: or rather, I sought
to deceive myself with the continuation of my good
opinion of her, and choose to wait the worst at her
hands, sooner than be turned out to starve in the
streets, without a penny of money or a friend to apply
to these fears were my folly.
While this confusion of ideas was
passing in my head, and I sat pensively by the fire,
with my eyes brimming with tears, my neck still bare,
and my cap fallen off in the struggle, so that my hair
was in the disorder you may guess, the villain’s
lust began, I suppose, to be again in flow, at the
sight of all that bloom of youth which presented itself
to his view, a bloom yet unenjoyed, and of course not
yet indifferent to him.
After some pause, he asked me with
a tone of voice mightily softer, whether I would make
it up with him before the old lady returned, and all
should be well; he would restore me to his affections,
at the same time offering to kiss me and feel my breasts.
But now my extreme aversion, my fears, my indignation,
all acting upon me, gave me a spirit not natural to
me, so that breaking loose from him, I ran to the bell
and rang it, with such violence and effect as to bring
up the maid to know what was the matter, or whether
the gentleman wanted anything; and before he could
proceed to greater extremities, she bounced into the
room, and seeing me stretched on the floor, my hair
all dishevelled, my nose gushing out blood, which
did not a little tragedize the scene, and my odious
persecutor still intent of pushing his brutal point,
unmoved by all my cries and distress, she was herself
confounded and did not know what to do.
As much, however, as Martha might
be prepared and hardened to transactions of this sort,
all womanhood must have been out of her heart could
she have seen this unmoved. Besides that, on the
face of things, she imagined that matters had gone
greater lengths than they really had, and that the
courtesy of the house had been actually consummated
on me, and flung: me into the condition I was
in: in this notion she instantly took my part,
and advised the gentleman to go down and leave me to
recover myself, and “that all would be soon over
with me; that when Mrs. Brown and Phoebe, who were
gone out, were returned, they would take order for
everything to his satisfaction; that nothing would
be lost by a little patience with the poor tender
thing; that for her part she was frightened; she could
not tell what to say to such doings; but that she
would stay by me till my mistress came home.”
As the wench said all this in a resolute tone, and
the monster himself began to perceive that things
would not mend by his staying, he took his hat and
went out of the room murmuring and pitting his brows
like an old ape, so that I was delivered from the
horrors of his detestable presence.
As soon as he was gone, Martha very
tenderly offered me her assistance in anything, and
would have got me some hartshorn drops and put me to
bed; which last I, at first, positively refused, in
the fear that the monster might return and take me
at that disadvantage. However, with much persuasion
and assurances that I should not be molested that night
she prevailed on me to lie down; and indeed I was so
weakened by my struggles, so dejected by my fearful
apprehension, so terror-struck, that I had not power
to sit up, or hardly to give answers to the questions
with which the curious Martha plied and perplexed me.
Such too, and so cruel was my fate,
that I dreaded the sight of Mrs. Brown, as if I had
been the criminal, and she the person injured; a mistake
which you will not think so strange, on distinguishing
that neither virtue nor principles had the least share
in the defence I had made, but only the particular
aversion I had conceived against this first brutal
and frightful invader of my tender innocence.
I passed then the time till Mrs. Brown
came home, under all the agitations of fear and despair
that may easily be guessed.
About eleven at night my two ladies
came home, and having received rather a favourable
account from Martha, who had run down to let them
in, for Mr. Crofts (that was the name of my brute)
was gone out of the house, after waiting till he had
tired his patience for Mrs. Brown’s return,
they came thundering up stairs, and seeing me pale,
my face bloody, and all the marks of the most thorough
dejection, they employed themselves more to comfort
and re-inspirit me than in making me the reproaches
I was weak enough to fear, I who had so many juster
and stronger to retort upon them.
Mrs. Brown withdrawn, Phoebe came
presently to bed to me, and what with the answers
she drew from me, what with her own method of palpably
satisfying herself, she soon discovered that I had
been more frightened than hurt; upon which I suppose,
being herself seized with sleep, and reserving her
lectures and instructions till the next morning, she
left me, properly speaking, to my unrest; for, later
tossing and turning the greatest part of the night,
and tormenting myself with the falsest notions and
apprehensions of things, I fell, through mere fatigue
into a kind of delirious doze, out of which I waked
late in the morning, in a violent fever: a circumstance
which was extremely critical to reprieve me, at least
for a time, from the attacks of a wretch, infinitely
more terrible to me than death itself.
The interested care that was taken
of me during my illness, in order to restore me to
a condition of making good the bawd’s engagements,
or of enduring further trials, had, however, such
an effect on my grateful disposition that I even thought
myself obliged to my un-doers for their attention
to promote my recovery; and, above all, for the keeping
out of my sight of that brutal ravisher, the author
of my disorder, on their finding I was too strongly
moved at the bare mention of his name.
Youth is soon raised, and a few days
were sufficient to conquer the fury of my fever:
but, what contributed most to my perfect recovery and
to my reconciliation with life, was the timely news
that Mr. Crofts, who was a merchant of considerable
dealings, was arrested at the King’s suit, for
nearly forty thousand pounds, on account of his driving
a certain contraband trade, and that his affairs were
so desperate, that even were it in his inclination,
it would not be in his power to renew his designs
upon me: for he was instantly thrown into a prison,
which it was not likely he would get out of in haste.
Mrs. Brown, who had touched his fifty
guineas, advanced to so little purpose, and lost all
hopes of the remaining hundred, began to look upon
my treatment of him with a more favourable eye; and
as they had observed my temper to be perfectly tractable
and conformable to their views, all the girls that
composed her flock were suffered to visit me, and had
their cue to dispose me, by their conversation, to
a perfect resignation of myself to Mrs. Brown’s
direction.
Accordingly they were let in upon
me, and all that frolic and thoughtless gaiety in
which those giddy creatures consume either leisure,
made me envy a condition of which I only saw the fair
side; insomuch, that the being one of them became
even my ambition: a disposition which they all
carefully cultivated; and I wanted now nothing but
to restore my health, that I might be able to undergo
the ceremony of the initiation.
Conversation, example, in short all,
contributed, in that house, to corrupt my native parity,
which had taken no root in education; whilst now the
inflammable principal of pleasure, so easily fired
at my age, made strange work within me, and all the
modesty I was brought up in the habit, not the instruction
of, began to melt away like dew before the sun’s
heat; not to mention that I made a vice of necessity,
from the constant fears I had of being turned out
to starve.
I was soon pretty well recovered,
and at certain hours allowed to range all over the
house, but cautiously kept from seeing any company
till the arrival of Lord B , from
Bath, to whom Mrs. Brown, in respect to his experienced
generosity on such occasions, proposed to offer the
perusal of that trinket of mine, which bears so great
an imaginary value; and his lordship being expected
in town in less than a fortnight, Mrs. Brown judged
I would be entirely renewed in beauty and freshness
by that time, and afforded her the chance of a better
bargain than she had driven with Mr. Crofts.
In the meantime, I was so thoroughly,
as they call it, brought over, so tame to their whistle,
that, had my cage door been set open, I had no idea
that I ought to fly anywhere, sooner than stay where
I was; nor had I the least sense of regretting my
condition, but waited very quietly for whatever Mrs.
Brown should order concerning me; who on her side,
by herself and her agents, took more than the necessary
precautions to lull and lay asleep all just reflections
on my destiny.
Preachments of morality over the left
shoulder; a life of joy painted in the gayest colours;
caresses, promises, indulgent treatment; nothing,
in short, was wanting to domesticate me entirely and
to prevent my going out anywhere to get better advice.
Alas! I dreamed of no such thing.
Hitherto I had been indebted only
to the girls of the house for the corruption of my
innocence: their luscious talk, in which modesty
was far from respected, their description of their
engagements with men, had given me a tolerable insight
into the nature and mysteries of their profession,
at the same time that they highly provoked an itch
of florid warm-spirited blood through every vein:
but above all, my bed fellow Phoebe, whose pupil I
more immediately was, exerted her talents in giving
me the first tinctures of pleasure: whilst nature,
now warmed and wantoned with discoveries so interesting,
piqued a curiosity which Phoebe artfully whetted,
and leading me from question to question of her own
suggestion, explained to me all the mysteries of Venus.
But I could not long remain in such a house as that,
without being an eye-witness of more than I could
conceive from her descriptions.
One day, about twelve at noon, being
thoroughly recovered of my fever, I happened to be
in Mrs. Brown’s dark closet, where I had not
been half an hour, resting upon the maid’s bed,
before I heard a rustling in the bed-chamber, separated
from the closet only by two sash doors, before the
glasses of which were drawn two yellow damask curtains,
but not so close as to exclude the full view of the
room from any person in the closet.
I instantly crept softly and posted
myself so, that seeing everything minutely, I could
not myself be seen; and who should come in but the
venerable mother Abbess herself! handed in by a tall,
brawny young Horse-grenadiers, moulded in the Hercules
style: in fine, the choice of the most experienced
dame, in those affairs, in all London.
Oh! how still and hush did I keep
at my stand, lest any noise should baulk my curiosity,
or bring Madam into the closet!
But I had not much reason to fear
either, for she was entirely taken up with her present
great concern, that she had no sense of attention to
spare to anything else.
Droll was it to see that clumsy fat
figure of her’s flop down on the foot of the
bed, opposite to the closet door so that I had a full
front view of all her charms.
Her paramour sat down by her:
he seemed to be a man of very few words, and a great
stomach; for proceeding instantly to essentials, he
gave her some hearty smacks, and thrusting his hands
into her breasts, disengaged them from her stays,
in scorn of whose confinement they broke loose, and
sagged down, navel-low at least. A more enormous
pair did my eyes never behold, nor of a worse colour,
flagging, soft, and most lovingly contiguous:
yet such as they were, this great beef-eater seemed
to paw them with a most unenviable lust, seeking in
vain to confine or cover one of them with a hand scarce
less than a shoulder of mutton. After toying
with them thus some time, as if they had been worth
it, he laid her down pretty briskly, and canting up
her petticoats, made barely a mask of them to her
broad red face, that blushed with nothing but brandy.
As he stood on one side, unbuttoning
his waistcoat and breeches, her fat brawny thighs
hung down, and the whole greasy landscape lay fairly
open to my view; a wide open mouthed gap, overshaded
with a grizzly bush, seemed held out like a beggar’s
wallet for its provision.
But I soon had my eyes called off
by a more striking object that entirely engrossed
them.
Her sturdy stallion had now unbuttoned,
and produced naked, stiff and erect, that wonderful
machine, which I had never seen before, and which,
for the interest my own seat of pleasure began to take
furiously in it, I stared at with all the eyes I had:
however, my senses were too much flurried, too much
concentered in that now burning spot of mine, to observe
anything more than in general the make and turn of
that instrument; from which the instinct of nature,
yet more than all I had heard of it, now strongly
informed me, I was to expect that supreme pleasure
which she had placed in the meeting of those parts
so admirably fitted for each other.
Long, however, the young spark did
not remain before giving it two or three shakes, by
way of brandishing it, he threw himself upon her, and
his back being now towards me, I could only take his
being ingulphed for granted, by the directions he
moved in, and the impossibility of missing so staring
a mark; and now the bed shook, the curtains rattled
so that I could scarce hear the sighs and murmurs,
the heaves and pantings that accompanied the action,
from the beginning to the end; the sound and sight
of which thrilled to the very soul of me, and made
every vein of my body circulate liquid fires:
the emotion grew so viol-lent that it almost intercepted
my respiration.
Prepared then, and disposed as I was
by the discourse of my companions, and Phoebe’s
minute detail of everything, no wonder that such a
sight gave the last dying blow to my native innocence.
Whilst they were in the heat of the
action, guided by nature only, I stole my hand up
my petticoats, and with fingers on fire, seized and
yet more inflamed that center of all my senses:
my heart palpitated, as if it would force its way
through my bosom: I breathed with pain; I twisted
my thighs, squeezed and compressed the lips of that
virgin slit, and following mechanically the example
of Phoebe’s manual operation on it, as far as
I could find admission, brought on at last the critical
ecstasy, the melting flow, into which nature, spent
with excess of pleasure, dissolves and dies away.
After which, my senses recovered coolness
enough to observe the rest of the transaction between
this happy pair.
The young fellow had just dismounted,
when the old lady immediately sprung up, with all
the vigour of youth, derived, no doubt, from her late
refreshment; and making him sit down, began in her
turn to kiss him, to pat and pinch his cheeks, and
play with his hair: all which he received with
an air of indifference and coolness that showed him
to be much altered from what he was when he first
went on to the breach.
My pious governess, however, not being
above calling in auxiliaries, unlocks a little case
of cordials that stood near the bed, and made
him pledge her in a very plentiful dram: after
which, and a little amorous parley, Madam set herself
down upon the same place, at the bed’s foot;
and the young fellow standing sidewise by her, she,
with the greatest effrontery imaginable, unbuttons
his breeches, and removing his shirt, draws out his
affair, so shrunk and diminished, that I could not
but remember the difference, now crest-fallen, or
just faintly lifting its head: but our experience
matron very soon, by chaffing it with her hands, brought
it to swell to that size and erection I had before
seen it up to.
I admired then, upon a fresh account,
and with a nicer survey, the texture of that capital
part of man: the flaming red head as it stood
uncapt, the whiteness of the shaft, and the shrub growth
of curling hair that embrowned the foots of it, the
roundish bag that dangled down from it, all exacted
my eager attention, and renewed my flame. But,
as the main affair was now at the point the industrious
dame had laboured to bring it to, she was not in the
humour to put off the payment of her pains, but laying
herself down, drew him gently upon her, and thus they
finished, in the same manner as before, the old last
act.
This over, they both went out lovingly
together, the old lady having first made him a present,
as near as I could observe, of three or four pieces;
he being not only her particular favourite on account
of his performances, but a retainer to the house;
from whose sight she had taken great care hitherto
to secret me, lest he might not have had patience
to wait for my lord’s arrival, but have insisted
on being his taster, which the old lady was under
too much subjection to him to dare dispute with him;
for every girl of the house fell to him in course,
and the old lady only now and then got her turn, in
consideration of the maintenance he had, and which
he could scarce be accused of not earning from her.
As soon as I heard them go down-stairs,
I stole up softly to my own room, out of which I had
luckily not been missed; there I began to breathe
more free, and to give a loose to those warm emotions
which the sight of such an encounter had raised in
me, I laid me down on the bed, stretched myself out,
joining and ardently wishing, and requiring any means
to divert or allay the rekindled rage and tumult of
my desires, which all pointed strongly to their pole:
man. I felt about the bed as if I sought for
something that I grasped in my waking dream, and not
finding it, could have cried for vexation; every part
of me plowing with simulated fires. At length,
I resorted to the only present remedy, that of vain
attempts at digitation, where the small-ness of the
theatre did not yet afford room enough for action,
and where the pain my fingers gave me, in striving
for admission, though they procured me a slight satisfaction
for the present, started an apprehension which I could
not be easy till I had communicated to Phoebe and
received her explanations upon it.
The opportunity, however, did not
offer till next morning, for Phoebe did not come to
bed till long after I was gone to sleep. As soon
then as we were both awake, it was but in course to
bring our ly-a-bed chat to hand, on the subject of
my uneasiness: to which a recital of the love
scene I had thus, by chance, been spectatress of, served
for a preface.
Phoebe could not hear it to the end
without more than one interruption by peals of laughter,
and my ingenuous way of relating matters did not a
little heighten the joke to her.
But, on her sounding me how the sight
had affected me, without mincing or hiding the pleasurable
emotions it had inspired me with, I told her at the
same time that one remark had perplexed me, and that
very considerably. “Aye!” says she,
“what was that?” “Why,” replied
I, “having very curiously and attentively compared
the size of that enormous machine, which did not appear,
at least to my fearful imagination, less than my wrist,
and at least three of my hand-fuls long, to that of
the tender small part of me which was framed to receive
it, I could not conceive its being possible to afford
it entrance without dying, perhaps in the greatest
pain, since she well knew that even a finger thrust
in there hurt me beyond bearing. As to my mistress’s
and yours, I can very plainly distinguish the different
dimensions of them from mine, palpable to the touch,
and visible to the eye; so that, in short, great as
the promised pleasure may be, I am afraid of the pain
of the experiment.”
Phoebe at this redoubled her laugh,
and whilst I expected a very serious solution of my
doubts and apprehensions in this matter, only told
me that “she never heard of a mortal wound being
given in those parts, by that terrible weapon, and
that some she knew younger, and as delicately made
as myself, had outlived the operation; that she believed,
at the worst, I should take a great deal of liking;
that true it was, there was a great diversity of sizes
in those parts, owing to nature, child-bearing, frequent
over-stretching with unmerciful machines, but that
at a certain age and habit of body, even the most
experienced in those affairs could not well distinguish
between the maid and the woman, supposing too an absence
of all artifice, in their natural situation: but
that since chance had thrown in my way one sight of
that sort, she would procure me another, that should
feast my eyes more delicately, and go a great way
in the cure of my fears from that imaginary disproportion”.
On this she asked me if I knew Polly
Phillips? “Undoubterly,” says I,
“the fair girl which was so tender of me when
I was sick, and has been, as you told me, but two
months in the house.” “The same,”
says Phoebe. “You must know then, she is
kept by a young Genoes merchant, whom his uncle, who
is immensely rich, and whose darling he is, on a pretex
of settling some accounts, but in reality to humour
his inclinations for travelling, and seeing the world.
He met casually with this Polly once in company, and
taking a likning to her, makes it worth her while to
keep entirely to him. He comes to her here twice
or thrice a week, and she receives him in the light
closet up one pair of stairs, where he enjoys her
in a taste, I suppose, peculiar to the heat, or perhaps
the caprices of his own country, I say no more,
but to-morrow being his day, you shall see what passes
between them, from a place only known to your mistress
and myself.”
You may be sure, in the ply I was
now taking, I had no objection to the proposal, and
was rather a tip-toe for its accomplishments.
At five in the evening next day, Phoebe,
punctual to her promise, came to me as I sat alone
in my own room, and beckoned me to follow her.
