 CHAPTER 34 This incident necessarily produced a change in my view with regard to my friend. Her fortune consisted of a few hundreds of dollars which, frugally administered, might procure decent accommodation in the country. When this was consumed she must find subsistence in tending the big wheel or the milk-pail, unless fortune should enable me to place her in a more favorable situation. This state was, in some respects, but little different from that in which she had spent the former part of her life, but in her father's house these employments were dignified by being, in some degree, voluntary, and relieved by frequent intervals of recreation and leisure. Now they were likely to prove irksome and servile in consequence of being performed for hire and imposed by necessity. Equality, parental solicitudes, and sisterly endearments would be wanting to lighten the yoke. These inconveniences, however, were imaginary. This was the school in which fortitude and independence were to be learned. It and the purity of rural manners would, likewise, create anew those ties which death had dissolved. The affections of parent and sister would be supplied by the fonder and more rational attachments of friendship. These toils were not detrimental to beauty or health. What was to be dreaded from them was their tendency to quench the spirit of liberal curiosity, to habituate the person to bodily rather than intellectual exertions, to supersede and create indifference or aversion to the only instruments of rational improvement, the pen and the book. This evil, however, was at some distance from Eliza. Her present abode was quiet and serene. Here she might enjoy domestic pleasures and opportunities of mental improvement for the coming twelve month at least. This period would, perhaps, be sufficient for the formation of studious habits. What schemes should be adopted for this end would be determined by the destiny to which I myself should be reserved. My path was already chalked out, and my fancy now pursued it with uncommon pleasure. To reside in your family, to study your profession, to pursue some subordinate or casual mode of industry by which I might purchase leisure for medical pursuits, for social recreations and for the study of mankind on your busy and thronged stage was the scope of my wishes. This destiny would not hinder punctual correspondence and occasional visits to Eliza. Her pen might be called into action and her mind be awakened by books and every hour be made to add to her stores of knowledge and enlarge the bounds of her capacity. I was spiritless and gloomy when I left blank, but reflections on my future lot and just views of the situation of my friend insensibly restored my cheerfulness. I arrived at Mr. Curling's in the evening and hastened to impart to Eliza the issue of my commission. It gave her uneasiness merely as it frustrated the design on which she had fondly mused of residing in the city. She was somewhat consoled by my promises of being her constant correspondent and occasional visitor. Next morning I set out on my journey hither on foot. The way was not long, the weather, though cold, was wholesome and serene. My spirits were high, and I saw nothing in the world before me but sunshine and prosperity. I was conscious that my happiness depended not on the revolutions of nature or the caprice of man. All without was, indeed, vicissitude and uncertainty, but within my bosom was a center not to be shaken or removed. My purposes were honest and steadfast. Every sense was the inlet of pleasure, because it was the avenue of knowledge, and my soul brooded over the world to ideas, and glowed with exaltation at the grandeur and beauty of its own creations. This felicity was too rapturous to be of long duration. I gradually descended from these heights, and the remembrance of past incidents connected with images of your family to which I was returning led my thoughts into a different channel. Well-Beck and the unhappy girl whom he had betrayed, Mrs. Villars and Wallace were recollected anew. The views which I had formed for determining the fate and affording assistance to Clemenza were recalled. My former resolutions with regard to her had been suspended by the uncertainty in which the fate of the Hadwins was at that time wrapped. Had it not become necessary wholly to lay aside these resolutions? That indeed was an irksome conclusion. No wonder that I struggled to repel it, that I fostered the doubt whether money was the only instrument of benefit, whether caution and fortitude and knowledge were not the genuine preservatives from evil. Had I not the means in my hands of dispelling her fatal ignorance of Well-Beck and of those with whom she resided? Was I not authorized, by my previous, though slender intercourse, to seek her presence? As I should enter Mrs. Villars' house, desire to be introduced to the lady, accost her with affectionate simplicity and tell her the truth. Why be anxious to smooth the way? Why deal in apologies, circuities, and innuendos? All these are feeble and perverse refinements unworthy of an honest purpose and an erect spirit. To believe her inaccessible to my visit was absurd. To wait for the permission of those whose interest it might be to shut out visitants was cowardice. This was an infringement of her liberty which equity and law equally condemned. By what right could she be restrained from intercourse with others? Doors and passages may be between her and me. With a purpose such as mine no one had a right to close the one or obstruct the other. Away with cowardly reluctances and clownish scruples and let me hasten this moment to her dwelling. Mrs. Villars is the fortress of the mansion. She will probably present herself before me and demand the reason of my visit. What shall I say to her? The truth. To falter or equivocate or dissemble to this woman would be wicked. Perhaps her character has been misunderstood and maligned. Can I render her a greater service than to apprise her of the aspersions that have rested on it and afford her the opportunity of vindication? Perhaps she is indeed selfish and profligate, the betrayer of youth and the agent of lasciviousness. Does she not deserve to know the extent of her errors and the ignominy of her trade? Does she not merit the compassion of the good and the rebukes of the wise? To shrink from the task would prove me cowardly and un-firm. Thus far, at least, let my courage extend. Alas, Clemenza is unacquainted with my language. My thoughts cannot make themselves apparent but by words and to my words she will be able to affix no meaning. Yet is not that a hasty decision? The version from the dramas of Zeno which I found in her toilet was probably hers, and proves her to have a speculative knowledge of our tongue. Near half a year has since elapsed, during which she has dwelt with talkers of English and consequently could not fail to have acquired it. This conclusion is somewhat dubious, but experiment will give it certainty. Prior to I had strolled along the path at a lingering pace. Time enough me thought to reach your threshold between sunrise and moonlight if my way had been three times longer than it was. You were the pleasing phantom that hovered before me and beckoned me forward. What a total revolution had occurred in the course of a few seconds. For thus long did my reasonings with regard to Clemenza and the villers required to pass through my understanding and escape in half-muttered soliloquy from my lips. My muscles trembled with eagerness and I bounded forward with impetuosity. I saw nothing but a vista of catalpas leafless loaded with icicles and terminating in four chimneys and a painted roof. My fancy outstripped my footsteps and was busy in picturing faces and rehearsing dialogues. Suddenly I reached this new object of my pursuit, darted through the avenue, noticed that some windows of the house were unclosed, drew thence a hasty inference that the house was not without inhabitants, and knocked quickly and loudly for admission. Someone within crept to the door, opened it with seeming caution, and just far enough to allow the face to be seen. It was the timid, pale, and unwashed face of a girl who was readily supposed to be a servant taken from a cottage and turned into a bringer of wood and water and scourer of tubs and trenches. She waited in timorous silence the delivery of my message. Was Mrs. Villers at home? No, she's gone to town. Were any of her daughters within? She could not tell. She believed. She thought. Which did I want? Miss Hedy or Miss Sally? Let me see Miss Hedy. Saying this I pushed gently against the door. The girl, half reluctant, yielded way. I entered the passage and, putting my hand on the lock of a door that seemed to lead into a parlor, is Miss Hedy in this room? No, there was nobody there. Go call her, then. Tell her there is one who wishes to see her on important business. I will wait for her coming in this room. So saying I opened the door and entered the apartment while the girl withdrew to perform my message. The parlor was spacious and expensively furnished, but an air of negligence and disorder was everywhere visible. The carpet was wrinkled and unswept, a clock on the table in a glass frame so streaked and spotted with dust as scarcely to be transparent, and the index motionless and pointing at four instead of nine, embers scattered on the marble hearth, and tongs lying on the fender with the handle and the ashes, a harpsichord uncovered, one end loaded with scores, tumbled together in a heap, and the other with volumes of novels and plays, some on their edges, some on their backs, gaping open by the scorching of their covers, rent, blurred, stained, blotted, dog-eared, tables awry, chairs crowding each other, in short, no object but indicated the neglect or the ignorance of domestic neatness and economy. My leisure was employed in surveying these objects and in listening for the approach of Miss