Fresh calamities
The next morning the sun rose with
peculiar warmth for the season; so that we agreed
to breakfast together on the honeysuckle bank:
where, while we sate, my youngest daughter, at my
request, joined her voice to the concert on the trees
about us. It was in this place my poor Olivia
first met her seducer, and every object served to recall
her sadness. But that melancholy, which is excited
by objects of pleasure, or inspired by sounds of harmony,
sooths the heart instead of corroding it. Her
mother too, upon this occasion, felt a pleasing distress,
and wept, and loved her daughter as before. ‘Do,
my pretty Olivia,’ cried she, ’let us
have that little melancholy air your pappa was
so fond of, your sister Sophy has already obliged
us. Do child, it will please your old father.’
She complied in a manner so exquisitely pathetic as
moved me.
When lovely woman stoops to folly,
And finds too late that men betray, What charm can
sooth her melancholy, What art can wash her guilt away?
The only art her guilt to cover, To
hide her shame from every eye, To give repentance
to her lover, And wring his bosom is to
die.
As she was concluding the last stanza,
to which an interruption in her voice from sorrow
gave peculiar softness, the appearance of Mr Thornhill’s
equipage at a distance alarmed us all, but particularly
encreased the uneasiness of my eldest daughter, who,
desirous of shunning her betrayer, returned to the
house with her sister. In a few minutes he was
alighted from his chariot, and making up to the place
where I was still sitting, enquired after my health
with his usual air of familiarity. ‘Sir,’
replied I, ’your present assurance only serves
to aggravate the baseness of your character; and there
was a time when I would have chastised your insolence,
for presuming thus to appear before me. But now
you are safe; for age has cooled my passions, and my
calling restrains them.’
‘I vow, my dear sir,’
returned he, ’I am amazed at all this; nor can
I understand what it means! I hope you don’t
think your daughter’s late excursion with me
had any thing criminal in it.’
‘Go,’ cried I, ’thou
art a wretch, a poor pitiful wretch, and every way
a lyar; but your meanness secures you from my anger!
Yet sir, I am descended from a family that would not
have borne this! And so, thou vile thing, to
gratify a momentary passion, thou hast made one poor
creature wretched for life, and polluted a family that
had nothing but honour for their portion.’
‘If she or you,’ returned
he, ’are resolved to be miserable, I cannot
help it. But you may still be happy; and whatever
opinion you may have formed of me, you shall ever
find me ready to contribute to it. We can marry
her to another in a short time, and what is more, she
may keep her lover beside; for I protest I shall ever
continue to have a true regard for her.’
I found all my passions alarmed at
this new degrading proposal; for though the mind may
often be calm under great injuries, little villainy
can at any time get within the soul, and sting it into
rage. ’Avoid my sight, thou reptile,’
cried I, ’nor continue to insult me with thy
presence. Were my brave son at home, he would
not suffer this; but I am old, and disabled, and every
way undone.’
‘I find,’ cried he, ’you
are bent upon obliging me to talk in an harsher manner
than I intended. But as I have shewn you what
may be hoped from my friendship, it may not be improper
to represent what may be the consequences of my resentment.
My attorney, to whom your late bond has been transferred,
threatens hard, nor do I know how to prevent the course
of justice, except by paying the money myself, which,
as I have been at some expences lately, previous to
my intended marriage, is not so easy to be done.
And then my steward talks of driving for the rent:
it is certain he knows his duty; for I never trouble
myself with affairs of that nature. Yet still
I could wish to serve you, and even to have you and
your daughter present at my marriage, which is shortly
to be solemnized with Miss Wilmot; it is even the
request of my charming Arabella herself, whom I hope
you will not refuse.’
‘Mr Thornhill,’ replied
I, ’hear me once for all: as to your marriage
with any but my daughter, that I never will consent
to; and though your friendship could raise me to a
throne, or your resentment sink me to the grave, yet
would I despise both. Thou hast once wofully,
irreparably, deceived me. I reposed my heart
upon thine honour, and have found its baseness.
Never more, therefore, expect friendship from me.
Go, and possess what fortune has given thee, beauty,
riches, health, and pleasure. Go, and leave me
to want, infamy, disease, and sorrow. Yet humbled
as I am, shall my heart still vindicate its dignity,
and though thou hast my forgiveness, thou shalt ever
have my contempt.’
‘If so,’ returned he,
’depend upon it you shall feel the effects of
this insolence, and we shall shortly see which is the
fittest object of scorn, you or me.’ Upon
which he departed abruptly.
My wife and son, who were present
at this interview, seemed terrified with the apprehension.
My daughters also, finding that he was gone, came
out to be informed of the result of our conference,
which, when known, alarmed them not less than the
rest. But as to myself, I disregarded the utmost
stretch of his malevolence: he had already struck
the blow, and now I stood prepared to repel every
new effort. Like one of those instruments used
in the art of war, which, however thrown, still presents
a point to receive the enemy.
We soon, however, found that he had
not threatened in vain; for the very next morning
his steward came to demand my annual rent, which, by
the train of accidents already related, I was unable
to pay. The consequence of my incapacity was
his driving my cattle that evening, and their being
appraised and sold the next day for less than half
their value. My wife and children now therefore
entreated me to comply upon any terms, rather than
incur certain destruction. They even begged of
me to admit his visits once more, and used all their
little eloquence to paint the calamities I was going
to endure. The terrors of a prison, in so rigorous
a season as the present, with the danger, that threatened
my health from the late accident that happened by
the fire. But I continued inflexible.
‘Why, my treasures,’ cried
I, ’why will you thus attempt to persuade me
to the thing that is not right! My duty has taught
me to forgive him; but my conscience will not permit
me to approve. Would you have me applaud to the
world what my heart must internally condemn? Would
you have me tamely sit down and flatter our infamous
betrayer; and to avoid a prison continually suffer
the more galling bonds of mental confinement!
No, never. If we are to be taken from this abode,
only let us hold to the right, and wherever we are
thrown, we can still retire to a charming apartment,
when we can look round our own hearts with intrepidity
and with pleasure!’
In this manner we spent that evening.
Early the next morning, as the snow had fallen in
great abundance in the night, my son was employed in
clearing it away, and opening a passage before the
door. He had not been thus engaged long, when
he came running in, with looks all pale, to tell us
that two strangers, whom he knew to be officers of
justice, were making towards the house.
Just as he spoke they came in, and
approaching the bed where I lay, after previously
informing me of their employment and business, made
me their prisoner, bidding me prepare to go with them
to the county gaol, which was eleven miles off.
‘My friends,’ said I,
’this is severe weather on which you have come
to take me to a prison; and it is particularly unfortunate
at this time, as one of my arms has lately been burnt
in a terrible manner, and it has thrown me into a
slight fever, and I want cloaths to cover me, and I
am now too weak and old to walk far in such deep snow:
but if it must be so ’
I then turned to my wife and children,
and directed them to get together what few things
were left us, and to prepare immediately for leaving
this place. I entreated them to be expeditious,
and desired my son to assist his elder sister, who,
from a consciousness that she was the cause of all
our calamities, was fallen, and had lost anguish in
insensibility. I encouraged my wife, who, pale
and trembling, clasped our affrighted little ones
in her arms, that clung to her bosom in silence, dreading
to look round at the strangers. In the mean time
my youngest daughter prepared for our departure, and
as she received several hints to use dispatch, in
about an hour we were ready to depart.