Mr. Lovelace, to John Belford,
Esq.
Sunday, may 28.
This story of Captain Tomlinson employed
us not only for the time we were together last night,
but all the while we sat at breakfast this morning.
She would still have it that it was the prelude to
some mischief from Singleton. I insisted (according
to my former hint) that it might much more probably
be a method taken by Colonel Morden to alarm her, previous
to a personal visit. Travelled gentlemen affected
to surprise in this manner. And why, dearest
creature, said I, must every thing that happens, which
we cannot immediately account for, be what we least
wish?
She had had so many disagreeable things
befall her of late, that her fears were too often
stronger than her hopes.
And this, Madam, makes me apprehensive,
that you will get into so low-spirited a way, that
you will not be able to enjoy the happiness that seems
to await us.
Her duty and her gratitude, she gravely
said, to the Dispenser of all good, would secure her,
she hoped, against unthankfulness. And a thankful
spirit was the same as a joyful one.
So, Belford, for all her future joys
she depends entirely upon the invisible Good.
She is certainly right; since those who fix least
upon second causes are the least likely to be disappointed And
is not this gravity for her gravity?
She had hardly done speaking, when
Dorcas came running up in a hurry she
set even my heart into a palpitation thump,
thump, thump, like a precipitated pendulum in a clock-case flutter,
flutter, flutter, my charmer’s, as by her sweet
bosom rising to her chin I saw.
This lower class of people, my beloved
herself observed, were for ever aiming at the stupid
wonderful, and for making even common incidents matter
of surprise.
Why the devil, said I to the wench,
this alarming hurry? And with your spread
fingers, and your O Madams, and O Sirs! and
be cursed to you! Would there have been a second
of time difference, had you come up slowly?
Captain Tomlinson, Sir!
Captain Devilson, what care I? Do
you see how you have disordered your lady?
Good Mr. Lovelace, said my charmer,
trembling if if my brother, if
Captain Singleton should appear pray now I
beseech you let me beg of you to
govern your temper My brother is my brother Captain
Singleton is but an agent.
My dearest life, folding my arms about
her, [when she asks favours, thought I, the devil’s
in it, if she will not allow such an innocent freedom
as this, from good Mr. Lovelace too,] you shall be
witness of all passes between us. Dorcas,
desire the gentleman to walk up.
Let me retire to my chamber first! Let
me not be known to be in the house!
Charming dear! Thou seest,
Belford, she is afraid of leaving me! O
the little witchcrafts! Were it not for surprises
now-and-then, how would an honest man know where to
have them?
She withdrew to listen. And
though this incident has not turned out to answer
all I wished from it, yet is it not necessary, if I
would acquaint thee with my whole circulation, to
be very particular in what passed between Captain
Tomlinson and me.
Enter Captain Tomlinson, in a riding-dress, whip in
hand.
Your servant, Sir, Mr. Lovelace, I presume?
My name is Lovelace, Sir.
Excuse the day, Sir. Be
pleased to excuse my garb. I am obliged to go
out of town directly, that I may return at night.
The day is a good day. Your garb needs no apology.
When I sent my servant, I did not
know that I should find time to do myself this honour.
All that I thought I could do to oblige my friend
this journey, was only to assure myself of your abode;
and whether there was a probability of being admitted
to the speech of either you, or your lady.
Sir, you best know your own motives.
What your time will permit you to do, you also best
know. And here I am, attending your pleasure.
My charmer owned afterwards her concern
on my being so short. Whatever I shall mingle
of her emotions, thou wilt easily guess I had afterwards.
Sir, I hope no offence. I intend none.
None None at all, Sir.
Sir, I have no interest in the affair
I come about. I may appear officious; and if
I thought I should, I would decline any concern in
it, after I have just hinted what it is.
And pray, Sir, what is it?
May I ask you, Sir, without offence,
whether you wish to be reconciled, and to co-operate
upon honourable terms, with one gentleman of the name
of Harlowe; preparative, as it may be hoped, to a general
reconciliation?
O how my heart fluttered! cried my charmer.