Hedy. Some minutes elapsed, but no one came. A reason for delay was easily imagined, and I summoned patients to wait. I opened a book, touched the instrument, surveyed the vases on the mantle-tree, the figures on the hangings, and the print of Apollo and the Sibyl, taken from Salvatore and hung over the chimney. I eyed my own shape and garb in the mirror and asked how my rustic appearance would be regarded by that supercilious and voluptuous being to whom I was about to present myself. Slowly the latch of the door was softly moved. It opened and the simpleton, before described, appeared. She spoke, but her voice was so full of hesitation and so near a whisper that much attention was needed to make out her words. Miss Hedy was not at home. She was gone to town with her mistress. This was a tale not to be credited. How was I to act? She persisted in maintaining the truth of it. Well, then, said I, at length, tell Miss Sally that I wish to speak with her. She will answer my purpose just as well. Miss Sally was not at home, neither. She had gone to town, too. They would not be back she did not know when, not till night, she supposed. It was so indeed, none of them wasn't at home, none but she and Nanny in the kitchen. Indeed there wasn't. Go tell Nanny to come here. I will leave my message with her. She withdrew, but Nanny did not receive the summons, or thought proper not to obey it. All was vacant and still. My state was singular and critical. It was absurd to prolong it, but to leave the house with my errand unexecuted would argue imbecility and folly. To ascertain Clemenza's presence in this house and to gain an interview were yet in my power. Had I not boasted of my intrepidity in braving denials and commands when they endeavored to obstruct my passage to this woman? But here were no obstacles, nor prohibition. Suppose the girl had said truth that the matron and her daughters were absent and that Nanny and herself were the only guardians of the mansion. So much the better. My design will not be opposed. I have only to mount the stair and go from one room to another till I find what I seek. There was hazard as well as plausibility in this scheme. I thought it best once more to endeavor to extort information from the girl and persuade her to be my guide to whomever the house contained. I put my hand to the bell and rung a brisk peel. No one came. I passed into the entry to the foot of a staircase and to a back window. Nobody was within hearing or sight. Once more I reflected on the rectitude of my intentions, on the possibility that the girl's assertions might be true, on the benefits of expedition and of gaining access to the object of my visit without interruption or delay. To these considerations was added a sort of charm, not easily explained, and by no means justifiable, produced by the very temerity and hazardness accompanying this attempt. I thought with scornful emotions on the bars and hindrances which pride and caprice and delusive maxims of decorum raise in the way of human intercourse. I spurned at these semblances and substitutes of honesty and delighted to shake such fetters into air and trample such impediments to dust. I wanted to see a human being in order to promote her happiness. It was doubtful whether she was within twenty paces of the spot where I stood. The doubt was to be solved. How? By examining the space. I forthwith proceeded to examine it. I reached the second story. I approached a door that was closed. I knocked. After a pause a soft voice said, Who is there? The accents were as musical as those of Clemenza but were in other respects different. I had no topic to discuss with this person. I answered not, yet hesitated to withdraw. Presently the same voice was again heard. What is it you want? Why don't you answer? Come in. I complied with the command and entered the room. It was deliberation and foresight that led me hither and not chance or caprice. Hence, instead of being disconcerted or vanquished by the objects that I saw, I was tranquil and firm. My curiosity, however, made me a vigilant observer. Two females, arrayed with voluptuous negligence, in a manner adapted to the utmost seclusion and seated in a careless attitude on a sofa, were now discovered. Both darted glances at the door. One who appeared to be the youngest, no sooner saw me than she shrieked and starting from her seat, betrayed in the looks which she successively cast upon me, on herself and on the chamber, whose apparatus was in no less confusion than that of the apartment below, her consciousness of the unseasonableness of this meeting. The other shrieked likewise, but in her it seemed to be the token of surprise rather than that of terror. There was probably somewhat in my aspect engarb that suggested an apology for this intrusion as arising from simplicity and mistake. She thought proper, however, to assume the air of one offended, and looking sternly, Now, now, fellow, she said, What is this? Why come you hither? This questioner was of mature age, but had not passed the period of attractiveness in grace. All the beauty that nature had bestowed was still retained, but the portion had never been great. What she possessed was so modelled and embellished by such carriage and dress as to give it most power over the senses of the gazer. In proportion, however, as it was intended and adapted to captivate those who know none but physical pleasures, it was qualified to breed distaste and aversion in me. I am sensible how much error may have lurked in this decision. I had brought with me the belief of their being unchaste, and seized, perhaps with too much avidity, any appearance that coincided with my prepossessions. Yet the younger by no means inspired the same disgust, though I had no reason to suppose her more unblemished than the elder. Her modesty seemed unaffected, and was by no means satisfied, like that of the elder, with defeating future curiosity. The consciousness of what had already been exposed filled her with confusion, and she would have flown away if her companion had not detained her by some degree of force. Ails the girl. There's nothing to be frightened at. Fellow, she repeated, what brings you here? I advanced and stood before them. I looked steadfastly, but I believe with neither effrontery nor anger, on the one who addressed me. I spoke in a tone serious and emphatical. I come for the sake of speaking to a woman who formerly resided in this house, and probably resides here still. Her name is Clemenza Lodi. If she be here, I request you to conduct me to her instantly. Me thought I perceived some inquietude, a less imperious and more inquisitive air in this woman, on hearing the name of Clemenza. It was momentary and gave way to peremptory looks. What is your business with her, and why did you adopt this mode of inquiry, a very extraordinary intrusion? Be good enough to leave the chamber. Any questions proper to be answered will be answered below. I meant not to intrude or offend. It was not an idle or important motive that led me hither. I waited below for some time after soliciting an audience of you through the servant. She assured me you were absent, and laid me under the necessity of searching for Clemenza Lodi myself, and without a guide. I am anxious to withdraw and request merely to be directed to the room which she occupies. I direct you, replied she, in a more resolute tone, to quit the room and the house. Impossible, madam, I replied, still looking at her earnestly. Leave the house without seeing her. You might as well enjoin me to pull the Andes on my head, to walk barefoot to P. King. Impossible! Madam Solicitude was now mingled with her anger. This is strange insolence, unaccountable behavior. Be gone from my room! Will you compel me to call the gentlemen? Be not alarmed, said I, with augmented mildness. There was indeed compassion and sorrow at my heart, and these must have somewhat influenced my looks. Be not alarmed. I came to confer a benefit, not to perpetrate an injury. I came not to censure or expostulate with you, but merely to counsel and aid a being that needs both. All I want is to see her. In this chamber I sought not you, but her. Only lead me to her or tell me where she is. I will then rid you of my presence. Will you compel me to call those who will punish this insolence as it deserves? Dearest madam, I compel you to nothing. I merely supplicate. I would ask you to lead me to these gentlemen if I did not know that there are none but females in the house. It is you who must receive and comply with my petition. Allow me a moment's interview with Clemenza Lothi. Compliance will harm you not, but will benefit her. What is your objection? This is the strangest proceeding, the most singular conduct. Is this a place fit to parley with you? I warn you of the consequence of staying a moment longer. Depend upon it you will sorely repent it. You are obdurate, said I, and turn towards the younger who listened to this discourse in tremors and panic. I took her hand with an air of humility and reverence. Here, said I, there seems to be purity, innocence, and condescension. I took this house to be the temple of voluptuousness. Females I expected to find in it, but such only as traded in licentious pleasures, specious, perhaps not destitute of talents, beauty, and address, but disillute and wanton, sensual and avaricious, yet in this countenance and carriage there are tokens of virtue. I am born to be deceived, and the semblance of modesty is readily assumed. Under this veil, perhaps, lurk a tainted heart and depraved appetites. Is it so? She made me no answer, but somewhat in her looks seemed to events that my favorable prepossessions were just. I noticed likewise that the alarm of the elder was greatly increased by this address to her companion. The thought suddenly occurred that this girl might be in circumstances not unlike those of Clemenza Lodi, that she was not apprised of the character