We went down the back stairs very
softly, and opening the door of a dark closet, where
there was some old furniture kept, and some cases of
liquor, she drew me in after her, and fastened the
door upon us, we had no light but what came through
a long crevice in the partition between ours and the
light closet, where the scene of action lay; so that
sitting on those low cases, we could, with the greatest
ease, as well as clearness, see all objects (ourselves
unseen), only by applying our eyes close to the crevice,
where the moulding of a panel had warped, or started
a little on the other side.
The young gentleman was the first
person I saw, with his back directly towards me, looking
at a print. Polly was not yet come: in less
than a minute though, the door opened, and she came
in; and at the noise the door made he turned about,
and come to meet her, with an air of the greatest
tenderness and satisfaction.
After saluting her, he led her to
a coach that fronted us, where they both sat down,
and the young Genoes helped her to a glass of wine,
with some Naples biscuits on a salver.
Presently, when they had exchanged
a few kisses, and questions in broken English on one
side, he began to unbutton, and, in fine, stript unto
his shirt.
As if this had been the signal agreed
on for pulling off all their clothes, a scheme which
the heat of the season perfectly favoured, Polly began
to draw her pins, and as she had no stays to unlace,
she was in a trice, with her gallant’s officious
assistance, undressed to all but her shift.
When he saw this, his breeches were
immediately loosened, waist and knee bands, and slipped
over his ankles, clean off; his shirt collar was unbottoned
too: then, first giving Polly an encouraging kiss,
he stole, as it were, the shift off the girl, who
being, I suppose, broke and familiarized to this humour,
blushed indeed, but less than I did at the apparition
of her, now standing stark naked, just as she came
ont of the hands of pure nature, with her black
hair loose and a-float down her dazzling white neck
and shoulders, whilst the deepened carnation of her
cheeks went off gradually into the hue of glazed snow:
for such were the blended tints polish of her skin.
This girl could not be above eighteen:
her face regular and sweet featured, her shape exquisite;
nor could I help envying her two ripe enchanting breasts,
finely plumped out in flesh, but withal so round, so
firm, that they sustained themselves, in scorn of any
stay: then their nipples, pointing different
ways, marked their pleasing separation; beneath them
lay the delicious tract of the belly, which terminated
in a parting of rift scarce discerning, that modesty
seemed to retire downward, and seek shelter between
two plump fleshy thighs: the curling hair that
overspread its delightful front, clothed it with the
richest sable fur in the universe: in short,
she was evidently a subject for the painters to court
her, sitting to them for a pattern female beauty, in
all the true pride and pomp of nakedness.
The young Italian (still in his shirt)
stood gazing and transported at the sight of beauties
that might have fired a dying hermit; his eager eyes
devoured her, as she shifted attitudes at his discretion:
neither were his hands excluded their share of the
high feast, but wandered, on the hunt of pleasure,
over every part and inch of her body, so qualified
to afford the most exquisite sense of it.
In the mean time time, one could not
help observing the swell of his shirt before, that
bolstered out, and pointed out the condition of things
behind the curtain: but he soon removed it, by
slipping his shirt over his head; and now, as to nakedness,
they had nothing to reproach one another.
The young gentleman, by Phoebe’s
guess, was about two and twenty; tall and well limbed.
His body was finely formed, and of a most vigorous
make, square shouldered, and broad chested: his
face was not remarkable any way, but for a nose inclining
to the Roman, eyes large, black, and sparkling, and
a ruddiness in his cheeks that was the more a grace;
for his complexion was of the brownest, not of that
dusky dun colour which excludes, the idea of freshness,
but of that clear, olive gloss, which glowing with
life, dazzles perhaps less than fairness, and yet pleases
more, when it pleases at all. His hair being too
short to tie fell no lower than his neck, in short
easy curls; and he had a few sprigs about his paps,
that garnished his chest in a style of strength and
manliness. Then his grand movement, which seemed
to rise out of a thicket of curling hair, that spread
from the root all over his thighs and belly up to
the navel, stood stiff and upright, but of a size to
frighten me, by sympathy for the small tender part
which was the object of its fury, and which now lay
exposed to my fairest view; for he had, immediately
on stoppings off his shirt, gently pushed her down
on the couch, which stood conveniently to break her
willing fall. Her thighs were spread out to their
utmost extention, and discovered between them the mark
of the sex, the red-centered cleft of flesh, whose
lips vermillioning inwards, expressed a small ruby
line in sweet miniature, such as Guide’s touch
or colouring: could never attain to the life
or delicacy of.
Phoebe, at this, gave me a gentle
jog, to prepare me for a whisper question: “Whether
I thought my little maiden-head was much less?”
But my attention was too much engrossed, too much
inwrapped with all I saw, to be able to give her any
answer.
By this time the young gentelman had
changed her posture from lying breadth to length-wise
on the coach: but her thighs were still spread,
and the mark lay fair for him, who now kneeling between
them, displayed to us a side view of that fierce erect
machine of his, which threatened no less than splitting
the tender victim, who lay smiling at the uplifted
stroke, nor seemed to decline it. He looked upon
his weapon himself with some pleasure, and guiding
it with his hand to the inviting; slit, drew aside
the lips, and lodged it (after some thrusts, which
Polly seemed even to assist) about half way; but there
it stuck, I suppose from its growing thickness:
he draws it again, and just wetting it with spittle,
re-enters, and with ease sheathed it now up to the
hilt, at which Polly gave a deep sigh, which was quite
another tone than one of pain; he thrusts, she heaves,
at first gently, and in a regular cadence; but presently
the transport began to be too violent to observe any
order or measure; their motions were too rapid, their
kisses too fierce’ and fervent for nature to
support such fury long: both seemed to me out
of themselves: their eyes darted fires: “Oh!
oh! I can’t bear it. It is too much.
I die. I am going,” were Polly’s expressions
of extasy: his joys were more silent: but
soon broken murmurs, sighs heart-fetched, and at length
a dispatching thrust, as if he would have forced himself
up her body, and then the motionless languor of all
his limbs, all shewed that the die-away moment was
come upon him; which she gave signs of joining with
by, the wild throwing of her hands about, closing her
eyes, and giving a deep sob, in which she seemed to
expire in an agony of bliss.
When he had finished his stroke, and
got from off her, she lay still without the least
motion, breathless, as it should seem, with pleasure.
He replaced her again breadth-wise on the couch, unable
to sit up, with her thighs open, between which I could
observe a kind of white liquid, like froth, hanging
about the outward lips of that recently opened wound,
which now glowed with a deeper red. Presently
she gets up, and throwing her arms round him, seemed
far undelighted with the trial he had put her to,
to judge, at least by the fondness with which she eyed,
and hung upon him.
For my part, I will not pretend to
describe what I felt over me during this scene; but
from that instant, adieu all fears of what man can
do unto me! they were now changed into such ardent
desires, such ungovernable longings, that I could
have by the sleeve, and offered him the bauble, which
I now imagined the loss of would be a gain I could
not too soon procure myself.
Phoebe, who had more experience, and
to whom such sights were not so new, could not however,
be unmoved at so warm a scene; and drawing me away
softly from the peeping hole, for fear of being overheard,
guided me as the door as possible, all passive and
obedient to her least signals.
Here was no room either to sit or
lie, but making me stand with my back towards the
door, she lifted up my petticoats, and with her busy
fingers fell to visit and explore that part of me,
where I was perfectly sick and ready to die with desire;
that the bare touch of her finger, in that critical
place, had the effect of a fire to a train, and her
hand instantly made her sensible to what a pitch I
was wound up, and melted by the sight she had thus
procured me. Satisfied then with her success,
in allaying a heat that would have made me impatient
of seeing the continuation of the transactions between
our amourous couple, she brought me again to the crevice,
so favourable to our curiosity.
We had certainly been but a few instants
away from it, and yet on our return we saw everything
in good forwardness for recommencing the tender hostilities.
The young foreigner was sitting down,
fronting us, on the coach, with Polly upon one knee,
who had her arms round his neck, whilst the extreme
whiteness of her skin was not undelightfully contrasted
by the smooth glossy brown of her lover’s.
But who could count the fierce, unnumbered
kisses given and taken? In which I could often
discover their mouths were double tongued, and seemed
to favour the mutual insertion with the greatest gust
and delight.
In the meantime, his red-headed champion,
that had so lately fled the pit, quelled and abashed,
was now recovered to the top of his condition, perked
and crested up between Polly’s thighs, who was
not wanting, on her part, to coax and keep it in good
humour, stroking it, with her head down, and receiving
even its velvet tip between the lips of not its proper
mouth: whether it was to render it more glib and
easy of entrance, I could not tell; but it had such
an effect, that the young gentleman seemed by his
eyes, that sparkled with more excited lustre, and
his inflamed countenance, to receive increase of pleasure.
He got up, and taking Polly in his arms, embraced
her, and said something too softly for me to hear,
leading her withal to the foot of the couch, and taking
delight to slap her thighs and posteriors with
that stiff sinew of his, which hit them with a spring
that he gave it with his hand, and made them resound
again, but her about as much as he meant to hurt her,
for she seemed to have as frolic a taste as himself.
But guess my surprise, when I saw
the lazy young rogue lie down on his back, and gently
pull down Polly upon him, who giving way to his humour,
stradled, and with her hands conducted her blind favourite
to the right place; and following her impulse, ran
directly upon the flaming point of this weapon of
pleasure, which she staked herself upon, up pierced,
and infixed to the extremest hair breadth of it:
thus she sat on him a few instants, enjoying and relishing
her situation, whilst he toyed with her provoking
breasts. Sometimes she would stoop to meet his
kiss: but presently the sting of pleasure spurred
them up to fiercer action; then began the storm of
heaves, which, from the undermost combatant, were
thrust at the same time, he crossing his hands over
her, and drawing her home to him with a sweet violence:
the inverted strokes of anvil over hammer soon brought
on the critical period, in which all the signs of
a close conspiring extasy informed us of the point
they were at.
For me, I could bear to see no more;
I was so overcome, so inflamed at the second part
of the same play, that, mad to an intolerable degree,
I hugged, I clasped Phoebe, as if she had wherewithal
to relieve me. Pleased however with, and pitying
the taking she could feel me in, she drew towards
the door, and opening it softly as she could, we both
got off undiscovered, and reconducted me to my own
room, where, unable to keep my legs, in the agitation
I was in, I instantly threw myself down on the bed,
where I lay transported, though ashamed at what I felt.
Phoebe lay down by me, and asked me
archly, “if, now that I had seen the enemy,
and fully considered him, I was still afraid of him?
or did I think I could come to a close engagement
with him?” To all which, not a word on my side;
I sighed, and could scarcely breathe. She takes
hold of my hand, and having rolled up her own petticoats,
forced it half strivingly, towards those parts, where,
now grown more knowing, I missed the main object of
my wishes; and finding not even the shadow of what
I wanted, where every thing was so fiat, or so hollow,
in the vexation I was in at it. I should have
withdrawn my hand, but for fear of disobliging her.
Abandoning it then entirely to her management, she
made use of it as she thought proper, to procure herself
rather the shadow than the substance of any pleasure.
For my part, I now pined for more solid food, and
promised tacitly to myself that I would not be put
off much longer with this foolery of woman to woman,
of Mrs. Brown did not soon provide me with the essential
specific. In short, I had all the air of not
being able to wait the arrival of my lord B ,
though he was now expected in a very fews days:
nor did I wait for him, for love itself took charge
of the disposal of me, in spite of interest, or gross
lust.
It was now two days after the closet
scene, that I got up about six in the morning, and
leaving my bedfellow fast asleep, stole down, with
no other thought than of taking a little fresh air
in a small garden, which our back parlour opened into,
and from which my confinement debarred me, at the
times company came to my house; but now sleep and silence
reigned all over it.
I opened the parlour door, and well
surprised was I at seeing, by the side of a fire half-out,
a young gentleman in the old lady’s elbow chair,
with his legs laid upon another, fast asleep, and left
there by his thoughtless companions, who had drank
him down, and then went off with every one but his
mistress, whilst he stayed behind by the courtesy
of the old matron, who would not disturb or turn him
out in that condition at one in the morning; and beds,
it is more than probable there were none to spare.
On the table still remained the punch bowl and glasses,
stewed about in their usual disorder after a drunken
revel.
But when I drew nearer, to view the
sleeping estray, heavens! what a sight! No! term
of years, no turn of fortune could ever eraze the
lightninglike impression his form made on me.
Yes! dearest object of my earliest passion, I command
for ever the remembrance of thy first appearance to
my ravished eyes, it calls thee up, present; and I
see thee now.
Figure to yourself, Madam, fair stripling
between eighteen and nineteen, with his head reclined
on one of the sides of the chair, his hair disordered
curls, irregularly shading a face, on which all the
roseate bloom of youth and all the manly graces conspired
to fix my eye sand heart; even the languour and paleness
of his face, in which the momentary triumph of the
lily over the rose was owing to the excesses of the
night, gave an inexpressible sweetness to the finest
features imaginable: his eyes, closed in sleep,
displayed the meeting edges of their lids beautifully
bordered with long eye-lashes; over which no pencil
could have described two more regular arches than those
that graced his forehead, which was high, perfectly
white and smooth; then a pair of vermilion lips, pouting
and swelling to the touch, as if a bee had freshly
stung them, seemed to challenge me to get the gloves
off this lovely sleeper, had not the modesty and respect,
which in both sexes are inseparable from a true passion,
checked my impulses.
But on seeing his shirt collar unbottoned,
and bosom whiter than a drift of snow, the pleasure
of considering it could not bribe me to lengthen it,
at the hazard of a health that began to be my life’s
concern. Love, that made me timid, taught me
to be tender too: with a trembling hand I took
hold of one of his, and waking him as gently as possible,
he started, and looking, at first a little wildly,
said with a voice that sent its harmonious sound to
my heart: “Pray, child, what-a-clock is
it?” I told him, and added that he might catch
cold if he slept longer with his breast open in the
cool of the morning air. On this he thanked me
with a sweetness perfectly agreeing with that of his
features and eyes; the last now broad open, and eagerly
surveying me, carried the surightly fires they sparkled
with directly to my heart.
It seems, that having drank too freely
before he came upon the rake with some of his young
companions, he had put himself out of a condition to
go through all the weapons with them, and crown the
night with a getting a mistress; so that seeing me
in a loose undress, he did not doubt but I was one
of the misses of the house, sent in to repair his loss
of time; but though he seized that notion, and a very
obvious one it was, without hesitation, yet, whether
my figure made a more than ordinary impression on
him, or whether it was his natural politeness, he addressed
me in a manner far from rude, though still on the
foot of one of the house pliers come to amuse him;
and giving me the first kiss that I ever relished
from man in my life, asked me if I could favour him
with my company, assuring me that he would make it
worth my while: but had not even new-born love,
that true refiner of lust, opposed so sudden a surrender,
the fear of being surprised by the house was a sufficient
bar to my compliance.
I told him then, in a tone set by
love itself, that for reasons I had not time to explain
to him. I could not stay with him, and might even
ever see him again, with a sigh at these words, which
broke from the bottom of my heart. My conqueror,
who, as he afterwards told me, had been struck with
my appearance, and liked me as much as he could think
of liking any one in my supposed way of life, asked
me briskly at once, if I would be kept by him, and
that he would take a lodging for me directly, and
relieve me from any engagements he presumed I might
be under to the house.
Rash, sudden, undigested, even dangerous
as this offer might be from a perfect stranger, and
that stranger a giddy boy, the prodigious love I was
struck with for him, had put a charm into every objection:
I not resisting, and blinded me to every objection;
I could, at that instant, have died for him:
think if I could resist an invitation to live with
him! Thus my heart, beating strong to the proposal,
dictated my answer, after scarce a minute’s
pause, that I would accept of his offer, and make
my escape to him in what way he pleased, and that I
would be entirely at his disposal, let it be good
or bad. I have often since wondered that so great
an easiness did not disgust him, or make me too cheap
in his eyes, but my fate had so appointed it, that
in his fears of the hazzard of the town, he had been
some time looking out for a girl to take into keeping,
and my person happening to hit his fancy, it was by
one of those miracles reserved to love, that we struck
the bargain in the instant, which we sealed by an
exchange of kisses, that the hopes of a more uninterrupted
enjoyment engaged him to content himself with.
Never, however, did dear youth carry
in his head more wherewith to justify the turning
of a girl’s head, and making her set all consequences
at defiance, for the sake of following a gallant.
For, besides all the perfections of
manly beauty which were assembled in his form, he
had an air of neatness and gentility, certain smartness
in the carriage and port of his head, that yet more
distinguished him; his eyes were sprightly and full
of meaning; his looks had in them something at once
sweet and commanding; his complexion out-bloomed the
lovely coloured rose, whilst its inimitable tender
vivid glow clearly saved it from the reproach of wanting
life, of raw and dough-like, which is commonly made
of those so extremely fair as he was.
Our little plan was, that I should
get out about seven the next morning (which I could
readily promise, as I knew where to get the key of
the street door) and he would wait at the end of the
street with a coach to convey me safe off; after which,
we would send, and clear any debt incurred by my stay
at Mrs. Brown’s, who, he only judged, in gross,
might not care to part with one, he thought, so fit
to draw custom to the house.
I then just hinted to him not to mention
in the house his having seen such a person as me,
for reasons I would explain to him more at leisure.
And then, for fear of miscarrying, by being seen together,
I tore myself from him with a bleeding heart, and
stole up softly to my room, where I found Phoebe still
fast asleep, and hurrying off my few clothes, lay
down by her, with a mixture of joy and anxiety, that
may be easier conceived than expressed.
The risks of Mrs. Brown’s discovering
my purpose, of disappointments, misery, ruin, all
vanished before this new-kindled flame. The seeing,
the touching, the being, if but for a night, with this
idol of my fond virgin heart, appeared to me a happiness
above the purchase of my liberty or life. He
might use me ill, let him: he was the master,
happy, too happy, even to receive death at so dear
a hand.