I can’t tell, Sir [and
then it fluttered still more, no doubt:] The whole
family have used me extremely ill. They have
taken greater liberties with my character than are
justifiable; and with my family too; which I can less
forgive.
Sir, Sir, I have done. I beg pardon for this
intrusion.
My beloved was then ready to sink, and thought very
hardly of me.
But, pray, Sir, to the immediate purpose
of your present commission; since a commission it
seems to be?
It is a commission, Sir; and such
a one, as I thought would be agreeable to all parties,
or I should not have given myself concern about it.
Perhaps it may, Sir, when known.
But let me ask you one previous question Do
you know Colonel Morden, Sir?
No, Sir. If you mean personally,
I do not. But I have heard my good friend Mr.
John Harlowe talk of him with great respect; and such
a co-trustee with him in a certain trust.
Lovel. I thought it probable,
Sir, that the Colonel might be arrived; that you might
be a gentleman of his acquaintance; and that something
of an agreeable surprise might be intended.
Capt. Had Colonel Morden been
in England, Mr. John Harlowe would have known it;
and then I should not have been a stranger to it.
Lovel. Well but, Sir, have
you then any commission to me from Mr. John Harlowe?
Capt. Sir, I will tell you,
as briefly as I can, the whole of what I have to say;
but you’ll excuse me also in a previous question,
for what curiosity is not my motive; but it is necessary
to be answered before I can proceed; as you will judge
when you hear it.
Lovel. What, pray, Sir, is your question?
Capt. Briefly, whether you are actually, and
bona fide, married to Miss
Clarissa Harlowe?
I started, and, in a haughty tone,
is this, Sir, a question that must be answered before
you can proceed in the business you have undertaken?
I mean no offence, Mr. Lovelace.
Mr. Harlowe sought to me to undertake this office.
I have daughters and nieces of my own. I thought
it a good office, or I, who have many considerable
affairs upon my hands, had not accepted of it.
I know the world; and will take the liberty to say,
that if the young lady
Captain Tomlinson, I think you are called?
My name is Tomlinson.
Why then, Tomlinson, no liberty, as
you call it, will be taken well, that is not extremely
delicate, when that lady is mentioned.
When you had heard me out, Mr. Lovelace,
and had found I had so behaved, as to make the caution
necessary, it would have been just to have given it. Allow
me to say, I know what is due to the character of a
woman of virtue, as well as any man alive.
Why, Sir! Why, Captain Tomlinson,
you seem warm. If you intend any thing by this,
[O how I trembled! said the lady, when she took notice
of this part of our conversation afterwards,] I will
only say, that this is a privileged place. It
is at present my home, and an asylum for any gentleman
who thinks it worth his while to inquire after me,
be the manner or end of his inquiry what it will.
I know not, Sir, that I have given
occasion for this. I make no scruple to attend
you elsewhere, if I am troublesome here. I was
told, I had a warm young gentleman to deal with:
but as I knew my intention, and that my commission
was an amicable one, I was the less concerned about
that. I am twice your age, Mr. Lovelace, I dare
say: but I do assure you, that if either my message
or my manner gives you offence, I can suspend the
one or the other for a day, or for ever, as you like.
And so, Sir, any time before eight tomorrow morning,
you will let me know your further commands. And
was going to tell me where he might be found.
Captain Tomlinson, said I, you answer
well. I love a man of spirit. Have you
not been in the army?
I have, Sir; but have turned my sword
into a ploughshare, as the scripture has it, [there
was a clever fellow, Jack! he was a good
man with somebody, I warrant! O what a fine
coat and cloke for an hypocrite will a text of scripture,
properly applied, make at any time in the eyes of
the pious! how easily are the good folks
taken in!] and all my delight, added he,
for some years past, has been in cultivating my paternal
estate. I love a brave man, Mr. Lovelace, as
well as ever I did in my life. But let me tell
you, Sir, that when you come to my time of life, you
will be of opinion, that there is not so much true
bravery in youthful choler, as you may now think there
is.
A clever fellow again, Belford! Ear
and heart, both at once, he took in my charmer! ’Tis
well, she says, there are some men who have wisdom
in their anger.