of her associates, and might by this meeting be rescued from similar evils. This suspicion filled me with tumultuous feelings. Clemenza was for a time forgotten. I paid no attention to the looks or demeanor of the elder, but was wholly occupied in gazing on the younger. My anxiety to know the truth gave way to pay-sauce and energy to my tones while I spoke. Who? Where? What are you? Do you reside in this house? Are you a sister or daughter in this family or merely a visitant? Do you know the character, profession, and views of your companions? Do you deem them virtuous or know them to be profligate? Speak, tell me, I beseech you. The maiden confusion which had just appeared in the countenance of this person now somewhat abated. She lifted her eyes and glanced by turns at me and at her who sat by her side. An air of serious astonishment overspread her features, and she seemed anxious for me to proceed. The elder, meanwhile, betrayed the utmost alarm, again upbraided my audacity, commanded me to withdraw, and admonished me of the danger I incurred by lingering. I noticed not her interference, but again entreated to know of the younger her true state. She had no time to answer me, supposing her not to want the inclination, for every pause was filled by the clamorous importunities and menaces of the other. I began to perceive that my attempts were useless to this end, but the chief and most estimable purpose was attainable. It was in my power to state the knowledge I possessed through your means of Mrs. Villars and her daughters. This information might be superfluous, since she to whom it was given might be one of this licentious family. The contrary, however, was not improbable, and my tidings, therefore, might be of the utmost moment to her safety. A resolute and even impetuous manner reduced my incessant interuptor to silence. What I had to say I compressed in a few words and adhered to perspicuity and candor with the utmost care. I still held the hand that I had taken, and fixed my eyes upon her countenance with a steadfastness that hindered her from lifting her eyes. Whether you be dissolute or chaste, I cannot tell. In either case, however, what I am going to say will be useful. Let me faithfully repeat what I have heard. It is mere rumour, and I vouch not for its truth. Rumour as it is, I submit it to your judgment, and hope that it may guide you into paths of innocence and honour. Mrs. Villars and her three daughters are English women who supported for a time an unblemished reputation, but who, at length, were suspected of carrying on in the trade of prostitution. This secret could not be concealed forever. The profligates who frequented their house betrayed them. One of them, who died under their roof after they had withdrawn from it to the country, disclosed to his kinsmen who attended his deathbed their genuine character. The dying man likewise related incidents in which I am deeply concerned. I have been connected with one by name Wellbeck. In this house I met an unfortunate girl who was afterwards removed to Mrs. Villars. Her name was Clemenza Lodi. Residents in this house, under the control of a woman like Mrs. Villars and her daughters, must be injurious to her innocence, and from this control I now come to rescue her. I turned to the elder and continued. By all that is sacred I adjure you to tell me whether Clemenza Lodi be under this roof. If she be not, wither has she gone. To know this I came hither, and any difficulty or reluctance in answering will be useless, till an answer be obtained I will not go hence. During this speech anger had been kindling in the bosom of this woman. It now burst upon me in a torrent of approbrious epithets. I was a villain, a columniator, a thief. I had lurked about the house till those whose sex and strength enabled them to cope with me had gone. I had entered these doors by fraud. I was a wretch guilty of the last excesses of insolence and insult. To repel these reproaches or endure them was equally useless. The satisfaction that I sought was only to be gained by searching the house. I left the room without speaking. Did I act illegally in passing from one story and one room to another? Did I really deserve the imputations of rashness and insolence? My behavior, I well know, was ambiguous and hazardous and perhaps wanting indiscretion, but my motives were unquestionably pure. I aimed at nothing but the rescue of a human creature from distress and dishonor. I pretend not to the wisdom of experience and age to the praise of forethought or subtlety. I choose the obvious path and pursue it with headlong expedition. Good intentions, unaided by knowledge, will perhaps produce more injury than benefit, and therefore knowledge must be gained, but the acquisition is not momentary, is not bestowed unasked and untoiled for. Meanwhile we must not be inactive because we are ignorant. Our good purposes must hurry to performance, whether our knowledge be greater or less. CHAPTER XXXV To explore the house in this manner was so contrary to ordinary rules that the design was probably wholly unsuspected by the women whom I had just left. My silence at parting might have been ascribed by them to the intimidating influence of invectives and threats. Hence I proceeded in my search without interruption. Presently I reached a front chamber in the third story. The door was ajar. I entered it on tiptoe. Sitting on a low chair by the fire I beheld a female figure dressed in a negligent but not indecent manner. Her face and the posture in which she sat was only half seen. Its hues were sickly and pale, and in mournful unison with a feeble and emaciated form. Her eyes were fixed upon a babe that lay stretched upon a pillow at her feet. The child, like its mother, for such she was readily imagined to be, was meager and cadaverous. Whether it was dead or could not be very distant from death. The features of Clemenza were easily recognized, though no contrast could be greater in habit and shape and complexion than that which her present bore to her former appearance. All her roses had faded, and her brilliancies vanished. Still, however, there was somewhat fitted to awaken the tenderest emotions. There were tokens of inconsolable distress. Her attention was wholly absorbed by the child. She lifted not her eyes till I came close to her and stood before her. When she discovered me, a faint start was perceived. She looked at me for a moment, then, putting one spread hand before her eyes, she stretched out the other towards the door, and waving it in silence as if to admonish me to depart. This motion, however emphatical, I could not obey. I wished to obtain her attention, but knew not in what words to claim it. I was silent. In a moment she removed her hand from her eyes and looked at me with new eagerness. Her features bespoke emotions which, perhaps, flowed from my likeness to her brother, joined with the memory of my connection with Wellbeck. My situation was full of embarrassment. I was by no means certain that my language would be understood. I knew not in what light the policy and dissimulation of Wellbeck might have taught her to regard me. What proposal conducive to her comfort and safety could I make to her? Once more she covered her eyes and exclaimed in a feeble voice, Go away, be gone! As if satisfied with this effort she resumed her attention to her child. She stooped and lifted it in her arms, gazing, meanwhile on its almost lifeless features, with intense anxiety. She crushed it to her bosom, and again looking at me, repeated, Go away, go away, be gone! There was somewhat in the lines of her face, in her tones and gestures that pierced to my heart. Added to this was my knowledge of her condition, her friendlessness, her poverty, the pangs of unrequited love and her expiring infant. I felt my utterance choked and my tears struggling for passage. I turned to the window and endeavored to regain my tranquility. What was it, said I, that brought me hither? The perfidy of Wellbeck must surely have long since been discovered. What can I tell her of the villars which she does not already know, or of which the knowledge will be useful? If their treatment has been just, why should I detract from their merit? If it has been otherwise, their own conduct will have disclosed their genuine character. Though voluptuous themselves, it does not follow that they have labored to debase this creature. Though wanton, they may not be inhuman. I can propose no change in her condition for the better. Should she be willing to leave this house, wither is it in my power to conduct her? Oh, that I were rich enough to provide food for the hungry, shelter for the houseless, and raiment for the naked. I was roused from these fruitless reflections by the lady whom some sudden thought induced to place the child in its bed and rising to come towards me. The utter dejection which her features lately betrayed was now changed for an air of anxious curiosity. Where, said she, in her broken English, where is Senor Wellbeck? Alas, returned I, I know not. That question might, I thought, with more propriety be put to you than me. I know where he be. I fear where he be. So saying the deepest sighs burst from her heart, she turned from me and, going to the child, took it again into her lap. Its pale and sunken cheek was quickly wet with the mother's tears, which, as she silently hung over it, dropped fast from her eyes. This demeanor could not but awaken curiosity while it gave a new turn to my thoughts. I began to suspect that in the tokens which I saw there was not only distress for her child, but concern for the fate of Wellbeck. Know you, said I, where Mr. Wellbeck is? Is he alive? Is he near? Is he in calamity? I do not know if he be alive. He be sick. He be in prison. They will not let me go to him. And here her attention and mine was attracted by the infant, whose frame, till now motionless, began to be tremulous. Its features sunk