To this purpose were the reflections
of the whole day, of which every minute seemed to
me a little eternity. How often did I visit the
clock! nay, was tempted to advance the tedious hand,
as if that would have advanced the time with it!
Had those of the house had the least observations
on me, they must have remarked something extraordinary
from the discomposure I could not help betraying;
especially when at dinner mention was made of the
charmingest youth having been there, and stayed breakfast.
“Oh! he was such a beauty!... I should have
died for him!... they would pull caps for him!...”
and the like fooleries; which, however, was throwing
oil on a fire I was sorely put to it to smother the
blaze of.
The fluctuations of my mind, the whole
day, produced one good effect: which was, that,
through mere fatigue, I slept tolerably well till five
in the morning, when I got up, and having dressed myself,
waited, under the double tortures of fear and impatience,
for the appointed hour. It came at last, the
dear, critical, dangerous hour came; and now, supported
only by the courage love lent me, I ventured, a tip-toe,
down stairs, leaving my box behind, for fear of being
surprized with it in going out.
I got to the street door, the key
whereof was always laid on the chair by our bed side,
in trust with Phoebe, who having not the least suspicion
of my entertaining any design to go from them (nor,
indeed, had I, but the day before), made no reserve
or concealment of it from me. I opened the door
with great ease; love, that emboldened, protected
me too: and now, got safe into the street, I saw
my new guardian angel waiting at a coach door, ready
open. How I got to him I know not: I suppose
I flew; but I was in the coach in a trice, and he by
the side of me, with his arms clasped round me, and
giving me the kiss of welcome. The coachman had
his orders, and drove to them.
My eyes were instantly filled with
tears, but tears of the most delicious delight; to
find myself in the arms of that beauteous youth, was
a rapture that my little hear swam in; past or future
were equally out of the question with me; the present
was as much as all my powers of life were sufficient
to bear the transport of, without fainting. Nor
were the most tender embraces, the most soothing expressions
wanting on his side, to assure me of his love, and
of never giving me cause to repent the bold step I
had taken, in throwing myself thus entirely upon his
honour and generosity. But, alas! this was no
merit in me, for I was drove to it by a passion too
impetuous for me to resist, and, I did what I did,
because I could not help it.
In an instant, for time was now annihilated
with me, we were landed at a public house in Chelsea,
hospitably commodious for the reception of duet parties
of pleasure, where a breakfast of chocolate was prepared
for us.
An old jolly stager, who kept it,
and understood life perfectly well, breakfasted with
us, and leering archly at me, gave us both joy, and
said, “we were well paired, i’ faith! that
a great many gentlemen and ladies used his house,
but he had never seen a handsomer couple... he was
sure I was a fresh piece... I looked so country,
so innocent! well my spouse was a lucky man!...”
all which, common landlord’s cant, not only
pleased and soothed me, but helped to diver my confusion
at being with my new sovereign, whom, the minute approached,
I began to fear to be alone with: a timidity
which true love had a greater share in than even maiden
bashful-ness.
I wished, I doated, I could have died
for him; and yet, I know not how, or why I dreaded
the point which had been the object of my fiercest
wishes; my pulses beat fears, amidst a flush of the
warmest desires. This struggle of the passions,
however, this conflict betwixt modesty and lovesick
longings, made me burst again into tears; which he
took, as he had done before, only for the remains
of concern and emotion at the suddenness of my change
of condition, in committing myself to his care; and,
in consequence of that idea, did and said all that
he thought would most comfort and re-inspirit me.
After breakfast, Charles (the dear
familiar name I must take the liberty henceforward
to distinguish my Adonis by), with a smile full of
meaning, took me gently by the hand, and said:
“Come, my dear, I will show you a room that
commands a fine prospect over some gardens”;
and without waiting for an answer, in which he relieved
me extremely, he led me up into a chamber, airy and
lightsome, where all seeing of prospects was out of
the question, except that of a bed, which had all the
air of recommending the room to him.
Charles had just slipped the bolt
of the door, and running, caught me in his arms, and
lifting me from the ground, with his lips glued to
mine, bore me trembling, panting, dying with soft
fears and tender wishes, to the bed; where his impatience
would not suffer him to undress me, more than just
unpinning my handkerchief and gowns, and unlacing my
stays.
My bosom was now bare, and rising
in the warmest throbs, presented to his sight and
feeling the firm hard swell of a pair of young breast,
such as may be imagined of a girl not sixteen, fresh
out of the country, and never before handled:
but even their pride, whiteness, fashion, pleasing
resistance to the touch, could not bribe his restless
hands from roving; but, giving them the loose, my
petticoats and shift were soon taken up, and their
stronger center of attraction laid open to their tender
invasion. My fears, however, made me mechanically
close my thighs; but the very touch of his hand insinuated
between them, disclosed them and opened a way for
the main attack.
In the mean time, I lay fairly exposed
to the examination of his eyes and hands, quiet and
unresisting; which confirmed him the opinion he proceeded
so cavalierly upon, that I was no novice in these matters,
since he had taken me out of a common bawdy house,
nor had I said one thing to prepossess him of my virginity;
and if I had, he would sooner have believed that I
took him for a cully that would swallow such an improbability,
than that I was still mistress of that darling treasure,
that hidden mine, so eagerly sought after by the men,
and which they never dig for, but to destroy.
Being now too high wound up to bear
a delay, he unbuttoned, and drawing out the engine
of love assaults, drove it currently, as at a ready
made breach... Then! then! for the first time,
did I feel that stiff horn-hard gristle, battering
against the tender part; but imagine to yourself his
surprise, when he found, after several vigorous pushes,
which hurt me extremely, that he made not the least
impression.
I complained, but tenderly complained:
“I could not bear it... indeed he hurt me!...”
Still he thought no more, than that being so young,
the largeness of his machine (for few men could dispute
size with him) made all the difficulty; and that possibly
I had not been enjoyed by any so advantageously made
in that part as himself: for still, that my virgin
flower was yet un-cropped, never entered into his head,
and he would have thought it idling with time and
words, to have questioned me upon it.
He tried again, still no admittance,
still no penetration; but he had hurt me yet more,
while my extreme love made me bear extreme pain, almost
without a groan. At length, after repeated fruitless
trials, he lay down panting by me, kissed my falling
tears, and asked me tenderly “what was the meaning
of so much complaining? and if I had not borne it
better from other than I did from him?” I answered,
with a simplicity framed to persuade, that he was
the first mam that ever served me so. Truth is
powerful, and it is not always that we do not believe
what we eagerly wish.
Charles, already disposed by the evidence,
of his senses to think my pretences to virginity not
entirely apocryphal, smothers me with kisses, begs
me, in the-name of love, to have a little patience,
and that he wilt be as tender of hurting me as he
would be of himself..
Alas! it was enough I knew his pleasure
to submit joyfully to him, whatever pain I foresaw
it would cost, me.
He now resumes his attempts in more
form: first, he put one of the pillows under
me, to give the blank of his aim a more favourable
elevation, and another Under my head, in ease of it;
then spreading my thighs, and placing himself standing
betwen them, made them rest upon his; applying then
the point of his machine to the slit, into which he
sought entrance, it was so small, he could scarce assure
himself of its being rightly pointed. He looks,
he feels, and satisfies himself: there driving
on with fury, its prodigious stiffness, thus impacted,
wedgelike, breaks the union of those parts, and gained
him just the insertion of the tip of it, lip deep;
which being sensible of, he improved his advantage,
and following well his stroke, in a straight line,
forcibly deepens his penetration; but put me to such
intolerable pain, from the separation of the sides
of that soft passage by a hard thick body, I could
have screamed out; but, as I was unwilling to alarm
the house, I held in my breath, and crammed my petticoat,
which was; turned up over my face, into my mouth,
and bit it through in the agony. At length, the
tender texture of that tract giving way to such fierce
tearing and rending, he pierced something further into
me: and now, outrageous and no longer his own
master, but borne headlong away by the fury and over-mettle
of that member, now exerting itself with a kind of
native rage, he breaks in, carries all before him,
and one violent merciless lunge, sent it, imbrued,
and reeking with virgin blood, up to the very hilt
in me... Then! then all my resolution deserted
me: I screamed out, and fainted away with the
sharpness of the pain; and, as he told me afterwards,
on his drawing out, when emission was over with him,
my thighs were instantly all in a stream of blood,
that flowed from the wounded torn passage.
When I recovered my senses, I found
myself undressed and a-bed, in the arms of the sweet
relenting murderer of my virginity, who hung mourning
tenderly over me, and holding in his hand a cordial,
which, coming from the still dear author of so much
pain, I could not refuse; my eyes, however, moistened
with tears, and languishingly turned upon him, seemed
to reproach him with his cruelty, and ask him, if such
were the rewards of love. But Charles, to whom
I was now infinitely endeared by his complete triumph
over a maidenhead, where he so little expected to find
one, in tenderness to that pain which he had put me
to, in procuring himself the height of pleasure, smothered
his exultation, and employed himself with so much
sweetness, so much warmth, to sooth, to caress, and
comfort me in my soft complainings, which breathed,
indeed, more love than resentment, that I presently
drowned all sense of pain in the pleasure of seeing
him, of thinking that I belonged to him: he who
was now the absolute disposer of my happiness, and,
in one word, my fate.
The sore was, however, too tender,
the wound too bleeding fresh, for Charles’s
good-nature to put my patience presently to another
trial; but as I could not stir, or walk a-cross the
room, he ordered the dinner to be brought to the bed
side, where it could not be otherwise than my getting
down the wing of a fowl, and two or three glasses of
wine, since it was my adored youth who both served,
and urged them on me, with that sweet irresistible
authority with which love had invested him over me.
After dinner, and everything but the
wine was taken away, Charles very impudently asks
a leave, he might read the grant of in my eyes, to
come to bed to me, and accordingly falls to undressing;
which I could not see the progress of without strange
emotions of fear and pleasure.
He is now in bed with me the first
time, and in broad day; but when thrusting up his
own shirt and my shift, he laid his naked glowing body
to mine... oh insupportable delight! oh! superhuman
rapture! what pain could stand before a pleasure so
transporting? I felt no more the smart of my
wounds below; but, curling round him like the tendril
of a vine, as if I feared any part of him should be
untouched or unpressed by me, I returned his strenuous
embraces and kisses with a fervour and gust only known
to true love, and which mere lust never rise to.
Yes, even at this time, that all the
tyranny of the passions is fully over, and that my
veins roll no longer but a cold tranquil stream, the
remembrance of those passages that most affected me
in my youth, still cheers and refreshes me; let me
proceed then. My beauteous youth was now glued
to me in all the folds and twists that we could make
our bodies meet in; when, no longer able to rein in
the fierceness of refreshed desires, he gives his
steed the head, and gently insinuating his thighs
between mine, stopping my mouth with kisses of humid
fire, makes a fresh eruption, and renewing his thrusts,
pierces, tears, and forces his way up the torn tender
folds, that yielded him admission with a smart little
less severe that when the breach was first made I stifled,
however, my cries, and bore him with the passive fortitude
of an heroine; soon his thrusts, more and more furious,
cheeks flushed with a deeper scarlet, his eyes turned
up in the fervent fit, some dying sighs, and an agonizing
shudder, announced the approaches of that extatic pleasure,
I was yet in too much pain to come in for my share
of.
Nor was it till after a few enjoyments
had numbed and blunted the sense of the smart, and
given me to feel the titillating inspersion of balsamic
sweets, drew from me the delicious return, and brought
down all my passion, that I arrived at excess of pleasure
through excess of pain. But, when successive
engagements had broke and inured me, I began to enter
into the true unalloyed relish of that pleasure of
pleasures, when the warm gush darts through all the
ravished inwards; what floods of bliss! what melting
transports! what agonies of delight! too fierce, too
mighty for nature to sustain?... well has she therefore,
no doubt provided the relief of a delicious momentary
dissolution, the approaches of which are intimated
by a dear delirium, a sweet thrill, on the point of
emitting those liquid sweets, in which enjoyment itself
is drowned, when one gives the languishing stretch
out, and die at the discharge.
How often, when the rage and tumult
of my senses had subsided, after the melting flow,
have I, in a tender meditation, asked myself cooly
the question, if it was in nature for any of its creatures
to be so happy as I was? Or, what were all fears
of the consequence, put in the scale of one night’s
enjoyment, of any thing so transcendently the taste
of my eyes and heart, as that delicious, fond, matchless
youth.
Thus we spent the whole afternoon,
till supper time in a continued circle of love delights,
kissing, turtle-billing, toying, and all the rest
of the feast. At length, supper was served in,
before which Charles had, for I do not know what reason,
slipped his clothes on; and sitting down by the bed
side, we made table and tablecloth of the bed and
sheets, whilst he suffered nobody to attend or serve
but himself. He ate with a very good appetite,
and seemed charmed to see me eat. For my part,
I was so transported with the comparison of the delights
I now swam in, with the insipidity of all my past
scenes of life, that I thought them sufficiently cheap,
at even the price of my ruin, or the risk of their
not lasting. The present possession was all my
little head could find room for.
We lay together that night, when,
after playing repeated prizes of pleasure, nature,
overspent and satisfied, gave us up to the arms of
sleep: those of my dear youth encircled me, the
consciousness of which made even that sleep more delicious.
Late in the morning I waked, first;
and observing my lover slept profoundly, softly disengaged
myself from his arms, scarcely daring to breathe,
for fear of shortening his repose; my cap, my hair,
my shift, were all in disorder, from the rufflings
I had undergone; and I took this opportunity to adjust
and set them as well as I could: whilst, every
now and then, looking at the sleeping youth, with inconceivable
fondness and delight, and reflecting on all the pain
he had put me to, tacitly owned that the pleasure
had overpaid me for my sufferings.
It was then broad day. I was
sitting up in the bed, the clothes of which were all
tossed, or rolled off, by the unquietness of our motions,
from the sultry heat of the weather; nor could I refuse
myself a pleasure that solicited me so irresistibly,
as this fair occasion of feasting my sight with all
those treasures of youthful beauty I had enjoyed,
and which lay now almost entirely naked, his shirt
being trussed up in a perfect wisp, which the warmth
of the season and room made me easy about the consequence
of. I hung over him enamoured indeed! and devoured
all his naked charms with only two eyes, when I could
have wished them at least an hundred for the fuller
enjoyment of the gaze.
Oh! could I paint his figure as I
see it now, still present to my transported imagination!
a whole length of an all perfect manly beauty in full
view. Think of a face without a fault, glowing
with all the opening bloom and verdant freshness of
an age, in which beauty is of either sex, and which
the first down over his upper lip scarce began to
distinguish.
The parting of the double ruby pout
of his lips seemed to exhale an air sweeter and purer
than what it drew in: ah! what violence did it
not cost me to refrain the so tempted kiss!
Then a neck exquisitely turned, graved
behind and on the sides with fais hair, playing
freely in natural ringlets, connected his head to a
body of the most perfect form, and of the most vigorous
contexture, in which all the strength of manhood was
concealed, and softened to appearance by the delicacy
of his complexion, the smoothness of his skin, and
the plumpness of his flesh.
The platform of his snow white bosom,
that was laid out in a manly proportion, presented,
on the vermilion summit of each pap, the idea of a
rose about to blow.
Nor did his shirt hinder me from observing
the symmetry of his limbs, that exactness of shape,
in the fall of it towards the loins, where the waist
ends and the rounding swell of the hips commences;
where the skin, sleek, smooth, and dazzling white,
burnishes on; the stretch-over firm, plump, ripe flesh,
that crimped’ and ran into dimples at the least
pressure, or that the touch could not rest upon, but
slid over on the surface of the most polished ivory.
His thighs, finely fashioned, and
with a florid glossy roundness, gradually tapering
away to the knees, seemed pillars worthy to support
that beauteous frame at the bottom of which I could
not, without some remains of terror, some tender emotions
too, fix my eyes on that terrible machine, which had,
not long before, with such fury broke into, torn,
and almost ruined those soft, tender parts of mine,
that had not yet done smarting with the effects of
its rage; but behold it now! crest fallen, reclining
its half-caped vermilion head over one of his thighs,
quiet, pliant, and to all appearances incapable of
the mischiefs and cruelty it had committed. Then
the beautiful growth of the hair, in short and soft
curls round its roots, its whiteness, branched veins,
the supple softness of the shaft, as it lay foreshortened,
rolled and shrunk up into a squat thickness, languid,
and borne up from between his thighs, by its globular
appendage, that wondrous treasure bag of nature’s
sweets, which revelled round, and pursed up in the
only wrinkles that are known to please, perfected the
prospect, and altogether formed the most interesting
moving picture in nature, and surely infinitely superior
to those nudities furnished by the painters, statuaries,
or any art, which are purchased at immense prices;
whilst the sight of them in actual life is scarce
sovereignly tasted by any but the few whom nature
has endowed with a fire of imagination, warmly pointed
by a truth of judgment to the spring-head, the originals
of beauty, of nature’s unequalled composition,
above all the imitations of art, or the reach of wealth
to pay their price.
But every thing must have an end.
A motion made by this angelic youth, in the listlessness
of goingoff sleep, replaced his shirt and the bed
clothes in a posture that shut up that treasury from
longer view.
I lay down then, and carrying my hands
to that part of me in which the objects just seen
had begun to raise a mutiny, that prevailed over the
smart of them, my fingers now opened themselves an
easy passage; but long I had not time to consider
the wide difference there, between the maid and the
now finished woman, before Charles waked, and turning
towards me, kindly enquired how I had rested? and,
scarce giving me time to answer, imprinted on my lips
one of his burning rapture kisses, which darted a
flame to my heart, that from thence radiated to every
part of me; and presently, as if he had proudly meant
revenge for the survey I had smuggled of all his naked
beauties, he spurns off the bed clothes, and trussing
up my shift as high as it would go, took his turn to
feast his eyes on all the gifts nature had bestowed
on my person; his busy hands, too, ranged intemperately
over every part of me. The delicious austerity
and hardness of my yet unripe budding breasts, the
whiteness and firmness of my flesh, the freshness
and regularity of my features, the harmony of my limbs,
all seemed to confirm him in his satisfaction with
his bargain; but when curious to explore the havock
he had made in the centre of his over fierce attack,
he not only directed his hands there, but with a pillow
put under, placed me favourably for his wanton purpose
of inspection. Then, who can express the fire
his eyes glistened, his hands glowed with! whilst
sighs of pleasure, and tender broken exclamations,
were all the praises he could utter. By this time
his machine, stiffly risen at me, gave me to see it
in its highest state and bravery. He feels it
himself, seems pleased at its condition, and, smiling
loves and graces, seizes one of my hands, and carries
it, with gentle compulsion, to this pride of nature,
and its richest master piece.