Well, Captain, that is reproof for
reproof. So we are upon a footing. And
now give me the pleasure of hearing the import of your
commission.
Sir, you must first allow me to repeat
my question: Are you really, and bona fide, married
to Miss Clarissa Harlowe? or are you not yet married?
Bluntly put, Captain. But if
I answer that I am, what then?
Why then, Sir, I shall say, that you are a man of
honour.
That I hope I am, whether you say it or not, Captain
Tomlinson.
Sir, I will be very frank in all I
have to say on this subject Mr. John Harlowe
has lately found out, that you and his niece are both
in the same lodgings; that you have been long so;
and that the lady was at the play with you yesterday
was se’nnight; and he hopes that you are actually
married. He has indeed heard that you are; but
as he knows your enterprising temper, and that you
have declared, that you disdain a relation to their
family, he is willing by me to have your marriage
confirmed from your own mouth, before he take the steps
he is inclined to take in his niece’s favour.
You will allow me to say, Mr. Lovelace, that he will
not be satisfied with an answer that admits of the
least doubt.
Let me tell you, Captain Tomlinson,
that it is a high degree of vileness for any man to
suppose
Sir Mr. Lovelace don’t
put yourself into a passion. The lady’s
relations are jealous of the honour of their family.
They have prejudices to overcome as well as you advantage
may have been taken and the lady, at the
time, not to blame.
This lady, Sir, could give no such
advantages: and if she had, what must the man
be, Captain Tomlinson, who could have taken them? Do
you know the lady, Sir?
I never had the honour to see her
but once; and that was at a church; and should not
know her again.
Not know her again, Sir! I
thought there was not a man living who had once seen
her, and would not know her among a thousand.
I remember, Sir, that I thought I
never saw a finer woman in my life. But, Mr.
Lovelace, I believe, you will allow, that it is better
that her relations should have wronged you, than you
the lady, I hope, Sir, you will permit me to repeat
my question.
Enter Dorcas, in a hurry.
A gentleman, this minute, Sir, desires
to speak with your honour [My lady, Sir! Aside.]
Could the dear creature put Dorcas
upon telling this fib, yet want to save me one?
Desire the gentleman to walk into
one of the parlours. I will wait upon him presently.
[Exit Dorcas.
The dear creature, I doubted not,
wanted to instruct me how to answer the Captain’s
home put. I knew how I intended to answer it plumb,
thou may’st be sure but Dorcas’s
message staggered me. And yet I was upon one
of my master-strokes which was, to take
advantage of the captain’s inquiries, and to
make her own her marriage before him, as she had done
to the people below; and if she had been brought to
that, to induce her, for her uncle’s satisfaction,
to write him a letter of gratitude; which of course
must have been signed Clarissa Lovelace. I was
loth, therefore, thou may’st believe, to attend
her sudden commands: and yet, afraid of pushing
matters beyond recovery with her, I thought proper
to lead him from the question, to account for himself
and for Mr. Harlowe’s coming to the knowledge
of where we are; and for other particulars which I
knew would engage her attention; and which might possibly
convince her of the necessity there was for her to
acquiesce in the affirmative I was disposed to give.
And this for her own sake; For what, as I asked her
afterwards, is it to me, whether I am ever reconciled
to her family? A family, Jack, which I
must for ever despise.
You think, Captain, that I have answered
doubtfully to the question you put. You may
think so. And you must know, that I have a good
deal of pride; and, only that you are a gentleman,
and seem in this affair to be governed by generous
motives, or I should ill brook being interrogated as
to my honour to a lady so dear to me. But
before I answer more directly to the point, pray satisfy
me in a question or two that I shall put to you.
With all my heart, Sir. Ask
me what questions you please, I will answer them with
sincerity and candour.
You say, Mr. Harlowe has found out
that we were at a play together: and that we
were both in the same lodgings How, pray,
came he at his knowledge? for, let me tell
you, that I have, for certain considerations, (not
respecting myself, I will assure you,) condescended
that our abode should be kept secret. And this
has been so strictly observed, that even Miss Howe,
though she and my beloved correspond, knows not directly
where to send to us.