into a more ghastly expression. Its breathings were difficult, and every effort to respire produced a convulsion harder than the last. The mother easily interpreted these tokens. The same mortal struggle seemed to take place in her features as in those of her child. At length her agony found way in a piercing shriek. The struggle in the infant was past. Hope looked in vain for a new motion in its heart or its eyelids. The lips were closed, and its breath was gone forever. The grief which overwhelmed the unhappy parent was of that outrageous and desperate kind which is wholly incompatible with thinking. A few incoherent motions and screams that rent the soul were followed by a deep swoon. She sunk upon the floor, pale and lifeless as her babe. I need not describe the pangs which such a scene was adapted to produce in me. These were rendered more acute by the helpless and ambiguous situation in which I was placed. I was eager to bestow consolation and sucker, but was destitute of all means. I was plunged into uncertainties and doubts. I gazed alternately at the infant and its mother. I sighed, I wept, I even sobbed. I stooped down and took the lifeless hand of the sufferer. I bathed it with my tears and exclaimed, ill-fated woman, unhappy mother, what shall I do for thy relief? How shall I blunt the edge of this calamity and rescue thee from new evils? At this moment the door of the apartment was opened and the younger of the women whom I had seen below entered. Her looks betrayed the deepest consternation and anxiety. Her eyes in a moment were fixed by the decayed form and the sad features of Clemenza. She shuddered at this spectacle, but was silent. She stood in the midst of the floor, fluctuating and bewildered. I dropped the hand that I was holding and approached her. You have come, said I, in good season. I know you not, but will believe you to be good. You have a heart it may be not free from corruption, but it is still capable of pity for the miseries of others. You have a hand that refuses not its aid to the unhappy. See there is an infant dead. There is a mother whom grief has for a time deprived of life. She has been oppressed and betrayed, been robbed of property and reputation, but not of innocence. She is worthy of relief. Have you arms to receive her? Have you sympathy, protection, and a home to bestow upon a forlorn, betrayed and unhappy stranger? I know not what this house is. I suspect it to be no better than a brothel. I know not what treatment this woman has received. When her situation and wants are ascertained, will you supply her wants? Will you rescue her from the evils that may attend her continuance here? She was disconcerted and bewildered by this address. At length, she said, all that has happened, all that I have heard and seen, is so unexpected, so strange, that I am amazed and distracted. Your behavior I cannot comprehend, nor your motive for making this address to me. I cannot answer you except in one respect. If this woman has suffered injury, I have had no part in it. I knew not of her existence nor her situation till this moment, and whatever protection or assistance she may justly claim I am both able and willing to bestow. I do not live here, but in the city. I am only an occasional visitant in this house. What then? I exclaimed with sparkling eyes and a rapturous accent. You are not profligate, are a stranger to the manners of this house, and a detester of these manners? Be not a deceiver, I entreat you. I depend only on your looks and professions, and these may be dissembled. These questions, which indeed argue to childish simplicity, excited her surprise. She looked at me, uncertain whether I was in earnest or in jest. At length she said, Your language is so singular that I am at loss how to answer it. I shall take no pains to find out its meaning, but leave uniform conjectures at leisure. Who is this woman, and how can I serve her? After a pause she continued, I cannot afford her any immediate assistance, and shall not stay a moment longer in this house. There, putting a card in my hand, is my name and place of abode. If you shall have any proposals to make respecting this woman, I shall be ready to receive them in my own house. So saying she withdrew, I looked wistfully after her, but could not but assent to her assertion that her presence here would be more injurious to her than beneficial to Clemenza. She had scarcely gone when the elder woman entered. There was rage, sullenness, and disappointment in her aspect. These, however, were suspended by the situation in which she discovered the mother and child. It was plain that all the sentiments of women were not extinguished in her heart. She summoned the servants and seemed preparing to take such measures as the occasion prescribed. I now saw the folly of supposing that these measures would be neglected and that my presence could not essentially contribute to the benefit of the sufferer. Still, however, I lingered in the room till the infant was covered with a cloth, and the still senseless parent was conveyed into an adjoining chamber. The woman then, as if she had not seen me before, fixed scowling eyes upon me and exclaimed, Thief, villain, why do you stay here? I mean to go, said I, but not till I express my gratitude and pleasure at the sight of your attention to this sufferer. You deem me insolent and perverse, but I am not such, and hope that the day will come when I shall convince you of my good intentions. Be gone, interrupted she in a more angry tone, be gone this moment or I will treat you as a thief. She now drew forth her hand from under her gown and showed a pistol. You shall see, she continued, that I will not be insulted with impunity. If you do not vanish, I will shoot you as a robber. This woman was far from wanting a force and intrepidity worthy of a different sex. Her gestures and tones were full of energy. They denoted a haughty and indignant spirit. It was plain that she conceived herself deeply injured by my conduct, and was it absolutely certain that her anger was without reason? I had loaded her house with atrocious imputations, and these imputations might be false. I had conceived them upon such evidence as chance had provided, but this evidence, intricate and dubious as human actions and motives are, might be void of truth. Perhaps, said I, in a sedate tone, I have injured you. I have mistaken your character. You shall not find me less ready to repair than to perpetrate this injury. My error was without malice, and I had not time to finish the sentence when this rash and enraged woman thrust the pistol close to my head and fired it. I was wholly unaware that her fury would lead her to this excess. It was a sort of mechanical impulse that made me raise my hand and attempt to turn aside the weapon. I did this deliberately and tranquilly, and without conceiving that anything more was intended by her movement than to intimidate me. To this precaution, however, I was indebted for life. The bullet was diverted from my forehead to my left ear, and made a slight wound upon the surface from which the blood gushed in a stream. The loudness of this explosion and the shock which the ball produced in my brain sunk me into a momentary stupor. I reeled backward and should have fallen had I not supported myself against the wall. The sight of my blood instantly restored her reason. Her rage disappeared and was succeeded by terror and remorse. She clasped her hands and exclaimed, Oh, what? What have I done? My frantic passion has destroyed me. I needed no long time to show me the full extent of the injury which I had suffered and the conduct which it became me to adopt. For a moment I was bewildered and alarmed, but presently perceived that this was an incident more productive of good than of evil. It would teach me caution in contending with the passions of another, and showed me that there is a limit which the impetuosities of anger will sometimes overstep. Instead of reviling my companion, I dressed myself to her thus. Be not frightened. You have done me no injury and, I hope, will derive instruction from this event. Your rashness had liked to have sacrificed the life of one who is your friend, and to have exposed yourself to infamy and death, or at least to the pangs of eternal remorse. Learn from hence to curb your passions and especially to keep at a distance from every murderous weapon, on occasions when rage is likely to take place of reason. I repeat that my motives in entering this house were connected with your happiness, as well as that of Clemenza Lodi. If I have erred in supposing you a member of a vile and pernicious trade, that error was worthy of being rectified, but violence and invective tend only to confirm it. I am incapable of any purpose that is not beneficent, but in the means that I use and in the evidence on which I proceed I am liable to a thousand mistakes. Point out to me the road by which I can do you good, and I will cheerfully pursue it. Finding that her fears had been groundless as to the consequences of her rashness, she renewed, though with less vehemence than before, her implications on my intermeddling and audacious folly. I listened till the storm was nearly exhausted, and then declaring my intention to revisit the house if the interest of Clemenza should require it, I resumed my way to the city. CHAPTER XXXVI Why, said I, as I hasted forward, is my fortune so abundant in unforeseen occurrences? Is every man who leaves his cottage and the impressions of his infancy behind him ushered into such a world of revolutions and perils as have trampled my steps? Or is my scene indebted for variety and change to my propensity to look into other people's concerns and to make their sorrows and their joys mine? To indulge in adventurous spirit I left the precincts of the barn door and listed in the service of a stranger and encountered a thousand dangers to my virtue under the disastrous influence