I, struggling faintly, could not help
feeling what I could not grasp, a column of the whitest
ivory, beautifully streaked with blue veins, and carrying,
fully un-capt, a head of the liveliest vermilion:
no horn could be harder or stiffer; yet no velvet
more smooth or delicious to the touch. Presently
he guided my hand lower, to that part in which nature,
and pleasure keep their stores in concert, so aptly
fastened and hung on to the root of their first instrument
and minister, that not improperly he might be styled
their purse-bearer too: there he made me feel
distinctly, through their soft cover, the contents,
a pair of roundish balls, that seemed to play within,
and elude all pressure, but the tenderest, from without.
But now this visit of my soft, warm
hand, in those so sensible parts, had put every thing
into such ungovernable fury, disdaining all further
preluding, and taking advantage of my commodious posture,
he made the storm fall where I scarce patiently expected,
and where he was sure to lay it: presently, then,
I felt the stiff intersection betwen the yielding,
divided lips of the wound, now open for life; where
the narrowness no longer put me to intolerable pain,
and afforded my lover no more difficulty than what
heightened his pleasure, in the strict embrace of
that tender, warm sheath, round the instrument it was
so delicately adjusted to, and which now cased home,
so gorged me with pleasure, that it perfectly suffocated
me and took away my breath; then the killing thrusts!
the unnumbered kisses! every one of which was a joy
inexpressible; and that joy lost in a crowd of yet
greater blisses! But this was a disorder too
violent in nature to last long: the vessels, so
stirred and intensely heated, soon boiled over, and
for that time put out the fire; meanwhile all this
dalliance and disport had so far consumed the morning,
that it became a kind of necessity to lay breakfast
and dinner into one.
In our calmer intervals Charles gave
the following account of himself, every tittle of
which was true. He was the only son of a father,
who, having a small post in the revenue, rather overlived
his income, and had given this young gentleman a very
slender education: no profession had he bred
him up to, but designed to provide for him in the army,
by purchasing him an ensign’s commission, that
is to say, provided he could raise the money, or procure
it by interest, either of which clauses was rather
to be wished than hoped for by him. On no better
a plan, however, had his improvident father suffered
this youth, a youth of great promise, to run up to
the age of manhood, or near it at least, in next to
idleness; and had, besides, taken no sort of pains
to give him even the common premonitions against the
vices of the town, and the dangers of all sorts which
wait the unexperienced and unwary in it. He lived
at home, and at discretion with his father, who himself
kept a mistress; and for the rest, provided Charles
did not ask him for money, he was indolently kind
to him: he might lie out when he pleased, any
excuse would serve, and even his reprimands were so
slight, that they carried with them rather an air
of connivance at the fault, than any serious control
or constraint. But, to supply his calls for money,
Charles, whose mother was dead, had, by her side,
a grandmother, who doated upon him. She had a
considerable annuity to live on, and very regularly
parted with every shilling she could spare, to this
darling of her’s, to the no little heart-burn
of his father; who was vexed, not that she, by this
means, fed his son’s extravagance, but that she
preferred Charles to himself; and we shall too soon
see what a fatal turn such a mercenary jealousy could
operate on the breast of a father.
Charles was, however, by the means
of his grandmother’s lavish fondness, very sufficiently
enabled to keep a mistress, so easily contented as
my love made me; and my good fortune, for such I must
ever call it, threw me in his way, in the manner above
related, just as he was on the look-out for one.
As to temper, the even sweetness of
it made him seem born for domestic happiness:
tender, naturally polite, and gentle-manner’d;
it could never be his fault, if ever jars, or animosities
ruffled a calm he was so qualified every way to maintain
or restore. Without those great or shining qualities
that constitute a genius, or are fit to make a noise
in the world, he had all those humble ones that compose
the softer social merit: plain common sense,
set off with every grace of modesty and good nature,
made him, if not admired, what is much happier:
universally beloved and esteemed. But, as nothing
but the beauties of his person had at first attracted
my regard and fixed my passion, neither was I then
a judge of the internal merit, which I had afterwards
full occasion to discover, and which, perhaps, in that
season of giddiness and levity, would have touched
my heart very little, had it been lodged in a person
less the delight of my eyes, and idol of my senses.
But to return to our situation.
After dinner, which we ate a-bed in
most voluptuous disorder, Charles got up, and taking
a passionate leave of me for a few hours, went to
town, where concerting matters with a young sharp lawyer,
they went together to my late venerable mistress’s,
from whence I had, but the day before, made my elopement,
and with whom he was determined to settle accounts,
in a manner that should cut off all after reckonings
from that quarter.
Accordingly they went; but by the
way, the Templar, his friend, on thinking over Charles’s
information, saw reason to give their visit another
turn, and, instead of offering satisfaction, to demand
it.
On being let in, the girls of the
house flocked round Charles, whom they knew, and from
the earlyness of my escape, and their perfect ignorance
of his ever having so much as seen me, not having the
least suspicion of his being accessory to my flight,
they were, in their way, making up to him; and as
to his companion, they took him probably for a fresh
cully. But the Templar soon checked their forwardness,
by enquiring for the old lady, with whom he said,
with a grave-like countenance, that he had some business
to settle.
Madam was immediately sent for down,
and the ladies being desired to clear the room, the
lawyer asked her, severely, if she did know, or had
not decoyed, under pretence of hiring as a servant,
a young girl, just come out of the country, called
Frances or Fanny Hill, describing me withal as particularly
as he could from Charlie’s description.
It is peculiar to vice to tremble
at the enquiries of justice; and Mrs. Brown, whose
conscience was not entirely clear upon my account,
as knowing as she was of the town as hackneyed as she
was in bluffing through all the dangers of her vocation,
could not help being alarmed at the questions, especially
when he went on to talk of a Justice of peace, Newgate,
the Old Bailey, indictments for keeping a disorderly
house, pillory, carting, and the whole process of
that nature. She, who, it is likely, imagined
I had lodged an information against her house, looked
extremely blank, and began to make a thousand protestations
and excuses. However, to abridge, they brought
away triumphantly my box of things, which, had she
not ben under an awe, she might have disputed
with them; and not only that, but a clearance and
discharge of any demands on the house, at the expense
of no more than a bowl of arrack-punch, the treat
of which, together with the choice of the house conveniences,
was offered and not accepted. Charles all the
time acted the chance companion of the lawyer, who
had brought him there, as he knew the house, and appeared
in no wise interested in the issue; but he had the
collateral pleasure of hearing all that I told him
verified, as far as the bawd’s fears would give
her leave to enter into my history, which, if one
may guess by the composition she so readily came into,
were not small.
Phoebe, my kind tutoress Phoebe, was
at the time gone out, perhaps in search of me, or
their cooked-up story had not, it is probable, passed
smoothly.
This négociation had, however,
taken up some time, which would have appeared much
longer to me, left as I was, in a strange house, if
the landlady, a motherly sort of a woman, to whom
Charles had liberally recommended me, had not come
up and borne me company. We drank tea, and her
chat helped to pass away the time very agreeably, since
he was our theme; but as the evening deepened, and
the hour set for his return was elapsed, I could not
dispel the gloom of impatience, and tender fears which
gathered upon me, and which our timid sex are apt to
feel in proportion to their love.
Long, however, I did not suffer:
the sight of him over-paid me; and the soft reproach
I had prepared for him, expired before it reached my
lips.
I was still a-bed, yet unable to use
my legs otherwise than awkwardly, and Charles flew
to me, catches me in his arms, raised and extending
mine to meet his dear embrace, and gives me an account,
interrupted by many a sweet parenthesis of kisses,
of the success of his measures.
I could not help laughing at the fright
of the old woman had been put into, which my ignorance,
and indeed my want of innocence, had far from prepared
me from bespeaking. She had, it seems, apprehended
that I fled the shelter to some relation I had recollected
in town, on my dislike of their ways and proceedings
towards me, and that this application came from thence;
for, as Charles had rightly judged, not one neighbour
had, at that still hour, seen the circumstance of
my escape into the coach, or, at least, noticed him;
neither had any in the house, the least hint of suspicion
of my having spoken to him, much less of my having
clapt up such a sudden bargain with a perfect stranger,
thus the greatest improbability is not always what
we should most mistrust.
We supped with all the gaiety of two
young giddy creatures at the top of their desires;
and as I had given up to Charles the whole charge of
my future happiness, I thought of nothing beyond the
exquisite pleasure of possessing him.
He came to bed in due time; and this
second night, the pain being pretty well over, I tasted,
in full draught, all the transports of perfect enjoyment:
I swam, I bathed in bliss, till both fell asleep, through
the natural consequences of satisfied desires, and
appeased flames; nor did we wake but to renewed raptures.
Thus, making the most of love, and
life did we stay in this lodging in Chelsea about
ten days; in which time Charles took care to give his
excursions from home a favourable gloss, and to keep
his footing with his fond indulgent grand-mother,
from whom he drew constant and sufficient supplies
for the charge I was to him, and which was very trifling,
in comparison with his former less regular course of
pleasure.
Charles removed me then to a private
ready furnished lodging in D.... street, St. James’s,
where he paid half a guinea a week for two rooms and
a closet on the second floor, which he had been some
time looking out for, and was more convenient for
the frequency of his visits, than where he had at
first placed me, in a house, which I cannot say but
I left with regret, as it was infinitely endeared to
me by the first possession of my Charles, and the
circumstance of losing, there, that jewel, which can
never be twice lost. The landlord, however, had
no reason to complain of any thing, but of a procedure
in Charles too liberal not to make him regret the
loss of us.
Arrived at our new lodging, I remember
I thought them extremely fine, though ordinary enough,
even at that price; but, had it been a dungeon that
Charles had brought me to, his presence would have
made a little Versailles.
The landlady, Mrs. Jones, waited on
us to our apartment, and with great volubility of
tongue, explained to us all its conveniences:
“that her own maid should wait on us... that
the best of quality had lodged at her house... that
her first floor was let to a foreign secretary of an
embassy, and his lady... that I looked like a very
good natured lady...” At the word lady,
I blushed out of flattered vanity: this was strong
for a girl of my condition; for though Charles had
the precaution of dressing me in a less tawdry flaunting
style than were the clothes I escaped to him in, and
of passing me for his wife, that she had secretly
married, and kept private (the old story) on account
of his friends, I dare swear this appeared extremely
apocryphal to a woman who knew the town so well as
she did; but that was the least of her concern:
it was impossible to be less scruple-ridden than she
was; and the advantage of letting her rooms being
her sole object, the truth itself would have far from
scandalized her, or broke her bargain.
A sketch of her picture, and personal
history, will dispose you to account for the part
she is to act in my concern.
She was about forty six years old,
tall, meagre, red-haired, with one of those trivial
ordinary faces you meet with every where, and go about
unheeded and un-mentioned. In her youth she had
been kept by a gentleman, who, dying, left her forty
pounds a year during her life, in consideration of
a daughter he had by her: which daughter, at the
age of seventeen, she sold, for not a very considerable
sum neither, to a gentleman who was going on envoy
abroad, and took his purchase with him, where he used
her with the utmost tenderness, and it is thought,
was secretly married to her: but had constantly
made a point of her not keeping up the least correspondence
with a mother base enough to make a market of her
own flesh and blood. However, as she had not nature,
nor, indeed, any passion but that of money, this gave
her no further uneasiness, then, as she thereby lost
a handle of squeezing près-sents, or other after-advantages,
out of the bargain. Indifferent then, by nature
of constitution, to every other pleasure but that of
increasing the lump, by any means whatever, she commenced
a kind of private procuress, for which she was not
amiss fitted, by her grave decent appearance, and
sometimes did a job in the match-making way; in short,
there was, nothing that appeared to her under the shape
of gain, that she would not have undertaken.
She knew most of the ways of the town, having not
only herself been upon, but kept up constant intelligences
in promoting a harmony between the two sexes, in private
pawn-broking, and other profitable secrets. She
rented the house she lived in, and made the most of
it, by letting it out in lodgings; though she was worth,
at least, near three or four thousand pounds, she
would not allow herself even the necessaries, of life,
and pinned her subsistence entirely on what she could
squeeze out of her lodgers.
When she saw such a young pair come
under her roof, her immediate notions, doubtless,
were how she should make the most money of us, by
every means that money might be made, and which, she
rightly judged, our situations and inexperience would
soon beget her occasions of.
In this hopeful sanctuary, and under
the clutches of this harpy, did we pitch our residence.
It will not be might material to you, or very pleasant
to me, to enter into a detail of all the petty cut-throat
ways and means with which she used to fleece us; all
which Charles indolently chose to bear with, rather
than take the trouble of removing, the difference
of expense being scarce attended to by a young gentleman
who had no ideas of stint, or even economy, and a
raw country girl who knew nothing of the matter.
Here, however, under the wings of
my sovereignly beloved, did the most delicious hours
of my life flow on; my Charles I had, and, in him,
every thing my fond heart could wish or desire.
He carried me to plays, operas, masquerades, and every
diversion of the town; all which pleased me, indeed,
but pleased me infinitely the more for his being with
me, and explaining every thing to me, and enjoying
perhaps, the natural impressions of surprise and admiration,
which such sights, at the first, never fail to excite
in a country girl, new to the delights of them; but
to me, they sensibly proved the power and dominion
of the sole passion of my heart over me, a passion
in which soul and body were concentered, and left
me no room for any other relish of life but love.
As to the men I saw at those places,
or at any other, they suffered so much in the comparison
my eyes made of them with my all-perfect Adonis, that
I had not the infidelity even of one wandering thought
to reproach myself with upon his account. He
was the universe to me, and all that was not him,
was nothing to me.
My love, in fine, was so excessive,
that is arrived at annihilating every suggestion or
kindling spark of jealousy; for, one idea only, tending
that way, gave me such exquisite torment, that my self-love,
and dread of worse than death, made me for ever renounce
and defy it: nor had I, indeed, occasion; for,
were I to enter here on the recital of several instances
wherein Charles sacrificed to me women of much greater
importance than I dare hint (which, considering his
form, was no such wonder), I might, indeed, give you
full proof of his unshaken constancy to me; but would
not you accuse me of warming up against a feast, which
my vanity ought long ago to have been satisfied with?
In our cessations from active pleasure,
Charles framed himself one, in instructing me, as
far as his own lights reached, in a great many points
of life, that I was, in consequence of my no-education,
perfectly ignorant of: nor did I suffer one word
to fall in vain from the mouth of my lovely teacher:
I hung on every syllable he uttered, and received,
as oracles, all he said; whilst kisses were all the
interruption I could not refuse myself the pleasure
of admitting, from lips that breathed more than Arabian
sweetness, I was in a little time enabled, by the
progress I had made, to prove the deep regard I had
paid to all that he had said to me: repeating
it to him almost word for word; and to shew that I
was not entirely the parrot, but that I reflected upon,
that I entered into it, I joined my own comments,
and asked him questions of explanation.
My country accent, and the rusticity
of my gait, manners, and deportment, began now sensibly
to wear off: so quick was my observation, and
so efficacious my desire of growing every day worthier
of his heart.
As to money, though, he brought me
constantly all he received, it was with difficulty
he even got me to give it room in my bureau; and what
clothes I had, he could prevail on me to accept of
on no other foot, than that of pleasing him by the
greater neatness in my dress, beyond which I had no
ambition. I could have made a pleasure of the
greatest toil, and worked my fingers to the bone,
with joy, to have supported him: guess, then,
if I could harbour any idea of being burthensome to
him, and this disinterested turn in me was so unaffected,
so much the dictate of my heart, that Charles could
not but feel it: and if he did not love me as
much as I did him (which was the constant and only
matter of sweet contention between us), he managed
so, at least, as to give me the satisfaction of believing
it impossible for man to be more tender, more true,
more faithful than he was.
Our landlady, Mrs. Jones, came frequently
up to my apartment, from whence I never stirred on
any pretext without Charles; nor was it long before
she wormed out, without much art, the secret of our
having cheated the church of a ceremony, and, in course,
of the terms we lived together upon; a circumstance
which far from displeased her, considering the designs
she had upon me, and which, alas! she will have too
soon, room to carry into execution. But in the
meantime, her own experience of life let her see,
that any attempt, however indirect or disguised, to
divert or break, at least presently, so strong a cement
of hearts as ours was, could only end in losing two
lodgers, of whom she had made very competent advantages,
if either of us came to smoke her commission, for
a commission she had from one of her customers, either
to debauch, or get me away from my keeper at any rate.
But the barbarity of my fate soon
saved her the task of disuniting us. I had now
been eleven months with this life of my life, which
had passed in one continued rapid stream of delight:
but nothing so violent was ever made to last.
I was about three months gone with a child by him,
a circumstances would have added to his tenderness,
had he ever left me room to believe it could receive
an addition, when the mortal, the unexpected blow
of separation fell upon us. I shall gallop post-over
the particulars, which I shudder yet to think of, and
cannot; to this instant, reconcile myself how, or
by what means I could out-live it.
Two live-long days had I lingered
through without hearing from him, I who breathed,
who existed but in him, and had never yet seen twenty-four
hours pass without seeing or hearing from him.
The third day my impatience was so strong, my alarms
had been so severe, that I perfectly sickened with
them; and being unable to support the shock longer,
I sunk upon the bed, and ringing for Mrs. Jones, who
had far from comforted me under my anxieties, she
came up, and I had scarce breath and spirit enough
to find words to beg of her, if she would save my life,
to fall upon some means of finding out, instantly,
what was become of its only prop and comfort.