Why, Sir, the person who saw you at
the play, was a tenant of Mr. John Harlowe.
He watched all your motions. When the play was
done, he followed your coach to your lodgings.
And early the next day, Sunday, he took horse, and
acquainted his landlord with what he had observed.
Lovel. How oddly things come
about! But does any other of the Harlowes
know where we are?
Capt. It is an absolute secret
to every other person of the family; and so it is
intended to be kept: as also that Mr. John Harlowe
is willing to enter into treaty with you, by me, if
his niece be actually married; for perhaps he is aware,
that he shall have difficulty enough with some people
to bring about the desirable reconciliation, although
he could give them this assurance.
I doubt it not, Captain to
James Harlowe is all the family folly owing.
Fine fools! [heroically stalking about] to be governed
by one to whom malice and not genius, gives the busy
liveliness that distinguishes him from a natural! But
how long, pray, Sir, has Mr. John Harlowe been in
this pacific disposition?
I will tell you, Mr. Lovelace, and
the occasion; and be very explicit upon it, and upon
all that concerns you to know of me, and of the commission
I have undertaken to execute; and this the rather,
as when you have heard me out, you will be satisfied,
that I am not an officious man in this my present
address to you.
I am all attention, Captain Tomlinson.
And so I doubt not was my beloved.
Capt. ’You must know,
Sir, that I have not been many months in Mr. John
Harlwe’s neighbourhood. I removed from
Northamptonshire, partly for the sake of better managing
one of two executorship, which I could not avoid engaging
in, (the affairs of which frequently call me to town,
and are part of my present business;) and partly for
the sake of occupying a neglected farm, which has
lately fallen into my hands. But though an acquaintance
of no longer standing, and that commencing on the bowling-green,
[uncle John is a great bowler, Belford,] (upon my decision
of a point to every one’s satisfaction, which
was appealed to me by all the gentlemen, and which
might have been attended with bad consequences,) no
two brothers have a more cordial esteem for each other.
You know, Mr. Lovelace, that there is a consent,
as I may call it, in some minds, which will unite
them stronger together in a few hours, than years can
do with others, whom yet we see not with disgust.’
Lovel. Very true, Captain.
Capt. ’It was on the
foot of this avowed friendship on both sides, that
on Monday the 15th, as I very well remember, Mr. Harlowe
invited himself home with me. And when there,
he acquainted me with the whole of the unhappy affair
that had made them all so uneasy. Till then I
knew it only by report; for, intimate as we were,
I forbore to speak of what was so near his heart,
till he began first. And then he told me, that
he had had an application made to him, two or three
days before, by a gentleman whom he named, to induce
him not only to be reconciled himself to his niece,
but to forward for her a general reconciliation.
’A like application, he told
me, had been made to his sister Harlowe, by a good
woman, whom every body respected; who had intimated,
that his niece, if encouraged, would again put herself
into the protection of her friends, and leave you:
but if not, that she must unavoidably be your’s.’
I hope, Mr. Lovelace, I make no mischief. You
look concerned you sigh,
Sir.
Proceed, Captain Tomlinson.
Pray proceed. And I sighed still more profoundly.
Capt. ’They all thought
it extremely particular, that a lady should decline
marriage with a man she had so lately gone away with.’
Pray, Captain pray, Mr.
Tomlinson no more of this subject.
My beloved is an angel. In every thing unblamable.
Whatever faults there have been, have been theirs
and mine. What you would further say, is, that
the unforgiving family rejected her application.
They did. She and I had a misunderstanding.
The falling out of lovers you know, Captain.
We have been happier ever since.
Capt. ’Well, Sir; but
Mr. John Harlowe could not but better consider the
matter afterwards. And he desired my advice how
to act in it. He told me that no father ever
loved a daughter as he loved this niece of his; whom,
indeed, he used to call his daughter-niece. He
said, she had really been unkindly treated by her
brother and sister: and as your alliance, Sir,
was far from being a discredit to their family, he
would do his endeavour to reconcile all parties, if
he could be sure that ye were actually man and wife.’