of Wellbeck. Afterwards my life was set at hazard in the cause of Wallace, and now I am loaded with the province of protecting the helpless Eliza Hadwin and the unfortunate Clemenza. My wishes are fervent, and my powers shall not be inactive in their defence, but how slender are these powers? In the offers of the unknown lady there is indeed some consolation for Clemenza. It must be my business to lay before my friend Stevens, the particulars of what has befallen me, and to entreat his directions how this disconsolate girl may be most effectually suckered. It may be wise to take her from her present abode and place her under some chaste and humane guardianship where she may gradually lose remembrance of her dead infant and her specious betrayer. The barrier that severs her from Wellbeck must be high as heaven and insuperable as necessity. But soft. Talked she not of Wellbeck? Said she not that he was in prison and was sick? Poor wretch. I thought thy course was at an end, that the penalty of guilt no longer weighed down thy heart, that thy misdeeds and thy remorses were buried in a common and obscure grave. But it seems thou art still alive. Is it rational to cherish the hope of thy restoration to innocence and peace? Thou art no obdurate criminal. Hadst thou lest virtue, thy compunctions would be less keen. Worth thou deft to the voice of duty, thy wanderings into guilt and folly would be less fertile of anguish. The time will perhaps come when the measure of thy transgressions and calamities will overflow, and the folly of thy choice will be too conspicuous to escape thy discernment. Surely even for such transgressors as thou, there is a salutary power in the precepts of truth and the lessons of experience. But thou art imprisoned and art sick. This perhaps is the crisis of thy destiny. Indigence and dishonor were the evils to shun which thy integrity and peace of mind have been lightly forfeited. Thou hast found that the price was given in vain, that the hollow and deceitful enjoyments of opulence and dignity were not worth the purchase, and that frivolous and unsubstantial as they are, the only path that leads to them is that of honesty and diligence. Thou art imprisoned and art sick, and there is none to cheer thy hour with offices of kindness or uphold thy fainting courage by the suggestions of good counsel. For such as thou the world has no compassion. Mankind will pursue thee to the grave with execrations. Their cruelty will be justified or palliated since they know thee not. They are unacquainted with the godings of thy conscience and the bitter retributions which thou art daily suffering. They are full of their own wrongs and think only of those tokens of exultation and complacency which thou wast studious of assuming in thy intercourse with them. It is I only that thoroughly know thee and can rightly estimate thy claims to compassion. I have somewhat partaken of thy kindness, and thou meritest some gratitude at my hands. Shall I not visit and endeavor to console thee and thy distress? Let me at least ascertain thy condition and be the instrument in repairing the wrongs which thou hast inflicted. Let me gain from the contemplation of thy misery new motives to sincerity and rectitude. While occupied by these reflections I entered the city, the thoughts which engrossed my mind related to Welbeck. It is not my custom to defer till to-morrow what can be done today. The destiny of man frequently hangs upon the laps of a minute. I will stop, said I, at the prison, and since the moment of my arrival may not be indifferent, I will go thither with all possible haste. I did not content myself with walking, but, regardless of the comments of passengers, hurried along the way at full speed. Being inquired for Welbeck, I was conducted through a dark room crowded with beds to a staircase. Never before had I been in a prison. Never had I smelt so noisy and odour, or surveyed faces so begrimed with filth and misery. The walls and floors were alike squalid and detestable. It seemed that in this house existence would be bereaved of all of its attractions, and yet those faces, which could be seen through the obscurity that encompassed them, were either void of care or distorted with mirth. This, said I, as I followed my conductor, is the residence of Welbeck. What contrasts are these to the repose and splendor, pictured walls, glossy hangings, gilded sofas, mirrors that occupied from ceiling to floor, carpets of torus, and the spotless and transcendent brilliancy of coverlets and napkins in thy former dwelling? Here brawling and the shuffling of rude feet are eternal. The air is loaded with the exhalations of disease and the fumes of debauchery. Thou art cooped up in airless space and, perhaps, compelled to share thy narrow cell with some stupid ruffian. Formerly the breezes were courted by thy lofty windows. Aromatic shrubs were scattered on thy hearth. Menials, splendid in apparel, showed their faces with diffidence in thy apartment, trod lightly on thy marble floor and suffered not the sanctity of silence to be troubled by a whisper. Thy lamp shot its rays through the transparency of alabaster, and thy fragrant lymph flowed from vases of porcelain. Such were formerly the decorations of thy hall, the embellishments of thy existence, but now, alas! We reached a chamber in the second story. My conductor knocked on the door. No one answered. Repeated knocks were unheard or unnoticed by the person within. At length lifting a latch we entered together. The prisoner lay upon the bed with his face turned from the door. I advanced softly, making a sign to the keeper to withdraw. Wellbeck was not asleep, but merely buried in reverie. I was unwilling to disturb his musing and stood with my eyes fixed upon his form. He appeared unconscious that anyone had entered. At length, uttering a deep sigh, he changed his posture and perceived me in my motionless and gazing attitude. Recollect in what circumstances we had last parted. Wellbeck had, no doubt, carried away with him from that interview a firm belief that I should speedily die. His prognostic, however, was fated to be contradicted. His first emotions were those of surprise. These gave place to mortification and rage. After eyeing me for some time, he averted his glances, and that effort which is made to dissipate some obstacle to breathing showed me that his sensations were of the most excruciating kind. He laid his head upon the pillow and sunk into his former musing. He disdained or was unable to utter a syllable of welcome or contempt. In the opportunity that had been afforded me to view his countenance, I had observed tokens of a kind very different from those which used to be visible. The gloomy and malignant were most conspicuous. Health had forsaken his cheeks and taken along with it those flexible parts which formerly enabled him to cover his secret torments and insidious purposes beneath a veil of benevolence and cheerfulness. Alas! said I, loud enough for him to hear me. Here is a monument of ruin. Despair and mischievous passions are too deeply rooted in this heart for me to tear them away. These expressions did not escape his notice. He turned once more and cast sullen looks upon me. There was somewhat in his eyes that made me shudder. They denoted that his reverie was not that of grief but of madness. I continued in a less steadfast voice than before. Unhappy Clemenza, I have performed thy message. I have visited him that is sick and in prison. Thou hadst cause for anguish and terror even greater cause than thou imagined. Would to God that thou wouldst be contented with the report which I shall make, that thy misguided tenderness would consent to leave him to his destiny, would suffer him to die alone. But that is a forbearance which no eloquence that I possess will induce thee to practice. Thou must come and witness for thyself. In speaking thus I was far from foreseeing the effects which would be produced on the mind of Wellbeck. I was far from intending to instill into him a belief that Clemenza was near at hand and was preparing to enter his apartment, yet no other images but these would, perhaps, have roused him from his lethargy and awakened that attention which I wished to awaken. He started up engaged fearfully at the door. What! he cried. What! is she here? Ye powers that have scattered woes in my path. Spare me the sight of her. But from this agony I will rescue myself. The moment she appears I will pluck out these eyes and dash them at her feet. So saying he gazed with augmented eagerness upon the door, his hands were lifted to his head as if ready to execute his frantic purpose. I seized his arm and besought him to lay aside his terror for that Clemenza was far distant. She had no intention and besides was unable to visit him. Then I am respited. I breathe again. No, keep her from a prison. Drag her to the wheel or to the scaffold. Mangle her with stripes. Torture her with famine. Strangle her child before her face. And cast it to the hungry dogs that are howling at the gate. But keep her from a prison. Never let her enter these doors. There he stopped, his eyes being fixed on the floor and his thoughts once more buried in reverie. I resumed. She is occupied with other griefs than those connected with the fate of Wellbeck. She is not unmindful of you. She knows you to be sick and in prison. And I came to do for you whatever office your condition might require and I came at her suggestion. She alas has full employment for her tears in watering the grave of her child. He started. What? Dead? Say you that the child is dead? It is dead. I witnessed its death. I saw it expire in the arms of its mother, that mother whom I formerly met under your roof, blooming and gay, but whom calamity has tarnished and withered. I saw her in the raiment of poverty under an accursed roof, desolate alone, unsolest by the countenance or sympathy of human beings, approached only by those