She pitied me in a way that rather sharpened my affliction
than suspended it, and went out upon this commission.
For she had but to go to Charles’s
house, who lived but an easy distance, in one of the
streets that run into Covent Garden. There she
went into a public house, and from thence sent for
a mid servant, whose name I had given her, as the
properest to inform her.
The maid readily came, and as readily,
when Mrs. Jones enquired of her what had become of
Mr. Charles, or whether he was gone out of town, acquainted
her with the disposal of her master’s son, which,
the very day after, was no secret to the servants.
Such sure measures had he taken, for the most cruel
punishment of his child for having more interest with
his grandmother than he had, though he made use of
a pretence, plausible enough, to get rid of him in
this secret abrupt manner, for fear her fondness should
have interposed a bar to his leaving England, and
proceeding on a voyage he had concerted for him; which
pretext was, that it was indispensably necessary to
secure a considerable inheritance that devolved to
him by the death of a rich merchant (his own brother)
at one of the factories in the South Seas, of which
he had lately received advice, together with a copy
of the will.
In consequence of which resolution,
to send away his son, he had, unknown to him, made
the necessary preparations for fitting him out, struck
a bargain with the captain of a ship, whose punctual
execution of his orders he had secured, by his interest
with his principal owners and patron; and, in short,
concerted his measures so secretly, and effectually,
that whilst the son thought he was going down to the
river, that would take him a few hours, he was stopt
on board of a ship, debarred from writing, and more
strictly watched than a State criminal.
Thus was the idol of my soul torn
from me, and forced on a long voyage, without taking
leave of one friend, or receiving one line of comfort,
except a dry explanation and instructions, from his
father, how to proceed when he should arrive at his
destined port, enclosing, withal, some letters of
recommendation to a factor there: all these particulars
I did not learn minutely till some time after.
The maid, at the same time, added,
that she was sure this usage of her sweet young master
would be the death of his grand-mamma, as indeed it
proved true; for the old lady, on hearing it, did not
survive the news a whole month, and as her fortune
consisted in an annuity, out of which she had laid
up no reserves, she left nothing worth mentioning to
her so fatally envied darling, but absolutely refused
to see his father before she died.
When Mrs. Jones returned, and I observed
her looks, they seemed so unconcerned, and even nearest
to pleased, that I half flattered myself she was going
to set my tortured heart at ease, by bringing me good
news; but this, indeed, was a cruel delusion of hope:
the barbarian, with all the coolness imaginable, stabs
me to the heart, in telling me, succinctly, that he
was sent away, at least, on a four years’ voyage
(here she stretched maliciously), and that I could
not expect, in reason, ever to see him again:
and all this with such pregnant circumstances, that
I could not escape giving them credit, as they were,
indeed, too true!
She had hardly finished her report
before I fainted away, and after several successive
fits, all the while wild and senseless, I miscarried
of the dear pledge of my Charles’s love; but
the wretched never die when it is fittest they should
die, and women are hard-lived! to a proverb.
The cruel and interested care taken
to recover me, saved an odious life: which, instead
of the happiness and joys it had overflower in, all
of a sudden presented no view before me of any thing
but the depth of misery, horror, and the sharpest
affliction.
Thus I lay six weeks, in the struggles
of youth and constitution, against the friendly efforts
of death, which I constantly invoked to my relief
and deliverance, but which proved too weak for my wish.
I recovered at length, but into a state of stupefaction
and despair, that threatened me with the loss of my
senses, and a mad house.
Time, however, that great comforter
in ordinary, began to assuage the violence of my suffering,
and to-numb my feeling of them. My health returned
to me, though I still retained an air of grief, dejection,
and languor, which taking off from the ruddiness of
my country complexion, rendered it rather more delicate
and affecting.
The landlady had all this while officiously
provided, and seen that I wanted for nothing:
and as soon as she saw me retrieved into a condition
of answering her purpose, one day, after we had dined
together, she congratulated me on my recovery, the
merit of which she took entirely to herself, and all
this by way of introduction to a most terrible, and
scurvy epilogue: “You are now,” says
she, “Miss Fanny, tolerably well, and you are
very welcome to stay in these lodgings as; long as
you please! you see I have asked you for nothing this
long time, but truly I have a call to make up a sum
of money, which must be answered.” And,
with that, presents me with a bill of arrears for rent,
diet, apothecaries’ charges, nurse, etc.,
sum total twenty-three pounds, seventeen and six-pence:
towards discharging of which I had not in the world
(which she well knew) more than seven guineas, left
by chance, of my dear Charles’s common stock,
with me. At the same time, she desired me to
tell her what course I would take for payment.
I burst out into a flood of tears, and told her my
condition: that I would sell what few clothes
I had, and that, for the rest, would pay her as soon
as possible. But my distress, being favourable
to her view, only stiffened her the more.
She told me, very cooly, that “she
was indeed sorry for my misfortunes, but that she
must do herself justice, though it would go to the
very heart of her to send such a tender young creature
to prison....” At the word “prison!”
every drop of my blood chilled, and my fright acted
so strongly upon me, that, turning as pale and faint
as a criminal at the first sight of his place of execution,
I was on the point of swooning. My landlady,
who wanted only to terrify me to a certain point, and
not to throw me into a state of body inconsistent
with her designs upon it, began to sooth me again,
and told me, in a tone composed to more pity and gentleness,
that “it would be my own fault, if she was forced
to proceed to such extremities; but she believed there
was a friend to be found in the world, who would make
up matters to both our satisfactions, and that she
would bring him to drink tea with us that very afternoon,
when she hoped we would come to a right understanding
in our affairs.” To all this, not a word
of answer; I sat mute, confounded, terrified.
Mrs. Jones, however, judging rightly
that it was time to strike while the impressions were
so strong upon me, left me to myself and to all the
terrors of an imagination, wounded to death by the
idea of going to prison, and, from a principle of
self-preservation, snatching at every glimpse of redemption
from it.
In this situation I sat near half
an hour, swallowed up in grief and despair, when my
landlady came in, and observing a death-like dejection
in my countenance, still in pursuance of her plan,
put on a false pity, and bidding me be of good heart:
“Things,” she said, “would be but
my own friend”; and closed with telling me “she
had brought a very honourable gentleman to drink tea
with me, who would give me the best advice how to
get rid of all my troubles.” Upon which,
without waiting for a reply, she goes out, and returns
with this very honourable gentleman, whose very honourable
procuress she had been, on this, as well as other
occasions.
The gentleman, on his entering the
room, made me a very civil bow, which I had scarce
strength, or presence of mind enough to return a curtsey
to; when the landlady, taking upon her to do all the
honours of the first interview (for I had never, that
I remember, seen the gentleman before), sets a chair
for him, another for herself. All this while not
a word on either side; a stupid stare was all the
face I could put on this strange visit.
The tea was made, and the landlady,
unwilling, I suppose, to lose any time, observing
my silence and shyness before this entire stranger:
“Come, Miss Fanny,” says she, in a coarse
familiar style, and tone of authority, “hold
up your head, child, and do not let sorrow spoil that
pretty face of yours. What! sorrows are only for
a time; come, be free, here is a worthy gentleman
who has heard of your misfortunes, and is willing
to serve you; you must be better acquainted with him,
do not you now stand upon your punctilios, and this
and that, but make your market while you may.”
At this so delicate, and eloquent
harangue, the gentleman, who saw I loooked frighted
and amazed, and, indeed, incapable of answering, took
her up for breaking things in so abrupt a manner, as
rather to shock than incline me to an acceptance of
the good he intended me then, addressing himself to
me, told me “he was perfectly acquainted with
my whole story, and every circumstance of my distress
which he owned was a cruel plunge for one of my youth
and beauty to fall into.... that he had long taken
a liking to my person, for which he appealed to Mrs.
Jones, there present; but finding me so deeply engaged
to another, he had lost all hopes of succeeding, till
he had heard the sudden reverse of fortune that had
happened to me, on which he had given particular orders
to my landlady to see that I should want for nothing;
and that, had he not been forced abroad to the Hague,
on affairs he could not refuse himself to, he would
himself have attended me during my sickness;... that
on his return, which was the day before, he had, on
learning my recovery, desired my landlady’s
good offices to introduce him to me, and was as angry,
at least, as I was shocked, at the manner in which
she had conducted herself towards obtaining him that
happiness; but, that to show me how much he disdained
her procedure, and how far he was from taking any
ungenerous advantage of my situation, and from exacting
any security for my gratitude, he would before my face,
that instant, discharge my debt entirely to my landlady,
and give me her receipt in full; after which I should
be at liberty either to reject or grant his suit,
as he was much above putting any force upon my inclinations.”
Whilst he was exposing his sentiments
to me, I ventured just to look up to him, and observed
his figure, which was that of a very well-looking
gentleman, well made, of about forty, dressed in a
suit of plain clothes, with a large diamond ring on
one of his fingers, the lustre of which played in
my eyes as he waved his hand in talking, and raised
my notions of his importance. In short, he might
pass for what is commonly called a comely black man,
with an air of distinction natural to his birth and
condition.
To all his speeches, however, I answered
only in tears that flower plentifully to my relief,
and choking up my voice, excused me from speaking,
very luckily, for I should not have known what to say.
The sight, however, moved him, as
he afterwards told me, irresistibly, and by way of
giving me some reason to be less powerfully afflicted,
he drew out his purse, and calling for pen and ink,
which the landlady was prepared for, paid her every
farthing of her demand, independent of a liberal gratification
which was to follow unknown to me, and taking a receipt
in full, very tenderly forced me to secure it, by guiding
my hand, which he had thrust it into, so as to make
me passively put it into my pocket.
Still I continued in a state of stupidity,
or melancholic despair, as my spirits could not yet
recover from the violent shocks that they had received;
and the accommodating landlady had actually left the
room, and me alone with this strange gentleman, before
I had observed it, and then I observed it without
alarm, for I was now lifeless, and indifferent to
every thing.
The gentleman, however, no novice
in affairs of this sort, drew near me; and, under
the pretence of comforting me, first with his handkerchief
dried my tears as they ran down my cheeks: presently
he ventured to kiss me on my part, neither resistance
nor compliance. I sat stock still; and now looking
on myself as bought by the payment that had been transacted
before me.
I did not care what became of my wretched
body: and wanting life, spirits, or courage to
oppose the least struggle, even that of the modesty
of my sex, I suffered, tamely, whatever the gentleman
pleased; who proceeding insensibly from freedom to
freedom, insinuating his hand between my handkerchief
and bosom, which he handled at discretion: finding
thus no repulse, and that every thing favoured, beyond
expectation, the completion of his desires, he took
me in his arms, and bore me, without life or motion,
to the bed, on which laying me gently downed, and
having me at what advantage he pleased, I did not so
much as know what he was about, till recovering from
a trance of lifeless insensibility, I found him buried
in me, whilst I lay passive and innocent of the least
sensations of pleasure: a death-cold corpse could
scarce have less life or sense in it. As soon
as he had thus pacified a passion which had too little
respected the condition I was in, he got off, and
after recomposing the disorder of my clothes, employed
himself with the utmost tenderness to calm the transports
of remorse and madness at myself, with which I was
seized, too late, I confess, for having suffered on
that bed, the embraces of an utter stranger I tore
my hair, wrung my hands, and beat my breast like a
mad woman. But when my new master, for in that
light I then viewed him, applied himself to appease
me, as my whole rage was levelled at myself, no part
of which I thought myself permitted to aim at him,
I begged of him with more submission than anger, to
leave me alone, that I might, at least, enjoy my affliction
in quiet. This he positively refused, for fear,
as he pretended, I should do myself a mischief.
Violent passions seldom last long, and those of women
least of any. A dead still calm succeeded this
storm, which ended in a profuse shower of tears.
Had any one, but a few instants before,
told me that I should have ever known any man but
Charles, I would have spit in his face or had I been
offered infinitely a greater sum of money than that
I saw paid for me, I had spurned the proposal in cold
blood. But our virtues and our vices depend too
much on our circumstances; unexpectedly beset as I
was, betrayed by a mind weakened by a long severe
affliction, and stunned with the terrors of a goal,
my defeat will appear the more excusable, since I
certainly was not present at, or a party in any sense
to it. However, as the first enjoyment is decisive,
and he was now over the bar, I thought I had no longer
a right to refuse the caresses of one that had got
that advantage over me, no matter how obtained; conforming
myself then to this maxim, I considered myself as so
much in his power, that I endured his kisses and embraces
without affecting struggles or anger; not that he,
as yet, gave me any pleasure, or prevailed over the
aversion of my soul, to give myself up to any sensation
of that sort; what I suffered, I suffered out of a
kind of gratitude, and as a matter of course what
had passed.
He was, however, so regardful as not
to attempt the renewal of those extremities which
had thrown me, just before, into such violent agitations;
but, now secure of possession, contented himself with
bringing me to temper by degrees, and waiting at the
hand of time for those fruits of generosity and courtship,
which he since often reproached himself with having
gathered much too green, when, yielding to the inability
to resist him, and overborne by desires, he had wreaked
his passion on a mere lifeless, spiritless body, dead
to all purpose of joy, since taking none, it ought
to be supposed incapable of giving any. This
is, however, certain; my heart never thoroughly forgave
him the manner in which I had fallen to him, although,
in point of interest, I had fallen to him, I had reason
to be pleased that he found, in my person, wherewithal
to keep him from leaving me as easily as he had had
me.
The evening was, in the mean time,
so far advanced, that the maid came in to lay the
cloth for supper, when I understood, with joy, that
my landlady, whose sight was present poison to me,
was not to be with us.
Presently a neat and elegant supper
was introduced, and a bottle of Burgundy, with the
other necessaries, were set on a dumb-waiter.
The maid quitting the room, the gentleman
insisted, with a tender warmth, that I should sit
up in the elbow chair by the fire, and see him eat,
if I could not be prevailed on to eat myself.
I obeyed with a heart full or affliction, at the comparison
it made between those delicious tete-a-têtes
with my very dear youth, and this forced situation,
this new awkward scene, imposed and obtruded on me
a cruel necessity.
At supper, after a great many arguments
used to comfort and reconcile me to my fate, he told
me that his name was H..., brother to the Earl of
L.... and that having, by the suggestions of my landlady,
been led to see me, he had found me perfectly to his
taste, and given her a commission to procure me at
any rate, and that at length he had succeeded, as
much to his satisfaction as he passionately wished
it might be to mine adding, withal, some flattering
assurances, that I should have no cause to repent
my knowledge of him.
I had now got down at least half a
partridge, and three or four glasses of wine, which
he compelled me to drink by way of restoring nature,
but whether there was any thing extraordinary put
into the wine, or whether there wanted no more to
revive the natural warmth of my constitution, and
give fire to the old train, I began no longer to look
with that constraint, not to say disguise, on Mr.
H...., which I had hitherto done but, withal, there
was not the least grain of love mixed with this softening
of my sentiments: any other man would have been
just the same to me as Mr. H..., that stood in the
same circumstances, and had done for me, and with
me, what he had done.
There are not, on earth at least,
eternal griefs; mine were, if not at an end, at least
suspended: my heart, which had been so long overloaded
with anguish and vexation, began to dilate and open
to the last gleam of diversion or amusement.
I wept a little, and my tears relieved me; I sighed,
and my sighs seemed to lighten me of a load that oppressed
me; my countenance grew, if not cheerful, at least
more composed and free.
Mr. H..., who had watched, perhaps
brought on this change, knew too well not to seize
it: he thrust the table imperceptibly from between
us, and bringing his chair to face me, he soon began,
after preparing me by all the endearments of assurance
and protestations, to lay hold of my hands, to kiss
me, and once more to make free with my bosom, which,
being at full liberty from the disorder of a loose
dishabile, now panted and throbbed, less with indignation
than with fear and bashfulness, at being used so familiarly
by still a stranger. But he soon gave me greater
occasion to exclaim, by stooping down and slipping
his hands above my garters; thence he strove to regain
the pass, which he had before found so open, and unguarded;
but now he could not unlock the twist of my thighs;
I gently complained, and begged him to let me alone;
told him I was not well. However, he saw there
was more form and ceremony in my resistance, than
good earnest; he made his conditions for desisting
from pursuing his point, that I should be put instantly
to bed, whilst he gave certain orders to the landlady,
and that he would return in an hour, when he hoped
to find me more reconciled to his passion for me,
than I seemed at present. I neither assented nor
denied, but my air and manner of receiving his proposal,
gave him to see that I did not think myself enough
my own mistress to refuse it.
Accordingly he went out and left me,
when a minute or two after, before I could recover
myself into any composure for thinking, the maid came
in with her mistress’s service, and a small silver
orringer of what she called a bridal posset, and desired
me to eat it as I went to bed, which consequently
I did, and felt immediately a heat, a fire run like
a hue-and-cry through every part of my body; I burnt,
I glowed, and wanted even little of wishing for any
man.
The maid, as soon as I was lain down,
took the candle away, and wishing me a good night,
went out of the room, and shut the door after her.
She had hardly time to get down stairs,
before Mr. H.... opened my room door softly, and came
in, now undressed, in his night-gown and cap, with
two lighted wax candles, and bolting the door, gave
me, though I expected him, some sort of alarm.
He came a tip-toe to the bed side, and saying with
a gentle whisper: “Pray, my dear, do not
be startled... I will be very tender and kind
to you.” He then hurried off his clothes,
and leaped into bed, having given me openings enough,
whilst he was stripping, to observe his brawny structure,
strong made limbs, and rough shaggy breast.
The bed shook again when it received
this new load. He lay on the outside, where he
kept the candles burning, no doubt for the satisfaction
of every sense, for as soon as he had kissed me, he
rolled down the bed clothes, and seemed transported
with the view of all my person at full length, which
he covered with a profusion of kisses, sparing no
part of me. Then, being on his knees between my
thighs, he drew up his shirt, and bared all his hairy
thighs, and stiff staring truncheon, red top, and
rooted into a thicket of curls, which covered his
belly to the novel, and gave it the air of a flesh
brush; and soon I feel it joining close to mine, when
he had drove the nail up to the head, and left no
partition but the intermediate hair on both sides.