Lovel. And what, pray, Captain, was your advice?
Capt. ’I gave it as my
opinion, that if his niece were unworthily treated,
and in distress, (as he apprehended from the application
to him,) he would soon hear of her again: but
that it was likely, that this application was made
without expecting it would succeed; and as a salvo
only, to herself, for marrying without their consent.
And the rather thought I so, as he had told me, that
it came from a young lady her friend, and not in a
direct way from herself; which young lady was no favourite
of the family; and therefore would hardly have been
employed, had success been expected.’
Lovel. Very well, Captain Tomlinson pray
proceed.
Capt. ’Here the matter
rested till last Sunday evening, when Mr. John Harlowe
came to me with the man who had seen you and your lady
(as I presume she is) at the play; and who had assured
him, that you both lodged in the same house. And
then the application having been so lately made, which
implied that you were not then married, he was so uneasy
for his niece’s honour, that I advised him to
dispatch to town some one in whom he could confide,
to make proper inquiries.’
Lovel. Very well, Captain And
was such a person employed on such an errand by her
uncle?
Capt. ’A trusty and discreet
person was accordingly sent; and last Tuesday, I think
it was, (for he returned to us on the Wednesday,) he
made the inquiries among the neighbours first.’
[The very inquiry, Jack, that gave us all so much
uneasiness.] ’But finding that none of them
could give any satisfactory account, the lady’s
woman was come at, who declared, that you were actually
married. But the inquirist keeping himself on
the reserve as to his employers, the girl refused to
tell the day, or to give him other particulars.’
Lovel. You give a very clear account of every
thing, Captain Tomlinson.
Pray proceed.
Capt. ’The gentleman
returned; and, on his report, Mr. Harlowe, having
still doubts, and being willing to proceed on some
grounds in so important a point, besought me (as my
affairs called me frequently to town) to undertake
this matter. “You, Mr. Tomlinson, he was
pleased to say, have children of your own: you
know the world: you know what I drive at:
you will proceed, I am sure, with understanding and
spirit: and whatever you are satisfied with shall
satisfy me."’
Enter Dorcas again in a hurry.
Sir, the gentleman is impatient.
I will attend him presently.
The Captain then accounted for his
not calling in person, when he had reason to think
us here.
He said he had business of consequence
a few miles out of town, whither he thought he must
have gone yesterday, and having been obliged to put
off his little journey till this day, and understanding
that we were within, not knowing whether he should
have such another opportunity, he was willing to try
his good fortune before he set out; and this made him
come booted and spurred, as I saw him.
He dropped a hint in commendation
of the people of the house; but it was in such a way,
as to give no room to suspect that he thought it necessary
to inquire after the character of persons, who make
so genteel an appearance, as he observed they do.
And here let me remark, that my beloved
might collect another circumstance in favour of the
people below, had she doubted their characters, from
the silence of her uncle’s inquirist on Tuesday
among the neighbours.
Capt. ’And now, Sir,
that I believe I have satisfied you in every thing
relating to my commission, I hope you will permit me
to repeat my question which is ’
Enter Dorcas again, out of breath.
Sir, the gentleman will step up to
you. [My lady is impatient. She wonders at
your honour’s delay. Aside.]
Excuse me, Captain, for one moment.
I have staid my full time, Mr. Lovelace.
What may result from my question and your answer,
whatever it shall be, may take us up time.
And you are engaged. Will you permit me to attend
you in the morning, before I set out on my return?
You will then breakfast with me, Captain?
It must be early if I do. I
must reach my own house to-morrow night, or I shall
make the best of wives unhappy. And I have two
or three places to call at in my way.
It shall be by seven o’clock,
if you please, Captain. We are early folks.
And this I will tell you, that if ever I am reconciled
to a family so implacable as I have always found the
Harlowes to be, it must be by the mediation of so
cool and so moderate a gentleman as yourself.
And so, with the highest civilities
on both sides, we parted. But for the private
satisfaction of so good a man, I left him out of doubt
that we were man and wife, though I did not directly
aver it.