who mock at her distress, set snares for her innocence and push her to infamy. I saw her leaning over the face of her dying babe. Wellbeck put his hands to his head and exclaimed, curses on thy lips, infernal messenger. Chant elsewhere thy rueful diddy. Vanish. Vanish, if thou wouldst not feel in thy heart fangs red with blood less guilty than thine. Till this moment the uproar in Wellbeck's mind appeared to hinder him from distinctly recognizing his visitant. Now it seemed as if the incidents of our last interview suddenly sprung up in his remembrance. What? This is the villain that rifled my cabinet, the maker of my poverty and of all the evils which it has since engendered, that has led me to a prison. Execrable fool, you are the author of the scene that you describe and of horrors without number and name. To whatever crimes I have been urged since that interview and the fit of madness that made you destroy my property, they spring from your act, they flowed from necessity which had you held your hand at that fateful moment would never have existed. How dare you thrust yourself upon my privacy? Why am I not alone? Fly and let my miseries want at least the aggravation of beholding their author. My eyes loathe the sight of thee. My heart would suffocate thee with its own bitterness. Be gone. I know not, I answered, why innocence should tremble at the ravings of a lunatic, why it should be overwhelmed by unmerited reproaches, why it should not deplore the errors of its foe labored to correct those errors, and thank thy fate, youth, that my hands are tied up by scorn. Thank thy fate that no weapon is within reach. Much has passed since I saw thee, and I am a new man. I am no longer inconstant and cowardly. I have no motives but contempt to hinder me from expiating the wrongs which thou hast done me in thy blood. I disdain to take thy life. Go, and let thy fidelity at least to the confidence which I have placed in thee, be in violet. Thou hast done me harm enough but canst do, if thou wilt still more. Thou canst betray the secrets that are lodged in thy bosom, and rob me of the comfort of reflecting that my guilt is known to but one among the living. This suggestion made me pause and look back upon the past. I had confided this man's tale to you. The secrecy on which he so fondly leaned was at an end. Had I acted culpably or not? But why should I ruminate with anguish and doubt upon the past? The future was within my power, and the road of my duty was too plain to be mistaken. I would disclose to Wellbeck the truth, and cheerfully encounter every consequence. I would summon my friend to my aid and take his counsel in the critical emergency in which I was placed. I ought not to rely upon myself alone in my efforts to benefit this being when another was so near whose discernment and benevolence and knowledge of mankind and power of affording relief were far superior to mine. Influenced by these thoughts I left the apartment without speaking, and procuring pen and paper dispatched to you the billet which brought about our meeting. Mervyn's auditors allowed no pause in their attention to this story. Having ended, a deep silence took place. The clock which stood on the mantle had sounded twice the customary alarm, but had not been heard by us. It was now struck a third time. It was one. Our guest appeared somewhat startled at this signal and looked with the mournful sort of earnestness at the clock. There was an air of inquietude about him which I had never observed in an equal degree before. I was not without much curiosity respecting other incidents than those which had just been related by him, but after so much fatigue as he had undergone I thought it improper to prolong the conversation. Come, said I, my friend, let us to bed. This is a drowsy time, and after so much exercise of mind and body you cannot but need some repose. Much has happened in your absence which is proper to be known to you, but our discourse will be best deferred till tomorrow. I will come into your chamber by day dawn and unfold to you particulars. Nay, said he, withdrawn on my account, if I go to my chamber it will not be to sleep, but to meditate, especially after your assurance that something of moment has occurred in my absence. My thoughts, independently of any cause of sorrow or fear, have received an impulse which solitude and darkness will not stop. It is impossible to know too much for our safety and integrity, or to know it too soon. What has happened? I did not hesitate to comply with his request, for it was not difficult to conceive that, however tired the limbs might be, the adventures of this day would not easily be expelled from the memory at night. I told him the substance of the conversation with Mrs. Althorpe. He smiled at those parts of the narrative which related to himself, but when his father's depravity and poverty were mentioned, he melted into tears. Poor wretch, I that knew thee in thy better days might have easily divined this consequence. I foresaw thy poverty and degradation in the same hour that I left thy roof. My soul drooped at the prospect, but I said it cannot be prevented, and this reflection was an antidote to grief. But now that thy ruin is complete, it seems as if some of it were imputable to me, who forsook thee when the sucker and counsel of a son were most needed. Thou art ignorant and vicious, but thou art my father still. I see that the sufferings of a better man than thou art would less afflict me than thine. Perhaps it is still in my power to restore thy liberty and good name, and yet that is a fond wish. Thou art past the age when the ignorance and groveling habits of a human being are susceptible of a cure. There he stopped, and after a gloomy pause continued. I am not surprised or afflicted at the misconceptions of my neighbors with relation to my own character. One must judge from what they see, they must build their conclusions on their knowledge. I never saw in the rebukes of my neighbors anything but laudable abhorrence of vice. They were too eager to blame, to collect materials of censure rather than of praise. It was not me whom they hated and despised. It was the phantom that passed under my name, which existed only in their imagination, and which was worthy of all their scorn and all their enmity. What I appeared to be in their eyes was as much the object of my own disapprobation as of theirs. Their reproaches only evinced the rectitude of their decisions as well as of my own. I drew from them new motives to complacency. They fortified my perseverance in the path which I had chosen as best. They raised me higher in my own esteem. They heightened the claims of the reproachers themselves to my respect and my gratitude. They thought me slothful, incurious, destitute of knowledge and all thirst of knowledge, insolent and profligate. They say that in the treatment of my father I have been ungrateful and inhuman. I have stolen his property and deserted him in his calamity. Therefore they hate and revile me. It is well I love them for these proofs of their discernment and integrity. Their indignation at wrong is the truest test of their virtue. It is true that they mistake me, but that arises from the circumstances of our mutual situation. They examined what was exposed to their view. They grasped at what was placed within their reach. To decide contrary to appearances, to judge from what they knew not, would prove them to be brutish and not rational, would make their decision of no worth and render them in their turn objects of neglect and contempt. It is true that I hated school, that I sought occasions of absence and finally on being struck by the master determined to enter his presence no more. I loved to leap, to run, to swim, to climb trees and to clamber up rocks, to shroud myself in thickets and stroll among woods, to obey the impulse of the moment and to pray or be silent just as my humor prompted me. All this I loved more than to go to and fro in the same path and it stated hours to look off and on a book, to read just as much and of such a kind, to stand up and to be seated, just as another thought proper to direct. I hated to be classed, cribbed, rebuked, and ferrelled at the pleasure of one who, as it seemed to me, knew no guide in his rewards but caprice and no prompter in his punishments but passion. It is true that I took up the spade and the hoe as rarely and for as short a time as possible. I preferred to ramble in the forest and loiter on the hill, perpetually to change the scene, to scrutinize the endless variety of objects, to compare one leaf and pebble with another, to pursue those trains of thought which their resemblances and differences suggested, to inquire what it was that gave them this place, structure and form, were more agreeable employments than plowing and threshing. My father could well afford to hire labor. What my age and my constitution enabled me to do could be done by a sturdy boy and half the time with half the toil and with none of the reluctance. The boy was a bond-servant and the cost of his clothing and food was next to nothing. True it is that my service would have saved him even this expense, but my motives for declining the effort were not hastily weighed or superficially examined. These were my motives. My frame was delicate and feeble. Exposure to wet blasts and vertical suns was sure to make me sick. My father was insensible to this consequence and no degree of diligence would please him but that which would destroy my health. My health was dearer to my mother than to me. She was more anxious to exempt me from possible injuries than the reason justified, but anxious she was, and I could not save her from anxiety but by almost wholly abstaining from labor. I thought her peace of mind was of some value and that if the inclination of either of my parents must be gratified at the expense of the other the preference was due to the woman who bore me, who