I had it now, I felt it now, and,
beginning to drive, he soon gave nature such a powerful
summons down to her favourite quarters, that she could
no longer refuse repairing thither; all my animals
spirits then rushed mechanically to that center of
attraction, and presently, inly warmed, and stirred
as I was beyond bearing, I lost all restraint, and
yielding to the force of the emotion, gave down, as
mere woman, those effusions of pleasure, which,
in the strictness of still faithful love, I could
have wished to have kept in.
Yet oh! what an immense difference
did I feel between this impression of a pleasure merely
animal, and struck out of the collision of the sexes,
by a passive bodily effect, from that sweet fury, that
rage of active delight which crowns the enjoyments
of a mutual love passion, where two hearts, tenderly
and truly united, club to exalt the joy, and give it
a spirit and soul that bids defiance to that end which
mere momentary desires generally terminate in, when
they die of a surfeit of satisfaction!
Mr. H..., whom no distinctions of
that sort seemed to distract, scarce gave himself
or me breathing time from the last encounter, but,
as if he had tasked himself to prove that the appearances
of his vigour were no signs hung out in vain, in a
few minutes he was in a condition for renewing the
onset; to which, preluding with a storm of kisses,
he drove the same course as before, with unbated fervour;
and thus, in repeated engagements, kept me constantly
in exercise, till dawn of morning, in all which time
he made me fully sensible of the virtues of his firm
texture of limbs, his square shoulders, broad chest,
compact hard muscles, in short a system of manliness,
that might pass for no bad image of our ancient sturdy
barons, whose race is now so thoroughly refined and
frittered away into the more delicate and modern built
frame of our pap-nerved softlings, who are as pale,
as pretty, and almost as masculine as their sisters.
Mr. H..., content, however, with having
the day break upon his triumph, resigned me up to
the refreshment of a rest we both wanted, and we soon
dropped into a profound sleep.
Though he was some time awake before
me, yet he did not offer to disturb a repose he had
given me so much occasion for; but on my first stirring,
which was not till past ten o’clock, I was obliged
to endure one more trial of his manhood.
About eleven, in came Mrs. Jones,
with two basins of the richest soup, which her experience
in these matters had moved her to prepare. I pass
over the fulsome compliments, the cant of the decent
procuress, with which she saluted us both; but though
my blood rose at the sight of her, I supprest my emotions,
and gave all my concerne to reflections on what
would be the consequence of this new engagement.
But Mr. H..., who penetrated my uneasiness,
did not suffer me to languish under it, and acquainted
me, that having taken a solid sincere affection to
me, he would begin by giving me one leading mark of
it, in removing me out of a house which must, for
many reasons, be irksome and disagreeable to me, into
convenient lodgings, where he would take all imaginable
care of me; and desiring not to have any explanations
with my landlady, or be impatient till he returned,
he dressed and went out, having left me a purse with
two and twenty guineas in it, being all he had about
him, as he express it, to keep my pocket still further
supplied.
As soon as he was gone, I felt the
usual consequence of the first launch into vice (for
my love attachment to Charles never appeared to me
in that light). I was instantly borne away down
the stream without making back to the shore.
My dreadful necessities, my gratitude, and above all,
to say the plain truth, the dissipation and diversion
I began to find in this new acquaintance, from the
black corroding thoughts my heart had been a prey
to, ever since the absence of my dear Charles, concurred
to stun all my contrary reflections. If I now
thought of my first, my only charmer, it was still
with the tenderness and regret of the fondest love,
embittered with the consciousness that I was no longer
worthy of him. I could have begged my bread with
him all over the world, but wretch that I was!
I had neither the virtue or courage requisite not to
outlive my separation from him.
Yet, had not my heart been thus preengaged,
Mr. H... might probably have been the sole master
of it; but the place was full, and the force of conjectures
alone had made him the possessor of my person; the
charms of which had, by the bye, been his sole object
and passion, and were, of course, no foundation for
a love either very delicate or very durable.
He did not return till six in the
evening’, to take me away to my new lodgings;
and my moveables being soon packed, and conveyed into
a hackney coach, it cost me but little regret to take
my leave of a landlady whom I thought I had so much
reason not to be over pleased with; and as for her
part, she made no other difference to my staying or
going, but what that of the profit created.
We soon got to the house appointed
for me, which was that of a plain tradesman, who,
on the score of interest, was entirely at Mr. H...’s
devotion, and who let him the first floor, very genteelly
furnished, for two guineas a week, of which I was
instated mistress, with a maid to attend me.
He stayed with me that evening, and
we had a supper from a neighbouring tavern, after
which, and a gay glass or two, the maid put me to bed.
Mr. H.... soon followed, and notwithstanding the fatigues
of the preceding night, I found no quarter nor remission
from him: he piquet himself, as he told me, on
doing the honours of my new apartment.
The morning being pretty well advanced,
we got to breakfast; and the ice now broke, my heart,
no longer engrossed by love, began to take ease, and
to please itself with such trifles Mr. H....’s
liberal liking led him to make his court to the usual
vanity of our sex. Silks, laces: ear rings,
pearl necklace, gold watch, in sort, all the trinkets
and articles of dress were lavishly heaped upon me;
the sence of which, if it did not create returns of
love, forced a kind of grateful fondness, something
like love: a distinction which it would be spoiling
the pleasure of nine tenths of the keepers in the
town to make, and is, I suppose, the very good reason
why so few of them ever do make it.
I was now established the kept mistress
in form, well lodged, with a very sufficient allowance,
and lighted up with all the lustre of dress.
Mr. H.... continued kind and tender
to me; yet, with all this, I was far from happy:
for, besides my regrets for my dear youth, which,
though often suspended or diverted, still returned
upon me in certain melancholic moments with redoubled
violence, I wanted more society, more dissipation.
As to Mr. H.... he was so much my
superior in every sense, that I felt it too much to
the disadvantage of the gratitude I owed him.
Thus he gained my esteem, though he could not raise
my taste; I was qualified for no sort of conversation
with him, except one sort, and that is a satisfaction
which leaves tiresome intervals, if not filled up by
love, or other amusements.
Mr. H...., so experienced, so learned
in the ways of women, numbers of whom had passed through
his hands, doubtless, soon perceived this uneasiness,
and, without approving, or liking me the better for
it, had the complaisance to indulge me.
He made suppers at my lodging, where
he brought several companions of his pleasures, with
their mistresses; and by this means I got into a circle
of acquaintance, that soon stripped me of all the remains
of bashfulness and modesty which might be yet left
of my country education, and were, to a just taste,
perhaps, the greatest of my charms.
We visited one another in form, and
mimicked, as near as we could, all the miseries, the
follies, and impertinencies of the women in quality,
in the round of which they trifle away their time,
without it ever entering their little heads, that
on earth there cannot subsist any thing more silly,
more flat, more insipid and worthless, than, generally
considered, their system of life is: they ought
to treat the men as their tyrants, indeed! were they
to condemn them to it.
But though, amongst the kept mistresses
(and I was now acquainted with a good many, besides
some useful matrons, who live by their connexions
with them), I hardly knew one that did not perfectly
detest their keepers, and, of course, made little
or no scruple of any infidelity they could safely
accomplish, I had still no notion of wronging mine:
for, besides that no mark of jealousy on his side started
me the hint, or gave me the provocation to play him
a trick of that sort, and that his constant generosity,
politeness, and tender attention to please me, forced
a regard to him, that, without affecting my heart,
insured him my fidelity, no object had yet presented
that could overcome the habitual liking I had contracted
for him and I was on the eve of obtaining, from the
movements of his own voluntary generosity, a modest
provision for life, when an accident happened which
broke all the measures he had resolved upon in my
favour.
I had now lived near seven months
with Mr. H.... when one day returning to my lodgings,
from a visit in the neighbourhood, where I used to
stay longer, I found the street door open, and the
maid of the house standing at it, talking with some
of her acquaintance, so that I came in without knocking
and, as I passed by, she told me Mr. H.... was above.
I slept up stairs into my own bed-chamber, with no
other thought than of pulling off my hat etc.,
and then to wait upon him in the dining room, into
which my bed-chamber had a door, as is common enough.
Whilst I was untying my hat strings, I fancied I heard
my maid Hannah’s voice and a sort of tustle,
which raised my curiosity; I stole softly to the door,
where a knot in the wood had been slipped out, and
afforded a very commanding peep-hole to the scene
then in agitation, the actors of which had been to
earnestly employed to hear my opening my own door,
from the landing place of the stairs, into my bedchamber.
The first sight that struck me was
Mr. H.... pulling and hauling this coarse country
strammel towards a couch that stood in a corner of
the dining-room; to which the girl made only a sort
of awkward holdening resistance, crying out so loud,
that I, who listened at the door, could scarce hear
her: “Pray Sir, don’t.., let me alone...
I am not for your turn... You cannot, sure, demean
yourself with such a poor body as I... Lord!
Sir, my mistress may come home... I must not indeed...
I will cry out...” All of which did not
hinder her from insensibly suffering herself to be
brought to the foot of the couch, upon which a push
of no mighty violence served to give her a very easy
fall, and my gentleman having got up his hands to
the strong hold of her Virtue, she, no doubt, thought
it was time to give up the argument, and that all further
defense would be vain: and he, throwing her petticoats
over her face, which was now as red as scarlet, discovered
a pair of stout, plump, substantial thighs, and tolerably
white; he mounted them round his haps, and coming
out with his drawn weapon, stuck it in the cloven sport,
where he seemed to find a less difficult entrance than
perhaps he had flattered himself with (for, by the
way, this blouse had left her place in the country,
for a bastard), and, indeed, all his motions shewed
he was lodged pretty much at large. After he
had done, his Deare gets up, drops her petticoats
down, and smooths her apron and handkerchief.
Mr. H.... looked a little silly, and taking out some
money, gave it her, with an air indifferent enough,
bidding her be a good girl, and say nothing.
Had I loved this man, it was not in
nature for me to have had patience to see the whole
scene through: I should have broke in and played
the jealous princess with a vengeance. But that
was not the case: my pride alone was hurt, my
heart not, and I could easier win upon myself to see
how far he would go, till I had no uncertainty upon
my conscience.
The least delicate of all affairs
of this sort being now over, I retired softly into
my closet, where I began to consider what I should
do. My first scheme naturally, was to rush in
and upbraid them; this, indeed, flattered my present
emotions and vexations, as it would have given
immediate vent to them; but, on second thoughts, not
being so clear as to the consequence to be apprehended
from such a step, I began my discovery still a safer
season, when dissembly my discovery till a safer season,
when Mr. H.... should have perfected the settlement
he had made overtures to me of, and which I was not
to think such a violent explanation, as I was indeed
not equal to the management of, could possibly forward,
and might destroy. On the other hand, the provocation
seemed too gross, too flagrant not to give me some
thoughts of revenge; the very start of which idea
restored me to perfect composure; and delighted as
I was with the confused plan of it in my head, I was
easily mistress enough of myself to support the part
of ignorance I had prescribed to myself; and as all
this circle of reflections was instantly over, I stole
a tip-toe to the passage door, and opening it with
a noise, passed for having that moment come home; and
after a short pause, as if to pull off my things,
I opened the door into the dining room, where I fund
the dowdy blowing the fire, and my faithful shepherd
walking about the room, and wistling, as cool and unconcerned
as if nothing had happened. I think, however,
he had not much to brag of having out-dissembled me:
for I kept up, nobly, the character of our sex for
art, and went up to him with the same open air of frankness
as I had ever received him. He stayed but a little
while, made some excuse for not being able to stay
the evening with me, and went out.
As for the wench, she was now spoiled,
at least for my servant; and scarce eight and forty
hours were gone round, before her insolence, on what
had passed betwen Mr. H.... and her, gave me so fair
an occasion to turn her away, at a minute’s
warning, that, not to have done it would have been
the wonder; so that he could neither disapprove it
nor find in it the least reason to suspect my original
motive. What became of her afterwards, I know
not; but generous as Mr. H.... was, he undoubtedly
made her amends: though, I dare answer, that he
kept up no further commerce with her of that sort;
as his stooping to such a coarse morsel, was only
a sudden sally of lust, on seeing a wholesome looking,
buxom country wench, and no more strange than hunger,
or even a whimsical appetite’s making a fling
meal of neck-beef, for change of diet.
Had I considered this escapade of
Mr. H.... in no more than that light and contented
myself with turning away the wench, I had thought and
acted right; but, flushed as I was with imaginary wrongs,
I should have held Mr. H... to have been cheaply off,
if I had not pushed my revenge farther, and repaid
him, as exactly as could for the soul of me, in the
same coin.
Nor was this worthy act of justice
long delayed: I had it too much at heart.
Mr. H... had, about a fortnight before, taken into
his service a tenant’s son, just come out the
country, a very handsome young lad, scarce turned
of nineteen, fresh as a rose, well sharped and clear
limbed: in short, a very good excuse for any woman’s
liking, even though revenge had been out of the question;
any woman, I say, who was disprejudiced, and that
wit and spirit enough to prefer a point of pleasure
to a point of pride.
Mr. H... had clapped a livery upon
him; and his chief employ was, after being shewn my
lodgings, to bring and carry letters or messages between
his master and me; and as the situation of all kept
ladies is not the fittest to inspire respect, even
to the meanest of mankind, and, perhaps, less of it
from the most ignorant, I could not help observing
that this lad, who was, I suppose, acquainted with
my relation to his master by his fellow servants,
used to eye me in that bashful confused way, more
expressive, more moving and readier caught at by our
sex, than any other declarations whatever: my
figure had, it seems, struck him, and modest and innocent
as he was, he did not himself know that the pleasure
he took in looking at me was love, or desire; but his
eyes, naturally wanton, and now inflamed with passion,
spoke a great deal more than he durst have imagined
they did. Hitherto, indeed, I had only taken
notice of the comeliness of the youth, but without
the least design: my pride alone would have guarded
me from a thought that way, had not Mr. H....’s
condescension with my maid, where there was not half
the temptation, in point of person, set me a dangerous
example; but now I began to look on this stripling
as every way a delicious instrument of my designed
retaliation upon Mr. H.... of an obligation for which
I should have made a conscience to die in his debt.
In order then to pave the way for
the accomplishment of my scheme, for two or three
times that the young fellow came to me with messages,
I managed so, or without affectation to have him admitted
to my bed side, or brought to me at my toilet, where
I was dressing; and by carelessly shewing or letting
him, as if without meaning or design, sometimes my
bosom rather more bare than it should be; sometimes
my hair, of which I had a very fine head, in the natural
flow of it while combing; sometimes a neat leg, that
had unfortunately slipt its garter, which I made no
scruple of tying before him, easily gave him the impressions
favourable to my purpose, which I could perceive to
sparkle in his eyes, and glow in his cheeks:
then certain slight squeezes by the hand, as I took
letters from him, did his business completely.
When I saw him thus moved, and fired
for my purpose, I inflamed him yet more, by asking
him several leading questions, such as: “Had
he a mistress?... was she prettier than me?... could
he love such a one as I was?...” and the like;
to all which the blushing simpleton answered to my
wish, in a strain of perfect nature, perfect undebauched
innocence, but with all the awkwardness and simplicity
of country breeding.
When I thought I had sufficiently
ripened him for the laudable point I had in view,
one day that I expected him at a particular hour, I
took care to have the coast clear for the reception
I designed him; and, as I laid it, he came to the
dining room door, tapped at it, and, in my bidding
him come in; he did so, and shut the door after him.
I desired him, then, to bolt it on the inside, pretending
it would not otherwise keep shut.
I was then lying at length upon that
very couch, the scene of Mr. H....’s polite
joys, in an undress, which was with all the art of
negligence flowing loose, and in a most tempting disorder:
no stays, no hoop..., no incumbrance whatever.
On the other hand, he stood at a little distance,
that gave me a full view of a fine featured, shapely,
healthy country lad, breathing the sweets of fresh
blooming youth; his hair, which was of a perfect shining
black, played to his face in natural side curls, and
was set out with a smart tuck-up behind; new buckskin
breechs, that, clipping close, shewed the shape of
a plump, well made thigh; white stockings, garter-laced
livery, shoulder knot, altogether composed a figure
of pure flesh and blood, and appeared under no disgrace
from the lowness of a dress, to which a certain spruce
neatness seems peculiarly fitted.
I bid him come towards me, and give
me his letter, at the same time throwing down, carelessly,
a book I had in my hands. He coloured, and came
within reach of delivering me the letter, which he
held out, awkwardly enough, for me to take, with his
eyes rivetted on my bosom, which was, through the
designed disorder of my handkerchief, sufficiently
bare, and rather than hid.
I, smiling in his face, took the letter,
and immediately catching hold of his shirt sleeve,
drew him towards me, blushing, and almost trembling;
for surely his extreme bashfulness, and utter inexperience
called for, at least, all the advances to encourage
him: his body was now conveniently inclined toward
me, and just softly chucking his beardless chin, I
asked him: “If he was afraid of a lady?...”
and with that took, and carrying his hands to my breasts,
I press it tenderly to them. They were now finely
furnished, and raised in flesh, so that, panting with
desire, they rose and fell, in quick heaves, under
his touch: at this, the boy’s eyes began
to lighten with all the fires of inflamed nature,
and his cheeks flushed with a deep scarlet: tongue-tied
with joy, rapture, and bashfulness, he could not speak,
but then his looks, his emotion, sufficiently satisfied
me that my train had taken, and that I had no disappointment
to fear.