nursed me in disease, who watched over my safety with incessant tenderness, whose life and whose peace were involved in mine. I should have deemed myself brutish and objurately wicked to have loaded her with fears and cares merely to smooth the brow of a forward old man whose avarice called on me to sacrifice my ease and my health, and who shifted to other shoulders the province of sustaining me when sick and of mourning for me when dead. I likewise believed that it became me to reflect upon the influence of my decision on my own happiness and to weigh the profits flowing to my father from my labor against the benefits of mental exercise, the pleasures of the woods and streams, healthful sensations and the luxury of musing. The pecuniary profit was petty and contemptible. It obviated no necessity. It purchased no rational enjoyment. It merely provoked by furnishing the means of indulgence and appetite from which my father was not exempt. It cherished the seeds of depravity in him and lessened the little stock of happiness belonging to my mother. I did not detain you long, my friends, in portraying my parents and recounting domestic incidents when I first told you my story. What had no connection with the history of Welbeck and with the part that I have acted upon this stage I thought it proper to admit. My omission was likewise prompted by other reasons. My mind is innervated and feeble, like my body. I cannot look upon the sufferings of those I love without exquisite pain. I cannot steal my heart by the force of reason and by submission to necessity and, therefore, too frequently employ the cowardly expedient of endeavoring to forget what I cannot remember without agony. I told you that my father was sober and industrious by habit, but habit is not uniform. There were intervals when his plotting and tame spirit gave place to the malice and fury of a demon. Lickers were not sought by him, but he could not withstand in treaty and a potion that produced no effect upon others changed him into a maniac. I told you that I had a sister whom the arts of a villain destroyed. Alas, the work of her destruction was left unfinished by him. The blows and contumelies of a misjudging and implacable parent who scrupled not to thrust her with her newborn infant out of doors, the curses and taunts of unnatural brothers left her no alternative but death. But I must not think of this. I must not think of the wrongs which my mother endured in the person of her only and darling daughter. My brothers were the copyists of the father whom they resembled in temper and person. My mother doted on her own image in her daughter and in me. This daughter was ravished from her by self-violence and her other children by disease. I only remained to appropriate her affections and fulfill her hopes. This alone had furnished a sufficient reason why I should be careful of my health and my life, but my father's character supplied me with a motive infinitely more cogent. It is almost incredible, but nevertheless true, that the only being whose presence and remonstrances had any influence on my father at moments when his reason was extinct was myself. As to my personal strength it was nothing, yet my mother's person was rescued from brutal violence. He was checked in the midst of his ferocious career by a single look or exclamation from me. The fear of my rebukes had even some influence in enabling him to resist temptation. If I entered the tavern at the moment when he was lifting the glass to his lips, I never weighed the injunctions of decorum but, snatching the vessel from his hand, I threw it on the ground. I was not deterred by the presence of others, and their censures on my want of filial respect and duty were listened to with unconcern. I chose not to justify myself by expatiating on domestic miseries and by calling down that pity on my mother which I knew would only have increased her distress. The world regarded my deportment as insolent and perverse to a degree of insanity. To deny my father an indulgence which they thought harmless and which indeed was harmless in its influence on other men, to interfere thus publicly with his social enjoyments and expose him to mortification and shame was loudly condemned, but my duty to my mother debarred me from eluding this censure on the only terms on which it could have been eluded. Now it has ceased to be necessary to conceal what passed in domestic retirements, and I should willingly confess the truth before any audience. At first my father imagined that threats and blows would intimidate his monitor, and this he was mistaken, and the detection of this mistake impressed him with an involuntary reverence for me which set bounds to those excesses which disdained any other control. Hence I derived new motives for cherishing a life which was useful in so many ways to my mother. My condition is now changed. I am no longer on that field to which the law as well as reason must acknowledge that I had some right while there was any in my father. I must hazard my life, if need be, in the pursuit of the means of honest subsistence. I never spared myself in the service of Mr. Hadwin, and at a more inclement season should probably have incurred some hazard by my diligence. These were the motives of my idleness, for my abstaining from the common toils of the farm passed by in that name among my neighbors. So in truth my time was far from being wholly unoccupied by manual employments, but these required less exertion of body or mind, or were more connected with intellectual efforts. They were pursued in the seclusion of my chamber, or the recesses of a wood. I did not labor to conceal them, but neither was I anxious to attract notice. It was sufficient that the censure of my neighbors was unmerited to make me regard it with indifference. I sought not the society of persons my own age, not from sullen or unsociable habits, but merely because those around me were totally unlike myself. Their tastes and occupations were incompatible with mine. In my few books, in my pen, in the vegetable and animal existences around me, I found companions who adapted their visits and intercourse to my convenience in Caprice, and with whom I was never tired of communing. I was not unaware of the opinion which my neighbors had formed of my being improperly connected with Betty Lawrence. I am not sorry that I fell into company with that girl. Her intercourse has instructed me in what some would think impossible to be attained by one who had never haunted the impure recesses of licentiousness in a city. The knowledge which a residence in this town for ten years gave her audacious and inquisitive spirit she imparted to me. Her character, profligate and artful, libidinous and impudent, and made up of the impressions which a city life had produced on her coarse but active mind, was open to my study and I studied it. I scarcely know how to repel the charge of illicit conduct and to depict the exact species of intercourse subsisting between us. I always treated her with freedom and sometimes with gaiety. I had no motives to reserve. I was so formed that a creature like her had no power over my senses. That species of temptation adapted to entice me from the true path was widely different from the artifices of Betty. There was no point at which it was possible for her to get possession of my fancy. I watched her while she practiced all her tricks and blandishments as I regarded a similar deportment in the animal sailax Ignavumke who inhabits the sty. I made efforts to pursue my observations unembarrassed but my efforts were made not to restrain desire but to suppress disgust. The difficulty lay not in withholding my caresses but in forbearing to repulse her with rage. Decorum indeed was not outraged and all limits were not overstepped at once. Dubious advances were employed but when found unavailing were displaced by more shameless and direct proceedings. She was too little versed in human nature to see that her last expedient was always worse than the proceeding and that in proportion as she lost sight of decency she multiplied the obstacles to her success. Betty had many enticements in person and air. She was ruddy, smooth, and plump. To these she added, I must not say what for it is strange to what length the woman destitute of modesty will sometimes go. But all her artifices availing her not at all in the contest with my insensibilities she resorted to extremes which it would serve no good purpose to describe in this audience. They produced not the consequences she wished but they produced another which was by no means displeasing to her. An incident one night occurred from which a sagacious observer deduced the existence of an intrigue. It was useless to attempt to rectify his mistake by explaining appearances in a manner consistent with my innocence. This mode of explication implied a continence in me which he denied to be possible. The standard of possibilities especially in vice and virtue is fashioned by most men after their own character. A temptation which this judge of human nature knew that he was unable to resist, he sagely concluded to be irresistible by any other man and quickly established the belief among my neighbors that the woman who married the father had been prostituted to the son. Though I never admitted to the truth of this dispersion, I believed it useless to deny because no one would credit my denial and because I had no power to disprove it. CHAPTER 38 What other inquiries were to be resolved by our young friend we were now at this late hour obliged to postpone till the morning of tomorrow? I shall pass over the reflections which a story like this would naturally suggest and hasten to our next interview. After breakfast next morning the subject of last night's conversation was renewed. I told him that something had occurred in his absence in relation to Mrs. Wentworth and her nephew that had perplexed us not a little. My information is obtained, continued I from Wortley, and it is nothing less than that young clavoring Mrs. Wentworth's nephew is at this time actually alive. Surprise but none of the embarrassment of guilt appeared in his countenance at these tidings. He looked at me as if desirous that I should proceed. It seems, added I, that a letter was lately received by this lady from the father of clavoring who is now in Europe. The letter reports that this son was lately met with in Charleston and relates the means which old Mr. clavoring had used to prevail upon his son to return home, means of the success of which he entertained well-grounded hopes. What thank you? I can only reject it, said he, after some pause, as untrue. The father's correspondent may have been deceived. The father may have been deceived, or the father may conceive it necessary to deceive the aunt, or some other supposition as to the source of the error may be true, but an error it surely is. Clavoring is not alive. I know the chamber where he died and the withered pine under which he lies buried. If she be deceived, said I, it will be impossible to rectify her error. I hope not, an honest front and a straight story will be sufficient. How do you mean to act? Visit her without doubt and tell her the truth. My tale will be too circumstantial and consistent to permit her to disbelieve. She will not hearken to you. She is too strongly prepossessed against you to admit you even to a hearing. She cannot help it, unless she lock her door against me or stuff her ears with wool she must hear me. Her prepossessions are reasonable, but are easily removed by telling the truth. Why does she suspect me of artifice? Because I seemed to be allied to Wellbeck, and because I disguised the truth. That she thinks ill of me is not her fault, but my misfortune, but happily for me a misfortune easily removed. Then you will try to see her? I will see her, and the sooner the better. I will see her today, this morning, as soon as I have seen Wellbeck, whom I shall immediately visit in his prison. There are other embarrassments and dangers of which you are not aware. Wellbeck is pursued by many persons whom he has defrauded of large sums. By these persons you are deemed an accomplice in his guilt, and a warrant is already in the hands of officers for arresting you wherever you are found. In what way, said Mervyn sedately, do they imagine me a partaker of his crime? I know not. You lived with him. You fled with him. You aided and connived at his escape. Are these crimes? I believe not, but they subject you to suspicion. To arrest and to punishment? To detention for a while, perhaps. But these alone cannot expose you to punishment. I thought so, then I have nothing to fear. You have imprisonment and obliquy at least, to dread. True, but they cannot be avoided, but by my exile and skulking out of sights evils infinitely more formidable. I shall therefore not avoid them. The sooner my conduct is subjected to scrutiny the better. Will you go with me to Wellbeck? I will go with you. Inquiring for Wellbeck of the Keeper of the Prison, we were informed that he was in his own apartment very sick. The physician attending the prison had been called, but the prisoner had preserved an obstinate and scornful silence, and had neither explained his condition nor consented to accept any aid. We now went alone into his apartment. His sensibility seemed fast ebbing, yet an emotion of joy was visible in his eyes at the appearance of Mervyn. He seemed likewise to recognize in me his late visitant and made no objection to my entrance. How are you this morning, said Arthur, seating himself on the bedside and taking his hand? The sick man was scarcely able to articulate his reply. I shall soon be well. I have longed to see you. I want to leave with you a few words. He now cast his languid eyes on me. You are his friend, he continued. You know all. You may stay. There now succeeded a long pause during which he closed his eyes and resigned himself as if to an oblivion of all thought. His pulse under my hand was scarcely perceptible. From this, in some minutes, he recovered and, fixing his eyes on Mervyn, resumed in a broken and feeble accent. Clemenza, you have seen her. Weeks ago I left her in an accursed house, yet she has not been mistreated, neglected and abandoned indeed but not mistreated. Save her, Mervyn. Comfort her. Awaken charity for her sake. I cannot tell you what has happened. The tale would be too long, too mournful. Yet, injustice to the living, I must tell you something. My woes and my crimes will be buried with me. Some of them, but not all. Ere this I should have been many leagues upon the ocean, had not a newspaper fallen into my hands while on the eve of embarkation. By that I learned that a treasure was buried with the remains of the ill-fated Watson. I was destitute. I was unjust enough to wish to make this treasure my own. Prone to think I was forgotten or numbered with the victims of pestilence, I ventured to return under a careless disguise. I penetrated to the vaults of that deserted dwelling by night. I dug up the bones of my friend and found the girdle and its valuable contents according to the accurate description that I had read. I hastened back with my prize to Baltimore, but my evil destiny overtook me at last. I was recognized by emissaries of Jameson, arrested and brought hither, and here I shall consummate my fate and defeat the rage of my creditors by death. But first, here Welbeck stretched out his left hand to Mervyn, and after some reluctance, showed a roll of lead. Receive this, said he, in the use of it be guided by your honesty and by the same advertisement that furnished me the clue by which to recover it. That being secured, the world and I will part forever. Withdraw, for your presence can help me nothing. We were unwilling to comply with his injunction and continued some longer time in his chamber, but our kind intent availed nothing. He quickly relapsed into insensibility, from which he recovered not again, but next day expired. Such in the flower of his age was the fate of Thomas Welbeck. Whatever interest I might feel in accompanying the progress of my young friend, a sudden and unforeseen emergency compelled me again to leave the city. A kinsman to whom I was bound by many obligations was suffering a lingering disease and, imagining with some reason, his dissolution to be not far distant, he besought my company and my assistance to soothe at least the agonies of his last hour. I was anxious to clear up the mysteries which Arthur's conduct had produced and to shield him, if possible, from the evils which I feared awaited him. It was impossible, however, to decline the invitation of my kinsman, as his residence was not a day's journey from the city. I was obliged to content myself with occasional information imparted by Mervyn's letters or those of my wife. Meanwhile on leaving the prison I hasted to inform Mervyn of the true nature of the scene which had just passed. By this extraordinary occurrence the property of the Morris's was now in honest hands. Everything stimulated by selfish motives had done that which any other person would have found encompassed with formidable dangers and difficulties. How this attempt was suggested or executed he had not informed us, nor was it desirable to know. It was sufficient that the means of restoring their own to a destitute and meritorious family were now in our possession. Having returned home I unfolded to Mervyn all the particulars respecting Williams and the Morris's which I had lately learned from Wortley. He listened with deep attention and, my story being finished, he said, in this small compass then is the patrimony and subsistence of a numerous family. To restore it to them is the obvious proceeding, but how, where do they abide? Williams and Watson's wife live in Baltimore and the Morris's live near that town. The advertisements alluded to by Wortley and which are to be found in any newspaper will inform us. But first are we sure that any or all of these bills are contained in this covering? The lead was now unrolled and the bills which Williams had described were found enclosed. Nothing appeared to be deficient. Of this, however, we were scarcely qualified to judge. Those that were the property of Williams might not be entire and what would be the consequence of presenting them to him if any had been embezzled by Wellbeck. This difficulty was obviated by Mervyn who observed that the advertisement describing these bills would afford us ample information on this head. Having found out where the Morris's and Mrs. Watson live, nothing remains but to visit them and put an end as far as lies in my power to their inquietudes. What would you go to Baltimore? Certainly. Can any other expedient be proper? How shall I otherwise ensure the safe conveyance of these papers? You may send them by post. But why not go myself? I can hardly tell unless your appearance on such an errand may be suspected likely to involve you in embarrassments. What embarrassments, if they receive their own, ought they not to be satisfied? The inquiry will naturally be made as to the manner of gaining possession of these papers. They were lately in the hands of Watson, but Watson has disappeared. Suspicions are awake respecting the cause of his disappearance. These suspicions are connected with Wellbeck, and Wellbeck's connection with you is not unknown. These are evils, but I see not how an ingenious and open conduct is adapted to increase these evils. If they come, I must endure them. I believe your decision is right. No one is so skillful and advocate in a cause as he whose cause it is. I rely upon your skill and address, and shall leave you to pursue your own way. I must leave you for a time, but shall expect to be punctually informed of all that passes, with this agreement we parted, and I hastened to perform my intended journey. End of chapter 38