My lips, which I threw in his way,
so that he could not escape kissing them, fixed, fired,
and emboldened him: and now, glancing my eyes
towards that part of his dress which covered the essential
object of enjoyment, I plainly discovered the swell
and commotion there; and as I was now too far advanced
to stop in so fair a way, and was indeed no longer
able to contain myself, or wait the slower progress
of his maiden bash-fulness (for such it seemed, and
really was), I stole my hands upon his thighs, down
one of which I could both see and feel a stiff hard
body, confined by his breeches, that my fingers could
discover no end to. Curious then, and eager to
unfold so alarming a mystery, playing, as it were,
with his buttons, which were bursting ripe from the
active force within, those of his waistband and fore-flap
flew open at a touch, when out it started; and
now, disengaged from the shirt, I saw, with wonder
and surprise, what? not the play thing of a boy, not
the weapon of a man, but a Maypole, of so enormous
a standard, that had proportions been observed, it
must have belonged to a young giant. Yet I could
not, without pleasure, behold, and even venture to
feel, such a length, such a breadth of animated ivory!
perfectly well turned and fashioned, the proud stiffness
of which distented its skin, whose smooth polish and
velvet softness might vie with that of the most delicate
of our sex, and whose exquisite whiteness was not
a little set off by a sprout of black curling hair
round the root: through the jetty springs of which
the fair skin shewed as in a fine evening you may
have remarked the clear light through the branchwork
of distant trees over-topping the summit of a hill:
then the broad of blueish-casted incarnate of the head,
and blue serpentines of its veins, altogether
composed the most striking assemblage of figure and
colours in nature. In short, it stood an object
of terror and delight.
But what was yet more surprising,
the owner of this natural curiosity, through the want
of occasions in the strictness of his home breeding,
and the little time he had been in town not having
afforded him one; was hitherto an absolute stranger,
in practice at least, to the use of all that manhood
he was so nobly stocked with; and it now fell to my
lot to stand his first trial of it, if I could resolve
to run the risks of its disproportion to that tender
part of me, which such an oversized machine was very
fit to lay in ruins.
But it was now of the latest to deliberate,
for, by this time, the young fellow, over heated with
the present objects, and too high metled to be longer
curbed in by that modesty and awe which had hitherto
restrained him, ventured, under the stronger impulse,
and instructive promptership of nature alone, to slip
his hands, trembling with eager impetuous desires,
under my petticoats; and seeing, I suppose, nothing
extremely severe in my looks, to stop or dash him,
he feels out, and seizes, gently, the center spot
of his ardours. Oh then! the fiery touch of his
lingers determines me, and my fears melting away before
the glowing intolerable heat, my thighs disclose of
themselves, and yield all liberty to his hand:
and now, a favourable movement giving my petticoats
a toss, the avenue lay too fair, too open to be missed.
He is now upon me: I had placed myself with a
jerk under him, as commodious and open as possible
to his attempts, which were untoward enough, for his
machine, meeting with no inlet, bore and battered
stiffly against me in random pushes, now above, now
below, now beside his point; till, burning with impatience
from its irritating touches, I guided gently, with
my hand, this furious fescue to where my young novice
was now to be taught his first lesson of pleasure.
Thus he nicked, at length, the warm and insufficient
orifice; but he was made to find no breach impracticable,
and mine, though so often entered, was still far from
wide enough to take him easily in.
By my direction, however, the head
of his unwieldy machine was so critically pointed,
that, feeling him fore-right against the tender opening,
a favourable motion from me met his timely thrust,
by which the lips of it, strenuously dilated, gave
way to his thus assisted impetuosity, so that we might
both feel that he had gained a lodgment. Pursuing
then his point, he soon, by violent, and, to me, most
painful piercing thrusts, wedges himself at length
so far in, as to be now tolerably secure of his entrance:
here he stuck, and I now felt such a mixture of pleasure
and pain, as there is no giving a definition of.
I dreaded alike his splitting me farther up, or his
withdrawing; I could not bear either to keep or part
with him. The sense of pain, however, prevailing,
from his prodigious size and stiffness, acting upon
me in those continued rapid thrusts, with which he
furiously pursued his penetration, made me cry out
gently: “Oh, my dear, you hurt me!”
This was enough to check the tender respectful boy
even in his mid-career; and he immediately drew out
the sweet cause of my complaint, whilst his eyes eloquently
expressed, at once, his grief for hurting me, and
his reluctance at dislodging from quarters, of which
the warmth and closeness had given him a gust of pleasure,
that he was now desire mad to satisfy, and yet too
much a novice not to be afraid of my withholding his
relief, on account of the pain he had put me to.
But I was, myself, far from being
pleased with his having too much regarded my tender
exclaims; for now, more fired with the object before
me, as it still stood with the fiercest erection, unbonneted,
and displayed its broad vermilion head, I first gave
the youth a re-encouraging kiss, which he repaid me
with a fervour that seemed at once to thank me, and
bribe my further compliance; and soon replaced myself
in a posture to receive, at all risk, the renewed invasion,
which he did not delay an instant: for, being
presently remounted, I once more felt the smooth hard
gristle forcing an entrance, which he achieved rather
easier than before. Pained, however, as I was,
with his efforts of gaining a complete admission,
which he was so regardful as to manage by gentle degrees,
I took care not to complain. In the mean time,
the soft strait passage gradually loosens, yields,
and, stretched to its utmost bearing, by the stick,
thick, indriven engine, sensible, at once, to the
ravishing pleasure of the feel and the pain of the
distension, let him in about half way, when all the
most nervous activity he now exerted, to further his
penetration, gained him not an inch of his purpose:
for, whilst he hesitated there, the crisis of pleasure
overtook him, and the close compressure of the warm
surrounding flow drew from him the ecstatic gush,
even before mine was ready to meet it, kept up by
the pain I had endured in the course of the engagement,
from the insufferable size of his weapon, though it
was not as yet in above half its length.
I expected then, but without wishing
it, that he would draw, but was pleasingly disappointed:
for he was not to be let off so. The well breathed
youth, hot-mettled, and flush with genial juices, was
now fairly in for making me know my driver. As
soon, then, as he had made a short pause, waking,
as it were, out of the trance of pleasure (in which
every sense seemed lost for a while, whilst, with his
eyes shut, and short quick breathings, he had yielded
down his maiden tribute), he still kept his post,
yet unsated with enjoyment, and solacing in these
so new delights; till his stiffness, which had scarce
perceptibly remitted, being thoroughly recovered to
him, who had not once unsheathed, he proceeded afresh
to cleave and open to himself an entire entry into
me, which was not a little made easy to him by the
balsamic injection, with: which he had just plentifully
moistened the whole internals of the passage.
Redoubling, then, the active energy of his thrusts,
favoured by the fervid appetency of my motions, the
soft oiled wards can no longer stand so effectual
a picklock, but yield, and open him an entrance.
And now, with conspiring nature, and my industry,
strong to aid him, he pierces, penetrates, and at length,
winning his way inch by inch, gets entirely in, and
finally, a home made thrust sheaths it up to the guard;
on the information of which, from the close jointure
of our bodies (insomuch that the hair on both sides
perfectly interweaved and incircled together), the
eyes of the transported youth sparkled with more joyous
fires, and all his looks and motions acknowledged
excess of pleasure, which I now began to share, for
I felt him in my very vitals! I was quite sick
with delight! stirred beyond bearing with its furious
agitations within me, and gorged and crammed, even
to a surfeit. Thus I lay gasping, panting under
him, till his broken breathings, faultering accents,
eyes twinkling with humid fires, lunges more furious,
and an increased stiffness, gave me to hail the approaches
of the second period: it came... and the sweet
youth, overpowered with the ecstasy, died away in
my arms, melting a flood that shot in genial warmth
into the innermost recesses of my body; every conduit
of which, dedicated to that pleasure, was on flow to
mix with it. Thus we continued for some instants,
lost, breathless, senseless of every thing, and in
every part but those favourite ones of nature, in
which all that we enjoyed of life and sensation was
now totally concentered.
When our mutual trance was a little
over, and the young fellow had withdrawn that delicious
stretcher, with which he had most plentifully drowned
all thoughts of revenge, in the sense of actual pleasure,
the widened wounded passage refunded a stream of pearly
liquids, which flowed down my thighs, mixed with streaks
of blood, the marks of the ravage of that monstrous
machine of his, which had now triumphed over a kind
of second maidenhead. I stole, however, my handkerchief
to those parts, and wiped them as dry as I could,
whilst he was re-adjusting and buttoning up.
I made him sit down by me, and as
he had gathered courage from such extreme intimacy,
he gave me an aftercourse of pleasure, in a natural
burst of tender gratitude and joy, at the new scenes
of bliss I had opened to him: scenes positively
new, as he had never before had the least acquaintance
with that mysterious mark, the cloven stamp of female
distinction, though nobody better qualified than he
to penetrate into its deepest recesses, or do it nobler
justice. But when, by certain motions, certain
unquietness of his hands, that wandered not without
design, I found he languished for satisfying a curiosity,
natural enough, to view and handle those parts which
attract and concenter the warmest force of imagination,
charmed, as I was, to have any occasion of obliging
and humouring his young desires, I suffered him to
proceed as he pleased, without check or control, to
the satisfaction of them.
Easily, then, reading in my eyes the
full permission of myself to all his wishes, he scarce
pleased himself more than me; when, having insinuated
his hand under my petticoat and shift, he presently
removed those bars to the sight, by slily lifting
them upwards, under favour of a thousand kisses, which
he thought, perhaps, necessary to divert my attention
from what he was about. All my drapery being now
rolled up to my waist, I threw myself into such a
posture upon the couch, as gave up to him, in full
view, the whole region of delight, and all the luxurious
landscape around it. The transported youth devoured
every thing with his eyes, and tried, with his fingers,
to lay more open to his sight the secrets of that
dark and delicious deep: he opens the folding
lips, the softness of which, yielding entry to any
thing of a hard body, close round it, and oppose the
sight; and feeling further, meets with, and wonder
at, a soft fleshy excrescence, which, limber and relaxed
after the late enjoyment, now grew, under the touch
and examination of his fiery fingers, more and more
stiff and considerable, till the titillating ardours
of that so sensible part made me sigh, as if he had
hurt me; on which he withdrew his curious probing fingers,
asking me pardon, as it were, in a kiss that rather
increased the flame there.
Novelty ever makes the strongest impressions,
and in pleasures, especially; no wonder then, that
he was swallowed up in raptures of admiration of things
so interesting by their nature, and now seen and handled
for the first time. On my part, I was richly overpaid
for the pleasure I gave him, in that of examining
the power of those objects thus abandoned to him,
naked and free to his loosest wish, over the artless,
natural stripling: his eyes streaming fire, his
cheeks glowing with a florid red, his fervid frequent
sighs, whilst his hands convulsively squeezed, opened,
pressed together again the lips and sides of that
deep flesh wound, or gently twitched the over-growing
moss; and all proclaimed the excess, the riot of joys,
in having his wantonness thus humoured. But he
did not long abuse my patience, for the objects before
him had now put him by all his, and, coming out with
that formidable machine of his, he lets the fury loose,
and pointing it directly to the pouting-lip mouth,
that bid him sweet defiance in dumb shew, squeezes
in his head, and, driving with refreshed rage, breaks
in, and plugs up the whole passage of that soft pleasure-conduit
pipe, where he makes all shake again, and put, once
more, all within me into such an uproar, as nothing
could still, but a fresh inundation from the very
engine of those flames, as well as from all the springs
with which nature floats that reservoir of joy, when
risen to its floodmark.
I was now so bruised, so battered,
so spent with this overmatch, that I could hardly
stir, or raise myself, but lay palpitating, till the
ferment of my senses subsiding by degrees, and the
hour striking at which I was obliged to dispatch my
young man, I tenderly advised him of the necessity
there was for parting; at which I felt so much displeasure
as he could do, who seemed eagerly disposed to keep
the field, and to enter on a fresh action. But
the danger was too great, and after some hearty kisses
of leave, and recommendations of secrecy and discretion,
I forced myself to send him away, not without assurances
of seeing him again, to the same purpose, as soon
as possible, and thrust a guinea into his hands:
not more, less, being too flush of money, a suspicion
or discovery might arise from thence; having everything
to fear from the dangerous indiscretion of that age
in which young fellows would be too irresistible,
too charming, if we had not that terrible fault to
guard against.
Giddy and intoxicated as I was with
such satiating draughts of pleasure, I still lay on
the couch, supinely stretched out, in a delicious languor
diffused over all my limbs, hugging myself for being
thus revenged to my heart’s content, and that
in a manner so precisely alike, and on the identical
spot in which I had received the supposed injury.
No reflections on the consequences ever once perplexed
me, nor did I make myself one single reproach for
having, by this step, completely entered myself into
a profession more decried than disused. I should
have held it ingratitude to the pleasure I had received,
to have repented of it; and since I was now over the
bar, I thought, by plunging head and ears into the
stream I was hurried away by, to drown all sense of
shame or reflection.
Whilst I was thus making these laudable
dispositions, and whispering to myself a kind of tacit
vow of incontinency, enters Mr. H... The consciousness
of what I had been doing deepened yet the glowing of
my cheeks, flushed with the warmth of the late action,
which, joined to the piquant air of my dishabile,
drew from Mr. H.... a compliment on my looks, which
he was proceeding to bask the sincerity of with proofs,
and that with so brisk an action, as made me tremble
for fear of a discovery from the condition those parts
were left in from their late severe handling:
the orifice dilated and inflamed, the lips swollen
with their uncommon distension, the ringlets pressed
down, crushed and uncurled with the over flowing moisture
that had wet everything round it; in short, the different
feel and state of things would hardly have passed
upon one of Mr. H.....’s nicety and experience
unaccounted for but by the real cause. But here
the woman saved me: I pretended a violent disorder
of my head, and a feverish heat, that indisposed me
too much to receive his embraces. He gave in
to this, and good naturedly desisted. Soon after,
an old lady coming in made a third, very apropos for
the confusion I was in, and Mr. H...., after bidding
me take care of myself, and recommending me to my
repose, left me much at ease and relieved by his absence.
In the close of the evening, I took
care to have prepared for me a warm bath of aromatik
and sweet herbs; in which having fully laved and solaced
myself, I came out voluptuously refreshed in body and
spirit.
The next morning waking pretty early,
after a night’s perfect rest and composure,
it was not without some dread and uneasiness that I
thought of what innovation that tender soft system
of mine might have sustained, from the shock of a
machine so sized for its destruction.
Struck with this apprehension, I scarce
dared to carry my hand thither, to inform myself of
the state and posture of things.
But I was soon agreeably cured of my fears.
The silky hair that covered round
the borders, now smoothed and re-pruned, had resumed
its wonted curl and trimness; the fleshy pouting lips
that had stood the brunt of the engagement, were no
longer swollen or moisture-drenched; and neither they,
nor the passage into which they opened, that had suffered
so great a dilation, betrayed any the least alteration,
outwardly or inwardly, to the most curious research,
notwithstanding the laxity that naturally follows the
warm bath.
This continuation of that grateful
stricture which is in us, to the men, the very jet
of their pleasure, I owed, it seems, to a happy habit
of body, juicy, plump and furnished, towards the texture
of those parts, with a fullness of soft springy flesh,
that yielding sufficiently, as it does, to almost
any distension soon recovers itself so as to re-tighten
that strict compression of its mantlings and folds,
which form the sides of the passage, wherewith it
so tenderly embraces and closely clips any foreign
body introduced into it, such as my exploring finger
then was.
Finding then every thing in due tone
and order, I remember my fears, only to make a jest
of them to myself. And now, palpably mistress
of any size of man, and triumphing in my double achievement
of pleasure and revenge, I abandoned myself entirely
to the ideas of all the delight I had swam in.
I lay stretching out, glowingly alive all over, and
tossing with burning impatience for the renewal of
joys that had sinned but in a sweet excess; nor did
I lose my longing, for about ten in the morning, according
to expectation, Will, my new humble sweetheart, came
with a message from his master, Mr. H...., to know
how I did. I had taken care to send my maid on
an errand into the city, that I was sure would take
up time enough; and, from the people of the house,
I had nothing to fear, as they were plain good sort
of folks, and wise enough to mind no more other people’s
business than they could well help.
All dispositions then made, not forgetting
that of lying in bed to receive him, when he was entered
the door of my bed chamber, a latch, that I governed
by a wire, descended and secured it.
I could not but observe that my young
minion was as much spruced out as could be expected
from one in his condition: a desire of pleasing
that could not be indifferent to me, since it proved
that I pleased him; which, I assure you, was now a
point I was not above having in view.
His hair trimly dressed, clean linen,
and, above all, a hale, ruddy, wholesome country look,
made him out as pretty a piece of woman’s meat
as you could see, and I should have thought any one
much out of taste, that could not have made a hearty
meal of such a morsel as nature seemed to have designed
for the highest diet of pleasure.
And why should I here suppress the
delight I received from this amiable creature, in
remarking each artless look, each motion of pure indissembled
nature, betrayed by his wanton eyes; or shewing, transparently,
the glow and suffusion of blood through his fresh,
clear skin, whilst even his stury rustic pressure
wanted not their peculiar charm? Oh! but, say
you, this was a young fellow of too low a rank of
life to deserve so great a display. May be so:
but was my condition, strictly considered, one jot
more exalted? or, had I really been much above him,
did not his capacity of giving such exquisite pleasure
sufficiently raise and enoble him, to me, at least?
Let who would, for me cherish, respect, and reward
the painter’s, the statuary’s, the musician’s
art, in proportion to the delight taken in them:
but at my age, and with my taste for pleasure, a taste
strongly constitutional to me, the talent of pleasing,
with which nature has endowed a handsome person, formed
to me the greatest of all merits; compared to which,
the vulgar prejudices in favour of titles, dignities,
honours, and the like, held a very low rank indeed.
Nor perhaps would the beauties of the body be so much
affected to be held cheap, were they, in their nature,
to be bought and delivered. But for me, whose
natural philosophy all resided in the favourite center
of sense, and who was ruled by its powerful instinct
in taking pleasure by its right handle, I could scarce
have made a choice more to my purpose.
Mr. H....’s loftier qualifications
of birth, fortune and sense, laid me under a sort
of subjection and constraint, that were far from making
harmony in the concert of love; nor had he, perhaps,
thought me worth softening that superiority to; but,
with this lad, I was more on the level which love
delights in.
We may say what we please, but those
we can be the easiest and freest with, are ever those
we like, not to say love the best.
With this stripling, all whose art
of love was the action of it, I could, without check
of awe or restraint, give a loose to jay, and execute
every scheme of dalliance my fond fancy might put me
on, in which he was, in every sense, a most exquisite
companion. And now my great pleasure lay in humouring
all the petulances, all the wanton frolic of a raw
novice just fledged, and keen on the burning scent
of his game, but unbroken to the sport: and,
to carry on the figure, who could better read the
wood than he, or stand fairer for the heart of the
hunt?
He advanced then to my bed side, and
whilst he faultered out his message, I could observe
his colour rise, and his eyes lighten with joy, in
seeing me in a situation as favourable to his loosest
wishes, as if he had bespoke the play.
I smiled, and put out my hand towards
him, which he kneeled down to (a politeness taught
him by love alone, that great master of it) and greedily
kissed. After exchanging a few confused questions
and answers, I asked him if he would come to bed to
me, for the little time I could venture to detain
him. This was just asking a person, dying with
hunger, to feast upon the dish on earth the most to
his palate. Accordingly, without further reflection,
his clothes were off in an instant; when, blushing
still more at this new liberty, he got under the bed
clothes I held up to receive him, and was now in bed
with a woman for the first time in his life.
Here began the usual tender preliminaries,
as delicious, perhaps, as the crowning act of enjoyment
itself; which they often beget an impatience of, that
makes pleasure destructive of itself, by hurrying on
the final period, and closing that scene of bliss,
in which the actors are generally too well pleased
with their parts, not to wish them an eternity of
duration.
When we had sufficiently graduated
our advances towards the main point, by toying, kissing,
clipping, feeling my breasts, now round and plump,
feeling that part of me I might call a furnace mouth,
from the prodigious intense heat his fiery touches
had rekindled there, my young sportsman, emboldened
by the very freedom he could wish, wontonly takes
my hand, and carries it to that enormous machine of
his, that stood with a stiffness! a hardness! an upward
bend of erection! and which, together with it bottom
dependence, the inestimable bulse of ladies jewels,
formed a grand showout of goods indeed! Then its
dimensions, mocking either grasp or span, almost renewed
my terrors.
I could not conceive how, or by what
means I could take, or put such a bulk out of sight.
I stroked it gently, on which the mutinous rogue seemed
to swell, and gather a new degree of fierceness and
insolence; so that finding it grew not to be trifled
with any longer, I prepared for rubbers in good earnest.
Slipping then a pillow under me, that
I might give him the fairest play, I guided officiously
with my hand this furious battering ram, whose ruby
head, presenting nearest the resemblance of a heart,
I applied to its proper mark, which lay as finely
elevated as we could wish; my hips being borne up,
and my thighs at their utmost extension, the gleamy
warmth that shot from it, made him feel that he was
at the mouth of the indraught, and driving fore right,
the powerfully divided lips of that pleasure-thirsty
channel received him. He hesitated a little; then,
settled well in the passage, he makes his way up the
straights of it, with a difficulty nothing more than
pleasing, widening as he went so as to distend and
smooth each soft furrow: our pleasure increasing
deliciously, in proportion to our points of mutual
touch increased in that so vital part of me which
I had now taken him, all indriven, and completely
sheathed; and which, crammed as it was, stretched splitting
ripe, gave it so gratefully straight an accommodation!
so strict a fold! a suction so fierce! that gave and
took unutterable delight. We had now reached
the closest point of union; but when he beckened to
come on the fiercer, as if I had ben actuated
by a fear of losing him, in the height of my fury,
I twist my legs round his naked loins, the flesh of
which, so firm, so springy to the touch, quivered
again under the pressure; and now I had him every
way encircled and begirt; and having drawn him home
to me, I kept him fast there, as if I had sought to
unite bodies with him at that point. This bred
a pause of action, a pleasure stop, whilst that delicate
glutton, my nether mouth, as full as it could hold,
kept palating, with exquisite relish, the morsel that
so deliciously ingorged it. But nature could
not long endure a pleasure that it so highly provoked
without satisfying it: pursuing then its darling
end, the battery recommenced with redoubled exertion;
nor lay I inactive on my side, but encountering him
with all the impetuosity of motion I was mistress
of, the downy cloth of our meeting mount was now of
real use to break the violence of the tilt; and soon,
indeed! the highwrought agitation, the sweet urgency
of this to-and-fro friction, raised the titillation
on me to its height; so that finding myself on the
point of going, and loath to leave the tender partner
of my joys behind me, I employed all the forwarding
motions and arts my experience suggested to me, to
promote his keeping me company to our journey’s
end. I not only then tightened the pleasure-girth
round my restless inmate, by a secret spring of friction
and compression that obeys the will in those parts,
but stole my hand softly to that store bag of nature’s
prime sweets, which is so pleasingly attached to its
conduit pipe, from which we receive them; there feeling,
and most gently indeed, squeezing those tender globular
reservoirs, the magic touch took instant effect, quickened,
and brought on upon the spur the symptoms of that sweet
agony, the melting moment of dissolution, when pleasure
dies by pleasure, and the mysterious engine of it
overcomes the titillation it has raised in those parts,
by plying them with the stream of a warm liquid, that
in itself the highest of all titillations, and
which they thirstily express and draw in like the
hot natured leach, which, to cool itself, tenaciously
extracts all the moisture within its sphere of execution.
Chiming then to me, with exquisite consent, as I melted
away, his oily balsamic injection, mixing deliciously
with the sluices in flow from me, sheathed and blunted
all the stings of pleasure, whilst a voluptuous languor
possest, and still maintained us motionless, and fast
locked in one another’s arms. Alas! that
these delights should be no longer-lived; for now
the point of pleasure, unedged by enjoyment, and all
the brisk sensations flattened upon us, resigned us
up to the cool cares of insipid life. Disengaging
myself then from his embrace, I made him sensible
of the reasons there were for his present leaving me;
on which, though reluctantly, he put on his clothes,
with as little expedition, however, as he could help,
wantonly interrupting himself, between whiles, with
kisses, touches and embraces I could not refuse myself
to. Yet he happily returned to his master before
he was missed; but, at taking leave, I forced him
(for he had sentiments enough to refuse it) to receive
money enough to buy a silver watch, that great article
of subaltern finery, which he at length accepted of,
as a remembrance he was carefully to preserve of my
affections.
And here, Madam, I ought, perhaps,
to make you an apology for this minute detail of things,
that dwelt so strongly upon my memory, after so deep
an impression; but, besides that this intrigue bred
one great revolution in my life, which historical
truth requires I should not sink from you, may I not
presume that so exalted a pleasure ought not to be
ungratefully forgotten, or suppressed by me, because
I found it in a character in low life; where, by the
by, it is oftener met with, purer, and more unsophisticated,
than among the false, ridiculous refinements with
which the great suffer themselves to be so grossly
cheated by their pride: the great! than whom,
there exist few amongst those they call the vulgar,
who are more ignorant of, or who cultivate less, the
art of living than they do; they, I say, who for ever
mistake things the most foreign to the nature of pleasure
itself; whose capital favourite object is enjoyment
of beauty, wherever that rare incaluable gift is found,
without distinction of birth, or station.
As love never had, so now revenge
had no longer any share in my commerce in this handsome
youth. The sole pleasures of enjoyment were now
the link I held to him by: for though nature
had done such great maters for him in his outward
form, and especially in that superb piece of furniture
she had so liberally enriched him with; though he was
thus qualified to give the senses their richest feast,
still there was something more wanting to create in
me, and constitute the passion of love. Yet Will
had very good qualities too: gentle, tractable,
and, above all, grateful; silentious, even to a fault:
he spoke, at any time, very little, but made it up
emphatically with action; and, to do him justice,
he never gave me the least reason to complain, either
of any tendency to encroach upon me for the liberties
I allowed him, or of his indiscretion in blabbing
them. There is, then, a fatality in love, or have
loved him I must; for he was really a treasure, a
bit for the Bonne Bouche of a duchess; and, to say
the truth, my liking for him was so extreme, that
it was distinguishing very nicely to deny that I loved
him.
My happiness, however, with him did
not last long, but found an end from my own imprudent
neglect. After having taken even superfluous
precautions against a discovery, our success in repeated
meetings emboldened me to omit the barely necessary
ones. About a month after our first intercourse,
one fatal morning (the season Mr. H.... rarely or
never visited me in) I was in my closet, where my toilet
stood, in nothing but my shift, a bed gown and under
petticoat. Will was with me, and both ever too
well disposed to baulk an opportunity. For my
part, a whim, a wanton toy had just taken me, and
I had challenged my man to execute it on the spot,
who hesitated not to comply with my humour: I
was set in the arm chair, my shift and petticoat up,
my thighs wide spread and mounted over the arms of
the chair, presenting the fairest mark to Will’s
drawn weapon, which he stood in act to plunge into
me, when, having neglected to secure the chamber door,
and that of the closet standing a-jar, Mr. H.... stole
in upon us, before either of us was aware, and saw
us precisely in these convicting attitudes.
I gave a great scream, and dropped
my petticoat: the thunder-struck lad stood trembling
and pale, waiting his sentence of death. Mr. H....
looked sometimes at one, sometimes at the other, with
a mixture of indignation and scorn; and, without saying
a word, spun upon his heel and went out.
As confused as I was, I heard him
very distinctly turn the key, and lock the chamber
door upon us, so that there was no escape but through
the dining room, where he himself was walking about
with distempered strides, stamping in a great chafe,
and doubtless debating what he would do with us.
In the mean time, poor William was
frightened out of his senses, and, as much need as
I had of spirits myself, I was obliged to employ them
all to keep his a little up. The misfortune I
had now brought upon him, endeared him the more to
me, and I could have joyfully suffered any punishment
he had not shared in. I watered, plentifully,
with my tears, the face of the frightened youth, who
sat, not having strength to stand, as cold and as
lifeless as a statue.
Presently Mr. H.... comes in to us again, and made us go before him into
the dining room, trembling and dreading the issue, Mr. H.....sat down on
a chair whilst we stood like criminals under examination; and, beginning
with me, asked me, with an even firm tone of voice, neither soft nor
severe, but cruelly indifferent, what I could say for myself, for having
abused him in so unworthy a manner, with his own servant too, and how he
had deserved this of me?
Without adding to the guilt of my
infidelity, that of an audacious defence of it, in
the old style of a common kept miss, my answer was
modest, and often interrupted by my tears, in substance
as follows: “That I never had a single
thought of wronging him” (which was true), “till
I had seen him taking the last liberties with my servant
wench” (here he coloured prodigiously), “and
that my resentment at that, which I was over-awed
from giving vent to by complaints, or explanations
with him, had driven me to a course that I did not
pretend to justify; but that as to the young man,
he was entirely faultless; for that, in the view of
making him the instrument of my revenge, I had down
right seduced him to what he had done; and therefore
hoped, whatever he determined about me, he would distinguish
between the guilty and the innocent; and that; for
the rest, I was entirely at his mercy.”
Mr. H.... on hearing what I said,
hung his head a little; but instantly recovering himself,
he said to me, as near as I can retain, to the following
purpose:
“Madam, I owe shame to myself,
and confess you have fairly turned the tables upon
me. It is not with one of your cast of breeding
and sentiments, that I allow you so much reason on
your side, as great difference of the provocations:
be it sufficient that I should enter into a discussion
of the very to have changed my resolution, in consideration
of what you reproach me with; and I own, too, that
your clearing that rascal there, is fair and honest
in you. Renew with you I cannot: the affront
is too gross. I give you a week’s warning
to get out of these lodgings; whatever I have given
you, remains to you; and as I never intend to see
you more, the landlord will pay you fifty pieces on
my account, with which, and every debt paid, I hope
you will own I do not leave you in a worse condition
than what I took you up in, or that you deserve of
me. Blame yourself only that it is no better.”
Then, without giving me time to reply,
he addressed himself to the young fellow:
“For you, spark, I shall, for
your father’s sake, take care of you: the
town is no place for such an easy fool as thou art;
and to-morrow you shall set out, under the charge
of one of my men, well recommended, in my name, to
your father, not to let you return and be spoil’d
here.”
At these words he went out, after
my vainly attempting to stop him, by throwing myself
at his feet. He shook me off, though he seemed
greatly moved too, and took Will away with him, who,
I dare swear, thought himself very cheaply off.
I was now once more a-drift, and left
upon my own hands, by a gentleman whom I certainly
did not deserve. And all the letters, arts, friends,
entreaties that I employed within the week of grace
in my lodging, could never win on him so much as to
see me again. He had irrevocably pronounced my
doom, and submission to it was my only part. Soon
after he married a lady of birth and fortune, to whom,
I have heard he proved an irreproachable husband.
As for poor Will, he was immediately
sent down to the country to his father, who was an
easy farmer, where he was not four months before an
inn-keepers’ buxom young widow, with a very good
stock, both in money and trade, fancied, and perhaps
pre-acquainted with his secret excellencies, married
him: and I am sure there was, at least, one good
foundation for their living happily together.
Though I should have been charmed
to see him before he went, such measures were taken,
by Mr. H....’s orders, that it was impossible;
otherwise I should certainly have endeavoured to detain
him in town, and would have spared neither offers
nor expense to have procured myself the satisfaction
of keeping him with me. He had such powerful holds
upon my inclinations as were not easily to be shaken
off, or replaced; as to my heart, it was quite out
of the question: glad, however, I was from my
soul, that nothing worse, and as things turned out,
nothing better could have happened to him.
As to Mr. H..., though views of conveniency
made me, at first, exert myself to regain his affection,
I was giddy and thoughtless enough to be much easier
reconciled to my failure than I ought to have been;
but as I never had loved him, and his leaving me gave
me a sort of liberty that I had often longed for,
I was soon comforted; and flattering myself, that
the stock of youth and beauty I was going to trade
with, could hardly fail of procuring me a maintenance,
I saw myself under the necessity of trying my fortune
with them, rather, with pleasure and gaiety, than with
the least idea of despondency.
In the mean time, several of my acquaintances
among the sisterhood, who had soon got wind of my
misfortune, flocked to insult me with their malicious
consolations. Most of them had long envied me
the affluence and splendour I had been maintained
in; and though there was scarce one of them that did
not at least deserve to be in my case, and would probably,
sooner or later, come to it, it was equally easy to
remark, even in their affected pity, their secret
pleasure at seeing me thus discarded, and their secret
grief that it was no worse with me. Unaccountable
malice of the human heart! and which is not confined
to the class of life they were of.
But as the time approached for me
to come to some resolution how to dispose of myself,
and I was considering, round where to shift my quarters
to, Mrs. Cole, a middle aged discreet sort of woman,
who had been brought into my acquaintance by one of
the misses that visited me, upon learning my situation,
came to offer her cordial advice and service to me;
and as I had always taken to her more than to any of
my female acquaintances, I listened the easier to
her proposals. And, as it happened, I could not
have put myself into worse, or into better hands in
all London: into worse, because keeping a house
of conveniency, there were no lengths in lewdness
she would not advise me to go, in compliance with
her customers; no schemes, or pleasure, or even unbounded
debauchery, she did not take even a delight in promoting:
into a better, because nobody having had more experience
of the wicked part of the town than she had, was fitter
to advise and guard one against the worst dangers
of our profession; and what was rare to be met with
in those of her’s, she contented herself with
a moderate living profit upon her industry and good
offices, and had nothing of their greedy rapacious
turn. She was really too a gentlewoman born and
bred, but through a train of accidents reduced to
this course, which she pursued, partly through necessity,
partly through choice, as never woman delighted more
in encouraging a brisk circulation of the trade, for
the sake of the trade itself, or better understood
all the mysteries and refinements of it, than she
did; so that she was consummately at the top of her
profession, and dealt only with customers of distinction:
to answer the demands of whom she kept a competent
number of her daughters in constant recruit (so she
called those whom their youth and personal charms
recommended to her adoption and management: several
of whom, by her means, and through her tuition and
instructions, succeeded very well in the world).
This useful gentlewoman upon whose
protection I now threw myself, having her reasons
of state, respecting Mr. H...., for not appearing too
much in the thing herself, sent a friend of her’s,
on the day appointed for my removal, to conduct me
to my new lodgings at a brush-maker’s in E
street, Covent Garden, the very next door to her own
house, where she had no conveniences to lodge me herself:
lodgings that, by having been for several successions
tenanted by ladies of pleasures, the landlord of them
was familiarized to their ways; and provided the rent
was paid, every thing else was as easy and commodious
as one could desire.
The fifty guineas promised me by Mr.
H...., at his parting with me, having been duly paid
me, all my clothes and moveables chested up, which
were at least of two hundred pounds value, I had them
conveyed into a coach, where I soon followed them,
after taking a civil leave of the landlord and his
family, with whom I had never lived in a degree of
familiarity enough to regret the removal; but still,
the very circumstance of its being a removal, drew
tears from me. I left, too, a letter of thanks
for Mr. H...., from whom I concluded myself, as I
really was, irretrievably separated.
My maid I had discharged the day before,
not only because I had her of Mr. H...., but that
I suspected her of having some how or other been the
occasion of his discovering me, in revenge, perhaps,
for my not having trusted her with him.
We soon got to my lodgings, which,
though not so handsomely furnished, nor so showy as
those I left, were to the full as convenient, and at
half price, though on the first floor. My trunks
were safely landed, and stowed in my apartments, where
my neighbour, and now gouvernante, Mrs. Cole, was
ready with my landlord to receive me, to whom she took
care to set me out in the most favourable light, that
of one from whom there was the clearest reason to
expect the regular payment of his rent: all the
cardinal virtues attributed to me, would not have had
half the weight of that recommendation alone.
I was now settled in lodgings of my
own, abandoned to my own conduct, and turned loose
upon the town, to sink or swim, as I could manage with
the current of it; and what were the consequences,
together with the number of adventures which befell
me in the exercise of my new profession, will compose
the mater of another letter: for surely it is
high time to put a period! to this.
I am,
Madam,
Yours, etc., etc., etc.